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Hey everybody, Robert Evans here and I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode, so every episode of the week that just happened is here in one convenient and with somewhat less ads package for you to listen to in a long stretch if you want. If you've been listening to the episodes every day this week, there's gonna be nothing new here for you, but you can make your own decisions.
Garrison Davis
Welcome to It Could Happen Here. I'm Garrison dav. This show originally focused on the potentiality of a second American Civil War and the conditions or events that might set one into motion. And we will return to that topic later this episode. But first let me introduce my guest, friend of the pod artist and noted live streamer Bailey new poster.
Bailey New Poster
I don't like that. That's what we're attributing to me nowadays. But that's, you know, that's fine, that's fair. Hello everybody.
Garrison Davis
Thank you for coming back on the show. Let's start our main topic Last summer, President Trump announced a UFC championship fight at the White House in 2026 as a part of the festivities for America's 250th birthday. The event was initially planned to take place on July 4th, but last October, Trump announced it was rescheduled to take place on Flag Day, June 14, which coincides with his 80th birthday. Come Memorial Day, a giant claw like canopy was being erected on the South Lawn right in front of the White House. The event, officially titled UFC Freedom250, had a lower capacity than originally envisioned, just 4,000 attendees, far from the 25,000 spectators on the White House grounds that Trump pitched last summer. The 4,000 seats in the miniature stadium arena were invite only. Most tickets went to members of the military, while Trump had 1,000 tickets to give out at his discretion, though there were 85,000 free tickets to watch the fights on big screens from the Ellipse park near the Washington monument. UFC Free M250 was streamed on Paramount and began with Trump and UFC CEO Dana White walking together from the Oval Office to the Octagon Zack Brown song, the national anthem featuring a military flyover. This was a $60 million production with fireworks, dirt bike tricks and music by the US Marine Band, which played Trump's favorite song. YMCA billionaires like David Ellison and Mark Zuckerberg were in attendance, along with members of Trump's cabinet and politicians. Before the first fight, UFC announcer Bruce Buffer kicked things off in a way that really encapsulated the entire event, and I'll show you this clip here and I'll have the audience listen to the
audio from the South Lawn of the
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White house in Washington, D.C. for UFC
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Freedom 250 presented by Ram Trucks.
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Nothing stops Ram and by crypto.com, the
Bailey New Poster
world's leading cryptocurrency platform, as sponsorships on the White House lawn. Let's go dude.
Garrison Davis
Crypto shout outs literally within 30 seconds
of like the actual like event, like
starting, like after, after the anthem, like when, when the fight starts. Within 30 seconds we get cryptocurrency ads. And I mean the stage was covered in logos for red, white and blue Monster Energy, Meta Rumble, the far right video streaming platform crypto.com as mentioned, steak, gambling and of course polymarket. UFC fighters were actually paid in the form of a crypto coin called USD1 issued by the Trump family's own crypto company, World Liberty Financial. Awesome crypto all the way in this event. But UFC Freedom to 50 went off largely without a hitch, save for a stunt pulled by UFC heel Josh Hokutt after winning his heavyweight match where he called Michelle Obama a man while being interviewed by Joe Rogan.
Bailey New Poster
Oh, that's, that's probably one of my favorite conspiracy theories. The Michelle Obama is a man.
Garrison Davis
It's pretty old. People have been, people have been writing
that for like over a decade.
Bailey New Poster
That's a classic. I like the ones that mix it with Michelle Obama is a man and Obama used to be a woman. Those are the ones that I really respect.
Garrison Davis
Solid straight T4T relationship there.
Bailey New Poster
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Joe Rogan never addressed this comment for the rest of the night and the UFC cut out this comment from Hokut from the YouTube upload and has been issuing takedown requests across social media. UFC CEO Dan White told Time magazine that he's, quote, completely against saying nasty and false things about people's families. Everyone knows my position on free speech, but I hate that kind of nonsense, unquote. But according to the FBI, this event could have gone very differently. On the morning of Tuesday, June 16, the DOJ announced that the FBI and law enforcement had prevented a mass casualty attack attempting to kill government officials. With five arrests in multiple states over that weekend, early reports framed the alleged plot as a sophisticated multi step plan involving explosives, drones and snipers. Vice President J.D. vance addressed the alleged terror plot on Fox and Friends Tuesday morning saying, quote, so much of the far left rhetoric is driving itself towards violence. Let's take a listen.
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This is a very, very dark stuff.
Garrison Davis
This is what happens when people turn the rhetoric up so loud that disagreeing with somebody is a cause for violence. That's the place that we've come to, unfortunately. I think a lot of my Democratic colleagues in Washington have got to look themselves in the mirror and say, why is so much of this political violence coming from our side of the spectrum? Maybe they can do something different.
Bailey New Poster
His eyes are getting like deeper set, like he, he looks waxier and waxier as the days go on.
Garrison Davis
Maybe he's just using a thicker eyeliner or maybe he's moved to eyeshadow. That's possible, that is, which is the sensible move. You start off with eyeliner, it doesn't look good. And then you realize what I should really be doing is eyeshadow.
Bailey New Poster
Imagine tears streaking down his face and his, his eye.
Garrison Davis
Ooh, Midwest emo. Oh, Midwest emo. JD Fan.
Bailey New Poster
A shiver ran up my spine.
Garrison Davis
So according to the Vice President, this alleged terror plot was coming from the Democrat side of politics and simply the result of them turning up political rhetoric. Fox News reported that upwards of 23 people were involved in this plot, five of whom are currently in custody. With the details of the plan being uncovered on the encrypted messaging app Signal, Fox News claimed the thwarted attack was targeting capitalism, billionaires and aipac. JD Vance also mentioned how the administration is going after the terrorist funding networks facilitating this kind of violence. We're trying to look at the underground networks that drive towards this violence. 23 people do not get to the point where they're going to commit a mass terror incident in Washington D.C. without some serious funding, without some serious coordination. And we've actually been trying to go with those networks of coordination because this
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is a, that's a terrorist plot.
Garrison Davis
That's not a few guys doing crazy stuff. That is a coordinated, planned terrorist plot. Thank God we thwarted it, but we got to do more of that stuff. According to the charges announced by the DOJ, Tyson Proper, 19 years old, of Ohio, Brian Rao, 24 of California, Michael Thomas, 32 of California, Daniel Eskridge, 32 of Missouri, and Abraham Alvarez, 31 of Nebraska, all conspired to plan and execute a mass casualty event targeting politicians and other quote unquote, high value targets. At the UFC Freedom250 event, the co conspirators allegedly planned to use drones to drop unspecified explosives on the north side of the UFC arena, forcing event attendees to evacuate south where other co conspirators would be set up with sniper rifles and to fire on the fleeing crowd.
Bailey New Poster
It's sort of a real shame that the IO Interactive guys aren't making another Hitman game for a minute.
Garrison Davis
A lot of this is like very Hitman, very, yeah, very Agent 47 type stuff. And as we get more into the plan, it's going to get increasingly video gamey.
Lee Hurley
Yeah, yeah.
Garrison Davis
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanch said, quote, the FBI, our law enforcement partners and our U.S. attorneys did what they do every day to make America safe through quick response and vigilance in investigating, disrupting and dismantling this alleged plan before it
could be carried out.
FBI Director Kash Patel said, quote, thanks to the rapid action of this FBI, our partners and the DOJ in a multi state operation, multiple individuals are now in custody and allegedly planned attacks were stopped cold. While the results represented the best of investigative work, it was also nothing out of the ordinary for this law enforcement team. We are built to detect, respond to and bring to justice those who threaten the lives of American citizens, unquote.
Bailey New Poster
And he said all that without blinking those big wet eyes of his.
Garrison Davis
I think this was mostly in the form of a tweet. So it sounds like the FBI did a darn fine job preventing this terrorist attack. Except what happened here was not the result of the FBI's excellent investigative prowess. They did not just stumble across this attack because of their, you know, diligent, diligent efforts to disrupt terrorist planning. Law enforcement only learned about this potential attack because on June 10, the mother of one of the co conspirators called local law enforcement in Ohio concerned about her son's recent firearm purchases and contact with individuals online. Officers went to their family home and spoke with 19 year old Tyson Proper and his family. According to the criminal complaint, a family member told officers that Proper had, quote, recently met random people online and quit his job in preparation to conduct quote, unquote missions and quote unquote recons with these individuals as soon as that upcoming weekend. Proper allegedly spent about $3,000 of his graduation money to buy camping gear, food, ballistic plates, a new shotgun, a rifle, lots of ammunition, extra magazines and plate carriers, unquote. The family turned all this equipment over to the police voluntarily. After local law enforcement interviewed Proper and his family, Tyson Proper was transported to Dublin Springs Mental Health Center. And I think this is quite notable is that they did not take him into custody, but was transferred to a mental hospital. In the DOJ announcement they refer to this as a medical facility, but in court documents they specify it's a mental health facility. And the criminal complaint says, quote, law enforcement submitted an application for an emergency admission based on his homicidal ideations, detailing that Proper had been thinking about joining the military or police force with the goal of being able to kill people, unquote.
Bailey New Poster
I like that. It's always like these guys, no matter what, what political ideology they have. At one point, they're like, maybe I should just fucking join the military. Maybe I should just join the police. I just really want to fucking shoot people. It's like, I want a cause. I want, like, a duty.
Garrison Davis
Yeah, that's sort of kind of more like floaty mindset. I think there's more of a factor here than, like, any specific political ideology, in a sense. And we'll get into that once we. Once we talk about the way that this group envisioned itself, like the role that it had on starting a second American Revolution. But there's very little, like, defined ideology happening with these individuals. And for someone, like, proper, there's a large degree of delusional thinking at play here.
Bailey New Poster
Yeah, it's guys who want to do missions.
Garrison Davis
That's it.
Bailey New Poster
Like, they don't want to do missions and recon.
Garrison Davis
It's very. It is very aesthetically based on, like, the military and this, like, idea of, like, tactics. And we'll get into this sort of, like, you know, military fetishism later on as well.
But, yeah, it's very much, like, very, very video gamey.
Very much like, I want to plan a mission to do in real life,
like, what we play in video games.
That's the sort of feeling across, reading about their plan, because their plan is relatively complicated, and there's no way that they could have pulled a plan like
this off like this.
This type of plan would be hard for a nation state to be able to do successfully. There's no way that, like, five guys from, like, across the United States with, like, a, you know, nerdy focus on,
like, tactical kit would be able to, like, do this.
Bailey New Poster
About, like, halfway through planning, they would have given up and all gone gay, probably.
Garrison Davis
What do you mean, gone gay?
Bailey New Poster
Well, they would have turned into. I was just thinking, like, you know, really quitting your job. This guy quits his job to meet his online friends, you know, go hang out with them in the woods.
Garrison Davis
That's a more positive outcome. Yes.
Bailey New Poster
5050, like, they either try to plan a mass terror attack, or they, like, all end up, like, kissing and stuff, you know?
Garrison Davis
I mean, yeah, having a gay camp out in the woods is the more positive path for people like this.
Bailey New Poster
Yes.
Garrison Davis
Because that's really all they need is just a group of friends to go camping with.
Bailey New Poster
Well, I do. I do like how Vance and them are talking about it.
James Stout
They're like, we fucked.
Bailey New Poster
We got these guys who were definitely going to try and shoot up our UFC event, and they were going to successfully do it if we didn't stop them. And it's like if you look at the kid, it's like a mentally ill teenager.
James Stout
Yes.
Garrison Davis
And as we will also get into, you know, far from this like left wing anti capitalist motivation which JD Vance and Fox News are promoting, that is not at all what was going on here. So the day after Tyson Proper was admitted to the mental health facility, the Sheriff's office contacted the FBI. After searching Proper's phone, investigators found signal chats detailing a planned attack with maps highlighting potential sniper locations and drone launch points. According to the criminal complaint, Tyson Proper's family saw him researching and mapping locations around Washington D.C. and when asked what he was doing, he said that he intended to conduct quote, unquote, recon and quote, unquote, hit and run missions.
Bailey New Poster
Hit and run missions. Awesome dude. That's fantastic. I'm gonna do GTA 5 online like Heist, like prerequisite missions before we go blow up this, this UFC event.
Garrison Davis
So on June 11, the FBI searched Proper's home and found a journal that the criminal complaint says contained a list of approximately 46 names including celebrities and politicians, as well as pages, quote, in which Proper wrote that the government sought to control people and to sacrifice children and others to a demonic figure, unquote. Awesome.
Bailey New Poster
We're going, it's getting better. It's, it's getting better.
Garrison Davis
So yes, this is obviously evidence of like delusional thinking. Like this is not, this is not someone who's doing well. And this is also not your typical rhetoric from a Democratic politician considering the claims Made by J.D. vance. This is not, this is not regular Democratic politician rhetoric. Proper's family told the FBI that he recently began interacting with a group of people online who quote, represented themselves as ex military and that may share some Christian based ideology, unquote. The family believed that these people online were using religion to manipulate Proper and that they quote, expressed ultra religious and anti government sentiments, specifically citing grievances about government corruption, the handling of the Epstein files, data centers, taking up all the water in communities and other government actions, unquote. So rather than a sort of general like left wing, anti capitalist or rhetoric from Democratic politicians motivating this attack, this is very general, kind of libertarian esque anti government sentiments. And this as we will discuss, this group did not consider itself on the right or the left, but saw themselves as American patriots more than anything else and they were upset about government corruption and had this anti establishment kind of leaning that was pushing them to plan very complicated and far fetched attacks against the establishment and corrupt politicians.
Bailey New Poster
This is Very average guy who sells cars. Ideology.
Garrison Davis
Yes. Oftentimes when people, like, read through these sorts of court documents, they'll be like, they had a incoherent ideology. And you're like, it's not.
It's not really incoherent.
Right. They're responding to real things in the world. Like, everyone knows we're all being fucked over. Government did mishandle the Epstein files. There is a lot of corruption. Right. And it does exist on both sides of the political spectrum. So, like, they are responding to real things, but there's not an avenue that it's being channeled in a helpful or useful direction. So it gets dispersed through these very larpy, like, idealistic, violent avenues where you
get a group of people who don't
really know what to do but are seeing these problems in the world, and then what they end up doing is larping themselves into federal custody by typing on signal about their dreams to shoot
Bailey New Poster
politicians spending their college money on guns.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Now, the criminal complaint in Ohio for Tyson Proper also specifies that family members highlighted concerning statements he'd made in recent months on social media, quote, such as making sympathetic comments about Adolf Hitler and posting anti Semitic comments on Facebook, unquote. Wow.
Bailey New Poster
Left wing.
Garrison Davis
Well, they are national socialists after all.
Bailey New Poster
True. True.
Garrison Davis
We will return to discuss Tyson Proper and the alleged attack on UFC 200 after this ad break. Okay, we are back. On June 11, the FBI interviewed Proper at the mental hospital where he admitted to planning an attack on the Freedom250 event at the White House. The FBI ran their own search of Proper's phone, and on the encrypted messaging app Simplex found messages identifying possible targets. The criminal complaint alleges that in mid May, Proper identified a senator from Tennessee and wrote, quote, she's taken money from the pro Israel lobby and supports them, unquote. A few weeks later, Proper sent pictures of four members of Congress apparently taken from the Track APAC website, writing, quote, these are the people we're going to focus on. Proper allegedly told police that members of this group that were planning the attack were primarily recruited through TikTok, where members shared photos and videos of tactical kits and physical training via TikTok direct messages. Once a recruit had proven himself on TikTok, they were then let into a, quote, unquote, vetted signal chat.
Bailey New Poster
So glad this isn't happening on my video app of choice, Instagram reels. I really, I really don't want to start restricting that.
Garrison Davis
The TikTok aspect is super interesting because there's elements of this that's similar to the accelerationist like Nazi terrorism of, you know, 2016 to 2020. These people are not explicitly Nazis, even if there's an aspect of anti Semitism kind of directing this violence. But this is anti Semitism that is largely focused on the role that Israel has in influencing the US government and the Israel lobby and politicians taking money from Israel. That's where most of the antisemitic aspect comes from. And then in proper's case, he is posting about Hitler on Facebook, but this is not driven by like neo Nazi style anti Semitic ideology. Like these guys aren't posting about son
and rads or Germany or race science.
At least that's not what's outlined in the court documents. So some of this does feel downstream from the accelerationist Nazis like the base and Adam Waffen and their target selection that we'll get into in a sec kind of also is similar to this. But they're not primarily organizing this on like telegram, right? This is, this is guys posting like shooting videos and tactical kit on TikTok and that's how they meet each other, is through TikTok sharing videos of their, you know, plate carrier and doing shooting drills. And then they start, you know, talking and they start planning these sorts of operations, as they call them, and then they move to signal to plan these things more in depth. Proper's phone contained a large signal chat with approximately 19 individuals, along with smaller chats consisting of four to five people that were divided based on role assignments and locations. In these chats, the group discussed exit, escape and evasion resources for the Freedom250 attack, including the location of potential safe houses. One of the signal chats was titled Hunters, which the complaint says contained detailed instructions for carrying out the attack and and plans to safely escape. PROPER showed The FBI the TikTok profiles of other co conspirators. And based on this, investigators were able to identify someone in California and someone in Missouri. The guy in Missouri, Daniel Eskridge, had the username fulcrum resist on TikTok. And they were able to identify him because he followed himself from another account with his legal name. And the account with his legal name largely just reposted the tactical videos from Fulcrum Resist.
Bailey New Poster
Like reposting your own videos and being like, I don't know, this guy looks pretty sick. This guy looks like a badass, pretty dope. Have you guys seen this guy shooting? Oh my God, I bet he's going to do something crazy one day.
Garrison Davis
This guy has a wife and five kids. Oh my God, he's like, I think he's like 32 years old. He lives on a rural property about an hour north of Kansas City. And he's. He's kind of the most interesting guy in this whole deal for me. The FBI was also able to identify co conspirators based on information in the Simple X messages given to them by Proper. Now, one of these Simple X group chats was called Vanguard of the Old Republic.
God.
This was the main name that this group used to refer to themselves was Vanguard of the Old Republic. And there was another Simplex chat that was called Vanguard of the Old Republic, parenthesis ops Stage one, which was there, which was like a. Which was like an, you know, an op planning chat.
Bailey New Poster
Awesome. That's so dope.
Garrison Davis
I. I'm going to read some messages from Fulcrum. That is Daniel Eskridge of Missouri. He wrote that the Vanguard of the Old Republic should intend to, quote, recruit operators into this group and start making teams to complete tasks and objectives to push our lines forward.
Bailey New Poster
So good.
Garrison Davis
Quote. The definition of a vanguard is the leading group in an advancing army or the foremost pioneers in any field, movement or industry. That is what we strive to be. This chat here will be insulated for the most part from each team's detailed plan. So we won't post exact details in this chat. This will be the main chat for everyone as we grow and we will have specific OPS chats. Our goal is, in a general sense, to, quote, restore the Old Republic. Our constitutional republic has been stolen by corporations, politicians and foreign actors. They have usurped power from the people and concentrated it at the top to the point that we now live in late stage, quote, unquote, democracy. When I say restore the Old Republic, I'm not talking about all the flaws that we had in the past times, but merely talking about the fact that in a constitutional republic, the people truly hold the power. And that's what we intend to restore. To get there, this country needs more fuel on the fire to show our fellow Americans that the time has come to stand up and reclaim that power. May 22, 2026.
Bailey New Poster
Oh my God. People who are on like the. The Star Wars Wiki forum, like way too much like I'm on the. What is it? Wookiepedia?
Garrison Davis
Wikipedia.
Bailey New Poster
Yeah, Wikipedia mod.
Garrison Davis
Another co conspirator named Michael Thomas of California wrote, quote, to be clear, I intend to escalate this group and I don't want to take six business years to do it, unquote.
Bailey New Poster
Six business years. He's making it sound more professional. That's a lot.
Garrison Davis
So much of this is like larpy, right? They're using all these like, you know, the sort of like tier one operator terms which we'll get into in a sec, and like, you know, missions. They wanted to sound professional. Six business years. A business year is the same as a regular year.
James Stout
It's not.
Garrison Davis
But Thomas also wrote that everyone in the group should, quote, consider yourselves an enemy of the state and discussed imagining executions. Another co conspirator named Brian Rao of California wrote about the need for, quote, unquote, guerrilla style warfare and quote, unquote, raid attacks with, quote, skilled operators to work like ghosts to conduct infiltration missions. Unquote. Yes, very hitman, very agent 47. Right, right. These are frankly just like totally, totally delusional. The criminal complaint says that Thomas and Rao met at least once in the last month in Southern California to quote, practice marksmanship and tactics. Michael Thomas of California described different tiers of operators within the vanguard of the old Republic. And this is largely taken from like military terms. Quote, Tier 1 operators may be asked to put themselves in harm's way, break the law, and potentially go into hiding. Tier 2 would consist of getaway drivers, drone operators, and direct support may still be asked to seriously break the law. Tier 3 may be a runner or, or part of the underground railroad. Indirect support, recruitment, supply, logistics, tech, still actively contributing, but most likely safe from legal issues. Tier 4, social media, influencers, protesters, funders, press followers. Nobody is being asked too much or taking any risks. Tier 1 status is not something to take lightly. You'll be sacrificing for your country and carrying a brunt of the wait. We will try to break them out of jail if we need to. Unquote.
