Provoked with Darryl Cooper and Scott Horton - EP:13 - Is #FreeSpeech in America Hanging by a Thread??
Episode Date: September 20, 2025When tragedy strikes, principles are tested. The assassination of Charlie Kirk has exposed fault lines in how Americans approach free speech, revealing a disturbing willingness to abandon constitution...al protections during moments of crisis. Scott and Daryl navigate this treacherous terrain with nuance, examining how the FCC's targeting of Jimmy Kimmel represents the dangerous "ratchet effect" that consistently expands government power following each national emergency. They argue that maintaining consistent principles isn't just morally correct but strategically essential—abandoning free speech protections today guarantees they'll be weaponized against you tomorrow.The conversation draws compelling parallels to 1968, when assassinations and political disappointments caused many Americans to lose faith in established channels of protest. When people believe the system has failed them completely, they turn to increasingly radical alternatives, creating unpredictable and often destructive consequences. "People are on the edge in terms of their faith in the system right now," Daryl warns. "It is hanging by the last, thinnest thread in the tapestry."A particularly fascinating segment explores how America's inconsistent foreign policy has destroyed our international credibility, comparing our national behavior to that of a "psychopath burning bridges everywhere they go." From broken promises with Russia to underhanded dealings with Iran, these betrayals create lasting damage that outlives any administration.Throughout the episode, Scott and Daryl make a compelling case for decentralization as a practical solution that could appeal across the political spectrum. By returning more decision-making power to local communities, we might reduce the temperature of national politics and create space for actual governance rather than perpetual culture war.Don't miss this thought-provoking conversation that goes beyond the headlines to examine the deeper currents threatening American society. Subscribe now and join us in exploring how we might preserve our republic in increasingly challenging times. Chapters: 0:00 Introduction and Awards 6:11 Daryl's Upcoming Enemy Episode 15:48 Charlie Kirk Assassination and Free Speech 29:17 Government Deterrence vs. Market Pressure 42:52 Ukraine War and American Credibility 51:27 Conspiracy Theories and Critical Thinking 1:10:52 Political Polarization and Social Breakdown 1:24:22 Decentralization as a Solution Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Thank you.
Thank you.
We're going to be.
We're going to be.
We're going to be able to be.
I don't know how much.
I'm a lot.
I'm going to be.
I'm going to be.
I'm going to be.
I mean
Thank you.
We're going to be.
All right, you guys, welcome the show,
it's provoked i'm scott horton from the libertarian institute oh there's mr darrell cooper martyr made
i got my homer simpson glasses on i realize that these aren't funny because they're homer simpson
glasses they just make me look especially old wise bookkeeper of some kind they make you look wise
scott oh thank you yes i'm sure that's what that's how it comes out definitely what i was going for
there hey man how are you i'm good i'm a little
little frazzled. I hate any city over, you know, 20,000 people these days, and I just flew into
L.A. So I've been in airports and on airplanes all day. And my reward for not crashing into the
ground from 30,000 feet is that I get to be in beautiful Los Angeles. So, you know, I love L.A.,
but the last time I was there, I thought, oh, my God, it's like that movie, Escape from L.A., which
was a knockoff of the skate from New York, which was like when you fly in and it's different
than it was when I was, when I was even 20 years ago, like you fly in and the city just
stretches off to Tijuana now. And it stretches like all the way up into Ventura County. There's
just city, nonstop, up to San Bernardino. It's insane. Yeah. And all the, there's no gap between
the inland empire either. It's just one of the outside upland. There used to be, but there's not
anymore. You want to hear something crazy, though, that's just completely unrelated to anything
that we are going to talk about? When I was in Kauai, I worked for the government, there's a
Navy missile range out there. So I was assigned out there for six months. And I was on a helicopter,
and we flew over this piece of the island that was 175,000 acres. And it was owned by the guy
who founded AOL and built Time Warner for like $150 billion.
or whatever they sold AOL for right before nobody cared about it anymore.
And I was like, how big is that?
And so I was curious.
And so I'm flying into L.A.
And I looked it up.
How big is the San Fernando Valley?
It's smaller than that.
It's like 160,000 acres or something.
It's just like crazy.
One dude owns all that.
But anyway, a little trivia for you.
By the way, everybody, I'm on my laptop.
I'm not at home, obviously.
I'm on my laptop with a laptop camera and microphone.
so if my audio sucks
blame that
I will not take the possibility
cool you sound okay
hey I was flying today too
because I was in Chicago
because I won a big award
look at me
Drew hold it up to the camera
it's the Integrity Media
Excellence in Journalism Award
for 2025
and I won that from Integrity Media
and then also who was there
and who won it was the great
Matt Taiibi
and also the great Jimmy Dore
and the great Julian Assange who was
represented by his brother Gabriel Shepton
who's also a great guy
and Robert Shear who
it was really great to meet him
I met him one time actually in L.A.
at an event at a church
with a skateboard ramp in the back
but it was really cool meeting him
and I learned that he was actually the guy
that broke the story about the Aron Kua 53
and how he broke the story was he looked up
Kermit Roosevelt in the phone book
and called him and said
hey won't you tell me a story buddy
Anyway, he was really great
He's like 89 years old or something like that
And he didn't seem a day over 75 dude
He was all piss and vinegar and going on and having fun
And then there was this lady named Dorothy Leavelle
Who had been the editor of this independent black newspaper
In Chicago since 1969
Which, or 68 even, I think was
So that was, she gave a good little talk about that
And then Ali Abu Nima from Electronic Intifada
Was supposed to have one
well he did win but he wasn't there because he had a death in the family but he was represented by
um this lady named maureen murphy who um she gave her talk about all the journalists killed in the
world this year and especially of course in gaza which is hundreds and hundreds and hundreds
killed by the uh israeli's there um so it was really cool and then but i also got to hang out
with um ray mgovern was there and john kiroku was there um erin mott was the mc um the great and
lovely Kim Iverson and Ford Fisher, who is that journalist that does all the coverage of the riots and
the protests and all those kinds of things and publishes through Taibi's Rackett News was there.
So, and then I got to meet a bunch of really nice people and all that.
And then it was Lynn Goodman and Patrick Sullivan, who, uh, who run and hosts a thing and
who I'm very grateful for. And so that was really cool.
So, nice. I'm not laughing at you or your award ceremony. I'm laughing at the home.
For sexy glasses, right?
Max, C.C. Limit. No, I am not high. I just got off an airplane. I wish I was. Why am I dressed so sexy? If you mean, why is the shirt open? It's because I'm in Southern California now. I'm freaking hot. I am looking a little wild. And Kyle, I love you, too. So let's go.
There you go.
Kyle Smith is so high. He's got to look down to see this guy.
Okay, more things to say. Charles Goyette. You know him? He used to be a radio show.
host in Phoenix, Arizona for a long time, and he got kicked off the radio for being good on a
Rock War II. And hell, I thought the guy retired, but it turns out he's just been writing really
great stuff for private investment newsletters that hardly anybody gets to read. But guess what?
He wrote a book called The Empire of Lives, and guess what? I'm going to publish it. It'll be
the 18th book published by the Libertarian Institute coming up here real soon. And you know what's
really cool about it, man, not to spoil it or anything, is I can just tell, and believe me,
I don't take it personally at all.
He has not been reading me this whole time.
So even though he's talking about much of the same stuff as me,
it's totally different examples
and totally different kind of directions
of coming at the same kind of subject and whatever.
You know, I always complain that like I'm not that good of a writer,
so provoked as just like this chronology.
But if I was a good writer, I would have had it all mixed up
and told the story in an interesting way,
well, that's what he did.
And in less than 300 pages.
And it's just great.
It's called Empire Lies, and that'll be coming out.
I'm really excited about that.
So I got to announce that.
And then I'm back to work on the audiobook, and I'm doing the last of the editing on the academy courses.
So that's coming up.
And then I wanted to ask you about your part one, because I know your people are very interested.
Yeah.
And what's your status?
Yeah.
I've been grooving on that.
Before I forget, we got Mnett who said, what's up from Ethiopia.
Cool.
I love Ethiopia.
Whenever I would go through there in the airport, I would stop in for a few days.
finest women on the planet anywhere except for armenia which is where my wife's people are from but
love ethiopia anyway um so enemy so i've been i've been grooving on this thing lately dude finally like
i cleared my plate and was able to just sit down for the last several weeks and really bear down on
it and man like the way i had envisioned the thing after i started getting it mapped out i realized
this is 10 this is like 10 hours if i do it like this and i know some people out there wouldn't mind that
but I got to cut it down a little bit.
So I'm squeezing it down and pushing some stuff off until the next episode.
But it's going to be a good six, seven hour episode.
And it'll be done here in a few weeks, like a couple weeks even.
Like, you know, I'm going through just like a little, little spoiler.
This episode, I mean, you know me.
Like I'm Vladimir Putin in this shit, you know, where you ask me a question about the Ukraine war.
