What A Day - No Digas Nada, Nury
Episode Date: October 11, 2022Russia launched its biggest attacks against Ukraine in months, targeting at least 14 regions ā including civilian areas ā on Monday. Vladimir Putin said the strikes were retaliation for a blast th...at damaged the only bridge connecting annexed Crimea to Russia.Nury Martinez stepped down as the L.A. City Council president, after she, two other council members, and a local labor leader were heard on a leaked recording making racist comments. Martinez is facing calls to resign, and the conversation has fueled concerns that some city leaders are trying to deplete the political power of Black Angelenos.And in headlines: Hurricane Julia made landfall on Sunday in Nicaragua, a union of railroad workers rejected a tentative agreement with freight carriers, and rapper Kanye West was locked out of Twitter and Instagram for antisemitic posts.Show Notes:L.A. Times: L.A. Council racist comments full coverage ā https://tinyurl.com/vj4yp223Vote Save America: Fuck Bans Action Plan ā http://theherschelwalkerabortionfund.com/Crooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram ā https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
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It is Tuesday, October 11th.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And I'm Travelle Anderson.
And this is What A Day, the podcast that's describing itself as fun size this month in
honor of Halloween candy.
Yes, to be clear, that description only applies to the length of the show, not the content.
The content is only occasionally fun.
And that part is outside of our control.
Correct.
On today's show, heavy rains have unleashed deadly flooding across Central and South America.
And rapper Kanye West, also known as Ye, is in Twitter jail over anti-Semitic posts.
But first, a major update on Russia's war with Ukraine. Yesterday morning,
the Kremlin launched attacks against at least 14 regions of Ukraine, spanning Lviv in the west and
Kharkiv in the east. According to Ukraine's civil defense agency, at least 14 people were killed
and nearly 100 people were wounded. Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said about half of
the Russian missiles and drones fired in this latest salvo were shot down,
but the rest hit power plants, leaving hundreds of thousands of people without electricity into Monday night.
And because the water system relies on electricity to run pumps and other equipment, that also means many of these folks are without water.
The power shortage is so severe, Ukrainian authorities have asked citizens to conserve their energy usage and
announced they will stop power exports to Europe starting today. We mentioned on yesterday's show
that Ukraine had apparently orchestrated an explosion on a major Russian bridge. Did that
have anything to do with this latest attack? Yeah. So to remind folks, over the weekend,
there was an explosion on the bridge that connects Russia's mainland to Crimea, the territory it illegally annexed back in 2014.
That bridge, known as the Kerch Strait Bridge, is both the main supply route for Moscow's forces fighting in southern Ukraine and a huge symbol of Putin's claim over Crimea.
While Ukraine did not take official responsibility for that explosion, which collapsed part of the bridge's roadway and led to a fire
that engulfed a train of fuel tanks on the bridge's adjacent railway, yesterday's attacks by
Russia are being seen as retaliation for it. Though Russia says they were targeting military
and energy facilities, many of the attacks actually hit civilian areas far from the war's
front lines, which is not new for them because residential areas, especially the ones in Zaporizhia, have been struck a few times over the last couple weeks. In this latest attack,
a missile even hit a playground in downtown Kiev and another struck a university while countless
other residential buildings and cultural sites, including museums, were damaged too.
Can you tell us what the international community has said in response
to these latest attacks and this latest info?
Yeah, well, let me start with the Russian locals, particularly hardliners in Putin's own camp.
They've long believed that the Russian military should be, you know, manhandling Ukraine
at this point, and that Putin wasn't doing enough. His loyalists have been calling for
attacks on Ukraine's civilian infrastructure for some time in order to freeze the Ukrainian people
into submission this winter, provided their soldiers can't be beaten on the battlefield.
So those folks are happy, even celebrating on social media as Ukrainian forces search through
the wreckage for survivors. But as expected, much of the international community is condemning
Russia's actions. President Biden said in a statement, quote, we will continue to impose costs on Russia for its aggression, hold Putin and Russia accountable
for its atrocities and war crimes, and provide the support necessary for Ukrainian forces to
defend their country and their freedom. And even China and India, two of Russia's allies who've
offered the Kremlin some relief in the face of Western sanctions, are now calling for de-escalation.
The spokeswoman for China's foreign ministry said, quote, all countries deserve respect for their sovereignty and territorial integrity.
And that, quote, support should be given to all efforts that are conducive to peacefully resolving the crisis.
And a spokesman for India's Ministry of External Affairs said they were, quote, deeply concerned.
So not quite a condemnation, but, you
know, not exactly support either. All of this said, Ukraine's foreign minister told CNN, quote,
this is the war for the existence of Ukraine as they vowed to keep fighting.
All right. Thank you for that update, Travelle. Moving on to some Los Angeles drama. Are you
ready? Let's get into it.
