It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 219
Episode Date: February 14, 2026All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. - Why Fascists Have Adopted A Suicidal Penguin as a Mascot - Normalcy feat. Andrew - Fighting ICE’s Ware...house Prisons - The Art of Petty with Prop & Amanda Nelson - Executive Disorder: Turning Point Halftime Show, Pam Bondi’s Epstein Hearing & ICE Detention of Liam Conejo Ramos You can now listen to all Cool Zone Media shows, 100% ad-free through the Cooler Zone Media subscription, available exclusively on Apple Podcasts. So, open your Apple Podcasts app, search for “Cooler Zone Media” and subscribe today! http://apple.co/coolerzone Sources/Links: Why Fascists Have Adopted A Suicidal Penguin as a Mascot Paul Virilio, “The Suicidal State,” in J. DerDerian, ed. The Virilio Reader https://files.libcom.org/files/A%20Thousand%20Plateaus.pdf https://contactos.tome.press/welcome-to-the-suicidal-state/ https://jacobin.com/2024/10/death-drive-trump-freud-liberalism https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/trumps-penguin-breaks-internet-sends-left-frenzy https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/penguin-walking-toward-mountain-nihilist-penguin https://trending.knowyourmeme.com/editorials/guides/what-is-the-nihilist-penguin-meme-why-a-video-of-a-penguin-walking-toward-a-mountain-from-a-werner-herzog-film-is-going-viral-explained https://x.com/DOWResponse/status/2014869279850496358 https://x.com/HHSGov/status/2014772131242877320?s=20 https://x.com/policylaila/status/2015359679279337808 https://x.com/WhiteHouse/status/2015068422980182214 https://x.com/RepMikeCollins/status/1954555969515450790 Fighting ICE’s Warehouse Prisons https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2025/12/24/ice-immigrants-detention-warehouses-deportation-trump/?itid=lk_inline_manual_7 Executive Disorder: Turning Point Halftime Show, Pam Bondi’s Epstein Hearing & ICE Detention of Liam Conejo Ramos https://rumble.com/v75hvqg-tpusa-presents-the-all-american-halftime-show.html?e9s=rel_v2_ep https://www.thebiglead.com/most-watched-super-bowl-halftime-shows-bad-bunny-v/ https://www.cincinnati.com/story/entertainment/television/2026/02/09/how-many-people-watched-the-halftime-show-2026-bad-bunny-super-bowl/88586255007/ https://lawfilesext.leg.wa.gov/biennium/2025-26/Pdf/Bills/House%20Bills/2321.pdf?q=20260210145058 https://oag.ca.gov/system/files/attachments/press-docs/Gatalog%20Complaint_FINAL.pdf https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.miwd.116977/gov.uscourts.miwd.116977.67.0_1.pdf https://x.com/DHSgov/status/2021292068065153476 https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/education/hisd/article/hisd-loses-immigrant-students-21307427.php https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2025-08-26/family-of-student-arrested-outside-arlete-high-allege-racial-profiling-trump-administration https://www.mprnews.org/story/2026/02/05/liam-conejo-ramos-dhs-requests-expedited-deportation-proceedings-for-family https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/26708008-us-district-judge-fred-bierys-opinion-ordering-release-of-5-year-old-liam-arias-and-father/ https://www.mprnews.org/story/2026/02/05/liam-conejo-ramos-dhs-requests-expedited-deportation-proceedings-for-family https://www.npr.org/2026/02/10/g-s1-109413/maxwell-appeals-for-clemency https://x.com/domarkus/status/2020882509525893536?s=46 https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/casey-wasserman-epstein-fallout-1236500784/ https://www.foxla.com/news/la28-casey-wasserman-epstein-maxwell-investigation-results https://democrats-judiciary.house.gov/media-center/press-releases/ranking-member-raskin-s-opening-statement-at-hearing-slamming-attorney-general-bondi-s-epstein-cover-up-betrayal-of-the-principle-of-justice-for-all https://apnews.com/live/trump-bondi-epstein-updates-2-11-2026 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JcEXpOSBE7I https://x.com/calltoactivism/status/2021617879750455415?s=46 https://x.com/antunes1/status/2021625934919369208?s=46 https://x.com/atrupar/status/2021661313429082564?s=46 https://x.com/atrupar/status/2021629409606676989?s=46 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
Over the last couple years, didn't we learn that the folding chair was invented by black people?
Because of what happened in Alabama?
This Black History Month, the podcast, Selective Ignorance with Mandy B,
unpacked black history and culture with comedy, clarity, and conversations that shake the status quo.
The Crown Act in New York was signed in July of 2019, and that is a bill that was passed to prohibit discrimination based on hairstyles associated with race.
To hear this and more.
Listen to Selective Ignorance with Mandy B
from the Black Effect Podcast Network
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Bowen-Yen.
And I'm Matt Rogers.
During this season of the Two Guys' Five Rings podcast,
in the lead-up to the Milan-Cortina
2026 Winter Olympic Games,
we've been joined by some of our friends.
Hi, Brian, hi, how Matt.
Hey, Elmo.
Hey, Matt, hey, Bowen.
Hi, Cookie.
Hi.
Now, the Winter Olympic Games are underway,
and we are in Italy
to give you experience.
from our hearts to your ears.
Listen to two guys, five rings on the Iheart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
1969, Malcolm and Martin are gone.
America is in crisis.
At a Morehouse College, the students make their move.
These students, including a young Samuel L. Jackson,
locked up the members of the Board of Trustees,
including Martin Luther King's Senior.
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 Lamombo. Listen to the A-building on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What is something you've had to unlearn about love? That it's earned.
That I was unworthy of love. That it needs to be forever for it to count.
February is the month of love. Whether you're in a relationship, casually dating, or proudly single,
it's a great time to reflect on yourself and what you want.
I'm Hope Woodard, host of the Boy Sober podcast, and each week we're looking at love from every angle.
Listen to Boy Sober. That's B-O-Y-S-O-B-E-R.
On the I-Hart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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. If you've been listening
to the episodes every day this week, there's going to be nothing new here for you, but you can make
your own decisions. Welcome to It Could Happen Here. I'm Garrison Davis. At midst attempts by
President Trump to seize control of Greenland last month during the World Economic Forum,
administration officials started posting images of a penguin. On January 23rd, the White House shared
an artificial image of Trump walking hand and flipper,
alongside a penguin holding an American flag
across a snowy tundra towards mountains bearing the flag of Greenland.
The caption read,
Embrace the penguin.
The flags look like poorly photoshopped stock images
while the rest of the image appears to be generated by AI.
Immediately, this post sparked ridicule
across various online platforms,
based on the fact that there aren't any penguin
penguins in Greenland.
Erm, penguins don't live in the northern hemisphere,
save for zoos and the Glapagos Islands of Ecuador.
So, ha-ha, the foolish Trump has been bested once again
in the arena of facts and logic.
Except this White House penguin post
was actually in reference to a TikTok meme
that was currently going super viral.
In mid-January,
remixed footage from Werner Herzog's Arctic document,
Encounters at the end of the world, featuring a lone penguin, breaking off from the flock,
and marching towards some icy mountains, started spreading around TikTok, synced to an organ
cover of Lamor Tjeure, a song which has been adopted by far-right anti-immigration groups in Europe
the past few years.
This combination of music and footage soon spread to other short-form video platforms,
like Instagram Reels, with the featherless subject being dubbed The Lonely Parenthood.
On January 20th, a more explicitly political version went kind of viral with over 20,000 likes,
with the addition of a Frederick Nietzsche, quote,
I know of no better life purpose than to perish in attempting the great and impossible, unquote,
with the caption, Save Europe, hashtag remigration.
That same day, an edit with 36,000 likes by the TikTok account, Epic History 32,
captioned Do the Hard Thing, played the documentary footage with Herzog's narration,
overlaid with images of historical figures and pop culture characters like Alexander the Great,
Caesar, Joan of Arc, King Richard I, King Baldwin the 4th, Gangus Khan, Aragorn, John Snow,
Luke Skywalker, and Spider-Man?
An op-ed in Fox News by the daughter of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy
referred to these as quote-unquote Western heroes.
To quote this op-ed,
In the film,
Herzog shows a lone penguin
peeling away
from the safety of its colony
and heading inland
toward certain death,
according to Herzog.
But the online right
saw something else.
Users, mostly male,
saw the penguin
as a powerful rebuke
of secular modernity.
They interpreted the penguin
not as lost,
but as a free thinker.
To them, he was rejecting
the colony.
In today's terms,
that means rejecting
secular, post-modern
orthodoxy and marching toward a greater purpose."
So, though Herzog in this documentary refers to this penguin as deranged, as a meme,
users identified with the penguin as a symbol of masculine rebellion against what they view
as mainstream culture, and the solitary trek up the mountains as a metaphor for the
struggle of individual greatness. Clips of men on outdoor adventures and client
naming mountains is Aethystra style, with the caption, Be the Penguin, spread wildly online,
the most popular reaching 4.2 million likes, and other penguin-themed videos getting hundreds
of thousands of likes. The Herzog penguin meme piggybacked and partially merged with an older
right-wing penguin-based meme video from two years ago of a drag queen asking a kid about
boys wearing makeup. The kid responds that boys can't wear makeup, so the drag queen asks the kid who
told him that, and this confused child looks around and sees a cartoon penguin on the wall,
points to it and says, that penguin over there.
618,000 likes.
What do you think about men who wear makeup?
You can't put it into boys.
Who said?
Uh, the penguin over there.
The penguin?
This video and this figure of the penguin has since been used as a symbol for
masculine resistance to the LGBT
agenda. And this new penguin meme
pertains to tap into a uniquely masculine urge,
as explained by this TikToker who racked up
42,000 likes.
I hate to be the one to say it, but the penguin didn't make it.
But does that mean he died in vain? No, his life was not a tragedy.
It was an inspiration. He left a legacy
most of us could only hope for.
It would be easy to quote Nietzsche here,
but that wouldn't do it justice,
that penguin spoke to something inside all of us men,
a desire for more to push our limits
and see what we're truly made of.
Sometimes our purpose is the impact that we leave behind.
On January 23rd, the Department of War Rapid Response account posted,
Be a warrior, Embrace the Penguin,
with an AI-generated image of five men wearing
the uniform of each military branch
walking towards the mountains alongside a penguin.
Secretary Kennedy posted a Make America Healthy Again,
edit of the penguin meme with the organ music
over an AI video of RFK Jr. and a penguin walking to the mountains.
On-screen text reads,
The mainstream made us sick.
Choose the healthier path.
The Health and Human Services government account
quote tweeted this video with the caption,
locking in after watching that penguin at it.
Unquote, so a occupied government.
An anti-immigration advocacy account created a viral AI image of a large, evidently prosperous colony
of penguins gathered under the banner of multiculturalism.
It reads that as a giant banner,
juxtaposed to a lone penguin facing the mountains,
and a sign reading, remigration now.
Across the pond, the London mayoral,
candidate for the far-right Reform Party in the UK, Lila Cunningham, copied Trump's version of
the penguin meme with an artificial image of her holding hands with a penguin walking towards
some snowy mountains surrounding the Tower Bridge in London. The caption reads,
Choose a new path for London before it's too late. The last penguin post will consider
is a video edit from the Department of Homeland Security.
It starts like many of the viral TikTok and reels videos
with footage and narration from Herzog's documentary,
which I will finally play here.
But one of them caught our eye, the one in the center.
He would neither go towards the feeding grounds
at the edge of the ice nor return to the colony.
Shortly afterwards, we saw,
or him heading straight towards the mountains, some 70 kilometers away.
Inley explained that even if he caught him and brought him back to the colony,
he would immediately head right back for the mountains.
After the narration cuts out, the music continues as a fan camp-style montage,
plays Trump, military helicopters, SWAT-style home raids,
and ICE and Border Patrol arresting people.
The video is captioned,
Americans have always known why in response to Herzog's query.
This post from the DHS asserts that part of the essence of America is breaking away from the herd
and forging your own path. Those who don't understand Trump's desire to control Greenland
at the risk of further damaging our geopolitical standing just suffer from herd mentality
and will never be strong enough to take the kind of risks that are core to the existence.
of this country. On January 24th, the White House posted,
The Penguin does not concern himself with the opinions of those who cannot comprehend.
For Trump, Venezuela, Greenland, Imperial Expansion, is an existential mission to achieve
some mythic frontier greatness, and only true Americans can understand why.
The Fox News Penguin op-ed by Christian nationalist Sean Duffy's daughter,
Wow, that's a nightmare sentence.
Reads, quote,
For Trump, the penguin is an apt symbol for the president's decade-long fight against the radical left.
Everything Trump does is opposed by the global power brokers.
Even the president's push to obtain Greenland has been fanatically opposed by hysterical European elites.
America was built by penguins.
And by that, I mean rebels, pilgrims, frontier men and women, conquistadors and cowboys.
we are a nation founded by risk takers who left the colony for the mountains.
We are descended from men who suffered and died to carve civilization out of wilderness.
It is our inheritance, unquote.
Now, what this DHS penguin video doesn't include, but has already been alluded to by some of the other videos I've played,
is the actual context of this lone bird's journey and its sad fate.
We will return to discuss penguin insanity after this ad break.
We're back.
Though the 2026 version of the penguin meme was dubbed the lonely penguin,
earlier meme videos of this documentary footage from years past
carried the titles deranged penguin or nihilist penguin.
Before the footage of this lone penguin plays in the documentary,
Herzog asks a penguin expert,
if they can experience insanity.
Is there such thing as insanity among penguins?
I try to avoid a definition of insanity or derangement.
I don't mean that a penguin might believe he or she is Lenin, Napoleon Bonaparte.
But could they just go crazy because they've had enough of their colony?
Well, I've never seen a penguin bashing its head against them.
the rock, they do get disoriented.
They end up in places they shouldn't be a long way from the ocean.
The political invocations of this footage largely ignore Werner Herzog's own speculation
on why the penguin is marching towards the mountains in the far-off distance and its inevitable
fate.
One of these disoriented or deranged penguins showed up at the New Harbor dive.
camping camp, already some 80 kilometers away from where it should be.
And here, he's heading off into the interior of the vast continent.
With 5,000 kilometers ahead of him, he's heading towards certain death.
The penguin is not the Ubermensch.
The penguin will not achieve individual greatness at the summit of the mountain because it's
never going to get there.
As friend of the pod, Dan Olson, so eloquently put it,
the penguin is going to die.
Though the penguin does not bash its head on a rock,
this separation from society is still an act of suicide.
The deranged penguin has literally turned its back on food, water, shelter, and the colony
to die wandering towards mountains that it will never reach.
The Trump administration's embrace of this suicidal penguin as a that's literally me figure
is a shockingly open display of fascism's relation to the death drive.
It's just so naked to make your mascot a symbol of suicidal defiance
against perceived cultural norms.
They're doing a first-as-tragity twice as farce.
For fascist death emblems, the Nazis get the skull,
we get a fucking penguin.
But the penguin is not the first modern American suicidal folk hero,
the killdozer rampage of public destruction,
which ended in the suicide of the perpetrator,
has been a mascot for the Libertarian right for over two decades.
And in 2018,
a 28-year-old airport ground service agent named Richard Russell
hijacked an empty plane at CETAC
to fly over Mount Rainier before killing himself
by purposely crashing the plane,
very similar to Herzog's deranged penguin.
Russell left behind a wife of six years,
but became a sort of nihilistic folk hero to overly online young men,
especially among the online far right on places like 4chan and telegram,
where he was dubbed Sky King.
Last August, a congressional Republican from Georgia, Mike Collins,
who serves on the Republican Transportation Committee,
posted a glowing, multi-paragraph memorial for Richard Russell
on the anniversary of his suicide,
signing off the message with
Rest in Peace Sky King.
But the direct identification
of the Trump administration
with a suicidal penguin
is a step farther.
The fascist appetite for death is well understood,
but the death drive represents
a usually subconscious desire
to not only harm or kill others,
but ultimately yourself.
An attempt to ease the tensions
driving social life, by returning to a prior inorganic state.
This desire can be channeled through the politics of fascism,
which allow for violent, paranoid manifestations of repressed internal contradictions,
which attempt to be resolved through death.
But fascism itself is a contradiction between a primitive war machine and a stable state apparatus,
and the way that tension is released is also self-destruction.
In the second volume of capitalism and schizophrenia, A Thousand Plateaus, by philosopher Jill's DeLews and psychoanalyst Felix Guatari, they discuss the ways in which fascism and totalitarianism differ. They write that totalitarianism is a state affair made up of material components that overmanaged society.
Quote, even in the case of a military dictatorship, it is a state army, not a war machine, that takes power and elevates the state to the totalist.
state. Totalitarianism is quintessentially conservative. Fascism, on the other hand,
involves a war machine. When fascism builds itself a totalitarian state, it is not in the sense of a
state army taking power, but of a war machine taking over the state, unquote. This analysis from
Deleuze and Guateri is building off of an essay by the French writer Paul Varyl, called The Suicidal
state, where Varylio argues that in fascism, this state is far less totalitarian than it is
suicidal, an evolution of the state that, quote, no longer pretends to be guided internally
by reason and progress, but rather non-progress and terror, founded on the repulsion and
fear of all development in this civil domain, unquote. This repulsion and fear were
manifested in the accelerated destruction of state institutions
during the first few months of Trump's second term
and Doge's scorched-earth approach to slashing government agencies.
Virillio writes that during the disappearance of public service,
infrastructures of service are reduced as the wiretaps of the Vermacht are restored.
Colonial geometry of decolonialization, unquote.
So, as the federal government rescinds public services,
The everyday presence of the federal government is reduced to masked armed agents in the streets,
disappearing our neighbors and shooting civilians,
while the president fights in court for the ability to deploy the military against American citizens within our own territory.
During the tension of total war or total peace,
Varelio says the system expands and reproduces itself a material process without an end,
but no longer without limits.
To quote the Brazilian philosopher of Vladimir Sveldre Sotli, the suicide state, quote, is not just a manager of death.
It is rather the ongoing agent of its own catastrophe, the maker of its own explosion.
To be more precise, this new state mixes the death management of entire sectors of its own population
with an ongoing and risky flirtation with its own self-destruction, unquote.
Verilio's idea of the suicidal state
emerges as this new mode of governing
to solve the crisis of post-war liberalism
in Germany after World War I,
as well as risked by the United States
after each of our many wars.
Quote, one of the keys to the present situation
is on one side the overly informed status
of experts of the system
and on the other, the under-informed status
of all those who are supposedly thinking outside of it, unquote.
Verlio says that the experts no longer know how to use
their hordes of information except to gain money and status
by continually adding to their body of work.
Meanwhile, the outsiders produce the political and cultural undercurrent
of modern folklore and ordinary life.
But this limp dichotomy cannot last for very long on its own.
So Verily proposes the new,
emergence of a third category of people who make use of information for an end, the ultimate
end, the directors of the suicidal state. While the outsiders, ideologues, and artists, simply
try to simulate catharsis, quote, by contrast, the third category, the suicidal state,
itself produces a feeling for the real. Better, it aims to retain the exclusivity of its production.
this feeling is a contempt for and a hatred of the every day, unquote.
To paraphrase Varelia, the fascist project exploits man's alienation from his environment
through pollution, economic insecurity, emotional insecurity, dessocialization,
and seeks to replace any legitimate grievance he has with society with a more repulsive and expressive force
the fear of society, which is superimposed on a new military schema of total war and internal invasion,
all towards a nihilistic end of dropping the bomb on ourselves.
The oscillation of external and internal destruction, epitomized by the Death Drive,
is mirrored by the imperial boomerang, where the violence of colonial expansion is forced to return to its homeland.
Once home, the drive remains, resulting in a war on society, directly or through other means.
But this is a war on its own people, or as Trump would say, the enemy within.
To quote a paragraph from a thousand plateaus,
so-called total war seems less a state undertaking than an undertaking of a war machine that
appropriates the state and channels it into a flow of absolute war whose only possible outcome
is the suicide of this state itself. There is, in fascism, a realized nihilism. Unlike the totalitarian
state, which does its utmost to seal all possible lines of escape, fascism is constructed on an
intense line of escape, which it transforms into a line of pure destruction and abysm.
It is curious that from the very beginning, the Nazis announced to Germany what they were bringing.
At once, wedding bells and death, including their own deaths and the death of the Germans.
