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Isaac Saul
law, 48 million people in the United States are adolescents between the ages of 14 and 24.
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Isaac Saul
Coming up, we are talking aliens, Trump's power and the gigantic slush fund of our tax dollar money going to the aggrieved. Before we jump into today's show though, I do have a special announcement. I want to let you guys know that we have a live taping of the Suspension of the Rules podcast coming to Berkeley Springs, West Virginia on Sunday, June 14th at 2:00pm There are tickets for sale right now for that live show. They're up on our website readtangle.com live. They'll be in the episode description of this podcast of the YouTube video. Wherever you go, you can probably find a link to go buy tickets for the show. It's going to be an awesome event. If you're not familiar with Berkeley Springs, it is a beautiful historical gem in the United States. There's tons of history there. There's a beautiful historic theater called the Star Theater where we're gonna be doing this live show. We're gonna have Andy Mills on stage with us. We're gonna be talking about AI and energy. We've got another guest, a soon to be announced guest, that's coming out to the show as well. Also, Saturday night before the show on Sunday, we're gonna have a VIP dinner at a restaurant owned by a very generous Tangle reader, which I'm super excited about. About half of those VIP tickets are already sold. So if you're interested in meeting the Tangled team, having a beautiful dinner in a beautiful part of West Virginia, shooting the shit with the Tangle fam, this is a great opportunity to do it. This might be our only event of 2026. I hope that's not true, but right now it's the only one on the schedule. So I encourage you to go check out the episode description, the YouTube description, our newsletters from last week, wherever you go to consume Tangle, and click on the link for tickets. If you're in Washington, D.C. philly, New Jersey, Pittsburgh, Ohio, Virginia, West Virginia. Many of you are probably in West Virginia. We're close. It's a drive, and you can even fly into an airport in the region and then hop in a rental car for a beautiful summer getaway. But it's coming up less than a month away. Hope to see you guys there. And thanks. Here's the show. Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening, and welcome to the Suspension of the Rules podcast. I'm your host, Isaac Saul. I'm here with you this week, but very shortly I might be in a castration center in Texas's 35th district if their new Democratic nominee has anything to say about it. So enjoy me while you have me, gentlemen.
Ari Weitzman
Is that the.
Camille Foster
Wow.
Ari Weitzman
No pun intended, I hope. But is that Your Teralingua district? The 30?
Isaac Saul
No. No, it's not. It's not.
Ari Weitzman
Okay. So you're safe for now. They're coming for the Zionists, but not your district, so you can say nothing.
Isaac Saul
Yeah, I newly acquainted with this woman who I think her name's Miranda Galindo. Is that right? I honestly don't know how to say her name. Maureen Galindo. Excuse me. I hope to never have to learn it by the grace of God. She'll be an irrelevant politician sometime in the next three or four months. But I found out about this this morning while reading and learning about the midterm elections in our country. And I think I would like to start by just reading this Instagram post that she. That she posted where she was trying to explain very gently that she's got nothing against the Jews. However, she did promise to convert ICE detention centers into internment camps for, quote, American Zionists. She added that it will also be a castration processing center for pedophiles, which will probably be most of the Zionists, end quote. This is a Democratic nominee in Texas's 35th district who just, by the way, came in first place in the Democratic primary in April. She's headed for a runoff now. She got 29.2% of the vote. So we're doing well. I mean, everybody seems good. I just. Last week we had Rand Paul's son. This week we've got Maureen Galindo. And we should note, by the way, I don't know if John got this edit in. We were recording the show last week and I, you know, made light of Rand Paul's son's kind of crazy anti Semitic rant at Mike Lawler in front of a reporter. And I said that he had not apologized. And we started recording the show around 4pm on Wednesday and about 5pm on Twitter, he actually did post an apology and said that he was gonna seek some help for his drinking. So, you know, I personally have never gotten shitfaced and started accusing a non Jew of being a Jew who was destroying the country. But I do appreciate the fact that he owned the conduct. And I'm less worried about him, more worried about this new woman, Maureen Galindo, who's now on my. My watch list for people I am scared of, who I hope I never run into in real life.
Camille Foster
Her assurances weren't credible to you, Isaac?
Isaac Saul
No, no, her assurances were credible to me. They were just also terrifying. They were not comforting, I would say. It's not the Jews, it's just anybody who supports the state of Israel's existence in any manner. Um, there you could make a pretty broad definition of Zionist, which definitely a broad definition of Zionist includes me for sure. Um, so, yeah, she scares me. Um, anyway, in lighter news, she only
Camille Foster
wants to castrate the pedos, so.
Isaac Saul
Oh, right.
Ari Weitzman
Yeah, I guess it's more evidence for my unified theory that you can get away with whatever you want in politics if you just blame terrorism or pedophilia. But at the Same time. Like, you know, this is another example of other parties also perhaps wanting to prop up extremists in the opposite party. Like, this is a person who benefited a little bit from fundraising from conservative or right wing PACs. So, like, kind of we're stuck in the cycle, I guess. Hopefully it just washes over, though.
Isaac Saul
We are definitely stuck in the cycle, though. I will note, I believe Texas is 35th district is currently represented by a Democrat. I think it got redrawn, so I think it's one of the districts that Democrats are expected to lose post gerrymander, but a little too close for comfort. Nonetheless. I'd prefer this woman was not getting 26% of the vote in any election. There's a lot of other news to get to. The three of us have kind of been. What's the word? We've been like, gallivanting in different directions recently. Camille, you just finished a trip to D.C. it sounded like you got to interview a whole bunch of interesting people. I've been sort of like, up and down the east coast, traveling out west a little bit. Ari's finally watching the summer bloom in Vermont. I saw a beautiful picture of Ari's dog today. And then we get to sit here and spend an hour together and decide what. What lovely topics we're gonna talk about. And today we have to touch on the political moment that is before us, which is Trump dominant as per usual, but I think especially forceful. In the last 48 hours, it seems like the president is remaking the dregs of the Republican Party that used to challenge him in real time and just finally scraping the last crumbs off the table. Not to degrade Thomas Massie as a crumb, but it does feel over and complete now. Bill Cassidy out. Thomas Massie out. Senator Cornyn probably out soon. If this Ken Paxton endorsement actually works. The whole project is feeling, like near completion. And we talked a few weeks ago about the Indiana legislator targeting and whether Trump still really had power over the party. And then we sort of, in real time, were reflecting on what an absurd question that was like. Of course he controls the party. It's been his party. This is such a tired trope. But I guess to start, I mean, I'm just curious how you guys are feeling after watching the last few days unfold. What. What reflections come to mind in terms of where the Republican Party is and what it means to cross the president. I mean, Cornyn didn't even really ever cross the president. He just wasn't really sufficiently, quote, unquote, loyal or supportive of him, still votes with him like 98% of the time or whatever one of those ridiculous statistics is. But yeah, I'm curious where your guys minds are right now. I got to dominate a bit in the newsletter and the podcast today, but I haven't heard from you too.
