Rev Left Radio - Parting Ways (for now): Guerrilla History Bids Farewell to Breht & Dave
Episode Date: March 8, 2024After a wonderful 3 and half years, Breht and Producer Dave are bidding farewell to Guerrilla History. Henry and Adnan will continue the program. In this episode, they all reflect on their time togeth...er and promise to keep collaborating when and where possible going forward! Please Subscribe to Guerrilla History on your preferred podcast app. Support Guerrilla History HERE and follow them HERE Check out Shoeless in South Dakota HERE Follow Shoeless in South Dakota HERE
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Hey everybody, welcome back to Rev Left Radio.
On today's episode, we are actually doing my sort of farewell conversation with Henry and Adnan from guerrilla history.
My time with the show has been wonderful.
I'm honored to have been a part of what we've done over at guerrilla history,
some amazing interviews that we've done together with some amazing guests.
as friends and as human beings.
I love Henry and I love Adnan.
As we talk about in this episode,
my life is just getting more and more cluttered
and I had to cut back on a few things.
And unfortunately,
Grilla History is one of the things I have to step back from currently.
So this is a conversation we have with Henry Adnan
and producer Dave,
who people almost never get to hear from,
talking about our time together,
reflecting on the project.
And importantly, you know,
tripling down on the reality
that guerrilla history is going to continue on,
just because Dave and I are stepping back
to focus on other things, including Rev Left.
Guerrilla History with Henry and Adnan are in great hands
and will continue,
and you should absolutely subscribe to them,
absolutely support them,
follow them on Instagram, et cetera.
But for me, there are now only two places
that you can find me and my work.
Red Menace has been encapsulated into Rev.
Left, so we put all the Red Menace episodes on Rev.
left, such that they aren't necessarily two separate projects.
If you only like when Allison is on, there is a separate Red Menace feed.
But in general, Red Menace has been integrated into Rev Left Radio.
And so there are two places you can find me.
That is Rev Left Radio.
You know, on IG Rev Left Radio official, that's going to continue to be the main place where you can find me and my opinions on politics, political philosophy, proletarian history, theory, etc.
And the other one, which not a lot of people know,
about, which we've only started in the last year or so, but I have not really promoted, is my
non-political podcast with a childhood friend of mine who is an active recovery for alcoholism,
and that podcast is called Shoeless in South Dakota. Again, it has nothing, it's not political.
Of course, we're talking about life and shit politics does come up, but it's not a political
podcast. It is more of a comedy podcast centered around like addiction, recovery, mental health,
the silly nonsense that me and my friend got into when we were much younger and much dumber
and it's just a much more laid-back, fun sort of podcast.
So if you just like my political stuff, if you just find value in that, totally fine.
I will be at RevLeft Radio.
You can find everything I do politically at Rev. Left Radio.
If you like me as a person, if you feel like you could listen to me talk about stuff that
doesn't involve politics, then you might enjoy Shulis in South Dakota.
other podcast again with my childhood friend and I'll link to both of those well if you're listening
to this you know where Rev left is but I'll link to Shulis in South Dakota and guerrilla history so
people can continue to follow and support guerrilla history even as um you know I step back from it
and then if you're interested you can check out what I do over at Shulis in South Dakota with my
friend um David Isanagel um and all the interesting and funny and weird shit we get up to over there
all right without further ado here is my conversation with producer Dave
Henry and Adnan and basically ending our time together with guerrilla history, but
promising that we're going to continue to collaborate and continue to work together.
And of course, always continue to be friends.
Hello and welcome to Gorilla History.
that acts as a reconnaissance report of global proletarian history
and aims to use the lessons of history to analyze the present.
I'm one of your co-hosts, Henry Hukimaki, joined as usual,
and I will be saying that for the last time, unfortunately,
by my two co-hosts, Professor Adnan Hussein, historian and director
of the School of Religion at Queen's University in Ontario, Canada.
Hello, Adnan. How are you doing today?
I'm doing well, Henry. It's wonderful to be with you both.
Yes, absolutely. And we're joined as usual.
all three. Yes, we'll talk about the guests in just a second. Man who's been behind many,
many things that we've done, but we're bringing him to the four. Anyway, our other usual co-host,
and again, last time I get to say that, so listeners, you know what we're going to be talking about
today. Brett O'Shea, who of course is also host of Revolutionary Left Radio and the Red Menace
podcast. Hello, Brett. How are you doing? Hello, I'm doing good. Today's going to be a little bit
of a bit of a bittersweet moment, but I'm happy to be here with both of you. And hopefully,
it's by no means the last time.
Absolutely.
And we also have a terrific guest today, somebody who guerrilla history would honestly not be what it is today if we didn't have with us for the last three and almost a half years.
We have producer Dave.
Oh, Dave.
Welcome to the show, or at least in front of a microphone on the show.
Yeah, how are you doing?
Good, good.
It's finally nice to be on a public podcast.
Yeah, I know that we asked you.
Yeah.
behind the current.
When we asked Dave, he's like, yeah, I'm not really a podcast guy.
I was like, Dave, with all the episodes that you record, surely, surely we should be able
to get you something out of you for this one.
But it'll be great, I'm sure.
So listeners, before I get into the conversation, I just want to remind you that you can
help support the show by going to patreon.com forward slash guerrilla history.
That's G-U-E-R-R-I-L-A history.
and following us on Twitter to keep up with everything that we're putting out at Gorilla underscore Pod.
Again, G-U-E-R-R-I-L-A-U-L-A-U-Skore pod, and that's a little hint about, you know, the state of the show.
So the topic today is a debrief of Brett and Dave, because as you may have gleaned from the introduction of this episode, they are both leaving the show.
obviously under relatively amicable terms because we are still sitting here with them.
Brett, I'm going to turn it over to you and Dave.
We'll get into this conversation.
We've got just a couple of very broad questions planned.
But I guess the first question is, you know, what's going on?
You said that you're going to be leaving the show.
What's going on in your life and, you know, what we hate each other now is the point.
Let us know about this decision, Brett.
Never. No, yeah, it has obviously absolutely nothing to do with the show, with either of you, anything like that. And in fact, of course, the connections, which we'll make very clear right now, we're going to continue on. Like the tab on the Rev. Left website, for example, for guerrilla history, will stay up there. I'll go on to Gorilla History and, you know, be a guest co-host once in a while. And I still importantly want to keep around that end of the year, Revolutionary Guerrilla Menace episode where us get together with Allison and we just kind of have like a sort of reflection episode on.
the entire year that passed. We've done that for the last two years and I've really had a lot of
fun with that. But in general, my situation in life is just getting more and more complicated. It's just a
simple matter of not having enough time in the day to do everything I need to do. Obviously, I have a
family with multiple young children. I have other shows as well, but importantly, I'm going to
school right now to try to become a teacher to get my master's in education. And that is increasingly
taking up more and more of my time as I, you know, I have to do endorsement classes, which are
high-level history courses. Right now, I'm doing a class right now in the Holocaust, which is
fascinating, but also demanding. And it's just a matter of having to sort of condense the things that
I do to make it more manageable. And after three and a half years, I felt like, you know, I've
certainly played my role for this show, and I'm very excited to see where the show continues to go.