They thought they would perish, but that their undertaking would be resumed, all across Europe, all
over the world, throughout the solar system.
And the people cheered.
Not because they did not understand, but because they wanted that death through the
death of others, like a will to wager everything you have every hand to stake your own death
against the death of others." Unquote. In A Thousand Plateaus, DeLuze and Guateri quote an excerpt from
Klaus Mann's 1936 novel, Nefisto, which contains fascist speeches and ordinary conversations
from Nazi Germany. The quote they include is eerily similar to the visuals of Trump as the
suicidal penguin. Quote, heroism was something that was being ruled out of our lives. In reality,
we are not marching forward. We are reeling, staggering. Our beloved furor is dragging us toward the
shades of darkness and everlasting nothingness. How can we poets who have a special affinity for
darkness and lower depths not admire him? Unquote. De Luz and Guatari then write,
suicide is presented not as a punishment, but as the crowning glory of the death of others.
The insufficiency of economic and political definitions of fascism does not simply imply a need
to tack on vague, so-called ideological determinations. We prefer to inquiry into the precise
formation of Nazi statements, which are just as much in evidence in politics and economics as
in the most absurd of conversations.
They always contain the stupid and repugnant cry,
long-live death,
even at the economic level,
where the arms expansion replaces growth in consumption,
and where investment veers from the means of production
toward the means of pure destruction, unquote.
Verrillo calls this a psychosis,
which governs its entire politics of production.
And he writes that the replacement of the American,
industries of the automobile and the cinema with the military industrial complex,
quote, does not involve a rational, functional, or useful choice, but rather entirely psychological,
or rather psychopathological. It stems from contempt for and abandonment of productive rapport
with the milieu. Every investment is made to escape from it, unquote. For contemporary reference,
go check out the stock price of Palantir.
And on the larger economic and international level,
Trump's tariffs, his trade wars,
and the self-destruction of the United States' geopolitical standing
are all expressions of this suicidal state in action.
Ferrelio claims the state of total war,
where the economy of war has become the economy of peace,
is facilitated by a transformation in the American sense of freedom.
where quote-unquote the free as a subject, as in the land of the free,
quote, is no longer properly spoken of as a citizen.
He has an anonymous organism, without culture, without society, and without memory.
This figure has no historical precedent.
Assistance has become survival, non-assistance, a condemnation to death.
All liberation henceforth has for him invariably the appearance of death.
of the end, suicide or murder, unquote.
This sort of freedom from social services, freedom from this state, freedom from assistance,
as a movement of the death drive, also provides insight into people's willingness to,
and even desire to vote against their own material interests, especially when their political
struggle has turned against society itself. Only in transformation of ordinary social
life into the horrific in the minds of the populace, can the fascist, quote, find their
surest means of governing, the legitimization of his politics and military strategies, and right
up to the end, far from weakening the repulsive nature of his powers, the ruins, the
horrors, the crimes, the chaos of total war, will generally only increase in scope.
In Hitler's 1945 telegram 71, he writes,
If the war is lost, may the nation perish.
Here, Hitler decides to join forces with his enemies
in order to complete the destruction of his own people.
By obliterating the last remaining sources of its life support system,
civil reserves of every kind, potable water, fuel, provisions,
this is the normal outcome of the politics of,
dialectical retreat from the man who had written the idea of protection haunts and fulfills life."
Fascism hijacks the mechanism of evolutionary and revolutionary escape and reverts it into
a mechanism of destruction. Instead of resolving crises, it produces constant crisis for it to feed
off of. Forming, as deluz and Guateri say, a war.
machine instead of resonating in a state apparatus. A war machine that no longer had anything but war
as its object and would rather annihilate its own servants than stop the destruction, to quote
a thousand plateaus. This is war not for conquest or revolution, but war as its own end. The hollowing
out of public institutions and social services, the divestment from the milieu of life,
leads people to turn towards the suicidal state as the only force of movement.
Resting on, as Varelio says, quote, the advanced exploitation of our instincts for death,
a new totalitarian state defined by the constant ascent of statistics toward planetary death.
Crime and madness will no longer be the defect.
The madman and the assassin are the legitimate children engendered and recognized by the suicidal state, unquote.
And what phenomenon has risen in the United States the past few years, the conspiracy theorist, and the assassin?
The embrace of total war and the campaign of civil fear necessitates a break from sanity and the bizarre strangeness of means that inevitably result in a self-destructive end.
Verilio claims there is an insanity at the heart of the fascist project.
The imaginary potential of the fascist state arises, quote,
from a finished world where insanity has become the goal of order,
the very product of organization, unquote.
There's a quote from Goebbels to one of his aides, Prince Frederick Christian.
The world in which Hitler moves is a world of absolute fate.
a world in which even success makes no sense.
It's not a mistake that the White House has cast itself as a lost penguin marching to its own death.
They know the absurdity of their replies.
They know the world looks upon them as insane.
They know that they'll never reach the Make America Great Again Mountain.
The self-destruction, ice, the tariffs, the broken treaties, are not for any greater
purpose. The means are the end. This is total war, the psychological purpose of which is terror,
which for the fascist is synonymous with peace. But let's not forget how Hitler and Goebbels finally
resolved their contradictions. Canadian women are looking for more. More to themselves,
their businesses, their elected leaders, and the world are 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 I Heart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Welcome to the A building. I'm Hans Charles. I'm Inolec Lamoma. It's 1969.
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. have both been assassinated.
And Black America was out of breaking point.
Writing in protests broke out on an unprecedented scale.
In Atlanta, Georgia, at Martin's Almemata, Moore House 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 were dying.
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.
I'm Bowen-Yin-Yin.
And I'm Matt Rogers.
During this season of the Two Guys' Five Rings podcast, and the lead-up to the Milan Quartina,
at 2026 Winter Olympic Games.
We've been joined by some of our friends.
Hi, Boone. Hey, Elmo.
Hey, Matt, hey, Bowen.
Hi, Cookie.
Hi.
Now, the Winter Olympic Games are underway,
and we are in Italy
to give you experiences from our hearts to your ears.
Listen to two guys, five rings on the IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Brandon Kyle Goodman,
the host of the Tell Me Something Messy podcast.
I wanted to create a safe, comfy place.
for all of us to talk about sex, relationships, and what it means to be human.
And baby, my fantastic guests are bringing their mess to share with the class.
Like singer-songwriter Duran Bernard, suggesting we reinstate adult sleepovers with friends.
Here's the thing.
Get a group that's mature enough not to be putting your hand in warm water and tickling you.
You know what I'm saying?
I mean, I mean, granted, I might be doing.
But you know, like.
And I think it's important for those examples of that.
of us just being gentle with one another because the world and the people in it already finding brand new ways to whip I ass everything.
1,000 percent.
The day.
1,000 percent.
So the least we could do is make strides to handle each other in a way that is a bit more.
Yeah, that's with care and a bit more mindful.
Listen to Tell Me Something Messy on the IHeart Radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts.
So Trump is kind of moving like a bull in a China shop.
Or rather a bull in a missile shop, you know.
I think that's a more apt analogy.
The system of government wasn't exactly benign beforehand, you know?
Yeah.
I think it really needs to click for people that Trump is not truly exceptional.
Mm-hmm.
Rather, he's a product of the normal that people seem to be yearning for.
Yeah.
You know, and the other issues with, too.
Yeah, I think like this is the crux of what comes next, right?
It's like we have this like, I don't want to disparage people.
We have this tendency in American politics, this liberal tendency, progressive liberal tendency even to think that like basically things have been magnificent until the first week of November in 2016, right, that America was progressing on this like linear pathway towards total equality in general.
justice for all, and that what's happening now is an aberration. It's the idea that there's a few
individuals conspiring, rather that there is a system which inherently creates interest,
which are opposed to our own, I guess. Yeah, exactly. It's like all of these, these problems,
the genocide were waging long before Trump came into power, you know, the economic strains,
people are feeling today that people have been feeling for decades for their entire lives,
you know, the climate crisis that is when we worsen this time is going on.
You know, all of this is a product of that normal, of that pre-Trump normal.
And I still hear people asking, you know, when are things going to go back to normal?
When can we settle down?
When will we go back onto the track of normal C?
And well, if you're listening to this podcast, I think you already know what time it is.
This is it could happen here.
I'm Andrew Sage.
and I'm joined by...
It's James again here to talk about the new normal.
All right, and welcome.
Thank you, yeah.
The new normal.
Yeah.
The ever-shifting normal.
Right.
The phantom of normal and why it is that it's really not coming back.
And why normalcy as a concept is actually pretty weird.
So, parts of I think, what feeds into this notion of normal is this myth of progress that people
are obsessed with.
You know, recently I read this book, Progress by Samuel Miller McDonald, and I would like to do a review of it at some point for the podcast. But the short of it is that it gets into just how pervasive this concept of progress is in kind of tripping people up and keeping us serving systems that don't serve us. You know, you mentioned progressives earlier. And, you know, even that notion, I think, of being a progressive, he kind of calls that into question in the course of.
the book. Going from ancient times to talking about a religious sense of a promised land to the
sort of modern sense of a secular or technological progressive improvement. Yeah. Or a social
progressive improvement. He identifies it as a story and a story that's so powerful that it acts
like a sedative. You know, we don't engage with the degrading reality the world around us because
we're wrapped up in this all-powerful faith. We're bound to progress, it's
linear that we are ever striving forward, you know?
Yeah.
And we point to examples of things like social progress, but as he quotes in the book,
it's like what Malcolm X said, you know, if I stick a knife into you and I only pull it
out three inches, that's not progress.
Pull it out six inches, that's not progress.
Nine inches, that's a progress.
Progress will be, you know, removing the knife completely and mending the wound.
But I'll take it a step further and say that is it really progress to go back to,
a state that already was.
Is it progress to
abolish slavery
when there was a time
when slavery did not exist?
You know?
Going back to a previous default state
is not necessarily
contributing to the natural.
Same thing with patriarchy.
You know, patriarchy did not always exist.
Eroading and abolishing the patriarchy.
Reaching a point where
the limitations place on
women are no longer there.
can we call that progress or suggest rectifying a previously imposed state?
And so these are some of the questions he grapples with.
And there's also, of course, the techno-utopian promise of, you know,
we can in self-driving cars any minute, you know, fusion energy,
AI, end in work forever.
You know, all these things are blind to the social or ecological reality of collapse.
But where else would you see might see this myth showing up in politics?
I think I covered a good few, but I might be missing something.
Yeah, like, I mean, it's almost in everything, right?
Like, it's a fundamental myth of liberal capitalism.
I guess, like, it also underlies a certain logic of colonialism, right?
The idea that, like, progress towards a neoliberal state is,
this can be, like, the logic of explicit or less explicit colonialism, I guess.
But, like, you see it there, too, right?
like you see it in the sort of, do you see it a lot in 19th century?
It's very explicit.
The idea to uplift civilize and Christian eyes, our little brown brothers.
Yeah, the civilizing mission.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
The white man's burden and these things that like became very, very on vogue in the late 19th,
early 20th century, I suppose.
You see it a lot there too, right?
Yeah, this whole notion, I think that even really starts with the concept of civilization
when you have that civilized other divide,
that binary of the civilized and the barbarian
or the civilized and the savage,
and how that gets turned into this mission
that civilization expands,
that you bring those savage peoples into the fold
and you slowly, you know, bring them up,
make them upright men,
and closer to being human than the state that they were in previously.
And the whole narrative around that,
it's what has as it has evolved with time led to the situation the bit in now.
Yeah.
And there's this idea as well that even when there are these ruptures in normal,
that everything will go back to its right place.
But as I think people say, you know, history is a series of unprecedented things.
Yeah.
You know, and one of the unprecedented things in history that I wish people would realize is not ever going to come back,
is that sort of post-war economic boom, you know, that 1950 era growth and excess that has become the default
that many people are striving to return to when in reality, something like that is a historical
anomaly driven by artificially cheap and abundant energy.
Yeah.
You know, the normal people are talking about sometimes is just this fifth day to seven,
a year, fossil, if you will binge, a binge that we are reaching the end of, and I think a fantasy
to believe that we can replicate for all the time. Right. Yeah, but it's the time that so much of the,
like, the world that we exist in was created, right? And like, people almost see themselves as,
like, a different species from human beings in the 19th century, right? Yeah. They can't conceive
of society that way. Exactly. Exactly.
And it's something that I've been dwelling on because, like, what a time to be alive to see, you know, personal cars being so ubiquitous.
But the ubiquity of personal cars is an aberration, it's a historical aberration.
It's not one that is likely to be sustainable in the long term.
You know, even if there are electric cars taking a place of gas-powered vehicles and we run out of gas oil,
even the materials necessary to produce electric cars are not always going to be around.
they're not always going to exist.
We can't supplement each and every individual person
with a car for all of time, you know?
Yeah.
So many of the rare earth minerals that are, again, quite rare,
we've spent them on things that may serve
a novelty or an interest in the short term,
but it's not something that we can maintain forever.
You know, I hear people talking about this EI bubble,
you know, and it is in the sense,
of the financial markets, the financial aspect of AI and how it's affecting our perception
of the economy and whether that bubble is going to boost economically.
But I'm more interested in the AI bubble in the sense that how long can this AI everywhere
thing persist when the material is necessary to maintain it because it is material,
despite the sort of cloud marketing that gets associated with it,
how long until we run out of those materials?
until those material needs cannot be sustained.
Yeah, we keep shifting, not like the goalposts, but like the terrain, right?
Like, you know, we're, okay, well, we've run out of fossil fuels, so that's fine, we'll do electric.
Okay, we'll, you know, the electric actually relies on rare earth.
Well, that's fine, we'll find a different thing to make batteries out of it,
rather than acknowledging that, like, we've created a system.
Or we'll just go to space.
Yeah, yeah, and trash another planet for another few hundred years.
you know, when you're driving your truck
and you have a lot of stuff in it
and it's hitting the end of the rev counter
you know, like you're trying to pass someone
and it's bouncing, it's in the red zone.
Like we've been running in the red zone.
Certainly for most of this century,
you know, since the Industrial Revolution
or certainly since the end of the Second World War
and like sustainability is a phrase
that's been co-opted, but like,
it's just not possible to keep doing it.
Yeah. I mean,
it's really an anomaly
a blip in our timeline, I would say.
And I think ruptures
in that normalcy, like the rupture we're experiencing now,
provides an opportunity for us to, you know,
take an exit ramp to kind of control the transition
to control our descent.
But instead, you know, it seems like we were just rapidly moving
towards the more forceful transition.
The transition made so by the laws of physics.
And that transition, I don't think,
will be nearly as pleasant as it could be.
You know, that's why a lot of people call it collapse.
And that transition is being delayed currently.
both the collapse of the material resources and also the collapse of the financial economic system.
That stuff has been delayed by rent-seeking, by new frontiers of exploitation, by ramping up theft
in parts of the world that were not as pillaged as other parts of the world,
or ramping up surveillance and violence to make it harder to resist.
But eventually it's going to hit, you know.
And I hate that it makes me sound like a second coming of Jesus conspiracist.
or something like that, just like, oh, yeah, it's coming, it's coming.
You know, like, like, like I'm a prophet screaming into the, into the streets.
But, you know, it may not be some kind of prophesied end times, but we are approaching that point,
you know, where that sort of narrative of economic growth, going back to normal, you know,
there's this big group project of making the rich richer because that rise in tide will lift
all boats, you know, this story that,
Everybody wins, that nobody will have to lose anything because the pie will just keep getting bigger.
It has to come to an end.
It's amazing how long it's lasted, right?
Like, certain group of society has been able to make the rest of society believe that the pie will just keep getting bigger.
When the pie has got smaller for most people, you know, certainly for the last few decades.
But arguably, you know, like lives have become worse for us since the Industrial Revolution in some ways, right?
Exactly. And, you know, people will point to improvements in health and sanitation. Sure. You can have improvements in health and sanitation without all this other baggage, though. Yeah. You know, or you can have improvements in literacy without literally poisoning our freshwater and bleaching our oceans and killing off biodiversity by the millions of species.
Yeah. It's not a, uh,
like a package deal, right?
Like, we can have vaccination against diseases
without having superfund sites.
We didn't need one to make the other.
It's not a like this way or the dark ages.
Exactly, exactly.
For example, all London had to do,
I mean, I'm oversimplified,
but all London had to do was stop dumping their sewage in the Thames.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, like it's a remarkable,
it's not that hard.
But like, just look at the disposal of hazardous waste.
And the way that rather than being like,
huh, maybe we should stop making waste
that will be hazardous for centuries
for the better part of 100 years,
we've just been finding somewhere else to put it.
Yeah, just keep dumping it.
Yeah.
Even as a child, I was like,
what were we supposed to do with all these mountains are garbage?
Like, are we just going to keep on pile
and it's up until we reach the moon.
Yeah, it's like in San Diego.
They used to dump it in the bay.
There's a whole part of our bay,
which used to be a landfill site.
And like I like to free dive.
Sometimes I would just be practicing
or diving in the bay or whatever.
And like you'll dive down and be like,
the fuck is a barbecue grill doing
on the bottom of the ocean.
And people just continue to chuck shit into the bay, right?
Like even though we have another landfill,
what we put it now.
No, but you see, James,
it's like that barbecue grill was $7 on T-Moo.
Yeah, yeah, right.
You can't pass up that deal, you know?
Yeah, and then when it turns out to be absolute crap,
it will be on our planet for longer than any of us.
But we've created a system where there's no disincentive
to buy a T-Mu barbecue grill, use it once,
and then throw it into the bay.
And like, we can't see that that's a problem.
Yeah, yeah.
Because of how the system is set up,
You don't have to think about, wait a second, why is the barbecue grill $7?
You know, who is suffering so that this barbecue grill is $7?
Yeah, right, because we're so detached from that, right?
Like, despite being so connected, we're also so far away from the people who
their misery as a consequence of our consumption or of the system which makes our consumption
the way it is.
Exactly.
And, you know, instead of thinking about how we can make society resilient, how we can
reasonably and ethically
and with consideration for seven generations
use the resources that we have
and without endless throughput
all the years continue to chase growth
they continue to chase progress
perpetually like a cancer
yeah you know and everybody's seeing the consequences
at this point the work situation is getting worse
because these platforms
these employers are finding ways to game the labor laws
you know, we're seeing shrinking margins in certain sectors
because when you rely on growth,
when that growth comes to an end,
there's nowhere else to grow,
you have to squeeze what there is.
What's the phrase, squeeze blood out of a stone?
Yeah.
You know, you have to force overwork,
you have to inshittify existing services
so that you can extract more subscriptions,
more payments, more upgrades,
or whatever the case may be.
The livability of entire cities
has been wiped out,
because, you know, we have Airbnb and private companies
howling out something as basic as housing for all.
And so the pressures to keep the whole machine running
just outweighs any long-term considerations.
But like I keep saying,
this normal was never sustainable.
I will say, though, when we criticize the system,
when we call it out and we talk about how these leaders
are pushing things in a certain direction,
They are, but at the same time, it's easy to fall into this notion that they are manipulating the whole thing.
You know, that they manage the system in its entirety.
It's tempting to see the system as coherent, you know, to act like it's all piloted by one individual or group.
Yeah.
As some wise or malevolent parental figure.
And, you know, these institutions, they all rely to very,
degree under the appearance of competence, right?
But I think what recent times has revealed is that things are a lot messier than that,
that political leaders know that they don't know, but won't admit that they don't know,
or they don't know that they don't know.
And in either case, they are pretending or believing that they have this grip on things,
that they can anticipate and smooth out of shocks to the sister.
You know, there are those who think that if they share the honest truth,
that they could trigger panic into populace.
So they think they're doing something, you know, brave and benevolent by not giving people
all the information they need.
And worse yet, they fear that by sharing all the information that's needed to make accurate
decisions, that they might lose investments, they might lose investors, you know, that the economy
will take a hit as result.
Yeah.
That's why you have situations where, like, when they,
the Texas grid field in 2021, that the officials were insisting that it was stable.
Yeah.
Until it wasn't, you know?
Or for the years that UK has its water, its water infrastructure is used.
It continues to claim that things under control and sewage was still getting into people's reverse.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah, or like I think a lot about Flint, Michigan, where the water that people have to
drink to survive is killing them.
And this has been happening.
We've known about it for a decade.