Ari Weitzman
I'm always able to get my oar in there a little bit as out of it. I'm doing the thing behind the scenes. All right, the. The thing that stands out to me is what you just ended with by saying that Cornyn wasn't signif sufficiently maga enough. And the two things in Donald Trump's post where he endorsed Paxton, which may have been a record for length for him, it was paragraphs and paragraphs included such exotica as punctuation and subordinate clauses. But there was a the two things that were at the top of the list from Trump on that endorsement were support for the Save America act, the Voting Security act, as well as a push to abolish the filibuster. So it's nothing really that Cornyn did. It's just that there's somebody who seems to be in Trump's camp more. And now I'm very much wondering what we're going to see next from Cornyn. I mean, there'll be up until the primary, then up until the election, and up until the primary. I'm sure that it's going to be a different person than what we'll see afterwards. Imagining a world where Paxton wins that Republican primary, which is now likelier than it's been. I think John Cornyn becomes the most interesting person to watch in Congress. I think given what we saw Cassidy do by voting for the Iran War Powers Resolution trying to limit Trump's military actions in Iran. I think maybe we see some movement from Cornyn, what he's willing to support or oppose. Maybe we don't. I think he's a really, really interesting barometer. He's a person who has a lot of respect from his colleagues in Capitol Hill. And if he starts to sway it all, then I think that shows a really strong indication that what people are voting for is more just based on electoral survival than principle. I mean, it's always a combination. But that would be the most interesting tell. To me, Cornyn expected or seen as a person who votes on principle or a person who's very in line with the center of the Republican Party. If he shifts, that's going to be a really notable tell. And I mean, I've got more I could say about the things that we're seeing out of Cassidy as well as Massie. But I mean it really is the headline the way that you said it, which is Trump's Republican Party underscore on Trump like it is his party and he's setting the agenda and a lot of people are making decisions based on electoral survival. Now the question is how much of it?
Isaac Saul
Camille, I'm curious to hear from you. I mean, I know Thomas Massie is somebody who has orbited your circle a little bit. The libertarian minded folks kind of right of center. I'm fairly certain you've sat down with him for an interview or two over the years. What's your read on the narrative arc of his political career? What kind of comes next for him and what you expect out of this development?
Camille Foster
What comes next is an interesting question. I'm not quite sure. I mean, I suspect he probably goes the way of Justin Amash and a number of other Republicans who've kind of run afoul of the president for being insufficiently maga, which is to say not a whole lot in terms of public office, maybe kind of taking shots at him from the sidelines and the way Marjorie Taylor Greene is doing and some other people Lone Borbret managed to make herself a pariah as well by going out to campaign for him. And we can talk perhaps a little bit more about some of the scandalous things that have been reported. I actually do air quotes when I say reported with respect to their relationship. But the dimension of the kind of Massey situation that I find most interesting and I mean, I think maybe you mentioned it, but perhaps not worth saying, the most expensive primary contest in the history of the country in a congressional race. It's extraordinary. And all of this because the president of the United States felt that a person who votes with him nearly all of the time, virtually all of the things, was insufficiently in line with him. And what specific issue is it that kind of pushed him over the edge and made this the place where he needed to draw the line, the place where he needed to have the Defense secretary essentially show up and campaign against an incumbent Republican? We don't really know. I don't know that you can actually point to any one thing. Was it the Epstein stuff in particular? Was it the fact that he was critical of the tariffs in particular? We're not really sure. The one thing that seems pretty clear to me though is while this district is a solid Republican district, it is unlikely to fall to Democrats. The national political narrative surrounding the president isn't improved at all by what looks like a pretty petty effort to take out someone who is kind of marginally critical of the administration in certain respects and certainly has been. They've had some kind of pretty substantial public dust ups as well, but certainly ran a race where he kept trying to align himself with the president. The president has really low polling numbers with Democrats, obviously, but also with Independents who are going to help decide plenty of races. And the calculus, from my standpoint, if I were a conservative in this country who wanted to see Republicans maintain control of the House and the Senate, would probably have a lot to do with how does this look to independence? Is the president really positioning himself to be in a better position to ensure that we're actually able to maintain control of Congress? And I don't see how this strengthens his hand much at all. I mean, the legislative priorities that you mentioned, Ari, that he's actually flagging in this true social post, it's not clear that Massie would have been a real obstacle to achieving most of those things. And with Cornyn in particular, you had the Republican leadership lobbying the president really hard to actually get the endorsement there. And again, just the same sort of pettiness that seen so many times before, where what seems to be most important to Donald Trump is kind of his particular interest, his ego, and not so much the kind of the fortunes of the party more broadly.
Isaac Saul
An interesting thread that I started to pull at today in the newsletter in one of the bulleted numbered takes that I had about Tuesday's primary that I'd really like to spend more time ruminating on is not just the pettiness of Donald Trump, but the pettiness of other politicians, too. Trump is not the only person who can hold a grudge or be petty. And I think there's a story emerging quickly that he just basically nuked his Senate majority. Maybe not in literal technical sense, but in practical governing sense going into the midterms, which could actually, literally and technically nuke his Senate majority. I mean, if you take a quick stock of the lay of the land, right now Republicans have a 53 to 47 advantage over Democrats in the Senate. Two of those are Lisa Murkowski and Susan Collins, who have an independent streak. So now you're down to 51. Then you have Thom Tillis, who's retiring, who's clearly enjoying his forthcoming retirement. I mean, he is bucking the president at every turn when he feels it's appropriate. He's been calling for Cash Patel to resign. He held up a Fed nomination. I mean, he's going after the administration in some Ways more aggressively and more forcefully and more kind of in the headlines than many Democrats. Now, Senator Bill Cassidy just got primaried by the President. And if you're wondering whether he's petty or how he's gonna navigate that, he literally overnight, I mean, literally overnight flipped his vote after losing the primary on this war powers resolution with regards to Iran and helped Democrats push it forward. So now you're at 49 reliable votes instead of 53. And then you have Senator John Cornyn, who I don't have a great read on how he's gonna navigate the next few months. I think the thing that really distinguishes him is he still has a runoff to win, so we'll see how that plays out. Everybody is basically assuming that Ken Paxton is going to win. I mean, I was just on a podcast with Mike Pesca earlier today before this show, and he told me that the Kalshee odds of Ken Paxton winning are 94%. I think that's quite a bit high. I mean, I think Paxton has the advantage, but I would maybe put it more like 70, 30. John Cornyn has never lost an election since he ran for his very first election in 1990 for a judicial position in Texas. So I'm just not quite ready to count him out before he actually loses. But either way, I'm sure he's spurned. I mean, I'm sure he doesn't feel great about the whole situation. So now you're at maybe 48 reliable votes in the Senate.
Ari Weitzman
Fetterman sometimes, apparently, yeah.
Isaac Saul
I mean, maybe Fetterman jumps the line here and there on stuff related to Iran or Israel, but like, it just became a lot more tenuous. And then you have a literal midterm election that's gonna control the Senate a few months from now. Republicans have all these bills. You know the reason Trump's talking about nuking the filibusters? Cuz Republicans have a bunch of legislation they wanna push across the finish line while they control the House and control the Senate. From immigration bills to crypto regulation. I mean, there's all manner of stuff. And Trump just put himself in a really tough spot. I mean, imagine being the President even with a nuked filibuster and needing 50 votes for something and having to go knock doors with Thom Tillis, Bill Cassidy, Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins. I mean, that's not exactly a friendly lineup of folks given what he just did. And I just don't think a lot of people are considering that element of this quite closely enough.
Camille Foster
I mean, the President certainly isn't and again, I think considering this from the standpoint of a conservative who ostensibly cares about the president's agenda, who cares about his priorities, you ought to be a bit outraged by the shortsightedness of the administration, at least in the way that the president seems to be dealing with his majority, his party. You could police them with a firm whip hand or you could find opportunities to compromise.