And I start talking about Prince Vladimir.
So I'm not quite that bad, but it's a, you know, it's about the Germans and World
War II, and you can't talk about the Germans in World War II without starting, without starting
with World War I, at least, at least, right? And so, you know, I wanted to convey to people
in a very visceral way, and it's a difficult episode to write, and it would be a difficult one to listen
to. Just what the guys in that war went through, you know, really just, I mean, the conditions that
they endured for years, if they were in the war the entire time managed to survive.
I mean, just, like, when you think about the environment alone, you know, one of the things I told my wife, I was like, you know, I think of the other day when I was writing, there was some rain in the forecast where I live.
It's like, oh, this nice, warm summer rain. I think I might put on my raincoat and go walk in it, some galoshes and, like, enjoy the weather and the nice smell.
Okay, cool. Like, go in your backyard, dig a big hole and make it high enough. You can't see over the top.
and now go get all your clothes, all your food, all the stuff you need to live and just stack
it up in there. And now you just forget about your house. You live in here now. This is now
your home and you live here. And now it's going to rain. And this is where you live. And this is
just it. That's where things start. When you start getting into the complete lack of sleep
because of the firing and the artillery,
the almost daily,
at least minor traumatic brain injuries
that people were getting,
like on the daily,
just from the concussive blast of the artillery,
overwhelming stress.
You know, the grotesquery of being in a place
that smells like rotting corpses all the time
to the point where it soaks into your bread,
the smell soaks into your clothes,
and you just can't, you know,
a lot of soldiers who went,
through it said that of all the things that decades and decades later they carried with them
as a memory about that war it was the smell you know and big battles like the battle of verdun
the battle of the psalm people would talk about how when they were coming up from the reserve lines
to reinforce the front you could smell it miles and miles away just rotting corpses as you were
walking up into this inferno you know and like these are all the rats you know a single
a couple of rats, like a male and a female, can have 880 babies in one year if they're well-fed,
and all of the rats on the Western front were really, really well-fed, you know, because there's
a lot of human flesh lying around. Plus the Woodrow Wilson flu, right? Plus the flu. Not the Spanish
flu, it was the Kentucky flu that Woodrow Wilson exported to Europe and caused extra millions of deaths
on top of the war. Little reverse Colombian exchange there. And then like, you know,
I mean, just the little things, like the fact that you're in, your ankle deep in mud, pretty much like 10 months a year.
Most of the time in your trench, you're like ankle to knee to thigh or waist or sometimes armpit deep in water for hours, sometimes days at a time, just constantly bailing water just to keep it below your knees because you're up in Flanders in northern France or Belgium and pretty much the entire place, the water table is like a foot or two below the surface.
And so you start digging down and you're in a pool of water before you even know it.
So it's a full-time job just to bail water out to keep it below your knees.
You're saying you're making great progress on the episode then.
Okay, yeah, yeah.
So anyway, I'm here like six hours later.
So that was Enemy, episode one, everybody.
Daryl pitched this show to me.
You know what we'll do, Scott, is you go off and I'll keep you rained in.
And I was like, all right, that sounds pretty good.
no all right hey listen we gotta do some super chats we got a bunch of them here we're doing this
live and we got a bunch of people watching so um here's where we start uh the first one is what
can we do to help particularly with defend the guard well the answer to that is you go to defend the guard
dot us especially you veterans but everybody else too go there they definitely need money um
and they definitely need volunteers particularly veterans to go and represent at the state uh congressional
hearings um that can be really effective and then the easiest thing of all for people to do is to
phone bank when it's at issue and everybody's bum rush in the phones in Arizona in to the house
of representatives that week and everybody do it all at the same time it can be really effective
we've seen it over and over again so i mean there's nothing more important to the anti-war movement
in america right now than the defend the guard thing is defend the guard dot us and
Bring Our Troops Home.us.
And then other than that, I don't know, man.
Leave an Amazon review.
Send it to your buddies, you know?
Yeah, it's such a great project, man.
Like, sometimes it can get really despairing when you think of, like, what can we do
to fight this machine and, like, rain it in?
It just seems impossible.
But then, like, there are these levers you can pull that, you know, are real force
multipliers. And like, this is a way that if we managed to get this through, man, they're
going to have to work a hell of a lot harder to sell wars to us. You know, if governors all
of a sudden and state legislatures or their asses are on the line, you know, if the guard gets
sent us. I just, I love the idea. I love the project. Yeah. And I'll tell you just real
fast, Diego Rivera is the guy with his boots on the ground running the thing, most of all.
And he said to me explicitly, oh, he is so over trying to convince anyone.
This is war.
You're either for this or I'm going to destroy your career.
That's it.
Black and white.
We're not playing games anymore and I'm not trying to be nice.
Because you can convince a guy and they'll change their mind and vote against you anyway.
It's got to be they're convinced that this is their only choice and they have no choice.
And so they're playing hardball.
They're doing a really great job.
So that's great.
And that's Cruzie.
And then, oh, he asked that question.
Thank you, Cruzey.
and then oh he asked another one and and you know what man i agree with this and i think i might
have mentioned this to you i know times are busy and and uh tough but um william bupert you should
talk with william i know i know i've been meaning you know great you listen to his show
no but i followed him on twitter for a while and i really like his account there um i haven't
i have you know what i've listened to a couple episodes of his show actually but i'm not enough
to get real familiar but i really want to talk to that guy just haven't gotten to it yet yeah he's
great he was a army officer and i think i'm not sure exactly if he was still in the army or he is like
a contractor training afghan soldiers in the war but his speciality is debunking counterinsurgency
doctrine um but he's also just a master military historian on all counts and he's done one of the
courses for the new scott horton academy and everything and i just know you get a real kick out of him
dude yeah definitely um and then um um
Um, uh, that was also cruisy. Thank you, dude. And then Philip Taylor says, Daryl, are you familiar
with Zoomer historians channel? If so, do you have any thoughts or the accuracy of his portrayal of
Germany in World War II? I think that says, yeah. I am not familiar with that channel, but I will
check it out. All right. And then Cody Folsom. Jimmy Kimmel was the last American patriot who spoke
truth to power truly i'm not sure he's my quotes around that i'm not sure who he's quoting that's a pretty
funny one um what you want to address the kimmel thing i love the devil horns in your cowlicks
you got going on there by the way yeah that's probably good um you know look man it's a tough
thing right because we can look at this from an abstract principled position like ron paul was
doing in that video that was being passed around today and saying we don't like it
when the left does it. We don't like it not just because they're doing it to people we might
agree with that we like, but because it's wrong in principle. And that is 100% true. The question
that you have to answer for yourself, if you're going to be against that, like if you're going to
say that we should never do that, you know, the question you have to answer for yourself is how can
you establish any kind of deterrence from the other side if they don't ever think there's going to be
blowback for you know it's a thing like when who doing what though because i think was ron
and i didn't see ron's video actually but was he addressing the FCC commissioners saying we're
going to go after him for this or was he addressing the companies that we didn't hear him about that
it was more just it was the the clip i saw was just more general you know it was like we don't like
it when the left does it and we shouldn't be doing it either kind of thing right it's just on the on the
overall canceled culture thing yeah and i can't argue with that like that's a i mean
that's those are my principles too you know what i mean but at the same time it's like you can only
bring a knife to a gun fight so many times before you get tired of getting shot you know and
but you know you bring a gun to a gun fight now everybody gets shot so maybe that's where we're at
now what do you think yeah no i mean i think uh and this is just the tragedy of american
politics my whole life long is whatever horrible abuses the last guy does yeah that sometimes
the new guy runs on those things and then they almost never turn it back you know this is what
um robert higgs calls the ratchet effect in crisis on leviathan where every time there's a crisis
which is always the government gets more and more and more power and then sometimes you know
each crisis abates as the emperor would say and then the ratchet goes click click click click back but
the um actual uh what you call geez this is the third time the
The word has escaped my, my tongue, the god dang, the part that goes on the ratchet and wraps around the nut.
I know it.
I'm just stupid.
Yes, the socket, exactly.
The socket stays in the exact same place and the ratchet goes click, click, click back, but it's just an illusion.
You know, you lose more and more freedom.
So, like, if the Democrats are abusing the IRS under Bill Clinton, then they'll do the same thing under George W. Bush.