And there have been a series of politicians from both parties
who have just been like, yeah, no, don't worry,
we've got this covered.
And we fundamentally have not got this covered, right?
But the machine is moving so fast and no one person can stop and turn it around
because the machine all just bulldoze them.
Yep.
It's not as steady as stable as it puts forward.
You know, in fact, that that whole image of the system as coherent as steady as stable,
I think it also serves to keep us from defying it.
Yeah.
You know, because we get this sense that, yeah, this is this like this, this behemoth,
this all-powerful, lovecraftian entity that us, mayor, individuals can't truly challenge.
Yeah.
When there are things that we can do directly to throw, you know, spokes in the wheel, if that's the expression.
No, it's something in the spokes.
Yeah, it's Spanner,
stick in the spokes, maybe.
Right, yeah, sure, let's go with that.
Would you say there was, like, a particular moment
when you realized that nobody actually knew what they were doing, though?
Yeah, I'm trying to think if it was, like, a momental recognition for me
or, like, a sort of gradual one, you know?
I think a few of the times, like, you see it a lot when you travel more, right?
Because the perception that, like, we are helping here, we've got this under control.
I think with immigration is a great example, actually, right?
Like, so I've obviously spent a lot of time with immigrants.
I think you see this.
I remember in 2018, we had the migrant caravan, right?
Like, there have been many migrant caravans.
This one was just coincided with the midterm in a way that allowed it to become, like, a political football.
And the American government is like, we are stopping them at the border so we can check if everyone's okay.
And the government in Mexico is like, well, we are taking care of them.
And you get there and you're like, fuck.
Like, these people haven't had water today.
And at that point, you know, I was already sort of predisposed to thinking that perhaps the state didn't have all the answers.
And to be clear, that Mexican states a lot more than the U.S. state in this instance and provided these people with a place to be, which it would have been much worse if they hadn't had that.
But, like, it was just this realization I was with a few friends.
all of us happened at the time to be full-time bicycle people.
So we didn't have jobs that needed us to be like in a place at 9 a.m.
So that realization that like if these people are going to get water today,
it's going to be because we go to Costco and buy all the water bottles.
And then we ride back whilst slowly destroying the suspension of this pickup truck
because we've got so much weight in it and give them out.
like because no one else is going to.
Right.
Like there's this whole world of NGOs and governments and states and like,
it didn't matter, right?
There's people still and have water.
Yeah.
There's a lot of room for direct actions too.
Yeah.
And the part was that being not as competent as they may at first glance appear.
In other words, if they say they have everything under control, don't believe them.
Yeah.
I think also that instability within the system is part of it.
You know, it's part of how it works.
It's part of what's necessary for it to keep going.
The competitive churn of the capitalist markets, the shifts of industries that, you know,
uproop people's lives, just part of how the system operates, you know, the booms and busts and real estate.
They all are ways for the powers that be to expand.
their wealth in some ways, expand their reach in certain territories.
And people, for most part, just go along with it.
You know, daily life is complex as it is without having to grapple with the full scale of
all the global issues.
You know, the following the leader, just going along with what they say, it does give
you some psychological breathing room.
You know, it's hard to grapple the existential threats that we face.
I don't have time, too, in many cases.
Right.
especially when you have an administrative strategy that involves flooding the zone with so much mess,
with so much drama with so many different controversies and lies and incidents,
that it feels like the best thing to do is just through your hands up and give up.
And then I'm speaking both from the perspective of what I'm observing in the United Government
and what I'm observing in the American government.
But I see this attitude of arrogance, callousness, and corruption.
It's like, they're not even trying to maintain a veneer of legitimacy or intelligence or anything like that.
Studies go through the motions to provide the things that it claims it's necessary to provide.
You know?
but they're feeling at even that
and they're so cocky
about it. They're so
careless about it too. They're
smiling in your face and lying to you.
Yeah. People
do see what's happening and they respond in a couple
different ways. You know, they
panic, of course,
or they fall into
conspiracies or they
deny that there is an actual
problem. They
continue to insist that everything is normal,
that everything is fine. If they
double down, they hustle harder, they consume more, they carry on as if nothing's wrong.
And there are those who see that something's wrong, but they see everybody else carrying
on as if everything is fine. And so they go along as well, you know? Or there are people, of course,
who disengage, who are burnt out, who are numb, who are just drifting or going through the
motions. But only a portion have turned to challenge the concept of normal itself.
whether it is that they're experimenting with simpler living,
developing some program for survival, some strategy,
either for themselves, for their household, or for their community,
engage in mutual support.
And of course, this is only a portion of the population
because many of us like fish in water, you know,
we can't really recognize the socioeconomic structure that we are within.
It's hard to recognize what you are immersed in.
as a thing itself.
And so you really in seeing and reading about alternatives,
they could get a glimpse of this normal Cian question to realize the system is natural or inevitable.
There's an aberration destined to decline no matter how much we want to believe otherwise.
But this script of working, consuming,
carrering, accumulating property, and all is a normal that is actually kind of weird.
You know, like it's strange that an entire society is dependent upon globe-spanning supply chains,
volatile markets, and oriented entirely around the quarterly earnings of elites.
You know, it's strange that whiteness, maleness, cis-heteroness,
ableness, are treated as the default, the starter kit,
even though only a fraction of humanity fits in any one of those molds,
let alone the combination of all of them.
You know, it's strange that normal is so narrowly conformist.
with those who don't conform a marginalised.
It's strange that normal means an illusion of independence,
the disguises the webs you will always rely on,
that you can claim to be independent and say,
yeah, well, I just bought that $7 grill off T-moon
and not think about the well of relationships
that brought that $7 T-moon grill to your doorstep
and eventually to the landfill.
You get to feel self-sufficient,
while the system hides the labour, the ecosystems, logistics,
and the people who are holding up.
I'm just thinking now about people whose whole thing is being like homesteaders,
but their homesteading gets in itself a performance for the global supply,
or the global market for distracting or entertainment or whatever you want to call it, right?
And they do not exist outside of those supply chains.
Like they are doing this performance of, of, like, independence because they are so codependent, right?
Like, they exist to generate, like, revenue or affiliate links or however influences make money, sponsorships.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, you're talking about the influencers, yeah.
Yeah, like, there's a guy who I remember, like, a year ago, because I'm, like, I don't know, broken inside, I got into an argument with someone on X.com.
Oh, no.
Yeah, this guy was like posing as a homesteader.
And like, you know, I grew up on a farm, right?
Like, I've spent lots of my life around, like, domestic animals and around domestic.
Like, I know how to fix things.
I know what tools look like when you use them.
And like, this guy was very clearly just posing a series of photos.
It just really, like, I don't know why that particularly threw me for a loop, right?
But like, the idea that this guy is performing independent.
for a system he himself is reinforcing.
It was just such a strange thing to understand.
Yeah, a system he's dependent on.
Yeah, exactly.
A system he's entirely dependent on, like, more so than most of us even, right?
Like, he makes nothing other than photographs that people look at it on their phones.
He makes no tangible product.
Like, at least if you're a...
Right.
You know, you can be a cabinet maker, right?
Yeah, you install kitchens for rich people, but you know how to make things with your hands.
this guy just gets a
saw that looks like it hadn't been used
since the Edwardian era and stands around for photos next to a log
in the same breath I guess that I condemn that
I feel like the way that we deal with the end of this
is the same way that we help each other get through
the middle of this and the collapse of it right
like I've seen people do mutual aid
with such scarce resources
and manage to make such amazing things,
like both in terms of physical objects
and in terms of like these beautiful things we do for each other,
we're so little.
And like the ingenuity that's still there,
it's not like people have forgotten how to exist without Timu, right?
But we just haven't created a way, a situation where we have to.
And in mutual aid spaces, I sometimes feel like
we already have the solution to this,
which is to depend on and care for each other.
It's just that we need that to be the way we do everything,
not just some stuff.
Exactly. Exactly.
You know, the whole homesteading fantasy is this very comforting illusion
and fiction, in my view,
because if we're talking about going back to the land,
People who live on the land, who live off of the land, they did so in community.
Yeah.
You know, very, very, very rarely did someone live entirely by themselves without contact
than anyone else.
Because you can't be an axe maker and a carpenter and a cook and a, you know, a farmer
and a herder and all these different things, all of these different roles, a medicine maker,
all these different things at the same time.
That is why we as a species have survived.
and succeeded because we are able to share our skills with others and, you know,
collectively accomplish more than the sum of our parts.
Yeah, it's a fantasy.
I was recently in a place called Chaco Canyon.
I don't know if you've, if you're familiar with Chaco Canyon at all.
No.
But there's this idea, I think, that, like, pre the arrival of capitalism, that's how
indigenous people lived.
And it's just not.
like, you know, this was a large thriving community.
I'm interested in Chaco Canyon because I'm interested in what you're talking about,
like a society which consumed at an unsustainable level and then collapsed and what came out of it.
But what came out of it is what kept the working class people in that society alive throughout it,
which is helping each other, right?
Like, yeah, sure, people had these little plots where they grew grain,
but also, like, by doing their ceremonies, by coming together in community,
they had something which could sustain them
even when the economic reality
completely changed for them
and it's like it's that part that people forget right
they think they can
yeah they think they can grow
their own food yeah you can
but when you need a plow what are you going to do
you're going to buy a forge on Timo
you know like it's so detached from
the way anyone has ever lived
yeah
it is and it kind of
at last.
And me personally, I would rather not wait until supply chains break down completely and
storms wipe the slate and blackouts, cut all communication and I would rather wait for
those things to create and sustain those networks of dependence, networks of interdependence.
There's local networks of aid and cultural practice and meeting of mutual needs.
There's a saying that the sort of hustle bros would say that your network is your net worth.
And to that I must concur.
You know, the community support and the shared resources are going to matter a lot more than your personal purchasing power.
Being part of something is emotionally easier than carrying everything alone.
They matter now and they'll matter even more in the future as crisis makes the invisible all too visible.
the normal that we remember is an illusion
but once you've seen it you cannot unsee
and I think the departure from normal
is an opportunity or chance to make something better
to be adaptable to the shocks that come
with courage and with clarity
and I hope that this conversation is able to put
towards what I'm sure that I'm not alone in feeling
that's all for me today
all power to all the people
Peace.
Canadian women are looking for more.
More into 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 and IHeart Radio,
or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Welcome to the A building.
I'm Hans Charles.
I'm Inalick 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'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 I-Heart Radio app.
podcast or whatever you get your podcasts.
I'm Bowen-Yin. And I'm Matt Rogers. During this season of the Two Guys Five Rings
podcast, in the lead-up to the Milan Quartina-26 Winter Olympic Games, we've been joined by
some of our friends. Hi, Boen, hi, Matt, hey, Elmo. Hey, Matt, hey, Bowen. Hi, Cookie.
Now, the Winter Olympic Games are underway, and we are in Italy to give you experiences
from our hearts to your ears. Listen to two guys, by the
Rings on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Brandon Kyle Goodman, the host of the Tell Me Something Messy Podcast.
I wanted to create a safe, comfy place for all of us to talk about sex, relationships,
and what it means to be human.
And baby, my fantastic guests are bringing their mess to share with the class.
Like singer-songwriter Duran Bernard,
suggesting we reinstate adult sleepovers with friends.
Here's the thing.
Get a group that's mature enough not to be putting your hands.
in warm water and tickling you.
You know what I'm saying?
I mean, granted, I might be doing it.
But you know, like, and I think it's important for those examples of that,
of us just being gentle with one another because the world and the people in it already
finding brand new ways to whip eye as everything.
100%.
The day.
100%.
So the least we could do is make strides to handle each other in a way that is a bit more
mind.
Yeah, with that's with care and a bit more mindful.
Listen to Tell Me Something Messy on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Hi, friends, and welcome to the show. It's me, James, today. And I'm very lucky to be joined by Sam Hamilton, who is the senior litigation staff attorney at Asian Americans Advancing Justice Atlanta. Hi, Sam. Hi, James. Thanks for having me.
Yeah, thanks for joining us. And we are gathered here today to talk about the new proposal.
that DHS has to detain people in literal warehouses, right?
If people aren't familiar, maybe you could start out by explaining what those proposals are
and how they specifically relate to the areas where you're organizing in Atlanta.
Sure.
So around December of 2025, a journalist leaked a list of about 20 different cities across the country
where ICE was intending to open new detention facilities in warehouses specifically.
And this list contained the names of the cities and the expected or projected occupancy of each of these facilities.
And so I live here in Atlanta, Georgia, and there were two cities on that list with warehouses.
contemplated. One is located in the city of Flowery Branch, where the warehouse there is intended to
detain up to 1,500 people, and the other is in the city of Social Circle, Georgia, where ICE
intends to use a warehouse that is over 1 million square feet to detain about 8,500 people.
That's vast. Like, I think that...
This would dwarf the capacity of any, like, I'm trying to think if there are maybe prisons
sort of bigger than that. I don't know, but like in immigration terms, I don't think there
is anything. Yeah, I mean, you know, so for the last four years or so, I've worked with,
I've worked on various different shutdown ice campaigns here in Georgia. And for the last four years,
I've been working with the campaign to shut down the Folkston Ice Processing Center, which is a nice
facility in South Georgia, pretty close to Florida, but it's about a five-hour drive from Atlanta.
And that ended up expanding last summer, but the number of beds at that facility was projected
to be around 3,000. And at the time, that was going to be the largest ice detention facility
in the country. So to jump from 3,000 to 8,500 is, yeah, it's massive, obviously.
Yeah. I mean, people want it, like, it's not fascism and if it comes from the fasci-eurorean area of Italy, right? Otherwise, it's, like, sparkling authoritarianism or whatever. But, like, unless you're looking for, like, a gate with Arbeck-marked-Fri on it or whatever, like, these are concentration camps. Like, that is what this is. I was really interesting. In 2023, we had outdoor detention under the Biden administration. And, like, we didn't really have much coverage from the U.S.
media when we were participating in mutual aid there. But we'd had a lot from non-US media,
like folks from Japan and Singapore and Italy. And they'd just come and be like, oh yeah,
this is a concentration camp. And then they'd write the story and be like, oh, these are
concentration camps. And like, I would never have got that passed an editor in L.A. or New York.
To them, it seems so self-evident. Now, we're just doing it on an even bigger scale, I guess.
It's terrible. It's shit. So I know you've been organizing, in,
social circle specifically, right, or part of an organizing group, I should say, that's been
opposing this detention center. So I think it'll be really instructive to people, because these are
all going to be all over the country. And this won't be the only expansion of immigration detention
we see in the next few years, I imagine, given the massive budget and the priorities of the
administration. Can you explain a little bit about, like, how that campaign got started and then
the nuts and bolts of how this is being opposed? Yeah. So before I get into that, I think providing
some context on who the social circle community is, you know, would be instructive. So it's a pretty
small, it's a very small city. It's got a population of about 5,000 people, overwhelmingly Republican,
overwhelmingly white, and pretty wealthy. Okay. And it's about an hour drive outside of Atlanta.
and in December of 2025, a news article was published in the Washington Post announcing, you know, the list of the 20 cities where these warehouses would be popping up.
And it was that article that told the residents of Social Circle and the elected officials of Social Circle for the first time that this ICE mega prison was coming to their community.
there was no notice to the city by ICE or anyone in the federal government at all.
Certainly no opportunity to respond, no opportunity for public input.
Yeah.
So they felt really blindsided.
Yeah.
And I'm not from this community.
And, you know, I've met many of these people only for the first time, you know, within the last couple months.
But I think it would not be so far-fetched to say that some of these people feel, you know, especially the ones,
who identify as Republicans or as, you know, conservatives, I think they feel really betrayed
by, you know, by their government, by their party.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so, you know, a lot of these people, I mean, I've just described the demographic.
I think many of them have never been involved in organizing of any kind before.
Some of them have, I think, but I think due to, you know, their life circumstances just
might not have found themselves in a place where they've needed to organize.
for anything.
Yeah.
So a bunch of these residents got together and have been holding, you know, in-person kind
of town hall community meetings.
And they held one in January where they were about, you know, I think 40 to 50 people
in the room and they wanted to get together and, you know, just have a public discourse
about what could be done.
Yeah.
And I was invited to this meeting.
because of my history of involvement with shutdown campaigns here in Georgia,
I got started with shutdown campaigns in 2020.
Okay.
When a nurse, a whistleblower who worked at an immigration detention center here in Georgia
called the Irwin County Detention Center,
alerted the public that there was a doctor who was contracting with ICE,
who had been providing medical services to women,
detained in this facility. Well, he had actually been performing non-consensual and medically
unnecessary medical and gynecological procedures on women in ICE detention.
I remember this year. Yeah. And when these women spoke out about it to their family members,
to journalists, to their lawyers, to members of Congress, or staffers for members of Congress,
they were retaliated against by being swiftly deported. And I'm talking put on planes within hours
of speaking to a congressional staffer.
And at the time, I was working at the University of Georgia School of Law's First Amendment Clinic,
where we were providing, you know, free legal services to people across the state,
including, you know, helping people with getting access to public records and suing the police
and, you know, and federal agents when they were retaliated against.
And so we represented those women.
And it was through my work.
work at Irwin and, you know, connecting with the organizers there that I got involved with
shutdown campaigns, or rather the shutdown Irwin campaign here in Georgia. And then from there,
later got involved with the shutdown folks in campaign. So I had been asked to speak to this
group of people who I think were new to the immigrants' rights struggle to talk about, you know,
what it's like to try to prevent a detention center from popping up in their community.
And like you say, like it's not a community that might traditionally be demographics,
graphically the same as the people who we associate with, like, migrant advocacy, migrant activism.
I guess when a group like that comes into a moment like this, I mean, there are some areas
of, like, activism, I guess, civil society stuff where, like, white suburban folks have
some experience, right? Planning is one of them, right? Like, the reason bike planes only go north,
South in San Diego is because they think that those of us who can't afford to live by the sea
don't deserve to cycle safely.
Like, there are many other examples of this.
But what were their like thoughts when they, when they first met?
I'm really interested to know they're like, they're obviously upset and they feel abandoned
and betrayed.
But like, how did they want to organize to prevent this?
Well, a lot of them were upset about the decrease in their property value.
that was what was really bringing them.
Yeah, that was the radicalizing moment.
Same with the bike lanes, actually.
Oh, yeah, I bet.
And, you know, but in addition to the property value stuff,
it's also, you know, the strain that this would impose on their small community.
I mean, you know, a number of the people who live there might be of, you know,
well-to-do means, but, you know, their city police department employs a total of 14 officers
and they have two on duty at any given time.
They have a fire department of, you know, comparably, you know, small size.
And they have, you know, water and sewer infrastructure that was built to accommodate about as many people as live there now, you know, between 4,000 and 5,000 people.
Yeah.
And it's that impact that is also, you know, really maddening and activating and agitating to.
people. Those arguments are not new to us who have organized in South Georgia, in also very
red areas, a lot more rural and a lot less wealthy. Yeah. You know, we'll try to, we've canvassed door
to door in the city of Folkston to try to ask people, how do they feel about this mega prison
opening up in their community? And a lot of people, you know, we're against it, despite the fact
government officials might try to bill it as, you know, an economic boon, you know, an employment
opportunity. A lot of people said, like, hey, I mean, I don't necessarily want a prison in my backyard,
but if it's bringing jobs, then, you know, that's what this community needs. That's something that I think
makes social circle distinct from the previous shutdown campaigns I've worked on in Irwin County
and in Fokston is that this isn't really an area that is starved for employment or starved for,
you know, economic support. Like, these people are doing okay. And, you know, another thing that
makes it distinct is before all of this warehouse business, the vast majority of facilities in this
country are formed through intergovernmental service agreements, you know, or IGSAs, for short,
is the acronym, but there are agreements between the federal government and the county,
the local government, where the local government says, yes, you can use our land or our facilities,
and in exchange, you pay us, I mean, in the case of Focston, it's a comparably measly amount.
It's only $200,000 per year.
Jesus, no much, yeah.
Even though the federal government is giving, I mean, $50 million a year to insert your favorite
prison corporation here, you know, whether it's court, of course,
civic or geo group. Yeah, I mean, your favorite. There are only two, really. Yeah, yeah, yeah, not much of a choice.
