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Sacha Stone
Hi, this is Free Thinking through the Fourth Turning My Name is Sacha Stone, Original Sin and the Party of Creeps how one of the Greatest Stories Ever Told Will Never Be Told by Hollywood I wasn't sure I'd be able to finish the Jake Tapper Alex Thompson book Original Sin. I downloaded the audiobook Narrated by Jake Tapper to listen to as I drive across the country from California to Ohio to see my daughter for her birthday. Out my window is the same running commentary of the real America I witnessed years ago that changed my mind about Trump and maga. And when you see Trump's name arising in unexpected places in nearly every state from Arizona, Viva Trump. To Nebraska to Iowa to New York, you know something significant has shifted in this country. It felt like a secret cry for help among forgotten and abandoned Americans. I see it even now. Podcast Listener is a picture of the back of a truck with an American flag, Trump fist pump and we the People and a cargo container with Trump's name festooned across it. I was not encouraged by the book's first chapter, which describes a world where the Democratic Party isn't corrupt, where they don't handpick candidates, then force everyone to vote blue no matter who, where identity politics don't rule the day, and where the democratic process is allowed to play out. Here is Jake Tapper reading from Original Sin.
David Plouffe
Ponder the question that Democrats such as Harris and others who might have run in 2024 Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg, Senator Amy klobuchar of Minnesota, Governor Gavin Newsom of California, Governor J.B. pritzker of Illinois, Governor Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan replay in their minds if Biden had not run for reelection, or if he had acknowledged his decay and changed his mind about it in 2023, what would have happened? If history is any guide, a competitive primary and caucus process would have produced a stronger Democratic nominee, one who had more experience with debates and taking questions from reporters, one with a more cogent and precise answer as to why they were running, one with time to introduce themselves to the American people. Past flip flops on issues would have been addressed. Policy proposals would have been fleshed out, winning messages would have been formed. The nominee would have figured out a way to respectfully but forcefully distance themselves from the unpopular incumbent president and forge a new path representing change. Would that candidate have been able to do 1.5 percentage points better in Michigan, 1.8 points better in Pennsylvania, and 0.9 points better in Wisconsin? To the ploughs of the world, it's hard to argue no, if Biden had decided in 2023 to drop out, we would have had a robust primary, Plouff said. Whitmer, Pritzker, Newsom, Buttigieg, Harris and Klobuchar would have run. Warnock and Shapiro would have kicked the tires of it. Maybe Mark Cuban or a businessperson of Some sort of 20% of governors and 30% of senators would have thought about it. We would have been eminently stronger. Once it became clear to the world that Biden needed to drop out, Obama, former House Speaker Pelosi and others pushed for some sort of open process in July and August. Biden's refusal to budge until July20.
Sacha Stone
What a load of garbage. To quote Deep Throat and All the President's Men. Oh, but it's touching. Just imagine Gavin Newsom attempting to challenge Kamala Harris. She might be the world's worst candidate, but all points lead back to her. You have to start there. Whether they had a primary or not, they knew that, which is why they skipped the foreplay and went straight to the first ever installed candidate for president. So I didn't think listening to an entire audiobook shaped by a false premise and awash in false media narratives would be a good use of my time. Maybe I'd listen to, I don't know, the new Mark Twain biography. As Victor Davis Hanson puts it, Jake Tapper is an unreliable narrator because there would be no Biden cover up if the media had done its job.
Victor Davis Hanson
And now he wants to say what? I have a little humility. I may, may or not. I sort of, kind of was part of the COVID up. But now the real Jake Tapper is in this book who's now telling truth to power. No, you're telling truth to impotence. Joe Biden has got cancer. He's written off, he's in decline. The family is disgraced. It's easy now to write about that. It was hard and would require intellectual courage, moral fortitude to say this when he was the most powerful man in the world. And so, Jake Tapper, you failed that test because this is one of the greatest acts of duplicity, moral duplicity, I've seen in my entire life. And it joins a long, long, long list of collusion, capers, conspiracy, bogus frauds, ruses. Jake Tapper, you should go back and see. What was your position on Russian collusion? What was your position on Hunter laptop disinformation? What was your position on the Steele dossier? What was your position on the 51 intelligence authorities? And I think in every one of those failed the test of truth. And you really did this time in the greatest cover up in the history, as I said, of the American presidency. And it's not over yet, because we're going to learn more and more tragically about Joe Biden's medical condition and to see if not just whether the cognitive disabilities of Biden were cover up, but whether his prostate metastasized cancer contributed to that and that source was also covered up.
