We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Calm News with Jessica Yellin: Stay Sane AND Informed
Episode Date: February 12, 2025Calm News with Jessica Yellin: Stay Sane AND Informed By popular demand, we present Calm News with our dear friend, and Award-Winning Journalist, Jessica Yellin. Together, we explore a new approach t...o consuming the news that keeps you (and us) informed without winding up our nervous systems. -What to do if you find yourself on “the ride” of the news cycle -Why calming your nervous system before consuming the news is crucial—and an effective way to do it -The two top news stories you need to know about—and how to respond proportionately -How to have a witnessing mindset when engaging with the news On Jessica: Jessica Yellin is the founder of News Not Noise, a pioneering Webby award-winning independent news brand. Over 1M+ subscribers and followers across Instagram and other digital media rely on Jessica and News Not Noise to understand what matters, which experts to trust, and to manage their “information overload.” She is the former chief White House correspondent for CNN and an Emmy and Gracie Award-winning political correspondent for ABC, MSNBC and CNN. Follow her on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @JessicaYellin. You can also find the News Not Noise Newsletter on Substack here: https://newsnotnoisejessicayellin.substack.com/ To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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One of my favorite parts about the holiday this year was our recent stay when we went to go visit
Glenn and Abby's family in LA, but we stayed in our own Airbnb a few blocks away.
It was the best of both worlds because look you've got your privacy,
you've got your own refrigerator, you've got your own beds, multiple beds by the way, and your own bathroom.
And you know what?
Then you can have your own bedtimes.
It was just so nice to wake up in our own cozy place and have our own family time and
then rejoin the larger family for the Christmas festivities and then retreat when everyone
needed a little breather.
So here's the deal, whether you're traveling
with family or friends, those extra rooms,
the fully stocked kitchen,
not only saves you a bunch of money,
but it also makes a huge difference.
If you're flying solo,
you can make your stay your own little sanctuary.
If you're planning a winter getaway this year,
I highly recommend giving Airbnb a try. Trust me, it's an experience you won't regret.
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Since November, Abby, Amanda, and I have been planning,
dreaming up ways for this
community to show up for each other, take care of each other, and continue building
community. But you know that several months ago I quit social media and the
effects of that quitting on my nervous system, mind and heart have been as
dramatic as when I quit drinking. It's been wild and it's been extremely important
for me to experience.
Since that quitting, I have felt calmer, braver
and clearer actually.
And in the midst of that, we have come up with some
honestly terrifyingly realer and more embodied ways
to connect with you
and as a community than on social media.
I want to keep showing up for each other
and I want to keep building community now more than ever,
but I don't want to do it on social media anymore.
So here's what I'm telling you today.
Soon I'm going to be inviting you into something special
and the invitation is first going to go to you through my new newsletter. Okay, I have a new newsletter
and all of my invitations and Abby and Amanda's invitations to new projects, new
events, all the beautiful offerings we're planning are going to come to you first
on this newsletter. Alright, now listen, if history proves to be an indicator, what
will happen is the newsletter will go out,
everyone who receives the newsletter
will sign up for these offerings
and then they will be sold out.
That's what happens.
And then everyone gets sad and mad
who didn't get the invitation in time.
And since I am in my programs,
I know that will not be my responsibility,
but still I don't want it to happen.
So please sign up for the newsletter now
so you won't be sad or mad later.
And if you have friends that you think want to be part
of these offerings in this moment,
email them, tag them, whatever you need to do
to get the newsletter to them
because I won't be promoting it heavily on social media.
Now, I can promise you two things about this newsletter.
I will be writing to you directly.
It will be me.
I miss writing to you directly.
I'm gonna do it on the newsletter.
It might be the only place that I'm doing that.
And two, I will never sell or give
or whatever people do with emails, okay?
I will keep them safe and sacred.
So here's what you do.
Go to Glenandoyle.com.
You will see a signup box in the top middle of the page where you can submit your email
address.
If you're on Instagram, go to my page, click the link in bio, you will see sign up for
newsletter as the second button, click the button and submit your email address.
That's it.
We are going to keep showing up for each other. The invitations will start coming soon on the newsletter, so go register now and I'll
see you there.
Jessica Yellen, our dear friend, is the founder of News Not Noise, a pioneering Webby award-winning
independent news brand.
Over one million subscribers and followers across IG and other digital media rely on
Jessica and News Not Noise to understand what matters, which experts to trust, and to manage
their information overload.
She is the former chief White House correspondent for CNN
and an Emmy and Gracie award-winning political correspondent
for ABC, MSNBC, and CNN.
Hello, Pod Squad.
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
Today, we are starting and trying a new thing.
The new thing we are trying today is calm news.
Calm news. I'm going to share with you the origin of this experiment.