Yeah, yeah. And so typically, like, we see this sort of, like, co-opting and manipulation of the local
community and the local government by the federal government, you know, coercing them economically to,
you know, to take on these detention centers or else. But here, I mean, social, like I said,
social circle is doing fine. They're not starved for economic investment. Yeah. And I said, you know,
consult them at all. It really just like, you know, in the dead of night, just bought this warehouse
from a private company and pushed this deal through. So those are some aspects that I think
might throw, you know, some of us who might have been involved in these similar fights before,
like for a loop a little bit because, yeah, there's this assumption, I think, by some of the local
officials that the Supremacy Clause governs here and the federal government can do whatever it
wants. So there's no point in us trying to use our local zoning ordinances or what have
you to try to put a stop to this because there's nothing that we can do. Right.
Is at least what, you know, some people might be saying. Yeah. Let's take a break for advertisements.
I can't think of anything mean to say. I don't know, buy some shit. This has come from a,
don't, don't buy anything you don't need. Okay. We are back. So you were talking about
this assumption that like the supremacy clause would mean that the uh the federal government could
build a mega prison in a warehouse in your town without asking you if it could do that first.
Can you explain like how people are able to use like you said like various local tools to oppose this?
Like you said, it's a huge burden.
Like when I first read this story, I remember thinking about like just like the water and
sewage demands of housing 8,000 people.
would be crippling for the infrastructure in a lot of places.
So how are people opposing this?
Well, it's been really inspiring for me to see these local leaders,
who again, many of whom have never been involved in activism or organizing before.
They've been very consistent in holding demonstrations on a weekly basis
at the site of this facility and have garnered the attention of different.
media who have come and interviewed them. So that's been one way that they've been trying to,
you know, get their message out there. I was just talking about, you know, the residents who are
concerned from, you know, sort of fiscal perspective and are concerned about, you know, their own
property values and things like that. But there are a fair number of people who are concerned about,
you know, the core human rights abuses. And, you know, sure, some of the lines might be, well,
this isn't the right place.
Right.
You know, our city is not the right place for a detention center suggesting, you know,
implying that there are some places that are suitable for a detention center.
But there are a fair number of people in this community who are opposed to detention centers
in general.
I mean, they see that they see the violence that ICE is inflicting in broad daylight on public streets.
And I think they're horrified.
And they don't want to be complete.
in something like that, you know, coming to their community. And I do think that along the way
I'm seeing more of a shift in, in the consciousness, or at least an openness to understanding
the different influences that bring us to the same table. That's cool. Yeah, it is. It has been
very cool. Yeah. And we can agree that, you know, we're not going to have 100%
unity of ideas, but we can have a unity of action.
Yeah.
And, you know, we can save these debates on, you know, I mean, whether someone is illegal or not.
Yeah.
But, you know, we can continue to have them along the way as we are also identifying the very
concrete ways that we can work together.
And I'm thinking of one, for example.
I work pretty closely with some staffers for different members of Congress.
I mean, in terms of like uplifting, you know, human rights and civil rights abuses that we see in detention center,
because as part of my job, I go inside detention centers, immigration detention centers in Georgia pretty frequently.
Also federal prisons.
Okay.
And we'll meet with people and learn about the conditions that they're facing and will, you know, fight for them to get released and also share what I learn from them with, you know, different members of, of, of,
Congress. And most of our connections are with people who are aligned with the Democratic Party.
You know, I mean, to be, to be frank, you know, I've never initiated correspondence with a Republican,
but I think I kind of just assumed that they wouldn't want to. Yeah, yeah. That I wouldn't get
anywhere with them or that they wouldn't, you know, that they wouldn't talk to me. But what's been
effective in working with this coalition of residents is some of these people, I mean, yeah, like they,
I, you know, they've been card-carrying Republicans for a long time and feel that they, you know, can wield influence over, you know, certain Republican elected officials.
And one of them, you know, I mean, well, I don't know how many of them, but, but a number of these local residents have gotten Republican, you know, Mike Collins to come out against this ice facility.
Yeah, that's especially right now in the Republican Party.
and like that could be very difficult for them to do.
I sort of want not hugely sympathetic to Republican politicians
and I would still like to see them get better.
Like, we want people to get better.
That's the whole thing.
And like I think for these people whose politics may not be the same as ours,
sharing the space, sharing the movement,
showing the struggle, like I hope it makes people better.
I hope being exposed to people who are not of the same.
as you, be it like class-rise, race-wise, politics-wise, whatever, like, makes people realize that
things are not quite how they're presented to them on the television or in the media they consume.
Totally.
So I'm sure that's, yeah, like, I hope that is positive.
What can, like, local government do or even, like, elected officials do, given that
elect officials on a federal level do, given that, I mean, ICE just appears to be operating, like,
without a great deal of oversight right now.
Yeah, I mean, with each of these warehouses,
there are different circumstances around each of them.
I've been really inspired, honestly,
by the folks in Maryland who are dealing with a warehouse,
maybe multiple warehouses, I'm not sure.
Yeah, I can't remember.
Where, you know, at both the local and the state level,
they have really pushed for legislation
that would effectively, yeah, I mean, prevent these warehouses from existing at all.
It is a different set of facts than what we're working with here in Georgia
because there's more involvement by private actors.
And so the government, you know, the local government can regulate them more.
But Maryland is certainly not the only place where those fights are happening.
And so I would really encourage folks to, yeah, to learn from Maryland.
And I get, you know, I'm talking about, you know, legislation.
I mean, I will be the first to tell you as a lawyer that I don't think legal tools will liberate us.
You know, the law will not make us free.
Sure.
Yeah.
And I do think it's it's the people power.
It's the coming together.
It's the mass collective action that is, you know, that's what's going to do it.
And also there are multiple, you know, there are multiple tools.
multiple instruments that we can wield. And so right now, I mean, with respect to the social
circle warehouse, ICE is saying that they intend to detain people in there starting in April
in less than two months. Yeah. And so right now, the strategy truly is to use just like
every tool at our disposal. Yeah. Identifying, yeah, like, what legislation can be filed,
what litigation, you know, what lawsuits can be filed,
What, you know, demonstrations, what kind of, you know, canvassing, door knocking, you know, you name it.
Like, how can people come together? How can we try to identify which companies would be supplying the labor to turn this warehouse into something, you know, where people will be detained?
I mean, not that I think ICE gives a damn about making any type of facility habitable for.
humans. But there's going to be, there's going to be some work that needs to be done in order to,
you know, turn this, you know, would-be Amazon warehouse into a place for people. And is there work that,
you know, local organizers? Because they're organizers. We're all, you know, we're all organizers.
Is there work that local organizers can do to try to unite with laborers, with workers, with workers who,
you know, might be working on this facility to try to, like, prevent them.
Or, like, city workers.
Like, can they prevent city workers from, like, actually hooking up this warehouse to
the city utilities?
Right.
Yeah, yeah.
Presumably, yeah, that will be a building contractor, right?
Like, they will want to build thousands of cells in this giant, yeah, like, all of that
stuff.
And especially with it happening so quickly, like, you know, anything that delays that will
cause it to at least slow it down, I guess.
Yeah.
I think another angle that we haven't talked about yet is the environmental angle.
Like with Social Circle, you know, this is, I mean, a town of 5,000,
it's going to nearly triple the number of people in this place.
And, I mean, and also triple the amount of waste and sewage that's going to be coming out of this place.
I mean, so that's one thing, another thing for people.
to look at is, you know, what would the environmental impact of these warehouses be on local
waterways, for example? And that's what, you know, temporarily put a stop on the detention facility
in the Everglades in Florida was a legal challenge in federal court under NEPA, the National
Environmental Protection Act, because the federal government had failed to conduct the proper
environmental impact assessments. And the only thing that they actually,
actually really had to do was, you know, something very procedural and, you know,
tick a box and ultimately the facility ended up moving forward. But it was a tool to buy time
to figure out what other types of organizing can we do. Yeah. And it's still like,
even if it's only time, right, like harm isn't being done in that time and it's still a good thing.
Yeah. It means like a form of harm reduction. It reminds me a lot of the struggles here against
the newer, larger border wall that we've seen since 2015, 2016, when Trump got elected.
Like, I'm thinking about how there have been ecological challenges to it.
There have been social challenges to it, right?
The city of San Diego is currently trying to sue the Fed to trespass for part of its war construction,
which, like, I'm not a big fan of our city government, but, like, I'm glad they did that.
And all these different tools have at least, like, at least in the last Trump administration,
remember in the late summer of 2020 being out with some kumaya folks who were in ceremony
because the wall construction was destroying kumia ancestors who are buried there and then the
spaces where they are buried.
And they ran out the clock on the Trump administration, right?
By using their rights as indigenous people to be in ceremony, the refusal of the workers
to literally drive a dump truck through the middle of their.
ceremonial practices, they were able to run the clock out on the Trump administration.
Unfortunately, now we have another one, but like all those different things had to work together
to mean that, like, in that little part of the border, somebody's great, great grandparents'
remains weren't dynamited out of the earth.
And that's still a good thing.
Like, however we got there, that's a good thing.
Absolutely.
It makes me happy to hear that, like, even folks who might have otherwise been political,
aligned with this project were appalled by this.
Because the idea of literally warehousing humans, like, it's so fucking bleak.
Like, there's these big warehouses where we fill them with shit that we don't need.
And now they're filling them with people that apparently we don't want.
Like, it's one of the more horrific things.
I don't know.
It's so bleak to me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I agree.
Like, the veil has just been totally lifted.
Like, we know that they don't view immigrants as human.
Yeah.
But now they're like not even pretending anymore.
Just truly treating people like chattel.
Yeah.
Again.
Yeah, again, right?
In the same places in this instance.
I guess I'm glad that even people who are not politically on the same team maybe are opposed to this because it's, yeah, it's repugnant.
Yeah.
I guess what if people are hearing about this for the first time, right?
And we'll include that link to the article so people can look up.
where these locations are, if they're near them.
What advice would you have for people?
If you're listening to this, you click on that link,
you find this one half an hour from your house or whatever.
Like, what advice do you have for those people?
I think if you're already an organizer,
regardless of whether you've been in the immigrants' rights fight or not,
now is a time when it really is like all hands on deck.
So don't be afraid to get an,
involved, but also, you know, like we were talking about before we started, is, I think,
guarantee that there is some immigrants rights movement in your locale or somewhere close by.
And I think it's just so important to, you know, approach this work, not with the assumption that
you are starting, you know, launching this new campaign, spearheading this, you know,
new previously untapped, you know, area of work because I guarantee you that, you know,
there are people who have worked on this before. And so I think connect with, you know, connect
both with people who have been doing this work for a long time and also try to connect with
people who you might not otherwise have thought to connect with. And I think it's important
to call out the nimbism, the not in my backyardism of,
of how, you know, some people are coming at this issue because they're, you know,
they're worried about their property value. But it's also something that we can capitalize on,
right? It's energy and oftentimes it's people with capital and connections that, you know,
that you might not otherwise have had access to either. So I think, you know, the connecting,
you know, and the community organizing needs to go in multiple directions. But I do think it's
important to move. Yeah. It's important to move fast. Yeah, seriously. Like that is a very
constrained timeline. Like everybody has to be. But that means it's also important to move respectfully,
right? Because like if we just blow each other shit up, because yet people assume that
migrant communities have somehow not been advocating for themselves and each other for centuries,
then we're not going to have time to organize because we're going to be dealing with that shit.
And I've seen that so much just personally, right?
Like having been involved for some time in migrant advocacy and seeing folks like pop in and tell us how to do everything.
It's tires them.
I understand that you'll want to help.
But yeah, if this is something that like you're organizing around, it's super easy to find those organizations to be like, how can I help?
Yeah.
And it's also such a good, like this fight in particular is such a good.
is such a good vehicle for fighting for abolition overall.
As someone who's been saying abolish ice for years,
it is amazing to see how much traction that phrase has gotten,
especially over the last six months.
And we can't just be fighting against, you know,
preventing new ice facilities.
We need to be fighting for shutting down all ice facilities
and for abolishing ice as an institution.
we've been around before ICE and we will be around after ICE.
As, you know, as an agency, ICE has only been around since 2003.
Sure, there was a predecessor.
There was the INS, but, I mean, it didn't operate in nearly the type of way that ICE does now as this, you know, law enforcement agency.
And even before Trump, like, ICE was still a really, you know, horrible, like a horrible agency.
And so, yeah, I think it's important to continue to, you know, point these things out while also, you know, welcoming people into the fight and pushing them, pushing them farther.
Yeah, I think that's really, it's really important.
Like, I think we have to rebut the assumption that this is an aberration and we can fix it and go back to normal because normal was bad and you just couldn't see it because it wasn't on your screen.
right like children died in outdoor detention under Biden I saw people suffer immensely in
outdoor detention under Biden like we don't want to go back to that either and I think it's really
important that when we build these coalitions we build them with that in mind that like we're
organizing very quickly but also we're in this for the long haul until everybody's free
is there anything that you'd like to leave people with resources or a bit of advice
any like closing words you'd like to share with them
Abolish ice.
That's all I got.
Perfect.
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 IHeartRadio 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 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 IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Bowen-Yang.
And I'm Matt Rogers.
During this season of the Two Guys Five Rings podcast, in the lead-up to the Milan Quartina 2020-2016 Winter Olympic Games, we've been joined by some of our friends.
Hi, Bob, hi, Matt, hi, hi, Matt.
Hey, Elmo.
Hey, Matt, hey, Bowen.
Hi, Cookie.
Hi.
Now, the Winter Olympic Games are underway, and we are in England.
Italy to give you experiences from our hearts to your ears.
Listen to two guys, five rings on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Brandon Kyle Goodman, the host of the Tell Me Something Messy Podcast.
I wanted to create a safe, comfy place for all of us to talk about sex, relationships, and what it means to be human.
And baby, my fantastic guests are bringing their mess to share with the class.
Like singer-songwriter Duran Brunar suggesting we reinstate adult sleepovers,
with friends. Here's the thing. Get a group that's mature enough not to be putting your hand in warm
water and tickling you. You know what I'm saying? I mean, I mean, granted, I might be doing it. But you know,
like, and I think it's important for those examples of that, of us just being gentle with one another
because the world and the people in it already finding brand new ways to whip my ass everything.
One thousand percent. The day. So the least we could do is make strides to handle each other in a way that is
With care.
Yeah, that's with care and a bit more mindful.
Listen to tell me something messy on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
All right.
So, ladies and gentlemen, we're going to dive in, hood politics, and prop.
This is special for me.
We're calling this the art of Petty.
And the play on words you may or may not know is that Petty's actually my last name.
And like, like, literally government, it's my last name.
And as a child, it used to bother me as a grown-up.
I'm like, nah, that sounds about right.
So what made us start, first of all, was the bio says the writer of the Petty'sburg address.
Yeah.
That's one of the funniest things.
It makes me mad because it's my last name.
And I'm like, why did I not think of that?
Like, it's so brilliant.
Amanda Nelson, welcome to the show.
Thank you. Thank you so much. And thank you for appreciating my ridiculous Abraham Lincoln joke.
It's brilliant. I and super producer Ian separately came across your content, like at the same time.
I know when I first hit the follow within a day or two, Ian was like, have you heard of this person?
And he just sent me a link. I was like, dude, I just started off. And it's, and I think there's a kindred spirit in the sense of like, in history.
being actually not that difficult to grasp if you just speak like a regular ass human.
You know what I'm saying?
Yes.
And politics the same.
Like, you know, the premise of the whole show is that like, if you understand inner city living,
you understand politics.
Like, if you grew up in and around our streets, it's really not that different.
You know, even whether you was like a nerd, you know, running as fast as you can to the library,
you still knew I better not go down 7th Street because, like, you still know how this works,
you know what I'm saying, or whether you were completely outside, like, you know, stealing people's bikes.
Like, you get it, you know.
So what we appreciated about what you do is, is the accessibility of it.
So thank you.
Well, thank you.
That was the goal from the beginning, especially the, you know, on Mondays, I do a series called the whiteboard,
which is literally just a whiteboard with a bunch of stuff.
diky notes on it. Yeah.
Where I track congressional legislation as it moves its way through Congress or doesn't,
as is more often the case. Yeah. And that was one of the first things I started doing when I started
making content and people were so appreciative of it. In a way, I found surprising. I thought
people would find it nerdy and boring and silly. Yeah. But it's such a unnecessarily complicated
process and explaining it in ways that people can grasp. There's been a lot of appreciation for,
which I love. Yeah. Which leads me to the next question, which would be like, okay, so you're
formal training, you're upbringing. Like, I need to know.
the origin story of the nerdery. But before that, this is the week of the Super Bowl. So I'm just
wondering, as a Latina, who's not a Latina, who I just found out an hour ago is not a Latino,
have you recovered from Benito's performance? I am not a Latino. That is true. And I just,
when I was talking about it, when I was talking about it online about the, about Bad Bunny's
half-time show, I got so many people asking me, wait, you're not Latina.
So apparently I am presenting, which is nice.
Yes.
I have recovered because after the halftime show, I went to bed.
So I was in bed, but I like 9.30.
It was such a boring game.
Like, I'm not going to say to her much.
The game was trash.
Four hours of freaking field goals.
But then, of course, I went to bed and it got spiced up a little bit.
And then it became a game.
Right.
But it didn't matter.
Yeah.
So you're on the East Coast then?
I am.
I'm in Virginia.
Yep.
Yeah.
No, that's absolutely hilarious.
We are on the West Coast, to which the game starts at three.
p.m. But definitely my wife was like ready to go after that. My wife is a first-gen Latina and she was just like,
wait, there's more game? She's being silly, but yeah, do we have to stay? We're at my sister-in-law's
house. And she was just like, we're good unless you want to stay, you know. Since I'm a Cali native,
I'm like, I really don't care about either of these teams. And same. Yeah, and my, I mean,
down to my mitochondria, like, I cannot ever cheer for a New England team.
Yeah.
I can't just the Celtics, the Boston thing as an L.A. boy, I can't anybody remotely close to that.
I just can't cheer for.
I think I have like 2010's PTSD for having to constantly listen to the Patriots be in everything.
And so I have an ingrained bias.
Also, their owner's like a weird maga dude.
He's weird.
Yeah.
He's weird.
So, and Tom Brady is also weird.
Like, he's a weird guy.
Weird, man.
Did you see his roast?
Yes.
I would like, yeah, you weird, bro.
Like, you know, he is.
And I can't decide if, like,
Giselle leaving made him weirder
or if he was weird and she left because of that.
I can't figure it out.
I don't care that much.
I honestly, that's a good thought, man.
Like, because I've considered that a few times
because I'm like,
the level of competitive you have to be
to be someone like a Tom Brady,
like a Michael Jordan,
like Tony Hawk.
Like, you have to be insufferable.
with your will and drive
to be as good as you are.
And now my wife has a PhD in Ed Policy.
She's one of the most self-driven people I know.
Even with her just doctoral nerdiness,
there's a level of like, will you chill
about, you know, certain stuff?
But we're both like, we're both nerds.
You know what I'm saying?
We're both nerds in a lot of ways.
But like, I can imagine being married to someone
where you're just like,
can we talk about anything but this yes anything else yes the answer is no no yeah so okay so tell
me about okay formal training and upbringing like why are you like this why am i like this yes uh well i have a
history degree in undergraduate history word that i got how do i explain why i'm like this that's such
an interesting question so i was raised in south by very conservative white people okay and i did not
understand why I was kind of singled out a lot growing up.
Like, as we said at the beginning, I am not Latina.
My grandmother's from the Philippines.
And so that was like enough, like enough one-dropness to make all the white people around me.
Yeah, one-drop, but do you?
Yeah, like very weird.
And I didn't get it.
And as I grew up and I realized more about, I understood more about the South and about
Virginia specifically, which is the capital of the Confederacy and all that.
Yeah.
I got kind of obsessed with history.
Like, why are these people like this?
Yeah.
So I've always been into history.
I got a history degree, and then I became, you know, I could have actively,
once I got out of my parents' house, to be honest.
For sure.
And they're not conservative anymore.
But once I got out of my parents' house and discovered, like, a world of active,
I went to college, which is the case with so many kids who grew up in, you know,
the rural South.
I went to college, discovered activism and organizing and people with different opinions.
Yeah.
And I don't know, a whole world opened up for me and I got involved.
I've been politically involved ever since.
I've done all kinds of things.
I've volunteered for campaigns.
I've been a clinic escort.
Yeah.
an abortion clinic here in town, all kinds of different.