Ari Weitzman
And an interesting thing with that is it's creates an odd situation where the best thing for Trump legislatively could be his favored candidate not gaining the party's nomination, which is I guess maybe a win win as well. The thing that I come back to though is what is this something that Trump may want to pass through Congress that he isn't doing on his own as an executive unchecked by Congress? The thing that I think gives the most peril to the President is this War Powers Resolution. Like it's this big canary in the coal mine right now where we're looking at and seeing, okay, we got Murkowski, Collins now, now Cassidy, who knows what Corden might do. And then Fetterman's in the mix for like depending on what the Antilles and depending on what the, what the topic is. But let's say that there is some big check against the president, against what he wants to do coming out of the Senate. And let's even say that, you know, maybe there's a couple leaves of absence or what have you from the House of Representatives, or people vote one way or the other and it passes. Let's say this War Powers Resolution passes, nothing happens. It's just going to get vetoed. There's no veto proof majority in these chambers. So, like there's going to be no check on Trump and Congress. The only check there is is what is on his legislative agenda, which as far as I can tell is the thing he spelled out, it was abolish the filibuster and let's pass the Save America Act. And I don't, like you were saying, Camillo, I don't see how this advances those priorities. And as such, I think they're kind of down the list on the priorities for him. It seems like what he wants to do is foreign intervention and he got the tax reform that he won with the one big beautiful bill act last year. And then being able to get things through with executive fiat like we just saw with this big fund that he pushed through the DOJ and like that, I don't think he needs Congress for these things. So, like, the stakes are already kind of mitigated. The question is, like, how much this is really going to hurt the midterms. Yes, but then what will that do for two years from now? I mean, it kind of comes back to that for me, and that's still too early to say. So while we're looking into what the implications are right now for the medium term, it's still, like, really, really mitigated by the fact that this president is just using power in a way that's different than any president has before.
Isaac Saul
He's found a new lever to push almost, or pull, I suppose you don't push levers, but pull a new button to push almost, seemingly every week of the presidency. I mean, from the very beginning, it was tariffs as a tool to force countries and pressure countries into trade. It was effectively ignoring or working around certain court orders to push through his immigration agenda. It was repelling helicopters out of the sky onto Chicago apartment buildings in order to deport people. Like, from. From the little kind of granular stuff to the larger scale. I will spend time, money, political resources to run state Indiana Republicans out of office if they don't gerrymander one seat the way that I want them to. I mean, the breadth of it is pretty remarkable. I was listening to Graham Platner get interviewed on the New York Times podcast, and he said something about how when he comes into office, his aspiration is to effectively govern with the kind of power wielding ambitions that Republicans have, that Republicans have been, you know, exercising for years now, this theory of power that they operate on behind Trump, which is basically like, if you can do it, you should do it. And if there is a historical precedent for it that you can point to, you should do it. One of the things Fetterman talked about was how he wants to impeach Supreme Court justices. I mean, there is a remarkable door being open that we do not consider enough about what this means for the future. I mean, I saw a Democratic aide being quoted, I think, maybe in the Washington Post, I forget from what office, but basically saying, like, we have no aspirations to undo the executive excesses of Trump's government. Like, we have aspirations to take those excesses and own them. I mean, they want the presidency so they can do the things they've watched him do. And it's naive to imagine that that's not how this goes historically, it's how it's always gone. And I think one way to think about a lot of this stuff, if you're a supporter of the president's, which is what I often try to implore people who are to the right of me on their view of Trump and power. And what this Republican Party is doing is every single time he does something like this, he is making a blueprint for how Democrats can do it in the future. And so if you don't want John Fetterman, if you don't want dissenting Democrats in the party, if you're somebody on the right, if you're somebody on the left, excuse me, who doesn't want those people wielding power in the party, Trump is just laying a roadmap out for eliminating them. And a lot of conservative voters I don't think, have considered that enough because it's just, it's the reality now. And we're all going to live in the post Trump world and figure out how far Democrats are willing to go once this is all done. And I think it's going to be pretty far. I think we're going to see a lot of this stuff become political norms, which is frankly, kind of terrifying. We'll be right back after this quick break.
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Isaac Saul
Well, as we were kind of talking about legislative stuff on the agenda and what Trump might try and do before the midterms come around. I was really hoping one of you was going to mention immigration, because then I was going to do this really awesome transition to aliens. But neither of you did. And so I can't. The layup joke didn't fall into my lap. But we did decide today that we're going to have a brief interlude here to talk about UAPS and aliens. And I suspect John will have some fancy X Files themed alien music that he can play on the podcast or else I'm just going to lay him off. But hopefully he comes up with that and we can just play the music. I thought a little bit about how to do it. So first of all, let's just say let's start here. We Had a big UAP disclosure. We did not talk about it in the show. We didn't talk about it in the newsletter. It has not appeared really anywhere in Tangle. Maybe a quick hit last week. I think it's possible it came up. I honestly don't remember. And I got some email and some text about it because people have been reading Tangle for a while. Know I'm a believer. I think everybody gets one conspiracy theory that they can subscribe to just one. Any more than that, Red flag. But you all get one. It's fun. Embrace it. My conspiracy is that the government's covering up the existence of extraterrestrial life. And I was really excited about the UAP disclosures. Click this. Unbelievably, almost I don't even know the word. It was like a satirical website for alien information, like alien news, UFO news, but it was a government website with government disclosures. I clicked three or four links. They're all stories that I've seen before. Many of them hogwash, debunked, you know, old newspaper articles with images clearly doctored into the sky of flying saucers and such. But we decided, let's spend a few minutes, talk about the UAP disclosures. And I think, Ari, maybe you came up with the prompt here, which was just hottest UAP, take your strongest evidence that the aliens are here and among us. And I would love, love to hear how you two approach that prompt because I honestly have no idea what you're going to say.
Ari Weitzman
Okay, so I'm kind of with you on the latest release being underwhelming. I think I'm putting myself fairly squarely in the Mick west camp. This famous debunker who looks at any video.
Isaac Saul
Former guest on the show.
Ari Weitzman
We've had many former guests the show. Yes, we should listen to that interview. It was great. Mick west was a great get and he's a great interview. He went through this one high profile video of some craft that seemed to be moving in and out of wind turbines in a way that was erratic. And he's like, every video that you see where you see something in the sky moving strangely, it's perspective that's really confusing because it's being filmed by an aircraft that's thousands of feet, tens of thousands of feet away from its target. And this is somewhere in between. And it's usually hard to tell how far. And that aircraft is changing direction and the actual camera that's mounted to it is pivoting. And all of those things make this, whatever the thing is in view, appear to be moving in ways that it actually isn't. It's a. It's a trick of perspective. And I haven't seen anything that disproves that. My general perspective is, it seems. Seems curious to me that the amount of reported incidences of alien sightings or spacecraft sightings just happened to coincide with humans inventing supersonic flight. That's interesting. But I could put that aside and engage with the prompt directly, which is what is the best evidence that's hard to deny about the proof of extraterrestrial life. And I would go back to. I'll set the scene. So I am 20 years old. I'm working part time at the University of Chicago's science library. And a fun thing about the science library at the University of Chicago is that it classifies both cooking books and books about extraterrestrials as science. So those things were in the library. So I got some good recipes and I got some interesting stories. I pulled this one book from the stacks one day. It was called alien discussions from 1994, is based on proceedings from an MIT conference about extraterrestrial theories or evidence. And one study in particular, I remember it very clearly, was some psychologists wanted to test the hypothesis that children age 8 or younger, or maybe 10 or younger, I can't recall exactly, had reported seeing visually or encountering extraterrestrials. What they did, and Remembering this is 1994, is they showed them pictures of different caricatures like Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, of firemen, things like that. And one of the characters was like the classic alien gray face with the big black eye spots and everything. The people who ran the study had a control where they showed that Most people in 1994 could not spot that image of an alien gray and say what it was like that long ago. That wasn't in the popular conscious to a strong degree, certainly was true with the control group with children. But when children had reported having encounters in their rooms at night, that gave them nightmares more often than not, they pointed to that picture as the visitor that they saw in their room. And they would have stories about it, and things would come back to their minds about, oh, this is the man, the skinny, small man who took me into the sky to see the doctor. And those kinds of stories are really hard to confront, and I'm not exactly sure how to explain them. I'm not convinced that it is aliens per se, but that is the piece of evidence that I always stumble over when I think about it.
