Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 122
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You don't put those inside of you, do you?
This is a show about women.
I mean, you do?
Finally, a show about women that isn't just a thinly veiled aspirational nightmare.
It's not hosted, not narrated, we're just dropping into a woman's world.
I found out when my dad was gay when I was 10, we were in a convertible on the 405 freeway
listening to the B-52s.
Looking back, I should have said, this is gay.
This is already all gay.
Listen to Finally a Show on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
John Stewart is back in the host chair at The Daily Show, which means he's also back
in our ears on The Daily Show Ears Edition podcast.
Join late night legend John Stewart and the best news team for today's biggest headlines,
exclusive extended interviews and more.
Now this is a second term we can all get behind.
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get your podcasts.
Beauty Translated Season 3 is coming soon with what? A second host? I'm Carmen Laurent
and this season I am joined full time by world renowned Janie Danger. Janie, what are we
talking about in season three?
We're talking about life, Carmen. Beauty Translated is about the many fragmented lives
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And the all-new Beauty Translated love line at 678-561-2785.
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Hey everybody, Robert Evans here and I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode.
Every episode of the week that just happened
is here in one convenient and with somewhat less ads package
for you to listen to in a long stretch if you want.
If you've been listening to the episodes every day this week,
there's gonna be nothing new here for you,
but you can make your own decisions.
Welcome to It Could Happen Here,
the podcast that tells you what's gonna happen
before it's happening.
I'm Garrison Davis.
Join with me is Mia Wong.
Hello.
So, so today we're going to be talking about predictive programming, something that I assume
some conspiracy theorist has accused this show of doing, specifically Robert, but we're
not going to talk about us too much.
Instead, we're going to talk about the origin of this conspiracy theory
and some famous use cases throughout history of how you might have been affected by predictive
programming, the listener. So let's start by defining our terms here. Predictive programming
is a conspiracy theory that future events are seeded within fictional media like film, TV, video games, and books to subliminally influence the public perception of real world
events. But this isn't simply about movies like just predicting the future. It's an intentional
method of large-scale social conditioning used by a conspiracy of deep state government agents and
the entertainment industry. This term was coined by a conspiracy theorist named Alan Watt,
different from the like pop
Zen writer Alan Watts, different guy.
There's a one letter difference.
I'm sure I'm sure they share some amount of audience crossover,
but they are different people.
He kind of coined this concept around the early 2000s.
From what I can tell.
He's a Scottish Canadian conspiracy theorist. Oddly enough, he's kind of one of the least problematic conspiracy theorists that I've run into.
Like he's openly pushed back on like anti-Semitism from David Icke and Alex Jones.
Like he just seems to kind of be a silly guy. He died a few years ago.
From what I can tell, at least on a cursory search, he's not the most problematic. Obviously, still a conspiracy theorist, but kind of the token good conspiracy theorist.
I don't know. But he defined predictive programming as the power of suggestion using the media of
fiction to create a desired
outcome. A more expansive definition that he gave is, quote, predictive programming
is a subtle form of psychological conditioning provided by the media to acquaint the public
with planned societal changes to be implemented by the elites. If and when these changes are
put through, the public will already be familiarized with them, and will accept them as natural progressions, thus lessening any possible public resistance
and commotion.
Predictive programming, therefore, may be considered a veiled form of preemptive mass
manipulation or mind control, courtesy of our puppet masters."
So that's Alan Watt.
That is his definition.
Like I said, he kind of came up with this idea in the early 2000s,
and it spread like wildfire throughout his competitors and his contemporaries in the conspiratorial milieu.
Yeah, it's really recent. I thought it was older than that.
Yeah, no, it is a new one.
It is a relatively new conspiracy theory.
Like it doesn't go all the way back to like, well, some of like the rough ideas were kind of used by stuff, you know,
going all the way back to like the John Birch Society, but the actual term predictive programming
and the modern understanding of that term are much more recent. An Ohio State University article on
the topic said, quote, predictive programming at its core is a tactic to reduce resistance by
introducing concepts that seem farfetched and continuously reintroducing
them to make these concepts appear more likely or at the very least acceptable.
So that's more of like a outside-in definition from researchers.
So let's go back to Alan Watt a little bit because he's kind of been largely forgotten
in the conspiratorial milieu, replaced by a whole bunch of more like bombastic
and and troubling figures like Jones and Ike and many, many smaller, smaller conspiracy
theorists. But I listened to what I believe to be the first kind of broadcast where he
where he coined this idea, as opposed to Alex Jones. Alan Watt is like a very like calm speaker.
Like he's he's he's actually kind of just like pleasant to listen to
because he's just so like like calm, methodical.
He's not like bombastic.
He just sounds like a regular like chill guy.
His his website is amazing.
It looks like a 1995 website that has never been updated.
It is it is fantastic.
I love that the website has stayed up after his death because it is just a joy to look
at.
But Alan Watt describes predictive programming as a quote unquote ancient science.
He thought that quote, families of actors go back thousands of years.
They're a specialized section of society that intermarries within their own
ranks." Unquote. So like he thinks all actors come from like this one large like intergenerational
family that have been like in like the profession of acting, which like is kind of true for like
the Copulas, but like, eh, you know, it's like, yes, there is a massive, like, an hepatism problem, but like, no. Yeah.
Actors aren't like a single family that goes back, like, millennia.
But that is one of his beliefs.
He calls producers magicians.
Quote, they know what messages must be imprinted into the minds of the audience.
They know the techniques, a perfect science." He also talks about how Shakespeare was involved in predictive programming.
Quote, Shakespeare was the magician that brought the English language into being unquote.
So he thinks that like Shakespeare is like the person who developed like the modern English
language.
Like obviously English like predates Shakespeare, but like he thinks that through Shakespeare's
writing he was able to like popularize the modern form of English which just
isn't true but it's a it's a it's a funny thing to believe and he thinks all
these people are like literal magicians like like wizards like you know like
like wands pointy hats like they're all like doing actual like magic
this seems like such a roundabout way of doing this.
Like you can just do magic.
So so true. So true, Mia.
So Alan Watt talks about that in the late 60s, there was a big
weeks long international meeting to decide that Hollywood would be
the place to create the culture of the future.
He then discusses how like Hollywood controls people through like war movies and how like the DOD
helps Hollywood with equipment for war movies, but they have to approve all the messaging,
which like that has like a little grain of truth in there. Like yes, to use military
equipment, you do need to get like approval from people in the
government and yeah, there is a form of Hollywood that is like just more propaganda.
Like that is there is there's there's a kernel of truth here, but not exactly in the way
Alan Watt talks about it.
Do you know what else has a kernel of truth?
All of these ads, there's one single kernel in all of these ads that is revealing a divine truth of existence,
so watch out and listen for this one kernel of truth.
Okay we are back to talk about Alan Watt and his predictive programming idea, which
has spread through the conspiratorial milieu like wildfire.
So probably the funniest thing he gets to on this whole Hollywood as magicians rant
is, quote, if you look at the word Hollywood, it means holy wood, which of course is the
staff of the Magi, the grand Magus of the occult. He waves a wand and everything is
changed. He casts a spell. So incredible. So he thinks that Hollywood literally refers to like a magic wand, like a holy wood.
He then also talks about Hollywood as like a grove, like Hollywood like the place is
a grove, quote, similar to Jewish holy groves in folklore.
Moses' staff was placed in a grove and that was a special place for higher magi to meet,
unquote. And I don't
think he means this antisemitically. It just kind of sounds antisemitic.
But he talks about, anyway.
I can't even blame the U.S. on this one. This guy's Canadian.
Scottish Canadian. Yeah. Yeah. Literally, literally me. Literally me. I'll read one more Alan Watt quote here, which is just just a
banger. Hollywood is the magician's wand. Holy holly, which has been used to cast
a spell on the unsuspecting public. Things or ideas that would otherwise be
seen as bizarre, vulgar, undesirable, or impossible, are inserted into films in
the realm of fantasy.
When the viewer watches these films, his or her mind is left open to suggestion, and the
conditioning process begins.
These same movies which are designed to program the average person can give the discerning
viewer a better understanding of the workings and the plan of the world agenda."
So unlike a lot of modern conspiracy theorists
who like refuse to watch movies
because of predictive programming,
Alan Watt thinks it's actually useful to watch movies
because you can get like a future like glimpse
at what is going to happen in the world,
which is like a neat little difference
compared to some of his modern contemporaries.
Yeah, you can watch Batman realize
that Occupy Wall Street is happening. Yes, one contemporaries. Yeah, you can you can you can watch Batman realize that Occupy Wall Street's happening.