And if George W. Bush is illegally spying and torturing, then Barack Obama will also illegally spy.
and torture and you know this and and and oftentimes expand the thing you know what i mean that kind of
thing so um yeah instead of the republicans saying what we're going to do is privatize the airwaves
and we'll see how long ABC CBS and NBC last without a federal license in the first place and a
federal granted monopoly control over these airwaves in the first place uh start with that you know
um this is actually ian ran over here keeps making me
laugh okay go ahead that's right the only einrand i ever read because i never read any of their stupid novels
or any of that but the only thing i ever read by her was um capitalism the unknown ideal and she has
a great essay in there about the absolute bolshevism of the national government nationalizing the
airwaves back under uh i believe it was William howard taft and all they had to do was just
homestead in which radio stations controlled which frequencies and which towns and all that they
could have figured all of that out through local state legislation and through court cases
and whatever. It would have been fine, just like homesteading any other property. And instead,
they nationalize the airwaves in order to force all the big companies to serve the national
government. And so that's, of course, the first problem in the line here is that ABC exists as a
creature of the federal government in the first place, always has. But anyway, I'm all for
revenge against Jimmy Kimmel. I hate him. And I'm okay with market pressure coming to bear against
people for things like that and in fact what i read i think in the journal what the what the people at
the company said was that he refused to apologize they said you go out there and say that you
were wrong about that and that he offered what he was going to say and that that wasn't good enough
it wasn't like a full retraction he was going to like try to half stand by what he said or something
like that i guess you know i kind of wonder if they gave him like a poison pill ultimatum
you know, like the, like the Austrian list of demands to Serbia, you know, right before the
First World War.
Yeah.
Just because like I have seen people and including people who I know are like kind of insiders,
mid-level insiders in Hollywood, say that that show was losing insane amounts of money for
the network for a long time, but they had a contract and they were happy for the excuse to cut
him loose.
And so maybe that's true.
And now they get to come away looking like, oh, we're the victims of the federal government
and, you know, the FCC might have done them a favor.
I don't know.
I mean, I agree with you.
Like, market pressures.
I mean, I don't think anybody can complain about that.
You know, if I live, if I have a deli in a Jewish neighborhood and, you know, one of my employees,
one of my, like, guys at the checkout counter walks in with a swastika tattoo on his arm showing,
then he's going to get fired, you know, because I'm trying to sell some sandwiches to some Jews, man.
But, like, and so I get all that.
That's fine. It is a little bit of a, you know, people want to make it like it's a new step that the federal government stepped in. No, but it's not. That's the problem. It's like this stuff, I mean, for sure over the last several years has been going on. But it's, I mean, it's been going on for a long time in different ways. It's just, you know, we're kind of in this weird holding pattern. I feel like a lot of us where we're looking back on this thing that we don't want to give up on and this thing that we hope we can kind of pull back to the present.
and restore, you know, but then at the same time looking forward and just sort of wondering
if like maybe things have just changed. And this, like, we're not going back to how things were
and like this golden age that we like to think of, 1776. Like, we have to deal with the
world as it is now. And these are the tools and the way power is exercised and the way it'll
be exercised against us if we don't exercise it ourselves. I mean, I feel like, especially our
generation, you know, Gen X. Like the zoomers, they don't have as much trouble with that.
You know, the Zoomers have been born into this chaos.
It's one of the things I think about a lot, actually, is how, you know, I mean, shoot, you're like,
people voted in the election last year who were not born when 9-11 happened.
You know, they were little kids when the financial crisis happened.
They don't remember that.
There were people who voted in the last election.
They're 18 years old who were 10 years old when Trump ran for office the first time.
They were 10 years old.
And so it's just been chaos that they were.
been thrust into like from the very beginning and this is just the world to them and they don't have like
you know and they were also born into a world where a lot of these sort of sacred symbols you know of
the of the national community and just a lot of our historical things uh where a lot of these things
had already kind of been disenchanted and been cast aside and they're thrown out into a world where
these things are already kind of you know looked at as silly and delegitimized whereas you know
those of us who have sort of straddled the birth of the internet
you know i was a grown up before i started really using you know using hey there are adults today
that were born in 2007 word yeah i continue to think about turning 18 this year yeah and so and so
um i feel like our generation like we have a little bit more trouble like we have to um i heard
somebody says the other day and it really kind of hit me hard is like before we can move forward
there's certain things that we almost have to allow ourselves to grieve the loss of yeah you know
You know what? Here's the thing. I mean, I don't know, like, what all the ramifications of the death of Charlie Kirk are going to be. You know what I mean? There's going to be a lot of them. The fact that he was the, I'm willing to sit right here in front of everybody and argue with anybody guy. You know, that's obviously highly symbolic, right? He wasn't shot just because of the views he represented, but how he represented them. And so there's going to be a chilling effect from that where people are going to be.
be you know less interested in trying to mimic that same behavior on the other hand they might
have just made a thousand more of them because honestly like things like this are terrible but they're
very rare in america right like all the campuses charlie kirk has done the same event on before that
this never happened before out of you know hundreds and hundreds of appearances i'm sure so um and
it's a very unique case so i hope people won't let it you know won't react too bad and let it
change how we operate around here you know we've had assassinations before we're not getting rid of
our first amendment we have to keep it we have to yeah it's what we're going to do without it because
then it's just going to be an absolute war of censorship each time the other guys are in power yeah i mean
it's unique in terms of how extreme it was with somebody actually getting killed but i mean the
problem is people've been watching it maybe hasn't been in the news as much lately but for years of
just uh you know anybody remotely conservative i
I mean, remotely conservative, shows up to a college campus to give a speech.
Charles Murray, you know, it's the sweetest old man, like Charles Murray, very traditional kind of like just conservative guy goes.
And it's a riot on campus.
And like the woman he's with, like, who's opening for him gets assaulted.
And people have been watching this happen for a long time.
And it's not assassination, you know, but it's this sort of, you know, people feel and have felt for some time with good reason that a lot of the leftist radicals, just like,
in the late 60s and early 70s, like you let them get to a point where they felt a sense of
impunity. And when you get there, once you're at that point, it's really hard to reestablish
deterrence without overreacting, you know, because they don't think you're going to do anything.
They just don't think there's any consequences to their actions. I mean, you know,
there's certain things like when you go back to the 2016 election, I don't know if you remember.
I mean, for a while there, it was like every Trump rally, when the people were leaving, they were getting attacked by like mobs of people.
Their cars were getting destroyed and they were getting chased around and beaten up.
Like, that kind of thing is not something that we just have every election cycle in America.
That's a different kind of thing that came out.
And, you know, like here's where I'm really torn on the state response to the Charlie Kirk thing is I feel.
like the idea that the government is going to now step in and do something about this is the
only thing that is keeping some right-wing dude with the rifle from loading it up and going
out like he has to know that you know what i'm not going to do that because the the state is
going to do something at least something you know and if they felt like the state's not going to
do anything and the media is not going to mourn him they're going to mock him and all this
then dude, you're getting the right wing guy with a rifle out there somewhere.
And I don't want to see that.
And so, you know, that's like where I'm, that's where I'm torn, I guess, is between those two things.
Well, I mean, look, I've been seeing people say, because in the middle of that I have been looking at Twitter a little bit, that, you know, well, lies are not protected speech.
Well, yeah, they are unless it's fraud, right?
Or what was this one?
I wrote it down.
The guy was saying.
this is um reckless endangerment jimmy kimmel saying that it was a right winger that shot charlie kirk
that's reckless endangerment because right nothing in america what's illegal is a direct
incitement to violence and that's it we've been through this already and in fact the defining
case was a clansman who threatened a politician and said we're going to get our revenge
against you and the Supreme Court said he had the right to say that what he didn't have the right
to say was let's get him right that's the distinction because this isn't England this is America
so that's it so all this neat speech stuff is barking up the wrong tree and you know I'd like
to give good credit to Matt Walsh and Orrin McIntyre who you know I watch both of their shows
pre-regularly and both of them just absolutely slam Pam Bondi and said this should be the end of
her career for saying, oh no, there's speech and then there's hate speech. No, there's not. And just,
you know, it takes one crisis and it's not just that they abandon any principles. They just become
Democrats and sound exactly like their enemies and invoke the exact same standards. But, you know,
these two right-wing influencers that I've seen immediately came out and said, no,
wrong lady and I believe oran said hey if you can't do this job go home that's it this is
we're not putting up with this at all and I think Tucker Carlson said the same thing he went
off on his show about this that this is they're denying your bury humanity when they're
trying to deny your freedom of speech yeah he killed it on this so I think she she was forced
to kind of retract and back down on that but like we got a hold firm to that dude because we
saw remember i mean they were breaking the law and and they got away with it for a time but they lost
at the at the polling booth finally over it um anyway but just remember the tyranny of the censorship
on twitter just a few years ago before Elon musk bought it it was just horrific to either way they
treated people and and the way they helped to rig the election of 2020 by what they do by shadow banning
charlie kirk and all of his buddies all of the new right wing influencers mike sernovich and
and Jack Possibik and all of those popular MAGA guys all got shadow banned down to oblivion
in order to try to, and I think with great success to rig that election against Trump last time.
Anyway, I should shut up and read more of these things because we got super chats.
This dude says, oh, do we think that Trump is capable or interested in actually ending the war in Ukraine as we stand right now?
My short answer is I think he is interested, but not capable, as I've said before.
The Russians are winning, but they're winning slowly, and they're still far from their goal.