Isaac Saul
Yeah, man, 100%, totally. I don't need to hear anything else. I'll probably use that over and over for the rest of my life. Camille Foster, the ultimate skeptic. I mean, Camille, always asking, is that true? Is that true?
Camille Foster
Is that Camille or Tucker Carlson?
Isaac Saul
Yeah, yeah, I don't know what the Antichrist is. Hey, wants you to not ask questions about whether that's true. Where'd you go with this UAP prompt?
Camille Foster
Look, the word that I would use to describe the disclosure is farcical. Isaac, you were reaching for one earlier. I'm remembering. Bring like Caroline Levitt's initial post. Like, stay tuned.
Isaac Saul
Alien emoji.
Camille Foster
Alien emoji. Donald Trump's initial.
Ari Weitzman
Don't look at a rhyme.
Camille Foster
Previous administrations have been very secretive about this, but we are gonna disclose all of these things so we can figure out in all caps what the hell is going on. Enjoy and have fun. That is how he ends this. You don't conclude a message like that when you are actually going to reveal evidence of aliens on Also, my favorite thing is that someone managed to register alien.gov and aliens.gov, which they didn't end up using, but they did register them. Which are. They're trolling you. Anyways, if I had to look at all of the available evidence and actually give you some sort of case for why maybe there's something here, I suspect it would have to be the fact. And this somewhat runs parallel to yours, Ari. There's been a sustained interest in this topic and there have been formal inquiries into this over the course of many, many decades. Things did kind of go silent during the, say, 1970s up until fairly recently, like the mid 2000 teens and more recently. Yeah, like we actually have agencies and kind of internal working groups that have been devoted to these things. We have seen declassification of documents. We have gotten reports that indicate clearly that there are any number of unexplained unidentified objects that have been tracked by military during military operations. And then we've gotten these disclosures, the reporting in the New York Times. All of that creates at least the appearance of something substantive here that is worth taking seriously. And you mentioned, Isaac, that I was in D.C. this past week and did a bunch of interviews with folks. I mean, I've talked to Congressman Maxwell Frost, who he was in those hearings, and he in particular, I thought, conducted himself in a really responsible manner, wasn't overly skeptical or cynical about it, was asking thoughtful questions. And when you see that, it's hard to just dismiss it all as utterly ridiculous and baseless. All the same, I don't think the fact that people are taking this more seriously is evidence of much in and of itself. And the disclosures thus far just aren't impressive. A bunch of weirdly redacted, like, military photos. Videos that, while they were perhaps not explained before, once they're released to the public, are explicable. Like, we can't. Oh, wait, that is a plume from a jet engine. There are people parachuting in this photo. That's almost certainly a balloon going through those wind turbines or alongside the wind turbines. It's explained readily. And I think that that old dictum is the thing that we have to adhere to here. Extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence, and thus far we have seen none of it, despite what Congresswoman Luna continues to insist.
Isaac Saul
Okay, great. I love it. But I wanna believe.
Camille Foster
I do wanna believe. I wanna be clear about that.
Isaac Saul
So I'll offer two things, I think. One is I think my answer to the prompt. And two is my theory of the case. I'll just plant the seed. My answer to the prompt, I think, is almost a retort to the most common thing I hear. And I think even maybe one of you two guys, because your low IQ simpleton said this in the slide.
Ari Weitzman
There's no way it was me.
Isaac Saul
Then you said you were. You said something along the lines of, you know, it's not something that government could cover up. If this was something the government was doing, then we'd be hearing from all these people. To which I respond, that does sound like me. We are hearing from all these people. That's the thing. There are people coming out. Government contractors, former CIA pilots, physicists, whatever. Every year there's a new person who had at some point access to some high level classified thing who comes out and says they're real. The government's covering up. I mean, Harry Reid, the former senator, was very famously demanding of more disclosures because he felt the American people, quote, deserved to know or whatever. So, like, actually, if you were to paint a picture of what would be happening if this was something the government was trying to cover up, the picture would look pretty similar to what we have today, which is a bunch of people coming out trying to say, hey, the government's covering this up. I know because I worked on XYZ Project. And then those people are immediately lambasted and sort of scarlet lettered as being crazy conspiracy lunatics by the government who's trying to cover it up. So that's my. It's my counterclaim to the thing that I always hear, which is the government could never Cover this up. We'd be hearing from all these people. And then I say we do hear from those people. You just call them crazy and say that they're idiots and they're making all of it up. But there's a lot of them. The new film came out, Disclosures or whatever it was called. Kind of a bad movie. Not gonna lie. I was really excited for it, a little bit disappointed, but there were a lot of people, some quacks for sure, but a lot of people in that film who were pretty legit, who had a lot of questions. And maybe they didn't say explicitly there's the big green walking alien men here, but they were willing to go kind of far in saying there are a lot of things that have indicated we've encountered extraterrestrial life and we think the government is covering up. And I was involved in program X, Y, Z, but of course, the moment they say that, they're immediately discredited. So that's kind of my. Yeah, that's my. My view is there are actually quite a lot of people raising the flag
Ari Weitzman
and saying, I do want to respond for 30 seconds of feel like, go ahead. Which is. I think what we're seeing is cover up of questions and not necessarily cover up of definitive answers. I think there's a lot of proof of people that have seen things that are hard to explain. We all know about Project Blue Book and the things that Air Force pilots saw. We didn't see things that they actually had as definitive proof. However, the government has been doing a lot of strange things throughout the past several decades that we do know about. Like if you look up the gateway tapes where the CIA was trying to get people to learn how to astral project for espionage, that's not something that you can just say, oh, that person's a quack. Like, we know that happened. So there's things that the government does for sure. But what we don't have is like, here's the proof of the fact that this is what they found and this is the stuff that works. So we have that as a bit of a different story.
Camille Foster
But it is interesting that we have plenty of detail about those failed programs to Astro Project. We have details about that didn't work out so well.