Last November, I started to slowly and then all at once lose my mind. I hit a point in my life where I realized
that paying attention each day to the news
as it was presented to me
in a way that made every moment feel terrifying
and urgent and insane was making me ineffective,
was hijacking my nervous system and insane was making me ineffective,
was hijacking my nervous system in a way that made me not able to be the human being,
the mother, the activist, the writer,
the thinker that I wanna be.
And I started to understand deeply
that it was designed that way,
that I wasn't alone, that the news as it was presented that way. That I wasn't alone.
That the news as it was presented
was not just to inform me,
it was to scare me,
to keep me addicted to the television,
to keep me addicted to the phone.
And not only did I realize that it was
ruining my life and my days,
but it was stealing my humanity.
I was slowly starting to feel a real us in them.
I was slowly starting to be unable to see the humanity
and people who thought different than me.
I was in a silo and the whole thing,
as we say in recovery, just became unmanageable. I
decided at that time that I was going to stop, just turn off the televisions and
stop and try to reclaim my sanity. Fast forward a few months later I started to
feel better, calmer and also deeply irresponsible because I do not want to pretend that there are only two ways
that I either one stay addicted to the news as it stands or to put my head in the sand and not know
how to lead, how to react, how to prepare my children for the world that they are entering.
react how to prepare my children for the world that they are entering. And I realized there had to be a third way.
During that time the LA fires happened, my dear friend Jessica Yellen came to stay with
me during that time because her house was in the line of danger.
She sat and stayed at my house for four days with her little dog Bruno. Oh my god, I miss him.
And what happened was that Jessica, as many of you know, she's the founder of News Not Noise.
She's a Webby award-winning news reporter, but she's been in this realm for a very,
very long time. She's not only a master reporter, but her entire life
has been dedicated to figuring out how to do the news differently for people so that they can ingest
what's going on in the world in a way that makes them more effective, more thoughtful,
and more helpful in healing that world.
For four days, she sat with me
and I felt the effects of that kind of news reporting.
She explained to me what was going on
in ways that allowed my nervous system to stay calm
and my mind to activate.
She explained things in such a way that my children,
I watched them, their very fearful bodies calm. There
was no bypassing. There was no pretending. There was no fake positivity. There was real
delivery of what was going on in the world in a way that was honoring of truth and also
of humanity. And at that moment, I realized, oh my god, this is the way.
This is the way.
We must create this third way for people
who want to be informed, want to be educated,
but also want to be healthy and effective.
Enter calm news. Today we are experimenting. Our dear friend Jessica Yellen is here to
begin to discuss this third way, how we can do the news in a new way, and perhaps maybe
that we can do it together. Jessica, welcome.
Thank you, Glennon.
That was the most beautiful description and introduction.
Thank you.
Oh my gosh.
You touched.
Can you talk to us a little bit about this new third way?
Because often my experience in life is that I lose my mind,
like what I explained earlier. Often my experience in life is that I lose my mind,
like what I explained earlier. I believe this is my personal problem, right?
I take it to therapy, I take it to all the places,
I try to figure out what is wrong with me.
And then when I start to talk about it, I realize,
oh no, this is a universal problem.
And based on the mass exodus from news
that has happened over the past year,
it strikes me that perhaps a lot of people
were feeling the way that I was feeling.
Can you explain to me your take on that
and how you think it needs to be done differently
and how it can be done differently?
Yes.
And I'll tell you, my favorite compliment comes
from therapists who tell me I prescribe your news
to patients who can't take it but want to stay engaged.
So you are not alone.
There are a lot of folks out there who are feeling that way.
My general view is the news exists to inform citizens in a democracy.
The news is the only private business explicitly protected in the US Constitution, the free
press, because the founders of America believed a free press is essential to have a well-functioning
democracy because you need your citizens to be informed.
But if the news is panicking people or the news
is giving people so much trauma fatigue that they're operating out of fight or flight or
not informing them or all the other things, it's not doing its job and our democracy is
not stable, right? So I spent so long in the news noticing how my own nervous system was responding.
I spent basically 20 years, 17, as a TV news journalist or writer.
And I would talk to regular voters.
And by the end of the time I was in TV news, they would scream at me.
I was always interviewing undecided women voters.
And they would scream at me saying, you know, the news, you give me a heart attack,
you panic me, and then you go to commercial break.
I have no idea what's going on.
It's like walking into a dinner party halfway through.
You use this lingo, you have these names,
you talk about terms,
and then all of a sudden I'm watching a commercial.
And they say, I leave with more questions than answers.
And people would say to me,
I'd rather watch the crime channel.
And I'd say, why? And they'd say, because at least at the end, there's a resolution.
And so I started to realize there's a fundamental problem here that we need to re-engineer. The language we use in the news, the way we frame things is designed, as you said, to panic people.
Not because people in the news are cruel or they want to be mean.
I have a whole presentation on it, but the bottom line is the industry learned that's
how they can drive engagement, drive up ratings and profits, right?
And so it became industry standard to panic folks or build on your outrage or rage, just
negativity.
