QAA Podcast - What's Normal Anymore? (E342)
Episode Date: September 30, 2025What once was fringe is now just normal. To chat about the new, strange normality, Jake, Julian, and Travis are joined by USA Today extremism report Will Carless. Carless has reported all over the glo...be for two decades, and has just released the first episode of his new video documentary series "Extremely Normal." The crew chats about the James Comey indictment, Trump's executive order declaring antifa "domestic terrorists," attempts to rewrite the history of January 6th, and why some young men continue to be drawn towards the message of Andrew Tate. Subscribe for $5 a month to get all the premium episodes: https://patreon.com/qaa Extremely Normal from Will Carless and USA Today https://youtu.be/NoC7t29e__A?si=f9m2Y8XVGBo2wl89 Will Carless https://x.com/willcarless Check out our new podcast series network Cursed Media and binge the entirety of our new show Science in Transition by Liv Agar and Spencer Barrows: https://cursedmedia.net Editing by Corey Klotz. Theme by Nick Sena. Additional music by Pontus Berghe. Theme Vocals by THEY/LIVE (https://instagram.com/theyylivve / https://sptfy.com/QrDm). Cover Art by Pedro Correa: (https://pedrocorrea.com) https://qaapodcast.com QAA was known as the QAnon Anonymous podcast.
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POMAYOR.
If you're hearing this, well done.
You've found a way to connect to the internet.
Welcome to the QAA podcast, episode 342.
What's normal anymore?
As always, we are your host, Jake Rockatansky, Julian Field, and Travis View.
Does Travis need like a wellness check?
This title is...
I think it's a valuable question to explore as things get continually stranger.
It's fair.
It's a fair question.
Yeah.
I think our guest today is going to help us explore that a bit because I think there are many excellent reporters who cover extremism and conspiracism.
And they work for either, you know, independently or for established outlets.
But I think you'd actually be a pretty hard-pressed to find a reporter in this field, more seasoned or better traveled, that our guest today, Will Carlos.
Will Carlos is an award-winning national correspondent for USA Today.
And before joining that paper, he reported on hate and extremism for reveal at the Center for Investigative Reporting.
He served as head of investigations of the nonprofit newsroom, Voice of San Diego.
He worked as a foreign correspondent for public radio international slash global posts across South and Central America.
Over more than two decades in journalism, he has traveled to more than 80 countries reporting in many of them.
His newest project is a video documentary series called Extremely Normal.
And the first episode is an intimate exploration of the draw that the Manosphere influencer Andrew Tate has on many directionless young men.
Will, thanks so much for taking the time to chat with us.
Thanks, Travis.
I guess seasoned is just like a good synonym for old.
Yeah, I'm just the old guy at this point, right?
Yeah, we taste better.
You know it, yeah.
Yeah, well, thanks.
It's great.
It's great to be on again.
I'm a huge fan of the show, and I always enjoy talking to you guys.
Yeah, yeah. This is like, yeah, I always enjoy your reporting and the way you really, really get into the weeds on a lot of these topics. So I'm really interested in getting your perspective on some news items before we get into your most recent project. The first of all, which is that the storm in some form has arrived. Maybe not quite exactly what Q&N was expecting. But it's like in that direction. Because like, you know, one of the one of the big fantasies of Q&ONN is that like all.
all of their hated political enemies will suffer serious legal consequences.
And by serious, I mean, rounded up and sent to Gitmo where they are hanged.
And it appears that the Trump administration is like kind of trying to make that real by a prosecuting
former FBI director James Comey.
Yeah.
I guess they'll start here.
You know, they wanted Clinton, you know, up on the up on the scaffolding.
But they'll start with Comey and a lying to the, you know, lying to the FBI charge, I'm sure.
I think he's starting with people that like nobody.
really cares that much about? Well, yeah, and like people, it's funny because Comey, you know,
if you go back and look at the data, him, him reopening the investigation into Clinton,
you know, days before the election, arguably did more in favor of Donald Trump than anything
else did. So he's kind of starting with one of his own, which I, I don't know. It doesn't,
it doesn't seem like the best, doesn't seem like the first run of the storm to me, you know.
I think what makes it interesting, though, in this context, in the context of, you know,
storm and I think I message you that this morning didn't I Travis I was like is this the storm starting
and I think I think what makes it interesting is the fact that this is kind of happening like a judicially or like you know kind of largely outside of the kind of prosecutorial system right because I was reading in the times this morning I guess that the career prosecutors at the DOJ were just like there's no case here right and then his handpicked US attorney was just like yes there is like we can find a grand jury you know to put a case
together. And I think that's what makes it really interesting as opposed to like, you know, look,
these are minor charges, right? He's not going to go down for a long time. But it's just the fact that
there's this kind of parallel prosecution track that Trump is just waving a wand and making
happen is what makes this so extraordinary, right? Yeah. Opening prosecutions, it's like it's like
just opening your VPN before you surf the internet. I think like presidents will just kind of establish a
few prosecutions before they get going in the future. I mean, why not, right? I mean, you know, I used
to live in Brazil, and that's kind of what happens in Brazil. It's like, whatever president isn't in
power is in prison. That's kind of how it works. Everyone gets to take turns. I mean, I do think all
politicians should do a prison stint if they want to be in charge of anything. Yeah, I agree.
Wait, wait, wait, this is going to backfire because I think that's what happened with Hitler.
Okay, I'll take it back. No comment. Well, you know, it's, look, it's an indictment, right? It's,
It's something that they can hang there.
I mean, I was looking in and checking on all of the old SpyGate in, you know,
SpyGate slash Qadon influencers.
And they are, oh, they are like digging into their closets and finding all of their old SpyGate gear and, you know,
putting it into the washing machine and getting it nice and shiny.
I think that's where we're going to go that no matter what comes of this at the very least.
And we've seen Trump do this, you know, before, is just getting people, just getting something to talk about.
whatever happens to Comey is kind of irrelevant.
This will still be milked and used as, you know, the first domino is falling.
Yeah.
It's just part of this overall paradigm shift, right?
Just we're throwing out the old book, essentially.
I mean, and I think it's particularly ironic that this is happening to Comey, right?
Because Comey, you know, the report essentially said, like, we probably should charge Trump with some crimes on this.
But I'm not going to do that.
I'm going to leave that up to Congress.
I'm going to leave that at arm's length, right?
And boy, I bet he's regretting that at this point.
But I mean, you know, here you have Trump essentially doing the absolute opposite,
which is like we don't have, we don't really have a lot to go on, but we're going to bring charges
anyway.
It's like the bizarro world version of what was happening.
When was that like four years ago, five years ago with Comey?
Well, yeah, they're like so desperate to just play rope a dope that they're, I think that they're just,
I think Julian's right.