Bailey New Poster
Oh my God, dude.
Garrison Davis
Oh, this is, this is kind of. Them at their larpiest is like when they're talking about like four different tiers of operators and it's like you and like at, you know, at the most like 19 of your Internet buddies.
Bailey New Poster
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
And kind of, at the least, kind of you and your five closest friends talking about how you want to like wage insurgent warfare against the government.
Bailey New Poster
They're structuring their Discord server.
Garrison Davis
Yes, that's what's happening. Just not on Discord, but on Simplex and Signal. But a lot of people know guys like this, right?
These are guys in their 20s to
30s who played a lot of tactical military video games who have this sort of military tactical fetishism and they're looking for an outlet for this. Combined with this anti establishment sentiment. That is based on very real things happening out in the world, but it has nowhere to be directed. So they just do this larp and eventually wind up in federal custody and get charged with conspiracy to commit murder on the White House grounds. Fulcrum Daniel Eskridge of Missouri wrote, quote, so right now in the historical timeline, I believe we are at the trigger event point. Meaning to set this off, we need an event or events that cause people to realize that the revolution has officially begun. So this is what the group intended to do. They intended to execute attacks that served as trigger events to cause this sort of mass like upswell of support for a second American Revolution.
They didn't call it a civil war,
they called it a second American revolution. And that is how they envisioned themselves as being the operators that will do trigger events to put this all into motion. It's kind of similar to like the boogaloo boy type stuff from, you know,
five, six years ago.
This group allegedly talked about attacking power grids with a fleet of drones to hit specific transformers and discussed assassinating several US Senators, House representatives and prominent business executives. So this sort of target selection very similar to like the base in Atomwaffen and like, you know, neo Nazi accelerationist terrorism from around like the, you know, 2016-2022 type era. The group did debate how they should choose assassination targets with Fulcrum writing, quote, we need to make sure it's someone that can't be easily turned into a right versus left thing. We want someone both sides would celebrate, would cheer and support us for taking out.
Bailey New Poster
Both sides would celebrate us shooting up this one guy. Like this one guy's weird America birthday event. Like what, what did I mean?
Garrison Davis
I think what they're pulling on from here is stuff like the Luigi Mangione incident, right? They're trying to identify.
And I find this part to be
very interesting because a lot of these guys do have this sort of Christian nationalist or Christian libertarian. It's kind of unclear, but they definitely have this Christian element to their motivation. They see themselves as patriots, but they do not explicitly associate themselves with the right or the left.
Ad Read Voice 2
Right.
Garrison Davis
They see themselves as kind of outside politics. But I find this aspect to be rather interesting when they're trying to specifically find targets that will allow for both people on the right and left to cheer them on or join in on a second American revolution. This does push them towards talking a lot about APAC backed politicians and unnamed prominent business executives. Their names are redacted in the criminal complaint, but I'm sure that's you know, it's, it's blackrock.
Bailey New Poster
It's.
Garrison Davis
Well, you know, because it could be people like Jeff Bezos or like Elon Musk. It doesn't, it's not totally clear, but I'm assuming that's the sort of range in which they're discussing. Fulcrum texted quote, so the goal here is to get at least three trigger event ops fully planned and manned, and to the best of our ability, to have them executed on the same day or in rapid succession so that our message is undeniably clear to our illegitimate government and our fellow Americans that we are waging war. We don't need to wait for resistance, infrastructure, supply lines and all these other things. That's what every other group in this movement is working on. And I'm sure one of them will be able to get it right. But they can't do that without mass support. And they won't get mass support as long as people think all anyone is doing is holding signs and chanting. All we need is three small groups of fully committed operators with a fully fleshed out and perfectly formulated planning and all real world on the ground intel they will need for each op to be successful. Once we've decided on what three events would provide the most impact and bring in the most support, we will create special chats for those ops specifically so that only the people on those ops know the details, unquote.
Bailey New Poster
All of this planning just for one 19 year old mitt. I gotta invite my mentally ill 19 year old buddy into this, this group chat so, so he can, his, his mom can get really worried.
Garrison Davis
That's how a lot of this stuff goes. And like, I, I don't want to, I don't want to diminish the possible harm that a group like this could cause. I think something that Robert pointed out last week when discussing this on Executive Disorder is like, this group could have easily spawned like one or two, like mass shooters, right? Or they could have acted on a plan that was way too difficult to pull off, that caused a lot of collateral damage, right? This group could have done something very bad. This group could have set a plan into motion that ended up killing or wounding a bunch of people or driven people towards other sorts of violent acts, right? Cause they're encouraging each other to buy weapons, buy kit, do all these things, right? So there was a potential for real harm here. Was the UFC Freedom250 event ever in serious harm from these people? Absolutely not. There was no way they were able to pull off their plan. As we will soon discuss but first, let's go on another ad break. Okay, we are back. I have one more encrypted message from Fulcrum or Daniel Eskrit of Missouri. Exciting quote. I can't speak for everyone in saying we're tired of not making shit happen and tired of being ruled over by treasonous pedophilic criminal policies, politicians and foreign agents, unquote. Fulcrum wrote that what they're doing is not only our birthright, but also our duty as Americans. It's about time the elites in the government are reminded of why they should fear the people, especially the American people, unquote. So Eskridge wrote that the American people is the largest standing army in the world with 107 million gun owners. He also believed that half of the military would join their cause and not follow, quote, unquote, unlawful orders after the second American Revolution kicks off. And that following a successful trigger event operation, potentially 3% of the US population would stand with their group writing that just like America's forefathers, quote, what we do here will reverberate around the world and echo throughout history. Long live the Republic, unquote.
Bailey New Poster
Oh, God.
Garrison Davis
So that's the most we know about the group formation and the sort of drivers that they themselves are discussing. Let's close by by getting back into the UFC Freedom250 attack plan, because the more that I learned about this plan, the more it became clear that this would just simply never happen. This is not a feasible operation. It would be hard for a special ops military team to pull this off at this location, let alone five of your TikTok friends to pull this off. And like the plan to target Freedom250 really only kicked off a week before the event was scheduled to take place.
Bailey New Poster
Well, there's your issue, guys. If you had a little, maybe a month's heads up, you know, maybe you could have gotten something going.
Garrison Davis
On June 7, Fulcrum messaged the vanguard of the Old Republic about using the White House UFC event to take out, quote, unquote, high value targets. In his message, he mentioned communication with, quote, unquote, other groups and said that the UFC attack would require cooperation from everyone and that they would need to, quote, put a hold on the other ops that were currently being planned. We need five teams of three, each team consisting of one sniper, one tier, one operator as support lookout, and one drone operator. As a part of the planning, they needed to pick five locations ideal for precise sniper shots and for the drone pilot to operate from. Fulcrum wrote, quote, once each team is mission ready, the green light will be given and the drone rigged with explosives will fly and they will initiate the attack, unquote. So after the explosives detonate, the attention will be, quote, on the skies and not the rooftop snipers, who will then eliminate, quote, unquote, high value targets.
Bailey New Poster
Oh, also, I feel like the skies and rooftop targets are remarkably close, Kind
Garrison Davis
of in the same sort of, sort of range bracket.
Bailey New Poster
I'm feeling if you're looking up, you might see on the roof.
Ad Read Voice 1
I don't know.
Garrison Davis
No, even the idea that you can get a sniper on a rooftop anywhere close to the White House without getting your head blown off is, like, insane. Right? There's just no way that's going to happen.
You're not going to be able to
get a sniper on a roof within a sight line of the White House. I mean, following the attempted assassination on Donald Trump in Butler, I can see why people might think it's easier to set up a sniper location than one might expect. The White House is like the most
defended place in the country.
Like, especially at an event like this where there's even more security. I just don't see how this is in any way feasible. Now, the group believed that there would be a protest outside of the event and that this would help allow quote, unquote extraction teams to evacuate the quote, unquote operators to a location out of state after successful completion of mission objectives. Fulcrum wrote, quote, if we are successful, this could be the first battle of the second American revolution. Who is willing to be able to drop everything and be one of these 10 operators? And who is confident and capable of flying drones? June 7, 10:28pm 19 year old, raise your hand. Babe, please come to bed. No, no, honey, I've been.
Bailey New Poster
I've been activated.
Lee Hurley
I gotta go.
Ad Read Voice 1
My friend, I got.
Bailey New Poster
You know those friends I've been hanging out in the woods with? I gotta go.
Garrison Davis
They need me.
So even if this group got enough quote, unquote operators to pull off this mission, which is highly questionable, if not impossible, they simply did not have the funds, the materials, or the resources to carry out an attack like this, let alone the skill or logistical capacity. Fulcrum texted the group, quote, we also need to come up with $1,300 ASAP.
Bailey New Poster
We need to come up with $1,300. You can't just pull it.
Ad Read Voice 2
What?
Bailey New Poster
This guy has three kids and a wife and he can't pull five kids and he can't pull, like, one expensive. We have. Oh, true, true. Yeah, but you're gonna you're gonna die. Like, he's gonna. He knows he's going to die. He's larping like he's gonna get out, but he knows he's gonna die and he can't be like, I will go and I'll sell some and I'll get like $1,300. We gotta fund this.
Garrison Davis
Do you have like a credit card? Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
Does anyone.
Garrison Davis
Anyone have a credit card? Quote? $1300 gets us the drones and the charges. We should all pitch in and we need it to asap.
Bailey New Poster
What kind of drones are they getting? Like, is this Amazon? Like, you look up drone on there? What? I'm just picturing, like, the drones that you see getting flown around, like at the park by a family that just
Garrison Davis
bought it just carrying a grenade.
Bailey New Poster
Exactly, yeah.
Garrison Davis
Thomas of California replied, quote, I'm flat broke. I can pay in manpower, though. I bet you could come up with a hundred dollars in a week somehow. Maybe just hold a sign by the freeway saying, quote, fund the freedom fighters.
Bailey New Poster
Oh, God, that's awesome, dude.
Garrison Davis
So, unable to pay for bombs, the group talked about trying to build drones and discussed breaking into military facilities to steal the explosives needed for their attack plan.
Bailey New Poster
Does anybody. Does any of us know how to build this?
Ad Read Voice 1
Oh, shit.
Bailey New Poster
We might have to redo the whole or. Or we can break into some of the most protected facilities in America. I think that might be the.
Garrison Davis
That might be the better choice to be fair. Some of those military facilities are not protected than what you might think.
Bailey New Poster
That's fair.
Garrison Davis
The criminal complaints reads, quote, a member of the group stated he knew how to build drones connected via fiber optic cable and capable of carrying explosive charges, but did not have access to the materials needed for explosive charges. That number suggested that they, quote, may need to hit a military industrial complex facility for the things we need, unquote. Fulcrum or Eskridge responded.
10 4.
I'm liking the sound of this.
Bailey New Poster
Awesome. What? You're texting people.
Garrison Davis
10 4.
Bailey New Poster
What are you doing? What are we doing?
Garrison Davis
The complaint alleges that the group continued to discuss the, quote, benefits and the detriments of obtaining a, quote, unquote, cook for explosive charges versus stealing military ordinance from a manufacturing plant, unquote. They were looking at a few locations in Kansas and zeroed in on the Kansas army ammunition plant, though they never actually stole explosives from this plant, but they sure did talk about it, and their conversations are in the charging documents.
Ad Read Voice 1
Awesome.
Garrison Davis
So again, this is all happening days before this attack is supposed to kick off, and a part of the Plan is for a day or two before UFC Freedom 250. The group was to meet up in Fredericksburg, Virginia to like, go over plans again in person and like, you know, practice and prepare. So they needed to get guys in Fredericksburg around the 12th or the 13th. One of the members who was interviewed by the FBI confirmed that the group was communicating online about attacking the event, but claimed that the attack plan was canceled on June 12th. And of course, Tyson proper was placed in the mental health facility on June 10. So somewhere between June 10 and June 12, the group called off their plans. It is notable, however, that at least one of the co conspirators did attempt to drive to Washington D.C. when Brian Rao was interviewed by the FBI, he admitted that he'd tried to drive to Washington D.C. to protest UFC Freedom 250, but denied any involvement in this conspiracy. And he told the FBI that his vehicle malfunctioned and had to return home. One of the most interesting parts in the criminal complaint is this FBI agent writing about how when he was interviewing Rao, Rao discussed how someone could hypothetically use drones armed with explosives to bomb buildings near the White House, which would cause a mass panic with limited deaths at UFC Freedom 250, and mentioned this as an example of how to use drones to enact political change in a more targeted way, rather than indiscriminate killing. The FBI agent wrote, quote, based on this exchange, I believe Rao was privy to the operational details of the plan, unquote. So Brian Rowe just like talked about the plan, just like, as a hypothetical to an FBI agent while the FBI was searching his vehicle after admitting he tried to drive to D.C. to protest the event, but was not involved in any criminal conspiracy.
Bailey New Poster
That's like being, you know, you just got caught. Your spouse has found all of your, your secret messages or whatever to your, your Grinder lover. And while they're going through your phone, you're like, I mean, what if somebody was hypothetically going to do that? Like, you know, it wouldn't be that bad because with a. It's with a man and not a woman. So it's like we love each other completely different ways, but that's just like me, you know, that's not real. That's not like it wouldn't be anything real. Just like, hypothetically, you'd be cool with that, right? You'd be cool with that.
Garrison Davis
The FBI was not cool with that.
Ad Read Voice 3
Especially.
Garrison Davis
Especially considering that when executing a federal search warrant of Rao's vehicle and home, they seized an AR15 style rifle, a Glock 19 handgun, a tactical belt, an ammo can full of bullets, a two way radio, an infrared laser target pointer and a rifle magazine. Brian Rouse family members told law enforcement that Rao had alluded to traveling to D.C. and according to the California criminal complaint, Rao told his family that, quote, one day they would wake up and he would be gone and that he intended to travel to Washington D.C. where, quote, unquote, something big would happen. Similar to Proper's family, Brian Rouse family suspected that he may be intending to commit an act of violence based on a, quote, increased time spent shooting weapons and a noticeable change in behavior including increased anxiety, irritation and seclusion, unquote.
Bailey New Poster
Dad spending a lot of time in the shed with a gun in his mouth.
Garrison Davis
Family also told law enforcement that Rao had been spending a lot of time online with a new group of friends with his family, also telling law enforcement that they considered reporting him to the police after he left on his way to D.C. but did not because he returned home so quickly. Rao told the FBI he had vehicle trouble. On June 13, law enforcement officials executed a federal search warrant of Daniel Eskridge or Fulcrum's residence and agents seized rifles, a shotgun, a pistol and other tactical gear that matched photos Eskridge posted online. That same day, FBI searched the home of Michael Thomas in California where they seized a hunting rifle, an AR15 style rifle, 30 round extended magazines with approximately 180 rounds of ammunition as well as a pistol. While Michael Thomas was being interviewed to quote the criminal complaint, quote, he stated that he saw himself as the planner and advisor for the group and while he was not willing to take action himself, wanted to guide and instruct others on how to carry out attacks. Thomas expressed frustration that some members of the group seemed non committal and used excuses as to why they could not take action. Thomas said that the aim of this and subsequent attacks was to create enough chaos to bring about the overthrow of the US government, which he believed was being run by an elite group of individuals who sacrifice and consume infants who are also deeply involved with Jeffrey Epstein and are now protected by President Donald Trump. Thomas places some of the responsibility of this corruption of the US Government with Jewish people and blames them and Israel for the current war with Iran, unquote. So yeah, that is what did not happen at UFC Freedom250.
Bailey New Poster
Nothing will ever happen now.
Garrison Davis
JD Vance did go back on Fox News Tuesday night on Fox news at the 5 and said, quote, it turns out the plot was like not that advanced. They weren't in town, they had not really done that much planning, unquote. So slightly backtracking his previous assertions.
Bailey New Poster
We gotta find who's funding these guys. These guys who can't pull out 1,300 bucks from, like, between the. Between five people? Yeah, between, like, what is going on? Like. No, I didn't. Wasn't it like 19 or something in the signal?
Garrison Davis
19. In the biggest signal chat related to the group, there's. There was 19 people. So far, only five have been arrested. More have been interviewed.
Right.
Because the FBI mentioned interviewing someone in West Virginia who said. Who said that the attack plan was canceled as of recording. This guy's not been arrested in charge. We don't know his name. So they definitely. They definitely are talking with other people related to this, like, network.
Bailey New Poster
Well, they know he was a tier four operator. He wasn't. The law can't touch him.
Garrison Davis
No. Yeah. Famously how conspiracy charges work.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah.
Ad Read Announcer
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
The last thing I want to mention is the fifth guy that was arrested, right, because there was five people arrested initially, and that is Abraham Alvarez. He was known as, quote, unquote, shepherd, online Call of Duty.
Bailey New Poster
Of course, Classic.
Garrison Davis
And the DOJ claims that he was responsible for planning, organizing and directing the planned attack. Alvarez allegedly picked out the drone launch points and sniper locations and claimed to have one drone and was trying to get others. He also selected a safe zone meetup location in Nebraska for after the attack. Alvira's also claimed to be, quote, unquote, cooking explosives. But court documents never specify that drones or explosives were seized during any of the searches. So we don't know if he actually had a drone or actually had explosives. It seems unlikely because of the whole plan of needing to steal explosives from this military facility in Kansas. But he may have been trying to make explosives. But at this point, it's kind of unclear. Now, before any of the details of any of the alleged attackers was released, a Fox News contributor said that considering President Biden let in, quote, unquote, millions of unvetted people into the country, quote, it would be a very dangerous delusion to believe that these terrorist organizations and countries did not use that open border to bring people inside, unquote. And as we've already discussed, this was not the operation of a foreign terrorist organization or people that were brought into the country. These are Americans. These are American patriots, self ascribed. But on Thursday, June 18, the DHS announced, quote, alleged ringleader of UFC terrorist plot is a Mexican illegal alien, unquote, with acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Biss writing, this illegal alien from Mexico should have never been allowed in our country. He was the ringleader of a failed terror attack targeting UFC Freedom250 at the White House. The current legal status of Abraham Alvarez is kind of unclear, but he was
not brought into the country under Biden's open borders.
He entered the country as a child on a B2 visitor visa that expired in December of 2021. He's been in this country nearly his whole life. And under Obama, he was granted Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, in 2014, suspending possible deportation. So while it looks like he currently may not have legal status, this was not an illegal alien who snuck across the border from Mexico. This guy was brought to the United States as a child and has lived
here for over 25 years.
Over 27 years. So I do think that is worth noting. But I'm sure going forward, the Trump administration will be running with this idea that this illegal alien from Mexico planned the UFC Freedom250 terrorist attack. And the actual context of how Alvarez entered the country is important. Not that it will matter to Fox News or the Trump administration, but I do think it is worth specifying. And of course, there is upwards of 19 other people involved in this, and the four others that I've spent most of the episode talking about are all us born citizens. Anyway. Yeah, that's what, that's what did not happen at USC Freedom250, and let things,
Bailey New Poster
I suppose, continue to not happen.
Garrison Davis
It could not happen here.
Bailey New Poster
It will continue not happening.
Garrison Davis
So, Bailey, new poster. Where can people find you online?
Bailey New Poster
Oh, God. I'm on Blue sky as New Poster two.
Garrison Davis
Very smart pick.
Bailey New Poster
Yes. I'm also on the other app, X as New Poster two, but I, you
Garrison Davis
know, not very, very woke of you.
Bailey New Poster
I'm also on Instagram as post lytical bling, because that account has not been suspended three different times. And then on Twitch, as I think on Twitch is New Poster two as well.
Jenny Garth
Excellent.
Bailey New Poster
There's. There's four little options for you.
Garrison Davis
Yes.
Good luck in your streaming endeavors.
Graham Platner
Oh, God.
Garrison Davis
All right, that does it for us here. That could happen here. See you on the other side.
Ad Read Voice 2
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Garrison Davis
I got it.
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Garrison Davis
Seriously, I insist.
James Stout
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Ad Read Voice 1
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Garrison Davis
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Bailey New Poster
earn unlimited 2% cash rewards on purchases. Okay.
Ad Read Announcer
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Garrison Davis
Rock, paper, scissors.