Yes. One year ago. Yeah, totally.
Predictive programming in the past.
In the past. Yeah. Yeah.
Preemptive. So let's talk about some some examples of predictive programming.
Now, one thing that people often point to when discussing this is the television show The Simpsons.
Now a writer and producer of The Simpsons from back in the 90s, Bill Oakley, gave a
statement to Reuters a few years ago about the concept of The Simpsons being able to
predict real world events. Quote, I would say in general, when people say The Simpsons
has predicted something, it's that we were really just satirizing real life events from
years before. And because history
keeps repeating itself, it just seems like we're predicting things, unquote. Which I think is
actually a really great observation. The show actually hasn't made very many predictions.
It is often just satirizing actual events from around the time of the show's production.
And lots of those events we've just now forgotten in the present. And similar events keep happening
in the present, like viruses or Donald Trump running for president, just like he did in
the 2000s.
So it's easy to kind of see these things as predictions when in fact we've just forgotten
the events that they were originally satirizing.
Now many of the kind of viral quote unquote predictions you see online associated with
the Simpsons actually just have a vastly different context within the show and in many cases are actually just altered images, fan art,
Photoshop or memes with mislabeled timestamps or genuine images satirizing current events,
making it appear as if the Simpsons version happened beforehand when really it was like
something satirizing an event a month
ago made to look like it was actually produced in like 2007 or something, right? So it's
just a whole bunch of manipulated media. One instance of something that like appears to
be an impressive prediction, but is actually just showing how the creators of the show
pay attention to politics is the purple suit that President Lisa wears, bearing similarity
to Kamala Harris's get up on on inauguration day. But purple was also
worn by Michelle Obama and Hillary Clinton during previous inauguration days. It's the color of the
suffragette movement and it tends to symbolize unity between red and blue states. It's just,
it's a very common thing that women wear at inauguration day. So like it's just a good guess.
So there's a lot of stuff like that.
Now, probably the most famous example of the Simpsons' predictive power
is probably the 9-11 poster from the New York episode.
Now, there is a wealth of eerie 9-11 imagery from years before the attack,
either associated with the date itself, destruction of the Twin Towers,
or in the case of the Simpsons, both.
Now, as for the others, 9-1- 911 is just a common number in the US, so you see it pop up in
a lot of stuff.
And the Twin Towers, as well as the Statue of Liberty, the Empire State, and the Chrysler
Building are all often used in like post-apocalyptic or like societal collapse, destructive artwork.
Of course, there was the bombing at the World Trade Center like a decade prior. And it's really
easy now just to focus on instances of art depicting the Twin Towers, right? We have Michael Keaton's
The Squeeze from 1987, Cookie Monster eating the Twin Towers in 1976, the Towers disintegrating in
the 1993 Mario movie, the infamous Illuminati card game, the Coos party music album cover,
and my personal favorite instance,
the pilot episode of the X-Files spin-off show, The Lone Gunman, in which members of
the US government deep state remotely hijack a commercial airliner to crash it into the
World Trade Center to blame it on terrorists and start a new war in the Middle East.
This episode aired six months before 9-11.
It is the funniest thing. This episode aired six months before 9-11. It is the funniest
thing. It's wild. It's like specifically being like an X-Files spin off. It's just it's just
gold hilarious stuff. And obviously, for another predictive programming type thing, in the
wake of COVID-19, many have pointed out that movies like Contagion or even zombie media
are instances of predictive
programming to get the public to accept a massive global pandemic, when in most cases
it's actually just like scientists being like, hey, a pandemic could probably be a big problem.
And then screenwriters being like, oh, let's write a movie about a pandemic, right?
Very, very easy.
Do you know what else contains very important subliminal messaging, Mayo?
Cars too?
Well, the products and services that support this podcast.
Listen to these to get a glimpse into the future.
Alright, we are back, and we are joined by Robert Evans to give his thoughts on the predictive
power of the Simpsons.
Hello, Robert.
Hey, you know, Garrison, once upon a time, I watched a Simpsons episode where Homer decides
not to go to church instead to stay asleep on Sunday all day.
And that really kind of predicted me sleeping in this morning after getting in on a late
night flight last night and missing the start of this recording.
So the power of predictive programming simply cannot be denied because there's a scene in
that where Homer like closes his eyes and curls his toes and pulls his covers up over himself
when he's avoiding church that really predicted me at about 11 a.m. this morning.
Well, that's that's great. Do you know who else is good at predictive programming?
Batman. Okay, so we've already talked a little bit about some of the predictive programming
conspiracies based on the Dark Knight Rises in the first segment of our Occupy Gotham City
episode. You know how the Aurora Colorado shooter was a modern MK Ultra victim program
to distract from the software leaks
that'll expose the corrupt elites
because his father worked on predictive algorithms
for the financial sector,
just like the plot of The Dark Knight Rises.
Not, it's not the plot of The Dark Knight Rises.
Not at all.
But let's not forget that the movie also conditioned us
to accept a major attack on a big sporting event.
Something which has also not really happened.
So I'll actually be seeing Clyde Lewis again next week.
So I will I will try to get his thoughts on on his Dark Knight Rises failed predictions.
We'll see. We'll see. We'll see how that goes for me.
But those are not the only conspiracy theories around this movie.
For the next one, we will turn to the king of the lizard people, David Icke.
Ah, there we go.
He claims that when the GCP are trying to track down the location of Bane's
nuclear reactor, there's a shot of a map on which there is a location marked
as Sandy Hook.
And you'll never guess what happened five months after the dark
Yeah, yeah, so man
Now I've I've looked into this a decent bit because yes
There is there is a location on the map of Gotham City marked Sandy Hook now
This is probably named after Sandy Hook, New Jersey.
Yeah. Just south of New York City. As on the Batman map, it is an island that is just south
of Gotham City. In the comics, it's called Tri Corner Island. For like this specific map of
Gotham they use is from like the 1990s. And it's called Tri Corner Island. I think they renamed it to Sandy Hook in the Dark Knight Rises.
So a similar map in the movie was used for marketing materials
that labeled Sandy Hook as a neighborhood in Gotham.
And this map also contained a neighborhood called the Narrows,
a common Gotham borough in Batman lore.
God.
In the wake of the Sandy Hook shooting,
this led schools in Narrows, Virginia To delay the return of students for winter break to install additional security precautions
And this was all based on a conspiracy article titled is narrows the site of the next school massacre
Just of course it wasn't but clear folks
There are Sandy Hooks towns named Sandy Hooks in Connecticut, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri. Yes, Virginia
Wisconsin like it's it's there's a lot of them. We've made a lot of them
There's a lot of places that are sandy and look like a hook
And then the secondary problem with this is that we have school shootings in so many places that if you just have a map in
Any movie there's like a one in twelve chance that there's going to be a shooting there now. So great, great society we've built.
I do kind of wonder, is this something that we've like inoculated
ourselves against by having so many school shootings like because you could never Sandy
Hook got so much attention because like we didn't have as many shootings back then.
And it was so terrible.
And like maybe now we move on to because it's like what're talking about elements of this, but like people obsess are still obsessed over the Sandy Hook shooting today in a way that like, I don't think most mass shooting victims have to deal with, like it becoming the center of this national mania campaign.
Yeah. And many pointed out that this this Batman conspiracy theory is kind of incongruent with
other Sandy Hook conspiracy theories, being like it's supposed to be a big shocking incident
to get people to start to start like wanting gun control versus why would they try to warn
us about it's about it happening if it was if the point of it is to be shocking, like
it doesn't quite make sense, as most conspiracy theories do.
But David Icke said, quote,
the Dark Knight Rises is classic Saturn symbolism
and Satanists worship Saturn.
So there you go.
Now, curiously, do you know who else lives in Sandy Hook?
Suzanne Collins, the author of The Hunger Games,
which leads us to our next topic, The
Hunger Games.
I found this amazing blog called Through Ancient Eyes by this British guy named Neil, who's
obsessed with the occult and is like a David Icke fanboy.
This blog is glorious. So I will, I'll start by reading the opening paragraph
from this blog, quote,
"'Don't think for a minute that the script
for the Hunger Games books is purely fiction.
Here we have predictive programming at its finest.
What I saw was the second part of a three-part narrative
that clearly plants ideas of acceptance, sacrifice,
and revolution
in the minds of youth.
The books are awash with symbols and archetypes
that seem to be classic programming devices
and more alarmingly, the books seem to project
a very viable future for not only America
but for the world."