From now on, when, you know, during the debates, the president, you know, the presidential candidates will run on the top three people that they'd like to prosecute.
That'll be part of policy now.
And they just want, you know, well, they investigated us.
So we're going to go and we're going to investigate them.
And we're going to, you know, they're going to do this, I think, for everybody.
They're going to find whatever they can just to get it in the papers, just to get the headline, just so they can spin a narrative around it.
I mean, it's, you know, it seems like a pretty obvious, a pretty obvious political play.
Either that or, you know, it could be just a true anomaly and the political establishment sort of turns its back on it and says, look, this is a disgrace.
We shouldn't be doing this.
And things go back to normal in three years.
But your guess is as good as mine.
Yeah.
Well, they shouldn't have treated Donald Trump as some sort of anomaly to the, you know, U.S. system instead of like a natural kind of extension of it or a natural evolution of like where we were heading in the first place.
They were like, oh, yeah, suddenly there's going to be, you know, a reckoning, even though George Bush had no reckoning.
Former presidents that have committed, you know, clear crimes have had no repercussions, have had the opposition completely drop it as soon as they take office.
And then this time around, they're like, wait a second, this guy is actually particularly bad.
And even that was theater.
I mean, you know, we don't really make any rich or powerful people, like, feel deep, deep consequences.
Well, that's the kind of devil's advocate, MAGA argument here, right?
is essentially, look, yeah, okay, we're shifting paradigms, but you're shifted paradigms when
you impeached Donald Trump twice and when you, you know, investigated him and did all of this
stuff. So, I mean, there is, there is a bit of a devil's advocate argument here that, yes,
this is paradigm shifting, but, you know, the paradigm also shifted in the opposite direction
against Trump, to be fair, right? Yeah, I would just say that, you know, if you're going to
pretend that there's, like, actual, you know, justice at work that can affect the, the president,
the sitting president, then that's a precedent.
And I think that that's what's so funny is that they weren't willing to go all the way
because they do know the consequences of that.
Right.
Because then Pelosi's in jail for insider trading.
I mean, there's nobody that almost nobody wouldn't be in jail for something or other.
And so they kind of like they stayed in the middle.
And I guess I'm hoping that he stays in the middle as well, that a lot of it is just bluster
in theater.
Well, that was my point, right?
It's like not only did sort of they, the royal they not go all the way, but like this
particular person didn't go all the way right now he's and now he's facing these charges so yeah i mean i don't know i never know with all of this stuff like these these guys are all politicians and as far as comies concerned you know his name's back in the spotlight he's back on the front pages like there's a bit of me that's just like how much of this is just political theater and and none of these people really care and they're all kind of smoking smoking cigars at the end of the day and having a whiskey together and just kind of saying you know like we'll charge each other but it's never going to go anywhere i don't know i don't know i
I don't know how serious these charges are, but my understanding is that it's, you know,
it's not going to be a big, a huge deal, even if he's found guilty.
Yeah.
I mean, I just want to congratulate Comey for launching his 2028 presidential campaign.
There you go, right?
I mean, you've got to think about that, right?
Yeah, the charges, he got two counts, one on making a materially false statement, and there's
another on obstructing a congressional proceeding.
So prosecutors allege that Comey falsely testified that he did.
not authorize anyone at the FBI to serve as an anonymous source and his testimony impeded Congress's
oversight work. And then this, like you mentioned, this was like, you had to get through a different prosecutor
to get this one. So Reuters reported that U.S. attorney Eric Sabert resigned after expressing
doubts about the case and was instead brought by Lindsey Halligan, a former Trump lawyer who was
newly appointed as U.S. attorney who personally took the case to a grand journey, which is unusual
step for a top prosecutor. And apparently, she has never actually prosecuted the case herself.
So my two thoughts on this is like, number one, it is kind of like weak sauce compared to, I guess,
what the more, I guess what the more deranged kind of like Qonon people are expecting. You know,
it's not treason. It's not human trafficking. It's a couple of, you know, procedural kind of charges.
Not yet. Maybe we'll see if they keep asking. Well, they tried to charge, they tried to bring a third
charge, a third count about another alleged false statement. But even the grand jury,
wasn't impressed by this, so it wasn't indicted for that. So I feel like they're, it feels like
they struggled to get even these two. And, you know, it's like the maximum sentence for both
them would be about five years and like no one gets the maximum sentence. And even if they do get
some sort of sentence, no one serves whatever sentence that the judge says. And the other thing is
that I can imagine how this will backfire. I was like, if this case is as so weak that they
can't even get a prosecution, well, doesn't that make the Trump DOJ look
pretty impotent that they brought, you know, a fairly weak case to the courts and they
couldn't get to the finish line? Well, I don't think it matters anymore. I think that, I think
that no matter where this case ends up going, the people on the right will say the deep state
came in and saved him or they kept him out, you know, there will be a, you know, a nefarious actor
who came in. And if the charges spiral and oh my gosh, wait, it looks like he actually did do
some bad stuff that's worth looking into, you know, the,
liberals will say like this is a political what i guess i'm trying to say is none of this will have
any impact whatsoever on where people's minds are at what they believe that whatever happens
the facts will be nicely siphoned into like two two mainstream columns and then a handful of
like fringe beliefs on the outside of what's really going on we've seen this with every single
other you know other political prosecution really i mean i you're going back to the muller report
so many people thought this was going to lend, you know, they were wringing their hands about, about
perp walks and Trump and the orange jumpsuit and all of this stuff. And when it didn't end up having any real material consequences,
people just decided that what Mueller set out to prove was real and true and, you know, Trump's corrupt and escaped punishment.
You know, it's just...
Has Jake answered your question yet, Trous? Yeah, yeah. Have I? Have I? Does anything matter anymore?
Let Will, maybe. It's all theater. It's all a win-win.
anyway as far as Trump is concerned because no because you know you're not talking about
Epstein anymore right it's like whether he whether he's found guilty how the trial goes whatever
it goes it's all diverting attention from the Epstein scandal right so it's in pure sort of optics
political optics like it's a win win however it works right yeah I suppose so I don't know it's
I think it's funny Travis that you are like thinking about whether the DOJ will lose its
reputation because I think that like the institutions' reputations are like deeply in the shitter
like no matter what. I think that horse is bolted, right? I mean, you mentioned the prosecutor
who resigned. I mean, we also have, I mean, how many people have we had who have either
been kicked out of or have left the FBI or the DOJ in disgust and have then gone and either
leaked stories, you know, whether it's the big scoop last week about the immigration
are, I'm blanking on his name, but, you know,
Holman, yes, Homan, all the, all the whistleblower from the DOJ, who was just so disgusted
at what they were doing with the immigration cases and flying people out of the country.
Like, I mean, I don't know.