Isaac Saul
Great segue to my final point, which is my theory of the case. Obviously, obviously they are in the ocean. We need to look down, not up. That's where all the aliens are. If you were to land on planet Earth and think, I need a place to hide for a few thousand years, So I can observe this burgeoning new species. You would not return to your home planet 100 million light years away. You would go into the ocean depths where nobody will ever find you. Okay. And more reason to map the ocean. Also, those Tic Tac things they always plunge into the water at the end of the videos. Why would they do that if they didn't have some mothership thing to get to down there? Sure. Have you ever seen an octopus? I mean, there's a million things I could throw out there. The aliens are in the ocean and that's where you're looking. Yeah.
Ari Weitzman
And alien grays aren't creatures. Those are spacesuits. The aliens are inside.
Isaac Saul
Nice. Love that. Little tiny. They're still tiny. Yeah, my size. Aliens with joysticks walking around the.
Ari Weitzman
Here's the sack.
Isaac Saul
All right, all right, that's enough of that.
Ari Weitzman
This is, of course, a politics podcast.
Isaac Saul
Yeah, yeah. Hey, UAP Government disclosures covers everything. We'll be right back after this quick break.
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Isaac Saul
All right, the last thing we gotta get to this week is the. I want to call it a slush fund. I guess we're calling it a. Oh,
Ari Weitzman
man, what a pivot.
Isaac Saul
Yeah, yeah. Government weaponization. It's like a. What's that?
Ari Weitzman
Anti weaponization fund.
Isaac Saul
Anti weaponization fund, yes. You know, it's hard to really put some of this stuff into proper framing. And I think, Ari, you said when we were working on the Friday, or, excuse me, the Tuesday newsletter, I think you said, I'm having a hard time editing today. I feel myself getting some emotional rise out of the content of the basics of this story. And then, Camille, when we talked in pre production, you were kind of using words you don't typically use, like astonishing. And you know, I'm sensing that there's some particular valiance here that's kind of. That's kind of getting to us because we're dumb woke libs, I guess.
Ari Weitzman
Austin. Bill Cassidy, man.
Isaac Saul
Yeah, Us and Bill Cassidy. Yeah. You know, I. And I've been thinking about that. Like, why, what is it about this? And I think for me, the answer I kind of settled on is it's so emblematic of the Overton window shift that I talk about constantly. And just even at the top of the show, we talked about it with just like, what Trump is normalizing in terms of going after people in your own party for insufficient loyalty. And I hate to have an episode that's so Trump dominant, but sorry, the day necessitates it. But I think the thing for me was I remember like it was a year ago, because it was a year ago when we were talking about whether Trump was going to pardon the January 6th rioters or insurrectionists or tourists, whatever you want to call them, I literally don't care what you call them. But there were people who committed real crimes that day, and Trump wanted to pardon them or was considering pardoning them. And I would, I mean, roughly say maybe half of the right wing conservative commentary, it was like, he's not going to pardon all of them. Maybe a couple who really deserve a pardon, who were unjustly given long sentences, they threw the book at them when they didn't have to, which, by the way, those people exist.
Ari Weitzman
I'm not denying QAnon Shaman's one of them. Oh, yeah, yeah, stand on that too. Forever. But yeah, go on.
Isaac Saul
Yeah, stand on Qanon Shaman, Ari. Hell yeah.
Ari Weitzman
That dude Was just made an example of because he was visible. Sorry, I'll back up. It's your show right now.
Isaac Saul
You got chill guy. I. But, but like that was where the conversation was a year, 18 months ago. And then he blanket pardoned everybody and now has created a fund worth as much as we talked about it, mid sized city, annual budget, close to $2 billion, designed specifically for people like the people who were arrested on January 6 and had the book thrown at them. He didn't just pardon all of them, he's positioning himself to give them a bunch of money. I saw one example today. The mother of some kid, I don't know, he was probably in his early 20s, actually, I think who was there on January 6th, she posted this long thing with an appeal to Trump. It was going super viral in the conservative Twitter accounts that I follow where she's saying my son was in prison for two years and we got charged with all these things. So I was like, maybe this is one of these legit anti weaponization cases, that this was a kid who was unjustly prosecuted and he showed up and he's, you know, went to jail for two years for walking in the Capitol after the doors were open and whatever. And then I looked up the kid's story and he literally planned with his friends like going to get wooden batons and talked about how they were going to go beat the shit out of a bunch of cops and then went to the Capitol and did that and helped like push steel barricades through and move everybody out of the way so the crowd could get into the Capitol so they could go hang Mike Pence, like, and then texted his buddies and joked about it and laughed about it afterwards. Like, I don't know if that guy deserves a pardon actually. Or that guy deserves, maybe he deserves a pardon. I don't know if he deserves a million dollars from the Trump slush fund. And I think that's the thing. It's like we went from this conversation like who deserves a pardon and should he and whatever to a year and a half later, everybody's pardoned. Also, we made a bunch of money, put a bunch of money in a taxpayer funded fund and now my tax dollars that I give the federal government 35% of my annual income is going to go towards paying these people out. It's offensive. So I'm upset too, but I don't, you know, like my perspective is feeling skewed. Anyway. Long monologue to just say you two seem to actually be in a similar boat as me. I sensed A little emotional rise out of both of you. And I was curious what in your view kind of prompted that.
Ari Weitzman
Well, Okay, collect myself. I will.
Isaac Saul
No crying, though. Okay? No crying.
Ari Weitzman
No liberal tears here. Yeah. The thing that is different about it, there are a couple things. The first is that like, this is kind of, it feels like a weird trick where Trump is like suing the government and then he's like, oh, that's me. And then he's taking up the lawsuit as the person who's the president, who's not supposed to be puppeteering the Department of Justice. But as we've seen, that's another precedent that's broken, which is, I think an under appreciated aspect of this issue is since that seal is broken, this is the thing that can happen. And then he's like, okay, private citizen, whoever you are, you've got a good point. I'm going to go make sure that you're made whole. What feels like a good number, I don't know, let's say 1,776 million dollars, because that's like a fun number that recalls our nation's highest principles. And I can just invoke that here. That sounds good. And then that's the thing that you could just do again is the thing that like kind of gets to me is that this doesn't feel like a one trick kind of situation. I could see this happening again where the Trump Organization or Eric Trump, because he's. I saw a story about how he is upset about the way his cancer non profit is being covered because it's being accused of being billed by the Trump Organization for services and then claiming profits, which I think is fair. And then he's claiming grievances. And I think I could see him suing and then the Justice Department settling that aside. That's just one aspect of it, is Trump is like sticking himself up. And the second thing is that he's paying himself with like Isaac's money and your money, Camille, and my money and everybody's money. Who is listening to this? A thing that I think you're going
Isaac Saul
to say not my money, because I don't pay my federal taxes here.
Camille Foster
I really would have been nice.
