It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 232
Episode Date: May 16, 2026All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. - Fighting Back Against the Surveillance State - Trump’s New Counterterrorism Strategy and the Spectre o...f Left-Wing Violence - Parasitism with Andrew - The Return of Jim Crow - Executive Disorder: Virginia Redistricting, Renaming the Iran War, TPUSA Event Cancelled by ANTIFA 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: Fighting Back Against the Surveillance State https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/03/meet-rayhunter-new-open-source-tool-eff-detect-cellular-spying https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/17pdf/16-402_h315.pdf https://citizenlab.ca/research/analysis-of-penlinks-ad-based-geolocation-surveillance-tech/ https://colonelpanic.tech/ SSD.eff.org Rayhunter.eff.org https://www.open-archive.org/save Trump’s New Counterterrorism Strategy and the Spectre of Left-Wing Violence https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/2026-USCT-Strategy-1.pdf https://trumpwhitehouse.archives.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/NSCT.pdf https://icct.nl/sites/default/files/import/publication/NSC-1v2.pdf https://web.archive.org/web/20210615130908/https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/National-Strategy-for-Countering-Domestic-Terrorism.pdf https://www.fbi.gov/news/speeches-and-testimony/confronting-white-supremacy-examining-the-biden-administrations-counterterrorism-strategy-langan-092921 https://web.archive.org/web/20210615101231/https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/06/15/fact-sheet-national-strategy-for-countering-domestic-terrorism/ https://www.gao.gov/blog/rising-threat-domestic-terrorism-u.s.-and-federal-efforts-combat-it https://uncoverdc.com/2023/02/08/the-fbi-doubles-down-on-christians-and-white-supremacy-in-2023/ https://angelusnews.com/news/nation/fbi-memo-investigation-update/ https://defendinged.org/press-releases/full-nsba-letter-to-biden-administration-and-department-of-justice-memo/ https://judiciary.house.gov/media/press-releases/us-house-judiciary-republicans-doj-labeled-dozens-of-parents-as-terrorist https://www.justice.gov/archives/ag/file/1170061-0/dl?inline= https://www.fbi.gov/investigate/terrorism Parasitism with Andrew Progress by Samuel Miller McDonald Worshiping Power by Peter Gelderloos The Return of Jim Crow https://www.naacpldf.org/case-issue/louisiana-v-callais/ https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/article-1/section-4/ https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/05/court-gives-immediate-effect-to-voting-rights-act-decision/ https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/04/after-major-voting-rights-ruling-parties-dispute-whether-the-court-should-finalize-decision-imme/ https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/05/court-clears-way-for-alabama-to-use-congressional-map-blocked-by-lower-court-as-racially-discrim/ https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/supreme-court/5872963-supreme-court-voting-rights/ https://www.ms.now/opinion/supreme-court-louisiana-callais-black-vote-warning https://www.democracynow.org/2026/5/12/voting_rights_scotus https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2026/05/supreme-court-alabama-voting-sotomayor-dissent-alito.html Executive Disorder: Virginia Redistricting, Renaming the Iran War, TPUSA Event Cancelled by ANTIFA https://www.who.int/emergencies/disease-outbreak-news/item/2026-DON600 https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvgzv77ldpdo https://www.calbee.co.jp/en/news/pdf/174-29160.pdf https://www.supremecourt.gov/orders/courtorders/051126zr_apl1.pdf https://x.com/joekent16jan19/status/2052477681036583183?s=20 https://x.com/pastormarkburns/status/2052227145921892710?s=20 ttps://www.newsguardrealitycheck.com/p/30-percent-of-americans-think-at-least-one-trump-assassination-attempt-was-staged https://x.com/i/status/2053865929633661046 https://x.com/diyarkurda/status/2054268681362804860?s=20 https://www.jpost.com/international/article-895828 https://x.com/mb_ghalibaf https://x.com/Reuters/status/2053897929174188187?s=20 https://www.cbsnews.com/news/pakistan-iran-military-aircraft-on-its-airfields-us-mediator-role/ https://www.c6f.navy.mil/Press-Room/News/Article/4482914/a-us-navy-ballistic-missile-submarine-arrived-in-gibraltar-may-10-2026/ https://www.them.us/story/uw-students-protest-turning-point-usa-after-trans-student-homicide https://x.com/MrAndyNgo/status/2054289485303525720 https://x.com/ChloeCole/status/2054365092054286605?s=20 https://www.vacourts.gov/static/opinions/opnscvwp/1260127.pdf https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/25/25A1240/408563/20260511151941216_25A%20Application%20for%20Stay.pdf https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/11/politics/virginia-redistricting-us-supreme-court https://newrepublic.com/article/210250/trump-virginia-dems-redistricting-warSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hello, welcome to It Could Happen here.
It's me today, James.
And I'm very lucky to be joined by Cooper Quentin, who is a senior staff technologist at the EFF and Colonel Panic, who is a hacker.
And we are going to be talking today about the privacy apocalypse that is coming our way, I guess, the end of privacy and what you can do to stop it being the end of privacy.
So thanks for joining me.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Hey, James, happy to be on the show again.
Thanks for having me.
Yeah, thanks for making the time.
So I guess, like, in the cases somebody lives under a rock.
we should start breaking down some of the different like surveillance mechanisms that the state is building.
And maybe, Cairal Panic, you can kick us off with, with Flock, because that is the one that has probably got the most attention recently.
And then Cooper, we can pick up on some of the many other privacy violation tools.
Certainly, you may notice all these cameras popping up around your town.
They're on a black pole.
It's a black camera with a solar panel.
And these are what we call flock cameras.
They're really easy to spot, but they're essentially ALPRs.
They're automatic license plate readers.
So this is like a form of drag net surveillance where anytime you drive by these things,
they're just logging your license plate.
And they've expanded this to do other things like facial recognition and gunshot detection and so on.
Distressed person detection is another one, which is really dodgy.
Yeah, fascinating.
But it just looks for people who are acting distressed.
Or I think it's a sound thing too, right?
Oh, okay.
Yeah, I think it's pretty similar to gunshot detection.
It looks for people shouting, people in the heightened state of emotion, right?
I mean, this could really easily be a protest detector, right?
Yeah, or imagine if there was a fucking peacock.
Like, do you hear when peacocks get angry, they really sounds like someone's dying or a fox?
So, yeah, I mean, false positives are already a huge issue for gunshot detections in general.
They can go off for a balloon popping.
They can go off for fireworks.
Yeah.
And then just because you're in the area, you're now part of an investigation.
So perhaps we should talk a little bit about some of the other ones, Cooper.
Maybe we start with facial recognition.
Yeah, yeah.
Facial recognition is all the race these days.
A lot of law enforcement is unfortunately investing in this.
We've seen, of course, ICE with their mobile fortified tool that's gotten a lot of press lately.
and then this is a app that that runs on Android phones that they can scan people with
and apparently, according to them, get a fully 100% accurate identity for that person within seconds.
Anybody who understands facial recognition will tell you that that is not true and that can't
possibly be true.
Facial recognition is never 100% accurate.
And in fact, there have been dozens of cases where people have been
falsely arrested, wrongfully imprisoned,
in charge because of incorrect facial recognition results.
This has also already happened in the case of Mobile Fortify.
There was a woman in Oregon who ICE scanned her face,
and they scanned her twice.
Both times it came up with a different identity for this woman.
And it turns out that both of those identities,
neither of them were the correct identity for this woman.
Jesus.
But ICE has been using this as,
as a, you know, sort of judge, jury and execution to determine whether to arrest, detain,
and possibly even deport somebody.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's pretty bleak.
Something that happens when you come to the United States, you're a migrant rate,
is that they will collect a large amount of your biometric data.
But it seems that even with all of that, the resolution that they have on this can is actually
very poor.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's, I mean, that's, that is correct, right?
So the way that this works, the databases that they have,
it's checking against various immigration databases.
We think that it's most likely checking against the like TSA database of biometric scans that you do every time you take a flight.
Of course, all of the at the border biometric scans, the ingress and egress scans,
any sort of visa information or anything like that.
There's also the Clearview AI.
So even if you've never done any of these, there's another app called Clearview AI,
which is used by law enforcement and by ICE,
which does a similar thing.
But its back-end data is all of the photos that have been posted online.
So they're using data from social media, Facebook, Instagram,
everything else to make a face match and determine who you are based on that sort of
publicly available data as well.
Great.
Yeah.
What a reassuring thing to hear.
The high cost of the free service.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Let's talk about a couple of other things.
I think those are things that people have a very reasonable fear of, concern with, anger or about, however you want to put it.
There is some stuff which I think perhaps we just need to understand what it means, I guess.
And maybe we could start there.
I know Cooper, you've done a lot with stingrays or cell phone site simulators, lots of names for them.
Yeah, definitely.
So I've been for the last couple of years working on a project called Ray Hunter,
which is a open source project to detect cell size simulators or stingrays or MC catchers,
whatever you want to call them.
I will probably use these terms interchangeably.
And in short, the way it works is it's a little piece of software that sits on a mobile hotspot,
one of those little things that you buy to get like Wi-Fi in various places from a cellular connection.
And it looks at the traffic between the hotspot and the towers that it's connected to, specifically the control traffic, not what you're doing, but what the control traffic is, how it's connecting into the towers.
It looks for a number of suspicious things, signatures that we've written of what we think are indicative of MCCc activity.
So we've been running this for a year.
There's several hundred of these around the U.S., if not a couple thousand, but we don't have exact numbers.
there's a bunch of these all over the U.S.
We had a bunch in Minneapolis,
people have been running them in Chicago and L.A.
when that was going on, people have been running them all over the country.
Yeah.
And we have found some evidence of MCC catchers,
but a lot less than we expected,
or a lot less than many people expected.
I actually didn't expect to find many.
And specifically, we have not found any evidence
of emcee catchers being used at protests.
And I should stop here for a second to explain
what a stingray or MC Catcher is.
Yeah.
This is a fake cell tower, essentially, that tricks your phone into connecting to it
so that your phone will identify itself to the MCCcatcher.
These are used for, the primary reason these are used for is to track down a specific
person.
So, like, what we see in court documents is that these are used to verify that somebody is
home before a police raid happens, right? This is what the vast majority of use for these is.
That is one use. The other potential use, and the one we're actually more concerned about,
is that these could be used to identify who is in a specific area. You can set one of these up
outside, let's say, outside of a mosque or outside of a protest, an anarchist meeting or
a anti-fascist meeting is regularly happening, right? And identify the people who were in that
meeting by getting those unique IDs and then going to the phone company and saying,
give us the subscriber information for these people.
And that is a far more concerning use.
And we are not seeing it so far with Ray Hunter being used for that.
What we're seeing is uses that seem to be more in line with the sort of manhunt or
like verifying that somebody is home style of operation, which is also what we're seeing in
core documents.
Interesting.
Yeah.
it doesn't mean that the government cannot find out that you were at a place or at a
protest, right? It just means that they're not using this mechanism of doing that.
Yeah, that's exactly right. So people have asked us what our theories are for about why we're
not seeing these to protest, because for a lot of, for a long time, there were a lot of activists
that were pretty convinced that these were showing up at every protest, right? Or that maybe,
like, you know, to use the old, there was the old Cointel Pro language was like the architects of Cointel Pro
wanted activists to feel like there was a cop behind every bush and inside every mailbox, right?
And that was really the impression that a lot of activists had about MCCatchers, right?
That they were in every cop cars, that they were everywhere, that they were just constantly being used.
And it seems like that's not the case.
And I think there's a couple reasons why.
One is that they're expensive.
It costs about a million dollars for an MCCatcher contract.
So these are actually like fairly rare.
And they're hard to operate.
They require a lot of technical knowledge.
They require a lot of understanding.
Cops are idiots.
They don't want to actually go do all this work if it's not necessary, right?
And it's a lot more expensive.
Then using one of the many other surveillance technologies they have,
flock, facial recognition, things like PennLink, which we can talk about in a little bit,
but other databases of location,
because our phone,
advertisements on our phones are constantly giving up our location, right?
And there's a whole surveillance industry around that selling that data to police.
Also, the other big issue is that there was a legal decision in 2020, 2019.
I'm going to mess this up.
Fact checkers, so we need to get on this.
In 2019, called Carpenter versus USA.
And the Supreme Court in that decision decided that to actually,
historical cell site location information.
So this is where people were located based on what cell towers they're connected to.
That police would need a warrant for that information.
And it seems like at that time, a lot of law enforcement agencies decided that that also
extended to stingrays.
Whereas previously they had not been needing to get a warrant to use their stingrays,
it seems like a lot of them thought, oh, okay, this seems like it probably also applies
to sting raise. Therefore, any case using stingrays without a warrant will get thrown out,
therefore, we're going to need to get a warrant to use this thing. And it turns out,
having to get a warrant was too high of a bar for most police agencies and made them not want
to use this technology unless they absolutely had to and thought they could get a warrant for it.
But there's a lot of other things they don't have to get a warrant for. So we think, my theory,
is that they are using these other technologies that are easier to use, cheaper to use,
don't have to get a warrant, and saving the stingrays only for when they are sure they can get a warrant,
and when they cost and complexity is justified.
Yeah, that makes sense.
It's 2018, June 22nd, 2018, that Supreme Court case.
Thank you.
Real-time fact-checking here on I-C-H-H.
Yep, that's what we do.
Let's talk about Penlink and, like, other location data.
I did hear recently that it's possible that Iran had used commercially available location data to target some of its strikes on U.S. troops in the Middle East, which is wild to consider.
I had not heard that, but it's not surprising, and it is absolutely wild, right?
So Penlink is a company that actually previously had sold a lot of software to help out with MC catchers.
So interestingly, they have now pivoted to different types of surveillance.
So they, a few years ago, acquired this company, Israeli company called Cobwebs.
Cobwebs makes a lot of different software.
There's actually just recently a fantastic report about all of the software that was acquired by Penlink in this sale.
There were links to a couple of spyware manufacturers.
Anyway, there was a report on Citizen Lab that's excellent.
I'd highly recommend it.
But the short of it is that Penlink has acquired two of their main products,
one of which is called Tangles and the other one is called Weblock.
Tangles is a social media surveillance tool that allows investigators to scrape social media for specific keywords and make links between different people, different organizations, say like anybody who has interacted with the John Brown Gun Club or anybody who has interacted with the socialist array or anybody who has mentioned the words Antifa, right?
you can go build a dossier on that person, build a dossier on who their friends are,
what they're talking about, scrape specific groups, any sort of left-leaning group, right?
They can build a dossier on that, who all the people are, who their friends are.
And then they have this tool called Weblock.
And what Weblock does is it is a near real-time database of the locations of millions of phones worldwide.
And so how it works is police can.
circle a specific area on a map, and it will show information about all of the phones that
they know, that we're in that area in some sort of time frame. And I think that the data gets
updated every 24 hours. So you're going to have about a 24-hour delay in that data. So you circle an
area just like with your finger, and you're going to see who was there, you know, as them 24 hours ago
and back to, you know, whatever time frame you set. You can then select any one of those
phones that were in that area, and see information about that person, which is mostly
advertising demographic information, like what sort of age bracket that person's in, what their
interests and hobbies are, whether they have kids, whether they're a parent, what their
nationality is, et cetera, et cetera. But you can also see a historical map of where that person
or where that device, we should say, has been, right? And so you can see where they're at,
where they spend their days, which is probably their work or something like that,
where they spend their nights, which is probably their house, you know,
where they spend sort of their afternoons or evenings, maybe a third space,
maybe a lover's house, something like that, right?
But you can see everywhere they've gone.
You can see if they were at a specific protest.
You could see everybody who was at a specific protest.
You could do a lot of different things with that.
And we think that they get that data from advertising networks.
We know they get it from apps on your phone.
And basically those apps are sending.
information to advertising networks, which is then sold or scraped by Penlink to add to their
database for this app. And all of this is then sold to law enforcement so law enforcement can get
this information and none of it requires a warrant currently. Law enforcement does not think they
need a warrant to acquire this data and judges have upheld that so far. Yeah. So you're saying
when you download an app and you give it location permissions,
that this is aggregated and then sold to third party?
Not every app, but yeah, a lot of apps.
We've been really strongly encouraging people to not give apps location permissions
unless there's a very good reason why that app should have location permissions, right?
Like on my phone, the only app that has location permissions is my Maps app and my weather app, right?
And that's because I know those apps don't have advertising SDKs in them.
But if you wanted to, if you were extra paranoid, like if I would,
is heading into something.
I mean, if I was heading to something that I didn't want people to know I was there,
I would turn my phone off or at least put it on airplane mode, right?
Yeah.
You know, short of that, you can turn off location services entirely for your phone, right?
And give no app your location.
But yeah, it's our phones are snitches, man.
Our phones are snitches.
Yeah, that is the big take home is the big snitch you carry around in your pocket.
And take everywhere with you.
Talking of snitches, I can't think of a way to fucking pivot this into adverts.
Damn.
Products and services.
Here's some things you can buy to snitch on you.
Yeah, buy these things.
They'll give away information data.
Sell it to an Israeli company who'll sell it back to the cops.
All right.
We are back.
I hope you bought something nice.
I want to talk about community counter-surveillance because it is interesting.
It gives people something.
they can understand a little more about the web of surveillance around them, right?
They can feel a little bit more informed.
So let's talk about it.
Maybe, Colonel Panic, if you want to kick off, you've been involved in some of these devices.
I don't know how you want to put it behind some of them.
Yeah, certainly.
I came up with the idea for what people are now calling we spy.
It actually was initially called OUI Spy.
It was organizational unique identifier, which is the first six characters of a,
Mac address, but it's art, you know, it's going to be pronounced however people want it.
It has dual meanings, we spy.
But this actually kind of was born from the war driving community, which is old school,
driving around, trying to find devices, just seeing what's out there.
And so essentially, you have all these devices that are transmitting around you,
and it's totally fine and totally legal to just receive passively.
And so things like Wiggle or Kismet you can use on Linux to just drive around and just kind of see what devices are in your area.
And through this, I came up with a device that was based on remote ID stuff prior to We Spy that just detects drones and then transmits it over mesh-tastic or detects a device and transmits it over mesh-tastic.
And then I was like, it'd be really cool to have a device that if you have a device that you want to know,
when comes around you, it'll just beep.
And so I just took a microcontroller and drew out the design for this thing to connect
to a beeper and essentially made the firmwares that do a few different things.
For instance, if you wanted to know when a Tesla drove by or something, you could put in
the OUI for that or the Mac address for a specific device.
And you can just tell, you can get alerts when devices are around you, essentially.
So that's where all that began.
Yeah. To explain how this might help someone. Let's say like you just wanted to get an idea, right, of the surveillance infrastructure that you encountered in your daily life. You haven't been going to city council meetings. You don't know all that shit is. Your local newspaper is dead now because everyone's local newspaper is dead now, right? So there's no reporting on it. Like if they wanted to get one of these devices cruise around town and work out like when they were being spied on, like what kind of abilities would it give them?
Certainly. So there's drone detection on this device. So you can have it alert when drones are near or have it map via remote ID. But the biggest one I think that has been the most important one is the flock camera detection. There's a ton of other cameras than flock. But this is the important one lately. So a lot of people are out on, you know, out doing word driving and doing real-time research and in contributing to, you know, adding to this database of,
flock cam signatures essentially.
And it's either Wi-Fi or Bluetooth, and some of them are over-cellular too.
But essentially, I made a firmware called Flock-U.
When you drive around, it just war drives flak cams.
And a good friend of mine did some recent research and found out that if you put the
microcontroller into Wi-Fi permiscuous mode, it'll detect more flock cams.
So that firmware just came out a couple days ago.
so constantly being added to.
So if anyone has, you know, Mac addresses, OUIs, please contribute.
It takes a village to raise a surveillance detection kit.
Yeah, it allows people to then let crowd source or do community-based mapping of this stuff, right, to give people.
And like, I know I have friends who have reported on gunshot detection software.
Like, it won't surprise people to find out.
which communities are the most surveilled and which communities are the least surveilled,
right? But it nonetheless is important. Like, that's an important function in making that
obvious to people. Likewise, drones. People might be thinking, why, why would I want to look for drones?