I mean, that, that to me is the bigger story here, whether, whether Comey ends up sort of
going to some, some holiday camp for, for a year or so, on some charges and then uses that
as a spring war for his election is, like, is, is kind of minor compared to, like, the
wholesale just attrition and dismantling of our, you know, federal judicial system, our federal
system of prosecution and investigation. It's just like that sort of stuff is what's scared,
as an extremism reporter, as someone who studies the really bad guys and the really bad
people who are out there doing bad things, just what I'm so worried about is, is all the
attention and all the institutional knowledge and just kind of focus of these major
federal agencies is just being either lost by attrition or just focused elsewhere. And that's what
kind of scares me. I mean, I'm really not worried about the DOJ losing credibility as much as I was
thinking about Trump's base being frustrated with Trump. If like, if they feel like he has all the
cards, he feels like he has everything he needs to like really prosecute his political enemies and
can't even secure a conviction. I don't know. That'll allow Comey to really more credible.
claim that this is all a political prosecution and springboard into a greater publicity
if that's what he wants.
Do you genuinely think that'll change anybody's mind, though?
Probably not, yeah.
It might make people slightly more like black pill, but I mean, what other option do they
have?
And are they going to switch sides?
No.
Not a chance.
Yeah, maybe black pill is probably the route they go.
Well, and also look at like Trump's first term.
Like he essentially ran on, I'm going to throw Hillary Clinton in jail.
He didn't do anything.
He didn't put anybody in jail.
The slogan was literally lock her up, right?
I mean, that was the slogan.
Yeah.
That was the slogan.
And he so failed in that that there had to be like an anonymous, you know, 4chan poster that was like, don't worry everybody who voted for lock her up.
Lock her up actually is happening.
Trust us behind the scenes any minute now, you know, it's like that was, he drew that out for four years.
find another way. It's, you know, I think that Comey escaping conviction and then doing like another
book tour and potentially announcing a presidential run, like, they'll be like, ah, this was always the plan
because once Comey is president, then he really is subject to, he really can be taken down in a way
that will really make the, I mean, we're too, it's too easy to just like write our way out of this,
I guess, like, you know, as if I'm like a television script writer. Now, this may be,
just the beginning of Trump using federal law enforcement for political ends. So according to reporting
from New York Times, a senior justice department official has instructed more than half a dozen
U.S. attorney's offices to draft plans to investigate a group funded by George Soros, the billionaire
Democratic donor. So we'll see if that goes anywhere. But like, you know, he seems like he's, he feels
emboldened. And it was like everyone who's really, they're really irritating him. He feels like
he's able to use his prosecutor to go after now.
You guys won't be getting your annual bonus checks from George Soros this year, guys.
Sorry.
No, pity.
Gosh, what'll happen if Trump gets, you know, because it's one thing to get the indictments, right?
If you've got a lawyer who's sort of like, sure, we'll find a, I can find a jury that'll indict on this.
I'll get a couple pilled people together.
We can do this.
You know, if he gets the Comey indictments, Soros, what if he gets all of the indictments and then no convictions have?
Like, that essentially on a public stage, it plays out that these people actually haven't done anything, you know, worthy of securing an actual conviction.
Now, that'll be interesting.
You also have to hold that up against the system of grand juries, right?
I mean, yes, okay, you can get that the saying is something like you can get a grand jury to indict a cheese sandwich if you need to, right?
Sure.
But I don't know what the stats are and maybe some smart listener can look them up.
But generally speaking, prosecutors will use grand juries to bring cases that they already know are very strong, right?
These grand jury cases very seldom fall apart.
Like, if you can get it past that stage, then you're going to bring it.
So what will be interesting will be not so much whether these cases fall apart, but how rare that is in the context of grand juries and these big federal prosecutions.
Because I think I'm right in saying that that's extraordinarily rare.
Like, you don't bring a grand jury prosecution that then just, like, falls apart with a whimper.
Like, that rarely happens.
Yeah.
Will, I also wanted to ask you about Trump using an executive order to declare Antifa a domestic terrorist organization.
Now, I've read that such a declaration is essentially legally meaningless.
There's no federal statute to make a designation.
But, you know, we're in a strange time.
Yeah, legally speaking.
You were like, you know, the letter of law and, like, how the law is practiced.
are diverging.
So, I mean, this is how the executive order reads in part.
All relevant executive departments and agencies shall utilize all applicable authorities
to investigate, disrupt, and dismantle any and all illegal operations,
especially those involving terrorist actions conducted by Antifa or any person claiming to act on behalf of Antifa.
Oh, well, that's bad news for all the crisis actors.
Or for which Antifa or any person claiming to.
to act on behalf of Antifa provided material support, including necessary investigatory and
prosecutorial actions against those who fund such operations.
Well, it's interesting that we're having this discussion after the previous one, right?
Because as you mentioned, Travis, like, legally, in a purely black letter law sense,
declaring Antifa a terrorist organization doesn't mean anything.
It doesn't, we don't have a domestic terrorism statute.
Ironically, a lot of people on the left after January 6th and before January 6th, when we had
all the shootings coming from the far right, we're saying we desperately need a domestic
terrorism law.
We need a statute so that we can charge these people with domestic terrorism.
And some more sort of seasoned people out there were saying, well, hold on a minute, because
if, you know, if someone like Trump gets back in, they can declare Antifa terrorists and then
they'll start putting people in prison.
So I think Antifa kind of dodged a bullet there that there was no law passed.
But to answer your question, like, this is in the context of what we were just talking about, right?
Look, Trump at this point, controls the DOJ and controls the FBI.
He has his top lieutenants in charge of the FBI.
He is installing whoever he wants and getting rid of who he doesn't want at the DOJ.
And so the mere kind of laser focus in on Antifa, yeah, it doesn't matter legally, but it matters enormously.
procedurally. It matters enormously in terms of who the FBI and DOJ are going to go after. And they've
been given a very, very clear signal. We want you to go after people like the Soros Foundation and
we want you to go after anti-fascists, like violent anti-fascists around the country. And so,
you know, every, every FBI office in every major city, every DOJ, every US attorney around the
country's literally got the memo, right? That's the memo, like go after these people. And
I actually covered a case in San Diego a couple of years ago that was very precedent setting in this,
which was a big case against, we called them the San Diego 11, and this was 11 anti-fascists.
I think I was maybe on the show talking about it a couple of years ago.
And that was precedent setting because it was the first time that anti-fascists had been charged kind of like a gang, right?
They've been charged with conspiracy to commit riot.
And the prosecutors in that case, it was a local prosecution, but it was successful.
And so that set a blueprint that I'm sure federal prosecutors around the country are looking at, you know, that that's what I think is the real impact of this is going to be the changing focus of like federal law enforcement.
