Human Events with Jack Posobiec – December 15, 2025
Theme:
This episode of Human Events centers on an urgent, wide-ranging discussion about recent incidents of political violence and terrorism—both international and domestic—as well as the larger implications of mass migration, shifting demographics, and the perceived threats posed to Western societies. Host Jack Posobiec is joined by guests Will Chamberlain (Article III Project) and Andy Ngo (Post Millennial, “No Comment” Substack) for in-depth analysis.
Main Topics & Key Insights
1. Violent Attacks in the West: Syria, Brown University, Australia
(01:48–06:35)
- Jack Posobiec sets the tone by referencing several recent violent incidents:
- A deadly ISIS attack on U.S. soldiers in Syria.
- A terror plot in Los Angeles linked to the “Turtle Island Liberation Front.”
- Mass shootings at Brown University (Rhode Island) and Bondi Beach (Australia), both with potential extremist motives.
- The Brown University attack claimed the life of Ella Cook, a conservative student and vice president of the College Republicans. Jack highlights the lack of information and transparency from authorities about the perpetrator and motive.
"Ella's family will not have her home this Christmas... and a gunman shot her in the head and killed her. At a time when we're seeing so much terrorism and so much political violence."
— Jack Posobiec, (04:05)
- At Bondi Beach, a Hanukkah celebration was attacked by "migrants from the Middle East," interpreted by Jack as another warning about the dangers of immigration policies.
"When is the West going to wake up and understand that these third world migrants are not interested in assimilation. They are interested in murder."
— Jack Posobiec, (05:37)
2. The Australia Mass Shooting, Immigration, and Gun Control
Guest: Will Chamberlain (10:35–19:15)
-
Attack Details:
- Per Will, the attackers were a Pakistani father and son, well-known in their mosque; they killed 10 people including a 10-year-old girl at a Jewish Hanukkah event.
- Arson Ostrovsky, a Jewish social media figure, was wounded.
- Incident cited as “lone wolf Islamist terror,” emblematic of a global pattern.
-
Gun Control Critique:
- Australia’s strict gun laws did not prevent the attack, only prolonged the attackers’ unopposed activity.
"Australia has incredibly strict gun control. What did that mean? A guy with a bolt-action rifle was able to stand there and shoot people for like 20 minutes... In America, if there was anybody armed, that would have lasted seconds."
— Will Chamberlain, (14:02)
- Immigration & Demographics Argument:
- Australia now has the highest foreign-born population in the West (over 30%), fundamentally changing the political fabric.
- The hosts argue that even a 10–30% voting bloc can become a “kingmaker,” transforming native society and politics without a majority.
"It doesn't matter because once you have a voting bloc that's 30%, this could become an extremely powerful voting bloc and you can be the kingmaker."
— Jack Posobiec, (17:26)
3. U.S. Immigration, 9/11 Aftermath, and Muslim Migration
(21:53–24:51)
- Missed Opportunity Post-9/11:
- Will and Jack criticize the Bush Administration’s response: Instead of tightening immigration, they expanded national security and surveillance.
"Maybe, just maybe, all we really needed to do was lock down our borders, focus on who we are and keep each other safe. Why didn't we do that?"
— Jack Posobiec, (22:53)
-
Will: “Islam is not compatible with Western civilization, and mass Muslim migration is not compatible with Western societies. It’s time to say this.” (23:52)
-
Economic Critique of Migration:
- Jack highlights poor experiences with foreign Uber drivers, framing it as evidence migration does not deliver societal benefits.
"Uber sucks now... These are not Americans. It's become this new, like, import class of people... It's really bad in pretty much every city that I've been in lately."
— Jack Posobiec, (24:51)
- Will: The “servant class” of gig drivers doesn’t pay their own way or contribute economically.
"They're not actually adding meaningful value... They're extracting more benefits from the state than they're generating."
— Will Chamberlain, (26:05)
4. The Rise of Far Left Terrorism — Turtle Island Liberation Front
Guest: Andy Ngo (29:17–46:26)
(29:17–35:11)
- Turtle Island Liberation Front Overview:
- According to Andy, this “antifa-style” group openly combines Marxist, anti-American, pro-Palestinian, and “decolonization” rhetoric.