James Stout
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Garrison Davis
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Ad Read Voice 2
Hey everybody. Robert Evans here. And this is it could happen here. I wanted to talk today a little bit about Belfast and about what happened there earlier this month. The racist riots in which mobs of bigots ran through the city forcing people out of their homes for not being white, destroying businesses, terrorizing people. It was horrific. And if you spent any time watching live streams or videos or just the coverage, I'm sure you felt as frightened both for those people directly and just for the future as many of us. And in the wake of something like that, it can often be hard to know, like what to do and what would I do if this were happening in my community, right? Like what is the proper response, especially if there isn't an immediate response in the moment that meets the rage of one of these nights and actually is able to stop it. If these bigots are able to go through and attack and harm people, how do you both respond to that and help the people who have been hurt? And how do you deal with the fact that that could be a very dangerous sit, you know, especially if you've still got these mobs of people out there who are willing to hurt the folks that you're trying to protect and anyone potentially trying to protect them. Well, obviously the people who live in Belfast are dealing with that problem immediately. And so the best place to go if I wanted to know what that was like was to someone who's been living through it. And fortunately I found the posts on Blue sky of Lee Hurley. He's a Belfast based writer. He's the owner of DailyCannon.com Lee also runs the Trans Agenda, which records and documents anti trans media coverage in UK papers. You can subscribe@transagenda.info I reached out to Lee after seeing some posts that Lee had made about what he had witnessed in terms of the local response to people trying to organize to help folks who had been attacked and brutalized. And Lee wrote an essay for us and, and read it and thankfully was good enough to do both of those things. So this is, you know, some direct first hand reporting both on what it was like to live in Belfast while that was going on and what it's like to watch the community spring into action to try and make right some of the wrongs that were done. So without further ado, here's Lee.
Lee Hurley
Last week Belfast hit the headlines worldwide. In usual Belfast fashion, it Wasn't for Anything good. On Monday, 8th of June, 2026, a man was attacked and stabbed in north Belfast by a refugee. It was a vicious attack caught on camera that resulted in the victim losing an eye and being placed in their medically induced coma. At the time of recording, the victim remains in hospital. The next day, the city exploded. Riots took place across Belfast. Fires raged and people were forced to flee from their homes. Today I want to talk to you about what happened. What really happened. Not the attack and not the riots themselves, but what went on in the hours and the days after that beyond the brick throwing and the burning and the fear. Because something good did happen. And I think it's important that the world knows about that. You need to know that Belfast isn't all bad. It isn't what you saw on the tv, that while the horror happened on the streets, the rest of the city said, enough. We mobilized. This is the story of the real community of Belfast. Belfast is a beautiful city, rich in culture, history, world renowned for its food, and if you would believe it, it's welcome in nature. Ask anyone who's visited for recommendations about what to do in the city and you'll likely hear them rave about the Titanic museum, a game of Thrones tour, or the stunning architecture. They'll tell you how nice everybody they met was. You'll be told about some wonderful restaurant they visited and the amazing trad music session they stumbled upon in some Quint backstreet pub. They'll tell you they want to go back. One of our most popular tourist activities is a tour of the key sights they played key roles in our civil war. Taxi drivers will take you to the places where blood was shed, bombs exploded, and those left behind still visit the morn. The tours aren't even that expensive here in Belfast. We've made a small industry out of the darkest parts of our country's history. The troubles. Although the days of bombs and murders and army controlled streets are spoken often past tense, by those tour guides, the beliefs, culture and division that fueled the fighting are still just as strongly held in many communities throughout the city as they were on the day that peace agreement was signed nearly 30 years ago. Belfast is a beautiful city, but it's a city that requires context to be fully understood and some would argue, fully appreciated. Like almost all wars, the trouble centered around identity and access to resources. On one side, the nationalists or Catholics who identify with and wish the country to be a united Ireland. On the other, Royalists or Protestants who want Northern Ireland to remain part of the UK division goes deeper than that and is much more complicated, but it's a bit like the left right divide of Democrats and Republicans in the us. Knowing what side someone falls on can usually tell you a lot about their other beliefs and morals. Even international politics gets divvied up here to one side or the other. Loyalists support Israel, Nazis support Palestine. Of course, it's not that simple. Not all Protestants and Catholics hold the same viewpoints, but for the sake of brevity and generalizing, and this is of course a very short and brief explanation of what is actually a very complex history that spans hundreds of years, we simply don't have the time to go in the at all with any more depth than that. It's not the focus of this podcast anyway, but even that oversimplified summary should help you see the contextual lens through its Belfast and what happened must be viewed. And it is within this context where tribalism and nationality and identity are so important that whole housing estates advertise theirs by painting their curbstones in the colors of the British or Irish flag. Giant murals celebrating both murderers and the murdered alike are painted on the sides of houses where hate for the other continues and where resources are fiercely protected and fought over that this story takes place Tension has been bubbling up about migration for the last several years in Northern Ireland and elsewhere. Just last summer we saw riots in nearby Ballymena and in Belfast after an alleged sexual assault took place, with the accused perpetrators being two teenage boys from Romania. Houses and businesses were smashed up and burnt if the riders believed there was any connection whatsoever to an immigrant, no matter where in the world they hailed from. I remember driving through Botanic, a vibrant, multicultural area of Belfast we live a few minutes away from and seeing business after business destroyed. The hookah bar, the international supermarket, cafes. Several months later, the charges against those two teenage boys were quietly dropped due to significant evidential developments. Like everything else here, attitudes to immigration and race in general has a pretty clear split between our two main communities. Throughout Loyalist areas you will find graffiti and signs stapled on the lamp posts. Foreigners not welcome here. No Muslims allowed. Stop the boats. A lot of the time these vitriolic methods aren't even spelled correctly. Education is just one of the many areas neglected here that nobody ever riots over. That's not to say there's no such thing as a racist nationalist. There are everywhere. Belfast is of course no different on that front when this most recent horrific attack took place in a city where immigrants, legal, illegal, refugee, asylum seeker doesn't actually matter. In fact, because you don't have to be a migrant to be targeted. You just have to be non white. Where they're already treated as scapegoats for every problem. Where racist riots have become something of a summer tradition, everyone knew what was coming. Within hours, social media was full of AI generated posters telling people to take to the streets to protest immigrants. When they said protest, we all knew they meant riot. And so the city shut down for three days. Shops, schools, community centers, swimming pools, public transport and businesses were held hostage to racism. Some places opened for a few hours in the mornings before having to close again. The buses were running, the buses were off. Half the city worked from home. Fake protest posters popped up on social media. Everyday life and routine was thrown into disarray and chaos. But it was when the sun went down that the actual horror happened. From the comfort of our homes, with the blinds dying, many of us sat scarred, scrolling social media, trying to find out what was happening. Via helicopter footage streamed live on YouTube, we watched our city get destroyed. We texted each other and made phone calls and even shit posted online, trying to find some levity or light in the situation. For others, those days changed their lives forever. They watched the cars get burnt out and along with the metal and the tires, tomorrow's school run. And transport went up in smoke sand from the last family trip to the beach. Still in the footwells, a favorite cardigan left in the passenger seat. Gone. All of it gone. Whole homes gone. Whether physically set on fire or threatened through the letterboxes, or driven out by a fear many of us will never have to know, the true number of people who fled their homes since the 8th of June is hard to gauge. Some have gone to stay with relatives or friends across the city. Some have moved to completely new places, waiting to feel safe enough to try again. Many have left the country altogether. And who can blame them? That is our loss. They say in times of trouble, look for the helpers. But here in Belfast, you wouldn't have seen too many at first glance. That's for the same reason you didn't see people rise up and take on the rioters face to face fear. Fear of personal reprisal from the loyalist paramilitary organizations. Fear of alerting the rioters and making the situation even worse for those you're trying to help. Fear is endemic here. But there were helpers. Hundreds, in fact. But our helpers moved quietly and in the shadows. Without foster fanfare. People across Belfast began taking action almost immediately. As everyday life began to return to normal and schools and shops cautiously reopened. Strangers became Small heroes. Families were moved from their homes under darkness and children taken to and from school. The elderly and sick and pregnant accompanied to hospital and doctor appointments in church halls and community centers. Supermarket sized food banks sprung up from nothing. Money was raised from all over the world. Where there was need, somebody met it. Then they returned and asked who they could help next. In those moments, the real Belfast was seen. On Thursday afternoon, 48 hours after it all started, my fiance arrived home from work. Let's call her Elle. I couldn't sit and do nothing anymore. So here's what was happening. She said she'd already contacted a church and arranged use of their hall. She contacted people she knew through her community work to get word out. I posted about it on Blue sky, not mentioning anything about where it would be located out of fears we'd be targeted. And someone asked if there was a fundraiser. There wasn't. There hadn't been anything just a few hours ago. Not thinking it would get much attention, I threw up a link to my PayPal and said I'd pass the money on if anyone wanted to donate. Thousands came flooding in from all over the world, particularly from Minnesota. Saturday came and we were up at 6am to hit the wholesalers, having roped in another friend to help with her car. By 9am we were at the church with two carloads of food and essentials, not knowing if it would just be the three of us standing there all day with a load of food. None of us had ever done this before. Although El has experience working with immigrants and asylum seekers in other areas, we couldn't have been more wrong. Through the networks El had formed over the previous 48 hours, and organizations started sending us addresses of people who needed food. Volunteers kept arriving. People flowed in with donations of food and money and essentials. By the afternoon, people were dropping stuff in, taking photos of our board that showed items we were low in and then going shopping to get those items specifically. Hundreds of food parcels were packed up. Need one for a family of five went to call across the hall as El coordinated everything that needed to go out. What ages of the children do they need nappies? Came a reply without fail. Everybody just pitched in with whatever was needed to be done. Others dealt with people who came in themselves and needed help. Drivers sent from other small charities arrived to collect parcels for people they were helping. I found myself managing the stock, running to the shop and the wholesalers time and time again to fill up items we couldn't keep up with. Basics like oil and sugar, flour, rice, pasta, soap, sanitary products. Nappies. The list was endless, as was the number of people we were trying to help. For three days, people who had never met before stood side by side sorting food parcels. Strangers took strangers into their car and into their homes. Is this definitely. Halal was desperately Googled by a lot of white people. I've lost count of the amount of people I've met over the last week, but I know it's more than I would usually meet in a year. To be fair, I'm not actually that social. But it was still a lot of people. I don't think I got the names of half of the ones I worked alongside in that pop up food bank that my partner seemed to magic out of thin air using the relationship she'd built up through her job. But it didn't matter. There wasn't time for small talk. It was more. Hello. Thank you for helping. Pass me some cooking oil, please. Are we out of deodorant again? That's not to say there was no bonding. When you share an intense experience like that, under the weight of emotions we were working with, there's a connection built. There was a sense of community that I've never experienced before and given the circumstances, I sincerely hope to never experience again. But that seems unlikely. In that church hall where we ran the food bank, nobody needed to be told what to do. There was no induction or even delegation of rules. For three days. People turned up and they found themselves something to do. And I don't know if it will surprise you because it shouldn't, but there were many migrants and refugees who turned up to help themselves. One woman came because she was in need of food for herself, but she asked if she could take some extra to make meals for others. Within two hours, we had 30 contains of home cooked halal curry to deliver to homes. Thanks to her work. I'm not sure I've ever been able to truly define what love or selflessness or solidarity mean, but I'm pretty sure that's what it looks like. This was not work being done by professional charities or organizations. That's not to say they weren't doing anything, far from it. But I want to take a moment to press upon you that this was everyday people figuring it out together, many of whom had never done anything like this before. WhatsApp groups were created, phone numbers shared and Google Doc databases thrown together across the city. Volunteers together and apart. Does anyone have clues for a baby? Can someone drive a lady to an appointment tomorrow at 10am? Resources were shared across makeshift donation centres. If one centre had run out of diapers. Another was sharing their supply. Volunteers drove from centers to shops to homes, trying to find what was required. It was beautiful chaos and it worked. Nobody had to be there. Almost all the volunteers had arrived through word of mouth. I don't think I saw one single social media post or advert calling out for help, apart from the one I posted on our last day. Help just came. Like me, many of the volunteers felt compelled to do something. Sitting at home beyond the locked door and watching. He had filled the city via livestream just wasn't cutting it anymore. One volunteer told me that when the violence erupted, they simply couldn't get the affected people out of her head. They took Friday afternoon off work to deliver food and essential supplies to families who were too afraid to leave their homes. More than anything, she said, she wanted to show the people of Belfast. Kerr and newcomers to our city are welcome. At a time when fear and uncertainty was affecting so many families, it felt important to her to offer practical support and remind people that they were not alone. The work people have been doing and are still doing is not without risk. I spoke earlier of fear. There's a dark rumour that Northern Ireland has the best knee surgeons in the world due to the paramilitary's favourite replenishment style of kneecapping, where they place a gun to the back of your knee and pull the trigger, blowing out the front. If you live in a community run by the Pars and you piss them off, you're going to know about might be a brick through your window, graffiti on your door, or a visit from the local police to tell you they would strongly advise you leave the premises and find somewhere else to live. For many community volunteers, this was a case of heart over mind. They were driving into loyalist strongholds that had been rioting just hours before to deliver food to the very people that had been targeted. But their compassion for those sitting hungry, tired and scared outweighed the fear they felt for their own safety. Many of the volunteers who helped will never tell their neighbors what they did. They may never tell anyone about it. Drivers arrive back to the hall with stories of families sitting in the dark with no electric in the meter, of mothers hiding in the back room by the door with their babies in their arms, ready to run should a flaming bottle come through the window. If you've wondered for a moment what kept us motivated, now you know. Some volunteers sprung into action from the first moment, and some are still going. There are still people from ethnic minority communities in great need. I cannot imagine the fear they're still living in but why was it left of the people to take action? I've heard that question asked several times during the last week. It's hard to know. Many people are rightly wondering where their government was in all this. Where are our politicians? Yes, some get on their podiums from time to time to condemn the violence. But if it wasn't for the community on the ground and the wonderful, generous people who donated money, all of those people that we helped would still be sitting there hungry, tired and scared even more than they are now. I know that here on the ground we're putting together a contingency plan so that we're ready to spring in the action should this happen once more. And we've done that without any of the resources at the disposal of the government, albeit in our own small way. So why, after so many summers of this happening, do we know nothing of any government plan? If there was any sort of plan, surely we would be seeing it in action by now. The sad reality is this is likely going to happen again, probably this very summer. We have a lot of problems and very little solution. How do we guarantee housing that's safe in a city that's littered with heat? How do we say to people, we've given you a food parcel with a week's worth of food, but next week you're going to have to sort it out yourself and go to the shop. Next week you're going to have to walk past your neighbor's smashed windows and the graffiti send Muslims out. Next week you're going to have to walk past the house of that loyalist who insists on calling you slurs every time he sees you. Even as I'm recording this, there are new calls for so called protests over the next few days. There's a rumor a non white man was arrested for trying to break into someone's house. I'm not being coy by saying non white. That's the base level of racism we're currently operating with here. And an incident like that is enough to set this all off again. For the rest of the summer, eyes on both sides of the immigration argument will skim over news articles searching for a race or nationality to be mentioned. I cannot imagine how it feels to be a member of an ethnic minority and be on tenterhooks hoping and praying someone of color does not commit a crime. You may be forgiven for thinking that we have absolutely no other crimes occurring on a daily basis, especially none committed by white people. Of course we do. They're the majority. We have one of the highest rates of violence against women and girls in the whole of Europe. Since 2020, 30 women have been violently killed by a man, a local man. Did they riot then? I'll give you two guesses. Our community action was not enough. That's the sad reality. What does some toilet roll and a few vegetables matter when someone's car has been burnt out? How does a bag of rice compensate for having to leave your home? It just doesn't. But maybe it will bring a small bit of hope. When we decided we were going to do something to help, that's all we started with. Hope. And now, a week later, after thousands of pounds worth of food, electric vouchers, phones, SIM cards, blankets and pajamas have passed in and out of our doors into the homes and emergency accommodation across Belfast, it's all we're left with. Hope that we helped. Hope that we won't ever have to do it again. As one recipient of financial help put it, the real value is not in the amount, it's the kindness, humanity and compassion behind it. At the very start of this podcast, I told you Belfast is a beautiful city, rich in culture and history. But to borrow the wonderful words of that recipient, I think it's also a city rich in kindness, humanity and compassion. It is a city that has shown it can and will come together when it really matters, even if you can't always see it. That's the real face of Belfast. I want to say thank you. Thank you to everyone who I met but never got the names off, the people I'd never have met. And I hope I don't have to meet again. Thank you to everyone who donated from across the world. That support meant everything to us and allowed us to help those who needed it the most. And I also want to say thank you to the people here in Belfast and Northern Ireland who've been the most affected by these riots. To the immigrants, the refugees and the asylum seekers. Thank you for coming here, for adding to a lot of communities and for becoming our community. We are the real community of Belfast and we are nothing without you.
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Visit Wells Fargo.comActiveCash terms apply. Welcome to It Could Happen Here, a podcast that is often about being trans in America and living under a regime that is actively hostile to our mere existence. I'm your host, Mia Wong, and today we're going to take a somewhat broad view and look at what it means to be trans in America from a class standpoint. Now, I think if you are trans, you are, at least broadly speaking, not a capitalist in the sense of you do not own the means of production. You are not the bourgeoisie. There are so few of us at all who can be said to own the means of production. We are all almost entirely as a class, like some kind of worker or another. But there was a lot of specificity to the specific trans experience of class and where we fit into the broader American class structure that I want to talk about today. And I want to simultaneously get people an actual understanding in one place of just kind of the outskirts of how bad it is, but then also talk about how good it is isn't maybe the right term, but want to give people a sense of what this class position means for our place and ability to fight back. Because that is also a critically important part of not just being trans, but a critically important part of every leftist and liberation movements in the US for the past decade has been longer than a decade. Like two decades has been us. And obviously there have been a lot of trans people who are involved in a bunch of shit before then. But the extent to which trans people have been involved and have been central to every social movement you've ever heard of in the modern era is exceptional. And I want to talk about why that is. I want to start talking about why that is by looking at some of the data that we have on what it's like to be trans in the us and this is one of the things that's very difficult when you're writing about trans people, because, you know, we all have our Experience of transness. And anyone who's tried to get trans healthcare, I think, is aware that there is so much research that has just not been done about us. This is medical research on, like, the effects of specific, like hormone regimens and like, what kinds of medicines do window to help and what the effects are. A lot of the information that you do get from doctors is based on really, really old studies that aren't applicable to what actually exists. And this is also true when you're trying to look at economic data where there just aren't that many studies of what it's like for trans people in the US and the ones that do exist. And there are people who have done some, they're very reliant on data sets that are not specifically designed to be of trans people. And that's a problem because a lot of what you end up with, and the reason why, like, there are some things that I've read that are just not going to be in this episode, is that they are very reliant on things like, okay, we know this person has gender markers, have changed or their names have changed, and that's fine, kind of if you want to sort of get a sense of what's going on. But like the percentage of trans people, the sort of demographics of trans people who have officially changed their gender markers is not reflective of trans people in general. So we're going to be using a lot of data in this from what's called the U.S. trans Survey. It's USTS. It's run by advocates for trans equality and God fucking bless them, these people are doing the transgenders work. It's an invaluable resource. I don't know of a better sort of repository of information about trans people that has been collected. So these surveys are run fairly infrequently. There was one in 2015 and one in 2022, but in the 2022 one, they got 92,000 trans and non binary respondents, which is unbelievable. That is a staggering sample size. But the information they got from it is in a lot of ways extremely bleak. I mean, you know, you can look at the positive stuff, which is that, yeah, people who transitioned say that, yeah, their lives are happier now. They transitions like, they like transitioning. It's good. It's. I don't know, do the thing. It will make you happier. However, comma, the economic numbers. Jesus Christ. Oh, boy, oh, boy. Now, as I've said, right, the people who work on the US Trans survey, they do astonishing work, but as with all trans people, they're doing astonishing work with not that many resources, and it takes them a long time to put their studies together. So, again, the information that we're using is from 2022. So this means a couple of things. One, this is during the Biden administration, right? A regime that is significantly less hostile to trans people than this current one. Even though there was a bunch of bad shit going on then, some of it done by the Biden administration. Dear God. Is Trump administration significantly, significantly more hostile to trans people? So the conditions that we're seeing now are going to be worse than the ones that we have data for. So all of the numbers I'm about to tell you about poverty rates and unemployment and homelessness, it's gotten worse. The second thing is when the US Trans survey writes reports, I mean, they released recently. Yeah, they released in June, Health and well Being, a report of the 2022 U.S. transgender Survey. It is 110 pages long. So they do very, very good and detailed work. However, what that means is that we still, for example, don't have, like, a granular economic report, and we don't have just the full report that they write on this stuff. And we also don't have really the sort of granular reports that they had from the 2015 numbers on the experience of trans people of different races. So those are sort of what I would say are the limits going into this that we have. However, what we do have from the Early Insights report is just horrifying. So one of the sort of defining conditions of being trans is dispossession. And you can look at dispossession in a whole bunch of different ways. You can look at, for example, the poverty rate. The poverty rate from the US trans survey among trans people is 34%. The American poverty rate is 12%. So that's almost three times higher than the general population's poverty rate. And 34% is really bad.
James Stout
Right.