Well, and just their idea of Antifa is essentially people of color in like black sweatshirts.
You know what I mean?
Like they're just, I think they're just going to use it to to go after, you know, more people that Antifa or not, they want off the streets, you know.
It's just, it's, I mean, the original, like, meaning of terrorism in terms of how it modifies how the government and the agencies can treat you.
It's just a suspension of your civil rights, essentially.
So it's, you know, obviously, like, we should have maybe fought harder when this was put in place, but we've already kind of defined by law that terrorists are not really full human beings.
I think we should have done a lot of things, maybe.
I think that the, I think the analogy here would be post-9-11 law enforcement focus on Islamist terrorism and the overreaches that happened post-9-11.
What you saw is like awful human rights and civil rights violations against the Muslim community in this country because federal law enforcement got the memo, we want you to put radical Muslims in jail.
Like that was, that was the memo that went out.
And so every investigator, every prosecutor in the country, that's what they were focused on.
And that's why they, you know, sent spies into mosques in New York and places like that, you know,
and ended up running a whole bunch of very dodgy sting operations against young Muslim men and kind of, you know,
selling them weapons and selling them explosives and stuff.
I think that's what we're going to see against, uh, against sort of anti-fascists in this country is like this.
It's not so much like, look, I've faced down and, and have my own kind of run-ins with, with,
like violent anti-fascists and like they can be pretty scary people like there are some pretty
scary like antifa out there but there are very small proportion of what you can call the anti-fascist
movement right and so what i'm interested in is like do they just go after the people who are
legitimately out there trying to kind of ferment revolution and sort of you know enact actual anarchism
or are they going to go after you know kind of grandmas and 17 year olds who like have read too much
car marks like that's that's going to be the interesting thing i mean i think
they're going to continue to entrap teenagers. They're just going to switch to, like, trans
teenagers. And then, uh, we're good to go. They'll basically do the, like, plot the crime up
until the point where the crime has to be done. And then they'll, you know, arrest them and be like,
we save the world from another thing that we planned. Another thing we convinced a 17 year old to do.
But then not, not to get too meta about it. But I mean, if you, if you, you know, we mentioned grand
juries. We've mentioned, you know, we've mentioned just then, like, stings. Like, is the problem,
Is the problem that the focus is currently on these, like, leftist, like, activists?
Or is the problem that we have these sort of fundamentally very, like, dark and secretive systems of, like, putting people in prison, which often involve, you know, essentially, like, scamming them and essentially, like, you know, doing a sting operation against them and or enacting a very secretive grand jury that nobody ever gets to see and no one ever gets to look inside that process?
Like, I think that's the bigger question here, right?
Like, is the focus the problem or is it the system, the way that we do this, the problem?
Well, and in addition to this sort of these secret processes of law enforcement and how they will abuse this new directive,
I'm also worried that you're going to have like a bunch of George Zimmermans, you know, who are like out on the street and they see some kids in black hoodies or whatever.
And they're like, it's antique, you know, like I'm also worried against the guys who want to take the law into their own hands and whatever.
they think is anti you know they think they've got a directive now as well even though they're not law enforcement or their former law enforcement they're friends with people who are in law enforcement so i think there's like a whole even another layer to this that's also very you know worrisome i think i'm going to say something that that might get me in trouble here and i hope it doesn't because i think that you know i want to say that this is predicated on 10 years of covering extremism but my general kind of understanding of the far left versus the far right
is that the far left tend to be, and when I talk about the far left, I mean the extremist far left,
like true, you know, anarchists and true, like, anti-fascist, like, agitators, and they tend to be
very smart people. They're university educated. They tend to be, like, higher socioeconomic,
you know, from a higher socioeconomic background. They're pretty smart people. And as such,
they know when to not go out and get themselves into situations where they could, you know,
where they could find themselves the target of law.
enforcement. That's often not true on the far right. You know, a lot of people on the far right,
a lot of kind of, you know, neo-Nazis and people tend not to be very well educated, tend not to be
very smart. And they tend to be these, you know, not only to be targeted by kind of law
enforcement stings, but also they are more willing to kind of put themselves out on the street
when they might be in danger. And so I think that's why we haven't seen large-scale
anti-fair activity. We haven't seen a lot of big protests. I think that's largely because they know
that not only are the George Zimmerman's out there, but they also know that law enforcement's paying
very close attention to them, and they're, you know, I guess, kind of biding their time, and, you know,
they don't want to go to prison. And so they're being sensible about it. I mean, that's nothing new.
I mean, the institutional power, the police power, military power, in general, is willing to
cut slack to far right way more than far left, you know, even if they do have to kind of
police them. There's a bit of a wink and a nudge. And historically, the, you know, the power
structures have not been weighted, you know, to certainly to help the left or give them a benefit
of the doubt. So, yeah, I think it makes sense. I think it makes sense that the right have not
learned the skills of being subtle because they kind of know they can mostly get away with it.
They don't really need to. I think, I think that I can objectively as a journalist say that.
I think I can say, look, I mean, you know, the FBI is a very conservative organization. It always
has been, you know, and I mean, there was that famous memo in the wake of the January 6th
prosecutions where a lot of FBI agents were saying, it was like the secret letter where a lot of
the FBI agents signed on, signed on saying, like, we think that these prosecutions, you know,
are overreaching and stuff like that. And it's like, that's all you need to know about, like,
you know, they didn't want to prosecute, um, or a lot of people, a lot of people in federal law
enforcement were reticent to prosecute Jan Sixers because, you know, they agreed with them,
essentially, right? Or they didn't think they were that bad.
Yeah, I mean, there's like, if the roles were reversed, even if it was just like a group of
people who call themselves Antifa and they, let's say, and this is totally, you know, speculative,
but let's say they like, they burn out a Walmart, you know, just like destroy Walmart.
The Democratic Party would never come to the rescue for them. They would never argue for their
release. They would never eventually be pardoned. There just isn't anybody. They wouldn't be
alive. They'd be shocked. Yes, that's true. Exactly. I mean, you know, there's layers.
to that. Yeah, I think I also like important context of this executive order. It's part of a long
running effort, starting with the Trump administration, to turn Antifa into like an all-purpose
boogeyman. I think it's probably best exemplified when, in 2017, when the alt-right troll microchip,
he started this petition to declare Antifa a terrorist organization, received over 300,000 digital
signatures. And Microchip told political that same year that the intent of the petition was to, quote,
bring our broken right side together after Charlottesville into prop up Antifa as a punching bag.
Microchip went on to say, quote, so the narrative changed from I hate myself because we have neo-Nazis
on our side to I really hate Antifa, let's get along and tackle the terrorists.
You can call it an extreme form of what aboutism.
So I think that's really the real broad.
It's not based upon a real sophisticated understanding of like, you know, a political organizing
on the, you know, on the grassroots level.