Drones are super cool. I just fly them around to see the birds. Like, you can explain that drones might
also play a role in surveillance? Yeah, absolutely. I'm a avid drone flyer. So I developed this just for
funzies, you know, and made a drone detector. And I quickly realized that the most frequent flyers
are the PD, unfortunately, you know, surveilling the area. So it's really interesting to see
and to see that they're flying, you know, more regularly than any hobbyist.
Yeah, yeah. This has become a big part of like cops you stuff to send up a helicopter to look
at something from above, right? And they still do all the time. I hear that shit over my house every
day, but they can also do it with it right now for much less money.
But do you want to explain Ray Hunter a little bit for people who are like, they're suddenly
shocked by all of this and they want to turn their car into a beeping machine?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
I will do that.
I want to extol the virtues of We Spy for a little bit before that, though.
Yeah.
I mean, this is how I linked up with Colonel Panache because I thought this was such a really
amazing project.
And I think that it serves a couple of purposes, right?
I think that there's one very practical purpose of like this can help you map out the surveillance in your town, right?
You can export the data from this and upload it directly to lock mapper, right?
Or there's some other site that will help you like plot a route from point A to point B avoiding flot cameras, which I think is really cool.
it also just helps
sensitize you
to how many
flock cameras are in your town
like people
yeah like they they are
unobtrusive to a degree right
like they are easy easy visual noise
to just ignore yeah right
but when you're like I was surprised
by how much it went off in my town
and then I'd look up and I'm like oh yeah
fly camera flat camera okay right and it got me
used to like spotting those cameras around right
And I think that it's a really, it's a really useful piece of propaganda work, essentially, in that, in that way to get people used to spotting these to get people thinking about, well, where are these? How many of these are there in my town?
Right. Like, people are like, well, you could just go look for them. Yeah, but people don't, right?
You've got the shit to do. Yeah. Like, yeah, exactly. But if I hear that from the, from the, you know, really loud buzzer, right? I, I know that something is going on, right? It's more.
of a, it's a little more jarring.
It's good in that way.
Yeah, I see it as like a little, I don't know,
imagine a little parrot sat on your shoulder and went,
you're being spied on, you're being spied on, you're being spied on.
Just constantly.
Yeah, yeah, you realize the extent to which that is happening.
Surveillance, coal mine canary essentially, you know.
Yeah, canary is better.
Better analogy.
Kind of like lying cat, but surveillance cat, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Instead of every time you're lying, it says that.
It just says surveillance every time somebody's lying on you.
Yeah. The other thing that I think is cool about no UI spy and Raimentor and why I think these are good projects is it gives a lot of people something to do, right?
Fascism can really make people feel helpless and this overarching surveillance can really make people feel helpless.
And it's really easy for people to fall into privacy nihilism and security nihilism, right?
And just be like, well, I'm going to be watched constantly. There's nothing I can do.
so, you know, script, why do anything, right?
And this gives people something to do, right?
There's a thing you can, and Americans love buying a thing, right?
We love a gadget.
And so there's a thing you can go buy or build or set up or whatever, right?
And go start pushing back even just little by little on the surveillance around you, right?
And then once you start doing one thing, it lowers the energy of activation.
It becomes easy to do other things, right?
It becomes easier to go to your city council and demand that they rip these cameras out.
It becomes easier to find and organize with other people in your community, right?
It becomes easier to start to, you know, think about direct action.
You know, in that sense, it becomes a bit of like propaganda by deed, right?
Like we're giving people the tool to get off their couch and start to push back and start to fight back and start to become a part of a community.
Right? So I think it's really important for that.
With Ray Hunter, so I already kind of described how it works.
But we had a few goals with Ray Hunter.
One was to figure out, you know, how often the cell size simulators were being used in the U.S.
And around the world, but, you know, I live here.
So this is my main focus, but specifically how often they're being used to spy on protesters, right?
Because we were getting this idea that a lot of activists thought that they were everywhere, right?
And I thought that other things were a much bigger threat, right?
Like, there are things that I'm more concerned about, but also cell site simulators and stingrays are pretty mysterious, right?
Like, we don't, we know the broad strokes of how they work, but we don't know the technical details of what exploits they are using to, you know, essentially trick people's phones into connecting to them, right?
So this was a, this was a chance to try to get some ground truth information about that as well.
Yeah.
And we have succeeded in that.
We have a bunch of recordings from around the U.S.
of things that we think are quite likely to be cell site simulators actively in use by law enforcement.
And we've got some ideas about how they're working and what they're doing.
And the other goal is that we wanted to try to calm down some of the fear and uncertainty and doubt among activists about whether this was a threat model that they need to worry about and give people more.
accurate threat models, right? Yeah. And like also give people, you know, a modicum of comfort,
right? This is not a self-defense device, right? This is actually like at the end of the day,
this is a data collect, like not not data collection. We're not collecting your data, but this is,
this is a research project. Yeah. We're collecting the data about like, how often do we think
we're actually seeing these, right? But it gives people a modicum of comfort too, right? Because you have
this, you have Ray Hunter with you, right? And if it doesn't go off, you're like,
every time it doesn't go off, you're like, okay, you know, maybe this is not actually a threat model than I need to worry so much about, right?
And then I hope you'll think, well, what do I need to worry about?
Oh, probably things like pen link, probably things like celebrate and the cops arresting me and making a copy of all the data on my phone.
Yeah.
Right. Probably other, you know, facial recognition and other things like that, which I think are the things that you should be thinking about and worrying about.
Yeah.
That's been the point of Ray Hunter, and I think it's been successful in that sense, right?
But yeah, we really, I mean, we want more people to install this, right?
Especially the next time ICE lays siege to a city, right?
We want to have, we want to have some there.
You know, late in the game to Minneapolis, a ground game got set up where we then had like a couple hundred of these on the ground in Minneapolis.
And we didn't find, we did not find anything in Minneapolis that we felt was conclusive evidence of an MC catcher.
Well, ICE was there laying siege to the city.
Hopefully there is no next time they lay siege to a city.
Yeah, hopefully that doesn't happen again.
But if that does happen again, hopefully we can get sort of a ground game set up very quickly to try to determine if they're using this form of surveillance or not.
So talking of surveillance, here are a couple of products and services.
If you buy them, that will probably result in your data being collected, which will in turn be sold, perhaps to an Israeli company who will sell it to the cops.
Shamba would never sell my data.
We are back.
I think that's really good explanation of the value of the value of the company.
these devices. The more you know, the more you know. And this is a struggle that I have on a daily
basis at a moment. There are so many things to be angry and scared about right now. We don't need to
invent shit that we shouldn't be angry and scared about. Like, we need to focus on the things that
are a real threat. And there are things in this landscape, which are a real threat. And so I think
it helps people to have that. Like, it's one thing to, yeah, go on flog map or whatever and
be like, okay, well, they're there and there and there. It's another one to be like, well,
shit, in my going out to get a pizza with my friends, I was spied upon five times. And I think
that that is very valuable. At the same time, nobody tried to sell site's booth and get my
information that way. I think that's very important. Let's talk a little bit about, like,
how people can organize. San Diego has done a spectacular job of signing a contract that it can't
stop paying for surveillance cameras. So even if we stop using them tomorrow,
we would keep sending our taxpayer money to a spying company, which is great because our city is
Enron by the sea. It will continue to be a shit show forever, apparently. But like, let's assume
that other people have slightly more competent local government.
What an amazing contract. I can't believe that they signed that.
California politics is a shit show, but San Diego is a fucking joke. Many examples of this.
Listen, my city council member just got indicted by the FBI on corruption charges. So in the year of
Lord, 2025, he got indicted by the FBI.
So, like, how stupid do you have to be?
So I have no leg to stand on, but also in California, so it all tracks.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, the great, great times on the left coast.
Yeah.
Let's talk about how people have organized their communities against surveillance.
Like, just to, like, paint a picture for folks here, right?
Like, the flock camera does not know if you're doing a crime.
The flock camera doesn't know if you came from another state to obtain repriments.
productive health care. The flock camera doesn't know if you're a migrant parent popping out to get
formula for your little baby. It captures all of that shit, right? Like there's a broad range of
people in this country who are fucking disgusted at that, people who we might not be used to
organizing with. But perhaps you guys could like explain like how or if you're aware of
instances where people have organized against state surveillance. It would be cool to hear about that.
Yeah, I recently did a talk here in Asheville, North Carolina at an event called Nerd Night.
And Nerd Night is essentially, it's a way to go to a bar without just a bunch of drivel.
You know, you go and then somebody does three talks, 15 minutes each.
And so the host was kind enough to give me a 25-minute slot at the end to talk about
flock cameras in our city here.
And it just so happened to be happening before they tried.
tried to vote on a real-time intelligence center that centralized flock, axon, and all of our
drone data into one just like wall of surveillance for the city.
Crazy.
And so I did this talk, and a city council member showed up.
Our coolest city council member, Kim Roney, she showed up.
And during the questions at the end, I was unsure because on our portal here, it said,
the APD says, you know, we don't share our data with outside agents.
And Kim Roney came up and confirmed that something like 4,000 agencies have access to our data. Yeah, we don't share them, but they can request and we just hand it over. So that's one thing that we learned at that time. So this prompted a big push that was kind of happening for city council. So a lot of folks that came to that talk came to city council. And I'm telling you, like, it's folks all over the board. I mean, this is Appalachia here. Nobody wants to be surveilled in these haulers, you know.
Yeah, this is one of those areas where we can build really broad coalitions, like of people who we might not agree on with on everything.
Like, this is a threat to anyone who wants to do almost anything apart from my guess, just go shopping.
One interesting point is that over 100 people showed up to city council.
You know, this is new to me.
I'm working on getting out there a little bit.
And I seated my time to another speaker, but over 100 people showed up.
and then they pulled it from the vote.
They pulled it from the agenda.
So lots of folks left,
but then some folks stuck around for general comment
and still got it out there,
but we'll see what happens down the line.
They love to do that tactic.
They did the same thing in Oakland
when it was up for when it was up on the agenda.
They said, oh, a ton of people showed up to discuss it.
And then they were like, oops.
No, never mind.
We're going to pull that from the agenda today.
Yeah.
It's such a shady tactic.
But no, I mean, at EFF,
we've seen similar things all over the country.
You know, a ton of different cities have dropped their flock contracts recently because of community
pressure, right?
This doesn't happen in a vacuum.
Your city council doesn't care, right?
They want to score easy political wins, right?
Flock sells them this as an easy political win, right?
They can stop carjackings, right?
They can find car thefts.
They can, they can, you know, do all these things that are popular.
Nobody likes being car jacked.
Nobody likes having their car stolen, right?
But when people show up to city council and push back and fight against this, it makes it not an easy political way.
Yeah.
Right.
It makes it actually politically a bit poisonous to push these technologies.
And it should be.
Yeah.
We shouldn't be surveilled constantly just because we happen to be outside.
And like, look, I would love to not have a car, right?
But this is America.
Like, everybody drives all the time.
That is the society we live in, unfortunately.
Yeah.
And you shouldn't be, you shouldn't be subject to surveillance just for participating in society.
And, and like you said, I think we can build very broad coalitions around this, right?
And we can start to, like, hey, you know, remember how, you know, how mad you were about flock?
Like, yeah, wait until you find out about these other surveillance technologies, right?
Like, now let's talk about campaign finance and how all these companies you don't like are financing politicians, right?
Like you can you can hold people to the left and this is a good way to start interacting with those people.
Yeah.
Right.
Even people on the right, even sort of are more, you know, the more libertarian folks.
They hate them too.
A lot of them have gone full Nazi.
But the ones that haven't gone full Nazi, right?
Like should really care about this stuff, right?
And you can, you know, this can be a way in with them as well.
Yeah.
Like everyone we can bring with us, we need to and everyone else fuck them.
Yeah, absolutely.
But I think this is a really good area to organize because all of us stand to lose something.
It's so fucking creepy when you realize the extent to which, like, someone is watching or could be watching you.
There's a million reasons where people could be mad at that.
There's plenty of room for abuse, you know, there too.
And it's been documented, you know.
Yep.
A recent video with Ben Jordan.
I mean, you know, if you give people this kind of surveillance access, it's impossible to vet people on this level.
And if you give people who got, you know, God-like surveillance power, what are they going to end up doing?
And there's been cases where they've shown that police officers have surveilled their ex-partners and then consequently pulled that person over, which is just insane.
Yeah, no, they've used this to stop people to surveil current partners, ex-partners.
Like, the idea that police would never abuse their power is completely absurd.
and anybody who is arguing that is not arguing in good faith, I think.
Yeah.
And yet, like, it is not that the Dems are, like, necessarily, I mean, they're not on the side of goods,
especially in this area.
But, like, it is a big blue state thing.
Like, don't think that because you live in California, this isn't happening.
Right.
This is very much happening.
Yeah.
Right, right.
Yeah.
I mean, to talk about that real quick, right?
Like, we have, I am blanking on the bill number, but we have a law in California that prevents
California police agencies from sharing data from flock with, from license play regions in general,
with outside agencies and with ICE.
And it still happens all the time.
Yeah.
Police just willfully ignore this law.
You know, I mean, like we see immigration or ICE support as the reason they put down
for searches, even though that's illegal.
And when they don't do that, we know that ICE, you know, people in ICE had buddies
in California law enforcement.
They text them.
They say, hey, run this plate for me.
law enforcement texts runs the plate, puts for the reason down as investigation or crime or, you know, some other such nonsense.
Yeah.
And then, and then, you know, sends the information back to ICE, right?
We call that the good old boy system down here.
Yeah, yeah, I'm here too.
And they've made a concerted effort to recruit people from local law enforcement all across the country.
And this is part of why, right, like, it gives a workaround.
SB 54 is the California Values Act, which...
Thank you.
Thank you.
You are welcome.
That is my shit.
There has never been a prosecution under SB 54 as far as I'm aware.
This law exists, like, largely to make the politicians who passed it feel good.
There are some parts about transferring people who are in detention already.
But, like, these systems give so many workarounds, right?
Or, like, if the data belongs to the company and not to the city,
or if it's stored on a server somewhere else,
like all of these things provide potential workaround.
So I don't think, I guess,
that because your local city council member
has tweeted about ICE being bad,
that that means that your flock cameras
are not being used for that.
It's very hard to ring fence this shit.
Yeah, absolutely.
If people want to learn more about this,
if they want to maybe get a ray hunter,
if they want to get a wee spy or a mesh to tech,
Do you want to explain mesh detect for people really quickly?
We didn't touch on that one.
Yeah, mesh detect is essentially,
it's the first advice that I made,
and its primary function was to detect drone remote ID.
The FAA requires remote ID,
which is any drone over, I believe it's 500 grams,
has to transmit pilot location and drone location in real time,
either via BLE or Wi-Fi,
which is pretty whack for, like, you know,
amateur flyers that just want to fly.
around. But that being said, it's a great Ocent tool. So I started with that. And essentially,
what this does is mesh detect. It takes that detection and sends it over mesh-tastic Laura
networks. So you can set up a, for instance, set up a node way out somewhere. And then you can
have it sends you a message down the line when a drone comes by over mesh-tastic. Or you can set
it up somewhere and have it say, okay, there's a body cam down here, or whatever device, a Tesla,
anything, you know, a lot of devices
randomized their O-U-I these days,
mostly phones, but there's plenty
that don't easily detectable.
So send it over mesh.
It just gives you a network of detection, essentially.
So if people wanted to get a We Spy,
to get a mesh detect,
how would they do, how they go about it?
What are the ways they could get or make one?
Yeah, I have a website called
kernel panic.com.
And it's C-O-O-N-E-L.
it's a little bit of a play on words,
but these devices,
like if you really need one of these things,
hit me up,
we'll talk,
but also it's just two wires,
you know,
like you can take my design
and just reverse engineer it and copy it,
and I put the wiring on my GitHub.
Every bit of this is open source.
So if you look up Colonel Panic GitHub,
you can take this and make it on your own.
I've made home assistant integration.
So like if a UI pops up around your house,
you can just get an alert via your smart home.
You could just go on there.
you know, dev it out.
If you see something that's, that I screwed up, just let me know and I'll fix it or we'll
collab.
So it's all open source.
Yeah.
How about Ray Hunter?
Yeah.
So folks can go to rayhunter.
org and that is our Rayhunter documentation.
That's our Ray Hunter book essentially.
And there you can find links on where to buy the hardware.
We do not sell the hardware, but you can buy the hardware on eBay.
or Amazon sometimes.
The Orbit is what people use in the U.S. primarily.
It's in like South America.
In Europe and parts of Africa,
there's a T.P. Link device that fits the bill better for those areas.
And once you buy the hardware, you can install the software on it there.
The hardware, unfortunately, is not open source because, like I said,
we didn't build the hardware.
We're just repurposing old hardware, right?
When the project started, you could buy the hardware for like 10 or 20 bucks.
Now it's harder to find because of people have bought out a lot of the supply and other other scalpers have wiseed up to the fact that people are trying to buy these.
So unfortunately, we've created a whole like mini market.
I'm a I'm a market maker, God damn it.
We're a hypercapitalist right here.
But no, there's like there's a whole, you know, mini market of people selling like already installed Ray Hunters on eBay and stuff.
Yeah.
I don't recommend paying more than like 40 or 60 bucks.
for the hardware. But then, yeah, the software is free. It's free. It's open source, right? It's on
GitHub. You can go edit it right now. And, you know, I know there's a lot of tech folks that listen
to this show. And I just want to say, like, there's so many cool opportunities for counter surveillance,
right? Like, we keep kind of, kind of mentioning that, like, a lot of police hardware is made
by this company Axon. And it has a very unique Bluetooth signature that can be easily detected,
right? There's a lot of really interesting.
stuff that you can do with counter surveillance.
And the chip that the OUI spy runs on, the ESP 32,
is this really powerful little chip that only costs like six bucks if you buy them wholesale.
And it's got Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and a bunch of really cool capabilities,
you know, that you can use to make some really cool counter surveillance stuff.
And so I really want to encourage the tech-minded folks to, like, think about this.
Come look at these projects, you know, come, you know, write your own code or make your own projects, right?
But like the quote from hackers,
and as you're beautifully designed PC board says, Colonel,
we can snoop onto them as they snoop onto us, right?
Exactly.
We need to spy back, right?
We need to raise the cost of them spying on us, right?
And that's like, sorry,
that brings me to another tangent.
What's really cool about these products is like,
you can build Ray Hunter for about 20 bucks, right?
You could buy a beautiful PC board
and the already assembled thing from Colonel for, you know,
a few dozen dollars.
I don't know
the price off the top of my heads.
I don't want to say.
Or you could build one for
you know, under 20 bucks, right?
Yep.
And you are then,
for, you know,
20 or 40 bucks,
you are making useless a surveillance tool
and a surveillance network
which costs hundreds of thousands
to millions of dollars,
right?
The economics here are on our side.
Yeah.
Right?
Like, this is just like any sort of
asymmetrical warfare, right?
Like, it costs
millions and billions and really billions of dollars for the governments of the U.S.
to set up this surveillance economy and we can defeat it for, you know, 20 or 40 bucks each, right?
Like, we can do this a lot longer than they can. They will go broke before we do.
And I think that that's really important, right? Like the asymmetry here and the economics here
are actually on our side. Yeah. And it's also like, it's cool to understand and make stuff.
I am very good at fixing things that work on, you know, like explosion happens and piston lifts, right?
Like that's my wheelhouse.
I can fix my truck.
I can fix my bicycle.
Are you saying you like ice?
Internal combustion engines?
In many ways, both ices will be the end of all of us.
But I enjoy to fix one.
I like to look at it and go like, huh, okay, this goes bang and then this goes up.
And it's cool to learn this stuff.
It's cool to learn a new skill,
especially like once you get into your 30s.
It's good to learn shit.
Yeah.
And this is approachable,
especially like the guides for these are very approachable,
even if you're not like a tech punk,
if this is your first time going on GitHub.
And that there are people you can reach out to,
like real nice people.
You won't get an AI tech support.
Someone will help you understand this shit.
And that is cool.
There's a platform called the M5.
stack that makes it really easy.
So like you get, you get a Zhao ESP 32, but M5 stack makes it so that like you don't
even have to do soldering and they have drag and drop coding.
So you can just plug in sensors and things like you can make a drone detector out of
one of those and already has like a screen on board.
And so like it's super cheap and you could just debit out really hard and just go for it.