I'm deeply grateful for every single episode we've done together for the fact that we've even
Even, you know, when this started, we were pretty much strangers.
You two reached out to me and with the idea for the show.
And that's a question I actually want to ask is who had the original idea for the show and where to come from.
But briefly, you reach out to me and pitch this idea.
And I was all for it from the beginning.
And I'm so happy about the work that we've done together.
So happy for the friendships I've been able to develop between us, myself, and both of you.
And so, yeah, this is incredibly amicable, not even relative.
amicable, completely amicable, just sort of mild separation, as it were. But again, the work
will continue and hopefully will continue to collaborate. And Dave, same question for you. What's
going on in your life? You know, you're also leaving the show. I know the listeners don't get to
hear you talk, but the situation is more or less the same. Similarly, with family, my wife works
seasonal. So summers are especially demanding. And then, you know, Brett and I kind of, we started
have left together. We've done all these projects together. So we kind of, um, I'm going to go along
with, uh, put the extra attention towards our other projects that we've been working on.
Yeah. Team basketball. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. The Siamese twins. You can't really separate them
very easily. It's ungodly. Uh, but before Ednon Hopson with the next conversation point,
I just want to mention something that Brett had brought up, just so the listeners are aware,
Brett is still going to be coming on as a guest host,
basically whenever he knows about a topic that he's interested in that we're going to be covering on the show.
And listeners, we are going to be continuing to put out episodes with the same frequency we were before.
And just as a little teaser for something that we've already announced that this mini-series is happening,
but we're already done recording it actually.
Brett and I, Adnan, was unfortunately unable to join for this miniseries.
So great that Brett was willing to guest host on these episodes.
episodes. We have a mini-series four-parter on modern Chinese history, which Brett is technically
only a guest host for, but that's just also to signify that despite the fact that Brett is
leaving the show in official capacity. He's still very much part of our orbit. We're very happy
for anything that we're able to do with him. And certainly you will be seeing him on the show in a guest
hosting capacity in the future as well as this, as I mentioned, miniseries that you'll see coming out
in the coming weeks, actually.
So keep your eyes peeled for that, for sure.
Don't just unsubscribe because Brett is leaving.
Please don't, yes.
Adnan.
Well, I just wanted to, you know, go back to the beginning since Brett sort of raised it.
And it's also part of my gratitude to Brett and Dave.
You know, I mean, I once had a show that was a little bit like guerrilla history called Radio Bandung on my local college radio station.
I loved it, but then, you know, for whatever reasons, I wasn't able to continue it.
And after getting to know Henry and becoming a regular guest for some strange reason on this thing called the David Feldman show,
I met Henry through, you know, through that, and he was doing regular segments.
And then he was going to bring on Brett because he wanted to discuss, I guess, an episode they had done together and it was about pandemics and other things.
And he had been a guest on the Rev Left show, I believe, talking about, you know, from, you know, a science perspective as somebody who's an immunobiologist, he forged a connection.
And I had listened to a few episodes of Rev Left.
And I thought it was just a fabulous podcast.
I just loved it.
And, you know, I've probably gone back and, you know, filled in and listened to lots of the previous episodes from, you know, Brett's more anarchist or.
interests and he had a lot of that.
And I just loved the, I just really loved it.
And so when I thought about, you know, it would be really fun to do a new,
a left podcast three, four years ago, I thought it would make a lot of sense to partner.
I knew Henry was very interested in history.
I didn't want it to just be historians.
I'm a historian, but I didn't want it to just be historians.
but I thought given Red Menace's theory interests and Rev. Left's kind of broad, kind of all topics in the left,
I thought a history-oriented podcast for activists and people who are interested in social justice
struggles would make sense. And I just thought that the best affiliation we could have is to be
within the network of Rev Left's umbrella. And if Brett would join as a host, it would be really great
because I just liked your approach to things
and thought that it would make a nice triumvirate
of different approaches and perspectives and emphases.
And I have to say also, once we got going,
it was also just such a boon to have high-quality audio production with Dave.
It just sounded so good.
And I can really say that I don't think,
you know, something that's been so meaningful for me
these last three, four years, it wouldn't have been possible without the two of you.
And so I'm so incredibly grateful that you took a leap of faith.
You didn't know us, as you said.
You'd had one episode with Henry, but you liked the proposal enough to sacrifice quite a lot
of time that is very precious.
You were doing other podcasts.
And initially, I think this was meant to be like a once or twice a month thing.
And then events, because of topics, because of current events, things kind of got to being, you know, a lot of time.
And so I completely understand, you know, lots of priorities, develop and change.
And I'm just so excited for whatever you're going to do, both you, Dave, and Brett.
It's going to be quality.
It's going to have an impact.
It's going to be meaningful for yourselves and for other people.
You're going to make a difference in other people's lives, just as you've done with Rev Left, you know, Red Menace and with guerrilla history.
And I'm just glad that we had this opportunity to begin to forge something together.
I learned so much from you and from doing the podcast together.
It really wouldn't have been possible to do it.
And I don't know what the future for guerrilla history, we plan on doing new things.
and who knows exactly what directions will take.
We do plan to continue.
However, it grows and develops.
Its base and its root comes from a wonderful collaboration together
that has shaped its identity.
And I'm just, again, so grateful for that.
Thank you, man.
That was incredibly, incredibly sweet and kind.
And I really, really appreciate that.
And, yeah, I totally feel the same way.
I've learned so genuinely, I'm not just saying this,
learn so much from both of you.
You both have your own little areas of expertise
and interest, and just the way that, you know, us three would tackle topics together, you know,
we would all sort of, like, bolster one another, but also add unique perspectives.
And I always, I always valued that about guerrilla history.
And again, I think we genuinely did a meaningful, good work.
And I know you two will continue carrying that torch forward.