It's based upon this, basically.
That's the Enrique Tariot School of Thought.
That's his, you know, the head of the Prout Boys.
That's what the Prout Boys are all about.
They're like, we're not white supremacist.
We're not, like, misogynist.
We just hate Antifa because they're the real terrorists, right?
That's a kind of a 20-23 kind of, you know, sort of argument that you heard all the time.
I think we should talk about the trans issue too, right?
I mean, we should talk about the FBI.
You guys read about the FBI kind of starting to call trans-terrorism, like nihilistic terrorism,
which is like just an extraordinary step.
Like when there was the Minneapolis shooting a couple of, like what was that a month ago,
you know,
a shooting that was actually committed by a trans person, right?
I wrote a story saying, yes, you know, this was a shooting done by a trans person,
but this is a, you know, this is an anomaly and this is like, you know, percentage wise.
Like this is still about, we're still about right in terms of like how many, you know,
transgender people like commit shootings compared to how many transgender people there are in the country.
But I pointed out in that story that actually that shooting was almost certainly, like all the experts looked at what the writings that the person left behind, that the shooter left behind and said, like, this individual left behind a lot of indications that they were part of like the nihilistic shooters, right?
They were one of these people who were just obsessed with school shootings and shooters and becoming a saint and all the rest of that kind of nasty dark stuff.
What happens two weeks later?
The FBI literally starts to call trans any shootings committed by trans people or their sort of
allies, they start to label it as nihilistic, nihilistic attacks.
And like, that's like the complete opposite of what all the experts say.
And they're basically using and weaponizing that that term against trans people.
And I think that that's very analogous to what's going on with Antifa.
It's the whole boogeyman idea, right?
Like, yes, Antifa are the boogeyman.
But, hey, trans people are, you know, increasingly the boogeyman in this country, too.
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
Will, as someone who was in D.C. for January 6th, I'm also curious about your perspective about the recent push to rewrite the narrative about those events.
Oh, man.
Yeah, so House members voted to officially establish a new panel to investigate the events around January 6th.
It will fall under the purview of the House Judiciary Committee and be chaired by Representative Barry Loudermilk.
So the goal seems to be to exonerate Trump and the right generally for the events of that day.
I think the sentiment is best summed up by a recent tweet from Marjorie Taylor Green, which said this.
J6 was a fedsurrection.
I said it on January 6th while it was happening.
Maga doesn't do things like that.
We don't riot.
We don't loot.
We are not the party of violence.
The left is.
I mean, that's an airtight argument.
My side is good and pure and doesn't do bad things.
Therefore, whenever is accused of doing bad things, it was actually.
actually the other side. So like Will, what do you make of this, I guess, this attempt is like
framed January 6th as like a plot by corrupt elements of the Trump government and the
right had nothing to do with it? I mean, I'm only amazed that like the head of that, whoever's
doing that organization that they didn't put Tucker Carlson in charge. Like, I mean, that's,
that's what I'm really surprised at. I mean, I don't know. Like, are you going to, again,
are you going to change anyone's mind in this? You know, like if we'll, you can all go,
anyone who wants to can go watch the videos of what happened. Like, I was
there. I watched it happen, you know, like it was very violent. It was very scary. It was like a, it was, it was, it was all the things that the videos clearly show that it was. But I think, you know, that Marjorie Taylor Green tweets very interesting. I think, and again, not to kind of get to like meta and big brain on this, but I think the fundamental problem here is our political lexicon, right? We still talk about things in these kind of stark, you know, left versus right ways. And I think that the reality is that most of MAGA don't consider them.
themselves on the right. Like they consider themselves in this kind of, you know, in this sort of like
magnetic feel that, you know, between the two ends of the political horseshoe, right? And so
when you hear people say like that, the reason that that people find it so hard to understand
that like, you know, that largely it was conservatives and people on the right who committed
these acts on January 6th is just because they don't self-identify as that, you know, they
see themselves as this sort of like, almost like liberals, right? Almost like liberal. Almost like
liberals in a classic sense.
But look, to answer your question, yeah, January 6th was a terrifying, violent, awful display
of, like, you know, thuggery.
Like, there's no question.
I was there, I watched it happen.
And any attempt, I mean, there have been five years worth or four years worth of attempts to try
and whitewash it.
And this is just another one of those.
Yeah, to me, this feels like, I feel like in the minds of conservatives or MAGA, like,
it's already been whitewashed, like they already believe it was these insights.
actors that procted people to do bad things and that it was peaceful gathering, but there were these
inside infiltrators. I think they just want like official language of that. You know, it's like not
enough to know it in their soul. They need like a government, you know, some sort of like government
investigation to label it as such. In the same thing that they're doing with Comey where it's like,
well, now he's really indicted. Like, of course they thought he was a criminal and deserved to be
prosecuted, you know, from day one. But I think now they just want it to come from some kind of
quote unquote official source so they can point to that and say, see, see, see, we were right
all along. We were right all along. Then they'll feel just as empty as they felt before. And they'll
feel just as empty as they did before. Exactly. I'm not sure you're quite right on that. And
what I want to couch is like you said that that you think that Maga needs that. I don't think that
they do. I think the people that need that are the people who are in the middle. The people who
aren't quite, they're not fully red-pilled, they're not fully maga, they're still on the, on the
fence, it's the swing voters, like this investigation, this kind of official, this sort of like
putting an official seal on the whitewash, just to mix metaphors, is aimed at, it's aimed at
the swing voters, it's aimed at the people who aren't quite decided on it and who don't, who frankly
can't be bothered to go do the research themselves and want to be told which way to believe.
Like, they want to give that sliver of the, of the population that, that vitally important,
sliver of the voting public, like, they want to carve off a few more of those and make sure that
they're, you know, that they're convinced of that version of events too. Like, Maga's already
convinced. They already know, you know, like, they already know what they feel about January
6th. And it's not true. Yeah. Now I want to talk about, yeah, your new investigative series,
extremely normal, which, uh, very intriguing, very, uh, on the ground. It seems like you got a
great team behind you. So this is, uh, yeah, new, new for USA Today. So what, what are your goals
for this series. Yeah, it's really exciting. So a few months ago, I went to my editors and I said, look,
I think we're looking at something different when we look at, when we think about extremism in this
country. I don't think that, I don't think that we can continue to kind of really sort of talk
about this in the same way. We need to be like a little smarter about it. And so we came up with
this concept of extremely normal. And essentially what this is, is it's a series of short documentaries
that are going to examine different ideologies, movements, individuals that were once considered
extremists, were once on the very fringes of American politics and are now firmly on the
mainstream. So that's the idea we want to look at movements that are either on that arc or
that have made that arc and we want to examine kind of how that happened and how did these
things that were once either conspiracy theories or just like fringe ideologies that
very few people believed how did they get to running the country, essentially, and to dominating
the political discourse. And that's, that's the goal of extremely normal. And yeah, as you mentioned,
our first episode looked at the manosphere and toxic masculinity and misogyny and, you know, just how,
I think that's a perfect example of something that, you know, would have been pretty abhorrent and,
and fringed, like, not that long ago. And now it's like, you know, most of our, like, neighbors' kids are
into this stuff and it's a very real thing. And so that's what we, that's what we looked at in our
first episode. Well, when you're sitting in the, in the fighting gym and you go, now how many of
you guys like look up to and, or you follow Andrew? I can't remember exactly what your question was,
but basically everybody in the room kind of raises their hand that it's a very normal thing.