I mean, look, he's not entirely wrong
because of all of the pieces of revolutionary literature and nonfiction
that have come out during our lifetimes,
the Hunger Games has inspired a lot more revolutions.
And like, eat everything else.
Absolutely.
That's why this one is so fun is because no,
like 2020 was like, a not insignificant part of 2020
was due to a whole bunch of kids
growing up with the Hunger Games.
No, no. I know people who are still fighting in the jungle.
So in part because of that book.
Yes, exactly.
So we will we will get into that in a bit.
Now, Neil, Neil believes that the country of Panam is, quote,
clearly a reference to both Arcadia and the Greek god Pan, unquote.
So it's an author who was up late at night looking for country names is quote, clearly a reference to both Arcadia and the Greek god Pan unquote. So-
It's an author who was up late at night
looking for country names and remembered an old airline.
Like that's what was going on.
The region of Arcadia was home to Pan
and characterized by a vast wilderness
with its lavish parties for the god of the wild
and his nymphs.
Quote, the Hunger Games capital is an urban forest
of the gods in its classic symbolic
reversal of the true meaning. It becomes a city dedicated to all that would be the opposite of
true freedom unquote. Now, Neil loves symbolic reversal, how you will see something depicted
that is like, you know, like being against totalitarian governments. This is actually symbolic reversal
where it's actually pro authoritarian governments.
This is how he talks about the entirety of the movie
and how it's actually trying to like seek acceptance
for a one world order military police state.
Similar to David Icke,
Neil also notes the Saturnian symbolism with the
goat imagery of the astral sign Capricorn linking to Pan as well as the
composite representation of the devil image Baphomet. Now I am I'm not a
planetary magic guy in general but Saturn is often like linked to like the
harvest, to destruction, chaos, it's it's it's a whole thing. But Neil says, quote,
both Capricorn and Aquarius are ruled by Saturn and its hidden vibrationality effect on the powers
that be banking, law, education. Therefore, Panam is the ultimate Saturn city of the future.
Panam is very much the typical totalitarian future Nazi-like city. It is also where that links to pandemonium in the form of a pandemic.
Is The Hunger Games preparing the youth of today for some kind of tyrannical future
born out of the events of the next decade that will lead to global pandemonium?
Which is unfortunately a pretty good prediction.
Coming from like, coming from like the early 2010s.
Yeah, they kind of were talking about a pandemic that leads to global unrest, rebelling against
a tyrannical future.
So pretty, pretty good analysis by Neil there.
Now, Neil also notes, you know, curious linkages between the segregated 12 districts of Panam,
just as our perception of time is governed by 12 hours and months.
Oh my god.
He breaks down Panam even further, claiming that the letter E and the letter M are like
numerology references, the E linking to the Intel and Saturn like Explorer logos.
And Neil says, quote, according to some researchers,
which is a great way to start a sentence,
according to some researchers,
the letter E is a very important letter number
because it represents the fifth essence or element,
the power of transcendence.
No, has the Dramatria started?
Oh yeah, absolutely, absolutely.
No!
Oh God.
He goes all out on the letter M. The letter M is a very important letter in the mystery
schools of antiquity.
Uh huh.
Being the numerology equivalent of 13, this of course relates to the 13 original districts,
or the 12 sectors around the one capital.
Oh yeah, sure.
There are, of course, 12 jurors and one judge.
The M, or the 13th letter, is the master with
12 disciples. And, esoterically speaking, 13 is the experiencer of the 12 signs of the
zodiac. There are 12 months in the Gregorian sun calendar and 13 months in the lunar calendar.
There were 13 districts, but now only 12 remain.
There's, there were 13 colonies. The US is Satanism.
So true. So true, Mia. There's a lot
of talk about how like kids can't read anymore, because how we fucked up like reading education,
you know, around like the early odds and shit, and like some the damage that that's done.
But this is showing that like you've got a bunch of boomers who are going through these books who
are reading them very carefully, who are googling every word in them to see if there's different things.
Yeah. And they, they catch all of this, like, put all this weird maniac shit
together, but they don't just get that, like, yeah, if you tell kids a simple
story about another young person overthrowing a tyrannical government,
maybe it'll burn down their Capitol building.
It's happened before and it'll happen again.
Neil gets obsessed with all these little tiny, tiny rabbit holes that are ultimately meaningless and like misses the very glaring obvious thing right before his eyes.
He says, numbers and letters are vibrational codes that affect the subconscious.
The more I look at Saturn symbolism, the more I see a thought form, wave form, or a vibrational pattern that permeates the collective thinking of humanity.
No, you miss the obvious and more like, there's always obsession with like numerology. And it's like, well, no, a big part of why the Hunger Games
caught on to people and was like so easy to like meme and spread as part of these revolutionary actions is they have like a thing, a hand thing that you did.
They had a little salute and like kids could do it to each other. It's the same shit.
Neil is not a fan of the salute by the way.
That's good. I'm sure he's got some fascinating opinions on that shit. Oh, he sure does.
And we will hear his extremely fascinating opinions on the three Finger Salute, as well as other
Hunger Games conspiracies, and new upcoming predictive programming conspiracies based
around the Civil War movie in the next episode.
So stay tuned tomorrow for even more exciting news on how you can predict the future by
watching movies.
See you tomorrow. I don't understand what the big fat ones are.
You don't put those inside of you, do you?
I mean, you do?
This is a show about women.
Okay, so I just reapplied my lip gloss after eating a delicious lunch. We are headed back
now to the European Political Systems class at Baruch College. Woo!
Finally, a show about women that isn't just a thinly veiled aspirational nightmare.
That's it, that's actually the name of the show.
It's not hosted, not narrated,
we're just dropping into a woman's world.
It's like reality TV on the radio.
I found out when my dad was gay when I was 10,
we were in a convertible on the 405 freeway,
listening to the B-52s.
Looking back, I should have said, this is gay.
This is already all gay.
Listen to Finally a Show on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. As important as choosing the right destination when traveling is choosing the right travel
partner.
Much of the joy you will find on the road comes from the person you share it with. So you hide the books, Gene. I'm the last star on the sea business.
I understand now.
This wise man marries a wiser woman.
But be careful and choose your travel partner well,
because the worst trips result when two partners
have two different agendas.
Get down!
Oh!
I'm not stupid, Gene.
Something is going on in it's high time.
You tell me the truth.
Freeze, Americano!
Oh! Gene, run!
So travel before it's too late.
Your money will return.
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you get your podcasts.
iHeart Podcast update, this week on your free iHeart Radio app. podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome back to It Could Happen here. I'm Garrison Davis. I'm joined by Mia and Robert
to discuss predictive programming. So last episode we talked about the origin of this conspiracy theory, how this Canadian
Scottish conspiracy theorist named Alan Watt came up with this idea that through Hollywood
movies, TV, books, video games, the secret ball of shadowy governments is trying to subliminally prepare us to accept
planned events as they take place in the future by putting little hints, shadows, and seeds
into our everyday entertainment diet.
One of the oldest examples that conspiracy theorists will point to as an example of predictive
programming is this book from the late 1800s called Futility that talks about a
fictional ship called the Titan which was thought to be completely unsinkable which eventually
crashed on an iceberg and sank. This obviously mirrors what happened to the Titanic in the
decades to follow. So yeah, we're talking about this sort of stuff. Last episode ended in our discussion of the Hunger Games.
I found this old conspiracy blog
by this British guy named Neil,
where he talks about all of his theories
surrounding the Hunger Games books and movies.
So we will return to hear Neil's thoughts
on the predictive programming implanted
into the Hunger Games.
Neil also has fascinating opinions on trains.
He really doesn't like that in the Hunger Games there is a big like train system,
which he links to like the, which he links to the European Union's future train plan,
as well as high speed rail plans for North America,
which he is very against because do you know who else used trains?
Was it the Nazis?
Garret, the Nazis, the Nazis, the Nazis, the Nazis.
You know, you can tell this is an older conspiracy because they
because they're actually using the Nazis as the people who use trains
and not like the Soviet Union. Yeah.
I think Neil just really likes driving
and he thinks that driving is like the epitome of freedom.
So he talks about how like trains are trying to control which areas the country you can go to instead of the freedom of the open road.
I got stuck behind a train and traffic on my way to the airport.
Very frustrating.
Make me late to this call.
So I actually I think he's right.
I'm on board now.
I think he's right. I'm on board now. He also rants about this this this 1992
UN plan called Agenda 21 about like
a big environmental management plan with
highly condensed human human settlement zones.
This is something that both John Birch and Glen Beck
were also like really Alex Jones is huge on.