And I do agree that adding the guerrilla history into the Rev. Left, Red Menace,
really kind of expanded, you know, the family, the brand, the content for everything.
yeah theory focused red menace history focused guerrilla history and then just broad umbrella
with rev left and yeah i i love that and like i said um you're still in the rev left family
that will never change um so we'll make sure of that yeah just when a kid moves out of the parents
house it doesn't mean that they've uh exactly that they that they that they've been excommunicated from
the family uh but you know i i want to hit on something that adnan had said before i bring up
this next topic for the two of you. Adnan said that when we originally planned this about three
and a half years ago that it was supposed to be once a month or maybe twice a month and it really
has expanded since then. I'm going to take a lot of blame for that. I had been pushing from
almost the beginning like there's so many topics that we can. I mean, it's history. Of course,
there's so many topics that you can cover. But the main reason was because I felt like I was
being pushed, challenged, and growing as a result specifically of my interactions with the two
of you. Now, I'm somebody who's been reading as much as I can from when I've, since I've been able
to hold the book, right? But the fact that we have this show pushes me to read challenging
material or, you know, different topics that I wouldn't have necessarily like picked as like leisure
you're reading. It's really driven me to accomplish understanding things in set periods of time,
but then also the interactions that I've had with you have helped me synthesize information much
better. It has allowed me to think about things in different ways, challenged some of my views,
helped shape some of my other views that I was a little bit cloudy on. And so how fruitful this was
for me personally, as well as how interesting getting to talk about all of these various topics. I mean,
And we have well over 150 episodes at this point.
That has been something I've always been like, I want to do more because there's so much fun stuff.
And so it ended up being a once a week thing.
I think that if you count how many weeks in a row we've gone without missing an episode,
we've got to be close to 100 weeks in a row without missing a single week of an episode.
So, I mean, that's crazy, first of all.
But, you know, I have to appreciate Dave and Brett for sticking around as long as they did given that.
Brett, when he came in, said, you know, yeah, once a month, maybe twice a month, I can do that.
And I'll stick around for a while as long as it works with my schedule and I'm able to maintain it.
And listeners, I don't know if you know, but we do a lot of prep for this show.
There is a lot of reading and research that we do for this show.
And despite us having gone like a hundred weeks in a row with new episodes every week,
Brett made it this far, despite having two other podcasts, a family.
And now is going to school.
And Dave also having a family and having all of his other projects that he's doing.
Like, it's really wild that they were able to make it as long as they did.
But then the other thing that I wanted to touch on is that the aspect of connection that we've fostered
and the friendship that we've made, you know, for me personally, and this is something that I,
I don't like talking about myself personally other than little funny anecdotes here or there.
But I'm going to be deep for once because this is my opportunity to do so on this farewell
episode. You know, this show started a very interesting time. As Adnan mentioned, we started this during
the pandemic. So at that point, I was visiting my family when I was, I was living in Germany for a
couple of years doing research and studies. And so I was living by myself there. I visited my family
and it was supposed to be for like two, two, three months while I was having some transgenic
mice delivered to the laboratory. And that was when the pandemic hit. All of the planes were
grounded. I wasn't able to go back. Then my position at the lab that I was at got terminated because
one, I wasn't able to go back and two, there was budget restructuring. And so I ended up stuck in my
parents' basement for like a year or a little bit over a year during that pandemic before I was
able to travel back to Germany and do any of the things that I was planning on. And so having
this sort of connection because I was not having any contact with other people other than my siblings
and my parents who were upstairs from me for like a year after we started the show.
Then I moved back to Germany, was living alone there for a little while, and then, you know,
was with my at the time girlfriend, now wife.
And then I moved to Russia.
And now I am in Russia.
And the only person who I knew here when I got here, again, was my to be wife at that point.
And for the last six months, in case listeners don't know, my wife has been studying in the U.S.,
And once again, I am here all by myself.
All of my childhood friends are back in the U.S.
I had some friends in Germany that we text once in a while.
My parents, my family, they're all back there.
So, like, I am really far separated from anybody that I knew growing up.
And so having this opportunity to get together with you roughly once a week to not only record these episodes with these excellent, amazing guests that we've been able to get for the last three and a half years, but just having.
the ability to connect with you and chat with you and learn with you and then have those
extra conversations outside of the actual recordings it's made my life a lot more i you know it makes
me feel happy that i have you as a friend that even though we're a million miles away i i knew
that i was going to be seeing you again very soon and getting to have these like very deep
conversations with you're not just the passing in the street oh hi like i do to the the
bread shop that's up the street for me like you know it's poke my head and wave at the owner like
this is different yeah so what i want to put out there for the two of you and i'm sorry for that
really long exposition but what i want to put out there for you is you know what have you gotten
out of the show both of you because we have spent three and a half years doing this together
we've put in thousands and thousands and thousands of hours between researching
recording producing all of these things just thousands of hours
So I'm hoping that you got something out of it.
Maybe you can speak to that a little bit.
Yeah, no, definitely.
I can go first.
The first thing is to say, you know, that's wonderful.
And it is kind of crazy that we've lived as we've sort of gone through deep things together,
even though we've done it remotely.
Like, just even just you getting married, that whole process is interesting, you know.
Just the COVID pandemic, you know, writing that thing out.
It was the origin of this show.
And just going through that together.
Some of the, my favorite episodes have been when it was just like us three shooting the shit
or tackling a topic together.
I remember our religion and Marxism episode,
our masculinity hysteria on the right episode,
conspiracy theories and our analysis of conspiracy theories.
Those were three episodes.
It was just us.
And it was so generative.
And it teaches, it taught me a lot.
And another thing that I really wanted to point out here is,
you know, on Henry's part of it,
I've never met somebody with such high level organizational skills.
like if it wasn't for for henry's ability to organize things and to take so much you know sort of food off my plate with regards to you know getting things scheduled reaching out to guests etc i wouldn't have been able to do it and i certainly wouldn't have been able to do it for three and a half years um so you know just the the the real attention to detail and the real organizational um commitment and and skill set that that henry has has really been deeply helpful but you know one thing that is true out of this show that i
I didn't get to achieve on any other show is I think because of both of your,
especially Audenon, sort of academic connections and also Henry's sort of, you know,
dogged determination when it comes to trying to get a guest.
We've had on guests on guerrilla history that really I haven't even thought of,
didn't even know about,
or wouldn't have been able to pursue and get on Rev left,
which allowed me to speak to people that I never thought I would speak to
and also allowed me to learn things from scholars with expertise.
in areas that I virtually knew nothing about. I mean, Adnan himself has this, you know,
deep fountain of knowledge when it comes to just history as a whole, the history of West Asia and
Europe and that crossroads of civilizations, you know, your book about the crusading society,
etc. That alone taught me, taught me so much. And then, you know, Adnan and I connect on the
on the spirituality and religious level where we, I think we've done really, I think,
important work on breaking down this sort of false barrier between like you know Marxism and
atheism and religious and spiritual traditions that are meaningful and can have real impacts on
people's lives and that's one of the things that I was able to expand on on guerrilla history and
I couldn't have done it without without Adnan so yeah just the the depth of knowledge from both
of you the skill sets both of you brought to the show and the amazing guests that we've had that
has filled out my knowledge of the world historically and presently like literally sections of
the world that i didn't know much about their struggle their history their culture um and because of
guerrilla history i've been able to radically radically deepen my knowledge and i i have to say
that my um you know my pursuit of becoming a teacher um and and specifically you know down the
history line comes a lot from this show i mean i i came into
the show already with the love of history, of course,
but this show has radically deepened
my knowledge of history and
my love for it. And I don't think it's
a coincidence that during
guerrilla history, I decided
to take this path into becoming
a teacher. And I really credit a large
part of that to both of you and to the show.