I've worked with the ACLU.
So I am like this, I suppose, because my family is strange.
I respect it.
Or maybe not strange, maybe just normal for where they're from.
Normal for where they are from.
No, I respect that.
In your defense, the Philippines, y'all are the black and Latinos of Asia.
Of the Asia.
Yes, yes, the Mexicans of the Pacific.
Yeah, you're the Mexicans and the black people.
That's what sucks about being, or what's great about being Filipino.
y'all get to be black and Latino and Asian.
It's not fair.
My step months from the Philippines,
so I have this affinity because raised by a Filipino woman.
Well, I was raised by a black woman and a Filipino woman.
Long story.
The point is that makes a lot of sense, dude.
That thing that radicalized you was,
I'm using radicalized as a stand-in word, but just exposure, right?
Like, that's super interesting to know that, like,
not even the awareness of,
because like you said, like you existed in this white space,
And you like, I don't understand why y'all.
Exactly.
Yeah.
What did I do?
What did I do?
It's like, because you're kind of not.
You're like, well, but yeah, I am, right?
Like, it was kind of kind of one of those scenarios or like, or did you kind of like,
I'm maybe putting a little more on.
Like you said, you weren't aware of your, you're presenting, but did you feel sort of
culturally that like I feel like I belong here?
Is that was, is that true?
Yeah.
I mean, I didn't understand.
I understood that I looked a little bit different than everybody around me.
Fine.
A little bit.
Not a time.
Like, I'm not, you know, I'm a quarter of a Filipino.
Like, it's not.
I understood that I looked a little bit different.
I did not understand why that mattered.
Word.
For a really long time.
And then, like, the older I got, the more it would be, like, I go out into school.
And the sort of racism that I would get would be when people mistook me for being Latina.
Or when people mistook me for being black.
That's when I would get, like, act, like, really bad.
Because where I'm from in Virginia Beach is the large.
just Filipino population on the East Coast.
Word. So, Filipinos being around,
people were kind of used to, but it was when people thought
that I was not just other, but a whole
other other, you know, than what they were
used to. And I didn't, I didn't understand.
Like, I was born into this household.
Like, I grew up with,
we've all watched the same fucking NASCAR races.
We eat the same food. Yeah, totally.
We listen to the, I have to listen to your stupid ass Rush Limbaugh.
So, like, why am I different?
It doesn't make sense to me.
That's so interesting.
I love that.
my undergrad was going to be history,
but it kind of switched to like intercultural studies.
I was just more interested,
a little more like sociology.
I majored in illustration because I wanted to do art
and the cultural studies and then did social science
for like grad school.
Mine was a little different in the sense that listeners know,
but like my father was a,
my father was a Black Panther, you know what I'm saying?
And you know, we grew up in the space.
And it wasn't sort of like, like you said,
like this like light bulb was not my experience.
My experience was like,
this is necessary for our survival.
Yeah.
And I think I was more thrown back because, which is, again, what I want to get to about, like,
kind of the way that you present this stuff is like, I feel like this information is available
for all of us.
Like, it didn't take a lot of digging for you to like, I feel like it was not really, I love
even you talking about your experience in like working in politics and organizing and
volunteering where it's like a lot of times we feel like the access to entry is much harder
than it actually is.
You could just go there.
Just go over there and just be like,
yo,
can I help?
And it's really like,
it really be that easy,
you know?
And people will be so happy to have you.
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
But yeah,
I just feel like,
especially your,
you're,
I'm jumping around,
but like your Trump's
L's for the week are like,
I mean,
it's right there.
Like,
you know what I'm saying?
Like,
he'd just be saying them.
I don't take a lot of work.
You know what I'm saying?
Like,
but obviously us has like,
you know,
having formal.
and research and back checking and double checks.
Like, you know, like having the formal training,
that definitely helps me, you know what I'm saying?
But besides that, sometimes I'd be like, well, this is just, I mean,
this is what he said he was going to do.
And then it didn't happen.
So I'm like, that's an L ain't it?
Like, I just don't, it don't be that hard.
Okay.
Now, the next question is about your sense of humor.
So, like, why are you so funny?
Like, what?
Why are you like that?
Because I mean.
I love it.
I'm mean to people you're not supposed to be mean to.
Like, you know, there's such a Americans, let me rephrase this,
white Americans have such an ingrained, like inherent respect for positions of authority like the president.
Like, how can you talk shit about the president?
You know, I don't care.
Because he trash.
Because he's garbage.
I don't give a shit.
I don't care.
Like he looks like the color of a rusted-down horse drop.
The fuck do I care.
Yeah.
So I have no problems being mean.
And I mean in ways that give people like permission to be.
a little, like, thrilled by it or a little delighted by it. And that provides, I think,
an entryway for people to learn a little bit of defiance. I love it. I don't know. America,
we're not, we're not great. Again, I should clarify, white America specifically, especially
my people. Yeah, I was like, oh, no, man, whatever really. Yeah, but anyway, well, yeah, you're right.
Yeah, like, the people that I speak to are a lot of, like, suburban moms, right? I'm a 41-year-old mom,
and they are not used to middle fingers up at all, especially, yeah, recently.
You know, like Biden got in office and everybody kind of fell asleep.
Yeah.
Back to brunch.
Yeah.
And the Democratic Party, white people fell asleep.
So being mean and just pulling out some claws, it's both like funny and fun for me,
but it's also strategic because I do want there to be, I want to present a permission
structure for people to start learning to have a bit more backbone.
I love that.
I love that.
I love that, like you said, the term you use is permission.
And that's what I enjoyed.
I think that, yeah, like knowing that like you're from the South and that like adds even more
of a.
a color to what's happening here.
It makes me like it even more.
Yeah, I don't have no second thoughts
about dragging a public figure, a politician.
Like, I don't have no second thoughts about it.
Because again, like, you asked for this.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, you signed up for this.
You said you was going to be this.
Like, all right, I'm about to get real black.
But like, there's parts of me that's just like,
okay, are you a bitch-ass nigga?
You know what I'm saying?
Like, and I'm like, there are ways for me to be able to know
if you are. You presented yourself
like you're a real one. And I'm like,
okay, well, there's qualifying
entry points
for me to do that. You know what I'm saying? Like, we learn
I'll respect, in our culture, you respect your elders
for their position
as elders. But do I respect that person
as a person? No, you got to earn that.
But authority figures
are different. You're in a
corrupt system. Like, this system
already don't like me.
And you're applying for a job.
And the job you applying for is governance.
So I'm like, I don't give, like about you?
Like, you know what I'm saying?
Like, no.
But there is something unique, I think, about your particular intersections as
technically ambiguous, from the South, highly educated, you know,
and unfortunately in a patriarchal, misogynistic,
world of female, right? Which I already know greats at so much, which I think I appreciate
probably the most when you have time to like drag a commenter. Like obviously men are not okay.
Like we know that ship is sailed. We're not okay. You know what I'm saying? Part of me feels like
now this is like as much as I've evolved in my feminism and you know, I'm the father of two daughters.
You know, I've learned to, like, really not understand how I was the problem to become to understand that I'm the problem, you know, even in just my ways of communicating, my advocacy, stuff like that, my blind spots and all that.
And I'm with, you know what I'm saying?
I have nephews.
I don't have, like I said, I don't have sons, but I have, I have nephews who I've, like, realized that I carried a lot of ways for which I thought I was supposed to talk to my daughter versus talking to a son.
You know what I'm saying?
And I'm like, and I used to say, well, I'm going to talk to my daughter the way I would talk to my son.
you know, and just stupid, you know what I'm saying?
And then, but even just being like, man, like sometimes my nephew could use like a gentle voice.
Like, you know, a man just like him that could just be real gentle.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, man, I'm sorry, you sick, man.
It sucks when you get your feelings hurt.
Like, I get it.
You know what I'm saying?
Like being able to be gentle with him too.
That said, I feel like I come from an era where words have consequences.
You know, you say something to somebody.
It might slap the shit out of you.
Yes.
You know what I'm saying?
So like you watch your mouth.
You know what I'm saying?
Because like,
I said, I've grown to wear it at.
Like, I don't know who fuck you think you're talking to.
Like I don't say that no more.
You know what I'm saying?
Where it's just like, okay, I have learned that that's not the person I need to be.
However, I feel like a lot of these young men, especially in your comment sections, like,
they didn't have no big homies like I did that would be like, boy, if you don't shut.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, you know?
just being like son, like, yes.
So you can't just be talking.
And I come from a city where she might slap the shit out of you.
She will.
You know what I'm saying?
She will.
It's not just like, you know what I'm saying?
So I'm like, bro, you can't just be talking.
So anyway, that's a long preamble to say, I appreciate when you take the time to drag a comment.
Thank you.
I do.
So please tell me, please tell me the origins of that.
Yeah.
So I have two sons.
Okay.
They are twins.
They'll be 15 in a few weeks.
and I care a lot.
Actually, I get a lot of shit for this
from people on the left,
from liberals as well,
especially from women.
But I care a lot about men
and them not being okay.
Yeah, they're not okay, yeah.
Because I have two boys
and I don't want that to be them.
I see the traps that are waiting for them out there
that are being placed on purpose
for sure by bad actors.
Yeah.
So I want policy and conversations and acceptance
and help for the men and the boys.
Yeah.
And also, when...
it's almost always, you know, like some Republican mouth breather who follows a bunch of AI porn bots,
gets into my comments to talk to me some kind of way.
I decided that I was going to make an example of them because these are people who have never experienced a consequence.
Yes.
Ever.
That's what I'm saying.
Like if you're a 50-year-old white man, you have never experienced a consequence for running your mouth.
That's what I'm saying.
And I'm going to be that consequence for you.
You're welcome.
Yes.
Thank you.
And it just disgusts me because, again, they're almost always following.
like a bunch of teenagers,
AI bots,
you know,
all of these just,
it's completely
inappropriate behavior.
They do not understand
the concept of matching energy.
They're completely shocked
when they come into my comments
and give me shit
and then I match their energy.
They're always just aghast.
They're like, how dare I?
Well, you dared first.
What?
I'm just like, yeah,
like for somebody who swear
they so, like,
you're so tough and hard,
I'm like, man,
you little cupcake ass.
Yes.
One of the earliest,
I mean,
I'm telling you,
the earliest lesson I got as a child.
And I still say it to my kids.
You don't dish out what you can't take.
Like, you don't put it out there if you can't handle it.
You know, so if you're going to get jokes and that person roast you back, I come from, that's our culture.
It's like, even around family.
It's just like, bro, I was having a conversation with one of the parents, like, because I have the type of job I have, I do a lot of the pickups, the after school pickups.
Yeah.
You know, so I was talking to one of the moms.
as a chauffeur.
Yes, yes.
So I was talking to one of the moms
just about like nicknames
growing up, whatever, right?
And my mother,
biting sarcasm, super funny,
brilliant, but like fire baptized,
speaking in tongues,
praying the house down.
She's just a biting sarcasm.
And I was like,
she used to call me the before pitcher.
Jesus.
She's just cold as ice.
And I was just like,
day.
But again,
it's like,
she could,
she could always give it back.
You know what I'm saying?
So, like, we, you just, so you just knew, like,
if you was going to get your feelings hurt.
I don't know if you can handle that, you know?
And even, like, specifically with the young ladies,
it's just like, bro, like, I'd, like, you following with porn bots.
Like, part of me, like, again, in the most misogynistic possible,
it's like, because, like, you ain't got no flavor.
Cause, like, you're a weirdo.
Like, that's why are you doing this, yeah.
And they claim, like, this is a group of people, you know, whatever,
conservative gen X men.
Yeah.
who claim a level of cultural dominance that that's what they're expressing when they come into
my comment section to yell at me.
This cultural dominance they think they have.
And it's completely manufactured.
Yeah.
You dominate no one.
No one.
Look at you.
Like, and that's kind of the point that I, and I, yeah.
Part of me is like, well, maybe I'm being too mean, but also I feel like I'm doing them a
favor.
Like, you really are.
You have no actual self-esteem.
You have no.
Self-esteem is built by doing esteemable things.
And when you spend all of your time online just yelling at women, there's nothing
is steamable there. It's so silly, man. Like, I mean, we're totally off the rails here, but I love this because it's very important to me. Because I'm just like, when my oldest was in like junior high, like I was trying to tell my wife, like, I was like, the thing is, we have been experiencing rejection since fifth grade. And it's because we're planning this all week to go actually approach Natasha. Like, you were thinking about it all week. I'm going to wear the right outfit. I'm going to do this. You go over there, you say something to her. She giggles to all her friends and runs
way and says, ew. It's just like, okay, that's the first time you got your little heartbroken
as a little boy, right? So, fast forward to middle school. Oh, my God, will you dance with me?
Ew, no. Okay. You did it again. By the time these dudes are in the club and it's like, hey,
hey, red jeans, red jeans, red jeans, red jeans. You want to dance? No, or whatever, fuck you. You
you know what I'm saying? It's just like, you know, you go through this, but all that to say,
hopefully if you have a healthy sense, you start learning like, hey, man, you catch more bees with honey,
bro, like, or you know what I'm saying?
Like, maybe there's a better way to communicate with people and you just got to understand
that like, I just think you don't know how to talk to people.
Like, you don't know, like, she got the right to be like, no, thank you.
And you got to be like, okay, word.
You know what I'm saying?
You shot your shot.
Like, I'm trying to be like as bland as possible.
Look, you shoot a shot.
You don't make every shot.
Yeah.
Do you what I'm saying?
Like, you don't make every shot.
You're going to hit one of them.
You know what I'm saying?
Somebody going to want to dance with you.
And you're just like, oh, okay, great.
You know, it was a good time.
You know, hey, can we...
No, okay, cool.
You know what I'm saying?
It's just, it is what it is.
To your point, I think either...
I don't...
It's so weird to me explain
because I just, I don't relate to it.
I don't relate to somebody
who doesn't understand
that, like, bro, you're a total stranger.
Like, I don't care about your opinion, number one.
And why do you feel like you have
the right to, like, what is you doing?
Like, it's just, it's embarrassing, bro.
Like, yeah, like...
So, anyway, I enjoy it.
But I think, I think,
I think you brought up something that I would love to hear you talk more about, like, all this
to say, like, this is the note I wrote. It's like, I feel like this type of dragging is not only
needed, but I think it's holy, right? And I think it's a divine, sacred work to like truly
roast a person. And I think when it comes to you in politics, it's because you know what you're
talking about. It makes it even more important. But I guess my question is like, do you think
that there is something greater than just
this is funny going on there.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
I know it seems
like it's for the lulls or whatever
or the views of the click or your engagement or whatever,
but there's very little that I do in my content
that's not strategic.
And again, it goes back to permission.
Like you said, these men don't know me.
Yeah.
I don't care what they think about me.
I'm doing great, you know.
You're free to hate me.
I don't care.
But I want to, again, provide,
a permission structure, especially for other women, who exist online, and who in this moment,
especially want to start raising their voices, to learn how to clap back. Like, you have got to
learn, if you're going to be out there, especially right now in the world, as a woman,
you have got to learn how to tell somebody to fuck off. In a way that that matter, that they will
hear, you know, because a lot of times men won't hear, no, we know that. The president doesn't know
what the word not means. But if you can say it artfully and mean it with your whole chest,
oftentimes it will work.
So it's almost like providing an example,
especially for women who are a little younger than me,
because I'm in my 40s now,
how to detach themselves from the value assigned to them
by random men.
Who gives a fuck?
For sure.
And like the seasoning on top of that is just corny ass men.
Like just, you are a cornball.
Like that's where it's like it's not the problem,
but it's the part that just like gets,
my fingernails is like, you're so fucking corny.
Like, you know what I'm saying?
We're holding a fish.
Yeah.
So I'm like, why are you doing this?
Like, you're the same guy, bro.
Like, it's the same guy every time.
Why are y'all?
Who, where is this aesthetic?
And then I'm just like speaking your language.
Like, I don't know a single female that likes this.
Nope.
Like, who, anyway, let's go back to the, to the professional.
Even though I do love that that's a part of the thing.
Like you mentioned before, formerly trained in history.
you know, your whiteboard stuff.
Like, you're obviously very well researched.
And I have my cynical answer to this, but like, it's just so bizarre to me how specifically
if we're going to use these binaries of like right wing and left wing, like, especially like content
creation to where I'm just like, okay, we know that that's a grift.
We know that's a hustle.
We know you doing that.
But like, but even with that, I'm just like, they just be factually wrong.
Yeah.
to where I'm just like, I'm not even, like,
I'm not even worried about your position.
I can't even get to your positions yet.
I'm just saying, like, you ain't do no homework.
I can't square that circle to me.
But, like, what you do, and I know what I do, too,
is because I guess we care about reality is like,
I mean, do a lot of homework.
You know what I'm saying?
So, like, I would love to know a little bit about your process
as far as, like, your homework, your research,
maybe what's some tools you use before you even put it on.
Like, I mean, there's been times I've had to be like,
hey, guys, hey, I fucked up.
I thought it was, you know what I'm saying?
Like, I'll come back and fact check myself, but I'll just be like, I don't understand.
Fact check at all.
Like, I feel like I don't even, that's why I won't do like Jubilee or any of the day.
I'll be like, man.
Oh, I refuse.
No, absolutely not.
I'm never doing.
I don't do that homework.
Like, yeah.
I'm not doing that.
Yeah.
No.
That's all that looks at my actual nightmare.
Yes, exactly.
I have a stress stream of being in a Jubilee.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think that the way that, like you were saying, the way that it's approached makes a difference.
So, like, I'm not here for a media career.
I'm not here to make a billion dollars and become an influencer and go work on Chuck Schumer's re-election campaign.
I don't give a shit about any of that.
No, thank you.
I am here.
I don't fuck with Chuck Schumer.
Yeah, yeah, no, thank you.
I am here with a mission.
And my mission is to help people who are probably just getting plugged in or even people have been plugged in for a while and are getting tired, understand how power operates in America politically.
Yeah.
Historically and now.
And that takes a lot of digging and a lot of research and a lot of fact.
checking as you were saying. So I need people to trust me because if they don't trust me,
they're not going to take my advice. They're not going to get involved in the places I tell them
to get involved. There's not going to be any strategy to the ways that people are formulating
their resistance or their opposition to rising authoritarianism. So it matters a great deal that I
am right in the things that I'm saying. And that it's accurate at least. I mean, I'm not saying my
takes are always right. And of course, like you said, I make mistakes sometimes. And I will go back and
correct myself. But I mean, you know, I've, I've been an American history person for 20 years now.
So I do have a pretty big base of knowledge. Decent, yeah. But I am going to go back before I say a
word and like double check my dates. Double check like, was this person in the House or the Senate.
You know, what was the bill number? Like, I am going to do all of that. And that takes a lot of digging.
Like, I don't, I don't think it's on purpose necessarily, but going through congressional records is
everything is very scattered. Nothing is in one place. You're checking 14 different, you
you know, resources, Congress.gov, and all these other things. And I have to collate all of that
and put it together. And it takes hours, you know, hours. Yeah. But it's my full-time job now.
So, yeah. That's fine. But when I was working full-time, when I had, like, a corporate job,
I was in big tech up until June of last year. Wow. So it was, it was just a lot of hours. It was
18, 19-hour days. I slept almost zero. I mean, it's better now. But, but, yeah, I mean,
I am very dedicated to making sure that the thing that I'm putting out there is trustworthy.
is not emotionally reactive.
Like I'm,
I think that is something that separates me
from other creators, especially on the left,
is I'm not trying to get a rise out of you.
I'm not trying to make you panic.
I'm not doing that like,
that should terrify every American.
I'm not doing that shit.
You're an adult.
If you want to be terrified, be terrified.
I don't care.
Like, your feelings are your own problem.
I'm telling you what's happening,
how it's rooted in American history
and what you can do about it.
And like what people have done about it
in the past when similar things have happened.
Something similar has probably happened.
And so like, yeah,
Yeah, that's my strategy.
Yeah, again, very much so, like a kinsman, like, spirit in that, yeah, like, I'm not, I'm, I'm
ultimately an educator, you know what I'm saying?
And I'm like, I'm really just trying to onboard you to be like, hey, bro, like,
these people aren't smarter than you, you know?
Yes.
Lastly, like, I would ask, because you kind of just brought it up, like, some sort of, like,
historical parallels as far as, like, lessons from, from the past, like, do you have any
that, like, come to mind, like, off the head?