You know, it's it's easy for makers nowadays.
Like in the 50s, right?
You'd have to have an entire military and industry complex behind you to do this kind of stuff, right?
Or a corporation.
And now you can just make yourself a little thing in your house.
It's really cool.
Yeah.
And like, you know, I was in Minnesota there at the time when lots of ICE and CBP agents were too,
when they took a lot of people and killed two people.
And like one of the things that was beautiful about that really horrible time was that everyone was so locked.
like to include grandmothers, to include a dude with a sign that said,
what would Ronald Reagan do?
Like, no one of those people in their town, right?
And that requires everyone to do what they do best.
Not everyone can be out on a street corner,
whistle in a whistle or driving around, right?
Some people that have a really powerful skill set.
And if you are someone who can't be out,
you can still help create these.
You can help code this stuff.
Like, it's beautiful when our resistance takes the best from,
all of us and then we are all better because of that.
Absolutely.
Beautifully said.
Anything you guys would like to plug before we go, websites,
utilaid projects, favorite snacks, whatever you want.
Take a peek at deflock.m.e if you want to,
I have nothing to do with that project yet, but,
you know,
they map on the flog cams.
You can use these detectors as supplementary devices to confirm or to find things
you haven't seen.
But other than that, just kernelphanag.
and definitely check out EFF.
They got a lot of good stuff going on
and they've been doing it since the early days.
Yeah.
I guess I'll plug EFF's surveillance self-defense
guides specifically.
That's at sSD.eff.org.
We got it.
We're the only continuously updated
and longest maintained
security guides.
There's also the activist checklist,
which is another really great resource.
The surveillance self-defense guides
are almost like a textbook.
Like there's a lot of information.
far there. But if you just need the
quick and dirty CliffsNotes version,
activist checklist is really great for that,
right? And they're doing a good job
keeping that up. A lot of respect to them.
And then, yeah, check out,
you know, Rayhunter.org for Rayhunter
stuff, kernelpanic.tech
for his stuff since he plugged my stuff.
I guess the other thing
that I will plug
is Open Archive,
which is a nonprofit
that I'm on the board of. They're
making an app called Save.
which allows you to securely record, archive, and verify videos of whatever you want,
say, such as human rights abuses or, you know, police atrocities or things of that nature.
And so I recommend that project. Go check them out. They're really good folks.
If you're doing a lot of cop watch type stuff, that's a good place to go.
Fantastic.
Nice. Well, thank you very much for joining us. That was great.
Thank you for having us.
Thank you.
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Another podcast from some SNL late-night comedy guide, not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and friends, me and hilarious guests from Jim Gaffigan to Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman,
help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel, help an acapella band
with their between songs banter.
There's the worst singer in the group.
The worst?
Yeah.
Me.
Is there anything to the idea that?
because you're from Harvard, you only got in because your parents made a huge donation.
The group.
The yard birds, right?
That's the name.
The Harvard yard, but they're open.
Do you have a name suggestion?
We're open.
Since you guys are middle-aged.
One erection.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and Friends on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
You love me.
I need some jokes to make me seem funny
Hey everyone, it's Ryder Strong
and Wilfredel from PodMeets World
And now the Pod Meets Twirled podcast
We're two men who were completely clueless to reality TV
Who now have covered Dancing with the Stars,
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I know we annoyed a lot of our listeners
By our severe lack of survivor knowledge
That is the point of the show.
I'm just going to remind you.
I have watched some Survivor.
I obviously haven't watched enough.
Did people not like it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
We'll be recapping the big conclusion
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Again, we are experts.
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Counterterrorism. No, I prefer table terrorism.
Counter. I hardly know where terrorism.
Hi, this is, it could happen here.
Yeah.
I'm Garrison Davis. That's Robert Evans.
And not a lot to be proud of with that introduction.
No, not much to be proud of. But there's also not much to be proud of considering the
2026 White House counterterrorism strategy.
That's right.
I think we put equal amount of work into this as Sebastian Gorka did.
Every year the new counterterrorism list is, it's my dune, you know, or whatever big
movies coming out this year.
I was excited.
Yeah, I mean, I was excited until I actually read it.
And that's what we're going to be talking about today.
And it's a short one.
This is, this is very short, actually.
This is just 14 pages of actual text about half the length of previous comparable documents.
Now, there's been a lot of headlines about the political weaponization after this strategy was released, and we'll talk about that in a sec.
But let's first start by talking about how the document starts with a presidential forward by none other than Donald Trump dated May 26th.
Trump lists counterterrorism accomplishments from the first year of a second term, like mobilizing DHS to remove illegal alien criminals and jihadist,
sympathizers, to arresting the ISIS-K operative who planned the Abbey Gate suicide bombing in Afghanistan
and rescuing over 100 American hostages.
Speaking of, Trump also says he secured the release of the remaining October 7th hostages,
and, quote, began the process of ensuring Gaza can no longer serve as a haven for terrorism and
extremism, unquote, and that's through establishing Trump's own Board of Peace.
The president writes that Operation Midnight Hammer and Epic Fury have dealt, quote,
quote, devastating blows to Iran, which Trump calls the world's number one state sponsor of
terror. Other actions Trump admin has taken include designating Muslim Brotherhood chapters and, quote,
deadly cartels as terrorist organizations, with Trump boasting that he, quote, began using the
strength and power of the U.S. military to stop and destroy cartel operations. The example that he
includes here is when the U.S. armed forces captured the, quote, unquote, narcocts.
terrorist outlaw Venezuelan dictator Nicholas Maduro.
So Trump's opening forward covers the majority of what this 16-page total strategy is focused on.
As Trump writes, quote, cartels, jihadists, or the governments who support them.
And what Trump doesn't actually write about in this forward is what most reporting on the new counterterrorism strategy has focused on,
the later inclusion of left-wing terrorism as one of the nation's leading terror threats.
And that's what we'll be mostly talking about today.
Well, good.
Though we will cover the other two types of terrorism that this guide focuses on.
Now, this strategy is the brainchild of White House counterterrorism czar Sebastian Gorka,
a far-right Hungarian commentator who briefly served in Trump's first term.
This new document states, quote,
A new type of domestic terrorism has emerged,
driven by violent extremists who have adopted ideologies
antithetical to freedom and the American way of life.
The terrorist threat has changed.
We face new categories and combinations of violent actors
that make established ways of doing counterterrorism,
insufficient or obsolete.
This strategy lists three main types of terror groups
the U.S. is currently facing.
Narco-terrorists and transnational gangs,
legacy Islamic terrorists,
and violent left-wing extremists,
including anarchists and anti-fascists.
Now, we'll get to the narco-terrorist stuff later.
But let's start with that last line,
which is clearly pulling from Trump's
Antifa terrorism executive order.
Yeah.
As well as the National Security Presidential Memorandum Number 7,
which directed federal law enforcement to investigate potential crimes relating to political violence and terrorism,
quote, under the umbrella of self-described anti-fascism.
This is a pretty clear political weaponization of the intelligence community apparatus,
and the new counterterrorism strategy doubles down on what MSPM7 established, writing, quote,
in addition to cartels and Islamist terror groups,
our national counterterrorism activities will prioritize the rapid identification and neutralization
of violent, secular political groups whose ideology is anti-American, radically pro-transgender,
and anarchist. We will use all the tools constitutionally available to us to map them at home,
identify their membership, map their ties to international organizations like Antifa,
and use law enforcement to cripple them operationally before they can maim or kill the innocent.
We will do the same with state sponsors of such groups,
and those governments undertaking lethal plots on U.S. soil or against Americans anywhere, unquote.
Sure. Are there any cases of that happening? Are there any Antifa groups killing Americans?
They have one case. They have one case. Not Antifa groups, but yes.
Oh, they don't have cases of, you know, state sponsors backing Antifa. But they do have one instance included of violent left-wing extremism, which we'll get two in a sec.
That's one example across this like 14 to 16 page document.
Now, the violent secular ideologies that I just listed are very similar to or overlapping with.
The common indicators and motivations animating violent conduct included NSPM7.
Anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, anti-Christianity, support for the overthrow of the United States government,
extremism on migration, race, and gender, and hostility to those who hold traditional American views on family, religion, and morality.
After this new strategy was published, Sebastian Gorka told reporters, quote,
We are taking ideology and counter ideology very seriously, unquote.
Now, despite that clear political focus, literally calling it left-wing extremism,
something that Biden never really did with right-wing extremism, at least in documents like this.
No, shocking.
Despite that clear focus, this counterterrorism strategy claims that counterterrorism operations
will be executed, quote, unquote, apolitically.
Uh-huh.
And actually spends a significant portion complaining
about how the Biden admin previously weaponized
counterterrorism operations against innocent Americans.
Great stuff.
Quote, as real threats were ignored or underplayed,
Americans have witnessed the politically motivated killings
of Christians and conservatives committed by violent left-wing extremists,
including the assassination of Charlie Kirk
by a radical who espoused extreme transgender ideologies.
Unquote.
This is the only example of quote-unquote left-wing violence included in this entire document.
Just this.
Just this one killing.
Now, on executive disorder, we have reported on a few instances where the Trump administration
has tried to weaponize the killing of Christians or attacks against churches as being
motivated by like anti-Christian bias, even when the people committing those attacks were
themselves Christian. And for all that we can tell, we're not religiously motivated against Christians,
but they've tried to glum onto a few of these incidents. Certainly not the Charlie Kirk assassination.
Exactly, right? Yeah. But they've tried to glim onto these examples to build this narrative of like
anti-Christian violence, which is rising in the United States. And as for the assassination of Charlie
Kirk, we still don't have a clear picture of the motivations behind that attack. More on that later.
after this new counterterrorism strategy dropped, I did the thing that I assume anyone would do
and read through the past like three or four counterterrorism strategies.
Really? Yeah, great. Great stuff. From the past 10 years. Good work.
Trump released one in 2018 and Biden's came out in 2021. Now, the first mention of any
non-Islamic terrorist group in Trump's 2018 counterterrorism strategy is the
the Nordic resistance movement, quote, a prominent transnational, self-described national
socialist organization with the anti-Western views that has conducted violent attacks against Muslims,
left-wing groups, and others, unquote. This document from Trump's first term focuses almost
exclusively on Islamic terrorism, specifically ISIS and Al-Qaeda, but also briefly mentions the
neo-Nazi National Action Group in one paragraph, and in another reads, quote, the United States
has long faced persistent security threat from domestic terrorists who are not motivated by a radical
Islamist ideology, but are instead motivated by other forms of violent extremism, such as racially
motivated extremism, animal rights extremism, environmental extremism, sovereign citizen extremism,
and militia extremism, unquote. But that's really all it has on non-Islamic extremism in what is a
34-page document. By the time Biden got into office, white supremacist violence had risen dramatically
and the Biden admin released a domestic terrorism-specific counter-terrorism strategy.
This document released in June of 2021, starts by describing racially or ethnically motivated violence
from the KKK during reconstruction to attacks on black churches and synagogues and the El Paso
shooting at the Walmart.
Then, the document covers what it calls anti-government or anti-authority violent extremism,
including the Oklahoma City bombing, the congressional baseball game shooting,
and the recent January 6th attack.
I'm going to read a paragraph from Biden's domestic terrorism strategy here to compare,
quote,
Today's domestic terrorists espouse a range of violent ideological motivations.
They also take on a variety of forms from lone actors to small groups of informally aligned individuals
to networks exhorting and targeting violence towards specific communities
to violent self-proclaimed militias.
Among that wide range of animating ideologies,
racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists,
particularly those who promote the superiority of the white race
and militia violent extremists,
are assessed as presenting the most persistent and lethal threats.
These actors have different motivations,
but many focus their violence towards the same segment
or segments of the American community,
whether persons of color, immigrants, Jews, Muslims,
or other religious minorities, women and girls,
LGBTIQI plus individuals, or others.
Their insistence on violence can at times be explicit.
it also can, at times, be less explicit, lurking in the ideologies rooted in a perception of the
superiority of the white race that call for violence in furtherance of preservation and abhorrent
notions of racial purity or cleansing, unquote. Now, Biden's strategy does later specifically mention
quote-unquote anarchist violence, though within the broader context of anti-government or anti-authority
extremism. Quote, a significant component of today's threat includes
self-proclaimed militias and militia violent extremists who take steps to violently resist government
or facilitate the overthrow of the U.S. government based on perceived overreach.
Anarchist violent extremists who violently oppose all forms of capitalism, corporate globalization,
and governing institutions which they perceive as harmful to society.
The document goes on to mention sovereign citizen violent extremists and other groups
that resist or oppose legislative, regulatory, or other actions taken by the government.
This strategy also names a few single-issue ideologies which may motivate violence like abortion, animal rights, environmental issues, or involuntarily-sellent violent extremism.
But that little section there is the closest that the Biden strategy gets to quote-unquote left-wing violence, as Trump would call it.
But rather than referring to violence as somewhere on like left-right politics, Biden's strategy tries to specifically name the exact motivating factors.
factor driving the violence. His document reads, quote, the definition of domestic terrorism in our
law makes no distinction based on political views, right, left, or center, and neither should we,
unquote. Biden's AG, Merrick Garland, would often say that combating domestic terrorism is about
stopping violence, not policing ideology, and quote unquote, violence, not ideology was an
often repeated refrain during the Biden administration. And this is something that the
the Biden administration definitely acted on. The FBI investigated Stop Cop City under Biden,
and a significant portion of the domestic terror-related charges while Biden was in office
were levied against Stop Cop City protesters by the state of Georgia with investigative assistance
from multiple federal agencies. And almost all of whom were charged with terrorism were not actually
charged with any specific violent crime. We'll talk more about the partisan weaponization of
terrorism or counterterrorism after some ads.
Excellent.
And we're back.
It's such a blast from the past to like read through all of these Biden counterterrorism
manuals.
Yeah.
Boy, back in those days.
Yeah, makes me, makes me nostalgic.
It's just a totally different world.
Yep.
Like, it's unfathomable to like think of the federal government now using this kind of language,
talk about like ethnic cleansing being done by like white supremacist.
motivated terrorists. It's like, it's just a totally different, totally different ballgame.
Now, in Trump's new strategy, it states that under the Biden admin, U.S. officials, quote,
used their significant powers to politically target individuals in the interests of those they favored,
wanted to keep in power, or to help win elections, unquote. Now, under Biden, there was an
increase of domestic terrorism-related prosecutions following January 6th. Plus, unrelated, felon
cases against Trump himself and prosecutions of Trump allies related to the stop-the-steal efforts.
In 2022, the DOJ opened a new unit focused on domestic terrorism investigations, and just that year,
$100 million of additional resources were allocated to the DOJ FBI and DHS for countering domestic
terrorism. Now, this increase in focus was correlated to an increase in attacks. The government
Accountability Office reported that between 2010 to 2021, domestic terrorism-related investigations
had grown by 356 percent, with 231 confirmed incidents, according to the DHS.
In just Biden's first year of office, the number of FBI domestic terrorism investigations
more than doubled. During this time period, the intelligence community classified racially
or ethnically motivated violence as the most common type of attack.
35% of domestic terrorism.
And this category also contributed to the most deaths.
The second most common type of attack was anti-government or anti-authority motivated violent
extremism with 32% of attacks.
And that category covered a lot of different things, including the militia stuff as well
as the anarchist stuff.
It depends on who's doing the exact categorization, though.
Yeah.
Now, the racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists were most likely to conduct
civilian mass casualty attacks, while militia types were more likely to, you
to target law enforcement or government apparatus.
In comparison, Trump's new counterterrorism strategy
does not contain a single mention
of racially or ethnically motivated violent extremism.
Weird.
Not one.
Not one.
Which is like, which is astounding, right?
Even like beyond, beyond the clear partisan weaponization,
like, just from a counterterrorism standpoint,
like this is, this is bizarre.
This is, this is quite, quite a choice.
The last pillar of Biden's counterterrorism strategy was, quote, confronting long-term contributions to domestic terrorism like racism, bigotry, religious or ethnic hatred, unquote.
Meanwhile, Trump's new strategy says that the fearsome powers of the U.S. government must never be abused, quote, whether under the guise of de-radicalization protecting our democracy or any other pretext, unquote.
great
which is
I don't
I don't even know
how to respond to that
yeah
I would always
yeah
like what are you
supposed to say
I mean
it
it demonstrates
they're not
actually interested
in combating
what is the most
lethal form of
domestic
no terrorism
no
and they never have been
even in Trump's
first term
at least they
moved towards that
as the threat
what was increasing
but now
they just have
no interest
whatsoever
and actually like
target
get de-radicalization as an example of the fearsome powers of the U.S. government.
Yeah, like the thing that never worked and like never actually did anything is the big
boogeyman for you guys. Okay. It's wild. The new strategy includes a few examples of
U.S. government overreach. Quote, our nation has not been well served by its intelligence
community, which has been mirrored in old ways of looking at threats or has been actively
weaponized by its leadership as a political tool.
Whether plotting against conservative Catholics attending traditional mass in Virginia,
parents standing up for their children at school board meetings, members of Congress,
or President Trump and his associates, this administration will continue to prohibit the
intelligence community from being used politically against innocent Americans.
So that's the main example of partisan weaponization of the intelligence community.
Let's start with this first one, targeting Catholics attending traditional mass.
This refers to a 2023 FBI memo from the Richmond Field Office
on how racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists
were displaying a growing interest in traditionalist Catholicism.
Great.
And how trad-Cath extremist violence could be mitigated
by building connections within the church.
Sure.
Now, random Latin mass churchgoers in Virginia
were not being investigated.
Rather, this memo was discussing the quote-unquote growing overlap
between the white nationalist movement and quote-unquote radical traditionalist Catholics,
and how white supremacists may use trad-cath social media to promote violence and recruit.
This memo also made a distinction from ordinary traditional Catholics who prefer Latin Mass
and the extremist beliefs and violent rhetoric from what they call radical traditional Catholics,
what we would just call trad-cats, like colloquially.
After backlash to this memo, the FBI claims to have scrapped it for not meeting the standards of the FBI.
Sure. Yeah, we've seen how high those standards are in Cash Patel's era.
I'm going to go on a little bit of like a tangent here.
Because I wanted to get more information about this Richmond field office memo and investigation.
So it turns out, the FBI did monitor a traditionalist priest at a church,
and this church was not considered by the Vatican
to be in full communion with the Catholic Church,
but it's still Catholic affiliated.
This priest refused to speak with the FBI
about communications he had with a parisher
who was a self-described radical,
traditional Catholic clerical fascist,
self-described,
who was posting about conducting a mass shooting
at a special needs of school,
armed resistance against the government,
learning how to manufacture pipe bombs,
and using untraceable means to purchase supplies
to manufacture 3D-printed weapons.
Posting about that on this Catholic account.
Yeah, nothing sketchy.
This Nazi was actually previously arrested in 2019
after being overheard making comments about political violence
while purchasing several AR-15-style rifles,
multiple high-capacity magazines and large quantities of 2-2-3 ammunition,
as well as making online statements advocating civil war
and the murder of politicians.
Now, after getting out of prison,
this guy started attending this traditionalist church
and planning an attack.
The FBI claims he tried to recruit other,
others with similar belief systems and made comments to churchgoers about his intent to commit violence.
He was arrested again and pleaded guilty to possessing a destructive device.
So the FBI was looking into this priest because this priest was not talking to them about
what the communications were with this Nazi.
Communications that they know existed.
And so they briefly looked into him.
This caused a massive backlash among the right.
This is where Marjor Taylor Green was posting about defunding the FBI.
A lot of the dismantle FBI stuff coming from the right was based on this incident of the FBI, you know, targeting conservative churchgoers.
Little side tangent there.
The other main example from the Trump counterterrorism strategy refers to parents and school boards.
This is in reference to a letter from the National School Boards Association requesting federal intervention into the harassment threats and attacks against school boards in 2021.
and this letter read in part, quote,
these heinous actions could be the equivalent
to a form of domestic terror and hate crimes, unquote.
After this letter was sent,
the AG, Mayor Garland,
announced that the government was going to look into these threats.
This too sparked a huge backlash from the right,
claiming that the FBI was investigating parents for terrorism.
There was congressional hearings,
and a month later,
the National School Board Association apologized for some of the language
they included in this letter.