And I started to think about, are there other ways to drive interest and engagement that
aren't those negative qualities?
Because those negative qualities drive rage, fear, disengagement, polarization, depression.
Depressed people are more likely to engage with disinformation.
It goes on and on.
And I'm from LA.
And in LA, I grew up around Hollywood,
and Hollywood drives interest and engagement,
sometimes through fear,
but largely through compassion and empathy.
And I thought, how can we use compassion and empathy
to engage people in the news?
Wow.
So before this recording, Pod Squad, Jessica called me and basically said,
because not only is she a beautiful reporter, but she also knows her friends well. And she
basically said in a nutshell, how are you going to stay calm? Like, don't forget,
Or are you going to stay calm? Don't forget, calm news has to be calm.
So talk to us a little bit about witnessing mind
and what you're going to bring to us of news.
What can we bring?
This is a mutual.
The pod squad will need to bring something specific
as you bring something specific.
What does the listener need to bring to this sort of news to make the outcome what we want
it to be, which is clarity, calm, and efficiency in what to do next?
So I think of it, as you said, as witnessing mindset, which means recognizing that what's happening in the world is real and it's not your experience in this moment,
in most cases, right?
Like if you're in a wildfire, yes.
But in most cases, what we're gonna talk about today
is something that is happening out there,
but what's in here for you is still safe and stable and calm.
And constantly reconnecting with that knowledge is what helps me keep myself calm and helps
me get through the difficult things.
But the other piece of it is asking yourself what story or what conclusions am I drawing about what I'm hearing
that might not necessarily be the truth. So the first piece of that is anybody who's,
you know, done yoga or done meditation or done mindfulness work knows the experience of being
connected with self, with the calm self within. There's so many different terms used for that experience.
But when you're feeling like you're not in your fight
or flight body and you're in your vagus nerve is activated
and you're chill and you're good,
if you can kind of take a minute and moment
and breathe into that, right?
And I start there.
So one way I do that is inhale, hold, and then you exhale much longer than you've inhaled.
Should we do it for a second?
Yes, we should.
Okay.
I'm going to inhale for four, hold for five, and then exhale for eight.
Okay. Hold. Exhale for eight, okay?
Hold.
Two, one. Exhale as long as you can.
It's the longer exhale that activates the vagus nerve. That's what I've learned.
Through your mouth or through your nose?
Does it matter?
The exhale?
I think you're supposed to inhale through your nose and exhale through your mouth, but
for this, I don't know that it's essential.
It's length of time.
I've also learned people have different ways, so the audience can tell us. So when you get into that calm place,
that's your landing pad.
Like that's where you're living.
And so when you feel that you're outside of that
and activated, that's when you know you've been triggered
and it's time to like put the thing down
and remind yourself, I'm here, my body's safe, I'm good.
And then come back into it.
Because what we do with the news, importantly,
because we care, is we go on the ride. And then all of a sudden you're inside the Treasury
Department with Elon Musk and you're going down the rabbit hole and you can't stop him.
And you're like, no, come on, we're not in the movie. Back out. Where's my calm self?
Can I stop you right there? Because I want to just give an example of that, because that feels so important to me.
And what I want the pod squad to hear is not.
What you're telling yourself is,
all these problems might be happening to other people,
but it's not happening to you.
So you're fine.
That is not what we're saying.
What we're saying is, and I'll give you an example.
When I, as a queer woman in a same-sex marriage who is raising
queer children, hear news about rights being taken away, about the future of this country that might
be threatened for my children and me and my family. I have to remind myself when I read and when I listen
what Jessica is saying, right now in my home,
in my body, I am okay.
Right now I'm looking at my child, they are okay.
Not because I'm bypassing,
but because the next moment is going to come.
And then the next moment is going to come. and then the next moment is going to come,
and what the world and those children are going to need
is a clear, calm, prepared mother
who is thinking clearly and thinking creatively.
There is no moment where my clearheadedness and calm
does not make me a more effective leader. If I
am panicked constantly, I will not be the leader and the mother that they need
when the moment comes for me to activate. So that just in terms of it is not
bypassing, it is good leadership. It feels to me what you're describing is exactly what my therapist talks to me about, about
my own personal work.
Like the idea that something could be deeply, deeply wrong in your life, like you are committed
to change it, but the only way you can really change those patterns is to have this kind
of detached observation of yourself while
that thing is happening. So you can say, oh look, that's me doing that thing I
really want to change. Like by taking the step back and actually not being on the
ride with yourself while you're doing the thing is the only path to change it.
And it feels like that's the same thing. Like looking and being like,
oh, I can see with clarity,
Elon Musk is raiding the Treasury Department.
What does that mean?
And what can I do about that?
I have a clarity where if I'm spinning in the hustle
and I'm down the rabbit hole,
I'm just as whacked out as Elon is, and I can't do anything
about Elon in that moment.
That's right.