Oh.
Yes.
How much time do you have?
No, I know people always, always, always want to talk about Nazi Germany right now.
And like, I get it. Okay. I'm not saying that there are no commonalities, of course, there are.
It's so important to me that we focus on the commonalities that we have in American history because we are so different from Germany.
Yeah.
Germany was like very ethnically homogenous. It's a small country compared to ours.
Yes.
They don't have the same issues that we had.
They had, you know, Nazi Germany came out of a very particular time, place and people.
We are a different time-placing people.
So there's that.
Like, study Nazi German if you want, I'm not saying don't.
But if you're going to study Nazi Germany, but you're not going to look at the Black Panthers
and you're not going to look at the Civil Rights Movement and you're not going to look at Reconstruction.
And you're not going to look at Jim Crow.
Reconstruction.
Yes.
Yes.
You're not going to come up with any viable solutions.
Yes.
Because resistance in Germany came from the Soviet Union coming in with the Soviets did it.
But resistance in America comes from black and indigenous and Latino people.
Yes.
Yeah, we did it.
Yeah.
Yes.
And labor movements and all it.
So you have got to become more familiar with your own people, with your own people.
And that's a little difficult in America, right?
Because we're like, you know, we're not really a melting pot.
We're more of like a weird mixed chopped salad.
Yes.
But we tend to be in our little, on purpose, our separated, segregated neighborhoods and our segregated schools and we don't associate with.
And we do like Black History Month.
And then we forget to read about any other point of black history outside of that.
And we'll do like indigenous people's day on Columbus Day and never read another piece of history.
And all that is a disservice because those are the effective resistance methods that we can take and carry forward as we move through this administration.
And we will. We will come out on the other side.
But like- I love it.
Even something like the Gilded Age, right?
Like that, I think is one of the most important historical analogs, the late 19th century.
Because in the Gilded Age, we had an oligarchy.
There was no income tax.
Like the Rockefellers, there was so much corrupt.
corruption at every level of government.
Jim Crow was on the rise, was being born out of that era.
Yeah.
Labor unions were coming online and all of that.
Like, there are so many parallels, but we made so many mistakes then.
We made so many, we let the clan come back.
Our labor unions were segregated.
Yes.
Purposefully segregated.
Yes.
We got lots of things like the FDA and government regulations and things like that
that were born out of all this corruption.
But then we went way too far into scolding, moralizing, and got prohibition,
was a terrible idea. So we need to avoid that. We need to avoid leaving behind people like we did
during the gilded age because that's what Americans tend to do. We like momentum. We like forward.
We like progress. And we leave behind all these people who have been oppressed and marginalized.
And we just ignore them. So we need to look at our own history and learn not just from the
effective resistance of the past, but the mistakes we made in the past. And we can't really
do that looking at Nazi Germany because that ended with a bunker. Those weren't our mistakes. Yeah,
Exactly.
He killed himself and then we, you know, set up NATO and left.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's not what we need to do here.
My biggest gripe was like, yeah, like, especially with like the leftover Nazis was like, we didn't go hard enough on that.
You know what I'm saying?
Like we should have like really stamped that out.
But you really cook it, man.
Like, I mean, you already nailed it.
I see, yeah, Gilded Age slave catchers.
Like to me this is like, this is some dread scotch shit to me.
Yes.
You know what I'm saying?
And yeah, all that.
Like, because that was like, we're saying, okay, who's a citizen?
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
That was the Dred Scott question, right?
Or just like, you know, states rights versus federal rights.
Marlboro versus Madison.
Like, all this stuff, like you said, like we've already fleshed out that in my mind is playing.
But I, but the Gilded Age thing is like, nah, dude, like you cooking because, man, you got me all excited in my history back.
I'm excited now.
I wish you could see my toes tapping.
But like, yeah, because I'm like, okay, you think I like the Pinkertons.
You think about like the ways for which a collective movement being broke in the sense that like you had these, you know, steelworkers in Pittsburgh that would strike and then they would just go get freed slaves to be like, well, y'all could go do this.
And it's like, man, what the hell you want me to do, dog?
You know what I'm saying?
Like, like you had any choice.
I don't have no choice.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like to the regime, like, touche, it was a really good move.
You know what I'm saying?
As somebody trying to hold on to a regime.
but like what like to your point like it's it's always like and this is the hard part for me even talking
about black history which is something I want to come back to with like the cost of this is
different for like African American communities this this costs us more you know what I'm saying
it's going to in the long run cost us all don't get me wrong but what you're asking especially
at that moment going back to the gilded days what you're asking me to step into we're not
ponying up the same amount of money here
You know what I'm saying?
So I just wonder, like you said, like what are those lessons me living in Los Angeles?
Like, you know, with ice rage being a part of like deeply student in the Latino community.
Like, what's the strategic?
Because you know, black people get out there, police open fire.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, they're going to kill us.
You know what I mean?
So like, is this strategic by us like, kind of like, well, we'll be in the back row.
Like what's happening here?
You know what I'm saying?
Like, so what are those lessons?
What are ways for which?
we can like, like you said, like look at how America has responded to its, you know,
hydra that's, that's rearing itself again is an interesting thing.
But I think the last thing before I'm going to ask you about predictions is this thing about
black history, this being Black History Month.
So the hard part for me is like, especially with like children, like I taught high school for
six years, you know, when, when discussing blackness, or like you said, Indigenous Day or whatever,
like, it's this carve out, right, that is, you know, a corrective force, right? But the carve out,
a lot of times tends to just be like trivia, like vocabulary, like, oh, did you know that this
person? Did you do it? You know what I'm saying? And it's like, of course, because you're trying to,
like, I get it. You're trying to wet the appetite. You know what I'm saying? But it's a carve out to me that's
not in the context. It's not context embedded. It's not context embedded. It's not. It's not,
not a part of history.
It's this carve out that's taught as
trivia. You know what I'm saying?
Like an afterthought. Yeah, or an add-on.
It's like an afterthought. But then like you said,
but then never talked about again as if
like, well, we were there
the whole time. We're in every chapter.
We're in all the
semesters you're about to talk through. Like,
we was at all of them. You know what I'm saying?
And it's just like, so we're just going to
not point at the black people for the rest of the
year when you talk about this.
while there needs to be, and of course I'm a product of it, like the specificity of a moment to say,
I just want to stop right here and say that this person was this, you know what I'm saying?
But like, what are ways for which we can reembed the female voices, the indigenous voices,
the black voices back into just the curriculum period, which is bastardized by what MAGA is trying to say?
You know what I'm saying?
Like the bastardized version of that that is clearly obviously racist.
You know what I'm saying?
I was like, so like a lot of times
we start talking about this,
they'd be like, you know what?
That's our point.
And I'm like, hold up,
because that's not your point.
You know what I'm saying?
That's not the point you making, right?
The point I'm making is saying
we were there the whole time.
Yeah.
And I would love to have the dignity
of being there the whole time.
You know what I'm saying?
So I say that to echo your point about like,
we're just going to stop talking about natives
after indigenous?
Like, they was there.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, yeah, and it matters today.
Like, I just got into it on threads or Instagram or whatever, some platform with some leftist, which is, I'm not, it's not a criticism of leftism.
Yeah.
But he was saying, like, he was criticizing Kamala Harris's campaign.
Fine.
I don't care.
Go for it.
But he was a white guy.
And he was saying she kept making pitches about what she could do for the black community, but she never said what she could do for white.
people. And I was like, my good bitch. First of all, you made that up. Like, she went on all black
podcast once and you took that to mean that she didn't care about white people. Yeah. And like second of all,
what part of like first time home buyer tax credit signals to you, I only care about black people?
Yeah. Like the idea that policies or history books or whatever that have black people in them or that would
benefit black people, only benefit black people is one of the reasons why we're in this
stupid situation that we're in now. Because the recognition of how black and indigenous and
Latino people have been in this country since the beginning, the Spanish have been here longer
than the English for what it's worth. Spanish has been spoken in this country longer than English.
Yeah. To put a pin in that. That raises everyone's boats. Like policies that benefit our
marginalized communities. Yeah. Benefit everyone else. Yeah. Like,
The rising tide truly does raise all of the ships.
Yeah, totally.
And we can't get to an understanding of that without understanding the history.
Because, like, take, for example, what we're dealing with right now.
Mostly direct attacks on the 14th Amendment, which is a reconstruction era amendment.
That was because us, guys.
Yes.
And attacks on the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which was passed to ensure that all black citizens could vote.
So the things that are fucking up white people right now are because you don't understand
when we got them in the first place.
Yes.
That's my rant.
You cooking.
No, you nailed it.
That was my exact point.
You're making my exact point.
I'm just like, no, this is like we were here.
We're part of the country.
So last thing is like besides the prediction of not counting Trump going to try to cancel the midterms, which is like I was like, I don't know why we're talking about midterms.
He going to try to cancel.
But besides that, like who should we have our eye on?
What do you think?
Oh, for the midterms over 28?
Midterms.
Okay.
I think we're going to win the midterms.
Okay.
I think that the decentralization, the federalization of elections, the way that every state runs their own elections, I don't see a logistical way for him to prevent that from happening.
Period.
He could tell states not to have elections, I suppose.
The only ones that would obey him would be red states, in which case we would have a congressional election of only Democrats.
that go to the hill.
Yeah.
Fine.
Sounds good to me.
That's how we got
the Reconstruction era amendment.
It was the conservatives
in the South state home.
Yeah.
And didn't go to Congress.
So, fine.
But I don't think that's going to happen.
Because there are too many
Republicans in red states
who want to run for governor
and you want to be senators.
And they're already having fundraisers.
So I do think we're going to have
the midterms.
And I think we're going to win.
And I'm basing that on the special elections
that we've been having.
For sure.
Yeah.
Since January of last year.
And it's not just, you know,
I mean, special elections are different.
We're like plus 13 on average
overperformance in special elections, that's not going to replicate itself in the midterms
because special elections tend to be, like, very partisan.
People are very dedicated to coming out.
But in the last couple of special elections that we've had in Texas, New Jersey, Louisiana,
Republicans have flipped.
Yeah.
And that is where I'm like, oh, it's in the back.
Like, maybe the majority won't be huge.
I don't know that it's going to be a landslide because they're going to fuck with it,
whatever.
Voter suppression is real.
But I do think that at least the House we're going to win.
And the Senate, I'm looking at, I think Alaska is super interesting.
Ohio, North Carolina for sure.
Everybody loves Word Cooper in North Carolina.
Yeah.
Texas.
Whether you like Jasmine Crockett or Tala Rico, either one of them are interesting.
You know, Texas could be interesting.
So, yeah, I think it's...
Love it.
If I were a Republican, I would be very nervous.
You better be because, like, you can't pretzel yourself any worse.
Like, I think people forget that, like, ambition didn't die when Trump became president.
People still are ambitious.
And at some point, you won't realize, like, shit ain't working, homie.
Which brings us to the last one.
time. Yeah, let me ask you about 2028. What do you think?
Third term?
It's too... No, God. No, he's not going to make it that long.
I was like, he's going to... I keep telling all my friends. I was like, I think you have to accept that he's going to die in office.
Anyway, but yeah. He's not going to make... It's going to be... It's going to be Vance.
Although I think he'll have some competition, maybe from Marjorie Taylor Green. I think she's going to try to run.
I think Marjorie's running. What about tuck?
About Tucker?
I think he might go for like a cabinet.
position. You think so? He's like this stupid little bow tie. I don't think anybody would go for him. I don't know.
I can't stand that man. I really don't like him. But yeah. He's so unlikable. But so is J.D. Vance, to be
honest. Anyway, on our side, you know, it's so early. Yeah. And I think that there are people who are starting to poke their heads up now.
Like, I think Osoff in Georgia is starting to be a little. And he's the best fundraiser in the Senate.
So the two best fundraisers are actually a ticket I would really be interested.
in, which is Osaf and AOC.
They're the two best fun readers
within the party. And that's a ticket I would not be
upset about, you know? Damn. AOC ticket would be crazy.
I'm not necessarily on the Newsom train.
I'm not going to lie. I'm not really on the Newsom train.
Sister, tell you a little secret
about how California feels about Newsom.
I know, I know.
Which is not so much of a secret.
Yeah, not so hot. We'd definitely
be looking at our like red
our Orange counties, our
red states, and they'd be like,
Gavin Newsom, we're like, yeah, no, yeah, no, no.
Sure, hard agree.
Yeah, no, for real.
Same, hard agree.
Yeah.
Anyway.
I appreciate that he was one of the first high-profile Democrats to stand up to Trump in this administration.
I appreciate that.
That's not good enough reason for me to make a president.
Not the president.
Yeah, I'm like, you're not, yeah, you're not a flaming bag of shit.
I got it.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, you're a decent.
You're not a fascist.
Yeah, you're not a fascist.
Like, okay, but you're willing to get on a podcast because,
For some reason you want, like, I don't understand where your, where's your code?
You know, and also I'm like, I don't know, man, you know, a grown man like that still slicking his hair back is, it's just odd to me.
That's going to do it for some, like, 60-year-old ladies in the suburbs, though.
He's going to have, like, a Kennedy thing, you know, like, oh, he's so handsome.
But that's, but so is also.
Osaf is handsome?
Osoff's handsome.
Yeah, maybe.
Vote with that guy.
I don't know, bro.
Yeah, no, you just, I feel like you, like, I feel like here's the thing about, about, about.
we need to end this.
But the thing about Gavin and me is I'm like,
there's this just like sheen to where it's just like,
oh, you need to be liked.
And like, you know,
it's this whole like L.A. transplant thing, like, you know,
where everybody's like, oh, it's so Hollywood.
And we're like, like natives are like,
those are all transplants.
We're not like that.
You know what I'm saying?
So, but to me he just has that to where I'm just like,
oh, you need to be the prom king.
You need to like, oh, you need this too much.
You feel me like?
And to me, I'm like, ooh.
I don't, I can't, I can't ride like, this, you need to, you need, you need to be popular too much.
Yeah, I prefer a president.
I can't trust you.
Yeah, they need to resent being there a little bit, I feel like.
It needs to feel like, you got to like, you got to kind of be like, I'll be all right if it don't work out.
Yeah.
You know.
There needs to be a sense of service.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Man, my camera turns off every half hour.
I don't know why stuff to figure that out.
Anyway, but that's a good sign for us to wrap this up.
Please, can you drop all the ad mentions for your stuff so that these people can enjoy what I enjoy?
It's Amanda's mild takes everywhere, except not blue sky.
I can't deal with that, but everywhere else.
Yeah, Amanda's mild takes with the Petty'sburg Address.
It's brilliant.
Thank you so much for your time.
Thank you.
We appreciate it.
Y'all, go please, you know, she'll be over there dropping jams.
It's just a good time.
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 and IHart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Welcome to the A building.
I'm Hans Charles.
I'm Inalick Lamouba.
It's 1969.
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr.
Have 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.
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
you get your podcast.
I'm Bowen Yang.
And I'm Matt Rogers.
During this season of the Two Guys Five Rings podcast,
in the lead-up to the Milan Cortina-2026 Winter Olympic Games,
we've been joined by some of our friends.
Hi, Boen, hi, Matt, hey, Elmo.
Hey, Matt, hey, Bowen.
Hi, Cookie.
Hi.
Now, the Winter Olympic Games are underway,
and we are in Italy to give you experiences from our hearts to your ears.
Listen to Two Guys Five Rings on the I-Heart Radio,
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Brandon Kyle Goodman, the host of the Tell Me Something Messy Podcast.
I wanted to create a safe, comfy place for all of us to talk about sex, relationships,
and what it means to be human.
And baby, my fantastic guests are bringing their mess to share with the class.
Like singer-songwriter Duran Bernard suggesting we reinstate adult sleepovers with friends.
Here's the thing.
Get a group that's mature enough, not to be putting your hand in warm water.
and tickling you.
You know what I'm saying?
I mean, I mean, granted, I might be doing.
But you know, like...
And I think it's important for those examples of that,
of us just being gentle with one another
because the world and the people in it already finding
brand new ways to whip our ass everything.
1,000 of the day.
1,000%.
So the least we could do is make strides
to handle each other in a way that is...
With care.
Yeah, that's with care and a bit more mindful.
Listen to tell me something messy
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
This is It Could Happen here, an executive disorder.
Our weekly newscast covering what's happening in the White House,
The Crumbling World, and What It Means for you.
I'm Garrison Davis.
Today I'm joined by Sophie Lickderman, James Stout, and Robert Evans.
This episode, we are covering the week of February 4th to February 11th.
It was the Super Bowl.
Wasn't that fun.
I heard it was streaming on Peacock.
this year, so I booted up my peacock account, went to the sports section, and was surprised at
how few Americans there were and how many other flags there were. And I do not remember this
much skating typically at previous Super Bowl shows or the ski jumping. But, I mean, it was still
fun to watch people compete. Uh-huh. Yeah. This is because I was watching the Winter Olympics,
get it. I did. I did. I did get it. Good work, Gere. No, fun.
What's your favorite Winter Olympics event, Garrison, as a Canadian?
Honestly, the ski jumping is pretty exciting.
They really fly.
Yeah, they do.
That video of that guy that went viral that did like a under six minute mile on skis uphill.
Yeah, going uphill.
That was crazy.
To be clear, he's not going for a mile.
Like, he just goes uphill.
Like, the whole course is like a mile-ish.
Well.
But yeah, still, cross-country skiers have insane V-O-2 maxes.
Wild.
Cross-country ski winning at the.
chance. It's fun. But I don't go that fast. But no, we do, we do need to discuss this,
the actual Super Bowl halftime show. Actually, well, no, not not the actual one, the other one.
Yeah. The all-American halftime show. Oh, maybe I'll just say the kid who bad bunny gave
his Grammy to was not the same child who you saw being abducted by ice in a little blue
bunny hat. No, it was supposed to symbolize a young Benito.
Him. Yeah. Yes. Yes. Yeah. Not anything else.
It really was not.
There was a lot of underlying messages in that show that were very important, but it would be weird.
It would be weird if he put in a kid that looked like the five-year-old that was abducted in prison by ICE to give him a Grammy.
That would have been really off-putting.
It would not have been a cool move.
Yeah, that would have been bad.
Just to say, it was a great half-time show.
I enjoyed it thoroughly.
And now here's a clip of the O'L.
All-American halftime show.
The real halftime show.
With our favorite kid rock, ready?
Mm-hmm.
Whoa!
Yeah!
Somebody makes some motherfucking noise in here!
There's nobody there!
There's nobody there!
Okay, this is not.
This is not from the show.
This is from Silicon Valley.
This was a joke that they did on the TV show Silicon Valley,
which looks almost exactly like...
Hilaria.
Yeah.
The Turning Point Halftime Show.
Yeah, I was about to say, I didn't hear that.
Aside from the Jorts, the, I thought that was a new angle.
They did have more people in the crowd, but they were hired actors, but they did have more people in the crowd.
Shockingly, it lines up.
Our colleague Molly Conger described his outfit as needed to run out to Home Depot to pick up us part for something.
And I think that's really funny.
He's in like shorts and like a t-shirt and has a wrist brace.
So, yeah.
Yeah.
It's great.
We'll get to Kid Rock in a sec,
but let's start at the beginning.
While watching the turning point stream,
there was no indication
where the show was being broadcast from
or whether it was live,
but four performers sang back to back to back,
indicating the show was cut together
from previously taped performances.
Yes.
The venue was this dark, narrow,
rectangular room with high ceilings and studio lights.
In the middle was a long stage,
with a small audience on either side,
maybe 200 people tops.
But the show was introduced by none other than Jack Fasobic, which I will show now.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Turning Point USA, All-American Half-Time show.
And this one's for you, Charlie.
Great stuff.
So that's the stuff.
446 down votes on Rumble.
Uh-huh.
That's rough.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I watched this.
I will admit,
I watched it after the actual halftime show because it was on YouTube and there was no reason to actually catch it during the Super Bowl.
And by the way, the viewership number suggests that most people who did catch it watched it after the Super Bowl.
Yes.
Because it's weird to pause or to turn off the sound in the middle of the Super Bowl and pull up like a laptop or something to go watch the fucking Turning Point USA show.
Yeah.
Oh, it was really cumbersome, really anti-social behavior at the Super Bowl party to turn off the stream.