And the Ukrainians don't want to turn around and quit the field where they're still standing.
And so it ain't quite a stalemate, but it's a slow motion, war of attrition, favoring Russia.
And I don't know how long it's going to last, but it's already lasted way too long.
It's far too dangerous.
But I don't know what the hell anybody can do about it, quite frankly.
it's terrible. I mean, look, I think that we, whatever reservoir of trust we still had remaining
with Russia in 2022 is just gone now. And they just, they don't feel like we are capable of
sincere and lasting agreements. You know, and I mean, we reinforce that like every day when
we're holding negotiations with the Iranians and, you know, the Israelis are secretly plotting a
sneak attack against them at the same time.
Like, when you do stuff like that, the rest of the world takes notice, you know,
and when, especially when you have the hubris to brag about it, like, like, we did with that.
And, like, you know, some people, some European officials did about the Minsk Accords,
all being sort of one big gag to kind of string the Russians.
Like, the Russians didn't see it as a gag.
The Russians thought this as a way to, like, stop this war from coming to fruition.
and like to hear officials that you've been negotiating with their people this whole time just sort of laugh at you and say ha you believe that you know and at this point it's like Putin might believe Trump wants to do it but he also knows that there's limits to the power the president can wield and that he's only going to be in there for a couple years and who knows what happens after that and so you know it's it it's hard to make an agreement that you can really trust with the United States right now and that
That's one of the things that, you know, I wish that our leaders would take more seriously, right, is that something like our national honor, like our word is our bond as a country.
Like, we have to do this thing that we said we were going to do, even though it's actually going to cost us now.
And it's not a, it's not going to be good for us.
But we said we would do it.
We committed to it.
And so we're going to do it.
You got to maintain those things.
Like those are the kind of things that forget the next administration.
those are the things that are going to matter 10 administrations from now, you know, 15, 20 administrations from now.
Does America keep its word? Does America do what it says is going to do? If they say they want us to sit down across a table from them, are they holding a knife behind their back and waiting for us to, you know, turn around to go get lunch?
I mean, these are the kind of, like, as a human, you know, like human beings, right?
One of the things they say about psychopaths is that they tend to move around a lot, if not.
not geographically, at least, from one social circle to another, because they just inevitably,
people kind of catch on to what these people are about, and they just burn bridges everywhere
they go. And so they have to move on, move on. But you can't move on in the global arena.
America's here. And our word and our national honor and how we're perceived, that's going to
stick with us, you know? And I feel like the damage we've done just over the last 15, 20 years,
but really, you know what, I would say since the end of the Cold War for sure.
when when we were in this unprecedented position, right, with the world at our feet.
I mean, we could have set up the American world order.
Any way we wanted that could have lasted, you know, a thousand years.
And instead, we just kind of stuck with the petty, you know, just bullshit.
Yeah.
And it's really unfortunate.
And I think, you know, at this point, the rest of the world just not.
buying it anymore you know and and that's yeah that's sad i mean you don't want the rest of the world
not trusting the most powerful country in the world it's a recipe for you know for for bad things so
all right man i got to cut a spot here uh for the show so first of all this show provoked is
brought to you by the book provoked by me published last year it's about 477000 words on
how the cold war with russia the new cold war with russia is all america's fault and uh the causes of
the war in ukraine before that i wrote fools errand time then the war in afghanistan which looks
like that might be relevant again because donald trump says he wants to go back to the bogram air
base and get this idiot argument i already addressed this in the book you know um eight years ago
that uh oh well china makes nuclear weapons somewhere near afghanistan like in western china so oh so we're
to station B2 bombers at Bagram Air Base for when we have to do a sneak attack against China's
nuclear weapons facilities? What? No, they're never going to station any major air power
at Bagram. Enough to bomb Afghanistan, B-1s for bombing Afghanistan with, yeah, but B-2s and
nukes for potentially holding over the head of the Russians or the Chinese stationed in Afghanistan?
No, they're never going to do that. So what have been?
advantages that give them to go back to Afghanistan, nothing. These people are crazy. Sorry, I had to say that.
And then this one is called enough already, and it's about all of the terror wars. And there's a
review of it today and all weekend at anti-war.com by Michael Holmes, who interviewed me a couple
times. He's a German guy who interviewed me a couple times. Dirty wars and endless lies,
Scott Horton's shattering history of America's War on Terror. And that's it running at
anti-war.com this weekend. So I had to say that. And then I also have to talk about the
expat money summit.
But this is where, say you had some money and you were trying to save it from annihilation by Uncle Sam, what you do is what you could do is you could find other places in the world where you can get citizenship and or residency, buy property and protect your assets.
This is not some scam where like they teach you how to cheat on your taxes and go to prison or something at all.
Nothing like that.
This is all about staying exactly within the rules of the United States and the other countries in the world and how to do it exactly.
right so that you can protect your assets. And it's taught by this great guy. His name is
Mikkel Thorup. I would say Mickle or something. Mikkel Thorup. He's a really good dude.
And he's expert at this. He's been doing this a long time. And the whole thing is free.
It's expatmoneysummit.com. And Chris, is there like a slash provoked at the end of that or something?
Yeah. Slash provoke. Expackmoneysummit.com slash provoked is, I haven't been saying that the last
few weeks. Go there. The whole thing is free. They'll have some upsells or whatever, I guess,
during the conference but it's um from october 10 through 12th and they'll teach you and they're
focusing on latin america this time i'll teach you how to protect your assets buy up property
in latin america and save your money and all of these things uh and the right way and it's not like
just some only an upsell uh where you know what i mean like they just string you along and make
you buy things like no they actually will teach you the basics absolutely what you need to know for
free throughout the whole summit and then the various upsells will just do a little better than that so that's
business um if you have any money protect it by um by looking at that and then drink my coffee if you like
waking up in the morning or if you just need to drive drunk home from the bar and get some coffee in
you all right um listen this guy asked a question it was uh fear the old blood
if you're the old blood asks
um
oh that was the ukraine question
i just didn't i just uh did uh this guy
um
same chatter
do you two think that the shit lip types are going to treat jimmy kimmel
as their free speech martyr in the same way the right is treating choice
i mean kind of maybe but i don't know
he didn't get shot and he ain't got charisma not really
jimmy kimmel he's so washed up and old i think this would be the last one on the phone
here um oh what do you consider to be the biggest distraction for right wingers of our time i'll leave
that one to you i mean right now it's hard to think of anything else other than just the the
obsession and i get it i'm i'm one of these people to a degree and i have to fight it off in myself
the impulse a lot but just the obsession with conspiracy theories it's the most natural thing in
the world the government lies to us about everything
everything. Like, even when there's no reason to lie, they still lie, you know. And, and so, you know, those are the, just those are those are the conditions that are, you know, just perfect soil for conspiracy theories to sprout up and grow in. And so I get it. And I'm one of those people. I have to remind myself of this. But man, like, I've been, I've been just at war on Twitter the last couple days over this Israel killed Charlie Kirk thing. And it's just. I've been just. I've been just. I've been just. I've been just. I've been just. I've been just. I've been just. I've been just. I've been just. I've been just. It's. I've
just, like, look, man, I'm, of all people on the planet, the last person who puts anything
past, like, from a moral standpoint, anything past the government of Israel. There's, I mean,
we've watched for two years that there are no moral limits that they consider applicable to their
own, to their own behavior. I'm, I put nothing past them. But man, you've got to start with,
like, start with, okay, we don't.
don't know anything. We don't know who did this. We don't know. So now what evidence do we actually
have? And you've got to work out from there. You cannot start with a conclusion and work your
way back, fitting every little square peg into a round hole and trying to cram it in there to make it
work. And people are so stuck on it, man, like they really, really, really want to believe it.
And it's easy to believe. Like, they kill a bunch of kids in Gaza. They kill a bunch of journalists.
They would do, you know, I mean, you know their deeper history that like, again, there's no real limits.
It's not a matter of whether they would or wouldn't do it from that standpoint, but you've got to be able to, you know, present an argument to people and present information to people that they can't debunk in five seconds when they go look it up.
It just makes us look stupid.
And more than that, it really, it distracts from real issues that are going on, you know.
The other day I said that Charlie Kirk, you know, Israel killed Charlie Kirk is why we can't.
have Israel has too much influence in U.S. foreign policy. You know, it just gets subsumed into
these into these sinkholes of conspiracy theories. And, you know, what it reminds me of
is when I would go to the Middle East for work all the time when I was with the DOD, I would
talk to a lot of the Arabs in the different places that I would be working. And man, like,
and these are English-speaking Arabs. So they're more urban and, like, educated than, like,
your average dude in the slum.
And man, their heads, and I don't even say this as an insult or whatever.
A lot of them are great people, but their heads are just so full of conspiracy theories
that they cannot think straight about just regional politics or anything like that.