Yeah, and just to
repeat, having that schedule,
I know it was a lot to do it every single week
for the past, like, couple years or a hundred weeks
or whatever, but it was really nice for me
to have, like, okay, every
Thursday or every Friday, you know, I have to get this episode to Henry, as opposed to
working with Brett. It's just like, hey, I'm going to be there in like two hours. We're going
to record. We'll see what happens. How do you think you can get that put out? You know, so
yeah, in addition to that with like the guests and stuff. They're from all over the world.
You don't always get like the best recording given their location, their situation, whatever.
So I was able to learn to work with some of those harsher recordings. And, you know, I have some
more tools of my toolkit going forward with, you know, mixing and whatever, because you don't
always get, like, somebody like Adnan's voice on a podcast, which is just super buttery and
it's like the ideal for somebody in my position.
I've always hated my voice.
This is really strange for me to hear.
It's a great voice.
It is strange when I hear my voice.
That's very funny to be described that way.
Notice how he said that you have the buttery voice at none.
I was good practice for Dave for the last three and a half years.
Like he said, you know, sometimes it's the recording quality.
Sometimes it's the voice itself.
Listeners, you know, if you've been able to stick with us for three and a half years,
it is not because of how I sound.
It is because of Dave making me sound tolerable.
Well, that end up in the content that comes out.
Absolutely.
Well, I guess this is a good time, actually.
You had mentioned a guest that we have had on Brett.
And I told you that I had a little surprise for you.
I have been trying to get a little present together for you.
And I guess we'll turn it on now.
Dear comrades from the guerrilla history podcast,
I will want to sincerely and most profoundly
on behalf of the Communist Party of Kenya
and the listeners of the guerrilla history podcast here in Kenya,
We would like to profoundly sign our comrade bread and produce the day for the invaluable insights that you've been able to contribute,
particularly to deepen our understanding on how we could even advance internationalism and our anti-imperialist,
understanding the anti-imperialist struggles from the belly of the beast, which is the United States.
And as you exit, guerrilla history would like to just thank you and wish you well.
And we hope that we could be able to engage on other platforms.
And of course, wish Comrade Henry, Haka Makir, the very best as he continues to run the guerrilla
History Podcast. Hi, Brett, this is Manny Calling. Just want to thank you for the great experience
we've had over the years on guerrilla history. I want to also commend you for the two
other incredible shows. Rev. Left and Red Menace. I will be listening to it on a regular
basis, and I look forward to speaking with you in the future. We need to fight against
imperialism, and we need to fight for socialism.
Looking forward. Revolutionary greetings, many.
Hey, Brett, this is Brandon Wolfe, and I just wanted to say thank you for all of the hard
work that you've done to make guerrilla history the amazing resource that it is.
I always learn so much from the depth and breadth of the insights that you bring to every show.
But above all else, what stands out for me is your immense humanity
and your acute sensitivity to the intricacies of the human condition.
Thanks for everything.
Hasta, the Victoria Sentry.
Hey, this is Ken Hammond from New Mexico State University
and the Party for Socialism and Liberation.
I just want to say that it's been so great
working with Brett and Dave here on Guerrilla History.
I've been on the show a number of times
in these last six or seven months,
but I know that Brett and Dave
been working here for three and a half years
and they're moving on.
I think it's very exciting
that they're going to be working on
Revolutionary Left podcast going forward.
forward. And I just want to wish you guys the very, very best. It's been a real adventure.
Hey, this is John Melrod, the author of Fighting Times. And I wanted to take this opportunity to
offer a shout out to Brett, who did a fantastic job interviewing me when I was on Guerrilla History
podcast and producer Dave. I got to say that the show that they did was one of the most popular
podcast that I've been on and I've been on quite a few and I really appreciate that and I'm sure that
when they go on to continue with Revolutionary Left Radio, they'll continue to make a contribution
to the struggle of people worldwide for justice and solidarity. So thanks and good luck with
your venture. Hey Brett and Dave. Alex Avina just here to demonstrate extreme gratitude for all the
amazing work that you guys did for guerrilla history and to make it the the amazing podcast that
it is today. And I'm also, I will be eternally grateful to you guys because you guys help on
my own podcasting quote unquote career way back in 2017. But thank you again for everything
that you've done. And as always, you know, you can count on me for anything. Solidarity.
That's incredibly sweet. And those are genuinely some of my absolutely favorite guests and
some of my favorite episodes. So yeah, just very, very, very.
sweet that they took the time out of their day to give us some well wishes and and you know a salute to
whatever we contributed to guerrilla history it's that's beautiful thank you for putting that together
henry that means a lot of it's really sweet yeah speaking of favorite episodes i really like the beautiful
game that was with alex avenia right you guys did that with that was dave's favorite up yeah that's
probably my favorite one yeah that was the first of the two football episodes that we did with
alex we had that one in the world cup one oh yeah yeah notice how david's favorite episode is one i
wasn't on. There is no coincidence here. Yeah, exactly. But yeah, that's awesome. So cool.
And I have to say, like, obviously, I loved all day episodes with everybody you just mentioned,
but this upcoming series on China with Ken Hammond is honestly one of my favorites. And I think
the perfect, while I'm there, I'm technically in the capacity of my guest co-host position,
you know, my first time coming back as a guest host. But fascinating, fascinating series, I learned
so much about a topic that I'm not totally ignorant of. Like, I've certainly done lots of work
on Chinese history. And yet this, um, these episodes with, with, uh, Ken Hammond on the history of
China, the last 200 years of Chinese history, absolutely fascinating. And I cannot stress how,
uh, everybody listening to this right now is going to love that series and, uh, be on the lookout
for it. Well, I wanted to ask you, um, Brett and Dave, well, Dave, we got the sense he,
He liked the ones about football and politics.
Any other, like, special episodes that were fun to work on, either because of the content
or, from your perspective, Dave, were just interesting, you know, doing any audio stuff
on any sort of highlights or things you want to kind of point out.
And then I'll ask, you know, Brett maybe also a similar kind of question.
You know, none that really stick out in particular, because, again, episode every week.
And it's a lot of information you guys pack a ton into each episode.