Plug in your laptop.
Go to rumble.com.
If you are doing that, your kids have not talked to you longer than they've been alive.
Like, they abandoned you before they were born.
Well, President Trump watched the actual Super Bowl halftime show.
Of course he did.
There's photos of him watching it.
He knows that this is loser's shit.
Yeah.
It's just about the loserist loser shit that I have ever seen.
And right after Jack Basobic introduced it, it cuts to this.
You've got this black state.
and there's like an amp on the stage,
and a guy walks up to it with a guitar.
Not a guy.
Brantley Gilbert, okay?
Some respect.
That's Brantley.
Okay, that's Brantley.
I was going to introduce his name afterwards.
But Garrison, you missed something important
because Brantley Gilbert's band is where this guy is from.
But the all-electric guitar performance of the Star-Spangled Banner
is led by the great guitarist Spencer Wosdor.
Wow.
Who?
Wazdor?
Spencer Wastor.
Where are they finding these guys?
Is that a stage name or is that a...
He's in Brantley Gilbert's band, Garrison.
This all sounds like, and I think you should leave sketch?
Yeah.
Like, I'm making up these names.
No, the whole performance was that I think you should leave sketch.
But no, it's beautiful electric guitar riff of the Star-Spangled Bannard opening the show.
Do you have a clip for us, Garrison?
No, I got a clip to play because there's a moment here.
They had pyrotechnics during the show.
Of course.
Like the real show had.
But they're not good.
They were better for the kid rock performance.
For the electric guitars, they're just kind of sad, and they make a sad little popping
stown.
Well, again, a single man is playing guitar on stage.
Jimmy Hendricks played the Star Spangled Banner on guitar, but he was good at playing
guitar.
But he was one of the best guitar players overlived.
Yeah, yeah.
It's a little different.
It does seem like a high yardstick that they've chosen to measure themselves against.
We'll talk about that in a sec, but I got to show you guys.
You just need to see the pop of these pyrotechnics just for a second.
And you, the listener, needs to hear it.
It's giving village fireworks display.
I lost my shit when I saw it.
Oh, that's beautiful.
That's great.
I don't know what you're talking about.
I loved it.
Per what you were saying earlier, there's a New York Times article.
For fuck's sake.
That the original title it was published under was,
The All-American Half-Time featured an electric anthem, unlike Kendricks.
Now, they changed that title in the reporter's notebook article to,
what does a whaling electric take on the Star-Spangled Banner mean?
I'm glad that they are getting to the core of the issues,
the publication that ignored all my pictures about Myanmar for several years.
Yeah, no, it's good. This is much more important.
Let's listen to a quote from this article that I think we can all agree matters much
more than a war.
In musical terms, Wazdorpe's version of the Star Spangled Banner was conservative, too.
Despite the bent notes and feedback, it largely stuck to the melody and conveyed a reverentive
stubborn form of patriotism.
I don't know.
I kind of loved it.
What do you mean?
No, it was terrible.
It's terrible. Hard watch.
That was the best part of it.
I hate to say it, but unfortunately, the pyrotechnics were basically competent for the kid rock show.
Which might have been the only competent part of the Kid Rock show.
Yeah, I want to hear the Kid Rock Show.
I haven't...
I think there's some other hits from this, from this show, though.
You're right.
That's not fair.
Including Brantley Gilbert's second song, which starts as a slow acoustic ballad,
and then abruptly changes into whatever this is.
Yeah, we have a few good man.
We can learn how to kiss and cause in blue.
Now the small town he says, she said, 8.20-hour room to spread like I know something.
he's trying to rap
He's trying to rap
He is trying to rap
He is trying
He is trying
He is trying
Small town
He said she said
I'm not going to read into what those lyrics
Are trying to express
But that was the second song
I would have skipped to the third act
Which is Lee Bryce
He started his second song
By saying quote
Charlie gave people microphones
So that they could say
What was on their mind
this is what's on mine.
And this next song starts
like a parody of a
conservative country song.
Here's the beginning.
I just want to catch my fish.
Drive my truck.
Drink my beer.
I'd wake up to all this stuff.
I don't want to hate.
I just want to catch my fish.
I'm getting a little teary-eyed, honestly.
Let's just listen to that.
The next part is insane.
The next line is...
Okay, I'm coming at this rule.
This is the next slide of the song.
The same kind of gun I hunt with just killed another man.
The only thing mine ever shot was a deer from a deer stance.
That's the next line.
Why are you including that, man?
Miracle genius.
Why would you do that in a song?
And the way he sings it is so bizarre.
It's...
It's...
Oh, it's about Charlie Cug.
I would like to hear it.
Oh, I'm just realizing.
What is he doing?
What is happening?
The gun violence problem is bad enough that he has to, like, make a comment about it existing and being depressing.
He has to do that, but then immediately, because the next bit after this, most of the song is basically about I don't want to listen to the news.
Correct.
Like, I don't want to watch things that remind me that...
The very next verse is, I just want to cut my grass, feed my dog, wear my boots,
not turn the TV on, and sit and watch the news.
That's an option for you.
Like, you can do that.
Yeah, I was going to say, that's very doable, friend.
That's entirely doable for you.
Folks, you could do that.
And I'm sure he is.
But this is what he's scared of hearing on the news.
Be told if I tell my own.
Little boys ain't little girl.
yeah.
There it is.
Of the creek in this cancel your ass world.
But then he said it.
He put it in a song.
Oh my God.
I almost choked.
Wow.
Yeah.
Again, man, you're being paid to sing about this.
It's amazing.
In fact, it is your job because you're not there for your musical abilities.
It's your presumably well-paying job.
Yeah.
The whole repeated refurb.
frame of the song is it's not so easy being country in this country nowadays.
You guys are in charge.
The entire song.
Question.
Who is at this event?
How many people?
Where is it?
About 200 paid attendees in Atlanta, Georgia at a soundstage.
Paid attendees.
Paid attendees.
Crucial.
Yeah.
Okay.
A lot of like fresh Detsons and like unbroken in boots in the audience.
There is so many cowboy hats in the audience.
You don't understand.
Yeah, it's like a bar in Jackson, Wyoming.
I get the vibe.
There's so many of them.
And you're like, you're in Atlanta.
Not many people wear cowboy hats in Atlanta.
I'm sorry.
It's not like Texas or Oklahoma.
Yeah, no, I love to see someone in a freshly purchased set.
The next song after this country one, they're all country songs.
The next song is what I think is a love song that goes, quote,
sometimes I drink too much, sometimes I test your trust,
sometimes I don't know why you stay with me
I'm hard to love
which yeah yeah sounds right sounds true
maybe that's related to the last song
you were singing maybe a little bit
about about bullying your children
wow sick
oh man but finally
finally the main act right
what we've all been waiting for
kid kid rock I'm going to play a little over a minute for us
we're not going to include all of this in the episode
We're just going to include the I am a kid section.
But I do need to show this all to James.
Yeah, because this is, I think a lot about, like,
there's that Steve Goodman parody country song
that you couldn't write today
because it's better musically and less ridiculous
than the actual country songs that we're hearing.
All right, James, are you ready?
Always.
I've never seen this before.
All right, that's good.
Wow.
That's enough.
That's more than that.
enough. There's a lot to talk about them. Yeah, we got to unpack some of this. He was better at the
R&C. He's flipping that, he's flipping that mic nonstop. He loves that move. But his name is
his. But that's how we got the wrist injury. I will say the first guys to play had a mic with a pair
of brass knuckles built into it, which I did like. I think we do need a version of that that's a
full knuckle duster from World War I. So it's got the trench knife on the other side. Perfect. Yeah.
We can use that for life.
At least take a risk.
Don't be a coward every time you flip the mic.
Yeah, take a risk.
Be a man.
As the Kid Rock Lates turn on, he explosively jumps on to the stage.
White fur coat, acid washed jeans, black fedora.
Yeah, I used to be a piece of shit.
Jeans, Garrison.
These are jorts.
They are cut off above the knee.
Jorts.
And second correction, it was a white fur coat vest.
Coat vest.
It's a vest. It's a vest. And I should note also that his fedora did not have the safari flaps. I repeat, it did not have the safari flaps. But it is leather, like a shiny black leather, not a breathable hat. It's beautiful. It's beautiful to see. It's really, it really is. And I think you should leave Sketch come to life. It's so good. He just jumps around and flipping that mic.
How long does he perform? How many sums do we get?
He gets like two or three songs
But none of the audio for the song
Match is what we're seeing on screen
The sinking is totally off
Leading a lot of people to suspect that
It was lip synced on stage
Hordley, we'll get to that in a sec
But the next song
Began with a two minute prelude
Featuring the cello
And violin
Is it one of those like
It's just the frame of a cello?
Oh James, you'll see
I'm gonna see a fucking
offense to God.
That's a real cello.
Wow.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, that's an interesting outfit.
The cellist dressed kinder like Ben Franklin.
Why is he dressed like that?
Yeah, one of the three musketeers is playing cello for those you're listening at home.
Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome our brother, Robert Richie.
Robert Richie is Kid Rock.
That's his real government name.
Oh, wow.
They reintroduce him under his legal name for the second.
song. Kid Rocks are not born. They're made.
Those people who introduced him, what was their, that was it for them?
Unclear. Okay. They only existed on screen to introduce Kid Rock as Kid Rock the first time and then as
Richie Russell, Richie Russell, whatever his name. Robert Richie. Whatever his real name is.
That's the only time they appeared was to introduce Kid Rock both times. Now, after the show,
it was revealed that this whole thing was pre-taped on a soundstage in Atlanta. And a few days later,
Kid Rock released a video addressing the rumors that his performance was lip synced, which he denies.
You know, we taped it, and then they sent me a first cut, and my comment was, the sink is off.
They were trying to line up.
First off, if we would have done it, if we would have recorded it, and then played like we were singing it, lip synced it, it would have been pie.
It would have been pie to line up.
It was very difficult for them because somebody clearly wasn't super familiar with the song.
Also, when I ask him, I go, you know, Freddie.
wraps that song with me, my DJ, and they're like, he does what? And I'm like, oh, no. I'm like, yeah,
do we have any cutaways of Freddie? And they, no, they didn't. He wasn't, we lit up? No, he didn't even
any TV time? No. Any TV time? No. Sorry, no. I mean, you can see my silhouette.
So they don't have that footage. Now, it's extremely difficult for them to line up the sink.
could have been done if we had more time.
I'm confident they could have got it right.
Let's pour one out for Freddie.
Kid Rock's DJ.
No screen time.
So Mr. Rock said that Turning Point was having trouble
lining up the audio with the visuals in part
because the song is actually performed
vocally by two people going back and forth.
Wow.
And Turning Point did not have a camera on the other vocalist.
So that's why it looks weird
when there's obviously vocals being heard,
but Mr. Rock isn't singing.
And again, the reason why no one at turning point is familiar with Kid Rock's music is that even they don't like Kid Rock's music.
And Mr. Rock demonstrated how this is, you know, supposed to go in this video with his DJ, which we do need to see 30 seconds up.
Thank you.
Oh, thanks, Gare.
I love you so much.
No, I'm sorry, Sophie.
We need to have a conversation about this.
This is in violation of several rules the company has said.
I just want to call out the fact that there is a pike behind them.
And I do mean the fish.
That has been taxidermied.
Yeah. Not what you normally expect.
I would have expected the other kind of pike behind Garrison.
No, that seems like Mr. Rock's abode, actually.
This feels very on brand for him.
Is that a drone?
No, that's a deer antler turned into a candlestick.
Yeah, it looks like a deer antler turned into a candlestick.
Classy.
Okay.
Although from a distance, it does kind of look like a bad 3D printing of Deep Space 9.
Yeah.
It's for my hookers all tricking out in Hollywood.
It's for my hoods of the world misunderstood.
I said, it's all good.
Yeah, and it's all in fun.
Now, get in the pit, you got to love so much.
Oh, no.
Oh, dear.
I'm having a physical reaction.
I've cringed with every muscle in my body.
Here's how he explains how it's supposed to go.
So he's filling those words for me so I can bang my head, keep going and carrying on.
Now, when I'm doing that, you see me, I'm over the stage.
Ooh, I'm flipping the mic.
I'm down here.
I'm over here back.
Boom.
I know these guys have a difficult time getting that sync together.
So I have nothing but good things to say not only about turning point, but the production team that they work with on this.
My favorite part about live music is when you.
post a over four minute clip video explaining how it was...
A four minute, 50 second video.
About how it was supposed to go and explaining to people things that don't actually exist.
No, his whole delivery sounds like a Tim Robinson bit.
It's so beautiful.
Incredible.
The Bad Bunny Hatham show averaged 135.4 million viewers during the show's time slot.
And Apple Music claims it's now the most watched show in Super Bowl history.
Meanwhile, TPA USA's show attracted upwards.
of 6.1 million concurrent live viewers on Turning Point USA's YouTube channel.
Due to licensing restrictions, TurningPoint was unable to stream the show on X-D-Eeverything app as they originally planned.
Which got announced like an hour before.
Right before.
But that's probably why they didn't hit 135 million because 129 of them were waiting.
Otherwise, they would have got it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The All-American Half-Time show now boasts 23 million views on their YouTube and Rumble pages combined.
The Bad Bunny Show is 70 million.
A lot of these views are also people like me and other researchers.
For sure.
And just, you know, curious Americans who are interested in what they had to throw together.
But a footage from inside Trump's Super Bowl party shows that even he did not turn into the All-American halftime show.
Now it's time for you to tune into these ads.
Shall we do the real news now?
Sure. So on Monday, February 9th, 2026, about three days before we recorded this, there was a student-led walkout protesting federal immigration arrests and protesting in large part last year's massive ICE actions in Chicago. And students from a number of different high schools walked out. This included students from East Aurora High School, where there was a notable clash is the word or skirmish is the word.
Like, skirmish is what Shaw Local News described it as between protesters and police.
There's video, and at least from the limited clip of video we have, I wouldn't call it a skirmish.
I would call it police getting pissed and assaulting some kids.
But we don't see the rest of the interaction.
This is apparently something that went on for a couple of hours.
So I don't know, like, what led up to this.
I can tell you the video shows what looks like some high school kids walking and kind of a line outside of their high school.
There's some police by the police are clearly talking to or maybe yelling at one of the kids.
And then as the video comes in, an officer just charges in and tackles hard, like a running tackle, a teenage boy, like a child smaller than him, which leads to several other police officers grabbing kids.
At least one student punches a police officer in the head while the officer is on top of his friend, beating his friend.
The police only responded by saying, like, look, you know, we had to act.
A student punched a police officer from the Shaw Local article.
the police department said the officer who was punched was transported to a local hospital for medical attention for his injuries.
They don't show he and his colleagues like literally tackling kids first before they get hit.
If somebody tackles my friend next to me, I might start punching.
That's just life.
Yeah.
And it's a, this is kind of an ongoing story at the moment.
I don't know like what's going to wind up being the result of this.
But it inspired at least initially a lot of anger.
and there have been further protest as a result of the police violence.
Students in the area are now demanding the resignation of the police chief in East Aurora.
The police have not really like acknowledged those demands yet.
I don't know if this is going to turn into like a larger protest movement.
There's some signs that maybe it will, that there may be further walkouts specifically
as a result of the police violence.
But this is a situation we will be watching, obviously seeing police violently beating kids
for, you know, speaking,
for doing the thing they should be doing at high school,
which is experimenting with believing things and taking stance.
So we'll be watching this to see kind of what results next,
but that's sort of where we are at the moment.
Yeah, that video is pretty brutal.
Let's talk a little bit more about some immigration stuff.
Let's start with policing, shall we?
I have reviewed the police report for the ICE officer
who, in late January, negligently discharged,
which is issued handgun in a hotel room.
Bradley Shaver was attempting to fix a backstrap from his Glock.
I'll quote the report here.
Quote, with his back facing room 320 and the firearm pointed in the area of Bradley's torso,
he attempted to remove the backstrap that was currently on the firearm while it was still loaded.
At some point, the firearm discharged.
Luckily, the occupant of that room had just checked into the hotel
and was walking to their room when the shot was fired.
so there was no one injured. I will quote again from the report. Initially, the agent thought the
gunshot came from somewhere else and he yelled, shots fired, and then told his wife he had to go and
hang up. Sheba then felt heat on the left side of his body, looked down and saw the damage to his
shirt and realized the shot had come from his own weapon. He said the round went through his
sweatshirt and the shirt underneath but did not penetrate his underarmic compression layer or
injure him. It seems like this person was attempting to repair or remove a part from his gun
that was still loaded and he didn't think to unload the gun. All of this is stuff you shouldn't do,
right? Yeah. You have to check before you do stuff to a gun to make sure it's unloaded. And even
when you've checked to make sure it's unloaded, you should still act like it's loaded and do stuff
like not have your finger on the trigger.
Make sure it's clear of a holster so that there's nothing that like,
especially like a leather holster where maybe stuff could get bowed in and pull the trigger.
You just don't do any of the things he was doing with a gun,
especially if you're a cop,
but also you do all the things he did with a gun if you're a cop
because this happens regularly.
Yeah, at this case, a 30-year veteran who had just returned after two years of retirement.
I want to talk a little bit now about Liam Conejo-Ramos.
This is the five-year-old who was detained in Minneapolis last month.
People will remember seeing images of him in a like a blue bunny hat.
Liam and his father were detained on 20th of January in his driveway after returning from school.
They were order released by Judge Fred Beery, who wrote in his order,
quote, observing human behavior confirms that for some among us,
the perfidious lust for unbridled power and the imposition of cruelty in its quest
know no bounds and are bereft of human decency, and the rule of law be damned.
You can tell the judge was incredibly pissed off at the government. I'll put it that way.
DHS then attempted to expedite the removal of Conejo Ramos and his family,
but the family were granted a continuance by his judge.
Liam and his father, his father is Adrian and Conejo Arias.
I've seen like various permutations of his father's name, I think perhaps,
because some people doing reporting are not familiar with how last names are generally configured in the Spanish-speaking world.
So I'm not quite sure how his last name is pronounced.
But Liam and his father entered in December of 2024.
When they were detained, they were detained at Dilly.
Dilley is a detention center for families, right?
It is a place that I have reported on before.
In my Darien follow-up series, I spoke about primros and.
Kimberly, who were both detained at Dilley, and they went into some detail about the conditions
there.
I'm glad to see that Dillie is getting more attention in sort of bigger, more legacy media outlets
now.
I also saw that there was a protest at Dilley, seemingly while Liam was there, and we can
see this because of drone footage of people walking out of the buildings and assembling in sort of
spaces in between the buildings, and they can be heard chanting in some of that footage.
Now I want to move on to something I've seen DHS doing recently, which is they're trying to push back against the evidence that they are using schools and children as bait to detain non-citizens, right?
I just spoke about how Liam was detained, right?
It was the fact that he was at school that allowed those agents to target his father, right?
I believe they got Liam to knock on the door and his dad came out, which obviously was part of the reason that this between.
particular attention was so controversial.
DHS in a post on X
said, quote,
ICE is not going to schools to arrest
children. A dangerous illegal
alien felon fleeing into a school
or a child sex offender working as an
employee may create a situation
where an arrest is made to protect
public safety. Criminals are no longer
able to hide in America's schools
to avoid arrest.
Potus Trump and Secretary Nome
trusts our brave law enforcement
to use common sense. We will not
tie the hands of law enforcement officers, they must be allowed to protect children from
public safety threats. Obviously, if someone is a sex offender, they can't work at a school,
right? That's how background checks work. The DHS tweet includes a screenshot of a Houston
Chronicle article, which details how HISD has lost 4,000 students due to the ice crackdown,
right? This is students who are, for the most part, afraid to come to school. And they've seen
22% decline in migrant student enrollment.
Obviously, I just want to note that ICE has detained parents outside schools.
And a note of instance last year, they disdained a 15-year-old disabled boy in Los Angeles.
Finally, from me, I want to talk about some legislation that is being proposed in the state
of Washington.
So the state of Washington's House Bill 2321 proposes legislation that focuses on what it calls
blocking features that must be integrated into 3D printers to prevent their use in creating firearms.
Blocking features are, I'm quoting here, a software controls process that deploys a
firearms blueprint detection algorithm such that those features identify and reject print
requests for firearms or a legal firearm path with a high degree of reliability and cannot be
overridden or otherwise defeated by a user with significant technical skill.
what this would effectively do is either prevent the sale of 3D printers in Washington State
or install state-level spyware onto 3D printers,
which would obviously be able to be used for things far beyond firearms.