Sacha Stone
Had Original Sin been written by Tom Wolfe, Gore Vidal, or even Walter Kern and Matt Taibbi, it would have been the searing indictment of a deep state plot foiled by Mr. Magoo, told with bemused irony. But it is dead serious, for better or worse. But I have to say, in the end, I'm glad I stuck with it. It might not be the definitive account of the rise and fall of a once mighty empire I would have wanted, but it is a surprisingly revealing look behind the curtain all the same. Could it really be that Jeffrey Katzenberg and Steven Spielberg were brought in to direct Joe Biden with better light, sound and acting coaching? Yes. Could it be that Rob Reiner and Jane Fonda broke down in hysterics at some mansion in the Hollywood Hills after the debate? Yes. If the aim was to scapegoat Joe Biden, they failed. He comes off as the most sympathetic, a victim of a massive machine of creeps that chewed him up and spit him out. Do they legitimately believe we would sympathize with some fat cat in Hollywood who threatens never to write another check unless they push Biden out? We're supposed to care what donors think. Tapper seems to have emerged from the grim experience with a bit of a perspective shift. At least now he's able to talk about the problems the Democrats have in a way he hasn't in the past 10 years.
Unknown Speaker
My son is now 15 years old and he's a gamer. He's a football fan, starting linebacker on his varsity football team. The Democratic Party has no way of communicating with him. They have no entree into his world. And in fact, it's interesting. I went on a left leaning podcast that shall remain nameless and we were talking about my kids because I think they were both people without kids. And they asked me about my son and I said he was, you know, he's, he's a football player and he wants to be a policeman. And their joke was about my 15 year old son. Oh, how does he feel about minorities? Like the idea that he wants to be a policeman, therefore he's, he's racist. My son. And like, you know, that was the big laugh. And then I got dragged in the comments and all that stuff, and I thought to myself, this is why you fuckers are losing elections 100%. Like my football playing son, who has no political views. He's 15. He thinks about World War II and gaming and playing linebacker. That's his world. You're deciding he's a racist because he wants to be a cop. And why does he want to be a cop? He wants to be a cop because he wants to help people, you know, and. And he thinks that's the best way he can help people. And that's how the Democratic Party talks to men. Not just white men, but men. And I mean, I get the idea that they thought Tim Walls could.
David Plouffe
What.
Unknown Speaker
What's the term he. He used? Code switch or something? He thought that he could. He could translate the Democratic Party values because he hunts and fishes and owns a gun and was in the army and drinks a beer. I mean, at least there was an attempt, but I find it just insane.
Sacha Stone
The value of original sin, at least for someone like me, who fled the party in disgust in 2020 after watching them use all their power to take our elections away from the people and decide their outcome, isn't so much that there are any new revelations, but it's a book written from the inside, with access to over 200 voices anxious to be heard. That meant following the events as they unfolded in real time. And let me tell you, there is pleasure in that. I found it cathartic, not just because the Democrats had it coming and got everything they deserved, but for the sheer joy of witnessing the most powerful people in the world have their asses handed to them by the very democracy they claimed they wanted to protect. That George Clooney, Steven Spielberg, and Jeffrey Katzenberg were so heavily involved in the politics of the Democrats makes it all look like the wizard of Oz, pulling back the curtain and exposing the ugly truth. Hollywood might make this into a series for HBO or Netflix, but since the co founder and chairman of Netflix, Reed Hastings, was one of the fat cats who threatened to withhold funds unless the Democrats got rid of Biden, I'm guessing we won't get the whole story. Podcast listeners, a headline. Netflix co founder and Democratic megadon are calls for Biden to step aside, but if they wanted to tell it like it really happened, it would make one hell of a tale. The story that writes itself. Hollywood doesn't have the guts to tell the whole story. They can't, because they're part of it they're way too cozy with the Democrats and if they really wanted to tell the truth, they'd have to admit, as with Michael Corleone, they are part of the same hypocrisy. At best, they could cobble together something that paints Trump as the ultimate evil, that vain and selfish Joe and Joe Biden allowed to take back power. The real story is how they built a powerful coalition and had no choice but to turn to corruption to preserve that power. This would make a great long form series Episode 1 the Hope and Change candidate lights up the world and chooses an old white guy to be his veep, just as JJFK did with LBJ. A cynical ploy to make his youth, inexperience