Yeah, this was the entire conspiracy ecosystem
for about 15 years couldn't shut the fuck up about
agenda 21.
Some of them still go on about it.
So Neil's upset because that looks similar to like the Pan Am map of like,
because Pan Am is in like a post climate collapse.
We have these very condensed areas of settlement and like a vast,
like unusable landmass in America.
So he has this whole thing about that.
He doesn't like that President Snow
looks like the Saturnian figure of Kronos,
the father of time who devours children.
Just like how-
Oh, kids love Kronos.
Just like how President Snow sacrifices children
to maintain societal control of Pan Am in the Hunger Games.
Don't let him see my bathroom.
That'll really get us in the center of some,
I have a giant copy of the Saturn eating his son painting
that's like right next to my toilet.
It's a great painting.
Also, not necessarily about that.
They just found a painting of a guy eating a guy
and were like, it's probably Saturn
that this guy was trying to paint.
That is the research quality that Neil also does he's like yeah
It's probably all these things seems like it's sadder. Yeah
It seems like it's sadder. Yeah kind of uncomfortable to imagine. It's anyone else
Neil also compares the Hunger Games to China's one child policy and the population reduction conspiracy theories of agenda 21
Just like in the Hunger Games. It's about having children kill each other,
just like the one child policy.
Yeah, that's that's how China has their one child policy.
Other children are told to kill children.
Why they're so good at one of the family back on the revolutionary tract.
Quote, I can't confirm that Susan Collins used the archetype of Artemis
for her character of Katniss.
But what can be observed is how this female role model
is a symbol for revolution, a new order,
and more importantly, a new world system.
This is clearly the blueprint for a new America.
So part of this blueprint that he talks about
is like implanted microchips and a brutal police state
that arrests and kills protesters,
unlike our current police state,
which would never arrest or kill a protester.
Yeah, and everyone just carries Michael Tripp's around.
Yeah, yeah. Now, more devious than the murder-happy police,
Neil finds the bird symbolism to be, including Katniss's dress, which transforms into the
mockingjay symbol, which according to Neel looks, quote, remarkably
like a Benu bird of Egypt. As well as a Phoenix, especially when encircled in fire. Quote,
the Phoenix is a classic Mystery School symbol that relates to the unseen forces that transforms
the world. Both Katniss and Peta's costumes set afire as they enter the arena before the
tournament, with Katniss becoming the bird on fire, she is the embodiment of the coming transformation,
the beginning and the end.
Katniss and Peeta are symbols of Artemis and Apollo,
the twins and children of the New World Order of Gods.
Smokeless fire is also a major symbol used by the Illuminati
and is their vehicle to communicate with the Archons.
He never goes into further detail about the Archons.
Yes, smokeless powder is what made war possible.
So, you know, there's other things.
It's not just the Illuminati.
We use it for fireworks too.
Katniss is the woman clothed in fire sun
in the Book of Revelation.
And the EU, the United Nations, and the Security Council
replicate this symbolism. A phoenix rising out, the United Nations and the Security Council replicate
this symbolism, a phoenix rising out of the tyranny and war. It's all reversed symbolism,
of course, because these bodies are set to administer the world army police and the future
new world order." So he's there complaining about a United Nations mural that was made
after World War II about a phoenix of peace rising from the ashes of
war and how this is actually reversed symbolism because they're actually going to be, you
know, laying out this global one world government calling it peace. You know, he also talks
more about the book of Revelation and how 12 and 13 combined and the unification of
the new world, just like in the Bible. And then finally, to get to that three, that three finger salute,
it quote, it's interesting when you dig a little deeper and find that Katniss' salute is reminiscent of a certain Nazi youth salutes found in Eastern Europe in the late 1930s.
He's and he's also quite concerned by the new adoption of the salute by the Girl Scouts Despite the three-finger salute being used in scout organizations for over a century, you know
Yeah, yeah, like the Boy Scouts have a lot are sinister but not because of the salute
Salute is the least of the problems
brief moment of reprieve for a lot of those boys getting to do a salute and
Then he also says quote it's no surprise that the mocking J pin also looks similar to a Nazi gunner
badge, because as I've already shown, guys, the bird is the symbol
for the power of revolution, a new order that goes all the way back
to the Holy Roman Empire.
And these are the guys will be like, well, look at the mocking J symbol.
It's similar to that.
They'll see like a scout sniper flag that looks like the SS logo and go,
well, there's clearly nothing related to that.
Yeah.
And then we will close this section
by continuing on the revolutionary elements.
Quote, what kind of revolution does Katniss symbolize?
Are the youth of today being readied
for another revolution followed by another dictatorship?
How many more celebrities are we gonna see being used
as a mouthpiece for revolution?
I am all for
peaceful revolution based on
respect and love, but the movies never
portray that kind of revolution.
A peaceful revolution is one inspired by
the inner world of imagination
and not necessarily the outer world of the
five senses. The type of revolution that the
elite would want us to unfold here would be
one born of pandemonium.
The Illuminati and those in control of the current global empire in the making love to
hide their agenda in plain sight within commercial, so-called fictitious movies, and in the media
industry in general.
The Hunger Games is the script for the totalitarian elite-ruled brutal police state.
The agenda is repeatedly being laid out in front of our very eyes, both in real everyday
life and in things we choose to expose ourselves within the so-called entertainment
industry.
This is one of these things where all of these conspiracies theories center around the fact
that people for reasons that are incomprehensible to me believe that the thing the US government
wants you to do is shoot guns at them.
Yes, right?
No, no, they don't. I guarantee they don't want you to shoot machine guns at them. Yes, right? No, no, they don't. I guarantee they don't want you to shoot machine guns at them.
They would like you to spend money and go to work.
That's the primary thing the US government wants you to do.
Pay your taxes without too much fuss.
Do you know what else the US government wants you to do, Robert?
I know a number of things the US government wants me to do, Garrison, but I won't.
I will not stop telling people to take colloidal silver for all of their healthcare problems. The
only way to really carry out the revolution starts with putting silver in your body.
All right, we are we are back. I've actually always wanted to do the topical silver and get that like blue skin.
I thought I thought that'd be kind of cool.
You have to do a lot of it, Kirsten.
I am well aware.
Like we can achieve this with body paint.
I do find it very funny that they're so obsessed with like the Hunger Games
as this like this is the elite showing you how they're going to crack down on all of us. And then when it actually when the Hunger
Games inspires an actual revolution, it's like the one that gets no support from any
like spook agency and the only one there's no CIA, no FSB, fucking nothing. Like it's
just a bunch of teenagers and their books and 3D printers.
I mean, and like looking back at that Hunger Games section, it's always interesting how
people like this.
They're like in the real world, very like pro police in a lot of cases, but then also
being being like they're trying to instill a police state, right?
They get to they get to eat their cake and have it to where they're they are both pro
law enforcement, but also anti this like
Imagined evil version of law enforcement. That's always like right on the cusp of being introduced
There's a through line there, which is that they are anti whatever it seems like people are telling them is like
Obviously, okay. It's it's it's it's oppositional defiant
It's the same reason why like you think that you're on you're living in a normal earth.
So it's got to be a hollow earth. Right.
Yeah. Like it's this if something is popular,
if a movie is popular, it can't just be a movie that people liked.
And if it's like, you know, I I saw a Hunger Game,
the first Hunger Games movie, and I tried to read the books.
And I was like, no, I can't read these.
You know, they're not they were not written for me.
Like, it's it's it's just I was not interested in them. And that's all I can't read these. You know, they're not, they were not written for me. Like it's just, I was not interested in them.
And that's all I really thought about it.
But like certain people, if they see something popular
and they don't immediately fall in love with it,
they have to come up with some reason why it's sinister.
And it's the same thing that leads them
to reject everything else, right?
That like, if other people like something
and I don't get it
or I feel weird or don't understand it, then it has to be a fucking conspiracy.
Like that used to be one percent of this country.
And through social media, it's become like half of us
because it's a deeply addictive way to feel.
I think the most sinister thing about the New Hunger Games
is that they did not put nearly enough Hunter Schafer in that movie
So let's know that is let's continue to the last that's got to be predictive Hunter Schafer
So they're wanting okay, so this is like very clearly well no no
I could go into like I could go into like they're trying to make the kids trans right they want like hunt down their parents
Oh, my first literally trend shaved right in shape. You know They're trying to make the kids trans, right? They want to hunt down their parents and shave.
And shave, right?
And shave, you know?
How did the whole space literally turn on Earth?
Well, I'm saying you could easily turn it into a conspiracy theory, Garrison.
You could make it work.