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Even looking at other demographics and other poverty rates, that's really, really, really bad. The trans unemployment rate is, I think, in some ways, even worse. The US trans unemployment rate is 18%. The US unemployment rate in general in 2022 was 3.6%. So let's try to get an understanding of what it means. Unemployment rate is a weird number. There are some groups of people. It doesn't count in terms of people who have stopped looking for work. Right. But to put this into perspective, during the peak of the lockdowns in 2020, the unemployment rate in the US was 14%, and that was the highest. It's been in ages for trans people, it's 18%. So if you are trans in America, right, trying to find a job, it is worse than it was for everyone during the lockdowns. 18% unemployment is like 1937, early 1938, Great Depression levels of unemployment. It's almost one in five people. And again, these are the numbers from 2022 between the Biden administration when the situation was better for trans people. We don't have more recent numbers for the US at sort of any kind of scale. And even back then, four years ago, when things were better for us and the economy in general was running a little bit better, it was again, 1938, Great Depression levels for just a regular trans person, right? This has a really, really broad array of effects, right, in terms of, you know, just the experience of the world that you have if you are trans because you are fundamentally living in a different world than an economic world than cis people do. Again, the cis people's unemployment rate in 2022 was like 3.6%. And yours is 18. You are living through the Great Depression and they are living through a normal economy. And that means that just fundamentally, from a class position, you have a different experience of reality than they do. You are living in something that is not the same as theirs. I also want to talk about homelessness numbers because, you know, queer homelessness has always been really, really bad for reasons that kind of obvious reasons that we'll get into here. But it's also related to, for example, the unemployment rate and the poverty rate because, you know, having an apartment or just any place to stay is expensive. We got a report recently that was a joint effort between advocates for trans equality and the national alliance to End Homelessness, who did a report using the USTs data. And they, they talked about how 30% of trans people have experienced homelessness in their lifetime. For Americans, it's about 4%. For Americans at large, right? You know, just like cis Americans in general, it's about 4%. So that is a homelessness rate of eight times the rate of the general population. And again, that is the 2022 numbers, which are now worse. And this is something that I think is borne out by if you are around any, like, I mean, not even working class trans people. If you're just around trans people in general, you have met people who have been homeless, right? Like, you're just constantly around people who have been homeless. And this is one of, I think the defining elements of what being a trans worker is, is that the level of precarity is so great. And the odds that through some kind of employment discrimination or just some bullshit happening with your employer or just like, I don't know, the employer is doing layoffs, it is so, so easy to move back and forth between having an apartment and being on the street in a way that to some extent the general American population has. But again, the rate for the general population, if they've been homeless in their lifetime, is 4%. And for trans people it's 30%. And this rate, this 30% rate of trans people who've experienced homelessness. And also, by the way, a lot of the people who have experienced this have experienced it more than once. And you know, there's a lot of just people who are trans who are homeless right the fuck. Now this is why I say, like, put a trans girl on your couch at the end of every executive disorder. Because there aren't like widespread solutions to this right now. It's something that we have to figure out for ourselves and we just don't have the resources to do it. Now this discrimination is intensified both in the housing market, right, by just general anti transdiscrimination by poverty and this, this is also sort of a cyclical process, right? Like, part of what's difficult about me writing this is that I, like, I haven't been homeless and I haven't been a sex worker, which means that I'm missing experiences that a lot of trans workers have. What I can say about it is like, obviously being homeless makes it harder to get even just an apartment afterwards, because it has a whole bunch of negative effects on a whole bunch of shit. Including, for example, like, it like, you know, obviously like fucks with your credit score. It fucks with just like, oh, do you have like previous landlord references that you can use? There's a whole bunch of different sort of spiraling effects of this. There's obviously, there's health effects, there's safety effects. So what you're facing is, on the one hand, you are squeezed out through discrimination of the workplace, through the fact that also, and this is another fairly common thing, trans people make significantly less money than CIS people do, just on the dollar. It's way, way worse. So you have lower income when you get a job, you have less access to jobs, and you also just have housing market discrimination. And also, trans people have weaker access to family support networks that function in a way to subsidize social reproduction for CIS people. A lot of trans people's families and parents don't accept them and they just get kicked out or if they are able to access resources from them, it's under conditions of extreme violence. And that has a massive effect on homelessness. Right? Like a whole bunch of homelessness is caused by queer youth getting kicked out of their houses. And because you also don't have places you can go back to, right? You don't have the kind of like, family, like, familial safety net that a lot of CIS people have access to and you're, you're less likely to have access to it. This intensifies the rate of homelessness and it intensifies the consequences of it and how difficult it is to get out. All right, we are going to go to ads and then we are going to come back and talk about some more bleak shit. But also, this is not just the Things Fall Apart podcast. This is also the Put it back Together but in a Better Way podcast. We are back. Now. There's another factor, something that's becoming increasingly a factor of trans life that has existed obviously for a long time, but has been enormously exacerbated by the current regime. And that is the trans refugee population. There is in the US a massive trans refugee population. These are, you know, what you would call, I guess, internally displaced people. The Movement Advancement Project, or MAP, did a study in 2024, 2025, looking at trans people who moved from one state to another because of anti trans legislation. Right. And they found, and this is just between November and June of 2025, they found that 9% of all trans people had moved in just that eight month span, right? That's 9% of trans people had. Just, just in the span between November 2024 and June 2025, right? Just in that span, 9% of the trans population moved. That's over 1% of the total trans population moving per month to a different state specifically because of anti trans legislation.
Garrison Davis
Right? That's really bad.
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If you look at sort of the general population of trans people in the US that's 400,000 people in just that eight month span. That's the entire population of Cleveland, Ohio, and then 35,000 more people, right? I mean, that's like obviously it's not like the complete metropolitan. It's like the actual just like city of Cleveland.
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But like again, that's in the span of eight months, we moved the entire city of Cleveland. And it's definitely gotten, almost certainly has like there have been more people who have moved, you know, since June 2025, because anti trans discrimination, anti trans crackdowns from the state have only gotten worse. This is a refugee crisis, right? And the things that they're fleeing from are also things that are just, you know, conditions of what, of what being trans is in the U.S. right, which they're fleeing restrictions on healthcare access from the national level, from the state level, also as we talked about, like from religious hospitals who can also just like, even if, even if you're in a so called blue state, can just be like, fuck you, eat shit, we're not going to give you health care. They're fleeing. Bathroom bills, they're fleeing. Don't say gay bans. They're fleeing also just an increase in social violence, right? Because the thing that this all legitimizes, right, that anti trans rhetoric legitimizes, that anti trans state action legitimizes, is just getting assaulted for being trans. A thing that has always happened but is now happening more than it did before. And yeah, that, that not being, you know, assaulted and this happens at work, this happens like coming back from work. This happens in other places too is also, you know, a part of the condition of your labor when you combine the fact that trans people were already, and I want to point this out, right, the homelessness rates, you know, the 18% rate of unemployment, the 30% rate of experiencing homelessness in their lifetime, right? That was before the refugee crisis like really, really intensified into what we're seeing now, right? It was not as bad in 2022 as it is right now, when again, like we were seeing for a period of eight months, we were seeing over a percent of the population per month, the trans population per month moving. All of the unemployment numbers and the poverty numbers and the homelessness numbers, those were all pre, the sort of real intensification after the election of the mass migration and refugee sort of status of trans people. And this has had an effect on trans people's class position, right? What this has created in the places that trans people are fleeing to. And this is places like Portland, this is places like New York, like la. There's a lot of sort of like regional centers too, right? I mean, obviously Chicago is at the other sort of big one. But you know, they're like places like Missoula, right? For people who don't know what Missoula. Missoula is a city with like a pretty large university population in Montana that has a fairly large trans population because it collects trans people from a whole bunch of the region around it. And there's also a bunch of people who go there for college and realize that they're trans. But what this has done Right. Is it's forced a bunch of people to move, leave their homes, which is expensive, right? And then you have to find jobs in these new places. And it's already really difficult to find jobs in the places that you were. And so what you're facing just in general, right, is you're facing this trade off between can you survive in the place that you are with the life that you have, or do you need to pick up and go to another place where it's less illegal for you to be yourself? And what this has created is this sort of mass underclass of trans workers that is especially large in places with large refugee populations. These workers are of any subgroup that like trans people are in. The trans people in that group are the most marginalized and the most just absolutely fucked of everyone in that group, right? You know, you can look at like the violence rates for black trans women particularly is appalling, right? There's a lot of disabled trans people and among disabled people who already have it really, really bad in the US right? Like you look at disabled trans people and it's. It's even fucking harder. That's especially an issue with, you know, something that's been affecting a whole bunch of people, which is the Medicaid work requirements, which have been just unbelievably harmful to a whole bunch of disabled trans people who suddenly are being like forced to work, who just can't, right? And what this has created is this incredibly, incredibly precarious class of workers. All over the spectrum of the working class, right? There are a lot of trans people, unbelievable number of trans people working, service jobs. And like the lower end and shittier the service job, the more likely you are to find trans people there. There's always been a lot of trans sex work because a lot of times that's the thing you can do, right? And this is sex work across the entire spectrum of what sex work is of sort of like greater and lesser degrees of risk. This also is the thing that contributes to the criminalization of trans people because there's a bunch of criminalization of sex workers in ways that gets trans people targeted by the police and subject to even more police violence than they are already, which they are also subject to extraordinary amounts of police violence. I don't know, every trans person has seen some shit. But I'm not just saying that this to be like the trans class position is bad, but what this has done is create this class of trans workers that moves between parts of the class that don't have contact with each other. Very much. There's a whole bunch of movement between being housed and being unhoused in a way that is at a significantly broader scale than it is for the rest of the rest of the population. There are a whole bunch of different kinds of trans workers who are able to unify around being trans, who have contact with each other and who organize with each other and who fight, you know, alongside each other, right, from different parts of the working class that don't often particularly get along. And in particular in terms of like, you know, service workers and unhoused people, there is a really systemic effort by the state and by the right and even by the Democratic Party too, to pit these groups against each other. But also with trans people, it's like, well, I don't know. Like, there's also an extent to which, yeah, like if you're a trans person, you are, you know, X number of days away from being that person on the street. And so this has created a fairly unique class position, right, of unbelievable precarity, you know, state enforced precarity. It's obviously not the only right class position in the US of like legally mandated precarity. You can look at undocumented workers who have even more genocidal shit happening against them right now in terms of just like. Yeah, no, yeah, there's just ice rounding people up. But what has been produced here is this incredibly precarious class of like down the remobile workers. And it's also worth noting that like, to some extent this is a deliberate strategy of the right. Like, this is, this is what the right wants. You know, if you look at like the rise of neoliberalism, you look at Reagan, you look at Thatcher, right? One of the big things that they are about in this era is control over gender and control over social reproduction. This is one of the things, you know, if you look at how these people come to power, they come to power on the back of very, very right wing social movements, right, that are, you know, in the US it's like the, you know, the sort of like the rise of the evangelicals who. One of their big things, right, One of the things that they're interested in is suppressing queer people specifically.
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But you can look at this in other contexts too, where you can look at China in the 1980s as the beginning of the reform period is starting. When you start to see the return of capitalism to China in 1980, you get the one child policy. And we're going on a little bit of a tangent here, but something I don't think is really acknowledged in the way that people think and talk about China, which is that the one child policy was not a thing from the Maoist period. This was the reformers, right? Deng Xiaoping is in power when this goes into effect, right? And it's when it's like written into the constitution, like, this is Deng Xiaoping. This is, this is, you know, the sort of pro capitalist reform movement that is imposing the one child policy on people in the U.S. you also have like, restrictions on abortion are sort of part and parcel of the right's attempt to expand capitalism. Because control over the family, control over, you know, social reproduction, the production of new workers, and the ability for people to continue to be workers for the capitalist system, that's something that is important to them, right? And the maintenance of right wing gender roles is something that is important for them to be able to reproduce their ideology and also reproduce capital in general. And so they came after us. But on the other hand, right, you know, as much as we have been targeted by the right, trans people have also, as I sort of talked about a bit at the beginning of this episode, been overrepresented in just every leftist social movement for the past like two decades, right? Everything from like union organizing to mutual aid, to like, who shows up in the street to protest, to like blocks from like Occupy to the uprising, right? There are trans people in all of these social movements in extremely key roles. The only real way for this not to happen is when trans people are specifically driven out of these movements. And that happens a lot, right? Like that's, that's also like one of the things that you experience being, being a trans worker is that, you know, people who are transphobic in the left will run you out of the shit that you're doing. Usually I say usually because sometimes they are. You are explicitly pushed out for being trans. Usually there's like some other excuse that's, that's found to do this. But, you know, even with how much, you know, like persecution of trans people there have been in these social movements, like trans people still show up for it, right? You know, to take just sort of a random example, right? Friend of the show Vicky Osterweil was the facilitator of the first Occupy meeting in New York, right? We're just, we're just always there. We have always been there. We've been there everywhere. And we will continue to be there in all. In all of these movements. In the anti ice movements, in. I say movements because like, this is true in like the 2018 anti ice movement. It's true in the current anti ice movement and it was, it was true in the student encampments in 2024. And there's a reason for this. And the reason for this to a large extent is that very precarity, right? If you were going to be trans, especially now, you have no choice but to fight. If you want to exist, if you want to have access to your healthcare, if you want to be upgraded to the status of mere proletarians, if you want your life to just merely, merely be the life of a CIS worker which is significantly less fucked than your life is, you have to fight. And this is something that is also spread to some extent by sort of trans culture, I would say broadly, but also just like the kind of social groups that form. And also it's spread. And this is particularly something you see in unions a lot, right? We've talked a lot on the show about trans people being overrepresented in unions. It's like, well, we're overrepresented in unions because we're workers, right? And this is in some sense the potential of what the right has wrought, right, which is that they have created this extremely large population of trans service workers and trans refugees who have nothing to lose but their chains and a world to win. Slightly elsewhere in the manifesto, like Marx writes, what the bourgeoisie produce above all are its own gravediggers. And if you look out at the world in 2026, right, you can see the graves being dug. The question is, who is going to be buried there? The capitalist class would very much like it to be us. I for one thing, don't want to fucking be buried in a mass grave. And if we're going to put something in that grave, better it be the class system itself. And that's a world worth fighting for. A world where there are no gravediggers, where there are no mass graves, where the state and the landlord don't throw you on the street in the night, where you can live in your community and not be run out, where you have your healthcare and you are able to be the person that you want to be. And that world is winnable. All that is left is to fight for it.
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Garrison Davis
Welcome to It Could Happen Here, a show about things falling apart and putting them back together. I'm Garrison Davis. This episode is on probably the most controversial midterm election happening this year. The U.S. senate race in Maine, where the new Democratic nominee Graham Platner is running to end the 30 year reign of Republican Senator Susan Collins, who brands herself as a moderate independent leaning Republican but has consistently backed Trump's unpopular policies while holding on to power. Beating Susan Collins would be a key part of taking the Senate away from the Republicans. Much of the media coverage and discussion of this election has focused on the scandals relating to Graham Platner's personal life, with very little on the real relations of his campaign, the political platform he's running on, the relations between him and organized labor, unions and working class Mainers. Platter's campaign has attracted overwhelming support from voters in Maine despite the series of well reported personal controversies, the Nazi linked tattoo he got as a Marine, old offensive Reddit posts, marital issues, relationship issues, and an ex girlfriend who worked at the Heritage foundation accusing him of quote unquote disturbing behavior after he got out of the military. Mainstream outlets have covered those at length. This episode I'm going to narrowly focus on the relations of Graham Platner's campaign. I'll start by going over his campaign platform, then his ties to labor unions and community organizing, and finally how those ties set up his campaign for massive success in the Democratic primary. Platner calls himself a New Deal Democrat and like Bernie Sanders, believes we need a quote unquote political revolution in this country. He wants to shake up the Supreme Court, increase the federal minimum wage and ban billionaires from buying elections. His platform is also designed to address the concerns of working class Mainers like declining manufacturing, decaying infrastructure, closing hospitals and spiking energy costs. Platner supports universal healthcare and ultimately wants to pass a Medicare for all type system while pointing to how the country could build on the VA model, saying, quote, the level of health care I've received with Maine's excellent VA system should be available to all. Unquote. We all know that going up against for profit health care will be a hard battle to win. His platform contains a list of policies that will start to break up health care monopolies and crack down on pharma corruption, like banning insurance companies and private equity from buying medical practices and hospitals and banning prescription drug advertising. Platinum says he wants to expand Medicare and Medicaid's power to negotiate drug prices, allow the import of low cost prescription drugs from other markets and ban stock buybacks and impose a cap on executive compensation for pharmaceutical companies that receive public funds. His platform calls to direct federal funds to reopen recently closed hospitals, birthing units and clinics, establish a national public drug manufacturing sector, make Medicare telehealth coverage permanent, reverse doge cuts to the va, national legislation mandating a safe level of nurse to patient ratios to counter chronic hospital understaffing and to open a new medical school at University Maine. A large part of Grand Platner's policy platform is focused on protecting democracy by keeping money out of elections. Democracy cannot function when wealth buys power. Since Citizens United, unlimited dark money has flooded American politics, giving billionaires and special interests enormous influence. Platner wants to overturn Citizens United either through a constitutional amendment or a different Supreme Court. More on that later. He also campaigns on banning congressional stock trading and advocates that former members of Congress should be banned from congressional lobbying, quote, public service should never become a pathway to private affluence, unquote. Platner supports mandating congressional term limits, two for the Senate and six for the House. And at a minimum, returning to the talking filibuster, his platform also includes congressional representation for everyone in the country, quote, unquote including in places like Washington, D.C. as for the Supreme Court, Platner wants to pack the cord and end lifetime appointments with staggered time limited terms. He's also in favor of impeaching justices on the Supreme Court by quote, holding the court to the same ethics standards we hold all other federal judges, unquote. Ghana supports passing a constitutional amendment to quote, prohibit partisan gerrymandering and require independent redistricting commissions to draw fair maps, which he says would keep elected officials more accountable and make voters voices stronger. To combat anti labor legislation like the Taft Hartley Act, Platner wants to strengthen our quote unquote right to organize by passing the Protecting the Right to Organize act, which would crack down on union busting by issuing significant penalties and override right to work laws. Plattner also supports creating a union job requirement for all jobs funded by federal dollars. In interviews, Platner's advocated for something akin to FDR's proposed economic bill of Rights. Quote in order to democratize our economy, we need to provide as rights things like housing, health care, education and collective bargaining, unquote. He also wants to pass the Equal rights Amendment to protect against sex discrimination while addressing how communities of color, LGBTQ Americans and immigrants have had the legal protections that were meant to guarantee them equal rights, quote, turned against them instead of working in their defense. We need a 21st century constitution that restores the original purpose of these guarantees. Equal rights under the law protected for every person in this country, unquote. His policy platform includes passing federal LGBTQ anti discrimination legislation and calls out Democrats for, quote, unquote, peddling soft bigotry to pander to Trump voters. One of Platner's most in depth policy pages is for his billionaire tax plan, which he says represents, quote, the bare minimum of what I believe we should expect a Democratic Congress under our next president to pass. Platner believes that income taxes alone, quote, cannot address the massive concentration of wealth in the hands of a few. Only a tax on wealth can do so. He promotes a 5 to 6% annual tax on wealth over $1 billion, as well as taxing capital gains the same as wages, quadrupling taxes on stock buybacks and taxing excessive CEO pay to pressure corporations to reinvest profits back into their workers through higher wages, better benefits and long term security. On the campaign trail, he's talked with voters about removing the $167,000 a year income tax cap on Social Security payments so that the ultra rich contribute to the same payroll tax rate as the rest of us. He also wants to restore the enhanced child tax credit. Platner's tax plan doesn't just include raising taxes on the rich, but closing loopholes mega corporations use to avoid paying taxes altogether. Quote. By closing corporate loopholes, we ensure that the giants who profit off our shared infrastructure, courts and educated workforce finally pay their way and that we can sustain investments into schools, safety and services every community depends on. One way to stop corporate tax dodging is by ending worker misclassification, I.e. hiring workers as, quote, unquote, contractors to deprive workers of labor protections and health care while using this misclassification to dodge payroll taxes. Instead of foreign policy dominated by trade agreements, that exploits workers and promotes endless war, Platner's platform calls for a new era of American, quote, unquote economic diplomacy that takes on billionaires who, quote, defund the societies that made their fortunes possible simply by shuffling money into an offshore account, unquote. He advocates a global billionaire minimum tax to, quote, ensure that extreme wealth is finally reinvested in the public good, regardless of where it is parked, unquote. This is based on a proposal by the EU's Internal Tax Observatory. To accomplish this, Platner says we would need to overhaul global economic institutions, use our leverage as a trading partner and use international economic diplomacy to target concentrated wealth and coordinate taxes and sanctions on ultra wealthy individuals, quote, rather than relying on broad trade sanctions that harm ordinary people. He also wants to close an inheritance tax loophole by stopping billionaires from passing down their wealth to their heirs tax free through buying appreciating assets, borrowing against those assets and then passing down the assets after they die while avoiding any taxes on the increased asset value. Platner says time for those gains to be taxed too. The tax plan also includes ways to lower taxes for working and middle class Americans. Quote, if we tax millionaires and billionaires at fair levels, we can provide a quote unquote cost of living exemption from federal income tax up to a reasonable threshold for working and middle class Americans. If we stop multinational monopolies from dodging their taxes, we can cut taxes on the small businesses and self employed individuals who are struggling to survive. The federal government could adopt a property tax fairness credit similar to Maine's that ensures low and middle income families do not pay more than 4% of their income in property taxes by providing a refundable credit including a fair calculation of rent attributable to property taxes so that renters are treated equitably, unquote. Something we've previously reported on is Platner's opposition to what he calls regressive gas and diesel taxes. Quote Relying on fossil fuels to fund basic infrastructure does not make sense if we want to reduce fossil fuels used in transportation. Instead, public goods should be financed by progressive general revenues as outlined in my end billionaire welfare tax plan unquote. Platner notes that an extra $275 billion has supplemented the tax based Highway Trust Fund since 2008. Platner also supports Ro Khanna's big oil windfall profits bill that would implement a per barrel tax equal to 50% of the difference between the current oil price and the price of per barrel last year. And he promotes a national electricity rate freeze by quote providing direct low cost energy infrastructure financing to any state that freezes or lowers electricity rates for four years funded by the windfall profits tax and repurposed federal fossil fuel subsidies, unquote. His platform states that the most effective national security project would be a huge build out of domestic clean energy production. Rather than relying on private equity to invest in new clean energy, Platner supports a national energy infrastructure fund that would issue debt backed by the federal government and, quote, partner with state lending authorities to provide cheap capital directly to utilities, rural electric cooperatives, public energy authorities and other developers of low risk clean energy projects, unquote. Platner believes this fund could cut Wall street speculators out of the equation, help build at scale with union jobs, lower costs and pass savings on to ratepayers. He also wants the Department of Energy to use the Defense Production act to revive domestic manufacturing to procure and stockpile critical clean energy technologies. His platform also includes creating a strategic fuel reserve for farmers and fisheries, a national whole home repair program to assist in weatherization, electrification and heat pumps to lower household bills by partnering with public housing authorities, county programs and local trade unions, as well as reinvesting the money funneled to big defense contractors back into shipbuilding. On the campaign trail, Platner talks a lot about being a veteran and the various ways that's informed his politics. He's promised to, quote, never send Americans into a pointless war. And to solve the issue of a president effectively being able to declare wars but just not call them wars, Platner has called on Congress to reclaim its war powers and other authorities over the executive. Quote, we must pass a new War Powers Act. The same must go for ending the executive's intrusion on congressional powers of the purse, taxation and other legislative prerogatives. We'll talk more about Graham Platner's campaign platform and ties to organized labor after this ad break. Welcome back to It Could Happen Here. Democratic nominee for U.S. senate Graham Platner was interviewed by the New York Times and said that since the end of the Second World War, American foreign policy, our wars and interventions haven't been good for workers or American families. Quote, they often are very good for corporate interests, defense contractors, and people in places of political power who want to use war as a mechanism of protecting their political power, unquote. Platner told the Times that he has a complicated relationship with the military where he's still proud of being a Marine but is ashamed of what's happened in the Middle east and says that the policies and systems orchestrating those wars are, quote, unquote, flawed from the top down and that he considers himself anti war.