And this is, despite there's, you know, there's in the, in the dock, there's this young woman who's
also in the class. And she gets up to speak and says, you know, hey, I'm noticing that my, my students
behavior towards girls in the class is shifting, you know, once they've sort of like found
this, you know, particular, particular influencer. And still, you know, at the end of the movie,
the guy who runs the dojo is like, no, I think he's like a misunderstood guy. And these don't seem
like violent, awful people. They mostly seem like shy kids that are looking for community. They're
looking to, you know, they're looking for discipline. It's just, it's, yeah, I really loved and was also so
saddened at how, you know, how non-rigid our political beliefs, and especially in young people
have become, you know, that there isn't necessarily an archetype anymore or a stereotype that
you can point to and say, this type of person believes, this type of thing, and this is how
it's going. Yeah, it's a good example of this stuff just kind of seeping out into the soup of
popular culture. Yeah, it's, you know, the number of times I would kind of describe this project to,
like, friends or acquaintances, and they'd say, come on, like, nobody really, like, respects Andrew
Tate, like, they all think he's an idiot. And I'd say, like, no, that's very much not the case. Like,
that is, you know, you have to go out there and you have to talk to people. And, you know,
for this project, I spent a long time kind of going around to different MMA gyms, like,
all over Southern California, just, like, trying to find, or just, like, talking to people
and trying to find the perfect kind of group of people who could tell this story. And as I say in
the documentary, like, these young men that I talked to, you know, the whole time I was kind of
expecting to find these like awful like you know horrible little kind of trolls and the reality isn't
that. Like the reality is that these are, as you point out, they're young, lonely men, you know,
who don't have a kind of, don't grow up in the kind of archetypal world that we grew up in,
or that I grew up in. And they are struggling for answers and this is where they find their answers
is online. And it's very, very difficult to distinguish like particularly when you look at like
the way that our politics acts, when you have the top politicians in the country kind of like,
you know, shouting at each other on social media and calling each other cuss words, it's like,
it's very difficult to distinguish that from Andrew Tate or whatever other, you know,
Huckster is out there who's trying to sell you on their worldview.
And so it's a confusing world for these young men and they get sucked into it and they get
attracted to the kind of, you know, the good stuff that these guys preach, which, you know,
they do preach some good stuff.
but then they also, along the way, are kind of taking in the violent vitriol and the misogyny
and everything else. And it is depressing. It's kind of scary. And I think every parent of young
boys needs to know about it. And that's the point of the piece. There was a really sort of like
troubling, troubling bit where you played a clip from one of Andrew Tate's interviews at some point
during the episode. And he's kind of bragging about like, yes, I am a misogynist. And like,
yes, of course I'm a sexist. And it really struck me as an attempt to sort of like,
sort of redefine these terms, and especially for, like, young people, you know, to look at the word
like misogynist or to look at, you know, sexist and to say like, oh, that's like an old term that
like used to be used to shame people, but like we've evolved out of that and we're taking that
back. Like really frightened me. Yeah, yeah. There's a lot going on there. There's a couple of
analogies there to kind of other worlds in extremism, right? I mean, this is, this is very analogous to
white supremacists going from and neo-Nazis going from talking about how, you know, people of color are kind of inferior and everything else to like talking about white, you know, white heritage, a white culture and the need to protect white culture, kind of moving into the patriot front kind of model of like this is, this is the way we need to talk about race is no longer in terms of denigrating other races. It's in terms of like, you know, protecting our own race. And it's like, it's just, it's just racism like dressed up in a different way.
And that's what Tate's very good at.
He's very good at Tate, Tate and these others are very good at saying, like, we don't hate women.
Like, we just love men, you know?
Like, we're not anti-women.
We're just anti-violent feminism or whatever it is.
And it's just a reframing of the same old kind of tropes and hate and everything else.
And then, you know, in the same breath, they'll kind of make jokes about how, like, oh, I'm never going to let a woman kind of drive my car and stuff like that.
And women can't be trusted.
And it's like, guys, you know, you're not, I want to, I was about to say,
not fooling anybody, but of course they are falling millions of people.
And they're certainly not going to get any more frequent dates.
If you tell a woman that you don't think she's fit to drive a car, yeah, it's probably not
going to go. You might continue to be very lonely.
You would hope so.
Yeah, I have a clip from your first entry in this documentary series here.
When I first learned there were a bunch of Andrew Tate fans at Patis's gym, I expected to find a group
of monsters.
I thought they'd be ranting sexism, frothing about how much they hate women.
But that's not what I found.
We have a lot of pressure on us to be successful.
And that comes from anywhere, especially social media.
You're seeing rappers, musicians, you're seeing actors, all these people with a lot of money that we don't have.
And Andrew Tate steps into that a little bit and gives some kind of.
Well, yeah, he does.
He just gives people hope, like as far as men go.
There's not a lot of good male role models out there.
And I'm not saying he's the best person to look up to.
But if you're picking and choosing things,
there is a lot more good than bad that you could take.
Wait, there are so many good male role models out there.
What is he talking about?
Maybe not in his algorithm.
Yeah, I mean, when we tried to feature,
we featured one of them in the show.
You know, we spend a few minutes, like, talking to a guy from Detroit,
a guy called Jason Wilson, who's like just a remarkable human being.
Oh, yeah, he was awesome.
Yeah, he's very cool.
And he's, you know, he's, we chose him because he's kind of ultra masculine in a way.
But he's also, like, very thoughtful and very respectful towards women.
So the point was, look, if you want to, if you want to do sit-ups and get a six-pack and, like, you know, do martial arts and all the rest of it, like, you don't have to also be a misogynist.
You can also, like, you know, respect women and love women in the way that this guy does.
And so he was, yeah, he was a good, he's a good role model.
And I'd argue there's a lot of guys like him out there, too.
What I really liked about that first episode there is that you really show just how, like, simple and small, the entry-
points into this content is.
And they all feel young men go like, well, yeah, I want to get a little more fit.