But so it is nice to just get, like, retain some information from each one and, like, have a little bit of a better understanding of history and, like, different places that, honestly, I have never even heard of a lot of the times.
Yeah.
That's cool.
That's cool.
Yeah.
And for me,
I mean,
there's so many,
like,
it's really hard.
Even I get this question
sometimes on, like,
Q&As for Revlov,
like, what's your favorite episode
or some of your favorite episodes?
I just can't do it because there's so many
and, you know,
they're always new ones.
And it's really hard for me to, like,
put them into a hierarchy.
But of course,
you know, that episode with Comrade Joma
was really interesting
because I'm deeply interested
in that particular struggle
and already was,
but also that he passed shortly thereafter,
meaning that we were at least one of the last
English-speaking interviews
that he possibly,
possibly did. Um, so that, that connection, that real connection to a real fighter who's made
real history. Um, and then to, for him to pass so quickly after our interview, um, really just
drove home the importance of it. And of course, other figures like, you know, uh, interviewing
Noam Chomsky together, right? Just a, just a crazy experience that I never, ever thought that,
that I would have. And, you know, I can, and, you know, he's in his 90s and very soon, unfortunately,
he will pass. And, um, you know, people have split opinion.
about his politics, and certainly I don't agree with all of his politics, but I don't have to
to realize the contributions that he's made to educating people like me on many things, including
Western imperialism and its deleterious effects on people around the world. I remember one of the
first political books I ever read was, as a teenager, profit over people by Nome Chomsky, and it blew
the, you know, it blew my mind. It blew the lid off my conditioning, and it set me on a path to
becoming who I am today. So regardless of whatever political differences may exist, you know,
between, you know, me as a Marxist and him as not a Marxist, his contributions to education are
really important and his own contributions to my political development are incredibly important.
So to be able to talk with him and was a fascinating, fascinating experience and one I'm very
grateful for. And I wouldn't have been able to do if it wasn't for guerrilla history and both
of your ability to get great, great guests.
Yeah, that's a great shout out.
I mean, I also never would have imagined
that I would have Noam Chomsky on a podcast that I was doing.
That was just nuts, you know, the idea of doing that.
But, you know, one thing that you mentioned
that just reminded me about, you know,
the approach that you take on Rev. Left,
that also, you know, was one of those things, one of those qualities that made me think that it would work on, you know, guerrilla history, was that kind of ecumenical left approach, you know, that you can, you know, have some disagreements, but that doesn't mean that you can't have useful dialogue, learn from one another, still be principled and committed, but maybe not always emphasize where we have our divisions in unproductive ways.
something I noticed about your approach and I very much appreciated and I think is part of what
makes guerrilla history work is because some people's approach to the past has been just
to work out the sectarian differences and project that onto the past when in fact what it
is is what we're dealing with right now is there's so many confusing contradictions and
ideology and fake news and all kinds of swirls of different interests that it's very hard sometimes
when you're dealing with the alternative, so-called alternative media to kind of parse through
what's important, what's not important, what's kind of related to just the self-aggrandizement
of the space and the logics of promotion and various things that are really not productive politically.
you know, we're having to parse that in a very confusing moment of a lot of change
where the left has, you know, kind of received a lot of energy and a boost from various things
because there's so much dissatisfaction.
But it doesn't mean that it always has translated into a coherent, comradly and productive approach.
And so when we look at history as well, you've got to understand that everyone thought that they were doing the right thing.
Everyone, you know, probably believed that they were making the right decisions.
And you have to restore to the subjects of history some sense that it was open for them,
whereas we're looking back and we can see the results of it.
We need to learn from those results, but also have that human understanding and empathy and generosity with one another that political education is we're going to require sometimes things not being clear, us having to discuss,
debate, and you have to be open to the idea that you might learn something new, that
when's going to change your principles, but might alter the way you see those principles actually
applying to real world circumstances and material conditions.
So that just reminded me about that, you know, because, you know, some people might say,
oh, well, I disagree with Chomsky, this and that, and fine, you know, have our disagreements.
We do have our disagreements, perhaps.
But that's something that I think was very important.
to the dynamic that we had
and to the approach that the podcast has
and that Revolutionary Left
and Red Menace also take.
It's an important kind of quality
that I just wanted to kind of just emphasize
that I really appreciated about
and learned from, I would say.
I mean, you know, from you, Brett,
and I'm going to miss having that kind of sense
of, of, of, of, of, of,
of dialogue among the three of us, I think.
So we'll have to keep the spirit of that going.
I want to add into that very briefly,
you know,
that Adnan,
what you were highlighting is something I was planning on bringing up,
which is that I had been at Rev Left listener since almost the beginning.
I think that I started listening about a year after you started the show.
And then,
of course,
when I started listening to it,
went back and listened to some of the back episodes as well.
So I was a very early listener.
And one of the things that I felt,
was the most important about Rev. Left was that while I didn't agree with a lot of the guests,
actually, what I was seeing was that you had this constant faith in your ability to synthesize
information, regardless of what tendency it was coming from. And at that time, I mean, I was young
at that time. I'm still not that old, but I was really young at that time. But I almost felt like my
intellectual growth was being stunted because I was drifting into almost a dogmatism
where I would either only communicate with other Marxist Leninists or if I was talking to people
outside of Marxism, Leninism, I would just kind of dismiss what they had out of hand as soon as
I finished the conversation and then think back within my Marxist Leninist circle, which was,
you know, I was learning things obviously. I was still reading things, but I wasn't being pushed
to think about what I was thinking.
why I was thinking it more deeply.
But when I started listening to Rev. Left,
what I was seeing is that you were having these conversations
with people from wildly different tendencies
and were willing to take on information from these people
not to take on their ideology.
I mean, I did, you know, obviously you have had
your ideological shifts over time,
but it wasn't like this conversation
is going to shift your ideology.
But what I could see is that you were going,
you took this information that you were being presented.
You were saying, okay, this information,
is obviously super useful for me or this information is not super useful for me and when you had
some information that you knew was useful but was coming from a perspective that you possibly
disagreed with you were able to synthesize that information into your own ideological worldview
which that opened my mind completely into how we should look at interaction and look at how we are
taking up information and that's something i've been thinking about for the last six years or so
is how do we have these conversations with people that we don't necessarily agree with,
but that we respect intellectually to be able to take what they're presenting to us,
synthesize it into our own thought so that we're able to grow intellectually,
but still remain committed ideologically.
Rev Left was one of the things that did that for me.
And as soon as I started thinking more deeply about that,
and it did take me a couple of years,
they really get into the mode of listening to people outside my tendency,
I really saw my intellectual acumen skyrocketing at that point.
And a very funny story.
This is an aside.
We can actually even cut this if we want,
but you just might find it funny.
And we can keep it.
I don't know.
I was in the forest on Saturday or Sunday.