Okay.
There is a major shakeup happening in Los Angeles after leaked audio revealed members
of a city council making racist comments and strategizing about political redistricting.
Council member Nuri Martinez, in particular, made several explicitly racist comments.
She resigned as city council president yesterday. I've been seeing the social media chatter about this entire story. Tell us more about the audio
here, Josie. How many members of the city council were taped and what was the context?
Yeah, so the audio that leaked is of a private conversation between Martinez and council members
Gil Cedillo, Kevin DeLeon, and the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor President Ron Herrera.
The conversation took place last October,
and it appeared to be about their frustration with the district maps
that were created by the city's redistricting commission.
All four people in the room were Latinx,
and news about the conversation fueled concerns
about some city leaders' willingness to deplete Black political power in the city.
The leaked audio is pretty long, about some city leaders' willingness to deplete Black political power in the city.
The leaked audio is pretty long, so we can't even cover all the racist, offensive, obnoxious things that were said. But among other things, Martinez and DeLeon have one very jarring exchange about the Black adopted child of one white council member.
They talked about what happened during a parade for Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
And just a word of warning, this is pretty bad audio. It's like the oddest thing. It's like black and brown on this float.
And then there's this white guy with a little black kid who's misbehaved. Este niƱo has no,
he's, they're not doing, yeah, no, they're not doing, the kid is bouncing off the effing walls
on the float, practically tipping it over.
There's nothing you can do to control him.
Parese changuito.
And I'm just like, oh my God, I'm over here trying to parent this kid.
I'm like, you can't do that.
I said no.
You can hear Martina say in Spanish, parece changuito, which means that he looks like a little monkey.
Yikes.
As a rule, we don't like to call little black kids monkeys.
There's a history there.
Listen, okay?
She also called the child
negrito,
which if you don't speak Spanish
is a very demeaning term
for a black person.
Martinez also said
the two-year-old child
needed a beatdown.
I'd just like to say
I have a two-year-old.
They are not controllable.
Put my two-year-old on a float
and see what happens.
And she even called him
an accessory
while Councilmember De Leon compared the child to a handbag.
All of this is very yikes and concerning energy to me.
Like this is wow.
Yeah.
And Martinez didn't save all her racism for young black children.
So she also had comments about the L.A. District Attorney, George Gascon, saying, F that guy.
He's with the blacks.
Yeah. We don't say with the blacks.
We don't.
The blacks is not something you say.
Yeah, we stopped saying that a few years ago, you know.
A few decades, some may say.
She also had racist comments about the Oaxacan community living in LA's Koreatown,
calling them, quote, little short, dark people and calling them tanfeos, meaning they're so ugly.
It's giving racism.
It's giving anti-blackness. Yes. It's giving bad they're so ugly. It's giving racism. It's giving anti-blackness.
Yes.
It's giving bad, bad, bad.
It's giving bad.
How did this audio get leaked in the first place?
Yeah, it's a great question.
And the answer highlights this whole other dimension to the scandal.
So the audio originally showed up on Reddit where someone posted it earlier this month.
It seems to have been taped without the consent of the people recorded, which is legally complicated because California is a two-party state when it comes to
recording audio. Meaning if one person in a conversation wants to secretly record it,
they can't legally do that. They have to have the other person, or in this case, the other person's
permission before recording. And according to the LA Times, the LA County Federation of Labor
released a memo stating that they had gotten the Reddit user suspended and the post taken down.
And they also said they plan to, quote, make sure these crimes are prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
So it seems that this racist debacle is not over yet.
I guess, you know, whoever should be investigated for, you know, the whole recording somebody without their permission thing.
But I don't know.
The racist comments seem, you know, to take a little bit more precedent to me.
Yeah.
But what do I know?
And I have to say, if you are a city official, talking city official business,
we should be able to record you.
That's my role.
I'm down with that.
So tell us, what has the reaction been like after this audio was released?
Yeah, well, as I mentioned earlier, Martinez has resigned from her role as president of city council, though she hasn't resigned from the council itself.
In her statement, she said, I take responsibility for what I said and there are no excuses for those comments and issued apologies to the council member she had been so demeaning towards.
She also said, quote, as a mother, I know better and I am sorry.
I am truly ashamed.
Kevin DeLeon and Ron Herrera
also apologized while Gil Cedillo said he didn't remember the conversation. Incredible quote. Oh,
they were racist? I don't even remember that. It's weird to say that. Meanwhile, LA Mayor Eric
Garcetti, California Senator Alex Padilla, and both mayoral candidates in LA have called on all
three council members to resign. Now the city council is set to
meet today. And keep in mind that as we're recording this on Monday at 9.30 p.m. Eastern
time, anything could happen. In the meantime, we will keep you updated on this story,
but that is the latest for now. We will be back to some headlines.