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
If you're the pilot of a plane, which we all are, metaphorically, we are all leading our
own lives.
Some of us are leading other people who are passengers on the plane.
We are all leading. It is the wrong idea to think that the pilot who is screaming and panicked and fired up
and losing their mind is the strong pilot.
Okay?
That is not the pilot you want.
Even when there are problems on the plane.
Even when it feels like the plane's going down, then more than ever, you need
a clear-minded, calm, strong pilot. So that's what we're doing here. Right, Jessica?
Yes. It's just the moment. You get it. The reason I think this is such a revolutionary
way to approach our reality is I spend so much time in social media
and one half of my feed is all this like tools and tricks
to, you know, be calm on the mat
and how to work on your mindset.
And it's all the therapy stuff, right?
And then the other half of my feed is
the world is ending explosions, pan panic, blah, blah, blah.
Often, the very same mindfulness meditation people that I look to for guidance on how
to practice on the mat or how to be still in myself are then posting these wild, panicked,
hysterical things about the world and politics.
And I'm like, how are you not applying the wisdom you've gained in this comfortable,
safe meditation world into the world of action and change and stress out there?
Isn't the whole point of having those tools that you can use them in the world and not
just in your own personal life.
Like Amanda, what you said is 100%. Yes, we use them in our own personal relationships.
They also apply to how we interact with the world of information, ideas, and political change.
And I think people do that so well intentioned. Like we think an indicia of my commitment and belief that
this is wrong is the extent to which I am enraged by this happening. And like as
the truism goes, you should be outraged about outrageous things. Everyone should
be outraged about outrageous things. Everyone should be outraged about outrageous things.
It is the posture towards that outrage that is channeling it in the most effective way.
We have to be wiser and more grounded than we have a right to be in this moment if we
are actually committed to surviving and resisting it.
Yes.
100%.
And if we want to have our wild and precious lives.
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It is about being effective for the next steps for the world, but it is also because we have
a birthright to joy, to calm, to peace, to creative lives where we are waking up and
figuring out what do we want to do with our time, energy, money, day, love, that we are
not constantly in reaction, that we have agency and access to the lives
that we want.
100%. One of the key tools in that is asking yourself when you feel like you're on the
ride, to use language, is what if I decided is true about this? That might not be true.
If you've written the script and you're already moving because you've decided an outcome, you're ahead of the story.
Ahead of the story. That's good. Also on the ride, pod squad, listen, even that language
is helpful. When you say that, Jessica, I know what that means in my body. I know when
I'm on the ride, it happens so fast. It's like a hijacking of me.
I feel it, an intensity building on the inside.
What does it feel like for you to be on the ride?
Even identifying it is helpful, right?
Mm-hmm.
And I can feel my nervous system calm down
when you're saying that, when we say I'm not on the ride.
Like I can see it.
And one of the things that's valuable about having this conversation and hearing this
conversation is you might not get it the first time, like your body might not respond, but
those ideas are in your head.
So the next time you hear this or the next time you suddenly feel so anxious with the
news, there's a part of your brain that'll go, wait, I know something about this.
And you might have just a moment of being able to distance yourself like, oh, I remember
they talked about how I'm on the ride.
Your intellectual mind might not understand what that means, but in that moment you're
triggered, it gives you almost like an air gap, a moment to step out.
And the more you can lean into that air gap to notice that you're too caught up and triggered
in that way, and that there is a way to relax out of it, that's your key.
And the more you practice that, the more your muscle memory grows and you're able to do
it in the moment.
There's also like a kind of righteous, beautiful indignation you can have about it, because it's like what we're so fired up about
and so outraged about is that they're trying
to take control of all of us.
But the irony is that when we submit to the ride,
they're literally controlling us.
The nature of a ride is someone else is operating it.
And someone else is deciding where you're going, how fast you're going, when you're going to drop,
when you're going to go up. The saying like, I am in charge of how I feel and where I go.
And the energy leakage that happens from me and the specific and strategic use of my energy
is an incredible act of resistance to that control.
And May, I add a corollary to that,
which I hadn't thought about until this conversation,
which is one of the reasons Elon Musk
and all those people we'll talk about are able to do as
much as they do in the world and they're doing right now is because by all accounts, they're
not very emotional about their work. They don't go on a ride. They stay at that witnessing space
and they can make calculated decisions about what to do.
And that gives them a measure of power over people who get emotionally reactive.
And so I'm not advocating to not care.
That's the whole point of doing the news is to care so that you can know and take action,
but to step out of the reactivity so that you have that powerful driver's seat,
sort of wise mind as you're doing it, which they have.
Yeah, it's to care enough.
It's not that you don't care, it's to care enough
to do the work in order to be effective,
even though it feels different.
It feels different than constant outrage.
Because it's interesting when you say that,
I think, okay, the example I gave earlier
about learning about queer rights being taken away
and my ultimate fear being that that reaches my home,
if I'm really honest,
that's what I'm thinking in that moment.