Ari Weitzman
No, we are. What an. Yeah, that would have been nuts. No, I pay my taxes, so promise. But the, the thing that's like the thing that I felt like you could always use a qualifier to like take the edge off of some of the claims that were highlighted in your Friday edition a couple of weeks ago about stories of Trump corruption and grift was that These are people who opt in in some way or another, people who invested in some business in some crypto scheme who wanted to donate money to a Trump Organization or buy some branded product. It was people who made a choice. And this is a very different thing. It's just the US treasury, and that's categorically different. And the third thing, and this is small compared to those other two, is just the arguments were so poor in support of it. I think normally you can see something where they're drawing a corollary and you're like, okay, I can get that. The argument they made was that Obama or the Justice Department under Obama, because it was different back then in the days of your had a practice where they would settle out of court for high sums with people who were suing it, especially the epa. And what they cited explicitly as precedent was a class action settlement that a group of Native Americans came to at the federal government for having been denied loans. And that class action settlement was agreed to by both parties. It was approved by a judge, was the $680 million plus another $80 million to pay off unapproved loans. And that money went to people who were already in a court said to have suffered a harm that the legal system found. And then when enough people claimed that those funds there were some leftover over amount. So the government said, what we're going to do is we're going to give grants. If you apply to a grant, if you're in this approved, if you're in this aggrieved community and you can prove it, you can apply for a grant and we'll portion it out, that is just extremely different than saying, here's an amount of money. It's going to be available to anybody who can prove some sort of harm. And the people who are going to adjudicate that are handpicked by the person who brought the lawsuit. Essentially like that's. If you think those two things are analogous, like you are using motivated reasoning to get there. There's no argument that I can see where that logic logics out. It just doesn't make sense. So all of those things just leave me particularly feeling piqued by this and thinking people like John Cornyn, if they're let off the loose, are probably going to be calling this out. Maybe I'm wrong, but I don't see a way that there's anybody who's looking at this with a stone sober face and saying, this is cool. It's just whataboutism. It's the only good excuse you can have for this. It's just. I don't know. I'm at the end of my rope with it. It's a pretty tough one to swallow.
Camille Foster
Yeah. I think it's the scale, it's the audaciousness, and it's the fact that it has been so consistent. I mean, Isaac, you're absolutely right. There were so many people who assured us. I mean, the tariff talk, he's not gonna do it that way. He's not gonna go that far. The immigration, he's not going to go that far. I mean, obviously. Come on. And I will say, even for me, I can remember a moment, particularly in the summer, shortly after the assassination attempt in Butler, the President seemed at that time to have moderated in some meaningful way, at least for a little while. And during that moment, during the inauguration, in those early weeks when there was so much attention and he seemed to really have essentially overcome the people who were trying to put him in jail, secured reelection, and was essentially getting kind of patted on the back by so many people in various elite circles who would have given him the cold shoulder before you had the sense almost, that, you know, you've been victorious here. The excess isn't necessary. The campaign of kind of reprisal and revenge probably isn't necessary here. But not only has he indulged in all of that and participated in exactly the same and worse kind of lawfare, targeting his political opponents, targeting law firms who represented his political opponents, targeting universities in the broadest possible ways, bypassing all sorts of mechanisms that he could have used to try and address what I think in some instances were definitely legitimate overreaches on the part of the Biden administration and certain Democrats in various jurisdictions, but he didn't do that. He made the problem worse in every single one of those instances. And here again is doing exactly the same thing, the filing a lawsuit, being on both sides of the lawsuit, deciding to pull it when it was clear you were going to lose, and then embarking on this bold new methodology for essentially creating a fund to enrich people who are your political allies during a week when you're also. I mean, and I don't even know if it's been mentioned today, but he secured forever immunity for himself and his family against future tax investigations. I'm sorry.
Ari Weitzman
Huh?
Camille Foster
How does that work? It's one thing for the Biden administration to say, pardon forever for any number of things that you might do or have done, specifically securing forever immunity for all future tax investigations. It's incredible. It's incredible to do that in the same week that you're saying that $100 million fine? Yeah, we're not gonna worry about that. In the same week that we're looking into insider trading related to not just the President, but people who had some sort of foreknowledge of various actions and decisions that were going to made with respect to Iran that moved the market in distinct ways. Is there clear evidence of wrongdoing there? There is not yet. But do I have faith that the apparatus of government, that the various agencies responsible for investigating this will do it in an impartial way? Why should I? Why should I At this point? It's astonishing on a number of levels. And I think what I think has been most frustrating about this is it isn't clear what sort of legal remedies might be available to opponents of this particular proposal at the moment. Is it the emoluments, Is there some sort of clear constitutional violation? Isn't clear yet. If Congress weren't so dysfunctional, if he hadn't brought his own party to heel so much, and you could have some faith that traditional conservatives who used to be concerned about things like spending might be a little miffed by this, maybe you could have some faith that they would do something, but that seems unlikely in the short run as well. So it's pretty frustrating and it's pretty dispiriting. And one certainly has an expectation that all of this will be leveraged by future presidents and future administrations in nefarious ways as well. And we just, we are left here waiting for someone to be the upstanding grownup who can say enough of this nonsense. We need actual transparency. We need meaningful accountability. And we have to know to all of this insidious self dealing.
Isaac Saul
Yeah, there's so much there. I mean, the nearly 4,000 stock trades in the first, just the last quarter, many of which involve businesses, companies whose profits Trump is directly impacted with announcements or regulatory announcements. I mean, it's just that is crazy. Especially in the context of Trump and J.D. vance and this administration sort of pushing a congressional stock ban as a kind of populous economic populist policy push, but exempting themselves and then having disclosures like this come out. I mean, it's pretty remarkable. The stuff about the IRS is interesting. I read a few follow ups to that news from some people who are these really nerdy tax experts who are basically saying it's not quite clear how ironclad this sort of immunity he tried to carve out for himself is. The offense is no less egregious. And offensive.
Camille Foster
The effort's still gross.
Isaac Saul
He tried and like, it's Todd Blanche, his Attorney general, who he put in there to do exactly what he's doing now, sign off on these sorts of things. But there seem to be some interesting kind of legal questions about whether the IRS actually can't bring those sorts of investigations forward if they decide they're necessary or they want. Want to. The context of that that I would also throw out there, too, is Joe Biden preemptively pardoned his son and his family members and a bunch of his associates, I think, with a reasonable suspicion that Trump would use the Justice Department to come after them, but also in a way that now and forever, as I wrote at the time, will give the Trump administration and its allies and future presidents and their allies the ability to point to President Joe Biden and say, somebody has done this. The precedent has been set. This thing exists already. And, I mean, I think it's a slam dunk that Trump is gonna pardon his children, his family, maybe even try to pardon himself and many of their associates, either while he's in office or right at the end of his term. The last thing I'll just say, too, about the period of time around the assassination in Butler, assassination attempt at Butler, Pennsylvania, which I remember, too, there was this sort of Goldilocks Trump two weeks after that, and it was different. A lot of people, it's sort of like a trope on the left. People make fun of, like, oh, is he being president? Oh, tonight was the night that Donald Trump became president, because he'll do some sort of responsible establishment, kind of accepted thing, or give a national address, and then everybody does the dance of, like, he's so presidential. And then the next day he's like, praise be to Allah, we're nuking Iran. You know, it's like, we go through that cycle a lot. But I will say I don't think that period of time was actually part of that trope. I think, like, he. I mean, he almost got shot in the head and killed. And, like, I think he. It did actually impact him. And I watched a bunch of his interviews and his public speeches, and. And there was just like, a different presence to him where he was much more demur and, like. And, I mean, I don't know exactly how to, like, put texture to it, but he seemed different, and then it just evaporated. And it reminded me of George Santos, who. I don't know if you guys followed this or we might have even talked about it on the show, but, you know, George Santos went to prison and then when Trump pardoned him in the lead up to the pardon, he was releasing all these opinion pieces and stuff, saying that he was gonna dedicate his life to prison reform. And just a few days ago that occurred to me. And so I went to like, what's George Santos been up to recently? And he's not dedicated his life to prison reform is all I'll say. He, like, made a big fuss about when he got pardoned, like in October of last year. But I did a Google search, like in the last six months for news stories about George Santos and, excuse me, prison reform efforts, and it's just like all about his different media appearances and clubs he's joining and opinion pieces he's written supporting the President. It doesn't seem to be a big particular focus, and I believe at the time it was Ernest. But it's clearly not something that's translated into long term changes or action for him, which sucks. It sucks to watch that kind of thing change in a person when it feels like they sort of see the light for a second and then it just kind of fades away over time. So, yeah, he is who he is. And to me it's very clear that he is interested in wielding the power he has now as taking it as far as he can go in the next few months when he's unchallenged and for the rest of the presidency, he doesn't care what happens to Republicans. He doesn't care what happens to the office after he leaves. I mean, this is just about him making his family and his family right, his personal enrichment greater and crushing his enemies and being the center of attention and winning the political moment of the day. He wants to win. He's somebody who's gets high on that. And this to him feels like a win. I don't think it's a win for us, but it feels like a win for him. So that's where we are and it's what we've got. All right, well, with that, we've been sitting here for about an hour and we've had a little bit of levity, but probably not enough. So, Jon, you can play the music and we'll get into our grievances for the show today,
Grow Therapy Announcer
the airing of grievances
Ari Weitzman
between you and me, I think your
Isaac Saul
country is placing a lot of importance on shoe removal.