Graham Platner
But it doesn't matter if you try your best inside of a flawed policy in a flawed system. It's flawed from the top down. It's bound to fail. It's bound to bring an immense amount of violence upon people who in no way, shape or form are deserving it of it. Because, I mean, we destroyed Iraq and we destroyed Afghanistan and all the suffering, all the killing, all the dying, all the displacement, all of it was, was we brought that. We, the United States did that. And that I'm ashamed of. The anger that I feel is for the people that sent me who are frankly still the same people who are sending people off right now to go be in harm's way so we can start and have this stupid war with Iran.
Garrison Davis
Platner has been clear that Israel is committing a genocide in Gaza and that the US has aided in the genocide of Palestinians. Quote, it is the moral question of our time and we failed as a nation. Platner believes that Israel should not receive any US Tax dollars and has proudly opposed aipac, though he has voiced support for sending aid to Ukraine. Platner calls abolishing ICE the quote, unquote, moderate position, and that he supports a path to citizenship, strong border security and a, quote, unquote, and to the mass deportation machine. His policy platform says that, quote, unquote, many multinational corporations have no interest in immigration reform because, quote, they want illegal workers with no rights who they can pay slave wages and abuse at will, unquote. In response to the overturning of Roe v. Wade, which Susan Collins assisted in by voting for Brett Kavanaugh, Platner wants to codify abortion rights and protect privacy rights. His platform states, quote, the Constitution should make clear that Americans have a fundamental right to privacy, including personal medical decisions, control over one's own body and freedom from unjust surveillance. In an age of mass data collection and artificial intelligence, this protection is more important than ever, unquote. Platner certainly leans pro gun. He's taught leftist armed self defense classes and owns AR15s. He doesn't support an assault weapons ban, but did back a referendum to create a red flag law in the state of Maine. Other miscellaneous campaign planks include more funding for the post office, passing the Postal Banking act, developing a federal child care policy for kids under 6, defending Medicare access for people with disabilities, strengthening the Clean Air and Clean Water act, opposing any federal support for private school vouchers, reviving federal support for housing, something like the VA Home Loan program for more Americans, banning hedge funds from buying homes through legislation like the END Hedge Fund Control of American Homes act and legalizing cannabis and clemency for people caught up in the war on drugs. That is a long list of policies, goals and prospective legislation that would be no easy task to enact. Some would mean a fundamental transformation in American politics and the world economy. Platner knows that not everything in his platform can be passed overnight. But says that Democrats need a strategic vision to fight for. Telling the Maine Monitor, I'll be the first one to say that me being in the Senate as the junior senator from Maine is not going to get us Medicare for all. There is this sort of establishment pushback where people are often like, well, you're not going to be able to do that immediately. Like, well, no shit. That's what power building is. That's what a long term plan is. Unquote. In interviews, Platner often talks about his quote, unquote theory of power and how the Democratic Party has, quote, never been able to articulate what it's trying to do. Like, what's the end goal? It never really articulates a clear set of policies to get us there and then never seems to want to wield power to make those policies a reality. Platner told the New York Times that Democratic Party leadership has failed the moment that the party needs new leadership and that Chuck Schumer should be replaced. Of course, candidates can say anything to get elected. We've all seen politicians run on populist platforms only to then serve lobbyists, corporate interests and themselves once in office. Trump himself first ran as a populist outsider, despite being a billionaire senator. John Fetterman also comes to mind, though. The only thing that really made Harvard graduate John Fetterman and quote, unquote, outsider was that he wore a hoodie and had stupid facial hair. Prior to his Senate campaign, he served as mayor of Braddock for 13 years and Lieutenant Governor for four. Fetterman also claims that suffering a stroke, quote, unquote liberated him from quote, unquote progressivism. All this to say John Fetterman and Graham Platner's respective backgrounds are quite different. But obviously, words and promises aren't enough to measure a candidate's worth. One must look deeper at the ties to local communities and organizations that might inform a candidate's political platform and facilitate their ability to run for office. To quote Graham Platner, we need to build political power through getting people like me into the US Senate, into Congress, and we also need to do it while building organizational power outside of the system. There has never been a moment in American history where we've gotten good things just because the institutions or people in power decided to do it. They need to be pressed. I mean, this is honestly why the country has killed the labor movement. We did it on purpose. We did it because the labor movement is the foundation of power that can actually, like, push back against the system, unquote. Graham Platner is only running for Senate because last summer the AFL cio, along with other local labor unions were looking to put up a candidate to run against Susan Collins on a working class platform. In July 2020, five candidate scouts showed up outside Platner's door asking him to run for Senate. Platner says he and his wife told them to, quote, unquote, fuck off. The Scouts, including progressive strategist Daniel Moroff, had learned about Platner from a video he was in a few years ago about community organizing against a corporate Norwegian salmon farm that was trying to move into their bay.
Graham Platner
My daily grind is coming out in the morning cleaning equipment and tying knots and fixing rope and fixing line and fixing boats and cleaning oysters and listening to podcasts. My name is Graham Platner and I live in Sullivan, Maine. The owner of Frenchman Bay Oyster Co. Boy born and raised here in Sullivan. I grew up three houses down from
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the house I currently live in Bangor.
Garrison Davis
Daily News reported that in July Platner spoke with Jason Shedlock, the president of the Maine State Building and Construction Trades Council via Zoom, to, quote, talk about the potential run while working on his oyster boat. About a week after first knocking on his door, the campaign Scouts showed up again, but this time with a detailed plan and the connections to get a campaign up and running. Union's support helped provide resources to shoot a launch video, facilitate small dollar fundraising and get Platner's name in local papers. He had never run for office before, but did serve as the harbor master and chair of the planning board for the town of Sullivan. In terms of Platner's own working class or middle class background, Platner's father was a lawyer in rural Maine and his mom was a small business owner who currently owns a local restaurant. As a kid his family got a financial aid package for a fancy private school in Connecticut, but Platner got himself kicked out after three months and then went back to Maine. After exiting the military, he worked as a bartender while going to University in D.C. dropped out, then worked as a private military contractor for six months at the embassy in Afghanistan. While there, Platner says he got deeply disillusioned with government corruption and the military industrial complex, quit, moved back to Maine, started working at a friend's oyster farm and got into local organizing. In a less reported on a Reddit post made by Graham Platner, he credited late political commentator Michael Brooks with moving him towards left wing working class politics. Around 2019-2020, Platner also made Reddit posts about being an anti fascist. The Senate campaign launched in mid August and in just nine days it raised $1 million with an average donation of $33. 98 of the donations were under $100. During its first week the campaign was attracting 300 volunteers per day. Pretty soon the campaign attracted the attention of Bernie Sanders, who come September invited Platner to speak on his upcoming Fight Oligarchy tour and has continued to campaign with and back Platner. Meanwhile, Governor Janet Mills was recruited by Chuck Schumer to beat Platner in the Democratic primary. From early on in the race, Plattner had received backing from local labor unions beyond the main AFL CIO, Plattner has received endorsements from Ironworkers Local 7, National Nurses United Maine State Nurses Association, American Postal Workers Local 458, the National Postal Mail Handlers Local 301, the Electrical Workers Union Local 2327, the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers, Maine State Council of Building and Construction Trades, North Atlantic States Regional Council of carpenters Carpenters Local 349 and 352 Painters and Allied Trades, DC 35 Massachusetts and Northern New England Labors District Council Millwrights Local 1121 Labourers International Union of North America Local 327-668-976 Teamsters Local 340 and the United Auto Workers, who represents nearly 2, 000 workers in Maine, including marine draftsmen at the Bath Iron Works, non profit employees, workers at the Portland Museum of Art and graduate employees across the University of Maine system. In their endorsement, UAW Region 9A Director Brandon Mancilla said, quote, graham Platner has emerged as a voice for the people of Maine, fed up with the corrupting influence of the oligarchy and money in our politics. More importantly, he's building a mass movement that will not only power his campaign, but will be ready to take on the challenges facing working families in Maine and across the country. Once in office, our members are ready to hit the ground running with Graham's campaign and take back the power for Maine's working class, unquote. Platner has said he wanted this campaign to be an extension of the local community organizing that he and his wife were already engaged in telling the main monitor the campaign is a, quote, organizing strategy first and an electoral strategy second. For the past few years, Platner's organized with a mutual aid and community activist group called Arcadia Action and was named in local news coverage for organizing a protest after Trump was re elected. The protest focused on, quote, the preservation of constitutional rights, support for Ukraine and protecting transgender Mainers, unquote. Platner was also an active member of the Penobscot county chapter of the Maine's People's alliance, the largest quote unquote progressive community action organization in the state, which claims to have more than 32,000 members. As a member of the Maine People's Alliance, Platner Traveled to Washington, D.C. a couple years ago for a march to protest access to health care and since then has been doing grassroots community organizing in Hanock County. According to the organization, the member led board of directors of Maine People's alliance voted unanimously to endorse Graham Platner. To quote the announcement, Maine People's alliance board co chair Gina Morin, they them said, quote, listening to Platner during interviews in town halls, it is clear that he addresses the critical issues affecting our country and specifically Maine. He speaks directly to the reality that the top 1% are hoarding wealth while the middle class and the poor are left to go without. He's also addressed the need to fix these same issues that we have been working on for years, such as health care, affordability, the housing crisis and immigrant rights. His activism drove him to seek this office out of frustration. His values and dedication are what align him with the Maine People's alliance, unquote. The organization said back in February that Platner has been, quote, active and vocal in resisting ice's presence here in Maine and has been calling on our members of Congress to do more to protect everyone in Maine and across the country from ICE's violent, racist tactics, unquote. Maine People's alliance board member Sean Donnelly said, quote, graham names the oligarchy and corporate greed as the true enemies of progress in Washington. And he understands that the only way to defeat them is through grassroots organizing. His personal story of finding purpose through his community and activism has the power to inspire many who may feel angry, disconnected or hopeless about politics. Graham is a talented leader whose values, vision and strategy are aligned with the mission of the Maine People's alliance, unquote. Following the primary, the Planned Parenthood Action Fund endorsed Platner over Susan Collins, who was one of the deciding votes in sending Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court. And last week, the Main Service Employees association, which represents more than 13,000 active and retired public service workers in the state, formally endorsed Graham Platner. So why are these endorsements and community ties important? These relations are what a working class campaign's political platform emerges from. And this community voting block is a mechanism to hold working class candidates accountable to their constituents. Platner has told the New York Times that he's a, quote, firm believer that organized people is the only actual place of power to conflict with organized money. And in our society, money is very organized, unquote. He echoed this sentiment at a campaign rally covered by more perfect union politics
Graham Platner
is about power, and in this society, power is either organized money or it's organized people. And the money is organized. It always has been and it always will be until we organize enough people to pull it back.
Garrison Davis
In May, Platner told Jon Stewart that getting someone like him elected, quote, needs to be in tandem with a fully organized, broad based coalition here in the state of Maine that can put pressure on members of our delegation if need be, because it's not going to be enough to just rely on the systems, unquote. Two days before the primary election, Platner spoke at a town hall about building a Senate office that prioritizes a relationship with labor unions rather than the owners of the industries that labor works in. A Senate office where a worker, labor organizer or civil rights representative should get more face to face time with a senator than any lobbyist.
Graham Platner
I very much believe that we need to connect that kind of local organizing work directly to a Senate office in D.C. so it's something like I used to I have been an organizer with Maine People's alliance before, and I firmly believe that we need closer coordination between community organizations, environmental organizations, frankly, all of the organizing groups around Maine with institutional power, because I do think that that's your history tends to show that you're most successful when outside organizing is working in tandem with institutional power. That tends to be when we get the most significant wins.
Garrison Davis
I'll come back to discuss how the Platner campaign was actually run after this ad break. Welcome back to It Could Happen Here. This past April, one of Platner's former high school classmates, turned journalist named Josh Keefe wrote an article for the Maine Monitor about why Platner's campaign has been so successful in Maine. Platner told his former classmate that the campaign is being run like a community organizing project. This kind of campaign and kind of politics with an organizing focus. This doesn't work if you just run TV ads. My background is in organizing and I want to take that on the road as a candidate. And the only way it ever works is by going out and engaging with people directly. You got to like, not sleep
direct.
Person to person engagement has been the hallmark of Platner's campaign strategy here. Age is certainly playing a factor in the race. Platner is 41. Janet Mills is 78 and Susan Collins is 73. Platner's younger age is not just compelling to voters who want a younger generation of candidates, but it also impacts how he can campaign. Blattner is effectively campaigning full time, making three to six campaign appearances a day while his business partner handles the Oyster Farm. From late September to the early June primary, his campaign held 83 town hall events across the state, pulling in hundreds of people per event and filling out community venues. In comparison, Susan Collins has not held a single public town hall meeting in over 25 years. Janet Mills didn't even release a policy platform until April. Platner told More Perfect Union, quote, people want to hear about the future, people want to hear about your policies, and people also want access to you so they can figure out if you're full of shit or not. Unquote. Considering the smaller size of Maine come the November election, there's a good chance Platner will have spoken face to face with nearly every voter in the state. At these town halls, he often talks about power, how working class power won the New Deal, and how since the 70s, corporate interests have been undermining that power, using money to influence policy. At an event in Freiburg, Maine, Platner said, quote, we are the richest society in the history of humanity. We can have universal health care, we can have universal child care, we can have universal education going from kindergarten all the way through higher education. We can have a tax code that pulls back the wealth that was stolen from the working class of this country for the past 50 years. What we need to do is from the ground up, build power the old fashioned way. This comes from organizing, unquote. Platner's campaign has helped with other local electoral and legislative efforts. And the Main Monitor reported that Platner's events often serve as locations for, quote, food donation drop offs. He is frequently introduced by a local activist who gets to talk about their work. Platner told the main Monitor, quote, we really have to fundamentally understand that no one is coming to save us and the only way to build that power on your own is here in the real world, face to face with your neighbors, building trust in relationships again, unquote. Platners also said that building that kind of outside power is also how to find more people to run for office and gather the resources needed to get them elected to take power. In an interview with Jon Stewart, Platner said that because the U.S. senate is in many ways a uniquely undemocratic institution, quote, set up to be a specific bulwark against working class people to protect the elites. That actually makes it a, quote unquote, unique place of power if candidates with strong ties to working class communities can occupy those seats. Following their historic loss in 2024, the Democratic Party establishment has been in a uniquely weak position, opening up the opportunity to address the issues that have led the party into national irrelevancy. Graham Platner lays blame on the Democrats abandoning the working class. And that doesn't just mean white construction workers, but the actual multicultural, multiracial working class wage workers and those who cannot live off their investments. For the past 40 years, the party has abandoned organized labor and begun catering to upper middle class professionals and has become a party of the elites and Ivy leagues in the United States. There are a lot of people who don't vote based on an ideology they hold, but in response to what's happening in their communities. Hospitals closing, jobs disappearing, groceries and utilities getting more expensive. Why would they vote for a party that says everything is fine, the economy is technically doing great, The Democratic establishment has wagered that voters would rather protect the system rather than change it. And in 2024, that wager was proven wrong. People want change, even if that change is being promised by a billionaire charlatan whose real interest is in serving the upper class and tech companies. But for as many people who decided to vote for Trump, there were many others who saw through the charade, but were so disillusioned by party politics that they chose not to vote at all. Platner's campaign has made itself not just about taking on Trump or even Susan Collins, but a part of a larger seismic shift. The working class reasserting its power and taking back the Democratic Party. To quote the main Monitor, quote, unlike Janet Mills, he's not trying to convince voters he will stand up to Trump. He's trying to start a movement to build a world without the despair and resentment that he believes allows Trump's brand of politics to flourish, unquote. Later, at that event in the town of Freiburg, Platner told the crowd, quote, people, when their lives begin to deteriorate, are going to look for folks to blame. And if we don't have an actual answer, then hatred and xenophobia and racism and homophobia and transphobia, all of them will fill the VAP vacuum. This means we have to go out in our community and we have to wear our hearts on our sleeves, unquote. Maine has semi open primaries, meaning that unenrolled voters can vote in a party primary. In the lead up to the primary, Platner's campaign did a series of videos where he gets coffee with Republican leaning voters and they talk about how their interests are more aligned compared to the interests of Trump, the billionaire class, and Susan Collins. Platner himself has said that his rise in Maine says more about the appetite for a new kind of politics, rather than him specifically as a candidate. But from the perspective of some voters, the slow drip of scandals and controversies might actually bolster Platner's image as an anti establishment candidate. For example, these people interviewed by CNN and Ms. Now, are you considering holding
Graham Platner
your breath and voting for him?
Garrison Davis
I got until Tuesday to decide, but I'm pretty sure I'll vote for him.
Ad Read Voice 1
I don't think a lot of this
Ad Read Voice 3
crap is anybody else's business.
Ad Read Voice 1
For some Democrats, they're willing to look
Graham Platner
past the interpersonal stories.
Ad Read Voice 1
I'm not really interested in the guy's
Lee Hurley
foibles, you know, I'm.
Ad Read Voice 1
I'm interested in his vision and what he has to say. And I love what he has to say. So, yeah, it's been definitely difficult because
Garrison Davis
everybody is piling on this guy.
Ad Read Voice 3
Does he have a problematic past? Yes.
Ad Read Voice 1
But I would rather have a redemption
Ad Read Voice 2
story than somebody telling you how wonderful
Ad Read Voice 1
they are, how much research they do,
Garrison Davis
and yet they still make the wrong
decision for the people of Maine. On election day, June 9, Platner won 71.9% of the vote with 154,058 votes. Governor Janet Mills, who stopped campaigning a month and a half prior but remained on the ballot, won 41,000 votes, or 19.3%. Graham Platner won more primary votes than any other Democratic Senate candidate in the history of Maine. As he walked onto the stage for his victory speech, Dropkick Murphy's cover of which side are you on? Blared in the background. Platner promised, quote, I will be a senator for the people who cannot afford to buy a senator now.
Graham Platner
Now, the national pundits, the political establishment, they keep looking for that one story, that one headline, that one moment in my life that they can define the campaign by. But in trying so hard to understand me, they failed to understand that this is not about me at all. This is a movement about us,
Bailey New Poster
About
Graham Platner
the far too many working far too hard and struggling far too much at the hands of the ruling class.