When I'm losing my mind in my home,
it has already reached my home.
Yes. It is very interesting to be
terrified that bodily autonomy will be taken from us
Let's practice now
Let's be in charge of our own bodies and our own nervous systems if we don't want our bodies to be controlled by Donald Trump
And Elon Musk, how about we start today?
Hmm, right. Okay to be controlled by Donald Trump and Elon Musk. How about we start today? Right?
Okay.
Let's practice.
And I think that as long as we're experimenting with this,
we'll start with a mini discussion like this
to reground us in why we're doing what we're doing.
But now let's do some what, Jessica.
When we talked about this episode,
we thought let's start with three things that you think the pod squad needs to know and why. I'm going to
have us do one breath okay before we actually do that can we do one more
grounding breath yes Jessica tells us four in five hold eight out okay let's
do it before we go into the news.
Let's do it before we go into the news. Okay.
Hold.
Exhale.
Glennon's showing off.
She did it for like five seconds longer than I did.
Great exhale ladies.
Thank you, Jessica. Thank you. Now let's get started by talking about what these motherfuckers are up to now. She said so calmly.
Calm news. Okay story number one is about DOJ which is Elon Musk's so-called Department of Government Efficiency. Please
know it is not an actual department. So the headline of this is Elon Musk and his boys
are inside the pipes of government. And insiders and lawyers are warning that they're behaving
with cruelty to federal workers and compromising the privacy of millions of Americans and the
credibility of America's financial system.
That sounds scary.
What it means and what's going on is Musk said that he wants to find waste, fraud, and
abuse inside the different agencies in government.
The way he decided to do that is by plugging a bunch of computers into the different agencies,
and he's going one by one, and then examining the guts of the agencies.
We don't have information on exactly what they're doing, what they're using, what they're
really looking at, but we do know that he's working with a team of people he brought in that were either 20-somethings,
there's even a 19-year-old who he's worked with before who are engineers. Others were sourced and
hired by Peter Thiel, who is a venture capitalist, worked with him at PayPal, and is involved in a lot of surveillance technology,
drone technology.
And they've sort of plugged these young men into workstations going into the guts of these
agencies around government.
They've been taking down websites, demanding access to highly sensitive systems, grilling
staff, and also recommending things to be frozen,
presumably people to be fired, we don't know,
sending emails to all of the federal workforce.
And it's very unclear what criteria
they're using for any of this, what level of vetting
they've had.
The questions go on.
OK, I have a beginner's mind question about that.
Yes.
How is Elon Musk getting access to all of this?
How has that power been given to him?
And is this is what we're seeing the move from democracy
to oligarchy, meaning is this where a government just
starts to be run by some business leaders who are very rich
and get access because of that? What are we looking at here? Great questions. And I'm going
to start with your second question first, which is if you wanted to move into oligarchy,
this is one way to lay the groundwork to do that. It could be a predecessor step to that kind of thing.
We are not there yet. There are people who argue we are because they see what's coming,
but I would argue they've written the script. And going back to the scriptwriting idea,
I'm staying on the facts that are true today. And we can talk about where it could go and
how it could go that way. Right now today, what we know is that these people are gaining a level of centralized
access to systems that no one's ever had before.
And it gives them a measure of power and eyes and ears onto the system and control.
That's a potential consolidation of power, could lead a lot of scary things, but we don't know that
it's gone there or what they're doing. I'll pause on that, ask if you have a question and then
before answering your first one. I just want to ask also because I know the big one was the
treasury payment system where it's literally every payment that goes out anywhere in the world,
including like America's social security payments and every international one that they had access to all the like sensitive
data of every American.
Is anyone talking about the fact that Elon Musk runs data companies and is he extracting
that data for his own personal use?
And is there any check on that?
I mean, all of his competitors' payments are in there.
Like, is it about the government, or is it about his personal for-profit?
There seems a lot of conflicts there.
There's a lot of conflict, and we don't know.
Okay.
We don't know.
So that's part of the...
We can write multiple scripts about where it goes from here.
Peter Thiel, the man I referred to before who has worked in a venture capitalist who was Elon Musk's
partner helped hire some of these guys. He's the mentor supporter of JD Vance. He gave JD Vance
his entree to politics and to venture capital and all more. He is very big in the data surveillance world.
And, you know, Elon Musk has access to all manner of tools and Peter Thiel's built systems around
data surveillance. And there's endless number of worrying scenarios that could emerge from giving
them access to so much. But again, they've been so cloak and dagger. One of the things that happened when Trump came
into office is he mandated that none of the agencies communicate anymore with
the public. So every agency used to have a communications office where as press
you could call and ask what's this and what's that and they were pretty
withholding. They didn't tell you much, but you could at least talk to them and
they'd post things on their website and updates.
That's gone.
Did you just say that every federal agency
is not allowed to talk to the public?