and in this case skin color more palatable for a nervous electorate. Episode 2 the Hope and Change guy doesn't like the old white guy as a successor of his powerful coalition, which now includes all of culture, all corporations, all institutions, all media, all social media. Why go backwards? The old white guy with a stutter who just lost his beloved son to brain cancer was no longer useful to the Hope and Change guy. No one thinks much of it as he's kicked to the curb and embarrassed as not electable enough, not desirable enough, and passed his sell by date. So the Hope and Change guy picks the Wall street sweetheart, the former first lady and Secretary of State, to become the first woman potus. With the help of a grassroots populist movement and an old socialist challenging the Wall street sweetheart, the party is fractured and Trump wins. Episode 3 the Establishment and the Obama coalition decide that Trump should not be allowed to rule. Forget democracy, who needs it? No old white guy was supposed to win, least of all that guy podcast listeners, a picture of the Women's March and a sign the system can't withstand our collective resistance. Millions pour into the streets in an orgy of self pity, imagined oppression, fragility, privilege and narcissism. Mass hysteria takes hold. Cancel Culture grips the left. Hundreds lose their jobs as they desperately try to undo the election results and get rid of Trump. They impeach him. They frame him. They smear him. They attack him. The OG old white guy waiting in the wings isn't looking so bad. An easy lateral move. An establishment pick one old white guy for another. Episode 42020 is its own whole episode. It has to be. It was the year the Democrats sold their souls to the devil to clean, cling to power. They spent 1 billion with a well funded cabal of elites to fund and amplify racial protests, change election laws 400 million to collect ballots and trot in experts to lie about everything from the laptop to Covid to the protests. They censored Americans on social media and the FBI forced censorship of the laptop. The country sinks. Media credibility is destroyed. Large swaths of the electorate abandon the Democrats, but the old white guy wins. So finally he gets his dream at long last to be President of the United States. Episode 5 the Old White guy is finally the savior he always dreamed he'd be. He became a blank check for black Americans, trans Americans and especially women of color. He would finish what the hope and change guy started. Are we topless at the White House? Welcome to the Lighthouse. Thank you. Happy Pride month.
Unknown Speaker
Can we take a Little video? Hi, Mr. President.
Sacha Stone
It is an honor. Fans. Rights or human rights? Are we top this at the White House? But the old white guy bungles the withdrawal from Afghanistan and his approval ratings tank. Americans don't see a nice old grandpa anymore. They see George Spahn who just moved in the Manson family who are now running the country. Now what? He goes after Trump and maga, calling them fascists, extremists and a danger to society. If the old white guy can't have the presidency, then no one will. For podcast listeners, a picture of Biden in his blood red fascist speech. The old white guy isn't so nice anymore. Trump is indicted four times, convicted and takes a mugshot that goes viral. They've sold their souls to the devil after all. They're not going to give up power so easily. Podcast listeners, a headline FBI raid on Donald Trump's Mar A Lago residence is the first in presidential history. Episode six, the Final Battle. Trump teases and torments the old white guy and forces him to debate. Trump mocks him mercilessly at rallies for not knowing where he is. For Trump, beating him will be a cakewalk for anyone not sucked into the false reality pushed by the legacy media.
Donald Trump
And has become crooked Joe Biden's top surrogate. I think because he doesn't think Biden is going to make it. That's why he's doing it. He doesn't think he's going to make it and it won't be him so easy. He's going to have a big fight. However, because there will be a lot of Democrats competing is going to be very interesting. But let's see. Look. Some people say Biden's going to make it. Does anybody think he's going to make it to the starting gate? I mean, a guy can't find his way off of a stage look, here's a stage. Here's a stage. I've never seen this stupid stage before. Right? I've never seen it. But if I walk left, there's a stair, and if I walk right, there's a stair, and this guy gets up, where am I? Where the hell am I? Where am I? Nah, he's terrible, Terrible. You know, I'm much tougher on him than I used to be out of respect for the office. I was never like, he's the most corrupt president, the most incompetent president we've ever had. But when they indicted me, and then again and again and again, I was never indicted. Now I'm setting records. Al Capone was not indicted so much. Alphonse Capone. If you looked at Al Capone in the wrong way, he'd kill you. He was not indicted like me. I was never indicted. I didn't know when they taught me at the Wharton School of Finance, they didn't talk about indictment.