Garrison Davis
At a town hall just a few days before the primary, Platner spoke about the need to rebuild our old alliances with labor unions, community organizations, and civil rights groups. Quote, the only thing that's ever beat fascism is a Broad based working class coalition. Fascism is what we are up against. I think a lot of the folks at the national level misunderstand the reason they keep getting everything wrong. They think this is a race about me, but it isn't. This is a race about us. This is a race about the future of politics in Maine. This is a race about building power the old fashioned way, from the ground up, going out into our communities and having hard conversations, putting in time and energy that many of us do not have. We've got to do it anyway. So what I'm asking to do, if you don't want to volunteer on this campaign, that's fine. Join a labor union, go help out at the local food pantry, go help out at a food bank. It doesn't matter what you do, but you gotta do something because the moment we're in right now, it's going to require all of us. There were 215,000 votes in the Democratic primary. Platner's campaign had 15,000 volunteers. These volunteers went up against and beat the Democratic establishment and now they face the GOP establishment. This shift in the politics of the Democratic Party is not isolated to Maine. Democratic socialists just won in Washington D.C. and following the election of Zoram Hamdani, nine more DSA candidates just won the Democratic primary in New York, including three seats in the US House of Representatives. But Maine occupies a unique place in American politics. The stereotypical purple state. Unseating Susan Collins would prove that real working class politics don't just win liberal cities, but can take down what Bernie Sanders would call the oligarchy.
Graham Platner
There's an old saying, as Maine goes,
Ad Read Voice 2
so goes the nation.
Graham Platner
If you want to stop, if you want to stop war with Iran and end the forever wars, if you want to give workers the raise they deserve, seniors the security they worked for, you want to bring back Roe v. Wade. As Maine goes, so goes the nation. If you want to stop a Trump family slush fund, their ballroom. There are deals with Saudi princes and tech oligarchs. If you want to stop the corruption. As Maine goes, so goes the nation. If we want to dismantle ice, win back the Senate, check Donald Trump's power and take back ours. As Maine goes, so goes the nation. Together we will defeat Susan Cox Collins.
Garrison Davis
Graham Platner is slightly ahead in the polls, above Susan Collins, but the race is still quite Close. In 2020, when Collins was facing a challenger, she too was behind in the polls, but still pulled off a victory. That does it for me at it could happen here. See you on the other.
Ad Read Voice 3
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Jenny Garth
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Ad Read Voice 2
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Garrison Davis
I got it. No, I got it.
Seriously, I insist.
James Stout
I insisted first.
Ad Read Announcer
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Ad Read Voice 1
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Garrison Davis
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Bailey New Poster
earn unlimited 2% cash rewards on purchases. Okay.
Ad Read Announcer
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Jenny Garth
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Garrison Davis
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James Stout
Shoot. No.
Garrison Davis
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Garrison Davis
This is it could happen here.
Executive Disorder. Our weekly newscast covering what's happening in the White House, the crumbling world and what this means for you. I'm Garrison Davis. Today, I'm joined by James Stout, Mia Wong and Robert Evans.
Lee Hurley
Hey.
Garrison Davis
This episode we are covering the week of June 17th to June 24th.
James Stout
Yeah. Should we start off with some little things?
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah, let's start out with some small things.
James Stout
So I guess to begin with, the federal judge Sparkle Sukhnan, actually, who we've heard about before in the show, has bucked the Trump administration from, quote, haphazardly assembling a list of citizens that will be used to purge voter rolls.
Ad Read Voice 2
Great.
James Stout
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
I'm glad they can't do that haphazardly.
James Stout
Yeah. Given the timing. Right, like before the midterms, hopefully that means that this isn't going to happen in a way that will impact the midterms. The State Department has announced it's going to begin revoking passports. People with outstanding child support of more than 2,500 United States dollars. They can contact an embassy to get a temporary passport to come back to the US but they'll only have their full passport restored. I guess if they pay their outstanding child support debt.
Ad Read Voice 2
Okay.
James Stout
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
I'm wondering what got this to their ears. How big a problem is this? I'm not against this. I'm just wondering why they moved to do this.
James Stout
I saw it on the Twitter feed of the US Embassy in Nigeria, and I would be interested, and I don't know how possible this would be to go after with public records to know which particular embassies are revoking passports of which particular people, if you see what I mean. Yeah.
Garrison Davis
I think in general, revoking passports is a bad thing to do.
James Stout
Yeah. I think this isn't the way to go after child support. You are a piece of shit if you're not paying your child support. But I think generally the possibility of someone being left, like, stateless, that's not how we get to a better world here.
Ad Read Voice 2
I'm just wondering why they're doing this. Has to be. They have to be targeting somebody with this. I don't believe this is about the problem of there being a lot of people who are getting out of child support by fleeing the country. I don't believe that's the motivation here. And I'm kind of curious what it is.
James Stout
I couldn't tell you for sure, but the fact that I saw this on the Nigeria Embassy website, I mean, I can look right now and see what if other embassies posted it, I guess. Here we go. U.S. embassy in Spain. I don't see it on their page, for example.
Ad Read Voice 2
Interesting.
Garrison Davis
Okay.
James Stout
It'd be interesting to follow like this.
Ad Read Voice 2
Suggestive. But yeah, sure.
James Stout
It's something I came across like a, you know, about half an hour before we recorded this.
Ad Read Voice 2
No, that's noteworthy.
James Stout
A judge has quashed a subpoena aimed at Governor Waltz and Mayor Frey, along with other state politicians in Minneapolis, writing, quote, this course of events in and of itself establishes beyond reasonable dispute that the subpoenas were part of a broader campaign to coerce state and local officials in Minnesota to assist the Trump administration in its enforcement of immigration laws. And of course, this campaign played out against the backdrop of the Trump administration's well established history of using criminal investigations to retaliate against and pressure the President's political and personal adversaries. Very clearly, it's a thing that the Trump administration has done with the doj.
Ad Read Voice 2
Right.
James Stout
But it's good to see it called out, I guess.
Bailey New Poster
Sure.
James Stout
USCIS is looking to increase fees for existing permanent residents to naturalize I become US Citizens, as well as removing fee waivers for lower income migrants. This will be a barrier to people. Right. And that is why it's happening. Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yep.
James Stout
A Rep. Anna Paulina Luna used Claude AI to amend legislation. She's deleted her tweet, but I actually posted A link to her tweet. Tweet on Blue Sky. And it still contains, like, the cached text of the tweet if you want to go read it. She immediately responded by throwing her staff under the bus. Sure.
Ad Read Voice 2
No.
James Stout
Claiming that it was not uncommon for staff to use Claude. Fucking amend national legislation.
Ad Read Voice 2
People just don't like to do their job, do you? My God.
James Stout
Yeah, it's. Yeah. I don't know how for hundreds of years, people wrote legislation without asking fucking Claude. She left the. Like, it's. It had Claude responded in the text of the bill. That.
Ad Read Voice 2
Great stuff.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Claude is very popular in Washington, D.C. like, specifically Claude.
James Stout
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
I mean, it's. It's widely agreed to be the best of the. Of the chat bots.
James Stout
Thinking person's chatbot.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah, yeah, the thinking man's chatbot.
Garrison Davis
There is like a weird bizarro universe where you get, like, the Mark Fisher.
Claude outputs that writes tons of legislation that gets suddenly passed where the US Enters a very odd, odd time because
they kept using this chat bot that really liked, like, certain. Certain writing from certain shit that people
Ad Read Voice 2
were reading online in 2001.
James Stout
Yeah. Has certain biases baked in.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Ad Read Voice 1
I'm having this nightmare image. I'm having this nightmare image of people doing, like, prompt injection attacks specifically to, like, get Claude to, like, auto spit out certain lines of regulation.
James Stout
Yeah, yeah. Claude just inserting trans rights into defense Appropriations bill.
Ad Read Voice 2
Claude. Amending prescription drug laws to allow me specifically to purchase Dilaudid over the counter. I can see a lot of good, good places to go here. Yeah.
James Stout
The Evans amendment.
Ad Read Voice 2
The Evans amendment I just get to call.
James Stout
It can actually be delivered. You don't even have to purchase it.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah. They put it in a trash bag for me. Yeah.
James Stout
Drop it with a drone. Talking of inserting shit into bills, let's talk about Mike Lee, the only person worse for the planet than the sport of golf.
Garrison Davis
Mike Lee mentioned two weeks in a row.
Ad Read Voice 1
Are we on three?
James Stout
I'm mentioning Mike Lee until he stops with this shit. Let me tell you. A bipartisan group of legislators has introduced legislation to block the backdoor sale of public lands through the reconciliation process.
Ad Read Voice 2
Huzzah.
James Stout
They might as well have called this. Fuck you, Mike Lee. Stop doing this bill. Stop it. It is exclusively one person who is doing this, and it is Mike Lee,
Ad Read Voice 2
the bill equivalent of spritzing a single guy on the nose with a bottle of water. Stop it.
James Stout
Get out of here. Yeah, he's been slapped down. It's interesting to see, like, you know, see less Bipartisanship than you used to. But no one likes Mike Lee in this shit, apart from people in Utah who inexplicably elected him.
Ad Read Voice 2
There's nothing people in Utah hate more than the beautiful land in which they inhabit.
James Stout
Yeah. Not being able to mine and graze it as much as they like.
Lee Hurley
Yeah.
James Stout
The Atlantic is reporting that Pete Hexess has pressured General Donahue into stepping down. It seems Donahue will leave his job next week. Yeah, I guess. I mean, Robert, I'm sure you're familiar as well.
Ad Read Voice 2
Donahue is a massive figure. He's very famously like the last US military official to leave Afghanistan during the withdrawal.
James Stout
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
He's a pretty major guy and was widely considered to be kind of one of the folks you'd think would be sort of bulletproof, outside of the fact that he was involved in the withdrawal from Afghanistan. Famously. Like. And I think most people assumed that because it was in a very, like, stereotypically heroic way and because this guy had such a reputation within, like, special Operations, that he would be protected. But this is kind of further example of the brain drain that's been hitting all of the guys who know how to do stuff in the Department of Defense.
James Stout
Yeah. Like, it is quite remarkable when you look at a list of the people who have been purged, like, you know, quote unquote, retired. Right. Like, in terms of U.S. military leadership capacity, it has been significantly diminished. Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Yeah.
James Stout
By Pete Hegseth.
Ad Read Voice 1
I, I just, I just want to put a note in here for later on. Hopefully, hopefully this never becomes relevant. But I really, really do not like that in a two year span, there has been a significant purge of both the senior leadership of the American and Chinese militaries. Really do not like that. Just, just, just put, just putting this note in the record that like. Yeah, very, very similar.
Ad Read Voice 2
You mean all the guys who, like, know each other?
Ad Read Announcer
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
And can say, no, I don't think
Ad Read Voice 2
that means that I know this guy. He would do, wouldn't do that for this reason. Like, everyone like that on both sides is gone. And that maybe is how traditionally disasters happen.
James Stout
Yeah.
Jenny Garth
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 1
So I don't like this Just, just putting a note in.
Ad Read Voice 2
It's actually like, say what you want about, I mean, say many different things about like, the fucking militaries of both China and the United States. But it's really good actually when you have like, a professional officer cadre that's insulated from politics and also like, kind of socially know the guys in the other countries at the higher levels because they've, like, spoken like that's actually really useful in de escalation of conflict.
James Stout
Exactly. Yeah. It gives an informal de escalation mechanism
Ad Read Voice 2
and when that disappears, it can lead to problems.
James Stout
Yeah. When you're promoting people of the hegseth fucking tendency especially. Right.
Ad Read Voice 2
A surprising number of disasters have been averted, and not just because military officials, because people in two countries who were high up in the government just kind of had hung out with, with each other at events and one was able to like call the other and be like, hey Joe, like, you guys aren't doing this, are you? Because my people are fucking flipping out. Those relationships are really load bearing in the US all not dying in atomic fire thing. So yeah, you know, there seems to
James Stout
be some kind of counterfactual. I don't know, there's just a lie going around x.com that like Donahue, Donahue was the last soldier to leave Afghanistan, as Robert said. And like that like they were being shot at and there were like junior enlisted folks being shot at. That wasn't happening. The last 13 US troops who died in Afghanistan were not shot by the Taliban. They were killed in an Islamic State suicide bombing.
Ad Read Voice 2
Again, because the Taliban was cooperating with our withdrawal. They were not like the Taliban was
Garrison Davis
not fighting, shooting at the US as
Ad Read Voice 2
we were leaving because they wanted us to do what we were doing.
James Stout
Yeah, yeah, they got that outcome without having to do that.
Ad Read Voice 2
If you're the Taliban and the war is almost over and if you know what, you know one thing about the US as the Taliban, which is like if we just suddenly kill a bunch of their guys, maybe they don't leave.
James Stout
Yeah, no, they will return and do a fucking murdering people spree. Like, I don't know. Once again, right? Like things that have happened in the last five years seem to not exist in the mind of people who use X.com to get their news.
Ad Read Voice 2
It never existed for them, I guess.
James Stout
Finally some good News from Mogwai PDF who destroyed Atatmador Mi17 helicopter using FPV drones yesterday.
Lee Hurley
Oh wow.
James Stout
Yeah. Not the first time it's happened in Myanmar. I constantly see when a drone is used in Ukraine in a sort of relatively novel way. People saying this is the first time it has happened and almost always it has already happened in Myanmar. Not always. Like there were some autonomous drones that killed people in Ukraine a couple of years ago that I'm not aware of existing in Myanmar. But like orientalism definitely plays a role in people's ignorance when it comes to like military firsts happening in the spring revolution. But yeah, in this instance, they seemed to hit it with multiple FPV drones taking out its, its landing gear than its engines.
Garrison Davis
I do have one short story here that I've tried to avoid covering because I really don't think it's that important.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
But much like the algae just keeps creeping back into the headlines.
So last month, President Trump got super
obsessed with the Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool. Spent $14 million in a no contract
bid to get rid of the algae. Trump used his own pool guys and
they drained the reflection pool. They painted the bottom, quote, unquote, American flag blue and then filled that thing up again.
Ad Read Voice 2
Brilliant marketing decision by whoever named that paint, by the way.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Yet somehow the algae returned and in
an even worse state, turning the entirety
of the blue reflecting water green.
So in response, they started dumping gallons
of hydrogen peroxide into the pool to kill the algae. Now, hydrogen peroxide, also a paint thinner and strips of the American flag blue
paint started peeling off the bottom of
the pool, making the situation worse.
Now here's where things get really interesting. This is the only reason why we're covering this, because last weekend Trump began making the completely unsubstantiated claims that the algae filled blue paint fiasco was the result of quote, unquote, radical left lunatics
who vandalized the pool.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
The National Guard and the park police
have since then been arresting people for
standing near the reflecting pool.
On Tuesday night, President Trump truthed, quote, six people have been arrested and seven
people have been cited for the damage they did to our country's now beautiful reflecting pool. The 350 foot gash made by a
very sharp knife or razors is actually numerous slashes over a very long 350 foot length.
It was purposefully and criminally done and
someone had to work very hard, probably
in the dark of the night to
create such a situation. Unquote, no evidence this has happened.
Obviously people have been watching the pool nonstop. No one's been seen.
James Stout
National Guard waiting in there with a
Garrison Davis
knife cutting the floor.
Ad Read Voice 2
Now, Garrison, Garrison, Garrison, you're not understanding what the President's saying. One man didn't wait in there with a knife. A team of hundreds, each made a single slash. That's the kind of discipline Andif is capable of, you know what I'm saying?
Garrison Davis
Probably in the dark of the night.
Ad Read Voice 2
Of course, in the dark of the night they wear black.
Garrison Davis
There's outlets like the Washington Post just react ported on Trump's claims without noting that this is just a lie.
Ad Read Voice 2
Just complete nonsense. Yeah.
Garrison Davis
But as the, as the President has
said six people have been arrested, one of whom for sticking his hand in the pool and touching one of the floating pieces of blue paint.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Trump has said they will need to
drain the pool again to make further repairs ahead of the 4th of July 250th celebration.
Ad Read Voice 2
If you read the actual report that was made by, I think it was the parts department or whatever, like, analyzing what had happened in the reflecting pool, they did notice some, like, things that were described as cuts, but concluded they had nothing to do with the paint itself. Like, if you actually read the report, like, what he's talking about is not like, what his own people said. He just saw cuts in the report and ignored that. It was like, but these were somewhere else and not relevant to the paint peeling and just went with it. Like, that's the root of all this.
Ad Read Voice 1
The thing with the story is like, yeah, on the one hand, it is very funny that the. The pool green, but also the fact that Trump can just lie about this stuff and then also a bunch of people get arrested.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Is really bad.
Ad Read Voice 1
It is, in fact, really bad that you can be arrested for putting your hands in a pool.
James Stout
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 1
That's very bad. Just on a fundamental level, not a sign of a society that is functioning or healthy or at all not doing well. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
James Stout
No, great. No, not a good.
Ad Read Voice 3
No.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah.
James Stout
Not a good look for us on the USA 250th birthday.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah. Deeply authoritarian society.
Garrison Davis
Speaking of, let's discuss probably the worst piece of news this week.
Lee Hurley
Yeah.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Which is the sentencing in the Prairieland case where the Trump administration brought terrorism charges against what they allege is an antifa cell who attended a protest outside of an ICE detention facility last 4th of July. Benjamin Song was sentenced to 100 years in prison. Song was convicted of attempted murder for shooting toward a police officer who was pointing a handgun at fleeing protesters. Marcela Raeda was sentenced to 70 years in prison. Zachary Evitz, Autumn Hill, Savannah Batten, Elizabeth Soto and Megan Morris were sentenced to 50 years in prison after being convicted of providing, quote, unquote, material support to terrorists. Now, some of these people weren't even involved in planning the protest, but just knew others who were. One of the people in this case wasn't even at the protest. Daniel Sanchez Desistrada, who was sentenced to 30 years in prison, did not attend the protest, but was convicted of concealing documents for moving a box of personal items and anarchist zines from one house to another that got him sentenced to 30 years in prison. One of the judges, Judge O' Connor, who was not the judge for the trial, said that the maximum sentences are to, quote, send a message to anyone who shares similar ideologies.
James Stout
Yeah, these are brutal sentences. Right? Like, yeah, these are the sort of things that you see in the potential liability. But it's.
Bailey New Poster
I think I.
James Stout
In my experience, I haven't seen many people get, like, maximum sentences. Like, I. I'm familiar with guys who are convicted of providing material support to the Islamic State, for instance, who did not get sentences anywhere near this duration.
Garrison Davis
No.
This is, like, absolutely insane. This is unprecedented.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Very clearly politically motivated, as the judge openly said during sentencing.
James Stout
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
Deliberately admitted it was. Yeah, yeah.
Garrison Davis
Like, the Adam laughing guy who planned to attack power grids a few years ago, was just sentenced to 20. This is absurd. Like, song sentence of 100 years is pretty insane itself for even for being convicted of attempted murder. But all of these material support charges and concealing documents, 30 to 70 years is like.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah, it's outrageous. Yeah. It's a very clear attempt to have a chilling event. Right. Like, that's the goal here. That's the goal with the prosecutions and Minneapolis as well. Like.
James Stout
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
You know, it's all the same. Part of the same strategy.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
No, using conspiracy charges to rope in people to this larger case, arguing that this conspiracy is evidenced through reading zines, through wearing certain clothes at a protest, being part of quote, unquote, antifa. And then they don't need to actually argue that every single person did a specific violent crime, but just this association with each other can lead to a conviction. And we are seeing this, you know, copied in Minnesota, where just like one or two people are charged with doing violence, like, you know, kicking a vehicle. But what links the 15 defendants together in Minnesota are these conspiracy charges.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah, yeah. The thing that it reminds me the most of is just that is. Is Haymarket, where, you know, in a very similar way, you have an attempt to not even necessarily go after the people who did the thing. You have an attempt to put the ideology on trial. I mean, the judge explicitly says this. Right. This is not a trial that is happening because something happened.
Ad Read Voice 2
This is specifically an attempt to send a message.
James Stout
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Ad Read Voice 1
To send a message and to, like, stop resistance to everything the Trump administration has been doing and particularly to try to try to, like, bring down the level of resistance to ice and border patrols, like, raids and actions going forward.
Garrison Davis
The defendants will absolutely need support for what's going to be a lengthy appeals process.
Lee Hurley
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
The worst case scenario is going to require building a mass movement to Push for pardoning anti ICE protesters, including the Prairie Line defendants in a post Trump government. A complicating factor in this case is that some of these defendants are also facing state charges, which a federal pardon would not cover in Texas. Yeah, but rallying behind these people is of the, like, utmost urgency. Same as all the anti ICE protesters around the country who are facing repression. Yeah, I do. I do want to note that, like our previous coverage of Prairie, my previous coverage focused on how the government used these specific charges, how they use specific testimony and. And flimsy evidence to successfully argue a conviction, while also mentioning that some of the mistakes that the public defenders made during that case. Missing deadlines to file motions, not calling witnesses.
Right.