Headlines.
A devastating landslide rushed through the Venezuelan city of Las Tejarias on Saturday, leaving at least 25 people dead and dozens more missing. It happened
after days of heavy rainfall that flooded the area's main river, destroying hundreds of homes
and businesses. This is Venezuela's rainy season, though officials said as much as a month's worth
of rain fell on the region in just eight hours. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro said rescue
workers have been deployed to help the affected areas. And in other severe weather news, Hurricane Julia made landfall on Sunday on Nicaragua's Caribbean coastline as a Category 1 storm.
Since then, at least 19 people across Central America have died as a direct result of the storm.
Julia formed a little over a week after Hurricane Ian slammed into Florida, Julia has since lost wind intensity and has been downgraded to a tropical depression and is now tracking northwest along the coasts of El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala.
Workers represented by the third largest railroad union in the U.S. rejected a tentative agreement from their employers on Monday, renewing fears of a nationwide strike.
The deal was brokered by the Biden administration last month
with a dozen unions that represent 115,000 rail workers.
The agreement was meant to avert a work stoppage that could potentially derail,
get it, the nation's economy and exacerbate the ongoing supply chain crisis.
Officials with the union holding out said yesterday that while the deal
did promise higher wages and more lenient attendance policies, it did not give workers a fair amount of paid sick leave.
Workers with four unions have already signed on to the deal and seven others are voting over the next month.
But all 12 unions must ratify their contracts by mid-November to avoid a strike during the holiday season. Rapper Kanye West, or simply Ye, as he's now apparently legally known by,
has been locked out of Twitter.
This comes after he tweeted for the first time in nearly two years on Saturday,
and those posts were, well, anti-Semitic.
Twitter said the post violated its rules on hate speech.
Ye was previously suspended from Instagram on Friday
for posting a separate anti-Jewish rant
on that platform.
He didn't learn his lesson.
But he's no stranger to controversy,
though his latest online antics
follow his appearance
during Paris Fashion Week
where he wore a White Lives Matter shirt.
I've been trying to avoid this story
because you can never explain
why Kanye is doing what Kanye is doing.
You can't.
But here we are.
Some major friction between big tech and big loop-de-loop as a new feature on Apple's new
iPhone 14 has been mistaking roller coaster rides for severe car crashes and sending emergency
workers to amusement parks.
That is according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.
For all the folks out there like me who are still getting by on an iPhone 13 or below, I think I'm in the single digits still,
the new feature automatically calls 911 when it believes that the user has been in an accident
using a combination of sensor data. There are reports of this feature being useful to folks
in need, but the high-speed movement of roller coasters has also triggered multiple false alarms
that have sent police and paramedics to parks like Six Flags, where the only real crises are kids peeing in
water slides and people paying a million dollars to get printouts of their in-ride photos.
Travelle, you already know how I feel about this. You're not a fan of the roller coasters.
They're too crazy. They're too much. And the iPhone is just proving it.
Hashtag not all roller coasters josie okay roller coasters
lives matter someone tell kanye west no one is safe from misinformation anymore not even condiments
in tiny little bottles and if you need proof a man is suing the makers of texas peed hot sauce
after discovering that it is not actually made in Texas.
The hot sauce connoisseur filed a lawsuit last month, and he says that he never would have bought
a bottle of the sauce for $3 at the supermarket if he'd known it was made in North Carolina,
a state with virtually no reputation for the heat of its sauces. He's asking that the manufacturer
pay damages and that they take Texas out of the product's name.
The lawsuit is also seeking class action status.
So if you, too, believe that Pete is stealing Texas valor, you could someday be entitled to $3.
As a fan, Josie, of Texas Pete hot sauce, I would just like to say that this man is out of his mind.
OK?
OK.
But you could make $3. So are you sure you want to say that this man is out of his mind. Okay? Okay. But you could make $3.
So are you sure you want to say that?
I mean, but is the lawsuit really worth $3?
Like, how much can you really get in damages for a decision you made?
I do love this because the lawsuit, surely the cost to actually file it cost more than $3.
And this guy was like, you know what?
It's the principal.
I'm just glad
someone has this much free time because i don't absolutely not i just would love to know how this
guy's spending his time maybe i could like get some pointers oh yeah yeah yeah yeah and those
are the headlines one more thing before we go crooked is bringing you the election coverage
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I'm Travelle Anderson.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And be yourself, Pete.
Okay, but North Carolina Pete hot sauce does not have a ring to it.
I'm just going to say.
It doesn't.
And also sometimes people move.
Absolutely. Like no matter where I go, I'm just going to say. It doesn't. And also, sometimes people move. Absolutely.
Like, no matter where I go, I'm going to be Georgia Josie.
I'm just saying.
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