Sacha Stone
Trump and Biden debate rematch. The old white guy crashes and burns so hard, it nearly sets Rob Reiner's hair on fire. He just lost the election. Dana Bash scribbles on a note to Jake Tapper. What now for the empire that was never the resistance.
Donald Trump
And, you know, that's a little bit old, that chart. That chart's a couple of months old. And if you want to really see something that said, take a look at what happened.
Sacha Stone
Trump survives an assassination attempt at Butler. The following month, his entire campaign is transformed. Elon Musk joins his dream team. This was our last, best hope for America. We wanted out. We wanted something new. We wanted to be set free.
Donald Trump
What will we do with this moment? How will we be remembered? Look at the opportunities before us.
Sacha Stone
This election really isn't about the left versus the right. It's about we, the people, choosing our government and the choice between freedom versus tyranny.
Unknown Speaker
Nobody has a chronic disease burden like we have. Why are we allowing this to happen to our children? Ultimately, the only thing that will save our country is if we choose to love our kids more than we hate each other.
What is going on here is deeper than politics. It is deeply spiritual. We are being called to rise above the hatred and the fear and the evil.
David Plouffe
We need to remember above and beyond that we must love our neighbors, that we must treat other people as we hope to be treated.
Donald Trump
You want to be a rebel? You want to be a hippie? You want to stick it to the man?
Sacha Stone
Show up on your college campus and.
Donald Trump
Try calling yourself a conservative.
David Plouffe
America is going to reach heights that.
Donald Trump
It has never seen before.
David Plouffe
The future is going to be amazing.
Unknown Speaker
Don't you want healthy children? Don't you want a president that's going to make America a healthy again?
I come to you today as a former Democrat. I will be a first time Trump voter. Tonight.
Donald Trump
The people dreamed this country and it's the people who are making America great again.
Sacha Stone
But inside the bubble, it's original sin. It's denial. It's a legacy press that lies to the monarchs, lies to their voters, sending them cascading into yet more hysteria. Please make the bad orange man go away for the sake of democracy. Please give us our utopia back. Jane Fonda, Steven Spielberg, Jimmy Kimmel, Stephen Colbert, David Simon, Jon Stewart, Bruce Springsteen, Neil Young and Rob Reiner are all losing their minds. It's a dystopia full of aging, frustrated aristocrats who can't keep democracy down. We're about to lose our democracy. They cry. Biden will lose us our democracy, they insist. How could this be happening? Get rid of the old white guy. Get rid of him for the sake of democracy. For podcast listeners, a headline. George Clooney. I love Joe Biden, but we need a new nominee. We need a new nominee, says George Clooney. Who's we? What happened to democracy? Now the duly elected nominee, AKA the old white guy, must step aside to save democracy. Yes, that is where the Democrats arrived in their pitiful last gasp to salvage and preserve their power, they cynically install the woman of color because they know all points lead to Kamala Harris. Their flock will fall in line as they always have. Push him out. Push the old white guy out. In a palace coup worthy of a fading, useless, self serving monarchy on the brink of collapse, Trump wins again. We see the old white guy grinning in the Oval Office and having the last laugh. They used him, they lied to him, they flattered him, then they kicked him out. All because they were exposed and couldn't hide the truth anymore.
Unknown Speaker
Former president and President elect Donald Trump and Joe Biden met for nearly two hours today in the White House in a cordial meeting. They shook hands and sort of talk back and forth. We were only very briefly in there, didn't get to say much or hear much. We heard President Biden call Trump both former President and Mr. President and President Elect before he finally settled on Donald. And he said that there would be a smooth transition. And Trump was sort of very gracious. They shook hands and Trump said that politics could often sort of be a, you know, a bad world, but it wasn't today and that this was very positive. And he said, you know, thank you, Joe. He said that the transition would be as smooth as it, as it could be. You know, I think that it was a little bit different from 2016, when Trump first came to the White House with, as President elect with Obama and seemed a little bit sort of nervous and subdued. This time he seemed to be more in his element. He seemed to, you know, he's coming back to a place he knew pretty well. But he was also sort of very gracious and didn't really get into sort of the back and forth.
Sacha Stone
As the scene fades to black, we see a close up on Jake Tapper lying in bed working it all out. Holy shit. He thinks someone has to tell this story. He picks up the phone. Alex, hi, it's Jake. Was wondering if we might talk. I mean, come on. It's Ishtar Part 2. It writes itself.