- Members allegedly plotted multiple bombings in Los Angeles; at least one arrested is transgender, which Andy claims is a pattern among far-left extremists.
"They urge violence. They call for the death of ICE agents... There's now always an excess of transgenderism [among these groups]."
— Andy Ngo, (31:13)
-
The group’s name refers to a Native American term for North America; their propaganda rallies a coalition of left-wing grievances, advocating U.S. destruction.
-
Operational Details:
- Feds released drone footage of group members assembling pipe bombs in the desert.
- One member is a former U.S. military vet, reflecting a “pattern” of left-wing groups actively seeking recruits with weapons training.
(36:37–44:46)
- Leftist Violence and Coverage:
- Andy details other acts of far-left violence and bombings, emphasizing their frequency and arguing public/media ignorance.
"We've seen over and over, there's so many. This is just unfortunately a drop in the bucket... The left is far more willing to use violence."
— Andy Ngo, (36:38/37:37)
- Systemic Failure & Legal System Bias:
- Federal prosecutors under the current administration no longer offer “sweetheart plea deals” to left-wing criminals, which Andy sees as a positive step.
- Local prosecutors/judges in left-leaning areas allegedly downplay or dismiss left-wing violence. He points to the CHAZ zone in Seattle as an example of impunity for leftist violence.
"Quite often the barrier to justice that I've seen in my many years of reporting on the violent far left are judges themselves and prosecutors working hand in hand..."
— Andy Ngo, (44:46)
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
- On Political Violence and Immigration:
"You are in a Marxist-jihadist revolution. Be right back."
— Jack Posobiec, (06:30)
- On ‘Replacement’ Demographics:
“I can't imagine the people of Australia are thrilled about effectively being replaced. What do you call that other than replacement if 30% of your population is foreign born?”
— Will Chamberlain, (16:57)
- On Media Narratives:
“Former statistics out of the mainstream press... were saying that, oh, the right is far more violent. But it's not true... it is the left that is far more willing to use violence.”
— Jack Posobiec, (37:37)
- On Post-9/11 Policy Choices:
“All we really needed to do was lock down our borders, focus on who we are, and keep each other safe. Why didn't we do that?”
— Jack Posobiec, (22:53)
- On Systemic Failure:
"Too often we see what appears to be activist judges making decisions that appear potentially politically motivated."
— Andy Ngo, (44:46)
Timestamps for Key Segments
- [01:48] – Jack opens with a summary of the week’s violent attacks (Syria, Brown University, Australia).
- [10:35] – Will Chamberlain analyzes the Australian attack, migrant demographics, gun control, and political implications.
- [21:53] – Critique of U.S. policy post-9/11; discussion on migration and changes in American society.
- [29:17] – Andy Ngo deep dive into the Turtle Island Liberation Front, antifa, and investigation of far-left violence.
- [40:22] – Andy reveals group targets, operational details, and legal response.
- [44:46] – Andy on judicial activism and the failure of the justice system in handling political violence.
Guest Wrap-Ups and Where to Find More
-
Will Chamberlain:
- Twitter (X): @WillChamberlain
- Article III Project: a3paction.com
-
Andy Ngo:
- Substack: ngocomment.com
- Author of Unmasked; Senior Editor at The Post Millennial
Tone & Language
- Direct, confrontational, and urgent.
- Frequent use of stark generalizations regarding immigration, demographics, and the threat of extremist violence.
- Strong criticism of institutions (media, local governments, courts) perceived as complicit or negligent.
Summary
For listeners seeking an unapologetically hardline conservative take on the recent wave of extremist violence—domestically and abroad—this episode delivers deeply critical perspectives on mass migration, security policy, and shifting Western demographics. Both guests offer case studies and firsthand expertise (legal, investigative) while the host drives home themes of lost national identity, government failure, and the perceived rise of far-left domestic terrorism. Notably, the conversation is propelled by real-world incidents and their political/cultural impacts, with little to no space for counterarguments.