I was in the forest both days.
But one of the days I see this guy out there who I know.
He is a communist eco-biologist.
I met him in the forest one time.
We had a little chat.
He knows some English.
My Russian is very bad.
but, you know, so we communicate in English.
And at one point he brings up, yeah, I'm a Russian communist.
I said, oh, I'm an American communist.
Of course, we got along very well.
But I saw, I saw it.
And of course, eco-biology.
I was an immunobiologist in the book that I'm working on right now was on agroecology in the Soviet Union.
So like, really, this is all of my interests being, you know, collided in this one person, interestingly.
But I was in the forest this weekend, this past weekend.
And I saw the communist ecobiologist and his family.
But, you know, what was very funny is that he was with one of his best friends out there.
And they were having a good old time out in the forest.
And he introduces me to his friend.
And who's his friend?
Not a communist ecobiologist, but an anarchist environmental scientist.
And these two are just chumming it up as best you can imagine.
And you think, you know, in Russia, the communists and the anarchists didn't exactly have warm relations.
But what you can see is that these two are obviously in a very generative relationship.
And that's not because they ideologically fall within the same realm.
They don't.
But they are working together on environmentalism and, you know, ecological issues with their own ideologies.
But clearly they are learning from one another.
And that also just reminded me of how, you know, Rev Left made me think about these things all those years ago and how I've really, that's been one of my key.
guiding lights since then is how do we synthesize information that we've deemed to be relevant
or important regardless of the messenger of that information. Yeah, it's absolutely fascinating. I could
walk around the forest outside of Omaha for years and never bump into a Russian communist.
I was going to say, Henry, you've got some great forests there. Fascinating. You've got to come over
anytime. But to both of your points, thank you for the kind words, but also that's reflected back in both
of you, right? I think both of you also have this humility. Neither of you are, you know, so
egoic as to think you've had everything figured out. And sometimes when you come across a
dogmatist of any stripe, it gives that sense of what you need more of is humility. You're
not aware of everything you don't know. And even, and I've always said, even when you
listen to somebody you disagree with, it's generative because you are now forced to wrestle
with why you disagree with that person. You have an anarchist on and they give you a critique of the
vanguard party.
Well, yeah, if you're a supporter of the vanguard party, you should hear the critiques of the vanguard party from somebody who's not a reactionary, not in fascist, not interested in maintaining liberalism, but could still have some things.
Now, you don't agree with that, but in response to that, when you start thinking in your head, well, they just made this critique, and this is why I disagree with that critique, you're actually building up your own knowledge.
And so you should be grateful for that person, right, because they offer you now an opportunity to learn something new.
And that's always been my approach.
and I think it stemmed out of my organizing before I got into Rev Left. Rev. Left, of course, was an outgrowth of my organizing. And when you're in a city like Omaha, you don't have the luxury of like getting into your exact tendencies organization. It's not like in Omaha, there's like Leninist organizations and Maoist organizations and anarchist ones. It's like, you know, the 57 people in the metro area who have radical politics come together and try to do work. And I remember, you know, I fought alongside these people. I got arrested alongside these people with Fed people.
alongside these people. And so when I got to, by the time I got to Rev. Left, I had, I was already
shifting and moving in my own way and, you know, and more and more embracing Marxism. But I, I would
never, you know, turn around and shit on those people because they weren't just like internet memes to
me. They were real people who had real commitments that I might disagree with, but I know they
were good people. And I wanted to bring that energy onto the show because, you know, in the U.S.,
the radical revolutionary principled left, beleaguered, beaten down, whitewashed out of our own history.
and, you know, there's not a lot of us out there. And if we're going to turn on one another on
five percent ideological differences or, you know, treat non-intaginous contradictions like they're
the end of the world, I think that debases us and I think it further weakens us. That's not to say
that we should liquidate our principles and our values into a big tent party or anything like that,
but it does mean that we should struggle together and come from a position of good faith, humility,
and a love of learning. Like, I just literally love learning. I love.
love hearing other people's, you know, takes on things and trying to understand what their
influences were, what life experiences might have pushed that person in that direction instead
of, you know, maybe towards my exact ideological orientation. And so, you know, I always have had
that approach. It's like a personality thing in me. I can't be, you know, a super sectarian dogmatic
weirdo. I just can't. It's not in me. But also it's not in you. And that's when I knew that
I agreed to be a part of guerrilla history because it's not that we all shared the
exact same ideology, even if we did or don't, I wasn't sure of that at the time. But I knew that
both of your approach was in line with my approach, which is humility first, principled approach.
We have our principles. We're not going to back down an inch on those, but we're going to
hear people out. We're going to explore together. We're going to learn together. And from day one,
you both had that energy, and I knew that I was going to say, yes, when you asked me to be a part of
this project precisely because of that. And Allison, as well, has that. And that's the people that I
gravitate towards and I like to work with you know Allison is a great example of somebody who's
incredibly principled incredibly consistent incredibly knowledgeable but also incredibly humble and you know
is never trying to put anybody down or shit on anybody or attack anybody and I love that about her
and I love that about both of you and so I'm I'm attracted to people who are sort of have that mindset
and bring that to the left and you know it's that balance between being open minded and and humble
while also being incredibly, you know, principled and holding on to what you actually believe
and not being buffeted around by political wins or, you know, what's happening in the greater
politic.
Because we've seen many people, you know, over the course of just guerrilla history, we've seen people
that, you know, were sort of on our ideological side and, you know, not that we personally
know them a lot, but, you know, online and stuff, on our political side.
And then, you know, the political wins change and people all of a sudden shift to a new position
because there's more opportunity there
because there seems to be more energy behind that new faction
or momentum, et cetera.
And that's just never been us.
So that, yeah, that balance between humility and being principled, I think is really important
and both of you strike it well.
I'm really curious of Dave's opinion of this, actually,
because I know Brett, between you, Adnan, and I were constantly scheduling guests.
And we always make those decisions before we bring the people on
of whether or not they have, you know, some information that can,
be synthesized and is generative and whether or not they have things that we we want to hear
and whether their ideological tendency is something that we you know even if we don't adhere to it
is something that we can that we can learn from versus obviously there's plenty of other shows
where every guest is going to fall in the same ideological line as the host but dave you know
you haven't been involved in those scheduling things so it's particularly interesting to hear
your opinion on you know what is it like to work with a show where you have
have all of these different tendencies being represented within the guesting of the show because
I mean, that's almost got to be, I mean, it's disorienting for me sometimes and I'm the one
inviting them. So I can only imagine that. Like it would be, I don't know. Yeah, it's definitely
just like a crash course a lot of the times. For the most part, again, I deal with like the
behind the scene stuff. Brett doesn't really read reviews or anything like that. So I get to.