There is unique aspects of this case, and I think knowing what those are is important. When I was putting together that episode, a lot of the coverage I saw talked about how, you know, fucked up this situation is, and it really is. Right. But I think it's also important to actually know how the state is able to do this, like, how they're able to argue this in, in, in very specific ways, to understand some of the unique aspects of this case and to know what the state and jurors considered relevant evidence. Saying certain things in group chats, but also just being at a protest with someone else wearing possibly matching clothing.
Right.
Understanding those specifics, I think is also important. But going forward, supporting these defendants, regardless of their conviction is of the utmost urgency. We will link to the support committee for the Cleryland defendants and the donation link to help with legal costs and other expenses resulting from the state repression.
James Stout
Yeah. I'm sure these people will have a lengthy and challenging appeal process ahead of them. Like, they, they will need significant legal support.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah.
James Stout
If they're going to get out of prison. And, you know, like, if we look at, like, previous movements in the US like, like Biden pardon, Leonard Peltier after decades. Right.
Garrison Davis
Yep.
James Stout
Of him being in prison, like most of the rest of his life was spent in jail. And we can contrast that to how Trump pardoned the J6s very rapidly.
Garrison Davis
No. 100%.
Lee Hurley
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Specifically in a post J6 pardon world, and considering the popular resistance to ICE, I think it's imperative that we go forward with this specific intention of. Even if the appeals fail, an anti ICE movement needs to include these people in their advocacy and getting them pardons in the future.
James Stout
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah. And I think it is also just worth saying that, you know, I think there's. There's an extent to which this repression would have happened regardless, but Part of the reason why this is happening and part of the reason why the judge is saying this stuff, and part of the reason why they find the need to try to do a chilling effect and to, you know, use fear and terror to stop anything else, you know, to stop any of the resistance is that the resistance is working.
Ad Read Voice 2
Right.
Ad Read Voice 1
That doesn't mean that people aren't getting hurt in unbelievably sort of hideous ways. It doesn't mean the deportations aren't continuing, but they have not been able to do the things that they wanted to do.
Ad Read Voice 2
No. This is defensive, lashing out. Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah. You know, there is an extent to which they're doing this because they're losing, and they know it. And they have to. Something has to happen in order to change the balance of how this whole sort of conflict between ICE and people's communities has been unfolding. And this is one of the things they're trying to do to do that.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah. And more broadly, they're just trying to chill anything that could become part of successful resistance. Like, they understand that anything that's public to the administration that looks bad can make them look bad. Like, that's why they're lashing out at the fucking Reflecting Pool tool. Like, the goal is to just like. To instill a sort of instinctive fear of doing anything that could make the administration look bad. They're trying to, like, force their own sort of, like, less majestic situation out through just, like, arresting people whenever they embarrass the regime.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
And specifically trying to criminalize common protest tactics and picking specific cases like, you know, Prairie Land and like, the 15 defendants in Minneapolis. And rather than actually focusing the majority of the case on alleged crimes, instead focusing on antifa as this scary specter. Right. It's anarchism, violent militancy.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Where just discussions or aesthetics of militancy is really what is. Is really what the case is like resting on and convincing a jury that these people are a scary group of outside agitators. But by solidifying a conviction, that actually criminalizes what are legal protest tactics.
Like, this is the scariest part about
the case in Minneapolis, in the Twin Cities, is that most of that document is covering legal, like ICE Watch, Rapid Response Networks.
Right.
This legal action. But they're trying to criminalize people's coordination to do that legal action by focusing on a group that the government thinks is specifically, you know, militant or has certain political beliefs.
James Stout
Yeah. I would say that the Minneapolis indictment is not the Prairie Land indictment. Like that. It's a very different thing.
Garrison Davis
Totally and totally.
James Stout
Yeah, we made an episode and that people go back and listen to it. But like, I think people, I understand the fear that people, people are feeling. But like, I want you to know that like this isn't every case going forward. Right. For this is a case that they have had success and it extracted like a really horrific burden. Most of the cases they bought in Minnesota have been thrown out.
Garrison Davis
The details and evidence of these cases are very, very different. I'm only invoking the comparison because the strategy from the DOJ is similar. Even if the specific details and evidence in these cases do why they differ. And regardless of those differences, I think both, both the defendants in both cases
should receive the same amount of support.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Like I mentioned links for the support committee and the donation link will be at the very top of the description below. Let's go on a break and return for more news.
Ad Read Voice 2
Foreign.
James Stout
We are back and we're talking about Iran. We, we saw like a lot of back and forth over the weekend about the mou, about Trump threatening the Iranian delegation, about them not signing it.
Garrison Davis
The MOU of Versailles didn't, didn't work out.
James Stout
The MOU event. We have a, an MOU in place right at the time of writing. This rests on a very fragile piece in Lebanon and I want to read something from Ben Gavir about Lebanon. He's a National Security minister in Israel.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah.
James Stout
Last time we spoke about him, he was physically assaulting people from the flotilla. I think I'm just going to read this out. Through every tear of an Israeli mother, a thousand Lebanese mothers must weep. All of Lebanon must burn. With all due respect to the Americans, Israel must make it clear to the entire world that the blood of our sons and the security of our citizens are not forfeit. All of Lebanon must burn. Our supreme duty is to protect the citizens of Israel and the soldiers of the idf. And this commitment takes precedence over every other consideration. I told the Prime Minister, even in our private meetings, for every tear of an Israeli mother, a thousand Lebanese mothers must weep. Enough with the ping pong in the Middle east, you don't win with measured responses and restraint. You need to go berserk to obliterate, to crush the terror. That's just a genocide post.
Garrison Davis
Like, there's, there's insanely genocidal.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah, super genocidal.
James Stout
Like, he might as well just say, like, what I want is a genocide. The genocide is what I want. Like, in other historically documented genocides, it is relatively rare to have the person just being like, we're doing a Genocide over here. This is a genocide.
Ad Read Voice 2
Seems like a good time for it. Yeah.
James Stout
Like, like it is historically somewhat remarkable to just be like, yes, we want to wipe them all out. Actually, if anyone wonders if this is genocide or not. Absolutely. Like, you will not find a clearer statement of genocidal intent than this. And so the Iran peace deal being contingent on Israel at least finding peace in Lebanon. Right now they're occupying southern Lebanon. It doesn't look like they're leaving, is contingent on this government, which includes someone who is openly genocidal, that finding a peace deal with Lebanon, which, I mean, what kind of compromise can you come to with that person? Israel continues to be the force that continues to destabilize the region and cause more death and suffering. Let's move back to America. The Senate did pass a war Powers resolution this week. Came through from the House. A resolution here. It expresses the will of Congress. It's slightly different for a piece of legislation. It is a setback for Trump. Right. It's not nothing, especially because some Republicans supported it. Rand Paul, Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins and Bill Cassidy. Of course, John Fetterman crossed the other way because he is a MAGA Republican. He just has a blue badge next to him. So in 2019, probably the most analogous kind of recent example, Trump vetoed resolution concerning U.S. support for the Saudi led coalition in Yemen. Right. He will likely ignore this. History understanders will know that we didn't stop supporting the Saudis and he is very unlikely to change his policy about this, but he is clearly very upset about it. And this is important because Trump has a record, as we go into the midterms, of attempting to destroy the careers of any Republican who he considers to have spoken out against him. Right. So in a general sense, with a war, Congress would have to approve it within 60 days, sometimes for national security reasons. It could be extended by the executive branch to 90 days. What the White House is arguing here is that the April ceasefire means that that clock has stopped and that the War Powers Resolution therefore pertains to a war that no longer exists. And if they start again, it will be a completely different, separate and unrelated thing. And that clock would start again from zero.
Garrison Davis
Yeah. Jesus Christ.
James Stout
That's kind of magical thinking. But that's what they're going with. Right. Just before we recorded, it was reported that Trump had a lunch, like a closed door lunch with GOP senators, which resulted in him getting into a screaming match with some of those senators, including Cassidy. Clearly, the peace deal, the 14 points that we, that we spoke about last time have been extremely unpopular with the Republicans. Right. Because Trump eventually caved on like, like Iran's coming out of this perhaps strategically in a better position than it went into this. Now, obviously, the US has done massive damage to Iranian infrastructure. It's killed people. Right. And in. But in terms of actually their military capacity, we, we. It seems to be a much less degraded than we initially thought. It looks like this continues to be one of the areas where Trump is bleeding GOP support. And so it is interesting to keep track of this. Let's move on to talk about immigration now. So the D.C. district Court had a ruling this week. It ordered the government to facilitate the return of a man, Mr. Martinez Andino, that they had deported to Honduras. The quote from the opinion, I'm going to quote kind of extensively here, I have removed, like, when you get these opinions right, they will have in text citations for other court cases. And I've removed those for reading clarity. After being arrested and detained in Montana by immigration authorities and moved between at least six detention centers in different states across the country, he seemingly disappeared. He was not permitted to contact his attorneys for more than 10 days. And neither Immigration and Customs Enforcement nor Customs and Border Protection would tell his attorneys where he was or in which agency's custody, despite repeated requests. Not until his attorneys filed this lawsuit, initially seeking only a temporary restraining order directing defendants to tell them where and in whose custody plaintiff was located did the government disclose that he had been removed to Honduras the same day, purportedly because he had voluntarily agreed to that departure. So this guy was kept without contact to his lawyer who was trying to contact him and who he was asking to talk to for 10 days. He disputes in this case that he voluntarily agreed to depart because he was deprived of access to his legal team because he wasn't able to understand the documents he was asked to sign. I can say from numerous interviews I've conducted with people who have been in detention that there is a great deal of pressure to sign those documents. And they're there all the time. Right. Like in the middle of the night when you can't sleep and it's freezing fucking cold. That document is right there on the wall for you to sign.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yep.
James Stout
The court but ordered the government to, quote, ensure that his case is handled as it would have been had he not been improperly sent to Honduras. And they cited Abrego Garcia versus Noem. Right. So they're using that as, like, a precedent here. That doesn't mean that he gets to come home and he's not going to be pursued by immigration. Right. That means that they have to process him and not hide him away from his lawyer for 10 days because effectively what they did was hid this man from his lawyers for more than a week and then forced him to sign a document he couldn't meaningfully consent to. Some background here. He entered as a 14 year old without family members. I don't like the term unaccompanied minor because I've spent time with migrants traveling to the US and there are often children who are traveling without their family, but they're still accompanied by somebody or somebody who's just decided to take care of them. But that would be the legal term here. Right? He was granted sij, Special Immigrant Juvenile status. And then when he got back to Honduras, he contacted his lawyer, filed an affidavit stating that the paperwork he signed when he was detained was not explained to him and he was, quote, told the only option he had detention was to sign for the paperwork. He, quote, asked to speak with his attorneys for days between nine days between March 31 and April 9, and his, quote, requests were ignored or denied. And he, quote, told immigration officials that he was afraid to return to Honduras and wanted an interview or a hearing with the judge. These requests were also, quote, ignored or denied. He also says he felt terribly mistreated due to poor food and no access to showers. He also gave a different timeline of deportation than that which the government presented in his case, suggesting that he may not have entered the country at the time the government said he was out of their custody. Which is important, right, because the government's saying we don't have him anymore. His timeline, when they landed, how long they sat on the tarmac, when they transited the border there is different from the one that the government provided. It's good to see this case. Right, but he will still face an uphill battle. I also want to talk very briefly about Blanche vs Lau. This is a ruling that returning green card holders are now considered or can be considered applicants for admission, which means they can be placed on immigration parole when entering the country. The case here pertains to Mr. Lau, who returned in 2012 and was placed on parole while facing charges related to trademark counterfeiting. I do want to go back and reference that date again. 2012. This is something that happened when Barack Obama was president. Barack Obama loved to deport people. Anybody who's telling you that isn't the case is lying to you. Mr. Lau later pled guilty and therefore was swiftly placed in removal proceedings because the government argued he was inadmissible. So when you are paroled, you are not technically admitted. You are paroled pending admission. Therefore, if you are found to be inadmissible, it is quicker to begin that removal. So this is where the Supreme Court had to decide. Right. Generally, green card holders are considered to have already been admitted when they are returning. Right. This ruling, though, will have serious consequences for LPRs, legal permanent residents, green card holders. Right. This pertains to crimes involving moral turpitude. I spoke about these a great deal and I don't think we already have the space or time to go into them here, but we're just going to say that it is a, a broad and nebulous category because quote from the Supreme Court opinion here, nothing in the INA required the border officer to have a clear and convincing evidence that Lau had committed a crime involving moral turpitude before deeming him an applicant for admission. So Mr. Lau had not been convicted of that crime. Right. He had been charged with that crime. Mr. Lau is still contesting whether this particular crime does involve moral turpitude, it seems. But nonetheless, this is a significant thing that green card holders, legal permanent residents, need to be aware of. That's it for James Reid's a bunch of court documents this week. I'll link to all the court docs in the thing if you guys want to get deep in there.
Ad Read Voice 1
So in other extremely bleak news, we're moving to the climate front where we are seeing a whole bunch of heat waves across the world. I want to start in India and Pakistan. So India has been dealing with very, very serious heat wave for a lot of parts of May and June. Temperatures just in parts of New Delhi have hit 123 degrees Fahrenheit, which is a nightmare.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah, that's, that's really bad.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah, yeah. In New Delhi, it's consistently been over 100 degrees.
Ad Read Voice 2
We're also talking about over 100 degrees in one of the most humid and worst AQI places on Earth. Like, that's just hell, yeah, that's hell, yeah.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah. And as we're going to get to in a second, in places where people don't have access to air conditioning and especially the, you know, the, the more rural and the more like the further out you get, you're dealing with people where you don't have good access to electricity and electricity grids tend to fail in the heat, especially when it is this hot and also this humid. Just that we know of. The direct reporting from the Indian Health ministry is reporting 100 dead from the Heat, it's probably much larger than that. One of the very consistent things when you, when you read reporting on this and you know, the BBC for example, will talk to researchers is that, yeah, the deaths are probably way higher, but there's real problems with how heat related deaths are categorized because the thing that kills you is the heat. But you're dying from like another sort of like health factor you had going on. So we're probably not going to know what the magnitude of this was for a pretty long time. Things have been bad enough that almost half of the states in India have either and it depends a lot on the the region. But a lot of these places have just straight up shut down their schools or have revised the schedules for their schools and effectively just started the summer break early because it is too hot to send kids to classrooms sometimes. There's been sort of like zoom school a la sort of stuff people probably are familiar from, from like the lockdowns. But yeah, yeah. The BBC did a report from Bando, which is a district in Uttar Pradesh where there was a full week in May where It was between 116 and 118 degrees, which is just a nightmare. And the other extremely dangerous part, and this is also true with the other places we want to be talking about, but is particularly has been true in a lot of places in India, is that it's not really cooling at night. And that as we've discussed on this show before in a whole bunch of different segments, but it's worth repeating every single time it is hot. That's one of the ways that things get very, very dangerous. Because when there aren't periods you can cool off at night, that is like, that is part of the way that heat stroke and deaths from heat injury are exacerbated int intensified. Now there's also a heat wave going on across Europe.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah, a lot of heat waves to go around here.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah, fortunately.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah, yeah.
Ad Read Voice 1
Oh, yeah, yeah. So both the UK and France are seeing their hottest weather on record. France saw their hottest day on record and their hottest night on record, which is extremely bad. 40 people have died in France, I think since the beginning of June just from drownings from people trying to escape the heat.
Ad Read Voice 2
Oh my God.
James Stout
Yeah. Which is.
Ad Read Voice 1
That's really weak. Yeah, that's.
Garrison Davis
That's brutal.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah. And there's also been like record temperatures of places in Spain. You're seeing temperatures that should not be happening, not just at sea level, but up in the mountains. You're seeing temperatures that are astounding and temperatures that you know the architecture of these places and their electrical grids and just like, do you have air conditioning? Right. Like a lot of the places where these heat waves are striking are not places that they've necessarily hit before and they're not designed to handle this kind of heat.
James Stout
Yeah, I mean, people aren't familiar. Most of our houses in Europe are built differently from houses in the US they're not particularly designed, especially as you get into Spain, like some that were designed with shade in mind, but not with like a temperature conservation insulation and specifically air conditioning. Right. Air conditioning is much, much less common than it is in the United States.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yep.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah. It's also worth noting that like one of the things that's intensifying this in a lot of places in India, but this is true. The more into the developing world you are, like the more fucked you are in a lot of ways about this. But like you're also dealing with a lot of places where just the trees have been cut down for industrial and sort of mining purposes and that also is increasing temperatures. And I want to close by just saying that, Right. We're seeing the hottest temperatures on record and this is what's happening under 1.4 degrees of global warming. Right. Like the versions of this where we're supposed to be stabilizing are, you know, the sort of, what's supposed to be the sort of habitable zone. Right. The case scenarios where we like quote unquote, deal with climate change are like 2 degrees of warming, 2.5 degrees of warming. It's already this bad. It is just going to get worse. And this is one of the just persistent kind of quiet crises that is happening in the backdrop of everything else, which is that, yeah, the way that we're powering all of our industries is causing the world to burn.
James Stout
Yeah. Complicated further by like austerity measures and make it harder for people to fund cooling their homes in Europe. Right. And the things that you might need to buy or do to keep your house cool. Margaret and I made an episode a while ago about heat waves. So if you're looking for some resources, you might be able to find some there.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Let's go on break and then we will return for a few more news stories. Hopefully not all of them depressing.
Ad Read Voice 2
Don't worry, I've got a happy one.
Bailey New Poster
Yay.
Ad Read Voice 2
Foreign. We're back. And as promised, I have some less depressing stuff to talk to you all about.
James Stout
Oh, sorry.
Ad Read Voice 2
No, I, I, I messed up. We're going to talk about the deaths of millions. So if you can Recall back to the first month of the Trump administration in like February 3, 2025. This is a little bit after Musk started his, you know, the early stages of his work with Doge. He tweeted, quote, we spent the weekend feeding USAID at the wood chipper. I think we all remember that, that great moment. And this has since been widely criticized and there are numerous articles, studies and reports that have come out and made the case that the cuts to USAID that Doge made have resulted in a tremendous amount of human death and suffering. Musk has consistently denied this. Earlier this week, he, quote, tweeted a fan who had written, if cutting USAID killed a child, a single child, it would be covered by the media. Like the biggest story in history. Musk added exactly in his quote tweet. Now, there actually have been several stories that specify individual children that have died because of cuts to usaid and we'll be talking about some of them.
James Stout
Oh yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
But I want to quote from a recent article by Matt Novak and Gizmodo. The trillionaire oligarchy had insisted that USAID is the one that's killed people, retweeting a conspiracy theory from Rand Paul that Anthony Fauci was to blame for the COVID 19 pandemic because federal funds were being used to conduct gain of function research. USAID money killed millions. Musk wrote Tuesday. Admittedly, U.S. intelligence agencies now endorsed the idea that COVID 19 escaped from a lab, but that only happened after President Trump took office for a second time. Before Trump took control, intelligencies were largely skeptical of the idea. So you're already seeing like the dimensions of sort of the spin here to the, all of the many deaths as a result of and this will come down to not just the US aid cuts, but anytime this is pointed out is the counterfactual would be. Well, but you know, actually these, these, these groups were killing way more people because of and then insert this insane conspiracy theory. Right. We've reached the point where they're now load bearing, right?
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
Both for like the personal, like mental health of the richest man in the world and for the federal government itself. Like the conspiracy theories aren't just a thing that are being signposted to get votes. They're a load bearing part of the ideology because otherwise everything's a failure. Right. Good stuff. Glad we're here. So Novak's article noted and as I opened the episode by mentioning a ton of people have done the important work of documenting just how many human beings have been killed as a result of the cuts that Elon Musk was integral in pushing. We'll talk more about that later, but I want to give one example from a Washington Post article published in September of 2025 that does specify a single child that was killed as a result of of these cuts. Yeah, quote Fever ravaged the body of five year old Suza Kenyabi as she sweated and shivered on a thin mattress in a two room clinic in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The pigtailed girl who had liked pretty dresses, was battling malaria and desperately needed medication that could save her life. That medication, already purchased by a US Taxpayer funded program, was tantalizingly close a little more than seven miles away, but it hadn't reached the clinic where Susa was being treated because President Donald Trump's suspension of of foreign aid had thrown supply chains into chaos. The injection Susan needed had traveled thousands of miles to the Central African nation USAID and other records show, only to be stranded in a regional distribution warehouse in the same city where she was gasping for air. Less than a week after her symptoms began, Suza was dead. Congolese government data shows that in Susa's province, deaths caused by malaria nearly tripled in the first half of this year. So keep that in mind during this next bit. That's just one of many stories we may I think I will cover this at some point on BTC TB in more detail, but a couple of days ago, you know, the same week that we're recording this episode, Ro Khanna, a Democrat from California, went on the IHIP News podcast, which I am not familiar with, but is apparently a sister podcast to what the Hill calls the Notable I've had it podcast. I don't know who any of these people are, but whatever kind of was asked like what will your party do if the Democrats win the midterms? Here's what the Hill says happen next. I do believe that once we take power, there has to be accountability. There needs to be accountability for Elon Musk, khanna told Welch. You know, they're celebrating that he created for the 400 millionaires, but they don't talk about the four and a half million children around the world who he possibly sentenced to death by dismantling the US Agency for International Development, usaid, Khanna added. He needs to answer for that. He needs to be subpoenaed. He needs to face investigation. He needs to answer for what he did with the Department of Government Efficiency. Khanna's comments were quickly exerted from the podcast itself and shared all around the Internet until they reached Musk and he made a comment of his own on the website that he owns. The standard applied by Doge was very simple and easy. Provide contact information for the recipients of AIDS that we can confirm it's not fraudulent. The Tech Trillionaire said in one of the posts. The reality is that money was being sent to corrupt politicians under the guise of aid. Liars and stock inside traders like Roe the robber should be in prison. Musk went on to claim that it's it's time to sue this liar.