Brief, yeah, they're not sharing knowledge
in that way that they used to.
Wow.
I don't know how temporary that is.
And if that's just for this like Blitzkrieg first hundred
days massive attack approach they're using to making change.
But that's where we are right now. And so we don't know a lot about what they're doing. I don't believe that if they were talking to us, they'd tell us anyway. But we just can't know.
So let me answer Glennon's question first, and then we'll go to Treasury. You'd asked, I think,
a version of under what authority, by what permission is he doing this. Trump made Musk
what's called a special government employee. That's a real thing. And they say that his team
of people has been vetted. We don't know that they have proper classic security clearance,
but the White House says they've been quote vetted. And they've been made some form of employees
and tasked with rooting out waste fraud and abuse.
Mm-hmm.
And there are Republicans and supporters of Trump who say, y'all who were worried about
this are out of your minds.
We have one of their view, one of the world's most talented engineers and CEOs who's volunteering
his time and the best minds to go in and make our government more efficient.
And we should be
thanking them. So that's the alt view and how they would present it. What we don't know is what tools
they're using once inside the system to look around, what they're doing with that, and how
they're making decisions. So I hear from federal employees that they're feeling like they're being
surveilled. People are telling one another that they're feeling like they're being surveilled.
People are telling one another that they think that their computer, work computers are listening
to them.
So, they're saying to turn it off at night if it's at home.
People are telling stories.
Those are stories I've heard.
Other people are reporting that some of these Doge kids are grilling federal employees like
on video conferences in in rather rude manner,
like justify your work.
If you had to fire one person in your workspace,
who would it be?
And that even sometimes they're doing it
on a two-way video conference where the Doge kid
who's questioning the federal worker
has their video turned off.
It's very eerie.
Big brothery.
Yeah.
So that's the human level.
The larger scale is, you know, people who work in cyber tell me they're concerned because
the Musk Silicon Valley way to do things is move fast and break things and ask questions
later.
And in government, if you break things, that's someone's social security check.
That's the payment that goes to the cancer research.
That's on and on and on.
And if they take the approach that we're just going to split people and just fire anybody
who's ratted out by a friend or by a colleague or any other sort of arbitrary category where
they're not being careful, you might rip out
one of the key chords that you need to make the system work.
Can I just speak to as a person who lives in DC, it's a very personally difficult time for a lot of people.
I couldn't tell you the number of people that I know that could have been making much more
money somewhere else, but deeply believe what they're doing.
And they have countless friends who have been dismissed.
They are getting emails that say,
if you hear of anyone within the agency
that is against Trump's policies,
you have to report them to this email address.
It's a very scary time around DC
in terms of people not knowing what's happening and feeling very much like
the idea is if you don't pledge allegiance, you will be rooted out.
And that's super un-American. And one of the fears is once these folks are in the system
and have a measure of power, can this be unraveled? I will say before we go into the rest, to give people some perspective, I think every
case, like one case after another, these things have now been challenged that they've taken
to courts.
The courts have said no.
They have paused a lot of what Doge is doing that's most concerning, some of what they've
done.
It's going back to court, but paused.
The Trump administration tried to halt federal funds
for a lot of places.
The court said, you can't do that.
At every step, the courts have said, no, no, no.
We don't know if they will try to defy the courts.
We're going to learn.
But I also think it helps to understand
that one of the theories about the Trump administration
in this term is that Trump insiders believe
they have very few days to actually force their will into the system because at some
point soon Congress is going to start to, their factions will start to fall apart.
They don't have a big majority.
Their own teams are very, like they have a coalition that has a lot of factions that
aren't well aligned that could start fighting soon.
And so they feel like this is like part of the reason it's massive attack is yes to confuse
us, yes to distract the press.
Also because they're like, let's see how much we can get done while we can before things
start to fall apart.
So there's a future version of this where it starts to
fall apart of its own weight in a way. Okay. Can I say back to you what I think I've heard you say
in a way that is a new person to all of this way? Just so I can see if I'm understanding it in general.
So is this a bit correct?
We know that during the Trump campaign, this time, Elon and Donald became tight.
And Elon was contributing huge amounts of money to the Trump campaign with the plan and hope that as soon as Trump was elected, Elon would then
become Trump's special guy.
What's the name?
He's called a special government employee.
Okay.
Sort of acting like the CEO of the country.
Okay, great.
What could go wrong?
Okay, so just went on the ride, coming back.
Sorry.
No, no, no.
That was me.
That was good.
Catching myself. That was me. That was good. I'm catching myself.
Good.
Okay.
So now that plan worked.
So now Elon is Donald's special guy.
And so he gets to create a department almost.
He gets to create his own team.
And that team of Elon's is sort of infiltrating all the different branches of government with what they are saying is their express goal of kind of cutting the fat, making it more efficient. of access without any typical or measurable vetting
or clear understanding of what the goal is.
Or oversight.
Or oversight.