Like they believe them all and there's just, they assume that the craziest conspiracy theory
version of something is probably what's true and then they start there.
and it makes it so that you know that conspiracy theorizing and obsessing over that stuff is what they do instead of actual politics you know instead of like the type of organized politics it would actually get anything done at all they're just like caught in these rabbit holes they can't claw themselves out of and i see that happening like in in corners of the right these days i mean you had like i know you're like not paying as much attention to twitter but you had like nick fuentes over the last couple days known zion
nationalist chill, you know, Nick Flentes, who's been on saying, you know, what's the evidence
exactly for the Israel angle? Like just what is going on? Like what, like, and you got tons of
people on the right saying, oh, they got to him. You know, he got, he must have like, it's like,
dude, I don't know. It drives me insane, man. Like, we have to, like, no matter, no matter
which angle you're coming at this from. Even if you are somebody who hates Israel,
even if you're somebody who hates Jews and they're your enemy or whatever. It doesn't matter.
Whatever approach you're coming from, you cannot abandon reason. And you cannot abandon
the requirement to think and speak and act with a sense of justice. You know, it's important.
Like if you, yeah, it doesn't matter where you're coming.
coming from like you know reason and justice are are not negotiable things that you can cast off when
you feel like it like you have to always have your your feet planted on those two things and so look
if if Israel killed charlie kirk if that comes out um i will literally on a live stream of provoked
uh get a live crow and i will eat it in front of you um so uh yeah full you'll have a full mea
copa you get to watch me eat a live diseased bird that i'll catch on my own you know on a power line
in nearby um but yeah man just that like we got to focus on real problems and uh and the conspiracy
theorizing again i understand it and a lot of times it's more true than not but you can't let it
distract us from like hard political problems that we're actually trying to solve yeah i mean my
approach to this stuff is just be patient i don't feel the need to be first on all these things
You know, if Justin was here, that would be his job to write, you know, everything we know so far as of Wednesday night or whatever.
But for me, I don't really have that.
I don't feel that pressure to pronounce what must be the final result conclusion thing now.
So I know there are a lot of theories going around.
A lot of people taking it upon themselves to investigate, which I think is great.
I was, you know, I was looking at Twitter a little bit.
I was watching a little Candace Owens.
And I was just thinking, man,
if we had had YouTube and Twitter back in the days of the Oklahoma City bombing, they wouldn't
have gotten away with that. There is no John Doe too crap for a day, dude. They would have just
been nailed. We know all these Nazis names. We know which cases they testified for the
prosecution and the rest, dude. Give me a break. I mean, maybe, but as a still Oklahoma bombing
truth or for the last 30 years straight, you know, I think it is important that people
investigate these things uh independently and don't wait around for the government to tell you what
the truth is but like you're saying too that doesn't mean you have to just jump to conclusions
you can just compile a bunch of things to wonder about and and wait as long as you can to make
your conclusion try your best to debunk these facts that you're compiling see if you can falsify them
you can't build a house out of straw anyway dude so if you're going to really make your case
you're going to have to have only the best pieces so yeah and
You know, I see a question from Cyber Chud 2077. Why would you say that as the information is still
coming out and it's so early? I'm not, we have to separate these things, right? To say that
there's no like hard evidence that I've seen, that I think anybody's seen that Israel carried
out this assassination is not the same thing as saying the story the government is telling us
is true or that they're like on the ball and figuring this out in the right way or conveying
the information it's not the same thing you know to say that uh like when we say be careful
and take your time uh that just means it's what well it's what you said just don't jump to
this conclusion but you have to really ask yourself like like you have to think about the
the claim itself and how extraordinary it is Israel this foreign country
assassination of like an American political commentator and figure. Now, would they do that?
Yes. There's no doubt in my mind. Benjamin Netanyahu would sleep like a baby tonight if he gets
there's no doubt about it. They've done they've done way worse, you know, and they've been doing
it on a daily basis now for years. So it's not that. But you have to say, okay, that's step one
is that this foreign country ordered to hit on this American citizen in broad daylight with thousands of
people around cameras everywhere. And they've got apparently the president, the vice president,
the FBI director, the DOJ head, just everybody in the American government covering for them as
they've done this. So you have this vast, sprawling global conspiracy at this point that's like
and now, okay, maybe it's all true. But if you're going to go down that road, you know,
you better have some good points to me, you know, and not just some,
innuendo that you know that that well i don't want to name any names but like just you can't just
have innuendo and like holes in the official story and you know therefore maybe this other thing
this insane sprawling conspiracy theory is true maybe it is but you got to have some solid building
blocks to like put that together on you know and people are just not waiting for that yeah and i
feel like it sucks so much and like people have been coming at me so hard for saying this stuff on
Twitter, but it's like, dude, we're on, like, we're almost certainly on the same side of most
of these issues, you know, this is, um, I mean, the reality of it is, like, whatever you think
about it, if you're right and they've got the president, the vice president, the FBI director,
the, just everybody, then guess what? It's going to be like JFK. In 70 years from now,
people are still going to be arguing about it. And so, like, I just, it sucks all the air out of
the room when this stuff becomes the focus. And anyway, I don't.
don't want to dogg on people, man. Because like I said, I get it. Like, I 100% get it. There's no
reason to believe anything that these people say. And there's nothing morally that you could put
past the Israeli government. I'm with you on that. Yeah, right. I know that. But, but we just have to
remember, like, we got to keep our eye on the ball and make sure we maintain some sense of credibility
among people out there who like are not already on the train. You know what I mean? Well, look, yeah,
hold your horses shouldn't be that controversial of a statement you know what i mean and that i mean
hold your horses on looking into things just hold your horses on concluding things till you can
be more careful and be more right um i also wanted to mention real quick dude that speaking
of uh israeli murderousness that i interviewed an american palestinian doctor
i didn't get a chance of yeah anas ahmed is his name and he spent a month over there
in May operating on people, you know, getting bombed to death and shot to death over there.
And I got a real good interview out of him the other day, which just posted.
So if people want to take a look at that, it's, you know, under my Scott Horton show handles.
There are 3,000 people watching live right now on our various things, which is great.
Everybody go over to the YouTube channel, YouTube.com slash at provoked.
I think you need that at in there.
Or if you type slash anti-war radio, it's my old anti-war radio channel.
so that'll work too it'll forge you over there um and then uh yeah this is great um i'm having
fun i missed live calls on pirate radio we're going to get to that someday here but for now um let me run
through these chats real quick we have reed hopper and rothbard of course that's true uh left and right
the prospects for liberty anatomy of a state war peace in the state and you know other great ones
the case against the fed what has government done to our money and um
anti-imperialist heritage and okay um did you see trump wants to retake bogram yeah i already cussed about
that non-interventionist should support tariffs well i'm not exactly sure about that but i know that we do
have a very rigged and crooked not exactly free trade system that basically says you can keep your
tariffs on us and we'll drop our tariffs on you as long as you let us have military bases in
your country and dictate your foreign policy right that's our deal
with the Europeans, the Koreans, the Japanese, and whoever else.
And so it definitely should not be that way.
And so if the tradeoff from bringing our troops home is we have to renegotiate, you know,
some level of protection just, you know, with other countries.
I'm listening anyway.
And anyway, I know that there are really smart libertarian arguments where no matter what
their tariffs are on us, we should, we still shouldn't have tariffs anyway, but I'm not
that good of an economist.
I'd have to ask Mark Thornton to explain all that crap, so I'll pass.
But I know that I don't support this rigged game that we have now,
which is really a giant pretense to maintain military dominance throughout the planet.
Yeah, and I mean, I'm like you.
I'm not a good enough economist to pronounce on the effects of that necessarily.
But I would say from the non-interventionist standpoint, and maybe this is what he was getting at,
but you know what tariffs do like forget the economics of it what they do is they give you foreign
policy tools short of force to use in your in your dealings with other countries you know you can
go to another country and say you know we're going to stop allowing you to sell your main
products into the American market or we're going to incentivize Americans to buy you know by
lowering tariffs and like opening it up for you it's just it's a less.
you can pull that something short of, you know, hey, we're going to invade your country or bomb you
if you do something we don't like. And you were dead on, though. I mean, it's, you know, it's this
Cold War system that we established, which maybe made sense, you know, during the Cold War,
this idea that we're in this, in this global war against the, you know, another empire. And
all the countries whose loyalty we're competing for, we go to them and we say, look,
here's the deal. Like you get to develop at a breakneck pace because you're going to be able to
just sell into our market and we're not going to sell into yours. And as you said, you know,
but you're going to be on our side of the Cold War, you know, foreign policy wise, like we get to
call the shots there. And maybe that made sense in the Cold War. But then by the time we got past
the Cold War, you had all these countries. Like forget about like the non-aligned countries that we
were doing this with to kind of bring them into the fold. We got like Canada,
European countries that we were doing this with, that they're completely rebuilt from World War II.
They have better public transportation, better infrastructure, everything than we've got over here.