James Stout
It would be great if he sued them. Like that would be a fantastic outcome.
Ad Read Voice 2
Great. I'd be fine with that. It looks like the direction Roe wants to go is much dumber because everything, everyone in US politics is annoying. Khanna responded to this by challenging Elon Musk to a televised debate. And I fuck off. Not gonna say what I think. I'm frustrated. Anyway, instead of going into that, I want to talk about where the number Roe cited came from, because that is worth discussing. This clip four and a half million children who might die as a result of US aid cuts. On January 1st of 2025, the UCA Fielding School of Public Health carried out research that found that over the prior 20 years, USAID funding had helped save 91 million lives. Obviously, that same study also concluded that the massive cuts to US aid under Trump would imperil that work. And they calculated that the cuts would cause 14 million additional deaths around the world by 2020, 30, including the deaths of more than four and a half million children under five. So if you look back to Roe's phrasing, I think he actually did a reasonably good job of like, citing this information, because what Roe said was they don't talk about the four and a half million children around the world who he possibly sentenced to death by dismantling usa. Right. That's a reasonably accurate way to sum that up. So I'll give Roe some points there, although I'll take a couple of points away because this phrasing does somewhat omit that these are predicted future deaths. He's not like not saying that, but he could have been a little clearer here.
James Stout
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
And I might also say, and because I think you could argue that he undercounted the severity of what that study says, because the study just notes that four and a half million children under five could die as a result of these cuts, which suggests way more than four and a half million total children deaths. Right. There are a lot of children who are over five.
James Stout
Yeah, yeah. Most of the children are under five.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
Most children are probably over five years old. Yeah, I do want to quote from UCLA studies again here just to clarify where their data came from. From quote, the London based journal the Lancet analyzed data from 133 countries. The work combined two approaches. A retrospective evaluation covering the years 2001 to 2021 and forecasting models projecting impacts through 2030 based on reductions to the budget of USAID. U.S. citizens contribute about 17 cents per day to USAID, about $64 per year. I think most people would support continued USAID funding if they knew just how effective such a small contribution can be to saving millions of lives, said Dr. James Machinko. And I, I agree with that. I think that's, those are the kind of numbers that we should be putting out, which is like, yeah, this is how little money it costs per US Taxpayer to save this huge number of lives around the world. It's worth digging into some of the more specific reporting we've seen on the consequences of these US Aid cuts because the reporting that Roe was citing is just predicting future possible deaths. Yeah, but there's documentation, as I cited earlier, about the people that Elon Musk and Doge have already helped, helped to kill or. Right. Or, or who have the cuts that they have championed have led to these people's deaths would be the, the most accurate way of saying that.
James Stout
And celebrated like.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah, and celebrated it.
James Stout
Right.
Ad Read Voice 2
They have, yeah. So again, I'll probably do a whole BTB on all this stuff later, but I want to discuss one more story which was published earlier this year in the New York Times. The title of that article was In Afghanistan, A Trail of Hunger and death behind US aid cuts. Trump last year very suddenly cut US aid to Afghanistan. You know, even after our 2021 pull out from the country, we had continued to send a significant amount, about a billion dollars worth of aid a year, which was more than a third of all of the aid flowing into Afghanistan. So given the status of that country, you can see how load bearing that is to their like, you know, infrastructure of health.
James Stout
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
Cutting that has caused the worst child starvation crisis in 25 years in Afghanistan. And this catastrophe, catastrophe has been exacerbated by the closing of 450 health centers as a result of these cuts. Here's a selection from that Times article. The isolated province of Daikundi has lost many of its health clinics to the USAID cuts. The clinic in Nalej, surrounded by parched fields of almond and mulberry trees, was a lifeline for 850 families the villagers say its closure has hurt children the most. Sakiya, three months old, has been vomiting since birth and her condition is deteriorating, said her mother, Sharifa Kowari. For weeks, she hoped her husband would bring back enough money from the coal mine where he worked to finance a taxi ride to the nearest clinic. But he said his pay was barely enough to put food on the table. The loss of the clinic erased years of monitoring that had saved children's lives. When I was giving birth, we were losing babies, said Nick Bakht, Ms. Kohari's mother in law. One would hope that younger mothers these days wouldn't face that and another tragedy contained in that article. Quote In 2024, the United States funded over half of Afghanistan's nutrition and agricultural programs. Food insecurity has skyrocketed since last year's cuts. More than 17 million Afghans, 40% of the population, now face acute levels of hunger, 2 million more than last year. Seven provinces face critical food insecurity, the final stage before famine, according to the Integrated Food Security Phase classification, a group of international organizations that the United nations and aid agencies rely on to monitor global hunger. None were at this level a year ago. Malnutrition is also hitting cities affecting the most vulnerable, the very young, sick and elderly first, as it does elsewhere. Muhammad Ali, nine months old, was one of a dozen toddlers waylaying or dozing in a Kabul nutrition ward on a recent morning. He was too weak to ingest milk, said his mother. Her husband's meager income as a housekeeper means they often eat only once a day. And there's millions of stories like this already and just a hid. I mean the number of deaths already as a result of these cuts is hideous and undeniable. And one of the counters you'll see when this get brought up to Musk and his fawning fans is that like, oh, the money was just going to corrupt dictators and local rulers and like no, the damage that we're already seeing shows that it wasn't. There was aid in place that was catching some people and it's not catching them now. And the human consequences of this have been atrocious and that's, that's just inarguable. Anyway, that's all I got for today.
James Stout
I remember that time receiving calls and messages from people like in the, the Burmese diaspora and on the Thai Burmese border about one of the only clinics where people could deliver their babies closing down and people literally going to the clinic, finding it locked like inaccessible to them and delivering their babies on the street outside. Like this is within maybe days, hours after the USA after Elon Musk tweeted about how he didn't go to a party because he was too busy asking this. Like, yeah, I've seen USA D all over the world. And yeah, undoubtedly not every penny that goes into that goes directly to like buying food because that's not how that shit works, right? People have to administer this, people have to get things done. Sometimes the way you get things done is through things that we would consider corruption. I don't particularly care as long as it results in the person who needs food getting food or who needs medicine getting medicine. And like, there are of course other ways to achieve that end and I think we should pursue them. But like, like this is one of the worst things that the Trump administration has done, one of the cruelest and most evil things that the United States has done in a very long time. And like USAID often crowded out other agencies, right, so that like local networks, local NGOs, other NGOs couldn't exist in that space. And then bait and switching. Like this is particularly evil.
Garrison Davis
For our last main story, something that is I arguably, arguably less depressing. On Tuesday night we saw the first real test of Zoran Mamdani and New York City DSA's political power. All three of the Mamdani endorsed candidates won the Congressional Democratic primary and nine out of 10 insurgent candidates on the DSA slate won their races for Congress, State assembly and state State Senate. These insurging candidates are non income as people challenging seats. Now as for the Mamdani slate, former City Comptroller Brad Lander beat incumbent Congressman dan Goldman with 65.8% of the vote in District 10, which is Park Slope to Lower Manhattan. Dan Goldman is an establishment Democrat who's supported by aipac. He got famous for Trump's first impeachment hearing. Oh, how well that went. Bradlander opposes aipac, has long called Israel's actions in Gaza genocide, but also describes himself as a quote, unquote liberal Zionist, the one that would vote against offensive weapons sales to Israel. When campaigning with Mamdani and Palestinian activist Mohsen Madhui, who's been targeted by the Trump administration. Bradlander said, quote, as a proud Jewish New Yorker, I will join you in that fight to end occupation and apartheid and genocide, unquote. Lander's victory here is a pretty significant upset. He was projected to win. He was doing good in the polls. But unseating Goldman is not a small feat. The second congressional race I want to talk about is in Bushwick, Greenpoint and Williamsburg. And this was technically an empty seat, but the outgoing congresswoman threw her backing behind Progressive Antonio Reynoso. The Brooklyn Bureau president, Mamdani and the DSA backed Claire Valdez, a State assembly member and a union organizer. There was a huge organizing push for Claire in the weeks leading up to the election. There's a massive ground game from DSA. 300,000 doors knocked. Meanwhile, a dark money super PAC dropped up to a million dollars in the last week of the election to blast pro Reynoso ads. And Reynoso had backing of a bunch of unions and the Working Families Party, more kind of like typical, you know, progressive Democratic establishment organizations in New York. This is the, quote, unquote, like commie corridor. This is like the kind of one of the further left districts in the country. And Reynoso is a progressive figure, but Claire was absolutely running to his left and had support from the UAW as
well as the DSA.
And come election day, Claire won with 56.1% of the vote, while Reynoso earned 35.8%. But the biggest upset of the night was in the 13th district, Upper Manhattan and parts of the West Bronx.
Community organizer Darryl Lisa Avila Chavier beat the chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, Adriano Espaillat. Espail has been a powerhouse in New
York city politics for 30 years. He's deeply tied to the New York City Democratic political establishment. And this was the closest race.
Avila Xavier won with 49.4% of the vote to Espail, 45.9%. Avila Xavier has been very active in pro Palestinian organizing in New York City, including the Colombia encampments. Pro Espion attack ads against her highlighted
a tweet she wrote a few years
ago reading, quote, unquote, fuck Kamala Harris. AIPAC pumped $650,000 into a Pro Esplat Super PAC, which spent almost $3 million to help re elect him.
And in total espionage received over 7 million from the real estate Wall street
pro Israel lobby and from GOP donors, as well as a collection of super PACs.
In the lead up to this primary, things were getting pretty ugly. In response to a campaign speech where Mamdani quoted Zizek's translation of Gramsci quote, the old world is dying and the new world struggles to be born. Now is the time of monsters. Before discussing how AIPAC and super pacs are using dark money to hide the identity of donors while blanketing the airways in bad faith attack. In response to this speech, New Jersey Democratic House Rep. Josh gottheimer responded.
Monsters.
Dark money, A hidden hand turning us against each other.
Swap APAC for Jews. And it's the oldest anti Semitic conspiracy
theory in the books, unquote.
James Stout
It shall make up a bunch of shit. And it means a different thing.
Garrison Davis
Yeah. If you swap this word for this word.
Ad Read Voice 2
If you change what this is.
James Stout
Yeah. If you said something completely different, it would have a different meaning. Meaning.
Garrison Davis
But Mamdani has faced multiple questions about
this in the past few days, and I think he has answered them fairly well. But, yeah, people trying to insinuate that dark money is like an anti Semitic term when it just refers to, like an actual process of hiding the identity of donors to a super PAC.
James Stout
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
And a term people have been using for 20 years.
Garrison Davis
It's a real term.
It's a real. It's a real term.
Ad Read Voice 2
There's a book called Dark. It's a term people have been using for forever.
Garrison Davis
It's completely absurd.
But things got way worse than this. While campaigning, Dariel Isa was harassed by people yelling, quote, unquote, Jew hater. And someone following her around screaming, she's Haitian.
Ad Read Voice 2
Jesus Christ.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Racial animus continued to be weaponized in the District 13 election.
A senior advisor to Representative Espaillat, who is then on leave, went on a
Spanish language podcast to say that Mamdani wanted to change the racial demographics of Washington Heights, northern Manhattan by making it, quote, no longer a bastion of the Dominican community, unquote, but instead a quote, unquote, bastion of the Haitian Muslim community allied to him.
Ad Read Voice 1
Oh, boy.
James Stout
Anti Haitian bigotry, specifically among Dominicans, is a real and vicious thing. Right. We've made a whole podcast about this a couple of weeks ago. But I did wonder when I. When they sweared someone was shouting, she's Haitian. If that was what was happening there.
Garrison Davis
Yes. And that was definitely weaponized by campaign advisors and volunteers going into this race.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Darieliza herself is a child of Dominican immigrants. She's Afro Latina.
But this advisor's invocation of this great replacement theory style attack is an extremely disgusting play.
James Stout
Yeah, it is. This is. This exists in the discourse in the Dominican Republic, to be clear. Like, it's not. They didn't. They didn't whip that one out. Thin air.
Garrison Davis
But yeah, politicians from the Dominican Republic echoed this rhetoric on X. The everything applied in specific reference to this district 13 election.
Come election day, Espad's canvassers screamed at
dairylies of voters and volunteers, quote, dominicans
only go to Cuba if you want communism.
Shut up. Get Educated. We don't want Islam here either. We're Christians here, unquote.
James Stout
Jesus Christ. Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Very ugly weaponization of racial nationalism.
James Stout
Yeah. Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Now this did not work, Terry. Elisa won in what is a massive upset. And her Palestinian activism was a big part of her campaign and proof that anti Israel politics do have a strong place in the Democratic Party moving forward. And to do that, you have to unseat these AIPAC backed candidates.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
This was a really big night for New York City dsa, and this election has cemented that. New York City DSA is possibly the strongest political machine in the city, at least in terms of elections. Right. And if you want to look at political power more broadly, it's like the New York City DSA and like the NYPD right now that are like strong dueling factions. And part of Zoran Mamdani's mayorship is a manifestation of those contradictions. But also based on this sweep of DSA candidates going against establishment Democrat incumbents, people are also reconsidering zoron and the DSA's decision to curb Councilman Chose's primary challenge against Hakeem Jeffries.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Who knows how that would have gone? Possibly she could have tapped into this incredible momentum and beaten House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries. That could have certainly been possible. DSI was also pretty thinly stretched this election. They had a lot of stuff going on. And it's possible that a primary of this scale would have prohibited their ability to win some of these other elections.
We don't know.
I don't think it's super useful to retroactively speculate so much. But this sweep is useful information going forward that supports the idea that there is a real hunger to unseat these establishment Democratic figures. And that has been proven Tuesday night in New York City.
James Stout
It's the, it's the polar opposite of what we've seen in California. Right. Which is like the Democratic Party doubling down without as many successful left primary challenges.
Garrison Davis
Yeah. And I mean, New York City DSA is like a uniquely highly organized, like, faction in the city. Like, the fact that it was able to out organize the Working Families Party is, is significant.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
And to, to, to a pretty, to a pretty extensive degree.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
In Bushwick, the Commie Corridor, Greenpoint, Williamsburg,
James Stout
there's still space for them to run under Working Families Party and run a spoiler, but we'll see how it goes.
Garrison Davis
Yeah.
And I mean, specifically, if Dariel Isa gets into Congress, which it is almost certain that she will, based on how this night went, she could very likely be the farthest left Congress member in the history of the country. Or at least in the past like 50 years, like significantly to the left of AOC and the campaign itself was significantly to the left of AOC's campaign.
Ad Read Voice 1
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
Anyway, that is what happened in New York Tuesday night.
Bailey New Poster
Cool.
Ad Read Voice 2
I guess last. We should talk about a couple of mass shootings that have unfortunately occurred in the last week. Two mass shootings that I wanted to talk about. One happened just the day before. We are recording this. So on June 23rd of 2026 in
Garrison Davis
Montreal, 25 year old Seth Hatfield of
Lethbridge, Virginia allegedly started shooting from a
hotel window in the Codenay borough of Montreal.
Footage posted to social media shows the
shooter firing at police on street level
before being shot and killed himself. Two other people were killed during this
incident, a police officer and a civilian.
Ad Read Voice 2
There's a manifesto, it's about 104 pages that is out. I have not gotten to read the whole thing yet, but early reporting on it suggests it's a lot of incel type rhetoric. A lot of discussion about like how it's unfair that women are, you know, hypergamous and going for all of this like tiny number of attractive guys. And so this huge. It's very normal like incel stuff. He like lists out the different like classes of targets that he thinks are okay. One thing that does kind of make this interesting is he's grafting this like weird kind of like reactionary anti capitalism to the in seldom which has been done before. This is not like the first time I've seen this.
Garrison Davis
Also mixing in the west is preventing me from getting my girlfriend right.
James Stout
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
Mixing in some anti Semitism and anti Zionism and also mixing in like at least some like kind of left wing and right wing signifying really like there's some calls to, you know, ending capitalism that can seem kind of socialist, but then a lot of really reactionary anti immigrant stuff in there too. He's also really angry at pickup artists. The shooting took place outside of the head office of alo, which is the parent company of pornhub. And he was also really angry about pornhub.
Garrison Davis
A big, a big chunk of the
Ad Read Voice 2
manifest was apparently him justifying like attacking executives of specific companies, including like the people who put out pornography. This is not like super weird stuff unfortunately. But yeah, it is very sad. It's not the first time this has happened in Canada. There have been. In 2018 there was a van attack in Toronto that killed 10. That was kind of an incel linked attack. There was a 2020 machete attack. And then of course there was the Cole Polytechnic attack, which was a couple of decades ago at this point, which is considered to be in some cases, some people would argue like the first of the incel. Kind of like public mass attacks.
James Stout
Yeah.
Ad Read Voice 2
And then also this week, there was a mass shooting in Chico, California. We don't know a whole lot about this one yet, but I did want to know that it's happened. Law enforcement officials have said that the shooter was wearing clothing like that of the Columbine killer, Eric Harris, and seems to have been like a Columbiner, someone who was interested in mass shootings as a fan and was carrying out this almost as an act of fandom. Again, this is the kind of scene we. We thing we've seen unfortunately like well over a hundred times in the past. So it's very sad. We'll probably talk a little more about Chico in the future. There's just not a ton of. Of information out, but I didn't want people to not be aware of it.
Ad Read Voice 1
Those countries sucks.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yeah, well, the news.
James Stout
Yeah, it's not a great time in America.
Garrison Davis
Yeah, well, to quote Zoron's quote of Zizek mistranslating Gramshi.
James Stout
Yeah.
Garrison Davis
The world is dying and the new
one struggles to be born. Now is the time of monsters.
Ad Read Voice 2
No, no, no, no. I disagree. I think now is the time of the mon Stars, the antagonists from the classic film Space Jam. This is their year.
Garrison Davis
Go Nyx.
Ad Read Voice 2
Yep.
Ad Read Voice 1
Put a trans girl in your couch.
Garrison Davis
We reported the news.
We reported the news.
Ad Read Voice 2
Hey, we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now until the heat death of the universe.
Ad Read Voice 1
It could happen.
Garrison Davis
Here is a production of Cool Zone Media. For more podcasts from Cool Zone Media, Visit our website coolzone media.com or check us out on the iHeartRadio app, Apple
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Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts,
Garrison Davis
you can now find sources where it could happen here listed directly directly in episode descriptions. Thanks for listening.
James Stout
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Podcast: Behind the Bastards – Cool Zone Media/iHeartPodcasts
Date: June 27, 2026
Host(s): Garrison Davis, with guests Bailey New Poster, James Stout, Lee Hurley, Mia Wong, Robert Evans, Graham Platner
This compilation episode covers a tumultuous week in the U.S. and abroad (June 17–24, 2026) through the multiple lenses of political spectacle, grassroots resistance, class struggle, and the ongoing rise of far-right authoritarianism. Organized in the "It Could Happen Here" format, the hosts deliver deep dives into the attempted terrorist attack on the White House during a Trump-era UFC spectacle, grassroots solidarity in Belfast following racist riots, the dire class position of trans Americans, the insurgent Maine Senate race, and breaking news from the week—including the crackdown on anti-ICE protesters, climate disasters, and election upsets.
[02:53–54:52]
"This is what happens when people turn the rhetoric up so loud that disagreeing with somebody is a cause for violence." (J.D. Vance, 08:28)
[59:04–80:09] | Story by Lee Hurley
[83:48–113:14]
[116:32–161:34] | By Garrison Davis
[165:29–234:23] | Hosted by Garrison Davis, panel with James Stout, Robert Evans, et al.
The episode’s through-line is the tension between growing authoritarian violence—state repression, far-right conspiracy, and political rot—and the persistent, sometimes quiet, sometimes explosive organizing by ordinary people refused to give in. Whether it’s mutual aid in Belfast, a surging working-class campaign in Maine, relentless resistance in trans and immigrant communities, or the rise of insurgent socialist electoral victories, the show illustrates both the ruin and hope of the present.
Closing call:
“If you don't want to volunteer on this campaign, that's fine. Join a labor union, go help out at the local food pantry, go help out at a food bank. It doesn't matter what you do, but you gotta do something because the moment we're in right now, it's going to require all of us.” – Graham Platner [158:12]
This summary is designed to provide a comprehensive guide to the episode’s central themes, arguments, and facts—preserving the language, wit, and urgency of the original while enabling new listeners to quickly grasp crucial context and highlights.