So those are the too many examples of this,
of this horrendous government overreach
and weaponization of the intelligence community
against innocent Americans.
Yeah, of course.
I mean, it's just, it's frustrating how like,
reality doesn't matter at all here.
But I only, like, what is the point
of even like going in and line by line?
Here's everything that's wrong with that.
I don't even know anymore.
No, it's not a matter of convincing.
It's often a matter of just holding my sanity together.
I guess. Yeah. Yeah. No, no, it's important to like look at it. And to some extent, document how
bullshit it is. But it's also just like, it's incredibly frustrating to like see this fucking
trad-cath priest get away with shit that like people would go to prison for if the ideologies
were reversed, you know? Yeah, sure. If you, if you switch this stuff around, you can imagine
how the Trump administration would be handling it. Yeah. A unitarian pastor.
Right.
planning some kind of attack with like an Antifa super soldier.
Well, or just if you've got like a Unitarian pastor or whatever,
like someone who is tangentially attached to someone left wing
who was like posting about carrying out an attack.
Like the level of backlash would be higher and would hurt more people.
No, horrendous.
We've seen stuff like that happen.
The sections on left wing terrorism in this new strategy
actually only make up a few paragraphs of this,
16-page document.
So what is the rest of this counterterrorism strategy really about then?
The first priority is the, quote, neutralization of hemispheric terror threats by incapacitating
cartel operations, unquote.
The primary threat is the so-called narco-terrorists previously mentioned.
And this term, narco-terrorists was invented in the 80s by the president of Peru to describe
attacks on the police by drug traffickers.
But since then, the term has come to mean a variety of things.
In this new strategy, Trump doesn't just consider drug trafficking as a means to fund terrorist groups,
but also implies that drug overdoses themselves constitute a form of terrorism.
Right.
Quote, the borderless America created by the Biden administration was so badly exploited by
threat actors that during one 12-month period, more Americans died as a result of illicit drugs
flooded into the country by the cartels,
then all the U.S. servicemen
killed in combat since 1945,
unquote.
Let's look at those numbers for cigarettes.
Let's just add tobacco in.
Let's just throw tobacco into the mix.
See how that, oh, does it dwarf every other
drug-related death toll combined?
Yeah, it sure does.
Obviously an absurd statement.
Yeah.
But I think it is crucial to understanding
how the administration is operating
by understanding that they consider
drug overdoses to be terrorism.
And that's a big.
big part of how they're able to do what they're currently doing is by weaponizing terrorism
as a category. The strategy later considers illicit fentanyl and its core precursor chemicals to be
weapons of mass destruction. This is the same category of weapons as nuclear bombs. That is how
they categorize it technically. When the U.S. government uses the term terrorism, it's supposed to
mean activities that involve acts dangerous to human life that are a violation of the criminal laws
of the United States or any state that appear to be intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian
population, to influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion, or to affect
the conduct of the government by mass destruction, assassination, or kidnapping.
It's really that last half that constitutes the terrorism part. That separates terrorism
from just any crime. It's the intent to intimidate or coerce civilian populations or influence
the government. But the FBI defines international terrorism.
as, quote, violent criminal acts
committed by individuals and or groups
who are inspired by or associated with
designated foreign terrorist organizations.
Unquote. So, if you
designate a group of foreign terrorist organization,
that means that what they are doing is terrorism.
And that last bit leads us to Trump's
kind of core strategy to combat drug trafficking,
designating cartels and transnational gangs
as foreign terrorist organizations,
which will quote,
make available additional intelligence authorities
and deny and disrupt their financial streams
and access to the United States, unquote.
After the designation, Trump authorized, quote,
dozens of strikes by the Department of War
against cartel drugboats,
resulting in a more than 90% decrease
in maritime drug smuggling into the United States, unquote.
Citation needed.
Yeah.
We will get into the second priority
of the counterterrorism strategy
after these ad breaks.
All right, we are back.
For our last section here,
let's start by talking about
the second priority
of the counterterrorism strategy
released last week.
The second is the targeting
and destruction of Islamist terror groups,
especially al-Qaeda
in the Arabian Peninsula and ISIS-K.
Trump's new strategy
blames continuing jihadist plots
against Americans,
quote,
in part because of the
failed forever war policies, the empowerment of terror supporting regimes like Iran, and a past
unwillingness to challenge Islamist ideologies head on, unquote. So how's that going? How's,
how's that going? I haven't, I haven't checked the news in about three months. Robert, can you
briefly fill me in? Good. No, no, no, no problems. It's flying. Everything's fine. Yeah.
We solved, we solved the failed forever war policies. We did. We did. No more forever wars.
We've got a short war, but it's one of our shortest, Garrison.
Iran is in no way empowered.
I can't tell you how short this war is at the moment, you know?
Incredibly short war.
Iran isn't exercising economic influence over the whole world right now?
I know you think that this all been a disaster, but I'm going to put on a graph how long
World War II lasted next to how long this little adventure in Iran has lasted, and you tell me
if it's a problem.
Hmm?
Wow.
One of those numbers is bigger than the other.
Guess we're fine.
It's wild.
It's absolutely bad shit that they have this in here.
Yeah.
Like, yeah, it's so funny.
It's insane.
So the document talks about Islamist terrorism in Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Europe for over
four pages.
It takes up a significant chunk of the strategy.
These sections of the document largely mirror Trump's national security strategy from last
year and talks about how, quote, unfettered mass migration in Europe has been the
transmission belt for terrorists and discusses the need for, quote, honest conversations about Islamism
and how hostile groups exploit open borders and related globalist ideals. The more these alien cultures
grow and the longer current European policies persist, the more terrorism is guaranteed. As the
birthplace of Western culture and values, Europe must act now to halt its willful decline,
unquote. Sure. One of the more explicitly fascist sections of this strategy.
Trump's new CT strategy does discuss the integration of counter-cartel and counter-terrorism efforts
saying it allows the U.S. to, quote, disrupt the share networks financing and logistical routes
used by both designated drug traffickers and Islamist terrorists, unquote.
The main success story of this strategy is the capture of Maduro, quote,
the illegitimate leader of Venezuela, a cartel boss in league with terror sponsor Iran and its terror proxy
Hezbollah, unquote. We've talked about this strategy for like 35 minutes, and you may have noticed
that so far we've really just talked about identifying targets with very little discussion actually on
actual strategy on how to counter these threats. That's because the document has very little on
actual strategy to counter these threats. It lays out three steps for countering terrorism,
identifying terror actors and plots before they happen, cutting off their arms, funding, and
recruiting streams, and ultimately destroy the established threat group. Methods for going about
this are, quote, a series of similar, high intensity, but short campaigns against jihadist groups.
Love to see that happen. As well as sanctions, Shadow Fleet Oil Tanker Interdiction,
and covert operations to disrupt funding and state sponsorship of terrorism.
That's it.
That is really the bulk of like the actual like strategy of how to do this.
Yeah.
And that's the important thing to remember for all that's scary about this and for all like the people
freaking out and not to say if there's nothing to be concerned about, this is the government
saying this.
They have a lot of ability to fuck with people.
Certainly should be concerned about this.
But at the same time, don't forget, they don't know what they're doing or have a real plan for
most of what they're doing.
No.
Like, this is hacked together, cobbled together, and executed by people who don't know what they're doing,
and at least in one major case, are drunk all the time.
No, it's pretty stunning to compare this to the 2021 Biden one, which is very, very complicated in laying out actual strategy
to dismantle domestic terrorist operations.
And this just, this lacks a lot of the same, like, strategic outlook.
Lastly, the strategy outlines current functional aspects of the, of the same, like, strategic outlook.
functional aspects of the threat environment. That's the term it uses. Functional aspects.
These are like complicating factors. I'll go through these line by line. New and evolving
collaboration between nation states and threat groups such as cartels. Alliances between established
terror groups. Exploitation of new weapons like drones by cartels and jihadists. The remaining
threat of terrorists acquiring and using nuclear biological or chemical weapons, which President
Trump has rightly labeled the single greatest threat to this world, unquote.
All of this stuff is like Bush era terrorism stuff.
Like this is all very outdated.
Not necessarily outdated, but like it's not cutting edge, I guess, what would be the
more correct way of putting this.
Like, you're just talking about drones now in 2026.
Yeah.
But another one of these, quote unquote, functional aspects is, quote, new and deepening
alliances between the far left and Islamists, i.e. the red-green alliance, unquote. This really just
takes up a single line. They don't expound on this. I'm pretty sure this would relate to, like,
pro-Palestine protests. Is this really like people in the far left either supporting Hamas or just
generally being pro-Palestine or anti-Israel? That's what they're calling a red-green alliance.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's just like a throwaway line, but I thought it's worth including just because
of how odd it is. It really stands out. It's at like the middle to end of the document way after
they actually do their like three paragraphs on left wing extremism. They just kind of throw
that in there as a new complicating factor. Yeah, of course. So what does this all mean for the
left? Almost nothing in here that pertains to the left isn't already in National Security
Presidential Memorandum number seven. This new strategy does not designate trans people as a class,
as terrorists, nor does it categorize trans people as nihilistic violent extremists,
like some have previously reported.
It essentially states, like NSPM7, that being extremely pro-transgender can be a motivating
factor in carrying out terroristic violence.
And the only example provided is the assassination of Charlie Kirk, which we still don't
have an illuminated motive for besides the suspect allegedly expressing frustration at
Kirk for spreading vaguely defined hate.
The strategy claims, quote, our counterterrorism powers will not be used to target our
fellow Americans who simply disagree with us. We will not permit the weaponization of America's
unparalleled counterterrorism capabilities for partisan purposes, unquote. Despite clear
political weaponization and Gorka specifically, specifically mentioning that we're going to be
countering ideology. Now, a way to kind of
explain what's going on here. Like, think about racially motivated or ethnically motivated
violent extremism. Being racist isn't illegal. But if someone threatens to shoot up a black church
because they are racist, then that qualifies as racially motivated violent extremism.
The Trump administration is basically using the same MO against people with left-wing
anarchist or anti-fascist views to either stop crimes before they occur or crack.
down harder on people or groups who have committed crimes motivated by those ideologies.
The Joint Terrorism Task Forces were already directed to investigate Antifa-aligned groups and
individuals, quote, engaged in acts of political violence and intimidation. And that's been
happening since at least October of 2025. What's in this document is already been in effect for a while,
and we've already seen some of the results of this in the federal Prairieland trial last February,
following the shooting of a cop outside an immigration detention facility in Texas last summer.
The government, in that case, used the specter of Antifa to link a group of defendants together
and argue for ideological motive.
And a federal jury convicted eight people of riot, conspiracy, and material support to terrorists,
even if each individual defendant did not commit an act of violence.
Yeah.
So there's cases like that, and then there's also cases against the SPLC, which, well,
the government hasn't specifically said
are part of their anti-Antifa investigations,
you can see some similar through lines there.
Yeah.
Right.
In a broad sense, that's how it relates to like
current left-wing activism, right?
The sort of threats and risk that has existed
really ever since Trump took office,
but especially after the Antifa terrorism executive order
and National Security Presidential Memorandum Number 7
are still in effect.
That is still the same level of risk.
this document doesn't introduce anything new.
Now, overall, what this strategy tries to do is connect all of the ideological targets of this
administration, right?
Put them onto a map intersecting each other.
That's what it's doing with this red-green alliance.
So it's trying to connect all of these ideological targets while expounding on Trump's
justification for mass deportations of suspected cartel members, military strikes on boats
in the Western Hemisphere, regime change in Venezuela, and the ongoing war in the Middle East.
That is really most of what the document is trying to do,
is actually build up the counterterrorism justification
for all of Trump's military actions.
And that's one thing that has, I guess, slightly frustrated me
in people's discussion of this new strategy
that a lot of it's based on threats to left-wing activists
in the United States,
while not really focusing on the bulk of the document,
which is building the justification for Trump's murderous military actions
around the world, right?
actions that are blowing up people in boats, bombing schools in Iran, things that have
like a sizable death count. And the sort of logistical and theoretical framework that Trump is
building through this document does have really, really devastating lethal consequences.
And I guess that's what I wanted to focus on a little bit, a little bit more, rather than
just the targeting of left-wing extremists. Yep. All right. Well, fun. I guess we'll see what
happens next. Yeah. I mean, we're going to see them continue to carry
this out both domestically against left-wing activists and overseas, including like right now, right?
This is what they're doing in Iran. They're talking about Cuba. This strategy does not grant them
any new powers, but it does give us a look into how they are thinking about regime change and the
Don Roe Doctrine, right? Yeah. Jesus. It's all so dumb. This U.S. domination of the Western
Hemisphere. And I think that's really the core of what's driving this document is U.S. domination of the
Western Hemisphere, rather than explicit political persecution of ideological left-wing enemies,
which is, of course, still a factor and still a thing to be concerned about and monitoring and
fighting back against.
Yep, absolutely.
Well, all right, guys, I think that does it for us today, huh?
Yeah.
Let's go be elsewhere.
All right.
See you around.
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Humanity is not a parasite.
But the systems we collectively uphold today are certainly parasitic.
They maintain their hold on us due to our interdependence as we rely on each other to survive.
And these systems, as destructive as they are, are how we know how to cooperate.
And they also maintain their whole, of course, through ideology.
The sets of ideas about the world carried through religion, philosophy, politics, education,
culture, etc.
And to some extent, they maintain their hold through violence.
And so we can, and I believe we must, break free from this parasitism.
I believe there are other ways of relating with each other with nature,
and I'll talk about those ways at the end.
By the way, hello, and welcome to It Could Happen here.
I'm Andrew Sage, Andrewism on YouTube, and I'm joined today by...
Mia Wong.
also here.
Yeah, we're doing great
intros.
Yippee.
So I want to talk
a world parasism,
the development of paracism
over time,
as discussed
in Samuel Miller McDonald's
book,
Progress,
which I highly recommend,
quite an enjoyable read.
So I actually really
first heard about that book
years ago before
it was even out,
and I had reached out,
and I was like,
oh, I would love to,
you know,
get a copy as soon as it's available,
and talk about it and stuff.
And, you know, I was at that point in my life,
I was really voraciously consuming
these kind of grand narratives of history.
And of course we know the flaws
with these grand narratives.
They have limited explanatory power.
But I still found use in these narratives
in understanding aspects and angles of our history,
at least when you take a critical,
approach to them.
Because, I mean, history is, as the name implies, a story, you know, there are many interpretations
and frameworks that can be used to explain or better understand different aspects of history.
And so progress offers one framework through its three eras of focus.
Of course, history isn't actually so linear.
Different forms can coexist, forms can come and go.
It isn't this sequential development as it sometimes posed.
but there are trends that we can observe.
So these three phases the McDonald discusses
identifies particular ideas of progress,
forms of parasitism, and agents of history.
I think it's a very compelling connection
between the theology, politics, economics, and ecology
that intertwine to make up history.
Obviously not perfectly accurate,
but I think it helps us to see
certain tendencies more clearly.
clearly. So we can look at a lot of the anarchist approaches or anarchist adjacent approaches to tracing
the development of the state in history. Peter Galiluse had worship in power. James C. Scott
has against the grain. And in progress, although I don't think he is anarchist or anarchist adjacent,
in progress, McDonald's starts with the beginning of recorded civilization in 3000 BCE and looks at
the way that many early states developed
from a blend of religion,
politics, and daily life.
So, I mean, humans had lived
for hundreds of thousands of years
before recorded history, right?
They spread across the globe.
They experimented with all kinds of different
social, political, and economic organizations
that are now lost its time.
And the dawn of everything by David Greber
and David Wen grew kind of wrestles
with some of this.
And the early years of
recorded history, there were many manners of approach to state development.
From roughly 3,000 BCE to 1400 CE, this is the first phase of McDonald's timeline.
Human societies such as Mesopotamia, Egypt, China, Mesoanarica, and medieval Europe
saw a combination of hierarchy with cosmology.
McDonald calls this phase heaven in the book, not to co-sign it as an ideal, but illustration
the prominence of religious power in this time period.
And me, I know even hosting recently about the impact of religion and the seeming hesitant
people have nowadays about actually engaging with what it means materially for the experience
of domination in our day-to-day lives.
Yeah.
Well, and it's something you can look at sort of in that period is the emergence of states
alongside sort of the emergence of temple complexes
as the thing that creates a bunch of the administrative systems.
Graber talks about this, I think that actually,
where a bunch of sort of the administrative systems
that would become, like, credit,
are these things that are developed
in order to sort of track resources
moving into these giant temple complexes.
And so you have the situation where, you know,
the things that are going to become the building blocks
of economics and exploitation for,
every single subsequent period in history
are developed in order to,
in order to fuel these sort of hierarchical,
massive complexes where like just staggering amounts of resources
are like fueled into these sort of temple complexes.
And that's a,
you know,
that's a thing that continues to current present day.
Indeed.
You know.
Indeed.
We have temple complexes.
Yeah.
Like,
what is,
we have temple complexes in the sense of megachurches nowadays.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like,
what is,
What is the mega church, but like the temple complex is farce?
Yeah, yeah, exactly, exactly.
That's the thing, right?
We are seeing an echo of this historical time period even in the present.
Because the idea of progress in this time and in these places was about progressing
toward a higher alignment with the divine order, the will of the gods,
ensuring that different groups of people were in their proper place in that.
order and so you had the development of religious laws and theologies and monumental architecture
which established this particular kind of order and when disaster struck whether it be floods or
droughts or invasions this was a sign a sign of the times perhaps that the order was breaking down
and so it's really funny to me that you know in this progressive account of the idea of
of progress that McDonald's talking about, you know, even the earlier ideas of progress have
not entirely gone away. You know, they haven't been replaced by the next era. They have just
taken on subtler forms and sometimes not as subtle forms. Yeah, there's a concept that
the journal Chuong uses where, I mean, they're specifically talking about like the ways that
elements of like the Chinese, I guess you call it the socialist regime, are sort of taken and then
used in the capitalist regime.
They go to this thing from biology
called exepation,
where something like evolutionarily
that was used for a different purpose
is like repurposed for a new thing.
So it's like, you know,
you've like Finn becomes hand.
I'm not a great biologist,
but this is this kind of thing
where like you have this situation
where like, yeah, elements of like
the old notion of what progress was
of like the sort of centralized hierarchical complexes
of religion.
are like excavated by the next thing that's going to happen.
And that's taken by the next thing,
which is taken by the next thing.
And we still have our sort of like versions of it
that have been taken through like countless numbers of world systems.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I definitely see that.
Of course, there were differences in how they would have,
I think, approached religion and thoughts of religion
compared to how we do.
Yep.
In a time like that, they didn't really have this more prominent and culturally accepted secular mindset that we have today, where religion could even be seen as something separate from everything else.
You know, for them, religion was how reality worked.
The seasons, the harvest, illness, victory in war, all of this was interpreted through a sacred lens.
People knew what place they had in the cosmos, or at least thought about it in that lens.
and they understood what role they had in the divine hierarchy.
On a material basis, though, because, I mean, we do have to think materially and not solely ideologically,
these societies engaged in what McDonald called continuous and regional parasitism
to extract resources like food, labor, and land.
And the agents of this parasitism are city, states, kingdoms, and empires.
On the city-state level, you had them dominating their immediate hinterlands,
And on empire level, they're conquering neighbors done for either integration and taxation or tribute
or slavery. But due to the limits of the technology of the time, you know, they didn't have the
instant communication and fast transportation that we do today. There were limits to how far an
empire could spread. Even the largest empires had their limits and would often devolve power
or fracture. Tensions would begin to build as growing empires struggled to uphold
central authority. Belief systems came into conflict and contact and intellectual traditions developed.
Over time, governance would get more bureaucratic. Religions would face reform due to challenges
from within. And by the time that we approached the late medieval period, around the 1300s and
1400s, and these from a Europe-focused account, or old-world focused account, the world is indeed
change it. The transition has begun from this heaven phase to the next phase in McDonald's framework.
As in the nation phase from 1400 to 1900, where we move away from a world of cosmic order
to a world more distinctly human, a world of human order. Religion persists, of course, but
authority has begun to move from the heavens down to Earth. An earth that could be observed,
could be measured, navigated, and controlled by human beings.
And so we see this in this time with the emergence of the sciences
and the emergence of, you know, newly minted political theories.