And when Trump comes along and says, you know, maybe we need to rework this system that we put in place to fight the Cold War, they act like some sacred tenet of American democracy and the global system is being violated.
And it's like, no, it's not, you know.
these are these are just uh these are negotiations that have needed to take place for 35 years and they
haven't yet and um and it's good that they are now but uh but yeah i mean tariffs are foreign
policy tools in addition to just being economic uh you know incentive machines so that's
important to keep in mind yeah all right so um well here let's just run through some chats here
uh this guy says possible movement on illinois weapons ban next week praying do you know about that
again i guess it sounds like i saw the chat about it i don't know anything about that sounds like there's
a chance it's going to get less worse is the implication i'm picking up on that that they might be
rolling something back is that what that sounds like uh maybe so i will have to maybe we'll talk
about that next week because i am not uh i'm not really aware of that issue at all um here's
another one kimball taken down fine by me i hate the bastard but FCC pressure not a fan of that at all
I think that is absolutely the correct take.
I used to like Jimmy Kimmel when he did the man show a long time ago.
Oh, look.
Reminder, Dave DeCamp is at the tail end of the fundraiser over at anti-war.com.
Help him fight the good fight and donate now.
Says Adam Parker, you got that right?
And I'm editorial director there.
So I mean that when I say that.
I actually got to hang out with Dave last night.
He went out to the award ceremony thing in Chicago and got to go hang out.
Great, dude.
He's our news editor there.
I read him every day.
I'm concerned with the administration using this to crack down on anti-Israel sentiment.
I mean, ain't that the way?
And that was part of what Pambandi said.
It was like, oh, we got to crack down on anti-Semitism.
Or McIntyre was like, oh, God, listen, lady.
You know what I mean?
And look, he is no hippie leftist pro-Palestine activist.
And he's not a strict non-interventionist, Ron Paulian, either.
But he's just saying, come on now, you're getting on my nerves with this stuff.
You know what I mean?
Charlie Kirk's assassination was not about anti-Semitism.
And no, it doesn't mean that we need more bans on speech for Americans
who want to criticize this foreign nation of Israel.
And it's in the news now that this guy, Mahmoud Khalil,
you're going to now deport him to Syria or, especially after what happened to Charlie, in our society.
Or Algeria, Algeria.
You want to play the clip? Chris, go ahead.
More law enforcement going after these groups who are using hate speech and putting cuffs on people.
So we show them that some action is better than no action.
We will absolutely target you, go after you if you are targeting anyone with hate speech, anything.
And that's across the aisle.
hook um so yeah and this is the thing is um as we were talking about last week can't we just defund
all the liberal arts departments there's a big controversy at texas a and m this this week i believe
it's brand new where um a student kind of secretly recorded the teacher preaching some trans
ideology type stuff and the student says well the president changed the law on this i guess their
interpretation of title nine is what she's referring to or i'm not exactly sure but um
I haven't kept up with it that close.
But so this became a big controversy between the president of university and whoever else,
all the chairmen and provosts and whatever.
And I believe the headline that I saw was several professors were fired from Texas A&M for pushing this stuff
after they'd already been told not to and that kind of thing, which, man, why even have these liberal arts departments at all?
You want to read the classics.
They're all on Kindle, dude.
like we don't need the national government especially or even the state governments to subsidize
these giant colleges to teach a bunch of gay communism to everybody's son and daughter that
they send off to get a higher education you know what i mean you're supposed to be reading chaucer
and whatever and now you know i mean and even beyond all that like these departments are just
scams dude it's like it's like if you're going to art school at like cal state northridge
it's like you're you're not going to like get a show at the met from that they're just they're
completely taking your money and selling you a dream that is completely false and so you think about
like you're you're an english literature major or a gender studies major like what are you what jobs
are you competing for well all 50 of you in your class are all competing for your professor's job
when he retires and so it's just a huge bottleneck and just by default 49 of you are not
are going to be disappointed, you know, and they're just a scam.
They scam people out of money, you know, these kids who were told, I mean, it's really sad
that we've sort of, we've created this culture around the university system that makes it
so that people who do something else, you know, people who, I can't remember if I told
this story on this show or not, but, you know, I used to do to somebody I was, I was dating
at the time I used to have to go to these universities graduate school art shows, right, for these
students. And it was absolute hell on earth. Like contemporary art is just so, you know, or maybe
I'm a Philistine. I don't know, but I hated it. And so I would be there and there's a bunch of
these art hos and like homosexual men who have created things that they're calling art and
they're being shown and commented on. And I'm just sitting in the back channel. I'm like waiting for
this whole thing to be over. And there was this other dude who I would always commiserate with. He was
the husband of one of the girls in the art program.
And this was here in L.A.
And this dude, he owned a landscaping company and employed like 60 people.
He had people all over the city, you know, doing work for businesses, homes.
Like he had like 30 trucks.
Like this is established.
He was like 29 years old, right?
Just like a legit dude.
And I'll never forget because we were in a little gaggle one time.
And there's a bunch of these art girls standing around.
and then me and this guy and maybe one other dude.
And they asked him at one point where he went to college.
And he just said, oh, yeah, no, you know, you did a lot of landscaping when I was in high school and stuff.
My dad did landscaping.
And so as soon as I got out of high school, like I just jumped straight into that and started building my business.
This is a dude who's like, again, a hyper successful dude, you know, 60 people, he's like paying their salaries.
And all of these art students who are like third.
four years old in graduate school because they can't think of what else to do with themselves
at the time.
They all, you know, they work at Starbucks despite the fact that they've got a bachelor's degree
and they all look at him like, oh, like they felt bad like, oh, he didn't go to college.
And, you know, the worst part about it is it bothered him.
He should have been like, I don't care about your opinion, but it did bother him.
And because that's the culture that we've created where, like, you're a lesser person,
if that's who you are, no matter what you've done.
And it's really destructive, like, because, I mean, like, in terms, like, it's socially
destructive.
Like, we have, you can't find a freaking electrician, you know, to do, to, to wire up your house
for you to fix something within the next, like, three weeks because they're all booked out.
But you've got a bunch of kids with graduate degrees who are working at Starbucks and living
with five roommates in their 30s.
You know, it's just, it's just a terrible, perverse incentive we've created.
And then they blame free market capitalism for the whole riot.
Hey, this is our, this is late stage capitalism when I take a giant loan from the national
government to go to college to get some worthless degree.
Keep talking.
Sounds like freedom's fault, all right.
Hey, so this guy says, he says, Marley Analytics.
I haven't been calling out these names.
I'm sorry, guys, I should be.
Does Kirk's assassination anyway remind you of the transpose of MLK?
Could this be the start of a counter-revolution?
I would point out that Hunter Durencis, who's our editor at the Libertarian Institute,
and he ran a piece at TAC, which I think it was not his title.
They called it the hero we needed.
Charlie Kirk was the hero we need or something.
He makes a comparison there with MLK,
obviously citing the best parts of MLK and his non-violent approach.
and um all of that and then so i don't know exactly what kind of counter revolution but are we
getting a hell of a reaction uh out of this yes i mean i don't know where it's headed um
well go ahead yeah i don't know exactly what the um i'm not exactly sure what the question
is getting at but i will say this and this is something i worry about
if you go back to 68, right, you had two sort of currents, main currents of the protest movement.
You had the white college kids who were mostly anti-war protesters because they didn't want to go to Vietnam.
And then you had the civil rights, black rights protesters, right?
And they had gotten increasingly wild over the course of the decade, increasingly sort of,
you could say anti-social and just separated from like the main current of like politics in the
country they were kind of beginning to branch off and um you had uh in by in 1968 or actually so
in 66 that's when stokely carmichael coined the term black power and you started to get the
youth in the civil rights movement who started to get really riled up you had a you had some of
this on the, on the, on the, the anti-war movement on the campuses too, but there was still enough
built-in faith in sort of the established channels of protest, you know, that most of that
energy was flowing into those things. And so in 1968, when Eugene McCarthy was running on
an anti-war ticket, you know, you had all these hippies and all these anti-war radicals on
campus who, you know, they cut their long hair off and they shaped.
It's clean for gene movement, so they could go door to door with these middle class normies and talk to him about the Senator Eugene McCarthy and why they should vote for him.
And you also, at the same time, even as like a lot of the youth in the civil rights side was getting really dissatisfied with the nonviolent approach and, you know, all of the things that Martin Luther King would talk about, he still had enough weight in the movement, enough moral authority in the movement that he was able to keep a lid on all that, you know, on things just veering off totally into black power and black separatism.
And in one year, you know, you get RFKs murdered and Eugene McCarthy gets just totally robbed at the Democrat primary.
You think like 2020 was bad. I mean, 1968 was at least. I mean, you had a guy who didn't even, he never, you know, Hubert Humphrey didn't even win a primary.
I don't even think he was in any but two of the primaries. And he didn't win a single one. He had like 0.2% of the vote or something.