So, lastly, we're going to talk about the new hit movie,
Leave the World Behind.
Oh!
Garrison made me watch this. I'm never going to forgive them for it.
One of it is it is one of the most recent examples of a movie sparking predictive programming
conspiracies. It's by the creator of Mr. Robot, which retroactively makes Mr. Robot much worse.
Now, there is a few reasons why this movie has caused so much uproar. A major factor being that
it's produced by the Obamas, as in the presidents.
Very irresponsible.
There is, there is, there's Havana syndrome references, discussion of an evil cabal that
runs the world, plans to collapse the United States, and the two child leads wear t-shirts
that read obey and NASA respectively, which has been the cause of a lot of discourse.
You gotta obey NASA.
Yeah. Yeah.
The left's long term plan.
Look, several of the letters in NASA are also in Stalin.
Are you going to tell me that's a coincidence?
Yeah, probably.
I will I will now I will now share this share this
clip from Steve Bannon,
who had a Dutch far right ye girl on his show
to discuss the movie.
He's doing good then.
So he's doing good, that's good.
I was worried about Steve.
Okay, so we see a movie here now
that is co-produced by the Obamas
about the potential cyber attack,
which causes mayhem, obviously. And I saw it
and it reminded me an awful lot of the narrative portrayed in a video published about two years
ago by the World Economic Forum. And this was a video in which they supposedly warned
us for a cyber pandemic interesting choice of words there. And they detail what could happen if we are under a cyber attack
and that the only way that we could solve an attack like that
would be to disconnect everything and everyone
completely from the Internet. So I figured this seems to me
like a classic case of predictive programming where not
just the World Economic Forum,
but now also through movies and fictional stories,
they are trying to prepare the public
to the idea of cyber attacks
and the potential chaos that could come with that.
So that is her big problems with the movie,
which we'll see echoed in a lot of the people
we talk about here with the World Economic Forum's warning about a big cyber attack. She then went on to rant
about the movie's anti white sentiments, probably from the Obama's involvement.
Clearly.
Yeah, she has she has almost a million followers, followers on Twitter. It is wild.
Also, because she's Dutch, her last name is and and I shit you not, Vlaardinger Broke. So
great great stuff happening in the Dutch.
Yeah, what is that predicting?
For a summary of the movie, I'll let this conspiracy theory TikTok explain the basic
themes that we'll be discussing here.
Essentially the movie is about the downfall of civilization and how it's
done in three steps. First step being that the government is going to be
toppled from within. Next one that it's going to be littered with
disinformation and misinformation to confuse the masses and to create chaos.
The third step, if the first and second step are done correctly, is going to
cause basically a civil war causing the paranoid and problematic to start
turning on each other. The little girl is obsessed with the last episode of
Friends called How It Ends, which
is interesting because the star of the movie, Julie Roberts, also dated Matthew Perry way,
way back.
Matthew Perry, who also passed away earlier this year.
The movie also references billionaires and their bunkers, and it references the cabal
on way more than one occasion.
The heart of it is that the cabal has fallen and so nobody is
in charge and this is what's leading to the fall of the United States of America essentially.
It has a very predictive programming feel to it. And I mean with the Obamas and the
constant references to water, planes crash in the water and a boat called the White Lion
runs up on shore from the ocean. Everybody wants water, they're constantly drinking
water, here's some water, you want some water water didn't the Obama chef just drown? I can't watch anything
Summon up the entire movie itself doesn't even have a plot
There's no real storyline to this movie and the ending is awful if I if I were not paying attention like I am
I would think the movie would be terrible. There's no resolution. There's no real start
It just seems like it's just here just here. It It's just telling you. And one more thing, it talks about microwave EMP, like,
okay, that's that's that's that.
Their brains are so melted that like, they, they can't see a movie made in the image of all of
their fears is made in the image of all their fears.
Like the whole it's so unsettling. It doesn't even start properly. It's just it just begins.
You're just in it like, yeah, man, that's kind of how a movie goes.
I like how she talks about she like she like can't enjoy movies anymore,
which is like the end result of all these all these conspiracy theorists.
Like they just they just can't enjoy life because they see everything as this series of like interconnected incidents
leading to some kind of grand narrative that makes it impossible to like actually like
be happy, which is probably the funniest thing.
Also that she thinks the movie predicted the death of the Obama's chef, which I don't even
know if that's real.
Yeah.
If you're one of these people, that's the most significant thing
that's happened the last 18 months.
The Obama chef and Matthew Perry are like the Rosetta Stone
for everything that's wrong in society
and not just two people who died because it's a year.
Because Matthew Perry used to date Jessica Roberts,
who's the star of the movie.
Of course, of course.
And there's friends references all throughout the film.
So it's all connected.
Subtle friends references in the movie, Leave the World Behind.
Very subtle.
You'll miss them if you don't pay attention.
So the last conspiracy theorist we're going to talk about is this like metaphysical influencer
named Tristan Haggard, who spends most of his time on stream selling hormone supplements
for men so that they could boost
their testosterone and stop being soy boys while discussing various conspiracies.
He says, quote, cyber attacks, bio warfare, weaponized Lyme's disease, lone star tick
and chronic wasting disease.
Things that get you to stop eating meat.
These things, these types of programs, these types of programs are seen throughout the film.
I feel like the tick bite and a lot of that stuff
might have been a little bit of that DARPA
extracurricular script additions.
Yeah, yeah, unquote.
Yeah, sure, yeah, of course.
The fact that a kid gets bit by a tick
and gets all fucked up is like trying to stop you
from eating a hamburger.
They're trying to stop you from eating meat.
Quote, I feel like the average normie might not put together the
Lyme's disease possible bioweapon connection unquote.
Amazing.
Yeah, I don't think the average normie might not put that one together.
You know, that does suggest to me that all these people are going to die in 30 seconds
if there's any real kind of unrest because their attitude towards the idea of disease
is that was planted by the New World Order.
Yeah, people won't get sick.
Now these two guys on the stream also said that they they had to stop watching Mr. Robot
in the third season because there were too many quote unquote gay scenes,
which is really funny.
I had to stop watching it in this first season
because I don't like Remy Malek, but you know.
See, I-
Some of us are built different.
I had to keep watching just for Christian Slater,
but that's just me.
He did make it hard to quit.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. yeah. So most of the time, these two guys on their conspiracy
podcast just complain about how Ethan Hawke is a weak little soy
boy and all of the and all of the quote unquote, by park people
were more like put together and more commanding.
They constantly say BIPOC, which is an interesting choice from them.
That is really fascinating, especially since Mahershala Ali's daughter
isn't really a character in that movie.
Mahershala Ali is OK because he's a great actor.
But like, it's not like it's not like all of the characters
who aren't white are like written stirringly well.
Most of the characters in this movie are written like dog shit.
They're all incredibly unlikable.
Or her shawl just elevates things.
Yeah.
But Tristan here says, quote, there's so much predictive programming and social engineering
of how the mechanics of possible collapse of the power grid collapse and the communications
would result in basically chaos.
And then I have this little clip here of him talking about the big cyber attack.
Right.
Now a lot of people are saying, well, this is predictive programming.
They're going to do this cyber attack.
And you know, we've been talking about this type of stuff for years, right?
With the cyber polygon exercises and the World Economic Forum and working with defense contractors, military intelligence, whatnot, working on
the possible scenario of a cyber attack, right?
The cyber attack is one of these scenarios that they're saying, it's got to happen.
It's coming.
The big cyber attacks coming.
But I feel like films like this, the intention could be to make people so afraid of just
as the mere possibility of a total collapse like this
So they they obviously sound like they know what they're talking about there. That's very very very polished now Tristan thinks that he has
he has a a better idea to
To kind of seed collapse quote a better way to implement
This would be to not really roll out a huge wide-scale power outages and communications outages, but make it a protracted, small and localized
so that you can still maintain a certain level of propaganda and control and then create
enough fear to where people will accept the mandatory digital ID for the internet and
the central bank digital currencies and whatnot. It's like a limited type of thing, a regional
type of thing that then is hyped up
to be the worst thing ever, unquote.
These guys are really like talking about
this mandatory digital ID
and the central bank digital currencies
as being this big threat.
And there's gonna just be,
and any day this cyber attack,
which is gonna force us to all adopt this digital ID
to be able to sign into the internet. Quote, all you have to do is going to force us to all adopt this, this, this digital ID to be able to sign into the Internet.
Quote, all you have to do is have most of the normal people afraid enough of the possible
scenario and tease it.
It's almost like a cyber attack, brinksmanship type of thing, unquote.