And the idea of progress in this time was redefined as expanding knowledge,
increasing efficiency, mastering the environment.
Hence the scientific revolution, the enlightenment advances in navigation and so on.
And consequently, parasitism as a process becomes more disboosed.
Extraction would stretch across continents and would be carried by maritime tree roots,
taking resources from different parts of the world, including sugar, cotton, spices, metals, and labour.
All flowing through increasingly complex global systems and increasingly industrial supply chains.
As wealth starts accumulating in certain regions, thanks the
extraction of others. You know, the rich is being built up at one place because of the poverty
being developed in another place. As the agents of this time of the kingdoms and empires,
but also newly minted corporate charters and nation states. And to be clear, I'm not trying to
say that these are the sole agents of history in any of these particular periods, but just that
they were significant. I don't want to deny the role of, you know, the politics. You know, the
politics from below the rabble as Greba sometimes refers to them,
would have also shaped the development of history.
Yeah, I think it's also worth noting too,
and it's something you were talking about from the top.
But as with all of these sort of like really, really broad,
sweet looks at history, this is capturing trends in a few places in the world.
As they moved, there are obviously many, many, many other things.
that are also coexisting with all of these systems at the same time.
The entire world in like 2000 BC is not just like mirror images of like the Shang Dynasty everywhere, right?
Like there's a whole plethora of different systems that are interacting with each other from, I mean, I can't even.
There's just an unbelievable sort of diversity of like cultural forms, some of which are states, some of which are not.
but yeah, when you're doing a macro history like this,
you are looking at certain sets of them
and matching patterns with them,
but that also is not,
we're also not saying here,
but that's literally everything
that is happening on Earth because it's not.
Yeah.
But yeah,
just,
just want to get that in
for the people who are going to get very mad about this.
For sure, for sure.
We are aware of the presence of other narratives.
We have,
we have,
we have done our postmodernism training.
We have done our historical,
archaeological stuff.
I just,
putting this note in.
Of course, of course.
And like I was saying, they had these other agents, but for this particular narrative, we're
focusing on the kingdoms, the empires, the corporate charters, and the nation states.
And, you know, nation states, we take them for granted now, but they really were not always
a thing.
You know, the idea of a group of people with a shared identity, language, culture, and history
being artificially, I would say, unified under a state that has to be constructed
and enforced through violence and assimilation.
You know, you didn't have this concept of France
until France was built
and the whole world has suffered as a result.
You know, you didn't have this concept of Italy.
You didn't have this concept of Nigeria.
You didn't have this concept.
These nation states had to be constructed.
Yeah.
Even China, which is seen as like the sort of archetypical example of this,
like we have a bunch of records of people.
in the 1500s.
And I think even through the 1600s, like,
going and talking to people in China and being like,
yeah, you're in China.
And the people are talking to her like,
what the fuck is China?
Like, what are you talking about?
We're like under this ruler who's under this ruler,
who's under this ruler who's like.
Yeah, exactly.
You know, so yeah,
these things have to be constructed
and they were constructed a lot more recently
than people think.
And then to actually get people to identify with them
also has to be constructed over the,
generations in some cases. Yeah. And usually by, you know, a process in which, I mean, the only way to
cause people to have a positive identification with like a specific new bounded national territorial
identity is to have it be posed against an other. So. Yeah. One of these, what of these also like,
the question of the national, like the 20th century national liberation movements is when you get like,
for example, like pan-Arabism. It's like, okay, like whose national liberation is.
this, sure as fuck, it's not like the Kurds or Yazidis.
It's, you know, yeah, this is, all of which is to say what you were saying,
which is this is a violent and bloody process that is a lot more recent that people
understand.
Absolutely.
This time also saw a lot of revolutions, bloody indeed.
You know, the rise and fall of old powers and new powers.
And this is also a phase, I think, that could be marked by its contradiction.
You know, you had this rising tide of ideas like liberty and rights and, you know, liberalism was developed in this period, as was socialism.
But you also had, obviously, this vast industrial exploitation of peoples and ecologies.
We saw the development of the sciences and scientific classifications, but you also saw how that gave way to pseudoscientific justifications for inequality.
the great chain of being the idea of the white being on top of everyone else.
Yeah.
You saw self-determination for some and self-determination, not so much for others.
As far as time we reached the 1800s, the pace of change was exceedingly dramatic and volatile.
Industrialization, urbanization, communication, and transportation converged to compress time
and space.
We see the booth of new ideas and reformed relations.
and by the time we reach the early 20th century, a new phase is taken shape.
We are now in what McDonald's calls the system phase, spanning from 1900 to the present day.
The system, the machine, whatever you want to call it, is this vast, interconnected set of systems
that organize how we live, produce, consume, and even think.
The system does not have, you know, a single king or a figurehead that you can point to as the big bad.
despite, I think, people's efforts to try and find a big bad.
It's really a web of processes and incentives and networks
and complex bureaucracies and global markets
and industrial and post-industrial economies and mass communication
and the underground economy and all these different things chugging along
almost like it's beastly bloodthirst is something benign.
Forgive the alliteration.
I'd like to throw a little poetry every once in a while.
It rocks.
So the idea of progress becomes very
economicistic in this period.
It's focused on growth, output, productivity, efficiency.
Our entire economy is basically organized around these metrics.
That's the thing that people are worrying about when they're on Fox business or whatever
the financial times, whatever spaces of dialogue about the economy.
The focus is not on actually all our people's needs being met.
It's what's growth looking like this quarter?
how efficient are we
exploiting the planet.
Yeah, I'm still going to be haunted forever
by that clip on CNBC
that we played in an ED
a few weeks ago whenever this is coming out
where the CNBC
anchor goes,
Trump has threatened to wipe out a civilization.
What does this mean for investors?
Yeah.
I saw that.
I saw that it's horrifying.
Haunting.
Haunting shit.
The way that
our economy has been built around these metrics is truly horrifying.
And you also see the idea of progress in this time tends toward the economicistic,
you know, the inevitability of globalization, the ideological victory of capitalism, and so on.
And parasism in this system phase is, as the name implies, systemic.
To quote directly from the book,
contiguous parastism had captured energy from indigenous societies and native wild and domestic species
this is the parastism of the first phase disparate parastism meanwhile had captured energy from
indigenous societies imperial subjects and both exotic wild and intensively domesticated species abroad
and that's the second phase and so the new form networked parstism captured energy from all
of these as well, but with the addition of ancient species of plant to animal in the form of fossils.
This enabled concrete energy capture through increasing electrification and then the digitization
of extraction and production and abstract energy capture from extremely large, dense populations
of urban subjects. Though the foundations of this system were built in the 19th century, it was only
the 20th century that it came to dominate, end quote.
So this parasism is networked on another level.
You know, it flows through global supply chains.
It extracts fossil fuels, you know, coal, oil, gas, power,
maintains the entire economy, maintains transportation, industry,
agriculture, digital infrastructure.
All of it, a whole world, as we've seen,
has been built around these fossil fuels.
And something as simple as blocking a,
fairly small street
can have a dire impact on
the entire world,
much of which is yet to be felt
even as the straight has now been reopened.
Well, it's not been reopened.
About to be seemingly.
I mean, Israel did value
this east fire though, right? So it probably will not
be opened again. Yeah, I mean, even before that, it hadn't
been reopened. I don't know. I have no idea
when this episode is going to come out.
So I am standing for the record here.
Yeah, it's very hard to comment.
It's impossible.
It's like not impossible.
It's extremely difficult to figure out
whether the straight is open
on a hour to hour basis.
Yeah.
Like, I don't know what the fuck.
It's going to be like, I don't know.
Like maybe someone will have like filled the straight in
by the time this episode comes out.
Like, who knows?
Yeah.
Sorry, I've been so straight-pilled.
That's a fair point. That's fair point.
I guess the point I'm trying to make is even in the hypothetical scenario where the straight is fully open,
you're still going to feel the impact of that brief period of closure.
Yeah.
For years.
Yeah.
The system phase, by the way, it's not just on the whole extraction of resources, of land, of labor.
You also notice that it extracts our attention as well.
through the collection of data, through the increasingly efficient ways that it seeks to draw out
eyeballs for the sake of advertising, for the sake of profit.
And this unprecedented scale of extraction obviously cannot last.
It's merely borrowing from the future and from a million-year-old ecosystems.
Eventually, that debt is going to catch up on us.
In fact, it already has begun to catch up on us.
We're not in the when climate change happens in the future.
It is happening right now.
And the nation states are carrying on business as usual.
And business is booming.
You know, the agents of this parasitic phase do not care.
This period saw the rise of corporations, you know, these massive transnational entities.
And what you'll notice about this period is that they are the agents of this time,
even sometimes more than countries.
Some of them, some of these corporations have more power than in.
entire countries. And so the advent of mass communication and globalization, we also saw ideological
coalitions, which could be seen as another agent in this phase. You know, the government,
institutions, media, tech giants, and movements that share a particular worldview and shape the
narratives that determine what people, be it workers, consumers, users, or citizens, believe as normal,
necessary, I did never tell them. As a person living in this time, it is very difficult.
to see it. You know, you get used to a certain system. It's, you know, it's like water to a fish.
Yeah. You can feel abstract, intangible. Like, what are you talking about? There's nothing besides this.
It can be the reaction you get sometimes. And it is not on anyone individual to understand the detailed
machinations of the entire system, the biggest picture. Nobody, I think, sees all the machinations
of the entire system. But nevertheless, the system sees you. You know, it sees you as a
part of its functioning and to kind of bring it to close.
What I want people to take away from this is that, you know, you can be and you are an agent
in history.
Yeah.
Now, whether you are an agent of history that serves as a cog in the machine or you are
an agent of history that serves as a wedge in the machine, that's really up to you.
We're obviously facing down enormous wealth, deep inequality, technology, technical,
technological advance month, military might, environmental strain, atomization.
The 2020s have been a whirlwind of a decade already and it's not even over yet.
Oh, God.
Still four more years.
Yeah.
This decade sucks.
It really does.
It really does.
It really does.
But this system is not unassailable.
Yes, it can and it does adapt to our.
ruptures, but it is a lot more fragile than it puts forward.
You know, to borrow from, I can remember who said it.
The concept of paper tiger, it comes from Chinese mythology or Chinese military philosophy, right?
Yeah, like I know Mao talks about it a lot.
I don't actually know where it's from, but yeah.
Yeah, but I say that to say that it's a paper tiger, you know, a particularly sturdy paper tiger.
but a paper tiger nonetheless.
Yeah, and never have the people
who are attempting to ride the paper tiger
have, like never in the entire
history of modern capitalism,
has it been ridden by people
who have less idea what the fuck they're doing?
Like never have people
who understand the system so poorly
been in charge of it.
And they are, you know,
they are already kind of tearing it apart
because they don't understand it at all.
Yeah, I think one of the
one of these signs of that was just the idea that you can kneecap your country's soft power
mechanisms entirely and bully every other country in the bill and expect nothing bad to happen.
I mean, honestly, the U.S. has not faced the consequences that it should for the things
it has done in this year alone, that's alone in its decades of history.
Yeah.
But, I mean, when you saw the deconstruction of U.S. aid, right?
which was one of the U.S.'s primary mechanisms of having sway in other countries,
building up goodwill in other countries,
and also intervening in the domestic politics of other countries.
To break that down, like a bull in a China shop,
when that was really like one of the main pillars that was keeping your whole liberal world order float,
it really, I think, is an indication of the incompetence with dealing with.
Yeah, and then even on top of that,
on an even larger scale, right, the entire premise for, I mean, like the entire premise of
the Pax Americana, right, the entire premise of the post-World War II American order was that
the U.S. Navy would keep the world's oceans open for supply chains. Yeah. That was the whole thing.
And it worked exactly as long as the U.S. never actually had to fight a war over, like,
the sea lanes that it couldn't militarily control. And then we fought the one war.
which would prove that we cannot in fact secure the sea lanes for global capital.
Apoccal transformations are happening in like the very structure of global capital
because these people think that like the idea of not using your military power and then reaping
the reaping the world spanning trillion trillion dollar rewards of this.
Like they thought that shit was like girl shit.
Yeah.
I mean, the whole point of what I think part of the point of invests in an endless military might
is so that you don't have to use it.
Yeah.
It's just trying to scare people into just bowing down.
You're just station your troops outside their territory and you're like, yeah, are you going to really try and challenge us?
Yeah.
And then you went and stomped all over somebody and obviously had to stand up and defend themselves
and now everybody's seeing what it is, you know?
Yeah.
And it's a situation too.
were like, yeah, like Iran has always technically had the military power to, like,
control the Strait of Hammuz, but they never did because the consequence of that would be
the U.S. bombing their cities.
So the only way you could possibly lose control of the Strait of Hramuz is if you bombed
the cities first.
So all you had to do was not do that, and it would be fine.
Yeah, but I mean, the little girls in the school were Hamasna, so.
Oh, God.
Yeah, it's just...
It's just a tragedy.
God.
It's really hideous.
they've decided to repeatedly shoot themselves in the balls
because they just like wanting to go kill a bunch of brown kids
you know this is an unfathomable horror
and also they so clearly have no idea what the fuck they're doing
that it makes a lot of things possible
yep yep yep yep yep
so the question is you know what comes next
we're seeing like as you said epochal transformations
just in this year alone
this phase the beer in currently
as defined by
McDonald is not going to last forever.
You know, unlike previous
phases, however, this phase has been
imposed truly globally.
There is no longer a
hint to land that one can escape
to. Yeah.
And so what comes next can be
fragmentation. It can be
some kind of devolution
or calcification
or it can be a social revolution.
And the moment and the
cogs and wedges in this moment
are actively deciding that.
But I think we can do without this parasism.
As McDonald notes, there are other ways of relating with each other and with nature.
He borrows from the ecological language of commensalistic and mutualistic relationships.
In mutualistic relationships, organisms benefit each other.
For example, we provide hives and protection where bees pollinate crops and produce honey.
And in commensalistic relationships, one organism captures an individual.
from another while doing neither harm nor good to the other.
There's lots of animals and plants will make their home among trees while neither harming nor
helping the tree itself, although some of them do end up helping the tree in more indirect ways.
But finally, in parasitic relationships, which is the kind that has proved disastrous for
our world, one organism that being us, has captured the energy of another or of multiple others
to those others detriment.
Our system has put us in the position of essentially being mosquitoes on planet Earth
and not in the role that mosquitoes play in the overall health of the ecosystem,
but literally suck in more blood than the system can sustain.
And so we have to shake things up.
We have to emboldened, I think, new forms of relations.
And what those relations look like are up to you.
As usual, all power to all the people.
Peace.
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Another podcast from some SNL late-night comedy guide.
Not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Jim Gaffigan to Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman,
help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel,
help an a cappella band with their between songs banter.
The worst singer in the group.
The worst?
Yeah.
Me.
Is there anything to the idea that because you're from Harvard,
you only got in because your parents made a huge donation.
The yard birds, right?
That's the name.
The Harvard yard, but they're open.
Do you have a name suggestion?
We're open.
Since you guys are middle-aged.
One erection.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and Friends on the I-Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Human me
I need some jokes to make me seem funny
Hey everyone
It's Ryder Strong and Wilfredell from PodMeets World
And now the Pod Meets Twirled podcast
We're two men who were completely clueless to reality TV
Who now have covered Dancing with the Stars, traitors
And we're gearing up for the season finale of Survivor
So yeah, now we're experts
I know we annoyed a lot of our listeners
By our severe lack of Survivor knowledge
That is the point of the show.
I'm just going to remind you.
I have watched some Survivor.
I obviously haven't watched enough.
Did people not like it?
Yeah.
Just because we...
Yeah.
We'll be recapping the big conclusion
in the 50th season
from the final attempts at gameplay
to the desperate pleas of finalists
to a bunch of...
Ha, ha, ha, who.
Again, we are experts.
So make sure to tune
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for all our Survivor 50 takes.
Listen to Pod Meets Tworrell on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to It Could Happen Here, a podcast where the thin veneer of democracy that has hitherto veiled the settler colony of the United States in the mask of humanity is being increasingly ripped away, leaving behind.
I think calling it a new Jim Crow is that title's already been used for something else.
but it's a return overtly to some of the worst discrimination of the Jim Crow era.
So I'm your host, Mia Wong.
Let's talk about what is actually at issue here.
And that is a recent Supreme Court ruling called Louisiana v. Kaleigh.
On a sort of micro level, this is about the question of,
can Louisiana just eliminate the two majority black districts that it had in its
congressional map in 2024. Getting to this map in the first place was a subject of really intense
civil rights litigation to get to the point where there were two majority black districts in
2024. On a macro level, what is that state here is can a state create an electoral map where
they spread all of the black voters across different districts in order to make them a minority in
every district, thus making it impossible for black voters to select the candidate of their choosing.
Until now, the answer was no, because this is specifically what the Voting Rights Act was passed
to stop. Like this specifically, like this is one of the very specific things. I cannot emphasize
this enough. This specific thing, which is spread out the black vote across a whole bunch of
districts where everyone else is white so that black people cannot choose who they want to elect. This is like
one of the specific things. It was designed to stop. Again, up until now, you have not been
allowed to do this, and this has led to the creation of what are called minority majority
districts. This is a long and complicated history that, frankly, could be its own, probably
is like multiple people's doctoral dissertations. The short, short version of what a minority
majority district is, is it's a district where the majority of voters are from a minority
group, thus allowing people from a minority group to select a candidate of their choosing.
There are a lot of these districts in the South specifically to prevent Republican politicians
from making it impossible for black voters to elect anyone they chose.
And fundamentally, what's at stake here, right, is the constitutional right to elect a
candidates of your choosing if you are part of a minority group, right?
This is why all of this stuff was passed in the first place, because under the,
what we call Jim Crow,
it was extremely easy
for a white majority
to simply effectively deny
the rights of black people.
And this is other non-white people too,
but this is primarily black people.
It was very, very easy
to simply deny them
from ever getting to elect anyone
by just drawing maps
where a candidate that they would vote for
can never be elected.
This is one of the bases
of Jim Crow over discrimination.
The Supreme
court has decided no, actually. What they've decided is that if the Republican Party that controls a
legislature draws a map that does the thing we've been talking about, where they spread out all of the
like specifically the black vote into a bunch of districts so that black people can't elect a
representative. In order to challenge this as violation of your voting rights, you have to prove,
definitively prove that the intent was racism and not literally anything else.
So, for example, and this is the thing that's really at issue here, right?
You have to prove that they specifically wanted to do this out of racism and not just because
they want to elect Republicans by gerrymandering it partisanshiply, which is amazingly a thing
that's legal to do in the United States for reasons that are incredibly baffling.
And also, you have to be able to prove that they created this.
map specifically out of the intention to disenfranchise a minority group, and also you have to
create a map that would allow them to achieve whatever other goals they supposedly want.
Like, for example, again, making sure that Republicans have all the seats in a state,
but also not be racist.
So you have to create a map for them that would allow them to do this in order to prove that
there could be another map that achieves their goals of like partisan gerrymandering that
isn't also racist, it's completely unhinged.
Legally, this is a shambles.
We have covered some downright, like, hideous nonsense on this show in terms of Supreme Court decisions, right?
Like, this Supreme Court has just the lowest level of legal literacy in, like, living memory of any Supreme Court.
It is astounding the kinds of just absolute horseshit they are popping out with.
this is maybe their worst ruling, which is difficult to prove because there have been so many
abhorrent ones, even just from a pure legal perspective.
This one is so bad, it defies belief.
So, okay, one of the main issues here is section two of the Voting Rights Act.
I'm just going to read what it says, quote, no voting qualifications or prerequisite to voting
or standard practice or procedure shall be imposed or applied by any state or political subdivision
in a manner which results, and keep that in mind later, which results in a denial or abridgment
of the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color
or in contravention of the guarantees set forth in Section 173B.
So again, can I emphasize this enough, right?
The way this is written is that it says that you can't apply qualification or prerequisite to voting or have any standard or practice or procedure cannot be imposed by the state or any other political subdivision that results in the denial or abridgment of the rights of citizens to vote in a count of race. Right. It specifically says results. It does not say intent. Now, this is incredibly important because Alito is like, no, fuck that. Actually, you have to prove intent. I'm going to quote.
quote from a piece of SCOTUS blog by Edward Foley, who has an extremely long title of
the Charles B. Ebersold and Florence Whitcomb Ebersold chair in constitutional law.