And they just installed it, you know. And this was at a time.
when these kids, this wasn't like, are we or are we not going to raise the age of, you know,
social security qualification or something? This was like, when I get out of college,
am I or am I not going to go die in the jungle? So this was serious shit to these kids.
And then you just steal the election. I mean, outright. And when they protested in 1968,
at the Chicago convention, the cops come out and just beat the shit out of him, you know? And like,
so that happens. And then, of course, Martin Luther King gets killed. And, you know, in this sense,
like I've seen people say like, you know, the left says we want to, you know, we have to
bring down the temperature. It's like, you just killed the guy who wanted to bring down the
temperature. And so now you get the next thing. And that's how people felt in 1968. And
that's very cathartic and honestly in a lot of ways, like a reasonable way to react to a situation
like that. But as we saw back then, nothing, nothing good comes from it, man. Like when people
start freelancing because they lose faith in the established channels of getting their grievances
across and dealt with. When they start freelancing, man, people, people can, chaos ensues very
quickly, as it did back then. And, you know, at the time, it was 19, everybody thinks of like
the 60s, like when they think of the weathermen or all of these other things as things that
were like part of the 60. All that stuff started in 1969. You know, this was like the end of the 60s
when, you know, you're already a couple of years removed from Hay to Ashbury and all this
this was like the end of it and all the dissatisfied people who were pissed off about, you know,
that they had put their faith into these established channels of protest only to get stomped on
when they actually started to win the argument. You know, they were, they were righteously pissed off
about it. And, but what, as you see in the 1970s, I mean, it just spun off into complete craziness.
You know, you're not going into those sort of established channels that everybody sort of, you know, that a large number of people have a sort of hand in shaping it and sort of go the, you know, shaping the rules that govern it, then people splinter off into like a million different cults and movements and just little groups. And you get Jonestown, you get the Symbionese Liberation Army, you get the Black Liberation Army, all these crazy.
little groups that are just committing violence for no real reason.
It's just sort of nihilistic violence.
But that's where you can end up.
And that is where we, that's something we have to worry about right now.
I mean, people are on the edge in terms of, like, their faith in the system right now
is hanging by the last thinnest thread in the tapestry.
I mean, it is like, you know, and you've got to hope that the people who are making decisions are aware of that and that their decisions are going to be shaped by that.
Because if you let large, large, large numbers of people cut that last thread, then you lose control of events very quickly.
I mean, really.
Yeah.
Well, I don't know how anyone could have faith in this system whatsoever, I think, but the question has got to be what to do about it.
and it sounds naive now and this kind of goes towards our next question but you know in a sense
you know the way I used to argue with the in with the libertarians is look the constitution is
about 95% of the way to pure anarcho-capitalism from where we are now and it's supposed to be
the rule of law it is the charter that created this national government and so it's supposed to
be bound by it and not going back to it but going forward to it and implementing
the Constitution, repealing the 21st and the 20th even centuries as much as we can and
having something like a limited republic and with more and more decentralization of power,
that's the way to fix this, right?
Because we don't have levers of power over Washington.
If we can form a broad consensus against centralization, then we can make some progress with that.
But as far as like on any one law, we, the people of this country have no.
power compared to the moneyed interest.
And this goes in, I'll be quiet in just one sec, but the E. Rutger asked, it sounds like
Daryl's deterrence idea aims at the idea of accepting the changes of the society.
This is refers to, this comment is an hour old or whatever.
We're behind the ball here, but when you were talking about that, and he asks, does this
conflict with Scott and Justin Romando's ideas on reclaiming the right?
It seems like there's already this push for a new right.
So this, my kind of take on that is that, yeah, I mean, there's, we're stuck going forward in time the best any of us can perceive.
So there's no going back to anything, right?
It's the future right now.
We're having this conversation halfway through 2025 by God.
So reclaiming the right is, you know, bringing up the legacy of people like Garrett Goret and H.L. Mencken and Albert J. Knox and even John T. Flynn and some of the other people who were, you know, made up the legacy.
the kind of opposition to Roosevelt and World War II back then and, you know, at the very
first days after World War II and invoking that legacy of, you know, call it paleo-conservatism
or paleo-libertarianism as a sound basis for a future non-interventionist foreign policy,
a Ron Paulian foreign policy that's based on the,
you know quite strict recommendations of george washington and thomas jefferson and others of that
generation that you're going to destroy your republic if you go create a world empire so don't uh which
you know they explained that quite quite clearly um so we can do that i mean um as best as we can
and try to i think the right already agrees is i i love to quote Doug mcgregor it's the
greatest thing anybody ever said time wins more arguments than reason in other words it don't
matter and you spouting off your mouth boy me um not that he was talking to me but that's how i take
it was like you sit here and complain complain complain but guess what by the time isis sacks philuja
in 2014 everyone's going to agree with you whether they ever heard you say that or not they're like
geez i guess this was all for nothing after all and um so the right more and more is with us
we don't have the power in the white house obviously but i think the narrative more and more belongs
to Tucker Carlson and likes of this show in setting the tone for what conservative American
foreign policy should be going forward. But what do you think about all that stuff?
Yeah. And I would add to it that decentralization, it has the added benefit of A, it's
something you can sell to people on the other side. You know, you can tell like a liberal New Yorker,
dude do you really want a dude in alabama a baptist in alabama having a say and whether or not
your girlfriend can get an abortion do you really want that you don't right well yeah so let's just
separate these things out you know decentralized go you can sell that to them they might not hold
to it once they're in power again but you can at least sell the idea to them and then also like
it's a you know talk about bringing down the temperature like concrete ways you can do it decentralization
is like the biggest way you can do it.
If all of a sudden, like, it doesn't matter quite as much who gets elected president
because it's not going to completely change your life.
You know, I think we mentioned an episode or two ago.
You think about how Ukraine was.
It was just this disaster of a country because you really had two countries that were stuck
together that didn't want to be together.
And this side, you know, the East would elect the pro-Russian guy and the West would
elect somebody who hated Russians and they'd go back and forth.
forth and neither side felt represented whenever they were out of power like at all. So there was no
loyal opposition. And you just, you know, you got what we have now. And of course, you know,
they had a little help with all that. But, you know, that's what happens when you have an
immensely powerful federal government. Is it really matters like who gets elected president.
It really matters like who he appoints to the Supreme Court. Because I mean, you know, if you got the
wrong guy in there and a Supreme Court justice kicks the bucket.
your life might change, like in ways it matter.
And if that was not the case, you know, if the Supreme Court was ruling on trade disputes,
you know, between states and like shit like that, but social issues, cultural issues,
a lot of these things were handled at the lowest level that they could reasonably be handled
that, which I would argue is like the township probably in most of these things.
You know, people wouldn't have to invest so much energy into questions that people didn't use to do that.
You know, you didn't have like your average dude who was turning a wrench all day just pissed off at night because, you know, Herbert Hoover appointed such and such as a federal judge.
I didn't give a shit.
Had nothing to do with their lives to the most part.
Or if it did, it was in like minuscule ways that, you know, that they were never going to notice.
And that's just not the case anymore because we have this, we have this machine, this federal government now that, you know,
If you go back to 1933, when Roosevelt was first coming into office for the New Deal,
before the Second World War and the Cold War, the federal government, in terms of revenues,
in terms of personnel who worked for it, in terms of just the activity and the aspects of society
and the economy and everything else that it had a hand in, it was 5% the size.
of the federal government now in every way.
And so what that means is that like 95% of the government grew up in the context of the
depression and global war.
And that's what the government grew to deal with, you know, to be proactive in the economy
during a depression because that's when all these agencies and these departments were all
created.
And once you get them rolling and get them moving and have somebody's job depending on them
finding something to do, I mean, we all know that story.
like it's just going to keep on going. And so we've got this giant thing that's built to fight
an economic depression in a stupid way, but that's what it, you know, thought it was doing,
and to fight global war against the fascists or the communists. And that's what the government is
built to do. And even things that we don't think of as being, as having anything to do with that.
You know, when Eisenhower was sending troops down to Alabama to point guns at American citizens
to integrate those colleges down there.
He wasn't some bleeding heart, like, civil rights guy who just, like, was, you know,
unable to sleep at night because this, you know, this black woman wasn't able to get,
like, maybe he believed that stuff, but it wasn't like something he was super, like,
dialed in on.
He just knew that the Soviet Union is sending their agents all over Africa right now to these
non-aligned countries and saying, look at the United States, look at Jim Crow.
Look what they're doing to black people.