So they think that you don't actually need to have the cyber attack.
You just need to have people afraid enough that it could happen by by talking about it
in media
Film TV, you know all all this sort of stuff You can't even get people to like change their passwords like and I know
It's so funny because like the past few months there actually has been a decent number of cyber attacks constantly. Yes
Which are yeah, like a very like a constant infl, which are all just being constantly handled.
And it's not led to any of these massive apocalyptic scenarios that they're talking about.
No, I mean, like the movie has part of how the movie has to make this like has to make
it like why the movie is set in the middle of nowhere is that if it's set in a city
and the Internet goes out, the way people would actually respond would be like the way
they respond when there's just some sort of random outage initially like like, oh shit, my phone doesn't
work right now. I guess I got to figure something else out for a second. Like it's it's easier
to have it seem disconnected and like completely disorienting when you have everybody like
out in the middle of nowhere without other people around to make shit make sense.
I'm going to play one more clip from, from Tristan's live stream here.
I feel like also, I mean, they haven't, they haven't been building all of this, uh, technocracy stuff to throw it away.
Right.
They've been building it to implement it.
Um, so if there was a, an outage or the cyber attack or whatever, this would be
some temporary limited thing, you know, hyped up into oblivion and, Oh, it was
all the Trump Maga people, or it was all the Christians that did it to get
working with Russia, right?
That's what they're going to say.
Yeah.
Yeah, totally.
They're going to blame the big cyber attack on the Trump Christians.
That's going to be who's going to, be who's gonna launch the big attack.
Totally, absolutely.
That's who everyone will assume knew how to do a hack is the Trumpers.
Yeah.
Amazing.
First, we taught them how to change the settings on their smart TV, and now they've hacked
the planet.
What do we do?
As soon as you turn off motion smoothing, then you're ready to go.
You're going to hack the system, get in, shut everything down.
Oh, Lord.
So this Tristan guy was getting like hundreds of dollars in super chats on the stream.
He's he's very fit on YouTube.
He has over 100,000 subscribers and he is one of the has some of the like not not very hidden anti-Semitism, but like I am kind of surprised that he's able to say as much as he is while still being verified and getting all this money because he has this line towards the end of his of his stream.
Quote, the little girl is inside the house with the bunker that everyone else was trying to go to, and she's sitting at the table surrounded by like go a slop.
She's just got all the freaking kibble foods like Funyuns and Doritos.
She's she's having a feast of gluttony.
It's all freaking globo homo kibble, fruity pebbles and stuff.
She's just gluttonously consuming a bunch of, you know, trash processed foods.
She's just all alone, just looking kind of autistic.
Unquote. What the fuck?
So, yeah, he's just talking about like goy slop,
like there's like the like like the Jews are creating junk food to pacify.
They want you to eat worms and stuff.
Yeah, exactly.
So that that is most of most of his his interesting opinions on Leave the World Behind,
a pretty a pretty bad movie. A pretty bad movie.
There is one real conspiracy theory about it.
It has nothing to do with the Obamas
or predictive programming.
We see a character at the beginning of the movie,
a survivalist prepping to take care of his family,
even though no one knows a disaster is coming.
And later, near the end of the movie,
when Ethan Hawke's son is sick,
we meet the survivalist again. It turns out he's a handyman. He lives in the end of the movie, when Ethan Hawke's son is sick, we meet the survivalist again.
It turns out he's a handyman.
He lives in the edge of town,
and he's played by Kevin Bacon.
Now, Garrison, in the classic film Trimmers,
Kevin Bacon plays a handyman character
who, with his friend, Earl Bassett,
played by Fred Ward, has to fight off an attack
by subterranean ancient giant worm beasts
in order to save himself and his small community.
Like Dune.
Just like Dune Garrison.
And in the lore of the Trimmers movies,
Val McKee, Kevin Bacon's character
is not seen in further movies because he gets rich
and he marries Rhonda LeBec and they move off somewhere.
Maybe they move to the Northeast,
to an island off the coast of the East Coast
where he bought a house and became a survivalist prepper
informed by his experiences with his good friend Bert Gummer,
the local survivalist who shot a giant worm to death.
And maybe leave the world behind as a stealth sequel
to the first Trremors movie,
showing what Kevin Bacon's character does later in life.
I would be so much more of a fan of Sam Esmell
if he tried to put the Tremors movies
into the canon of Mr. Robot.
It would have been perfect.
I would have completely changed my opinion on this movie.
They'd shut up to Kevin Bacon's house and he'd come out with a gun and they'd been like,
look, we just need some antibiotics. He's like, antibiotics? What about the fucking worms? How
are you people walking around? And then the movie ends. That's the end of the movie. It was all a
Trimmer's sequel. You, you, you Korean Iranian terrorists went into the wrong rec room.
went into the wrong rec room. So, I, lastly, just want to talk a little bit about some of, like, you know, the obvious problems with this predictive programming idea, right?
It completely ignores the fact that humans use art as a form of cultural creation.
Like, we imagine futures in our art specifically because they could come into being.
Like, a lot of sci-fi that influences technology comes from this.
That's also kind of the basis of Mark Fisher and Nick Lans,
like a cultural hyperstition where you specifically make art
to have this larger cultural effect that then it can bring things into being,
as opposed to the more individualistic use of occultism.
And then a big part of all of this predictive programming thing
is also just like apophenia,
right?
It's people creating connections and patterns and random data, because it's actually easy
to look back and pick out past media that has seemingly predicted events, but it's much
harder to identify current media that is actually predicting future events, right?
This is a part of hindsight bias, the tendency that we have to look at past events is more
predictable than what they actually were.
It is it's a common psychological response to a traumatic event like like a big pandemic or a school shooting.
There's also, you know, all of these all of these pretty programming theories fall into these kind of contradictory depictions, which is why the which is why the Hunger Games guy calls it reverse symbolism.
If predictive programming is orchestrated by a shadowy cabal seeking to implement a totalitarian
takeover by normalizing an incredibly oppressive government in media and film TV, why is said
media almost exclusively about rebel heroes overthrowing an evil totalitarian government?
It doesn't actually match. And there's been a lot of like cultural studies showing
that whether you portray something in media as positive or negative will strongly affect
the audience's takeaway of the stimulus. So if you show something positively, they're
more like they're more likely to view it as a positive thing. If you show something negatively,
they're more likely to view it as a negative thing, right? This this this this sounds very obvious, but you do have to do like social science to actually like show this is a real pattern. And then finally, I will I will end this by quoting from that, that article from the Ohio State University quote, there are a few purposes for predictive programming and not all of them have to deal with tyranny. Some of them are meant to lessen the blow of an event like 9-11,
or as previously mentioned, the Sandy Hook shootings.
The contradiction arises when thinking about
why the government would want to warn us
or prepare us for Sandy Hook.
The whole point of Sandy Hook conspiracies
is to doubt the event even happened
so the government would create
a conversation around gun control.
This would defeat the purpose of staging it
if the government was trying to ensure
a smaller or inexistent response, unquote, especially like looking back at what we
talked about with like the Simpsons.
It's it's just a fun game people play, right?
Like it sounds like a fun, a fun world to live in.
If you can imagine this interconnected web connecting every single thing that
happens to your own experiences, it's it's it, it's a way to turn, turn the world into like this, this great mystery
that you can solve instead of just like experiences that you have to live through.
These people need real hobbies.
Like finally, the thing I wanted to mention is that the, the upcoming discussion of predictive
programming is all centered around this movie coming out next month called Civil War.
Which many, many of these people in their discussion of Leave the World Behind are very much talking about how Civil War just seems like a sequel to Leave the World Behind, because Leave the World Behind seems like it's set up like a possible American Civil War and how this upcoming movie is itself going to be a massive predictive programming
operation to prepare American citizens for civil conflict with each other.
So have fun seeing a whole bunch of conspiracy theories develop around this
movie that comes out next month.
Yeah, that'll be that'll be good.
I mean, I wish people would start some conspiracy theories around Alex Garland's TV show Devs,
which is dog shit also.
And one of the one of the worst uses of that guy from Parks and Rec that I've seen in a
long time.
Heartbreaking.
They use math to see the past Garrison.
That kind of reminds me of this movie I watched for research called Knowing with with cage who finds a piece of paper that has numbers able to predict
like catastrophic events.
Alex Jones thought this movie predicted an oil rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico.
But besides that, you don't see it.
You don't really see it much in these in these circles, despite it's very like
obvious, like predictive
focus. Yeah, mostly devs features a bunch of very good actors standing around and staring at a
screen where a grainy picture of Jesus from the past is lit up in like movie theater size screens.