Ari Weitzman
Well, before we get into the grievances section, just as a tone changer, I want everybody just to imagine a little 2 inch alien, just Joy sticking that gray space suit. I think that's something that gives me a lot of joy just to picture it. And I think it's a nice palette cleanser. Maybe if there's like a. A cartoon image you can think of. Men in Black style.
Camille Foster
Thank you.
Ari Weitzman
What a great movie Men in Black was too. I'll die on that hill too. We need more Men in Black movies.
Camille Foster
Well, movies like it need a neuralyzer actually.
Ari Weitzman
For the DOJ trust fund. Yeah, for sure.
Camille Foster
No, this isn't happening.
Isaac Saul
Either of you have a particularly aggrieved feeling you'd like to air with our audience?
Ari Weitzman
I do. Camille, you have something.
Camille Foster
I've got something. I can at least complain about it. I don't have any sort of remedy whatsoever. I've been talking about my glasses for the past several weeks. This morning departing D.C. and for a period of maybe four or five hours afterwards, I was kind of blind. I'm certainly glad that I wasn't responsible for driving at that point, but my brain has somewhat adjusted to these bifocals that I have. And when I take off the glasses, my vision is terrible. But for a period like the glasses weren't really working either and all I was seeing was just kind of stars all over the place. And the difficulty of our brains, like adjusting to these new prescriptions, particularly this kind of progressive thing that I've got going on for the near and farsighted stuff, has been extremely disorienting. Like, it's very weird. It feels like there's something horrible happening, a kind of deterioration of whatever kind of ocular sensory gear is in my head. It feels almost inexorable. So I'm a little bit distraught today. Even looking at you guys on the screen is slightly blurrier than it's been. And it sounds like. Cause I reached out to my optometrist, it might be that my sleep deprivation, which is just kind of a function of my lifestyle, is having an impact on my ability to actually adjust to this new prescription. So apparently after I get eight hours of sleep, I'm supposed to let them know if my vision kind of comes back and self corrects. But it's been a rough day. I don't. This whole glasses adventure feels wrong. And I, to the extent there's a conspiracy I believe in, it might be that once you start wearing the glasses, your actual vision, like your natural one, begins to meaningfully suffer.
Ari Weitzman
Before I was like, oh, that's silly.
Camille Foster
It seems that way. No, no, it feels like it actually is suffering.
Isaac Saul
I think it's true too. I mean, my vision has Definitely gotten worse without glasses since I started wearing glasses. I think that's it could also just
Camille Foster
be getting worse, but it's just been barely a month. For me, it's been about three and a half weeks. And if I take these off now, things are blurry.
Isaac Saul
Everything is blurry in a way that it wasn't before the sleep deprived induced blindness. That's a nuance that's pretty legit, man. That's when you know you've been burning the candle at both ends, is when you lose your vision over how little sleep you've gotten.
Camille Foster
It's the coast to coast travel that is the problem and the. And the time zone differences.
Isaac Saul
It's just.
Camille Foster
Yeah, but I'm going to sleep tonight
Ari Weitzman
remembering a theory that we maybe pioneered at Tangle that like, there's an action you can do as a, as an employee or like a coworker at work that is either exemplary of you being the best possible coworker or the worst possible coworker. And it's falling asleep during a crucial meeting because that either shows you are gunning it out as much as possible or you are just completely checked out. And like, I think for you, you're probably gutting it out as much as possible.
Isaac Saul
Just to be clear, Ari fell asleep during a team meeting, which
Ari Weitzman
I was flu ravaged on very little sleep and I was gutting it out like the hero.
Isaac Saul
Yeah, I like how Ari just told that story, completely detaching his own person from it as if he weren't the one who fell asleep in the.
Ari Weitzman
I think it's the principal that's more interesting.
Isaac Saul
Okay. Yeah, the guy who fell asleep would say that. All right, Ari, what do you got, man?
Ari Weitzman
You meant to say hero who succumbed to sleep, but yeah, I had a couple that I could go with today. Obviously it's on top of my mind now that we don't make movies as good as Men in Black anymore. But the thing that I think I want to talk about is it's summer. Isaac mentioned this. Summer has finally come to the northern reaches of New England. And it's beautiful. We are sleeping with the window open and the breeze coming through. We hear the owls at night as we fall asleep, but we hear the birds when they wake up in the morning. And that sounds nice, but morning to birds in these northern reaches is 4:45. And I know this because that's when I wake up. Now we're going to have to close the windows. I think I can play you all some audio of what it sounds like at 4:45. But it's exactly what you think it would sound like. It's the middle of the fucking rainforest is what it sounds like. Robins and chickadees and Phoebe's and like every manner of bird that I don't even know are just waking up and saying, hey, how are you? And they're just like, oh, not bad. How are you? I'm pretty good. How are you? And just it's like that for an hour. And I really.
Isaac Saul
Are these birds in the background of your microphone that I'm hearing right now?
Ari Weitzman
Yes. Yeah, yeah.
Isaac Saul
Okay. Yeah.
Ari Weitzman
Those nice cute little robins, They've been at it for a while. I could tell you that much. Robins like to get up and they like to yell about it.
Isaac Saul
This is a great.
Ari Weitzman
Shut up.
Isaac Saul
A great grievance. And I will add a layer to it, which is I. For probably 10 years now on my iPhone, I've used the alarm setting that is birds chirping, which is like this specific ringtone. And it's like, it's a very organic. I think it literally might be like a recording of these little birds. And it starts kind of quiet and then it turns in this course. It's very realistic. And for years it was just the way I use my alarm. And now Phoebe and I's bedroom, the master bedroom in our new home in suburbia, is like tucked in between trees. And so I've had the exact same experience where in the last few months, birds are starting to chirp at like 5am and my brain thinks it's my phone alarm going off. And so I'm just like immediately adrenaline hit and wake up super early. And then I have to wrestle the windows closed and try and go back to sleep, which is always impossible to do. So a perfect grievance. Finally.
Ari Weitzman
It's same for yours. Just cosine.