Are you really going to follow them or are you going to follow us?
like come with us. Propaganda rights itself. And that's what Eisenhower was thinking of. And so even
things like that have like a, you know, the warfare state sort of tinged to him, you know, and that's what
the whole government almost really is. And the way that you deal with that is not to just like break
it down or be doing. You have to, you have to devolve it down to lower level. Subsidiarity is the only way
you're ever going to do that. There's a great George Carlin bit about that. How we just declare war on
everything got a war on poverty got a war on education got a war on this and war on that and it's
our only concept for dealing with anything we don't really do anything about it we just declare
war on it and send a bunch of DEA ages of kicking people's doors or whatever there's a
there's a joke in 30 rock where alec Baldwin says something like he said something like he's like
oh it's a war on drugs the war on the poor and then Tina phase like I think you mean the war on
poverty and he's like yeah let's go with that yeah yeah same
difference and he's being redundant with the war on drugs anyway um all right this guy says tell darrell i
spent countless hours fighting with people over his churchill was the cheap villain of world war two
comment i'm holding the line brother so glad to know i mean i've talked a lot about that i don't
know if there's anything else everybody wants to hear me say about it you know i got a tangent there
i forgot to mention i got a chance to meet i'm going to say his name wrong i have no idea how to
say it right alexander mercois the guy from the duran that does
that great podcast. It talks all about Russia issues all the time. And I was surprised that he knew
me. And he had been at that conference in Georgia where I'd been invited to give that short
statement. And he said that I had made a great impression with my little talk that I'd given
in Tbilisi there over Zoom. I was supposed to go there, but I decided not to. But so that was
cool. I'm going to send him a book. But he's a really great dude. And I forgot why that was relevant.
So we're going, we're something about Churchill.
Oh, because he said there's a book called Churchill by some commie.
And I forgot the commie's name, but he says this is a very popular revisionist book about Churchill in England that everybody kind of reads.
And then they pretend that they didn't because the guy that wrote it is such a Stalinist or whatever it was.
I forgot.
And I said, well, I just read AJP. Taylor.
And he's like, well, he knows what that means.
Same difference.
But so I don't know if you've read that book or not.
I could recommend.
I'm not the comming one.
I probably should, though.
Sounds like.
Yeah, I asked him what it was called.
And I think he said it was just called Churchill.
But I'm going to email him anyway because I need his mailing address.
So I will try to hunt that down for you because I know you need it.
Senator Brundlefly says, I like liberty.
That was not a fart.
I rubbed against the wall.
I didn't hear you.
I like libertarianism.
It's a game we can play only in an ordered society with shared.
premises if culturally balkanize i don't know how to play that game well that's the whole point you've got to
teach libertarianism to as many people as possible and practice it as much as can um you know uh freedom is
the parent of order and if you just try to impose it it ain't gonna work anyway so um degenerate society
says they didn't dig up the nuns in spain but they had a lot to do with the spaniards were
digging up their nuns scott you see the new k o t h
Knights of the Hoth
I don't know
KOTH I don't know what that stands for
I was trying to guess a Star Wars name
the nuns in Spain I don't know what we're talking about
you're the historian yeah Spanish Civil War stuff
I don't see the question so I don't know the context
but talking about you know they would they would
exhume the graves of priests and nuns and defile their corpses
and do all these terrible things there's pictures you can find online
really awful stuff yeah all right derrick wheeler asks um speaking of conspiracy scott have you done
any digging on william ban man king of the hill well of course huh king of the hill oh i missed
it koth h oh of course did i see the nuky you know i watched a couple of them
and then it was all kind of woke and it just man they missed it like this was all clearly
produced before the election of last year and it just seems so out of date that
Like, oh, it's Hank Hill dealing with woke times, but it's, it's just feels, I don't know.
You've been whacking off in my tool shed?
Yeah, they could have made it more universal, you know?
It was too, like, you know, it's like watching a new Star Wars movie.
It was like, wait a minute, is this long ago in a galaxy far, far away, or this movie was
filmed in 2019?
I get it.
Anyway, Derek says, hey, what about William Van Wagonin?
And says that the Arab Springs beginnings in two,
Indonesia were not as organic as they appeared. Have I done any digging? Yes, I did. I interviewed him
about it. I did two interviews with William Van Wagonin recently. Do I have the book right here to show you?
No, but you can see in the... Oh, I do have it. This is the book. It's the 17th book I've published.
Admittedly five of them were mine. But this is Creative Chaos published by the Libertarian Institute
by the absolutely great and even heroic William Van Wagonin. He paid the price in time in Al-Qaeda
captivity over there, spent a lot of time in Iraq and in Syria and really knows his stuff.
And it's funny because I have been interviewing him supposedly about this book, but we just
keep talking about the background. So we did like a whole show. We're just talking about Iraq War
2 the whole damn time. And then we did another one where we end up just talking about Tunisia
and Egypt. That's the second one, Derek. It's there. We talk all about Tunisia and Egypt and this
and that. And I was actually thinking about this. I guess I'm
my flight. I was kind of spacing out and thinking about like how much I need to really reevaluate
my take on the Arab Spring from back then and even in enough already where he really makes it
seem like they were just as color-coded revolution as anything that happened in Georgia or Ukraine
in the Bush years and that from the beginning and that it wasn't just that America exploited the
ones that were in their favor and crush the ones that were not but that they really were behind
it all so um you know i'm really not sure man i think because part of his thing was it kind of
depended on wiki leaks releasing those state department cables at an opportune time but that's getting
the cause and effect backwards right like everything happens for a reason well you mean effects had
causes i mean because in this case what happened was wiki leaks released this stuff and there was a
bunch of State Department cables in there detailing the corruption of the dictator of Tunisia
and his wife's family especially but then as he pointed out but who trumpeted all that up on
the radio for the last couple of months before the riots broke out and i don't know this for a fact
but i guess his implication was these are all USAID backed groups in Tunisia that that ended up
picking up the thing digging the pro picking up the protest movement see at least seeds of
of the same thing in Egypt at that time.
Clearly, they absolutely just hijacked the Arab Spring in Libya and Syria in a way that
was the polar opposite of how they treated it in Yemen or in Bahrain, Kuwait, or Saudi,
where they just absolutely crushed all opposition ruthlessly.
Yeah, I was actually in Bahrain when that was going down.
Are you kidding me?
Yeah, no.
I didn't see much, but I was in a taxi cab going from my hotel back to.
the American base and I was a civilian and on my way there like we went through a zone where
you know there were people panging on the windows of the taxi at me and you know there was some
tear gas coming through the vents in the car and stuff and not it wasn't anything crazy like the
the real action was several blocks away but yeah it was it was wild dude and it was funny too
because you know the countries we don't like boy you heard all about everything that
their governments did to put down those protests.
He didn't hear anything about what the Saudis and the Bahrainis were doing over there.
And they were going hard, man.
They went ham on those people.
And it never even made the news here.
Right.
All right.
Well, look, man, we should wrap.
We're at like an hour and a half here.
I saw one guy said, he didn't think the Israelis killed Charlie Kirk because they would have
blamed it on a Palestinian.
Or on me.
Makes sense.
Yeah.
or on Daryl.
All right.
So listen, I think this has been a lot of fun.
We covered a lot of ground in no particular order.
Let me check my notes real quick.
Oh, Trump says October 7th was genocide.
So, okay, but then that means that definitely what Israel's doing is genocide.
Iran signed a new deal with the IAEA to restart sanctions, although the European powers are still threatening to do the snapback sanctions, which could destroy that.
But there's going to be a new inspections regime.
You can't say there's been an unbroken chain, though, since the war.
So I don't really suspect that they've broken out toward a nuke,
but I would not completely discount it.
And then there's a bunch of random stuff on here.
But, oh, you know what?
Let me just say this one thing real quick.
And maybe I'll skip it.
Yeah, I'll just skip it.
Oh, you know what?
I'll say this instead real quick.
They force down the interest rates,
the so-called independent Federal Reserve
bowing to pressure from the president
cut interest rates by a quarter of a point
trying to just juice the bubble like
he's George W. Bush, just sowing the seeds
of future catastrophe.
And, of course,
we need just free market interest rates
instead of having the thing rigged.
But we got inflation above
their so-called 2% target
and they're cutting it anyway.
And so buy whatever commodities you can now,
buy gold because they're,
and I'm not selling it.
I'm just telling you, all your prices are going to keep going up already, again, more.
And so I guess we'll leave that at that unless you got something else for us, bud.
Yeah, because he's asked it a couple of times.
Matt, HM. 73, you said earlier this week, I said there was a podcast coming out that I'm super stoked about.
I cannot tell you what it is.
It's not my podcast.
When it gets announced or comes out, it gets rescheduled, then you know, you'll know what it is probably without me having to tell you.
but it's not mine, so I can't announce it to you.
But it's going to be good when it comes.
There you go.
All right, cool.
Well, thank you, everybody, for watching.
It's been fun.
And thank you, Daryl, and get so much.
Yeah, sorry for the setting and my beautiful clothing
and the laptop quality sound and video.
And the fact that my forehead is just gleaming with sweat this entire time because it's
freaking hot.
Now you can turn the ceiling fan on.
Thank you, everybody, for participating.
It's been a lot of fun.
See you next week.
We'll see you next time.
THE PRESIDENT.