And people have notably been 3D printing whistles a great deal in Minneapolis right there.
So there's been lots of coverage of this.
I think it would be very naive for people to think that this would start and end
with the creation of unregistered firearms.
Yeah.
No, they'll go, I mean, they'll do stuff like try to enforce games, workshops,
copyrights, and stop them for printing models or whatever.
Exactly, right?
Like, it opens a whole world of IP enforcement in 3D printing,
and it more or less ends.
The thing that I find beautiful about 3D printing
is not that, like, I can make little plastic things in my office.
It's that it shows me that people will choose to create beautiful and innovative things,
even when there is not a profit incentive for doing so.
Yes.
And here's the thing.
It would be a different discussion
if this were a country where the only way to get a gun
was to 3D print it, but it's not.
Yes.
Washington State, right?
You do not have to drive that far from Washington State
to a state where it would be perfectly legal
to do a private party transfer in the Walmart parking lot.
Yep.
And also, there's just a lot of guns in Washington.
Yeah.
Like there are in Oregon.
like there is everywhere in the country.
And to the extent that 3D printed firearms are used for crime,
they tend to be used like specifically in gang crime,
where if the 3D printed gun isn't available,
the professional criminals will access a separate gun.
Americans are not overwhelmingly using 3D printed firearms to shoot up schools.
They're using perfectly normally purchased firearms to shoot up schools.
Yeah, that's what we do.
because this country is full of guns.
Yeah, the state of California is also pursuing a case against 3D printed firearms code hosting websites.
California passed an extremely broad law last year that prohibits the hosting, distribution,
and promotion of the, quote, unlawful manufacture of firearms.
This has significant repercussions for the First Amendment, right?
Like, the code itself is not a tangible thing.
It's not a gun.
It is speech.
But in this case, it is the instructions that allow them.
machine to create gun, right?
Yeah.
It appears that there are over a hundred other people indicted in this case.
I'm guessing that those are probably the designers who posted their STLs for firearms on
the catalog.
I think that the evidence also suggests that's unlikely to hold up in court.
Yeah.
Because like right now, there's a case over the Kansas laws that are mandating, like,
you have age, basically restrictions on websites and the like.
And there were laws.
There was a lawsuit from like a mom who alleged that despite this, her kid was able to access
a website that was located out of the state because it didn't have any of these restrictions.
And the judge in Kansas ruled like, well, our law doesn't restrict people in other states.
They don't have to have like this.
Like that's just you can't actually enforce this.
Yeah.
So we'll see how it goes in California.
Yeah.
California's suing for damages in this case.
It's a civil case on a criminal one.
Sure.
But still, I mean, there have been a lot of cases about 3D.
printed guns and how they are covered under the First Amendment.
So, yeah, I'm going to keep an eye on this because, I guess, like, there are attacks on
the First Amendment from just about every angle right now, and I think we should pay attention
to that.
That is all I have.
Shall we take a little break and then talk about paedophiles?
Sure.
I love talking about paedophiles.
That's what we do.
I don't.
We're back.
This is another, yet another episode of.
the pedophiles.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
I volunteered to do this section.
These are Epstein updates as of today, which is Wednesday.
Yeah.
February 11th, there were quite a few things.
We just finished recording a four-parter on him for bastards and there's more new shit.
Yeah.
It just keeps coming.
It is endless.
It really is.
I want to start off, which at the top of the week, Elaine Maxwell was,
supposed to speak to the House Oversight Committee, and she was called in for questioning, and during a video call, just so folks know she is serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking at a federal prison camp in Texas. But she invoked her Fifth Amendment right to avoid answering questions that would be self-incriminating. This was expected, but her lawyer's statement was interesting, so I'm going to read it to the audience now. Members of the community.
committee, on my advice, Glenn Maxwell respectfully invoke her Fifth Amendment right to silence and
decline to answer your questions today, even though she would very much like to answer your
questions. She must remain silent because Ms. Maxwell has a habeas petition, clearly pending that
demonstrates that her conviction rests on a fundamentally unfair trial. For example, jurors lie during
Voidier to secure seats on the jury and the government promised immunity and then broke that promise.
Nulli Disco's documents now demonstrate these facts conclusively. If this committee in the American
public truly want to hear the unfiltered truth about what happened.
There is a straightforward path.
Ms. Maxwell is prepared to speak fully and honestly, if granted clemency by President Trump.
Sure.
Only she can provide the complete account.
Oh, I'm bad.
Some may not like what they hear, but the truth matters.
For example, both President Trump and President Clinton are innocent of any wrongdoing.
Ms. Maxwell alone can explain why.
and the public is entitled to that explanation.
Thank you.
Look, I'll talk to Donald Trump if I can get immunity for some things.
She's like, by the way, would love to speak.
Gonna need immunity.
Yeah.
The guy that could grant me clemency, I can vouch for that guy.
That's the most, doesn't commit crimes thing a person could possibly say.
Wild.
Yeah.
I'm moving on to a two.
to another guy that was all over the Epstein files, Casey Wasserman.
Casey Wass.
Robert just said that like he knew the guy.
Oh, yeah, no, that's what I always call them.
Jason Wasserman, he's the founder and CEO of Wasserman, which is a talent agency slash sports
marketing agency.
And the reason I'm bringing this up is for two reasons.
There's two things I want to discuss here.
The first one is that since this got announced, he's had major clients, major stars,
as well as athletes, say, that's gross.
And I'm not going to work with you anymore.
and I've left the agency, which is fucking cool.
Which is good.
It's what you should do if you find out that you are working for someone in the Epstein files.
Yeah.
Someone who was specifically communicating consistently with Epstein after his conviction, right?
There's a lot of people who are named in the files.
A lot of random journalists whose articles got shared in the files or something.
Yes, yes, yes.
Big name stars here.
We're talking like Chapel Roan.
Chappelle Rhone.
You're so annoying.
So, like, Chapel Rhone was probably the first big name to be like,
Ew, I'm out.
Yeah.
And another big part of this is Casey Wasserman is leading the preparations for the 2020s
Summer Olympic Games that are going to be located in Los Angeles.
And per Fox L.A.
The LA 2028 board officially supported chair Casey Wasserman in Wednesday,
rejecting calls for his recognition following an independent misconduct review.
While multiple L.A. elected officials demanded he stepped down.
The board cited his strong leadership and cooperations as reasons for his retention.
Ew.
I can't believe the good name of the Olympics finally has a stain on its right now.
Right.
Yeah.
Who would have thought?
Can you imagine the Olympics being associated with a bad man?
I love the Olympics.
This sucks.
How will I watch trampoline?
Uh-huh.
What about Luge?
Wait, no, that's only in the winter.
That's happening right now.
That's already happening.
Yeah, you can watch Luz.
Yeah, you're right, you're right. The one good sport in the Olympics is already happening, so we're fine.
We have to be clear on this. Luge has no links to the Jeffrey Epstein files that we know of.
The Italian Luge Olympics, completely clean. No problems.
Now I want to move on to probably the biggest story of the week, which is Attorney General Pambondi took heated questions from lawmakers and a competitive congressional hearing over the Justice Department's handling and the files related to Jeffrey Epstein.
that expose sensitive private information about victims despite redaction efforts per the A.P.
She frame-mogged everyone at this hearing.
In my opinion, this was the most outrageously unprofessional, shameful,
centurable and sickening congressional hearing in history.
And she is a disgrace and disgusting.
And yeah, I want to get into a little bit of it.
I want to start by playing a clip from Representative Raskin.
He's the Democratic congressman from Maryland.
and he is the Democratic Ranking House member of the committee on the judiciary.
You're running a massive Epstein cover up right out of the Department of Justice.
You've been ordered by subpoena and by Congress to turn over 6 million documents, photographs, and videos in Epstein files, but you've turned over only 3 million.
You say you're not turning over the other 3 million because they're somehow duplicative, but we know that there are actual memos of victim statements.
in there, and you also took down the Department of Justice's prosecution memo from 2019.
So it's clearly not all duplicative, but even if it were, why not release it?
Just release all the duplicative stuff.
In the half you did produce, you redacted the names of abusers, enablers, accomplices, and co-conspirators,
apparently to spare them embarrassment and disgrace, which is the exact opposite of what the law
ordered you to do. Even worse, you shockingly failed to redact many of the victim's names,
which is what you were ordered to do by Congress. Some of the victims had come forward publicly,
but many had not. Many had kept their torment private, even from family and friends, but you
published their names, their identities, their images on thousands of pages for the world to see.
So you ignored the law. And even with over 100,000 employees at your disposal, you acted with some mixture of staggering incompetence, cold indifference, and jaded cruelty towards more than 1,000 victims raped, abused, and trafficked.
This performance screams cover up.
I can't even begin to describe how vile and disgust.
it is that they have doxed these survivors of Epstein without their consent.
Yeah.
It is traumatizing enough that they had to endure this.
Now they've had what happened to them put on display, and now they are going to be targeted.
And they have not had the ability to speak up if they wanted to on what happened.
But the government, despite being told to not out these survivors, did it, but covered the names of the people that committed these crimes.
It is unspeakably disgusting.
Sorry.
Well, I feel great.
It's really upsetting.
Yeah.
It's really deeply disgusting and upsetting.
For sure.
I thought ranking member Raskin spoke very clearly here, and I appreciated his statement.
Yeah.
Moving on, Bondi's tactics during this were to deflect, deflect, deflect.
There was a couple of instances that I want to play for everyone now.
Yeah, you could assign this to a class.
And like, if you're talking about every way that, like, the modern Republican Party tries to deflect culpability for anything negative, like, they all got deployed one after the other in this.
So there were Epstein survivors in person and Bondi wouldn't even look at them.
I want to play a clip from when she's asked to address them here.
To the survivors in the room.
If you are willing, please stand.
And if you are willing, please raise your hands if you have still not been able to meet with this Department of Justice.
Please know for the record that every single survivor has raised their hand.
Attorney General Bondi, you apologize to the survivors in your opening statement for what they went through at the hands of Jeffrey Epstein.
Will you turn to them now and apologize for what your Department of Justice has put them through with the absolutely unacceptable release of the Epstein files and their information?
Congresswoman, you set before Merritt Garland sat in this chair twice.
Attorney General Bondi.
Can I finish my answer?
No, I'm going to recall.
claim my time because I asked you a specific question that I would like you to answer,
which is, will you turn to the survivors? This is not about anybody that came before you. It is about
you taking responsibility for your Department of Justice and the harm that it has done to the
survivors who are standing right behind you and are waiting for you to turn to them and
apologize for what your Department of Justice system. Members get to ask the questions,
the witness get to answer and the way they want to answer. That's not accurate, Mr. Chairman.
Because she doesn't like the answer. So, Mr. Chairman, why? I have asked, she asked Merrick
Garland this. I'm reclaiming my time and when I will continue to answer. I'm not going to get in the
gutter for her theatrics. The time belongs to the, the time belongs to the gentle lady. The
gentlelady has 17 seconds. Thank you. You're not going to answer this question. So let me just
chairman. I'll direct it to you. What a massive cover-up. No, I'm answering a question.
Well, you restore her time. The witnesses interrupted. I'm not going to get in the gutter with this woman.
Stop the time. Let me have my time. The general lady, the gentle lady from Washington controls the time.
The general lady has 17 seconds. You can proceed with your final 17 seconds.
What a massive cover-up this has been and continues to be. Donald Trump made the release of the Epstein files, the center of his political.
campaign because he thought it would benefit him. Then you got into office, Attorney General,
claimed to have a client list, only to them say that there was no list. Your deputy, Todd Blanche,
met alone with Elaine Maxwell and transferred her to a minimum security prison. And now you continue
the cover-up. And I wish that you would turn around to the survivors who are standing right
behind you and on a human level.
Chairman,
You're now recognizes the chairman.
Oh, man.
The time is the gentleman's ex-
you have no time to yield back.
You appreciate that.
We appreciate the thought.
Dispicable.
Disgusting.
Dispickable.
She did not ever turn around
and look at these survivors
that are in the room.
Later,
she loses it again when asked
why she hasn't indicated
any of the Epstein clients
and deflects by saying this.
The doubt.
The Dow right now is over, the Dow is over $50,000.
I don't know why you're laughing.
You're a great stock trader, as I hear Raskin.
The Dow is over $50,000 right now.
The S&P at almost $7,000.
And the NASDAQs smashing records,
Americans 401Ks and retirement savings are booming.
That's what we should be talking about.
We should be talking about making a major.
Americans safe.
We should be talking about, what does a Dow have to do with anything?
That's what they just asked.
Are you kidding?
Mr. Jordan.
No, it's not.
You are here for, you are here.
That's common.
You are here for a hearing on the Epstein files.
You are the Attorney General of the United States and you are a fucking piece of shit.
Fucking nightmare.
It's in response to a question about indicting Epstein clients.
Yeah.
She just starts talking with the stock market.
Yeah.
In only did she just start talking about it.
She clearly came with her stats ready to talk about it, right?
Because the message is it's fine that all this happened and that Trump was involved as long as the economy is good, right?
People shouldn't be complaining.
It's cartoon.
It's cartoon behavior.
Yeah.
Like, it's not even some kind of sophisticated route.
So just going to look over there.
This would be like in like a British like sketch comedy about the government in like the 80s.
Like this is like, if this is it's, it's, it's.
wild. It's truly horrific. And guess what? I still have more to share. Here is an exchange and another
attempt for her to deflect. She tries to bring up Merrick Garland again. This is with the
Congresswoman from Vermont. Didn't ask Merrick Garland anything about Epstein, not once when he was
And also, I want the record to reflect that, you know, with this anti-Semitic culture right
now, she voted against a resolution condemning
is Jewish.
Oh.
Do you want to go there, Attorney General?
Do you want to go there?
Are you serious?
I belong to the gentleman from South
Carolinism to a woman who lost her grandfather in the hot cause.
Really?
Really?
Pretty disgusting.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
She's like, ah, yes.
How can I work in being pro-Israel?
Also, again, right?
She clearly had like,
If this person speaks, this is what I will say.
It's very clear.
She had a material list of, like, cheat sheet of this is how, when this person speaks,
this is my dirt on this person.
When this person speaks, this is my dirt on this person.
There are even photos of the dirt she has piled up on each person.
She had a sheet of, like, people's search histories, just unbelievable deflection, to say the least.
I have one more clip I want to display it, and then I'd like to talk about it a little bit more.
Yeah.
I want to discuss another man Donald Trump, who is all over the Epstein files.
Like former prince.
Here's a video.
And for reference, this is the very, very popular video of Epstein and Trump,
worth Epstein wearing that then I'm shirt and Trump and the pink tie.
They're kind of like elbow on each other and talking about ladies.
Yeah.
Laughing at a party.
Yeah, you've seen it.
Yeah.
Former Prince Andrew, Donald Trump attend to various parties with Jeffrey Epstein.
I want to know whether any underage girls at that party or at any party that Trump attended with Jeffrey Epstein.
This is so ridiculous and that they are trying to deflect from all the great things Donald Trump has done.
There is no evidence that Donald Trump has committed a crime.
Everyone knows that.
This has been the most transparent presidency.
He's the one that asked that those files.
I mean, claim my time.
I got your answer.
You said there's no evidence.
Mr. Chairman, please stop the clock.
He signed the legislation.
This is ridiculous.
Time.
I belong to the gentleman from California.
Okay.
I'm going to put up another document from a witness who called the FBI's National Threat
Operation Center because I believe you just lied under oath.
There is ample evidence in the Epstein file.
Don't you ever accuse me of a crime?
I believe you just lie under oath and this is all in videotape.
You said there's no evidence of crime.
I'm showing you here is a witness statement who called into the FUI's threat operations center.
He drove Donald Trump around in a limo.
He overheard what Donald Trump said to Jeffrey on his cell phone.
He was so angry he was going to stop a limo and hurt Donald Trump.
And he met a girl who said she was raped by Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein.
She later had her head blown off.
The officers at the scene said that could not have been suicide.
side. No one, no one at the Department of Justice interviewed this witness. You need to interview
this witness immediately. Epstein should rot in hell so sure the men who patronizes operation.
And as we say here today, there are over 1,000 sex trafficking victims and you have not held a
single man accountable. Shame on you. If you had any decency, you would resign right after this
The time of the gentleman has expired.
She did not answer a single question, honestly.
She did not give a yes or no answer.
The Republicans spent the time trying to deflect by,
she had like this sheet of like, well, in your state,
this person committed a crime.
In your district, this person committed a crime
and tried to deflect in every which way.
Congress people aren't law enforcement.
Like, no.
And the Republicans spent the time praising her and praising Trump and touting their own agenda.
And this is not justice.
This is sickening.
I.
What precedent this sends to people who are survivors of horrific sex crimes.
I mean, the precedent they want to send is don't say shit, right?
That's what I'm saying.
That's what it sends.
And we can't allow this to go on.
We have to keep talking about it.
Sorry, I'm just very upset.
Pam Bondi, she is one of the most despicable people in the world.
Oh, yeah.
To get up there with survivors in the room and to not look at them,
to not answer a single question, and to continuously deflect and lie,
It's impossibly disgusting and very, very, very sad.
Very, very sad.
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
Yep.
Well, I don't know what else to say about it.
It's impossibly disgusting and very, very sad.
Yeah.
I hope that these survivors get some kind of justice someday.
We are not going to forget about them.
We are not going to stop talking about it.
something has to give here. This is this, this is not justice. This is despicable.
Yeah. Yeah. I don't know what's going to happen or if anything's going to give in the near future,
but people are pissed and hopefully we'll continue to be, which is I guess all we can hope for is that
before much longer the time comes around where we can make sure that these people, including the
folks protecting them now, pay. So, you know, we got any other news? Or has this?
Nope.
It's a real bummer of an ending.
Yeah, well, that's appropriate right now.
Yeah, we reported the news gear, yeah.
I love the news.
We reported the news.
Yep.
James, anything you want to plug at the end here?
Yeah, if you want to email us with news tips, you can email cool zone tips at proton.me.
Do you want to email us with episode ideas?
I will make another email for that, but it makes it significantly harder for all of us going through the news tips email if you just email us with things that you think we should talk about.
So we will try and partition those two things off so that we can deal with both of them separately.
Okay. Bye.
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.
CoolZone Media, visit our website,
coolzonemedia.com,
or check us out on the IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
You can now find sources where it could happen here
listed directly in episode descriptions.
Thanks for listening.
Over the last couple years,
didn't we learn that the folding chair
was invented by black people
because of what happened in Alabama?
This Black History Month,
the podcast, Selective Ignorance with Mandy B,
unpacked black history and culture
with comedy, clarity,
and conversations that shake the status quo.
The Crown Act in New York was signed in July of 2019,
and that is a bill that was passed to prohibit discrimination based on hairstyles associated with race.
To hear this and more, listen to Selective Ignorance with Mandy B from the Black Effect Podcast Network
on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Bowen-Yin.
And I'm Matt Rogers.
During this season of the Two Guys Five Rings podcast,
in the lead-up to the Milan Cortina-206 winner Olympic Games,
We've been joined by some of our friends.
Hi, Bob, hi, Matt.
Hey, Elmo.
Hey, Matt, hey, Bowen.
Hi, Cookie.
Hi.
Now, the Winter Olympic Games are underway,
and we are in Italy to give you experiences
from our hearts to your ears.
Listen to two guys, five rings on the IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
1969, Malcolm and Martin are gone.
America is in crisis.
And at Morehouse College, the students make their most.
These students, including a young Samuel L. Jackson,
locked up the members of the board of trustees, including Martin Luther King's senior.
It's the true story of protests and rebellion in black American history that you'll never forget.
I'm Hans Charles.
I'm Manilic Lamouba.
Listen to the A building on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What is something you've had to unlearn about love?
That it's earned.
That I was unworthy of love.
that it needs to be forever for it to count.
February is the month of love.
Whether you're in a relationship,
casually dating, or proudly single,
it's a great time to reflect on yourself
and what you want.
I'm Hope Woodard,
host of the Boy Sober podcast,
and each week we're looking at love
from every angle.
Listen to Boy Sober.
That's B-O-Y-S-O-B-E-R.
On the I-Hart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast, guaranteed human.