Unknown Speaker
Telling the truth can be good news. Da da da da da da da da da da. Telling the truth is a bad idea. Telling the truth is a difficult problem. Telling the truth. Telling the truth is a scary. Telling the truth is a scary predicament. Telling the truth is a bitter herb. Telling the truth is a dangerous tunnel. When you get out of that tunnel, you've got bitter herbs. Black life ahead.
Sacha Stone
Forget herb.
Unknown Speaker
I never heard of a hit that.
Had the word herb in it.
Telling the truth is a dangerous, dangerous. Telling the truth can be dangerous. What? Telling the truth can be dangerous. Telling the truth can be dangerous business. Telling the truth can be dangerous business. Why?
Victor Davis Hanson
Why?
Sacha Stone
Why?
Unknown Speaker
Telling the truth can be dangerous business. Because if yourself. You don't know why. Well, I'm just giving you with the ideas. Telling the truth can be dangerous business. If you don't know yourself, then you don't know why.
David Plouffe
Oh, is that brilliant?
Unknown Speaker
Telling the truth can be dangerous business. Honest and popular don't go hand in hand. If you admit that you can play the accordion no one will hire you in a rock and roll band. But we can't sing our hearts out.
Sacha Stone
Do I think you should read Original Sin? Absolutely. It might not be the whole truth. It might be spin for the Democrats to regroup and recover. It might be reputation laundering for the media. But for me it was an early Christmas present, if only for the delicious pleasure of watching them squirm as their corrupt plot to cling to power unravels. I can't think of anything more satisfying than that. Original Sin proves two the Democrats are creeps and they got exactly what they deserve somewhere in Iowa 8pm thank you for listening to my podcast sashastone.substack.com I'm on the road and I'm posting some of my travel logs. At least I posted one for paid subscribers. And if you like my work, please consider becoming a paid subscriber, which you can do over at Substack. And thank you for all your support. Thank you for listening and for your patience. I hope you have a great weekend. And remember to thine own self be.
Jackson Browne
True Looking out at the road rushing under my wheel Looking back at the years gone by like so many so 65 I was 17 running up 101 I don't know where I'm running out I'm just running out running around you running into the sun but I'm running behind you got to do what you can just to keep your love alive Trying not to confuse it with what you do to survive that I was 21 and I called the Lord my own I don't know when that road turned on to the road I know running into the sun but I'm running.
Sacha Stone
Behind.
Jackson Browne
Ra people need some real reason to believe I don't know about anyone but me if it takes all night that'll be all right if I can get you to smile before I leave Looking out at the road rushing under.
Sacha Stone
My wheel.
Jackson Browne
I don't know how to tell you I'll just tell you how crazy this life feel I look around for the friends that I used to turn to the P Looking into the eyes I see them running on running on empty running on running the sun but I'm running behind honey you really tempt me know the way you look so kind I want to know who you are but I'm running behind oh no I don't even know but I'm hoping to find Running blind running into the sun but I'm running behind.
Free Thinking Through the Fourth Turning with Sasha Stone
Episode: Original Sin and the Party of Creeps
Release Date: May 25, 2025
In this compelling episode of Free Thinking Through the Fourth Turning, host Sasha Stone delves into the intricate dynamics of American politics and culture through the lens of Jake Tapper’s controversial book, Original Sin. Stone, a former Democrat disillusioned with the political landscape, embarks on a critical examination of the Democratic Party's internal struggles, media narratives, and the broader implications for American democracy. The episode intertwines book analysis with speculative narratives, featuring insights from notable commentators like David Plouffe and Victor Davis Hanson, ultimately painting a vivid picture of the current political climate in the United States.
Stone begins the episode by recounting her experience with Jake Tapper’s Original Sin. She shares a personal anecdote about listening to Tapper’s audiobook during a cross-country drive, juxtaposed with her observations of a shifting political landscape where Donald Trump’s influence appears to be resurging across various states:
“When you see Trump's name arising in unexpected places in nearly every state from Arizona, Viva Trump. To Nebraska to Iowa to New York, you know something significant has shifted in this country.”
— Sasha Stone [00:00]
Despite initial skepticism about the book's premise—that the Democratic Party operates without corruption and allows a fair democratic process—Stone finds herself drawn into Tapper’s narrative, which she initially dismisses as “a load of garbage” but later acknowledges some unexpected revelations.