Isaac Saul
That wasn't my grievance, but I could adopt it for sure. My grievance is also animal rights related though. So we are very synced up today. Mine is that I have deer in my yard, which I thought would be really cool. It's less.
Ari Weitzman
It's cool for a little bit.
Isaac Saul
There's actually a great moment. When we first moved in, the mailman came and he told. He was like, hey, really nice guy, Jimmy. I've gotten to know him. And he was like, you know, I just want to let you know that your yard is like this throughway for deer. So just a heads up, like a bunch of deer, you know, they like like a migratory path or something.
Ari Weitzman
He said, deer.
Isaac Saul
I really I resist. I was so close. I wanted to be like, oh, awesome. Well, I'll be sure to lay out some traps and just, you know, take care of that, no problem. But I was like, no, I'm just, yes, thank you. And yeah, they're here. They're real. They sit in the backyard, whatever. And the reason I'm aggrieved, they looking at them, they're beautiful. It makes me feel like I live in the wild. I see them sort of walk and it's fine, they can eat whatever they want, whatever, but they, they're pooping everywhere in the yard. And I have a 15 month old son who picks up anything that looks even remotely like food or pebbles or whatever and tries to play with it and eat it. So now it's like Omri, who is feral right now because it's summertime, just like naked, dirty, in the grass, whatever, living his best life. He'll just be like plottzing along in the yard and then I see him squat down and pick something up out of the grass and look at it. I'm like, no. And yeah. So that's my new battle is the deer poop, which unlike dog poop, is actually not easy to kind of excavate and remove. It is just like a mound of tiny little pebbles and yeah, it looks like chocolate.
Ari Weitzman
Yeah.
Isaac Saul
Yeah.
Camille Foster
Are there not more severe concerns associated with deer, like ticks and other awfulness?
Isaac Saul
Yeah, I think like if you, you
Ari Weitzman
know, ticks are already among us.
Isaac Saul
Yeah, ticks are among us. I don't know. I mean, the other thing is like these deer do not care about humans. So I've gotten pretty close to them and deer actually.
Camille Foster
Oh, to try to scare them off.
Isaac Saul
Yeah. When they're like 10 or 15ft away from you, they are terrifying. Like they are big, strong animals. Yeah. And like they've got those scared beady eyes where like they're just really crazy looking. Like you don't know what they're actually going to do next. And they're always kind of twitching. So. Yeah, I don't know. I had this whole vision of the beautiful yard and the deer being awesome and it wasn't awesome. Similar to Ari. It sounds like you were like, oh, you might think waking up to the sounds of birds would be beautiful and wonderful and it's.
Ari Weitzman
Everything's trade offs. You know, if you want to nature, nature's gonna commune back. Yeah.
Camille Foster
I would trade you. I would trade you our wild turkeys for your deer. I assure you, it's much worse. Not only do they shit Everywhere. They crawl all over the car.
Isaac Saul
Huh.
Ari Weitzman
That's great.
Camille Foster
Yeah.
Ari Weitzman
Is that something that happens all the time?
Isaac Saul
We have.
Ari Weitzman
We have now it's my second year here. We have a turkey day, which has happened like once a year where we'll see, like 20 turkeys just like, marching up the hill and then they go on their way and whatever's in their path, they go over. But, like, it's just the day. But for you, it's an all the time thing.
Isaac Saul
I can't believe this hasn't come up in your grievances. You have turkeys that destroy your cars and stomp all over your Tesla.
Camille Foster
Well, the car is already destroyed. This has happened a while ago.
Isaac Saul
It's scratched up.
Camille Foster
It's going to stay scratched.
Ari Weitzman
The car's in orbit.
Camille Foster
It's too late to protect the other one. But, yeah, it's just. At this point, I'm resigned to my fate, but it's pretty bad.
Isaac Saul
Wow. Wonderful. What a great animal oriented grievances section. I never knew.
Camille Foster
Animals are awful.
Isaac Saul
Yeah, yeah.
Ari Weitzman
They're beautiful, majestic creatures. They're proof of a greater spirit that surrounds us. And I wish they would shut the hell up.
Camille Foster
Malevolent spirit.
Isaac Saul
Yeah. All right, gentlemen. Well, thank you for sitting down and complaining with me and sharing space on this beautiful Wednesday evening. I'm gonna let you guys go. Always good to be here. And we'll see you soon. Next week, I guess.
Ari Weitzman
What if ticks are aliens?
Isaac Saul
Oh, God. All right, bye. Our executive editor and founder is me, Isaac Saul, and our executive producer is John Walt. Today's episode was edited and engineered by Dewey Thomas. Our editorial staff is led by managing editor Ari Weitzman with senior editor Will Kbach and associate editors Audrey Moorhead, Lindsey Knuth and Bailey Saul. Music for the podcast was produced by Diet75. To learn more about Tangle and to sign up for a membership, please visit our website@retangle.com.
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Isaac Saul
ages of 14 and 24.
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They're working, parenting, leading, sometimes all at once.
Ari Weitzman
I'm balancing work and being a mom at the same time, and I'm still on track to graduate with my bachelor's next year.
Grow Therapy Announcer
So what do today's young people need to truly thrive? Tune in to good Things from Lemonada Media to hear the six part Thrive series.
Episode: Suspension of the rules.
Host: Isaac Saul
Guests: Ari Weitzman, Camille Foster
Date: May 21, 2026
This episode of Tangle's "Suspension of the Rules" brings together host Isaac Saul, managing editor Ari Weitzman, and guest Camille Foster for a lively, far-ranging discussion of the chaotic current moment in American politics. The trio dives into three main subjects: the radicalization of major parties (with a wild Texas primary example), Donald Trump's consolidation of power in the Republican Party and use of government levers, and the creation of a massive "slush fund" for politically aggrieved individuals. For some levity, the group also tackles a perennial favorite: are aliens real, and does the government cover it up?
The tone is sharp, critical, and at times, incredulous—capturing the hosts' mix of political engagement and exasperation with today's news cycle.
[04:52 - 08:55]
[08:55 - 22:45]
[22:45 - 29:01]
[29:59 - 45:12]
A lighter, philosophical diversion on the recent government UAP "disclosures."
Prompt: What’s the best evidence the aliens are here?
[47:21 - 62:18]
[68:19 - End]
The hosts close with personal—and mostly animal-themed—grievances, adding comic relief:
Bonus closing banter: Ticks—are they aliens?
Isaac Saul [18:18]:
“He just basically nuked his Senate majority... Trump is not the only person who can hold a grudge or be petty.”
Camille Foster [22:17]:
“You could police them with a firm whip hand or you could find opportunities to compromise.”
Isaac Saul [25:17]:
“Every single time he does something like this, he is making a blueprint for how Democrats can do it in the future.”
Ari Weitzman [54:45]:
“The thing that I felt like you could always use a qualifier to take the edge off of some of the claims ... was that these are people who opt in in some way or another... This is very different. It's just the US treasury, and that's categorically different.”
Camille Foster [62:18]:
“We are left here waiting for someone to be the upstanding grownup who can say enough of this nonsense. We need actual transparency... and we have to know to all of this insidious self-dealing.”
This episode gives a representative taste of Tangle’s appeal and style: unsparing yet witty critique, real concern about democratic norms, and a willingness to see the absurdity in politics today. The show brings together different political viewpoints, but shares a non-partisan suspicion of power and a sense that America is living through a period of deep institutional strain.
For full context and more, visit readtangle.com