Like it's it's it's very, it's very mid. That's what I'm saying about devs. It's pretty mid folks
don't watch devs.
Yeah.
I mean, same, same thing with this Obama movie.
So yeah, watch out for the Obama's new movies, which are all going to seed the collapse of
humanity as well as the eight 24 Civil War movie, which is probably, probably devious
in some way.
So have fun with that.
You know, I'll say this Barack Obama, it's not his fault, obviously obviously that a bunch of racists lost their mind when he became president
But knowing that it was kind of irresponsible for him to make his debut
movie production a movie about a
Cabal taking over the government using secret weapons. That's absolutely you knew what was going to happen Barack
You're not a dumb man. Tell me that's not what was going to happen.
Absolutely.
All right, well, I think that does it for us today.
Have fun predicting the end of this episode.
-♪ MUSIC PLAYING -♪
I don't understand what the big fat ones are. You don't put those inside of you, do you?
I mean, you do?
This is a show about women.
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We are headed back now to the European Political Systems class at Baruch College.
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Finally, a show about women that isn't just a thinly veiled aspirational nightmare.
That's it, that's actually the name of the show.
It's not hosted, not narrated, We're just dropping into a woman's world.
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I found out when my dad was gay when I was 10,
we were in a convertible on the 405 freeway,
listening to the B-52s.
And looking back, I should have said, this is gay.
This is already all gay.
Listen to Finally a Show on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
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iHeart podcast update this week on your free iHeartRadio app.
In retrospect, revisit pop culture moments from the 80s and 90s and try to understand
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Crying in public, two 20 something college women living in NYC dive into growing up at a time when
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As important as choosing the right destination when traveling is choosing the right travel partner. Gene!
Eugene Fodor!
Gene, wake up!
Much of the joy you will find on the road comes from the person you share it with.
So you write the books, Gene. I'm the star on the C-business.
I understand now, he's a wise man, Mary is a wise woman.
But be careful and choose your travel partner well, because the worst trips result when
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Get down!
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Freeze, Americano!
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So travel before it's too late.
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Hello, good morning, good afternoon, good evening, good night.
I'm Andrew Sage and I run the YouTube channel Andrewism,
but this is It Could Happen Here.
Today I'm carrying on my discussion of everyone's favorite subject, collapse.
I'm here, of course, with...
Garrison.
I'm here of course with... Garrison.
And last time we spoke about the what, why and how of collapse as well as the many ways
people respond when confronted with this crisis.
So if you're curious about that, you can listen to the previous discussion.
One thing I didn't touch on last time was the various levels of awareness that people
have about collapse.
Because as with most things in this life, it exists on more of a spectrum than anything. We're all
on this learning journey and some people are further along if you could even really relate
it in that way than others. Some discussions of collapse are informed by author Paul Schifrka's stages of collapse. There are five stages in total
and the first stage is dead asleep which is where you're really just vibing. You know you
can see some issues in the world here and there but that could be fixed right? All we got to do is
organize a bit better, change our behavior slightly, tweak the rules and we'll be fine.
But then you move on to the next stage,
which is the awareness of one fundamental problem.
It's when you realize,
oh, there's something structurally wrong,
but you only see in one part of that structural flow.
So it seems everything is not, you know, cash money.
You know, maybe you found out about the depths
of systemic racism or imperialism or overfishing or mass extinction or fracking.
And you know, as one does, you start to freak out a little bit, you know, maybe you mobilize to bring some awareness of this issue.
Just so people know that, you know, something is wrong, let's fix it.
And that one problem can even consume you entirely.
And then consuming all that knowledge about that one problem, you keep learning.
And if you really do keep learning and are open to learning more and more about the issue,
eventually reaching awareness of many problems, the next stage.
The more you learn, the more you worry.
You're taking all sorts of information and begin to see how complex and multifaceted
the world's problems are.
Now it's hard for you to even prioritise which is to need to be dealt with first.
In fact, you're so overwhelmed that you might be reluctant to acknowledge new problems
because you already have so much on your plate.
Alas, you cannot ignore the other problems forever, not unless you want to keep running
in circles.
So you get to the stage of awareness of the interconnections between the many problems.
It starts at dawn on you that there are no easy solutions.
Shutting down factory farms may lay off millions and leave perhaps hundreds of millions without
a complete meal.
Or efforts to raise the standard of living in the developing world through industrialisation
in the footsteps of the developed world just might accelerate the earth's demise and profit a select few.
At least you're thinking under systems level now, beyond the symptoms towards the
source.
Perhaps there is no one solution.
Perhaps the gravity of such a solution may be too much to bear.
So finally, in the last stage, you get to awareness that the predicament encompasses
all aspects of life.
So much so that you might even pine after ignorance, as you realise that this series
of problems, or rather, this all-encompassing capital P predicament, includes everything
we do, how we do what we do, how we relate, and how we affect the entire planet. The predicament is so massive, you might even reach a point where you're just like,
there is no capital S solution to this capital B predicament.
No easy answer, no quick fix, and you can't do it alone.
So, now what?
Now, in the last episode, I would have spoken about a couple different responses
that people have had to collapse.
spoken about a couple different responses that people have had to collapse. Slumber, denial, apathy, preoccupation, hedonism, overwhelm, blind hope,
individual change, progress worship, leader worship, apocalypse worship, despair.
But as promised for this episode I want to be a bit more constructive in focus.
And so to answer the question really, is there any way out?
But before I get to that, Garrison, do you think there are any stages I might have missed in that progression of understanding or what have you observed in your experience?
I mean, one thing I kind of will reiterate that is this is something that was talked
about a lot when Robert was putting together the second season of It Could Happen here
is trying to avoid, yeah, like looking at collapse as one singular moment and more as this like it's a more Gaussian,
more fuzzy, slow crumbling of things that we have grown to rely on. And sometimes you can like
envision it eventually reaching some sort of tipping point. But other times, that tipping
points never really ever reach it's just this forever kind of crumbling and then
rebuilding and then crumbling and rebuilding.
And you get to like a ship of these situation or eventually.
At one point, the thing is completely different from what it used to be.
But there was never like a full moment of, quote unquote, collapse.
It was just this this continual like crumbling and then becoming into the next thing.
That kind of sounds similar to what John Michael Greer described.
No, not John Michael Greer, David Corwitz.
He talks about this idea of like oscillating decline.
Yeah, yeah. These these recessions, these declines, and
you have a couple peaks when things have to climb up a little
bit. And then, and the overall picture is like a downward
trend. But there are some like brief respites of recovery.
Yeah, and that's definitely a mode that I think about a lot.
And a lot of people are worried of like some like some event
triggering a much kind much larger scale collapse.
I think it's good to focus on all of the smaller crumbling that's just always happening all of the
time, no matter where you live. So I mean, my experience is pretty similar. I think one of the
first issues that I became fundamentally aware of was climate change.
Of course, I mean, you crack open any one of those.
I don't know if you ever got one of those big books
of knowledge as a child.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I had a few of those.
It was like kind of plastic-y pages.
So they have all these big, amazing pictures, yeah.
So I remember seeing in one of those books
this huge
like mountain of trash and seeing like this floating garbage patch in the ocean. And I
was just like, wow. And then later on, so first thing wasn't even climate change, it
was pollution. And then later on I started thinking about climate change. And then that
really became like my major thing. And then later on, as I got older and I learned history and that sort of thing,
I came to economics and all that stuff. I came to realize just how big the situation was.
And now I'm here.
So as I said in the previous episode, we really don't need blind hope.
And I should be abundantly clear, we definitely don't need blind hope. And I should be abundantly clear,
we definitely don't need hopeless despair.
It's a little rhyme there.
So how do we respond to this predicament?
The short answer is that I don't know.
The long answer is this whole podcast episode.
I mean, I could give some platitudes, you know, we need sobriety, clarity, lucidity.
I mean, Paul Schafferter points out in his article that those in stage five awareness who see the predicament encompasses all aspects of life.
Look to one of two paths.
I mean, I've since adapted, interpreted and remixed of two paths. I mean, I've since adapted into Britten and remixed the two paths, so not one to one with
what he had in mind, but you should get the gist.
The first path of response to the predicament of collapse is the inner path of self-healing.
It's a manifestation of that fake Gandhi quote, be the change you want to see in the world.
Sort of retreating into oneself, digging
deep and personal, developing your self-awareness. I mean, some people take this to mean some sort
of hyper-individual thing, and it low-key is. If you tilt and twist your head slightly,
you can maybe see it in a different light. I don't think it has to mean becoming a monk or
an ascetic. I don't think it means denying systems or ignoring the painful truth.