He's the director of election at law at Ohio State University.
You've written a book on electoral law.
He's a constitutional law professor.
He specifically does election law.
He is like by no means a leftist.
He's coming into the right of like Justice Jackson in her dissent in this case, right?
but even he.
I'm going to quote what he writes about this.
He calls this ruling an abomination, which is like a thing that you don't really get from, like, legal people.
They don't say shit like that.
I'm going to quote what he says about this.
The ruling purports to interpret the Voting Rights Act Section 2, but it destroys the central meaning of the section, converting it into the exact opposite of what Congress meant for it to do.
The one thing that is unambiguous about Section 2,
is that the 1988
Amendment to the section's test
creates a
quote, results test
for determining
whether there is liability
under the section,
replacing the intent test
that the Supreme Court
had previously adopted
for Section 2 claims.
As the text states,
quote,
no standard practice or procedure
shall be imposed,
which results in a denial
or abridgment
of the right of any citizen
to vote on account of race.
Yet the case defiantly
convert section 2 back to an
intention inquiry rather than a
result's analysis. So what happened
here, right, to make this extremely clear,
is that Congress in 1982
had amended this, they amended
what this thing said, right?
Because Supreme Court had been adopting
a standard of intent, right, which means that you
have to prove that like these
people were like mustache twirling
saying the N-word in
fucking clan robes doing
Nazi salutes. You have to like prove
that they intentionally did this for racist
reasons and not any other reason.
And Congress went back and went, no, fuck that.
If the result of it is racist, then you can't do it.
Even if, like, nominally what you're saying out loud is that you're doing this for
non-racist reasons.
If the result is racism, then you have to not do it.
And Alito goes, yeah, no, fuck that.
We're just, like, flipping it back to an intent standard for no reason other than
I want to be able to do racism and help the Republican.
party win seats. The other thing that fully talks about is the court is arguing that like Congress
can't draw from the 15th amendment in order in order to like have the Voting Rights Act work in the
first place. I'm going to quote him again. Yeah, the court in this decision did not need to consider
the question of congressional power to enforce the 15th amendment. That is because the power of
Congress to enact Section 2 with the voting rights amendment for the purposes of the case could have been
sustained not under the 15th Amendment, but under Article 1, Section 4 of the Constitution.
Congress has full power under Article 1, Section 4 to enact laws governing the, quote,
time, place, and manner of congressional elections. Thus, Congress can enact a prohibition
against minority vote dilution for congressional districts under a disparate impact theory
without any consideration of discriminatory intent and not rely on the 15th Amendment at all.
So, okay, what does this mean?
Right?
What Alito is saying is it like, oh, well, actually Congress doesn't have the authority to, like, write the section of the voting rights amendment.
They don't have the authority to do it under the 15th Amendment because it, like, oversteps the rights of states to, you know, like run their own elections, right?
So I'm going to do the thing I did last time with Foley's thing and just read the full Article 1, Section 4 of the Constitution.
By the way, when something says, like, Article 1, Section 4, you have to remember that all of the amendments, right, the amendment that got rid of slavery, even like the first.
Amendment, right? The freedom of speech. That's an amendment. That's not in the original
text. That had to be added onto it. And obviously we have something called the Bill of Rights that
was like, you know, was like the first ten amendments that was passed with the Constitution.
But that's not stuff that was like put like freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, freedom
of worship. That was not in the original text of the Constitution. That was the amendments put on.
This is something that the people who wrote the Constitution were like, fuck it. This is going to be
in the original thing. Right.
So Article 1, Section 4, this is from like the original fucking body of text of the Constitution, says, quote,
The Times, places, and manner of holding elections for senators and representatives shall be prescribed in each state by the legislature thereof.
But the Congress may at any time, by law, make or alter such regulations except as to the places of choosing senators.
So, yes, obviously they can fucking do the voting rights amendment.
They literally have the ability.
Like it says in section one
Congress may at any time
by law make or
alter such regulations
By such regulations they mean
the times, places, and manner of holding elections.
They could just do this.
Right? So obviously they can
fucking do the voting rights amendment. It's
literally just there in the Constitution. It just says
that. It's all like this.
It's gibberish. It's like,
oh my God. You can just
read the text of the
Constitution and it says you can do
this is God!
Holy shit!
Even from the perspective of like if you treat the law as real,
this is just pure Calvin ball shit.
Like, I mean, it's just Jesus Christ.
Okay, you know what's real and not Calvin Ball?
It's these products and services.
We are back.
So, okay, what has the result of this been?
It's been about two weeks since the court did this decision.
The court immediately followed this up.
by allowing Alabama to gerrymander the shit
out of their upcoming election.
They're doing this via, again,
the shadow docket,
which is their ability to just be like,
no, fuck you, we're not ruling on this case
without actually issuing a decision.
An unsigned one paragraph thing from the court
can just dictate what the law is.
It's great. It's amazing.
And by amazing, I mean, Jesus fucking Christ.
This happens about a week
after the original Supreme Court decision.
This shadow docket,
allows Alabama to put in place a map that was already found to be explicitly racially motivated.
A thing Alito said in the decision that he wouldn't do, right?
Alito says in a decision that he won't overturn A cases that are like overt discrimination
and B, that he wouldn't overturn this exact case.
And then they did it anyways.
Like, Jesus Christ.
I just like, oh my God.
So the short version of the Alabama conflict, I'm drawing here from Slate's story on this thing, is that Alabama tried to do a map that would let them get rid of both of the congressional, black congressional candidates in the state by gerrymandering the black vote.
There's a whole bunch of court cases about this.
In 2023, the Supreme Court said that they couldn't do this and they had to make fairer districts that didn't violate the Voting Rights Act.
So this was three years ago.
This, like, the Supreme Court said they had to do this.
Here's some slate, quote, Alabama, however, refused to comply with that order.
Again, like, they got an order from the Supreme Court and refused to do it.
Quote, so the lower court imposed its own map featuring two districts where black voters had a real shot at choosing their representative.
The court also found that in defying its previous mandate, the Alabama legislature had engaged in intentional racial discreet.
discrimination, violating the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause in addition to the Voting Rights Act.
Up until Monday, this decision had prevented the legislature from joining the former Confederate
states now raising to eliminate black representatives from their congressional delegations.
Alabama Republicans pressed the district court to lift its bar, but it refused.
So they filed an emergency request at the Supreme Court asking permission to re-jerrymandered
black communities in light of this decision. Now, I can't emphasize enough. This vote from
they were granted this position. This vote is in like eight days, right? People had already started
voting for candidates and primaries, right? And Supreme Court was like, yeah, sure, yeah, you can,
you can fucking re-jerrymander this thing eight days before the election. That's absolutely fine.
Even though, again, I can't emphasize this enough. In the ruling, Alito specifically said,
in the majority opinion, that they wouldn't overturn this exact case. And then they did it.
It's mind-boggling. It used to be. Like, it really truly did you.
to be that if you were going to do shit like this, you had to like sort of like pretend
that you were following some kind of legal order. And now you just don't. You can just
fucking do Calvin bullshit. You can just literally lie about what you're doing in your decisions.
And then just fucking do whatever you want about it. And obviously, you know, as Slate points out,
this has been pointed out by a whole bunch of different outlets. The Supreme Court also had used
another legal principle to prevent states that would have, we're trying to, like, make more
democratic maps, both in the sense of, like, not being racist and also that would elect more
democratic politicians. And even though it was three months before the election, the court was
like, well, it's actually too soon. It's like, it's too close to the election for you to be changing
this stuff. But then also now they're just letting Alabama do one of these like eight days before
an election. So it's so incredibly clear about what's happening here is that the court is trying to
allow Republican politicians to just straight up rig elections for them by doing gerrymandered districts
in a way that lets them eliminate the ability of non-white people to vote. And this is a huge
fucking deal. Getting the 1965 Voting Rights Act was one of the major achievements of the civil
rights movement, right? It's like one of the biggest goals of the moderate wing of the movement
was to have elections in which black people got to actually fucking vote.
and not have their vote intentionally diluted
so they could never actually elect a candidate.
And that's what's being done here.
Right?
And this has been pointed out.
It's like anyone who's read any kind of analysis
of racial politics in the U.S.,
one of the consistent themes of the sort of,
you know, what you would call, I guess,
like the era of Black uprising, right?
The sort of modern era stretching from roughly Ferguson,
I thought I guess you could talk about the stuff
in the debate before that.
roughly from Ferguson through 2020, was that the U.S. was not a democracy before the 1965
Voting Rights Act because the principle of one person, one vote was not real because you could
simply disenfranchise anyone from a minority group. And that was the status quo of the
South and also like a lot of other parts of the country too was this very overtability of
these people to, you know, not only just, like, this is, this is one of the components of segregation,
right? It's not just, like, imposing segregation legally in public spaces, right? It's also, you know,
like preventing, it's preventing black people from voting. And this is the thing that the Supreme
Court ruling has just effectively destroyed, right? It's the thing that, like, made it possible to even sort of,
like in the loosest sense possible called this country a democracy.
And it's gone.
It's just gone.
And now, you know, it's like, okay, like what, what fucking is this now?
And, you know, I don't know, it's like it's, it's an even more just extremely overt
Jim Crow state.
This is what the goal of the Republican Party has always been.
Like, they want resegregation.
It's been the basis of, of modern Republican politics forever, right?
It's, you know, dating back.
you if you want to look at what Trumpism descends for. We talked about this at length on the show.
The thing that became the sort of religious right was originally born out of like the school
choice movement. And the thing about the school choice movement was that it was an anti-integration
thing. After losing their fight to be able to have whites only schools, a bunch of these sort of right
wingers were like, okay, well, we'll just do private schools where we can do that. And that's the basis
of modern Republican politics, right? Of like, you know, sort of both even
evangelicalism and sort of the Bush administration and Trumpism and Reagan too is this shit and
this has been what the Republicans have done when they've been in power right this is a lot a lot of
the Trump administration like what they were doing like all of the stuff about DEI all the stuff about
wokeness but this is also a lot of what DOJ is doing was trying to make it so that black people
like couldn't work for the US government right was a huge purge of black women from the US
government and you know now now we're seeing this on the
level of elections. And on this level, what the Republicans are trying to do with these
gerrymandered maps is remove non-white people and especially black people from Congress so they can
just have untrammeled white supremacist rule. And they're doing it by claiming both that it's actually
partisan, it's just partisan gerrymandering, which is legal to disenfranchise black voters, because
black voters won't openly vote for the party of white supremacy. And they're also claiming that
not doing this is like infringing on the civil rights of white people.
A thing that like is completely, you know, just gibberish world turned upside down nonsense.
But if they can just do that now because they're in power and because the court will just let them do this shit.
And so I think in a way that really has not been conveyed in the media and in the discourse, like this is one of the leekest moments of this administration, right?
You know, on top of just the multiple genocides they're committing, right?
On top of, you know, just like the ethnic cleansing of not my people from the U.S. that ISIS is doing.
What they're doing right now is attempting to end multiracial democracy in the U.S.
And obviously, politically, I have my critiques of like electoral democracy as a concept,
but having it just revert back to only white people get to decide who politicians are is something even worse
than what we've had so far.
You know, it's a seismic shift
in just literally what this country is
toward something that unbelievably
and unfathomably leaked state of pure white rule.
And the people who are talking about this
think that it can be reversed
just by voting more.
But no, it can't.
The whole point of this, right,
is to make sure that election
and whatever the will of the people is,
is incapable of actually affecting the white supremacist state
because non-white people just don't get votes.
You can't just vote harder your way through all of this shit.
You have to actually do things.
And, you know, if we don't want to live in a white supremacist society,
we're going to have to actually take action to combat
and actually resist the fact that this is,
Like, this is just a pure white supremacist Jim Crow state now.
Yeah, so this has been a good happen here.
I don't have a non-bleak way to end this.
But the common refrain is if you've ever asked yourself what you would be doing in Nazi Germany, it's right now.
And I think you can also add to that, right?
If you've ever asked yourself, what would you be doing during Jim Crow?
The answer is whatever the fuck you're doing now.
And if you're not happy with that answer,
then it's time to move.
Harry Styles, live in London, England at Wembley Stadium.
This is Harry Styles.
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Another podcast from some SNL late night comedy guy, not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Jim Gaffigan to Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman,
help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel,
help an a cappella band with their between songs banter.
There's the worst singer in the group.
The worst?
Yeah.
Me.
Is there anything to the idea that because,
you're from Harvard.
You only got in
because your parents
made a huge donation.
The group.
The yard birds, right?
That's the name.
The Harvard Yard's,
but they're open.
Do you have a name suggestion?
We're open.
Since you guys are middle-aged,
one erection.
Listen to humor me
with Robert Smigel and Friends
on the I-Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
You love me.
I need you.
Some jokes to make me seem funny.
Hey, everyone.
It's Ryder Strong and Will Ferdell from PodMeets World.
And now the Podmeets Twirled podcast.
We're two men who were completely clueless to reality TV,
who now have covered Dancing with the Stars, traitors,
and we're gearing up for the season finale of Survivor.
So yeah, now we're experts.
I know we annoyed a lot of our listeners
by our severe lack of survivor knowledge.
That is the point of the show.
I'm just going to remind you.
I have watched some Survivor.
I obviously haven't watched enough.
Did people not like it?
Like what was just because we?
Yeah.
We'll be recapping the big conclusion of the 50th season
from the final attempts at gameplay
to the desperate pleas of finalists
to a bunch of ha, hoo, ha, ha, who.
Again, we are experts.
So make sure to tune into PodMeets Twirled
for all our Survivor 50 takes.
Listen to PodMeets Twirled on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaking of things that are on fire, America.
All right, I did my job. Garrison, what are we doing?
Who are we?
This is It Could Happen here, Executive Disorder.
Our weekly newscast covering what's happening in the White House,
their crumbling world, and what this means for you.
I'm Garrison Davis.
Today I'm joined by James Stout and Robert Evans.
Yep.
This episode, we're covering the week of May 6th through May 13th.
Yep.
James, some small news items to open us up.
My little grab bag of news stories, yeah.
The United Kingdom parachute drop supplies and medical personnel into Tristan Dekuna last weekend
to respond to the hunter virus outbreak.
A man had got off the cruise ship where the outbreak began in April and returned to Tristan Dekuna where he resides.
I think the cruise ship stopped Tristan Dekuna.
This weekend, British paratroopers from the Pathfinder platoon tandem jumped a doctor
and a nurse onto the island along with supplies.
including oxygen, which was critically low on the island. The patient had reported symptoms
two weeks after disembarking the cruise ship, and they'd spent that time on the island,
and therefore there's a fairly high chance that they've interacted with other people, right?
The island has no airstrip. There was such a low supply of oxygen that there obviously
wasn't time for a boat to get to Tristan Bacuna. So the UK conducted this, like fairly
I mean, extremely unusual. This is the first time the UK's ever done it. The island has a population
around 220 people and only two medical professionals who are obviously exhausted after delivering
care to this person who's on oxygen for several weeks. Yeah. So they jumped a couple more in there.
Yeah, a fairly audacious response to the hunter virus. Secondly, and I think we can also agree
of equal importance, Japanese snack food giant Calbi is switching to black and redactious.
white packaging for its snacks.
No! No!
Garrison is loading a gun right now.
This is a significant portion of my daily diet.
Garrison won't be able to make it through this one.
Garrison is going on hunger strike.
They are wiring a crude detonator together, it looks like.
I'm going to join Iran.
Put an end to this madness.
That is this is because ingredients used for the ink on its normal.
more colorful packages are hard to come by.
Thanks to the war with Iran and the effects on world trade.
Yeah, so if you got one of those little stickers that says,
I did that, and you've got a packet of black and white crisps.
Now you can combine the two.
Put on your black and white lame-ass chips.
Yeah, the one thing that gave us joy is gone.
The Nigerian military has once again carried out an airstrike on a market killing
at least 100 civilians, according to Amnesty International.
The airstrike on the Tumphan market is the second in a month to hit a market.
The Nigerian military claims the area was a hideout for bandits, but it has yet to acknowledge
a civilian death toll.
Government in this area is more or less like only present through its ability to project force
like this, and I've seen interviews with locals suggesting the town was under the control
of non-state groups.
Previously, people remember the Nigerian government has suggested that anyone doing business
with the people it's targeting is also a legitimate target, which is how we're.
has justified dropping bombs on crowded markets like this.
CNN is claiming that the CIA facilitated a car bomb in Sinaloa.
The article seems to have sources in or very familiar with the operations of Ground Branch.
It also alleges that the US government employees who were killed in the car crash.
Last month were members of Ground Branch.
More than the fact of this story, it doesn't shock me that the CIA is killing people in weird ways.
in different countries.
No.
That is one of the things that they do.
That's like the CIA's job.
Yeah.
The fact that CNN has a source that is leaking ground branch operations,
that is not usual.
For someone in the CIA to be talking to someone at CNN,
while these operations are ongoing, right?
And like, yeah, operations in Mexico are exceptionally high risk for these kinds of folks.
Like in 2012, some Mexican federal.
cops open fire on U.S. government employees, presumably not acting on behalf of the federal
government, right? Obviously, it puts this mission at risk, which isn't, like, this is already a high
risk thing, but the fact that somebody has felt the need to leak this to CNN is pretty remarkable.
Speaking of potential CIA leaks, former director of the National Counterterrorism Center,
Joe Kent claimed on X the Everything app that before the president launched the war on Iran,
Quote, the U.S. intel community, including CIA, was an agreement that Iran wasn't developing a nuclear weapon and that Iran would target U.S. bases in the region and shut down the Strait of Hormuz if they were attacked by Israel and the U.S.
Unquote.
The Supreme Court extended access to remote prescription and mail to delivery of the abortion pill with the Pristone until Thursday, May 14th, which is the day this episode releases, the night this episode releases.
Around Thursday, they're expected to make a shadow docket ruling on whether Louisiana's ban on
mail-order abortion pills can go into effect as the case continues through a lower court.
A golden statue of President Trump was unveiled at a Trump resort in Miami last week.
The statue was blessed by evangelical pastor Mike Burns, who said, quote,
Let me be clear, this is not a golden calf, unquote.
God, it's so hard.
You went through everything you just, like, the little parade of horrors like you do every week,
and then you just drop that, that there's a priest blessing a golden statue of Trump.
Pastor.
Sorry, you're right, pastor.
And I know that, like, that he had dressed in the moment, like, the whole golden cat thing of it all,
which is funnier that, like, he knew I got to say something.
Like, I got to make a comment on that.
That's what got me that he felt that he needed to address the golden calf in the room.
Really genuinely funny.
This is not a golden calf shirt.
Has a lot of people asking questions already answered by the shirt.
Oh, fuck.
Yeah, it's great.
But yeah, grim stuff.
Yep.
So a national survey of 1,000 Americans by NewsGuard and UGov suggests that about half of people in the United States, a survey,
think each of the attempts on Donald Trump's life were staged
or they're not sure if it was real.
For the White House correspondent's dinner attempt
and the Butler Pennsylvania attempts,
24% of those surveyed thought the attempts were staged.
32% were not sure in the White House correspondent's dinner attempt
and 29% for the Butler Pennsylvania event.
It's more than half if you add them up.
I'm not convinced it was real.
Super funny.
I'll quote from the report here of the 12% of Americans who said all three attempts were staged.
55% were Democrats, 38% were independents, and 7% were Republicans, according to the report.
Really interested in that 7%?
Yeah.
What are they getting out of that?
I don't.
Yeah.
In what way do they think it was staged?
It's just like, hell yeah.
We're owning the libs.
We're staging.
We did it.
Look at us go.
I think it may just be like, well, I voted for Trump because I wanted my date.
taxes to be lower, but I know he faked that.
Yeah.
This is obviously worrying and this trend is something we've been talking about for years at this
point.
This is why I've been kind of such a hard ass about the liberal conspiracyism that is growing.
I don't even find it worrying anymore, Garrison.
I find it liberating that we're finally here.
And I just like, ha, ha, ha, look at that.
We're finally free from the shackles of truth.
Yeah.
Everyone's dad on the muck together.
Nobody's standing pretty anymore.
Everybody's just wallowing like a filthy pig and shit.