And then so you'll notice by like when you have somebody on as a guest,
and the dogmatic sectarian people come out and try and like drag you in the comments or
leave shitty reviews or whatever but all on all no it's it's been really fascinating it gives me
something to talk about with my friends because we're all like outside of bratt i mean like my group
are kind of like baby leftists we're still learning and trying to settle settle things out um
but yes nice to at least have topics a lot of times are uh uh
easy enough to digest. Sometimes they get a little too heady for me, but those ones that,
like, those ones that hit hit really well, I'd say. And I would also add to that as, you know,
the times that we've gotten shit, right? Like, which is, they come in waves. It's just a natural
part of being a political, a public voice in politics of any scene, right? Is that you're going
to ruffle feathers. People are going to disagree with you. Early on, as Adnan said earlier,
I came to Rev. Left was sort of a libertarian Marxist, um, ideology.
and with an interest in anarchism, so that was very heavy,
and that, of course, brought in a lot of, like, anarchist fans.
And then, you know, I continued evolving politically,
and I, you know, went through a sort of Maoist phase
and then really, really solidified, you know,
my sort of anti-revisionist, Marxist, Leninist position.
And, you know, those shifts, yeah, threw off a lot of people.
People felt betrayed about that.
You know, every time we've gotten shit,
it's been because in one way or another,
we've sort of deviated from a political tendency,
or at least had on somebody of a different political tendency
that other people in a different tendency didn't like
and didn't appreciate.
And so it's sort of amusing.
And at first, you know, it bothers you.
It sucks to have to read negative comments
or people that used to be your fans attacking you
and shitting on you.
You get used to it.
Yeah.
Now it's just like, okay, that's fine.
It's not for you.
Yeah, exactly.
You know, like, I'm not going to lose any sleep.
That's one of the things I've never quite understood
is people can get really like,
it's like a personal insult.
Like I personally came to your house and slapped you or something.
Yeah.
It's just like,
Oh, when that happens to me, I just push the off button and I find a different show that I like more.
Well, you know, I'm not complaining.
It is what it is.
It's part of the territory.
And I've sort of had to adapt to accepting that part of things.
Maybe it says something about the intimacy of the podcast, you know, much more than the video show, you know.
It's like just in your ears, you know, and you're just having to picture.
There's maybe something a little intimate about the.
audio form and it makes people feel
very close and connected
that could be part of it
you know over-identification
it's just a voice that's in your head
it's your voice it's the voice it's there
but so anyway amongst all of the others
of course right exactly
cacophony right
but yeah
but my big my big hope
as we as we gear towards the end of this episode
is that eventually we could, you know, be on the same continent would be nice at once,
but meeting up in real life at some point is definitely on my, on my to-do list.
And I think it would be awesome if we ever find ourselves in the same corner of the world at the same time
for us to like, you know, have a day where we just go out and hang out as friends
and then maybe even, you know, do some work together at the end of that.
But I still hold out hope that one day we'll find ourselves in a similar location.
that would be fun i i think um brett you and i may find ourselves at least on the same continent
but um henry seems pretty well situated in asia you know we'll have to wait for you know
one of his required visits to family perhaps to oh you know something like that i'll be
taking the cheese tour across wisconsin this summer probably really you know i i'm well
you know listeners i i i don't again we can cut this it's up to dave Dave Dave
listeners, you don't know this, but every recording we've done has actually been about five
hours long, but Dave cuts about three and a half hours of my ramblings every time. You just don't
know that. So, you know, if this is in there, you can thank Dave. And if not, you really should
thank Dave. But, you know, I'm from the Upper Peninsula. I was born about three miles away
from the Wisconsin border. And even after my family moved, we moved to another town that was
three miles away from the Wisconsin border. And so, of course, we spent quite a bit of time.
in Wisconsin, which gave me a long-held, lifelong love of cheese.
And Wisconsin, having cheese as its main tourist industry,
has like a developed cheese tour that you can follow
and visit all of the different creameries and cheese manufacturers.
And my wife is also a cheese fan,
even though she did not grow up in a place that made good cheese.
And so I might take her on that tour this summer.
I don't know.
That's only a few hours away from here, to be honest.
If we get down towards Madison, you've got to hop on up and we'll get some cheese together.
Absolutely. I love that. For sure.
Well, I guess since we are moving to conclusions, I just did want to say before we do wrap up,
that one thing you said very early on in this episode was about the conversations among the three of us
and some of those episodes like the intelligence briefings
where we didn't have a guest on,
but we just talked about a topic.
Those were among the most fun, I think.
I mean, I think some of these other episodes
with great guests were phenomenal
and our wonderful products
just because we got the chance to really engage
with somebody who had done some amazing research
and had incredible analysis that was so valuable.
But in terms of just what was personally very beneficial
and enjoyable
were that comradly kind of conversations
and getting to really understand
the impressions and opinions
and perspectives of one another
those were among my favorites to experience
and will be very special for me
and I would say the last thing is just that
you mentioned our mutual interests
on kind of religion and spirituality.
And you also mentioned the importance of humility as a value and an approach.
And I think of those things as sort of going together is that there is, regardless of
whether you want to think about it as religion or spirituality or just personality and
disciplining oneself to be open and connected to others, which is so important, you know,
to actually be effective.
It's not just about the ideas.
It's not just about being right.
It's somehow translating that into human interactions
to socialize these commitments and solidarity
that makes left politics and movements and change real and possible.
And so that's something that's been very important for me
and I gained a lot in that through our interactions.
and I think is also something very significant and important about Rev Left's interest,
that you have that as a thread of episodes.
And I enjoyed very much being a guest on Rev Left.
And I hope that sometimes we'll recreate those either there
or sometimes when you come on to guerrilla history is really exploring some of those
personal and political intersections of how, I think we talk,
talk about activism, but also some kind of disciplining of oneself, training of oneself, of
connecting with people and some things that are bigger than ourselves is also very important
for the success of the left and left movements. And I hope we'll continue exploring
facets of that together. It's been very important for me and a significant experience to
connect with somebody with such amazing left analysis and interests in those in those things who
also appreciates those in a conscious way. So that's a value to me. And that's why I think no matter
whether you're on the program regularly or not and you're pursuing these other interests,
that's always going to be a connection that I feel very strongly to you, Brett, personally. And
as a comrade, you know, working toward spreading some kind of approach that we think might be
useful in facilitating the change that we all want to see.
I genuinely feel the exact same way about you, and I've loved those episodes that we've
been able to do, two that jump to mind.