Okay, so in terms of witnessing, that is helpful.
I understand in general what is going on with Elon.
Thank you, Jessica.
You're still allowed to go OMFG.
Yes.
Witnessing mindset allows you to have feelings
about the thing.
Okay.
I'll just say in general,
it feels like it could be problematic.
I mean, we are on the wildest timeline.
Okay, let me ask you, I would like to do one more.
Because I think usually we will give people three things.
But since we did such a beautiful introduction, let's choose one more.
And then call it a day. It's enough practice for the day.
Okay, one of the big concerns right now is,
will Doge behave in ways that are constitutional or not? And in a larger sense, is the Trump
administration going to trigger a constitutional crisis? I'll tell you that JD Vance and Elon Musk
have actually challenged the legitimacy of courts to do their constitutional checks and balances and that's triggering concerns that we
might be at the start of a constitutional crisis. And I can explain
that a bit more. Amanda had mentioned earlier that DOGE, which is not a
department, it's just calling itself one. Okay. Because an actual department would have to have confirmations and people would have to
say yes, we agree that person should have access to highly sensitive information.
Yes, and you raise such an important point, which is all of this should be stood up by
Congress.
Yes.
So if they want some sort of new department that does this, that would have to be voted on by Congress. So if they want some sort of new department that does this, that would have to be
voted on by Congress. It's the executive's job to execute how that department does its work,
but Congress has to have a say and Congress has not had its say.
Now, Congress is not stepping in to check anything Musk is doing, so that's worth noting, but that could change in time.
So this Doge entity, one of the first things they did is go into some of the key departments
and including Treasury, and they went into this payment system Amanda mentioned to start
looking around.
We don't know what they did. This raised, as you might imagine, some significant alarms all over the place.
They were taken to court.
A bunch of state's attorneys generals said, this is a violation of Americans' privacy
because our pay stubs or tax stubs are in there.
We don't actually know what they're looking at.
Is it all Americans' IRS payments? Is it just federal employees' payments? We don't actually know what they're looking at. Is it all Americans' IRS payments?
Is it just federal employees' payments?
We don't know.
But they have the risk of violating privacy laws.
They're putting payments to states at risk.
And it's risking the credibility of our financial system.
In fact, five former Treasury Secretaries wrote an op-ed this week saying that this
is almost constitutional crisis.
It's threatening America's financial stability.
And a judge said, it's true.
The first get out.
They said the kids who were in there have to get out of the system, unplug your laptop, you know,
and erase everything that you downloaded.
That upset the administration and J.D. Vance, I still say tweeted, he posted on X,
it's so hard to get used to that. A message that said, essentially the last sentence of his message
is, judges aren't allowed to control the executive's legitimate power. He's saying, back off courts, you can't tell us what to do. And then the administration
filed a lawsuit challenging the judge saying, your ruling that we need to get out of Treasury,
that DOJ needs to get out of Treasury is unconstitutionally telling us how we can do
our job. It is our job to run Treasury, true. It is the Treasury Secretary's job to
decide how the payment system functions, true. And the Treasury Secretary said it was okay
for Doge to go in, so you are overstepping. They're going back to court on Friday and
we'll see what the judge decides. This is a potential constitutional crisis because
if the judge says, no, you have to stay out and they violate
it and go back in, they are saying, we don't listen to the courts.
They haven't done that yet.
To our knowledge, we don't know that they've gone in overriding a judge as well.
So we're not in the crisis now.
We are looking at the possibility of that.
I'll pause there.
Constitutional crisis means basically like our Constitution, our form of government was set up
for the purpose of, if you go back to our origins, preventing a tyrannical leader
from taking over the government because that's what we fought against to establish America,
right? So the idea of checks and balances, you have Congress, you have the court system,
and you have the president. So when you say constitutional crisis, are you meaning that,
like, will these checks and balances hold? That's what we mean by constitutional. Is
the constitution going to work the way it was intended to work
where one can't take more power than it is supposed to have?
Yes, exactly. And what the constitution says is these three branches do different things.
Congress writes the laws, sets the policy. The executive, the president's branch,
puts it into action, takes those and interprets what they mean
and puts them into action.
And then when there's a dispute about that, the judiciary, the judges weigh in and decide
this is what it really means and you have to do this and you have to do that.
Now it is precedent, history in America that the judges have the final word.
There is a court case called Marbury versus
Madison and in that case, the Supreme Court said when there's a dispute and the Congress
and White House disagree, we, the Supreme Court, have the final say. And ever since then, we
have followed that pattern. Interestingly, not the Constitution that says that, it's
Marbury versus Madison and we follow that tradition to the state. What could happen is
they could say, for example, no, we're not getting out of the Treasury Department. And then that
would be challenging that history-making precedent in Marbury versus Madison, that the courts have
the final say if it went to the Supreme Court. And if Congress doesn't want to act because they've
been passive to date and the courts ruled and the executive decides, I'm not listening
to the courts, then the question is who has the controlling authority and how do you enact
that will? If it's the courts that should be driving what the executive does, how do
you force that on the executive? That would be the crisis.