Yeah, I want to, I want to make more money and maybe just find them like kind of funny.
And those are like, those are like such easy ways to kind of like fall into the content.
And then it ramps up into more extreme, you know, more extreme misogyny.
Not only more extreme misogyny, but other forms of extremism too.
So we interviewed an academic by the name of Cynthia Miller Idris, who's just written a book called
Man Up.
And we don't get into it that much in this.
I think we mentioned it a little bit.
But, you know, in kind of 17 minutes of a documentary, we couldn't get into everything.
But one of the things that she's studied very closely is how, you know, that sort of thin end of the wedge,
that not only are you kind of been sucked into the algorithm and looking at this and then you get
into kind of more misogynistic content, but like there's a very clear throughline from
misogy into white supremacy, into anti-Semitism, into other forms of like hate and extremism.
And that's what Cynthia's book, like, goes very into that.
You know, there isn't a mass shooter out there, really.
There are very, very few mass shooters out there who didn't have a history of misogyny
and violent misogyny against women.
Like, the correlation is extraordinary.
And they all found their way, not they all, but like the vast majority of them, you know,
have come down that path to extremism.
And that's another element of why we need to take this, you know, very seriously as a society.
Yeah, what kind of amazes me is, you know,
a lot of people are shocked by like the language that Andrew Tate uses. But if you if you go beyond like the facade of, you know, kind of like liberal interpretation of what capitalism can yield, right? A free world where we're all equal and, you know, everything is according to your, you know, the meritocracy is real. But if you look at the actual like way the system is working, it is essentially the way that Andrew Tate says it. That's why they think he's such a truth sayer. It's like what what is essentially the value of.
the way we organize society. More money, you're better. If you have money, you can get women.
You know, I think that violence, you know, and don't let anybody humiliate you, you know, because
we're all in competition with each other. There's no communal project. So it's always kind of
amazing to me, just like Donald Trump is an avatar of our era. I think Andrew Tate is as well,
and sometimes people confuse the cult of personality around someone like that with a genuine
trend that happens when, you know, the kind of official narrative of where we're heading with
this system, you know, this free market capitalist system clashes with the reality on the ground
for a lot of these young men. Yeah, the only kind of chink in that logic is that, you know,
Andrew Tate has been charged, right? I mean, he's been charged with sex trafficking. He's been
charged with rape. There are lawsuits against him. And, you know, he could very well end up going to
prison. But I mean, yeah, essentially, yeah, I mean, look, here's a guy who's made millions and millions
of dollars out of essentially, like, exploiting women in one way or another. And he's used that,
you know, that vast wealth and his vast following to just kind of like steamroll over any sort of
like niceties and formalities of society, right? He's just like, he's just like, I'm just going to
do whatever the hell I want and say whatever the hell I want. And yeah, in many ways, that's sort of the
I don't know, the kind of the dream of the dream of commercialism, right?
It's like you get so rich and so powerful that you can do whatever you want.
And, you know, I think there are parallels between that and what we see in everyday politics.
And I'll leave it at that.
Yeah, there's definitely, you know, that contradiction of like seeing Trump up there and thinking of him as an anti-establishment figure when he's, you know, like very much a product of like capital accretion and all of these trends.
And that's obviously like something that, you know, kind of applies to to, to take.
as well. But, I mean, is Tate wrong that women in general are treated as a product, especially
sexually, and that they're consistently objectified, that they're consistently tied with a high
status as a person in society? I mean, that's what I find so tricky about some of these
figures is that they've read the writing on the wall. They're just reading you the writing on
the wall. Like, that's what Trump fucking made his whole thing. You know, he's like, well, yeah,
I'm one of them. I'm obviously like a Silver Spoon, you know, like rich.
a credit fiend, you know, just kind of like endless wealth, doesn't really matter what I do,
I'll always get away with it. And he just turned to the camera and finally said what a lot of politicians
weren't saying, which is like, all these people are crooked. I used to buy these people. I mean,
I think, I think the bigger trickiness with, with Tate and his ilk is, is even more fundamental
than that. It's that, it's that a lot of what they say makes sense and is perfectly reasonable
advice for young men, right? Like a lot of, if you look at the bulk of what Tate and the rest of
the Manistphere say, it's essentially along the lines of like, you know, make your bed, don't
eat too many burgers, like, you know, go for a run, get some sleep, drink water, you know,
study in school, don't get into trouble, don't drink, don't do drugs, like all of this stuff that
like most people who are in the kind of mental health industry say are pretty good things for
young men to do you know obviously where tate differs is that he then he then takes that and he he
spins it off into into his kind of vile misogyny as well right and so he he brings in this other stuff
but that's that's where i think the real danger lies with with tate and and these guys it's that
you have to listen to quite a lot of andrew tate to hear him say something nasty against women but
he does say it right whereas horrifying yeah whereas you know whereas
obviously like you can get all of that advice and not get the nasty stuff as well like and I think
that's that's the main that's the main point of our piece and the main point of like having jason
in there and just kind of offering some advice to parents is it's like look here's what your kids
are going to say they're going to come back and they're going to say but you know he's just telling me
all this good stuff and it's like yeah but is he is that all he's saying because it's not he's
also saying these other things and you know he accused us and other people accused us of like just
cherry picking his statement and saying, well, yeah, I mean, okay, we kind of did, but you did say them.
You know, like, and that's our job is to point out, like, the, uh, the, the controversial stuff that
you're saying, because it comes along, it's all part of the package. It comes along with everything
else. And when you're 12 or 13 years old or younger watching this, like, you can't differentiate
between those two things. It's all kind of part and parcel of the same messaging, right? And that's
what's so scary about it. Yeah. Yeah. And he'll be, he'll always be put, you know, forward in the
algorithm before somebody who's telling you all those positive messages, but not, you know,
attaching them to outrageous statements that are going to make the front page, both like because
people hate him and people love him. And by front page, I mean, top of the algorithm. I sound like
an old man. But yeah. Seasoned. Seasoned is the word, Jenny. Yeah. That's, that's the reality is
like, that's the secret sauce, right? Is that he's brasher and less controlled in the way he speaks,
that anybody else, he's willing to say things that are so outrageous that they would shock your parents,
if you're like, I don't know, a teenage boy, you love to shock your parents.
And so, like, again, the entire system is set up to facilitate an MLM, you know, sex trafficking grifter who yells at you, shows off his cars and comes in hot in, like, short form vertical format.
I don't know.
Bang.
Dude, I think you nailed it.
I was, I was listening to that one young man, and he's saying, you go on the internet, you go on social media, what do you see?