That is pretty much the status of the U.S. news market right now.
Yeah, I'm fine with it.
God, it's fucking bleak.
It's so bleak.
I just, I don't want to address the factual elements of each thing because there's no point.
No, right?
No, we should all know that's useless by now, right?
Yeah.
Just, have we not gotten to a place free of that yet?
Yeah, I know.
I really don't know what to say about that.
I mean, there are like real issues here.
A conspiratorial base can be more easily recruited into reactionary thought.
This is the idea of the cultic milieu.
And we can see a version of this happening with certain portions of the left
might engage with people like Tucker Carlson or Marjor Taylor Marine right now.
But for me, kind of the biggest issue with this is that,
that it's a refusal to understand or accept
the particular moment that you find yourself with them,
like a resistance to the self-realization
that you are living through history
and that people are active agents in history.
It's a historical rejection of the fact
that some people may look at some of the actions
that someone like Trump is doing,
whether regarding ICE or the war with Iran,
and then choose to act in response.
Or in the case of the Butler shooting,
the result of social disintegration or under-regulation
manifesting as someone's violent nihilistic expression,
similar to the mindset of like a school shooter.
My last issue relates kind of to the second issue,
like the ahistorical element,
how these false flag shooting conspiracy theories
also prescribe Trump too much power
by not just turning him into this like invincible god,
but then also assuming that like the U.S. deep state
is capable and competent
enough to stage major
world events like this, like brainwash
and groom patsies into doing
these shootings. And like this also
obviously removes the agency and the clearly
defined history. Oh, the people that do
these own shootings, right? It rejects
this, like I said, this relates to the second thing.
It rejects or refuses to
understand the moment that you're living in and that people
actually are active agents of history.
And like the people that do these shootings have their
own family and their own friends. They have their own
history that we can show and prove
and assuming that all this is like fake,
that like the government has like manufactured this
or somehow like turned someone
who was a normie kind of liberal
suddenly into like doing a shooting
or has like fake this backstory, right?
It gives the government so much power, right?
It assumes that the government has power
like a magical wizard that totally controls reality.
Yeah.
Anyway, for our first main story today,
let's talk about Turning Point USA.
But first, on Sunday night in Seattle, a 19-year-old transgender girl was murdered.
She was a student at University of Washington and was found with stab wounds in the laundry room of an off-campus apartment that she lived in.
No suspect has yet been identified.
While horrific in and of itself, Turning Point USA was scheduled to hold an anti-examination.
anti-trans debate event just days later at the very campus this trans student attended.
This event was going to be hosted by a far-right anti-trans lobbyist and influencer named Chloe Cole,
a teen transitioner who subsequently detransitioned a few years later following an acid trip
and then conversion to Christianity.
Many such cases.
Yeah, that's fascinating.
Yeah.
Most normal Christian detransitioner.
Yeah.
She made an appearance at Trump's last state of the union address
when the president talked about restricting gender-affirming care to minors.
After the murder in Seattle,
Cole and TPSA continued plugging their anti-trans event online,
prompting students to plan a protest to, quote-unquote,
shut the event down, calling to bring, quote,
flags, drums, or anything to make noise, unquote.
then on Tuesday, the National Turning Point USA Organization decided to cancel the event,
according to University of Washington spokesperson Victor Balta.
Later that night, Tuesday night, Chloe Cole announced the event was postponed because,
quote, Antifa has assembled a local militia in their own words, unquote.
Oh, that's alarming.
A militia.
Now, I was not able to find an instance of Antifa
claiming to have assembled a quote-unquote militia.
Really, no photos of the militia?
No documentation of the militia?
Nor was this language, this claim of a militia in their own words,
nor was this language included in right-wing reporting
of the planned protest.
I cannot find a source for this.
I really looked.
I went through Fox articles, post-millennial articles.
there was nothing about Antifa using the word militia.
No one, no counter, no protester that I could find was using the word militia.
Now, Chloe Cole also claimed that they were, quote, explicit threats on my life,
and that the protest caused a, quote, level of attention, our security team,
and the local PD are frankly unprepared for, unquote.
She shared an article from the Canadian far right outlet the post-millennial,
documenting threats against the TPUSA event.
Threats like one Twitter user in Canada
saying that people should shut down the event
like Milo Unopoulos's Berkeley campus event in 2017
writing, quote, make them hurt for scheduling this.
One other Twitter post with two likes,
read quote, luckily the bricks in Red Square
are easy to grab this time of year.
Okay. That's the end of the end.
evidence that Andy No used to claim that, quote, far left extremists are urging their comrades to
carry out deadly violence, unquote. Two posts. Just those two posts. That was that was the post
that Chloe Cole was sharing via this post-Millennial article that that was the evidence for these
deadly threats. Now, I do think it's worth reiterating that to these people, they also believe
that just calling someone a fascist constitutes a threat of violence.
This is something they've been repeating a lot
since the death of Charlie Kirk.
Just calling someone a fascist constitutes a deadly threat.
In Chloe Cole's video,
announcing that the TPA USA event was, in her words, postponed,
she said that after Charlie's assassination,
quote, speaking on a university campus in 2026,
can come with deadly consequences.
But towards the end of the video,
she stressed that, quote,
this is not a win for Antifa
because truth will always win.
I am not afraid of Antifa
That a quote
Rag-tag group of wannabe revolutionaries
on cross-sex hormones
Won't scare her
The enemy is both strong and weak
Yeah, good for her
Yeah, okay
That's how these people work
Now, while I was watching
Chloe Cole's video, something sprang to mind
Last week, the White House released a new
Counterterrorism Strategy that named
three major threat groups the country is currently facing.
Narco-terrorists and transnational gangs,
legacy Islamist terrorists,
and violent left-wing extremists,
including anarchists and anti-fascists.
The document says that counterterrorism activities
will, quote,
prioritize the rapid identification and neutralization
of violent, secular political groups
whose ideology is anti-American,
radically pro-transgender, and anarchist,
unquote.
I did a full episode about this with Robert earlier this week, if you want to check that out.
Yep.
But the left-wing transgender anarchist Antifa stuff makes up just a handful of sentences in a 16-page
document, which is mostly focused on Islamic terrorism, cartels, and complaining about the Biden
administration.
For a TLDR, there's nothing new in this counterterrorism document pertaining to the left that
wasn't already in National Security Presidential Memorandum Number 7.
It does not grant any new powers, nor designate trans people as terrorists.
Like NSMP7, it essentially states that being, quote, unquote, extremely pro-transgender
can be a motivating factor in carrying out terroristic violence or threats.
Since last October, joint terrorism task forces across the country had been directed to investigate
and TIFA-aligned groups and individuals, quote,
engaged in acts of political violence and intimidation.
This new document is just describing things that are already happening,
while building Trump's justification for military strikes
on suspected drugboats in the Western Hemisphere,
regime change in Venezuela, and the ongoing war in the Middle East.
But in the wake of this new strategy being released,
I wonder if TPA USA's canceling of the event
and Chloe Cole's language in the announcement
might also be designed to coax Trump's feds
into going after radical transgender antifa terrorists.
Whether that may be individuals who possibly sent threats online
that I just couldn't see,
or just made semi-questionable posts on Twitter.com,
or who simply spread the protest flyer online
or the protest organizers themselves.
Yeah.
I think that is something to keep in mind.
This new counterterrorism strategy,
it mostly serves as a chilling effect for speech and for organizing.
Like I said, it doesn't actually grant new powers,
but it can scare people into thinking that the Trump administration is
designating a whole class of people as terrorists
and stuff like this, you know, protests, right?
That is one thing that they can investigate.
Threats online, that is something that they can investigate, right?
That is what they are actually looking into.
They're not just investigating random trans people as terrorists.
They will be looking into threats or questionable posts made on social media, right?
Those are the things they actually can look into.
And I think some of Chloe Cole's language about the, quote unquote, deadly threats she received, stuff like that could be used by the Trump administration as a pretext to investigate people.
Yeah.
Whether or not those threats even were real, right?
I did not see anything that I think constitutes a deadly threat based.
on the post-millennial's reporting,
but her saying that might be enough
for a local FBI field office
to want to investigate, you know,
student activists at this university.
Right, right.
Yeah, I'm going to make sense.
So that's what I wanted to talk about here.
This is by far the thing I'm seeing
people freak out about the most right now
is like overall the idea that, like,
they've just declared it, you know,
a terrorism, a violent terrorism to be trans
or to be anarchist or to be, you know,
any of the things like anti-capitalist mentioned in that in that document yeah and what i'm actually
seeing on the ground so far is very much the same kind of prosecutions that they've been doing and the
same kinds of like messaging that that they've been making and i i think that like you're right on
the money this is something to pay attention to like does this get a response is there an actual
like investigation do we wind up see someone someone get indicted for a twitter post or you know if
someone made a threat that we're not privy to.
Do they get indicted for that?
Or do we see something that does look more like a witch hunt where they're going after
like a protest organizer?
That'll tell us a lot about kind of what's coming in the immediate future.
But right now I don't see anything different than what they've been doing, which is kind of
like incompetently and haphazardly flailing at everything sort of vaguely lefty.
Yeah.
And I think including this in a document like the counterterrorism strategy,
also serves as a chilling effect, right?
This is to scare people into not doing anything, right?
That is a part of their strategy.
Yep.
But, you know, they have investigated people for making death threats for years, right?
The Biden administration and their FBI.
Yeah, it's illegal to make death threats, by the way, if their actual death threats, that is illegal.
Yeah.
The FBI under Biden, investigated Stop Cop City.
The charges against the protesters at Prairieland started, that investigation started before
NSMP7 was even released, right?
This is not new, but it is something to keep an eye on.
To see if their scope is actually changing.
Right.
You know what else is changing in scope?
Our sponsors.
Are they?
Not really.
No, that's the same shit.
Yeah.
And we are back.
And we are back to talking about the war in Iran.
So I want to start off with,
President Trump's extremely vocal criticism of Kurdish groups.
One can assume in Iran that it doesn't necessarily seem that his criticism is limited to Kurdish groups in Iran.
Let's play the clip.
The level of ferocity for protests, you know, the people are watching it.
They want to go out on the streets.
They have no weapons.
They have no guns.
We thought the Kurds were going to give us weapons, but the Kurds disappointed us.
The Kurds take, take, take.
They have a great reputation in Congress.
Congress says, oh, they fight so hard.
They fight hard when they get paid.
So I'm very disappointed in the Kurds.
But they were given.
I said it wasn't going to work, by the way.
I just have to say it.
I disagreed with what they did.
They gave it.
I said, they'll never get there.
And I was right.
I like to be right.
In this case, too bad.
But we sent some guns with ammunition.
And there was supposed to be.
to be delivered, but they kept it. I said, they're going to keep it. But what do I know?
I've only been doing this a short period of time. What do I know?
Yeah, fascinating. Here's Diyadh, Korda, asking him about this.
Mr. President, thank you so much, Mr. President.
Mr. Yesterday you said you gave the Kurds arms, but they took it for themselves.
A U.S. military officials says that the Kurds have not received any arms,
and the Kurdish political parties are denying receiving any arms.
The officials are wrong.
Yes.
Yeah.
Well, there's, the Kurds could be so many things.
Like, they just said that officials, I'm assuming the KDP and the Puk is who they're referring to.
But that's just like the two big parties in Iraq, which isn't even all of the Kurdish parties in Iraq.
Like, not to mention all of the different armed groups.
But I have no idea who he sent guns to.
And I don't know that he does.
Yeah, or if he did.
He seems pretty confident that he did.
Yeah, yeah.
This is like the opposite of Iran-Contra,
with the president saying, like,
I definitely sent them guns.
I am running guns.
I was running guns.
And everyone else is like,
we have no fucking clue.
What are he talking about?
Yeah.
So I'm guessing this refers to his previous theory
that they had supplied guns to Iranian Kurdish groups in January.
It's time when there were large-scale protests in Iran,
that those Iranian Kurdish groups
were expected to deliver to presumably
Persian protesters, presumably in large cities
such as Tehran. The Jerusalem Post has reported that Trump himself
personally vetoed this exact plan in January
after receiving pressure from Turkey to do so.
There were some armed back to January, but small arms,
as we've said before, would not really have tipped the balance here.
Iran's army police besiege, the IGC,
as we've seen since February, can survive assault from the US and Israel.
It's not going to be toppled by a bunch of people
with AKs. They would have bombed whole cities so they had to. We covered this at a time in our
episode about it with Gordaim, but most of the Kurdish groups I've spoken to don't have
responses at this time, but the P.A.K, that's the Kurdistan Freedom Party, sent me this
comment regarding the protests in January. Quote, from the end of December 2025 through
approximately January 20th, 20th, 26, the Iranian regime committed an unprecedented massacre
across Ilam, Kamanshan and Loristan.
They mobilized Hashdalsh Shabbi militias into Persian cities
and deployed a massive military presence into our territories.
In order to defend our citizens,
we targeted the outposts and military bases
where these forces were stationed.
We confirmed that, yes, we carried out these operations.
So what they're confirming there is that they carried our operations,
not where the weapons came from, right?
But we saw those operations in January.
Pulat-Yan,
Politian, famous, I guess, for being a founding member of the Yepege or of Huindekar, an SDF commander.
He's also an author and a politician did make a statement, which I thought was interesting.
I'm going to read it at least a good amount of it because I think it's worth it.
Quote, the Kurds are not mercenaries.
Kurdish blood is not cheap and the lives of Kurdish youth are not for sale.
The Kurds are fighting for their freedom, dignity and political rights,
not to serve the temporary agendas of regional or international powers without any clear outcome for the Kurdish people themselves.
At the same time, the Kurds have repeatedly shown their willingness to cooperate in fighting terrorism,
extremism and instability in the Middle East. Kurdish forces played a central role in the defeat of
ISIS and contributed greatly to regional security. But cooperation must be based on mutual respect,
clarity and long-term political understanding. I do not know the accuracy of the recent claims
regarding weapons are literally sent to protesters inside Iran. If such operations truly existed,
then the American side should clearly explain which group, force, or individuals receive those
weapons. A nation of tens of millions of people should not be collectively accused through vague
and unverified statements. Yeah, that's pretty good. Sounds incredibly reasonable.
Yeah. Yeah. Sounds like a really reasonable thing. Yeah. It does seem that Trump has some
personal animus against the Kurds. I wonder if what he's referring to is that like a year or so
ago, the last time they sent over more weapons, if he sent some message more recently being like,
hey, could you send some of those guns that we already gave you over to rebels in Iran?
And they were like, no, no?
What do you mean?
And he's pissed.
I wonder if that's what he's pissed about.
Yeah, it's so hard for me to say.
Is he talking about the SDF?
Is he talking about groups in southern Kurdistan that they armed?
And yeah, he asked him to like pass him along.
I have never seen large numbers of American supplied.
weapons among the Rogelati groups.
No. Although they do, some of their AKs come from the US.
If you look at what's sent over, like a bunch of, and like body armor, a lot of like,
what the SDF, like the armor they have came from Americans.
Yeah.
And with a higher speed SDF guys, you'll see like M4s, but and even like Night Vision,
like YAT, the anti-terror forces and the SDF you'll see.
But like on the Iranian side, I have not seen that.
And it's, he's repeated this several times.
over quite a long period of time.
It seems to be something he genuinely believes.
But I have seen no evidence aside from his claims to support it.
It doesn't matter, but it does matter in the sense that Trump clearly is personally mad
at Kurdish groups and does not seem to be interested in supporting their aspirations for
autonomy, which is disappointing.
But I guess, I don't know why.
maybe because he feels that he alone should take credit for the defeat of the Islamic State.
Like, I can't quite work out what to cause this other than maybe he perceives them to have slighted him by not giving weapons that we don't know anything about.
Yeah. Let's talk a little bit about the broader situation in Iran.
I don't want to make this like true social review.
I know I've read Trump's truths in the past.
I have reached a point where I can't do that anymore.
That's fair.
Yeah, like, I can't, people are dying, right?
They bombed a girl's school.
Like, this is serious and horrible.
And it's really hard to bring the gravity that needs to be brought to this and also read out the absolutely bonkers stuff that gets posted.
Trump just arrived a missile strike on Iran as a love tap.
Yeah.
This past week.
So I'm just not going to, not going to do that this week.
I am going to say that both sides have repeatedly and openly violated the ceasefire.
which Trump described to reporters and Dr. Oz as being on, quote, massive life support.
Meanwhile, Iran's parliamentary speaker, Mohamed Ghalibah, has said, quote,
Iran forces are ready to deliver a well-deserved response to any aggression,
mistaken strategy, and mistaken decisions will always lead to mistaken results.
The whole world has already figured this out.
We are prepared for all options.
They will be surprised.
This comes as Trump calls Iran's peace demands, quote,
a piece of garbage and quote a stupid proposal.
Iranian demands allegedly included an end to Israeli aggression in Lebanon
and sovereignty over to straightforward moves.
Trump has also alleged that they walked back an agreement to surrender and rich Iranian.
We've also found that Iran has retained a large number of their missiles
and their launch capacity this week.
It's also been reported by Jim Leporteur, who is one of the few people still doing these
reporting at CBS, that Pakistan has provided safe haven for Iranian aircraft.
shielding them from U.S. strikes.
Allegedly some civilian aircraft were also sheltered in Afghanistan,
but then had to be moved when Pakistan began bombing Afghanistan in March.
Iran has friends everywhere, I guess.
The United States sent a ballistic missile submarine to Gibraltar this week.
The Ohio-class submarines provide the survivable element of the nuclear triad,
or the most survival element of the nuclear triad.
You can't strike a nuclear submarine before it gets a chance to strike.
It's basically impossible.
Yeah, that's the reason that they exist.
Guarantees that you will get to do your thing.
Yeah, for mutually assured destruction reasons.
It's not super normal to announce their presence in places, I don't think.
But the Navy did this week.
Yeah.
I mean, it can be.
It depends on like the situation.
And yeah, depending on what's going on.
This is a little weird, yes.
Yeah, yeah.
The Pentagon seems to be planning to rename the war in Iran,
operation Sledgehammer. This seems to be an attempt at an end run around the 1973 War Powers Revolution.
They claimed already, right, we spoke about this last week. They're claiming Epic Fury is over now
and that this is a new and distinct operation. In a congressional hearing, Hegsef denied that they
needed an authorized use of military force. Let's play the clip. It doesn't appear that
hostilities have ended. And so the question to you is,
is whether or not the administration has considered or had intended to seek an authorization of use of military force from the Congress.
Senator, our view is that should the president make the decision to recommence that we would have all the authorities necessary to do so?
Do you think that it would be helpful to the president if it was made clear that, in fact, the Congress did allow,
did provide an AUMF.
I think the president, our view is that he has all the authorities he needs under Article 2 to execute.
Thank, Mr. Chairman.
That's more or less HECF saying he didn't need Congress, which is great.
Yeah.
Hegst faced pointed questioning from the House and Senate appropriations to defend the subcommittees.
He repeatedly batted away questions about munitions to pleasion and suggested that like it wasn't
appropriate to answer them in public on the record like this.
Oh, I'm sure.
He also did not directly confront the cost of the war, which is now approaching 30 billion,
instead saying, quote, what is the cost of Iran obtaining a nuclear weapon?
And the fact that this president has been willing to make a historic and courageous choice
to confront that, it comes with cost and we recognize that.
Kind of an exercise in evasion on Higgs-S part there, apart from his pretty emphatic statement
that he didn't think that they needed any permission from Congress.
to continue with this war.
So we will be back next week to keep you updated on what might be Operation Sledgehammer.
Great.
Yeah.
Great stuff.
Very exciting.
So on May 12th, 26th, the former mayor of Arcadia, California,
Eileen Wang pled guilty to acting as an unregistered agent of a foreign government
and is being sentenced in the near future for being an unregistered agent of a foreign government.
People have taken this news normally.
The foreign government is China.
I did a quick little bit of Googling before coming around here and found some fun headlines.
One of them in The Lion, California mayor pleads guilty to serving communist China.
And that article was written by John Ransom, who's a senior contributor at The Lion and also has written for the epic time.
which itself is like the agent of a foreign power effectively.
The WCBM had a headline,
This Democrat mayor just came clean about working for communist China.
She didn't come clean.
She didn't come clean.