We put out on Rev. Left that grill history listeners might not have even seen is our episodes
on St. Francis and our episodes on the mystical strain of Islam Sufism, which are two
wonderful episodes. They're still fan favorites. I still get comments about our St. Francis episode that
we did together. And of course, you and I, one of the first things we did together, Adnan, was the Michael
Brooks tribute in that sort of collective Zoom call. And that was another way, that was another time that
you and I got to express a sort of different side of the coin, right? We have our politics, but we also
have this existential, spiritual, religious orientation that we got to explore in the context of losing
somebody, you know, who was an important voice on the left and that, that human element.
And so that's something you've always brought out of me. And so when you and I have worked
together and that's come out, it's sort of a natural result of us too coming together more than
it is, you know, any one of us separated from the other, having that, which of course we do.
But when we come together, I think something even more interesting happens. And so I've always
deeply appreciated that about you. Yeah. And I just want to, again, reiterate the fact that I
deeply appreciate not only the intellectual bond that we've been able to share and foster together,
but also the, you know, comradeship and friendship, true friendship between all of us,
including you, Dave, you know, I remember going back, you talked about the, the Alex Avina
beautiful game episode, but I also remember we had some chats during the Women's World Cup
and we didn't get to do a Women's World Cup episode on the show, but we were like texting back
and forth, like, you know, I don't, I don't even remember anymore.
but you know some of the things that were coming up during the women's world cup it was like yeah you know i'm
really connecting to dave on this issue i didn't know that he was that it but it was it was awesome you know
so but we've we've weathered some pretty pretty heavy things in the last three and a half years i know
brett you've had uh i i i want to bring him up myself on your behalf but you know you've talked about them
publicly you've had your your own share of personal um you know hardship tragedy loss all of those things
I've had my fair share as well, which, you know, again, I've touched on in the past.
There's no real point in bringing it up again now because, yeah, the listeners don't really know me.
Who really cares about these things?
But it's been great to be able to commiserate with one another, to be able to support one another and have that that bond where we know that, you know, there's somebody that cares, even if it's nothing more than just knowing that that person is there caring about these sorts of things.
Like, it really does mean the world.
And so don't leave the group chat because, you know,
we've been friends, whether you like it or not, you know.
Absolutely.
And in those moments where I did have some personal hardship and some tragedy,
you know, both of you were incredibly kind and humane with me and reached out
compassionately.
And, you know, that will always stick with me.
So, of course.
I appreciate that.
So you've got a friend here.
Come to Russia, Brett.
We'll want to help.
Both of you.
this my coach is just it's big enough yeah i know you've been working out bret you can fit on a small
area so you know just shove you in there uh anyway i think we probably should wrap this up at
some point because uh otherwise i'll just get into storytelling mode again and dave will have
to cut another three hours out of an episode before it gets to the listener so on that note then
and for the final oh i before we wrap it up i just want to let brett you talk about the last
thing that's going to be coming out from us before our guest hosting things where you come on
with us. The historic documents of the PLO book, which we co-wrote a forward to, is due out,
it's due out March 30th in terms of when people can actually get it. So I don't know if you
want to just reflect on that briefly, like the fact that we're going to have our name on a book
together before, you know, this amicable departure. I love that. And that's kind of a natural
exclamation point on our on our three years together with guerrilla history that we could have
this this resource that will now go out in the world stay out in the world about a very important
topic which is near and dear to all of our hearts the struggle of Palestinians for liberation
and that we got to put we got to not only you know have a forward to a book about that but
that we got to work together on it and just trying to work out the logistics of how we're going
to do that and doing it together and then getting to see the final product very soon I think
it's a natural high watermark and a perfect place to end this sort of formal collaboration.
But again, keeping in mind that this is by no means the last time that we're all going to work
together and collaborate. So I love that. And I'm very much looking forward to it. I'm very
happy that we didn't forget to bring that up in this episode. Yeah, absolutely. And listeners,
you can look for that at iscrabbooks.org. PDF will be available for free. But just to
encourage everybody, I know that everybody always likes people to buy physical copies of books for this
or that reason. But for this book, there is a great reason. The main reason is that all of the
proceeds of this book are going to the Middle East Children's Alliance to benefit those affected
in Palestine by the ongoing settler colonial regime of so-called Israel, you know, oppressing
the Palestinian population, particularly the genocidal actions in Gaza. All of the proceeds of that
book are going to Mecca to support people in need in Palestine. So I highly recommend everybody
pick up the book physically for that reason.
But if you're financially unable to do so, of course, along with everything else that Iskra does,
the PDF will be available for free.
So, IskraBooks.org, March 30th is when it's due.
So for the final time, Dave, it's been an absolute pleasure working with you.
You've, I mean, your production has made my life significantly easier and I am dreading
you leaving, but thank you.
And any parting words for the audience as you go out the door.
Yeah, same.
It's been great working with you guys.
And obviously, if you need anything, anytime, we're all in a group chat.
So you have my number, obviously.
Absolutely.
Yeah, totally.
And for the final time, as a co-host, at least, Brett, can you tell the listeners where they can find your other excellent podcasts?
Yep.
Thank you both again.
Long-lived guerrilla history.
But as for me, you can find what I do at Revolutionary LeftRadio.com.
Absolutely.
And, of course, we will continue to support Rev.
Left, Red Menace, despite this.
you know, this departure of Brett from the show.
So, you know, he's always going to be a friend of ours.
Adnan, how can the listeners find you and your other excellent podcast?
Well, you can follow me on Twitter.
I still insist it's Twitter at Adnan, a Hussein, H-U-S-A-I-N.
And check out the modulus, M-H-A-L-S on all the usual platforms.
Absolutely.
Highly recommend everybody do that.
As for me, listeners, you can find me on Twitter at Huck, 1995.
H-U-C-K-1-995.
In addition to the Palestine book that we had mentioned,
you can also keep your eyes peeled for the official announcements
of the next book that Salvatore Engel de Mauro and I
are translating and editing together.
To be coming out relatively soon, again, I already told what the topic is.
It's an agro-ecological history of Cuba and the Soviet Union.
So keep your eyes peeled for that rather esoteric book,
but it's a very fun read, I can assure you of that.
As for the show, listeners, you can help
support the show and allow us to continue, which by the way, in case it wasn't clear,
we are. In fact, we already have, I think, six episodes recorded, which are unreleased at this
point. So listeners, don't worry. There's a lot of things coming your way. You can help support
us and allow us to continue doing that at patreon.com forward slash guerrilla history. Again,
that's G-U-E-R-R-I-L-A history. And you can follow the show to keep up with everything that we're
doing individually and collectively at Gorillus underscore Pod.
G-U-E-R-R-I-L-A underscore pod on Twitter.
We do have an Instagram as well.
It's at Gorilla underscore History, I think.
I don't know.
You can find us.
And until next time, listeners,
and for the final time with a huge panel here with Brett, Dave,
as official hosts of the show, Solidarity.
Thank you.
Thank you.