You don't see poor people.
it's all cars clothes you know fashion traveling um here's look at me what am i eating what restaurant am i in
you know here's a picture of the menu it's like this shit has been around forever because like i
remember when i was in junior higher high school there were all sorts of like i can't remember
the names but it was like pickup guides you know how to pick up artists yeah yeah like how to
trick women into into liking you and literally the advice base of all of these because of course as like a non
athletic, like somewhat, you know, not like super masculine. Boy, I was like very worried about, you know, how was I ever going to get a girlfriend? I looked into some of these things. And they all dealt with treating women badly. They all dealt with treating women and viewing women as someone easy to manipulate if you have the right technique. But what's different with Tate is they can see him. They see the fitted jacket. I mean, I think he looks ridiculous. But like, I don't know, young people, they see the big glass.
and the Ferraris and all of that stuff and the wealth and like that's a huge part of it I think is that like the it's it's like they can see him too it's not just this message anymore it's it's hard it's hard to argue like that everything is a market everything is a free market everything regulates itself if you make it a commodity and then to argue wait wait you're seeing women as commodities now you're seeing highly sexualized women that we've been presenting you for years within this like free market system you're seeing them as commodities I'm shocked I mean every
everything pointed there. Like the entire funnel leads you there. Yep. And at the bottom of the funnel
is Andrew Tate. There he is. That's right. That's right. Olding biceps and all. Waiting to catch
you. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. With multiple human trafficking charges. Like you've got to ask yourself
why consistently in the last like couple decades. The most cynical fuckers on earth are getting
ahead real well. Like surprisingly well. Like shockingly well. Well, I would counter that.
say, you know, for every Andrew Tate, there's a thousand or 10,000, like, you know, sad little
hucksters getting nowhere, you know what I mean?
Sure.
That's how MLM's work, though, you know?
Well, yeah, but, I mean, Andrew Tate's also sort of a product of his own, he's kind of
a self-fulfilling prophecy, right?
I mean, he kind of got rich first and then got famous later, and if you look at how he got
rich, it's, like, very, very dodgy and very sketchy, and he's now probably going to go to
prison for it. So it's like, I guess I'm just trying to like, I'm trying to like, you know, I think a lot of
young men feel that. I think that they watch it and they think I just need to be like this person to get
ahead. But I think, you know, what they don't, what they don't see is all the pathetic people who are
trying to get ahead just like him and are actually just like leading very sad, very unhappy lives
because they never learned how to, you know, how to treat half of the human race, you know,
and that's uh that's that's that's really what we're trying to get across in the piece is just like like there are there are other ways of doing this and like these guys are not you know being honest with you you know yeah like it will make your life worse i think that's that's what really needs to come across it's like this actually will not help you yeah but it's understandable how people get there because it's all you know that's that's always being the role of like media and and you know tv and now social media it's like to show you the inaccessible dream that if you win the
the lotto of life for for no apparent reason usually nothing to do with merit if you win the
lotto of life you can access this and the majority of people receiving that message and adapting to
it and falling into these kind of scams are people who you know think like i'm just a you know
as as steinbeck said a temporarily embarrassed millionaire like i'm about to people are about
to recognize that i'm actually really unique and cool so the process of individualization you know
and the process of selling the american dream as it gets thinner and thinner and less and less
likely for the average human being that's you know it's it all goes together i think yeah and the
misogyny's nothing new i mean look snoop dog no that's we've all preaching misogyny 20 25 years ago you
know what i mean and like he's still doing pretty well we've never stopped we've never stopped
and we love snoop dog snoop dog is is hosting all of our events now never understood that by the way
never understood why you know he he and other rappers of that era just get a pass for like their
you know pretty overwhelming misogyny like just that's an aside but it's like okay
We're just going to give them a pass, you know?
Yeah, it was a different time, like whatever.
So, Will, what can we look forward to seeing in the future episodes of extremely normal?
Well, we're currently in production on a show.
I think I can talk about it, but I mean, I'm not going to get too into it,
but it broadly looks at the Maha world, obviously very much in the news these days,
make America healthy again, and, you know, kind of vaccine politics and that sort of thing.
That's what our next episode is going to be about.
I've got a lot of future ideas for four episodes.
One of them would be looking at the rise of not just anti-Semitism,
but Holocaust denial specifically as a, you know,
like it's now a topic of conversation among young people in this country, right,
who are sort of discussing the legitimacy of Holocaust denial.
And it's like, well, I thought we'd decided that, you know.
It's like apparently not.
Like, that's now being debated by young people.
And another idea we kind of have in the works is to look at,
the changing nature of discourse online and how what we're kind of phrasing is like rage debate
has has become the norm like these shows where you know you have sort of like one liberal
against like 20 conservatives and then it's all aimed towards getting like a 15 second like viral
clip of like so and so owns so and so and just how that is eroding our human ability to kind
of debate and discuss things and it's just turning people against each other and and you know how
Again, that used to be something that you'd occasionally see on the fringes.
And now it's just like, that's how people talk to each other at dinner parties about.
Did you see this, you know, did you see this clip?
And that's now a political mainstream.
So, yeah, wherever it's something that was once extreme and has now become normal, like, that's where we're after.
That's the sweet spot.
And I'd encourage any of your listeners who have good ideas or good topics to hit me up because I'm all ears.
Cool.
Fantastic.
We'll put a link to that in the show notes.
when our new episode is going to be released?
I mean, these documentaries take time to produce and to get out,
but I mean, we're hoping to get something out in the next three weeks to a month is the ideal.
Yeah.
All right, we'll be on lookout for that.
Thanks so much for taking time to speak to us today, Will.
Thanks, Will.
Thank you, guys.
It's always a great conversation.
I appreciate it.
Yeah, always a fascinating discussion.
Thanks for listening to another episode of the QAA podcast.
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Listener, until next week, may the deep dish bless you and keep you.
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Your message, not to Obama or Brennan, but to directly James Comey today.
Yeah. I mean, I think that James Comey, you're going to go down in history as a former FBI director who tried to stage a takeover of the United States of America and basically take down a duly elected president of the United States of America. That's what he's going to be known as. He is a evil treasonous SOB, and he knows it. I don't care how arrogant he can get because he can get very arrogant. But that's what he is.
And, you know, and it's not just him, but Comey, that's what he is.
He really is a person who thinks he can actually do whatever he wants to do
because he was in a position to do it.
And that's where the American people need to understand.
When you, we have to be very conscious of what it is that we are, who it is,
that we are putting into power inside of our government, state, you know, local state and federal.
Because these are the types of people that are,
that are in there now, and Comey is at the nexus of it.
And he will be convicted, but, you know,
let's see if he's, let's see if he helps expose some of these other names that you just mentioned.
Yeah, we'll see.
So you think flipping him, flip Comey.
Yeah, he's going to have to.
He's going to.
The rat, rat, rat, rat, eat rat, general.
That's right.
No honor among thieves is what they say.
Thank you.