She pled guilty for that, you know.
And then from the House Committee on China's website,
Mulanar warns of CCP influence after California mayor charged in foreign influence plot.
these charges highlight the very real threat of the Chinese Communist Party's attempts to influence our free and open society.
While it denies freedom and liberty for the Chinese people, the CCP is actively working to subvert our institutions and divide us against one another.
In this case, an elected mayor acted at the direction of CCP handlers, coordinated with Chinese intelligence-linked individuals, and used a local news platform to spread CCP propaganda.
And so let's talk about that, how much of this is true, right?
Yeah.
I mean, technically, yeah, like, that's kind of what happened.
And except for the part where they were like coordinating to drive Americans apart from each other and create unrest and whatnot.
That's not what the purpose of this thing that Eileen got wrapped up in was.
She and her former fiancé, a fellow named son who got sentenced before she did, Mike Son, are accused of basically having run like content farms at the behest of Chinese government officials.
Okay.
Like they were putting out articles on like the alleged genocide in Zingang, denying like the Chinese government had done anything wrong there.
There was any genocide at all in the region.
And so it's kind of like propaganda stuff like that.
They were serving as like a fire hose of propaganda per the Justice Department.
In June of 2021, a PRC official contacted Wang and other individuals via the Wii chat and crypted messaging application with pre-written news articles, including a PRC official written essay in the Los Angeles.
list times that stated, China's stance on the Xinjiang issue. There is no genocide in Xinjiang.
There is no such thing as forced labor in any production activity, including cotton production,
spreading such rumors due to fame China, destroy Xinjiang's safety and stability, weaken local economy,
and suppress China's development. Minutes later, Wang posted the article on her own website and
responded to the PRC official with a link to the article on her website. The others in the group
did the same. The PRC official responded so fast. Thank you, everyone.
And this is bad? Genocide denials bad.
Spreading slop content on behalf of a foreign government is, like, bad.
It is important to note that this is not, like, spying or sabotage in any meaningful way.
She's not acting to, like, try to damage the United States.
She's acting as, like, an unregistered PR agent for the Chinese government.
Or at least that's what she had done up to this point in her life.
And, like, everything that she was doing was legal if she had disclosed who she was working for,
which I think is also an important thing to note
because shit like this happens all the time
in the media.
Like we all see, there's tons of content
that is the result one way or the other
of some government's influence operation.
And for the majority of the time
when it happens, nobody gets tripped up,
you know, either because they have friends in power
or because they don't quite cross a line.
And Eileen and her friends were not very savvy
about what they were doing.
Yeah.
But they were also not operating
on a very large,
level. Like, this is not a big operation. One of the notes in this charging document is that Eileen
sent this Chinese government official a screenshot showing that the article had been viewed 15,128 times
through her site, which is like not, we're not talking like big deal influence ops here.
We're not talking like sweeping powers over like public opinion. Now, perhaps that's what they
hoped Eileen would kind of rise to over time. She didn't seem to be like a,
a kind of rising star in local government in Southern California.
She got endorsed by some prominent Democratic Party officials.
And she was still in touch with her Chinese government handlers at this time.
This whole period in which she's like being charged for working as an agent of the Chinese government is like 20-20 through at least 20-22.
So yeah, this is like, you know, a bad thing.
And it's good that this got found out and that she's not continuing to be the mayor of Arcadia.
Yeah. But also, this is not like the scary thing that the right wing press is making it out to. She was not here to like subvert the U.S. so that it could be invaded or destroyed. She was there to try to stop people on the internet from being mean to the Chinese government. Like that was the primary use that they had with her. It's just not that like actually scary a story or anything. It's just a kind of thing that happens. This lady happened to become mayor of a small town, basically, which is wild. It's crazy that that happened. But shit like this.
is going on all the time.
Yeah, I think, I don't know, yeah, people have lost their minds about this one in a way
that, like...
It's a perfect California city.
Like, it's a southern California town, and she's a Chinese government female spy, like,
of course, of course.
There was a lot of stuff back when Eric Swalwell was still a relevant human being.
There was some attacks on him for associating with a, quote-unquote, Chinese female spy.
like 10 years ago.
That was like one of the lines of attack against him.
Sure.
Because like someone he had like relations with in like 2014,
what was alleged or found to be working as a spy
for the Chinese government.
It's interesting that they're doing this type of stuff
at like the exact same time that Trump just got,
is like arriving in China right now.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's really great timing.
Curious timing there, but.
I'm guessing she took the plea
this has been a period of some time, right?
like her fiance.
Yeah.
Yeah,
yeah,
because first her former fiance
got busted.
And then she was like,
I didn't do anything wrong.
And then it became clear
that she very much had.
Yeah.
Right.
So there was,
this was like a thing that,
yeah,
that has been going on
for a little while.
It just sort of,
once she pled guilty,
then you could do the article,
like California mayor
pleads guilty
to working for the Chinese government.
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
Yeah.
Just funny timing.
Yeah.
Speaking of timing,
here are some ads.
Great. Yay.
Okay, we are back.
For one of our last main stories, let's talk about Virginia and the redistricting efforts.
Last week, in a 4-3 ruling, the Virginia Supreme Court blocked the voter-approved redistricting map that passed in April with almost 52% of the vote.
The court found the process used to advance the referendum.
violated the state constitution. According to Virginia's constitution, the legislature has to vote
twice to pass any proposed constitutional amendment before it gets put on the ballot for Virginia voters.
But these two General Assembly votes must be separated by a state general election.
The first General Assembly vote for this redistricting amendment passed in October 2025 before the
November general election, and the second vote to approve the referendum happened next January,
so a few months ago. The Republican challengers to the new voting map argued that because early voting
had already begun, the General Assembly's first vote in October did not actually occur
before a general election, and that was the grounds the state Supreme Court used to block
the voter-approved amendment.
The four-judge majority ruled the intervening election requirement was violated because the general
election, quote, began on September 19th, 2025, and just ended on election day November 4th.
Yeah, I feel like you're kind of outside the spirit of what they were going for with that one.
No, this on the face sounds quite absurd.
It's one of those things that's technically correct, but at the same time.
Well, and there's some complicating factors because of Trump's own attempts to restrict early voting or deem early voting, like, not constitutionally, like, appropriate or like it defies the federal government's definition of the word election.
And so now you have some groups in Virginia who are trying to pass this amendment, Democrat groups, who are using kind of similar rhetoric as Trump.
We'll get to that in a sec.
So Justice D. Arthur Halsy wrote to the majority opinion.
saying, quote, this violation irreparably undermines the integrity of the resulting referendum vote and renders it null and void.
Early Virginia voters unknowingly forfeited their constitutionally protected opportunity to vote for or against delegates who favor or disfavor amending the Constitution by not anticipating a legislative vote on a constitutional amendment four days before the last day of voting, unquote.
So the court said that the reason why they have this two vote requirement across two different
general assemblies is to give voters enough time to not just support or not support a constitutional
amendment on the ballot, but then also vote for state lawmakers who will either approve or
not approve the constitutional amendment in the legislature itself, right?
So that's what they're saying.
It's like this process of having these two votes is to ensure that voters,
have a say both in who they put into office as well as on the ballot.
And they're saying that this process was violated because early voting had already commenced
by the time that the legislature actually voted on this proposed amendment.
Chief Justice Cleo Powell wrote in the dissent that the majority, quote,
broadened the meaning of the word election as used in the Virginia Constitution to include
the early voting period.
This is in direct conflict with how both.
both Virginia and federal law define an election.
By extending elections in the Commonwealth of Virginia beyond a single day,
the majority's formulation would directly conflict
with the federal mandate that elections for federal officials be held on a single day, unquote.
So under the Supreme Court of Virginia's new ruling,
the district map drawn in 2021 must be used for the upcoming election this November, the midterms.
The new map would have won Democratic.
four more House seats.
But considering this ruling by the state Supreme Court,
Dems are now eight seats down in the national redistricting battle,
which the latest gutting of the Voting Rights Act will only make worse.
Yeah.
Over this past weekend, Virginia Democrats, Hakeem Jeffries,
and Governor Abigail Spanberger held discussions on what to do about this ruling.
The New York Times reported that Virginia Democrats expressed determination
to win two or three of the Republican held seats,
even with the current map,
but also discussed a few long-shot options
to change the ruling or push forward the map anyway.
One of the more extreme measures debated
was the possibility of replacing the entire Virginia Supreme Court
by lowering the mandatory retirement age from 75 to 54,
and then having a new court rehear the case.
Sounds great. Let's do it.
In between now and November.
So it seems the Democrats decided against this path, ultimately,
in part because the State Department of Elections deadline for congressional maps is May 12th,
which is a day before we are recording.
They kind of ran out of time on this.
It's also unclear if they really would have had the bravery to pull such an extreme maneuver, right?
Something that may be the correct thing to do, and maybe something they should just do anyway,
if they have the power to fully replace their Supreme Court,
why not? Because the Democrats are currently in a majority of control of the state legislature right now,
why not do this anyway, to a certain extent? Also, Abigail Spanberger can only serve one term.
So, you know, you're not going to lose much political capital by pulling a kind of insane move like this.
But it's not going to happen at least right now.
Yeah. No.
Virginia's state Senate majority leader, Scott.
Soroville told the new republic, quote, as a practical matter, the move would not be capable of
being implemented given the time frame. Now, despite that May 12th deadline, on Monday, Virginia
Attorney General Jay Jones and Democratic state lawmakers filed an emergency appeal asking the
U.S. Supreme Court to put the state Supreme Court order on hold for the upcoming midterm election,
arguing that the state court based their ruling on misreading the federal definition of election,
and by adopting its own definition, the state Supreme Court infringed on the state legislature's
power to regulate federal elections.
Quote, by forcing the Commonwealth to conduct its congressional elections using districts
different from those adopted by the General Assembly pursuant to a constitutional amendment,
the people just ratified, the Supreme Court of Virginia has deprived voters, candidates, and the Commonwealth
of their right to the lawfully enacted congressional districts, unquote.
This case will be initially decided by Chief Justice John Roberts, who handles the emergency
appeals from states covered by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals.
But the U.S. Supreme Court may argue that they don't have the authority to intervene because
the Virginia Supreme Court ruling cites state law, not federal law.
The New Republic also reported that state, Senate, majority.
leader Scott Sordoville confirmed that even if the Supreme Court gives them a good ruling,
that ruling could be unlikely to impact this upcoming election cycle due to this May 12th deadline.
I guess it's just worth saying that the nature of this midterm will be very important for
the way you get to vote in America going forward. Yeah, I mean, they're pulling out all the stops.
Like they're throwing any kind of plausible deniability in the trash because this is the get-it-or-lose-it moment for the right, you know?
Like, that's very much how they're looking at this.
Yeah. This is to lock it in forever.
We'll see.
Yeah.
A few years ago, Ohio pushed through unconstitutional maps, the maps that were deemed unconstitutional by state courts.
One federal court did authorize them to use these maps in like an interim period and they're still using them.
And in a piece by the nation, they mentioned this option, but said that they would need to have the backing of the state board of electors.
And Virginia might not have that.
There's lots of people on the Democratic side that are much more rule-followy than a lot of the Republicans, as we have seen here.
Now, Virginia may be able to still pass this redistricting map in the future by spreading out the process over a bigger period of time to not create this confusion about the early.
voting period, but the map would not be able to go into effect before the midterms, but it still
may be able to go into effect in the future. I do think it's also worth noting that the same day that
Virginia filed this appeal with the Supreme Court, the U.S. Supreme Court also paved the way for
Alabama to eliminate one of two majority black districts before the midterm elections by overturning
a lower court order that blocked the use of a Republican-backed map from 2023. So the Supreme
Court is currently weighing in on not exactly the same, but you know, similar
similar things in other states.
That was because it was basically pointing to its Louisiana ruling and saying, like,
we've ruled on this.
Yes.
This was following the Louisiana ruling, yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
That makes sense.
You know, great for the old democratic process, voting rights act.
Ooh.
So there's an increasing movement in the United States, both at the state and the federal
level to repeal gas taxes. So in the United States, there's federal gas taxes that everybody
pays. The current federal gas tax rate is about 18.3 cents per gallon for gasoline and gasahol,
which is the actual official name of fuel mixed with unleaded gas. That's like unleaded and ethanol
together is actually just called gasol. Okay. Never knew that. What a, yes. What a lovely word.
Yeah, they couldn't think of anything better. And then 24.3 cents per gallon for diesel fuel,
right? And then some states have their own, like Oregon has its own, like gas taxes.
California certainly does. At both levels, like the federal gas tax is there, in short, because
it helps to pay for the roads, right? Like, that's why we need a federal gas tax is because
it funds what's called the Highway Trust Fund or the HTF, which is a big part of like what keeps
our interstate infrastructure functional. And then state level gas taxes are
often also like supporting like state local roads, right? And so Trump has talked about temporarily
repealing the gas tax for like a couple of months. There have been democratic proposals that are
very similar. Graham Platner, uh, who's about to be a congressman from Maine. A democratic nominee for
yeah, he's currently the nominee, um, but is almost certainly going to win. Yeah, for the presumptive
nominee, I think has expressed support for ending the gas tax outright and his basic plan
with something like you have wealthy corporations pay the money that the gas tax is currently going to,
and you put that burden onto corporations instead of people.
And it's not uncommon, by the way, for the gas tax to be temporarily repealed during the early months of the most recent, like, escalation of the Russian invasion into Ukraine in the Biden administration back in 2022.
Biden temporarily paused the federal gas tax, right?
So this is a thing that happens.
It's just always a bad idea because it.
The reason why you see people in the left and right make suggestions like this repeal state or federal gas taxes is because it's really easy.
It's an easy way to say, like, I'm looking out for you.
I'm trying to take care of regular people.
Gas is too darn expensive already.
We've got to do everything we can to make your life easier.
The problem is the Highway Trust Fund, which is absolutely critical for our roads being functional, is already always running at a deficit.
In 2024, it was a deficit of about $13 billion.
The main reason for this is that like transportation infrastructure is aging every single year and falling behind.
And at the same time, that gas tax is not like pegged to inflation or anything.
So it has not been keeping pace with the actual needs of the trust fund.
So anyway, we're already in a really bad situation with the HTF.
Every time we pause these taxes, it gets much worse.
And I'm worried right now that it's really,
reasonable it may sound to say something like, well, we should just have the rich pay for that.
You're never going to have any kind of like move that does both of those things at once.
They're going to start by repealing the gas tax.
And then they'll never get around to replacing it with anything.
And then the roads will just be bad forever.
I think this is a bad idea.
And I think you should be a little wary of politicians doing this because it's an easy way to get a win.
But that said, damn near everybody.
is. So how wary can you actually be? It's just a really irresponsible bad idea that has a lot of
bipartisan support. Yeah, really ever since the no tax on tips thing, there's been this wave of,
of, you know, people have called this like sloppulous policies or like things that are that are,
that are, you know, populist in framing, but have certain like economic problems or, or get dispersed
in a weird ways, you know, Mia's, meas talked about some specifics around the no tax on tips policy.
Yeah. But there's, there's been like a wave of these, you know, small.
targeted tax cuts on on on on on various little things to kind of lift lift lift
the financial burden that Americans are facing you know the the better ones you know
ones like like like like Platner strategy which has a part of his plan increasing
taxes on on billionaires and oil corporations yeah but these sorts of taxes are
just like little band-aid solutions and that are almost like consolation prices for
not be able to just raise the corporate tax rate or income tax
brackets, right? And it's, it's like we're adopting these consolation taxes for this presumed
impossibility of just actually raising taxes to the level of, you know, if you look at the United
States in like the 1950s, super, super high, super high level of taxes that actually funded social
services. And one one thing that could be frustrating about these, these sorts of more
like sloppulous tax angles is it, you know, it undermines the vital role of taxes to actually
fund social services.
Now, should more of those taxes be funded by corporations and billionaires?
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
But I think that should be the focus, rather than these little itty-bitty kind of, you know,
cutting away at the corners of like small, small targeted taxes that are, that are, again,
like used as like, you know, consolation prizes rather than actually addressing the pretty
significant, you know, tax reforms that need to happen in this country.
And it's just dangerous in part because it acts as if what the gas.
tax is there to fund is optional is not like necessary. Like, well, we, we don't really need this.
So we'll pause this whenever like things get bad because we don't need them. But we do.
Like our society is reliant upon the maintenance of that fund. And we shouldn't act like it's,
yeah, this all is very frustrating to me. Yeah. You can see why the gas tax in particular is appealing right now.
Right now. Yeah. People are struggling. Like it is literally $7 a gallon in parts of California.
Oh, it's fucking nuts.
Yeah.
Like, people who, like, a lot of people who struggle to make it are really struggling to make it now.
Yeah.
The way our society is set up means it's very hard for people to exist without a car.
So you're like, yes.
The populist appeal is obvious.
And as is always the case with this sort of thing, the fact that it has an appeal is based on ignorance because when roads are poorly maintained,
it costs regular people huge amounts of money and the damage it does to their car, far more than the gas tax costs them.
This has been established.
This is not like I think we have to wonder about there have been studies into this.
Like you pay more money when the roads are bad because your car gets fucked up.
Yeah.
And it's reasonable for people to say, well, our country has enough money.
Can't we unfuck the roads and not charge me a lot of money?
Unfortunately, we just spent 30 billion fucking invading Iran.
So no, we can't.
Yeah, you have to not do some of the other things that we're doing.
Yeah, that is not up for grabs in the current.
political atmosphere, right? And even your mainstream Democrats aren't going to ride for that.
No, I mean, it requires pressure against mainstream Democrats and obviously the Republican
establishment as well, right? Like part of Plattenor's plan is a 50% per barrel windfall tax on
like big oil profits, which would be significant. But there will be a lot of pushback against
this, including among the Democratic establishment. And that might require getting rid of a whole
bunch of these democratic establishment figures who are currently occupying seats of power.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, everyone, think about that.
On that hopeful note, you figure it out.
You figure out how to do it.
Note.
Where can people send us news-related tips, James?
They can do that by emailing Coolzone tips at proton.me.
If you want to keep it a little bit more encrypted, you can do it from a proton email address.
so it doesn't bother you
go ahead and send it.
If you have a marketing email,
you can not send it
trying not to be so rude
to the marketing people.
No, I think part of
those anarchists
that left being extremist threats
might be against the marketing corporations
if James keeps
threatening them at the end of this episode.
I don't want to podcast anyone
to anyone. I'm not advocating violence,
I'm just going to block your email.
I will make sure
that we never hear from you
It won't just be me blocking it.
It'll be all of us here at Cool Zone Media.
We reported the news.
You reported the news.
We reported the news.
Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now
until the heat death of the universe.
It could happen here is a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more podcasts from Cool Zone Media,
visit our website, Coolzonemedia.com.
Or check us out on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
You can now find sources where it could hop in here listed directly in episode descriptions.
Thanks for listening.
Another podcast from some SNL late night comedy guy, not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer, Streeter Seidel, help an
a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to Humor Me with Robert Smigel and Friends on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Life is full of hurdles.
So how do you keep going?
On Hurtle with Emily Abadi, we're talking with the most inspiring women in sports and wellness from professional athletes, coaches, and Olympic champions,
about the challenges that shape them and the mindset that keeps them moving forward.
At our level, at this scale, being able to fail in front of the entire world.
Like, I can do anything.
I can do anything.
Listen to Hurtle with Emily Abadi on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
Your 20s can be so exciting, but they can also be really overwhelming, confusing, and honestly, just kind of lonely.
May is Mental Health Awareness Month, and the psychology of your 20s is breaking down the science behind the biggest roadblocks we face.
I was six years into my career, the 80-hour weeks, and just the first one in the last,
last one out and I ended up burning out.
There was a large chunk of my 20s that I like was just so wanting to like be out of that
phase out of my skin and I just like really regret not living in the present more.
You don't need to have everything figured out right now.
You just need to understand yourself a little bit better.
Listen to the psychology of your 20s on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
The story I've told myself can then shape my behavior and that can lead me to sabotage the
possibility of connection.
This Mental Health Awareness Month, tune into the podcast deeply well with
Debbie Brown if you've been searching for a soft place to land while doing the work to become
whole.
This podcast is for you to hear more.
Listen to Deeply Well with Debbie Brown from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the Iheart
radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