The episode features a critical segment led by David Plouffe, who analyzes hypothetical scenarios surrounding the Democratic Party’s strategy and candidate selection:
“If Biden had decided in 2023 to drop out, we would have had a robust primary,”
— David Plouffe [01:30]
Plouffe argues that a competitive primary process could have yielded a stronger Democratic nominee, capable of better articulating the party's vision and distancing itself from an unpopular incumbent. This segment underscores the internal conflicts and strategic missteps within the Democratic Party, highlighting missed opportunities for revitalization.
However, Victor Davis Hanson provides a counterpoint, fiercely criticizing Tapper's portrayal of President Biden:
“Joe Biden has got cancer. He's written off, he's in decline. The family is disgraced.”
— Victor Davis Hanson [04:15]
Hanson accuses Tapper of moral duplicity and questions his credibility by referencing past controversies surrounding Russian collusion and disinformation campaigns. This critique adds depth to the discourse, presenting a polarized view of media narratives and their impact on public perception.
Stone transitions into a speculative exploration of how Hollywood might dramatize the political upheaval depicted in Original Sin. She imagines a multi-episode series that starkly portrays the rise and fall of political figures, emphasizing the manipulation and corruption within the Democratic Party:
“Original Sin proves two the Democrats are creeps and they got exactly what they deserve somewhere in Iowa 8pm.”
— Sasha Stone [26:38]
She argues that Hollywood’s involvement could either gloss over the complexities or fail to capture the true extent of political machinations, suggesting a conflict of interest given the close ties between media moguls and political entities.
A poignant moment in the episode features an anonymous speaker sharing a personal story about political intolerance faced by their teenager:
“The Democratic Party has no way of communicating with him. They have no entree into his world.”
— Unknown Speaker [07:27]
This narrative highlights the generational and cultural disconnects within the party, questioning its ability to resonate with younger voters and diverse demographics. Stone uses this story to illustrate broader themes of alienation and ineffective communication strategies employed by political factions.
As the episode progresses, Stone paints a dystopian vision of American politics, characterized by entrenched power structures, media manipulation, and the erosion of democratic norms. She elaborates on a fictionalized sequence of events leading to increased polarization, the rise of populist movements, and the ultimate downfall of traditional political figures:
“We are being called to rise above the hatred and the fear and the evil.”
— Unknown Speaker [20:08]
These segments serve as a cautionary tale about the potential consequences of ongoing political strife and the importance of safeguarding democratic institutions against corrosive influences.
In her concluding remarks, Stone reflects on the cathartic experience of engaging with Original Sin, despite its flaws:
“Original Sin might not be the whole truth. It might be spin for the Democrats to regroup and recover. It might be reputation laundering for the media. But for me, it was an early Christmas present...”
— Sasha Stone [26:38]
She emphasizes the satisfaction derived from witnessing political accountability and the unraveling of corrupt practices within the Democratic Party. Stone's final thoughts encapsulate her journey from skepticism to a grudging acknowledgment of the book's revelations, while maintaining her critical stance towards the broader political machinery.
Sasha Stone on Initial Skepticism:
“What a load of garbage. To quote Deep Throat and All the President's Men.”
— Sasha Stone [03:30]
Victor Davis Hanson on Media Bias:
“Jake Tapper, you should go back and see. What was your position on Russian collusion?”
— Victor Davis Hanson [04:15]
Anonymous Speaker on Political Alienation:
“Why does he want to be a cop? He wants to help people.”
— Unknown Speaker [08:15]
Donald Trump’s Satirical Commentary:
“He gets up, where am I? Where the hell am I? Where am I?”
— Donald Trump [16:31]
Sasha Stone’s episode Original Sin and the Party of Creeps offers a provocative exploration of American political turbulence, media influence, and internal party conflicts. By intertwining book analysis with speculative narratives and personal anecdotes, Stone provides listeners with a multifaceted perspective on the state of democracy and the evolving landscape of political power. Notably, the episode encourages critical reflection on the efficacy of political strategies, the role of media narratives, and the importance of authentic communication in bridging cultural and generational divides.
For those interested in a deep dive into the fractures within the Democratic Party and the broader implications for American society, this episode serves as a thought-provoking resource that challenges conventional narratives and invites listeners to reconsider their perspectives on political allegiance and national identity.
Listen to the full episode at sashastone.substack.com