That's wild because then there could be a crisis where the branches are fighting each
other, but then there could be a crisis by abstaining from a fight. In other words, like
if Congress doesn't stand up and do its job or the courts don't, and they just passively
let this happen,
then that's like a different kind of crisis.
Like it's not working the way it was supposed to,
but it's because the others aren't stepping up
to enforce the balance.
And there's terms for that like constitutional coup
and people are throwing that term around.
And I don't feel comfortable with that word at this point.
I don't think that's where we are. Others do. I don't feel comfortable with that word at this point. I don't think that's where we are. Others do. I don't.
But, you know, we are in this weird position
where because Congress isn't saying, hey, no, stop,
the executive isn't overriding their will.
They're not expressing their will.
Right, exactly.
Or maybe they're fine with this.
Maybe they're in a wait and see mode.
Yeah. I know we have to wait till Friday
for this kind
of standoff to happen.
But there were like five more injunctions
by courts saying like, you can't do these things you're
doing, Trump administration.
Have they complied with any of those?
Is there any clues as to if they're going to?
In my analysis, they have found clever legalistic ways
to try to end run the courts in some cases
without explicitly defying the court.
Okay.
So I think they've adjusted.
I'm going to give you a quick example.
The White House, I can't even remember how long ago now, said there's going to be a freeze on all federal grants and funds.
That went to court.
That was in a memo. That went to court. That wasn't a memo.
It went to court. The judge said, you can't do that. So, they rescinded the memo.
Then they said, now that the memo is rescinded, we're going to freeze federal grants and loans,
because the judge's ruling was about the memo. And without the memo, we're just going to do it
in a different way. But you see that they were recognizing the court's authority,
But you see that they were recognizing the court's authority, I think, by saying, no memo.
And so it went back to court and the court just said, uh-uh, uh-uh, memo or no, you can't
do this.
And you're in defiance if you do.
And so now we're waiting to see if the payments go out.
But I think by doing that, they recognize the court's authority in OK. In a sneaky, trying to test boundaries way.
So two things.
First of all, can you, Amanda, do what I did with the first one
with that?
Can you say back to Jessica what you heard her saying,
what you would report to someone who wasn't listening to this
in a clear, concise way, what she just said?
Yes.
What I heard Jessica saying is that there is a lot of dramatic, even unprecedented actions
being taken in the early days of the Trump administration that many of which have been
challenged in the court system. So that is something that would suggest
that the checks and balances are working to some extent
to avoid a constitutional crisis where one branch is taking
too much.
So that is happening right now, where
there's an overreach by one branch and another branch
saying, y'all can't do that and that we are in a situation
where it is still to be determined whether the acceptance of the authority of the other branch
to say you can't do that will be respected by the executive branch which is the presidency.
Does that sound right Jessica?
A plus. Okay, great.
Great.
Can I tell you just before we end
what my nervous system story is about this?
I just think there should be like a nervous system story
because there is a point at which you're talking
where I start hearing wah, wah, because,
no, no, no, and this is, I wanna train,
I'm gonna train myself
throughout this process.
Because my nervous system story is,
there's a home invasion, we had a system
and now there's been a home invasion.
And there's no one to call because
the people who are supposed to come fix it
don't have the power or organization to hold the line
and hold these home invaders accountable.
And I'm scared about that because I just saw
the ineffectiveness of the people who are supposed to hold
the home invaders to account because of all that went down
in the last election and the inability to hold a line
and hold leadership and hold precedent.
That is my nervous system story,
that now no one is in charge
except for people that I don't trust.
So is that a story that is untrue? What is your reaction to that?
I would say true untrue. It's a fair feeling, right? It's a fair experience out of what we've
discussed. But what I see is our systems haven't been working. And I think that's pretty clear now.
And something's changing.
Things have to change.
And this is an invitation for moving into reform.
And it's true that the people who are at the driver's seat
right now have one vision of reform
and we don't know what it is,
but maybe we are being called to awaken in a
different way and we weren't awakening and nothing before was awakening and we
needed a much louder knock at the door. We also needed a vision for reform. We
also needed that and we didn't have it and I'll tell you what they're clear
with their vision. They have a new language for what they do. And
that's honestly part of the reason I'm so excited to talk to the two of you is you're
so good with language. And we need new language around what is healthy and good and right
to have a better world, right? And to act in the political space and act in our own lives in ways that are not just,
you know, good and kind,
but powerful and effective and strong and new.
And new.
Beautiful.
Let's take one more deep breath and end with that.
All right, ready everybody?
All right, Pod Squad. Thank you for that.
We'll see you back here next week when we'll try this again.
Calm News, the third way. Thanks, Pod Squad. Bye. If this podcast means something to you, it would mean so much to us.
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