I think it involves taking in the gravity of what we're dealing with, such a grand
scale issue, and putting it in a personal context, unobstructing it and understanding
it through a more manageable lens. I'm not one to fall back on evolutionary determinism or
anything like that, but I do think often about how we kind of weren't meant to be processing
this entire planet, this entire population. You know, I think we're very good at dealing with
immediate problems, very good at looking at situations that
are before us that are directly impacting us and looking at how we can solve that.
And of course, no local solution necessarily is going to by itself solve a global crisis,
but medley of Local Solutions can.
But we're not even talking here with this inner path of Local Solutions yet.
We're talking even at a smaller scale and local, at the base unit of society, which is the self.
So you might continue pursuing knowledge of the issues, start developing your practical skills and people's
skills, try to minimalise your lifestyle in preparation for the economic and social shocks
of collapse. Perhaps seeking to settle somewhere you've determined is best suited to weather
the coming storms, which I believe I saw a video some years ago where this guy was saying
the Midwest might be the best place environmentally to settle.
I don't know if you all covered that in the first or second season if it could happen
here.
I mean, there was something definitely we were looking into during some of the research
phases of a lot of the agriculture that is currently based in the south of the United
States.
Every decade is going to start moving
up and up and up. And particularly, Canada is going to enter a very large agricultural economic
boom. That process has already started. But yes, there's going to be this slow rising level of
industrial farming, which first of all isn't actually great for the
land itself. Like once all of the land that's abandoned in the southern states, like after
it's been tapped for so long, it's really just like dust. Like it's not actually useful
dirt anymore, but it's all of that stuff's going to start moving farther and farther
north as the conditions for growth start changing.
And it's the same thing for a lot of things that are grown in more like jungle-y forest
mountain areas where every year, like coffee and chocolate, they have to start moving the
crops further up the mountain.
And again, that's obviously not a great long term solution
because the mountain is only so high. It costs a lot of money to constantly be moving your crops
higher and higher up a mountain. But that is the sort of like, agricultural and like, economic drive
that's going to start getting more and more common to supply the amount
of food that Americans are used to eating. And it won't like in the case of coffee, like,
it's not like actual coffee beans are not going to be as common as they were today or
20 years ago, it's going to become more of like a higher priced luxury item. And I'm
sure we'll I'm sure Americans will get their caffeine fixed some other way.
But yeah, it's like that those sorts of changes are going to become more and more and more
commonplace.
Yeah. Yeah, for sure. And this is why, you know, anarchists get, I think, unfairly labeled like, like, like
excessively agrarian or maybe parochial in their focus.
But I think that as we talk about the degradation of soils, we talk about the failures in the long term
of monoculture, a large-scale farming.
The only way that we're really going to see that sort of land restored again
is through the sort of agroforestry,
pulmoculture, you know, small scale practices that involve rebuilding
that relationship between people and the land itself.
Regarding outside of the US, I don't know what my game plan would be.
The dry seasons are certainly dry and I think last year actually was one of our driest wet
seasons.
So I don't really plan on leaving, but I do think about it, I do find myself thinking
about, okay, where am I going to like, put, where am I going to settle? Where am I going to be able to safeguard myself and stay connected with people and live?
So in a sense, I am on that inner path, educating myself as much as possible, trying to develop
my practical skills,
focusing on what I could do as an individual
to make changes in my own life
and partially in my surroundings
in a way that is manageable.
Understand?
Do you see yourself in this path as well?
I...
I'm not sure.
I tried to not...
I spent a lot of time thinking about the future
I guess but I try not to lock myself into any any particular
pathway, I don't know like I've
Already started to move around the US leaving
Leaving the places where I've kind of grown up for the majority of my life
That are actually decently suited for for some kind of climate collapse
but of my life that are actually decently suited for some kind of climate collapse. But yeah, I don't know. I have some form of hesitancy to like cede territory or just like write off places as just
being like not worth it, especially like the South, the American Southeast. Just like there's kind of a notion just to like write off large swaths of areas, whether
like agriculturally, like climate wise, or even like politically being like, oh, this
is just where all of the fascists are going to live.
And like, that's not true.
This area of the country is actually one of the most diverse parts of the country.
And to write it off all as like, just like Republican land is, I think, is grossly misguided.
Absolutely.
On the other hand, if things get really, really bad, I'm also going to hold on to my Canadian
passport and just go and have that as a backup option just to go north into into the snowy desolate of northern Alberta.
So, you know, I have to show.
Yeah. If push comes to shove, Antarctica is the final frontier.
Right. So like I, I always kind of I'm I have that backup option,
which is easier than a lot of people.
But it's it's it's something it's something I try not to like.
I I don't like relying on that kind of notion.
I feel you, I feel you, yeah.
And I mean, that's part of why I don't see this
in our path as fully satisfactory to me.
Yeah.
Even though I feel as a path I've unconsciously chosen
due to some of the challenges I faced on the outer path,
but still what clicks with me more is the outer path.
I've also called it balanced realism,
which is hard to balance
because a lot of people who confuse realism with pessimism,
you know, when you just see everything being awful,
that's, oh, I'm a realist, you know?
But truthfully, I think taking the outer path
of balanced realism
means shaking off the burdens and blinders of both pessimism and optimism and alarmism and
denialism and fatalism and hedonism and all these other setbacks and obstacles. All of the other Except for Andrews. Sure, sure. Keep watching Andrews.
Please.
Really loosen yourself from your own hopes and fears.
Really, I think the way I try to see it is
I have no idea and no one really knows
what outcome there will be. Up to, I haven't met a prophet.
I have met a seer, I have met a fortune teller. I don't think any of us really know what the
outcome will be. And there's so many factors that we can't even calculate and take into account.
I mean, for all we know, I mean, it would be very disruptive of our reality,
right? And personally, I'm not really a believer in like there being interstellar alien species.
But, you know, imagine just out of the blue, like on a random Thursday afternoon,
just out of the blue, like on a random Thursday afternoon, there was an actual alien invasion.
I don't think any of us could really predict that.
Of course there are things that we do have to be able to predict and work with and stuff like that,
but really, of course that's an exaggerated example,
but I want to be able to recognize and accept any number of possible outcomes.
In the face of such a grand predicament,
I think maintaining realism is difficult,
especially with so much information swooping around in the ether.
You don't know what's true and what's not,
but I think it's necessary.
You know, you agitate, you fight, you build for the best,
but you also prepare and defend for the worst.
A brief aside, by the way, on optimism.
I see really two sides of collapse
optimism. Both I think are well placed but both unfortunately misled. There's the optimism that
collapse absolutely will not take place, which I think is a sort of optimism that doesn't really
quite understand where collapse, what forms collapse can take. And there's this sort of optimism that collapse will take place, but will overcome it.
I mean, the hows of collapse might not line up fully with our predictions,
but there is a very clear trajectory that we are on.
So the idea that collapse is just not in the cards at all really feels like wishful thinking.
Humanity, I don't think has the plot armor that we tend to
think it does. And that lack of plot armor also means that there's really no guarantee that we'll
overcome collapse if it does occur. There are no sure outcomes to be sure but that doesn't mean
we're destined to come out of this unscathed. But what do you think of optimism considering what you do for work?
Um, I don't know. I honestly don't think about optimism very much. I see a lot of like bad stuff
like every day as a part of my job. I think about a lot of like grim stuff, I suppose.
like every day is a part of my job. I think about a lot of like grim stuff, I suppose.
But it's honestly not something I think about. I think it's a little bit of its own bubble.
I think there's a utility for having hope, but not having a sense of just like static optimism. I think hope is a useful thing to have in your brain. But but not not have it be as like this.
Just like umbrella that you apply to every single aspect of your life in the way like optimism is.
But in terms of like like when you're mentioning like the alien thing, I think one one way that people do think about collapse, try to cope with it a lot, is like, it's kind of some form of like
deus ex machina, like this, something will happen, whether that's some other like catastrophic event
or like apocalyptic event, or it's like some new found scientific advancement that one day will pop
into existence, and then we'll solve all of these problems. I think both of those are kind of a form of a Deus Ex Machina
and both of those are actually ways of coping,
even though one is more apocalyptic and one's more utopian.
I thought you were talking about the video game series,
you know.
Oh, no, no.
When you said Deus Ex Machina.
No, like-
So I was thinking, oh yeah, like, you know,
like Cybernetics and yeah, yeah, for sure.
Sure, sure.
We like, that kind of, that kind of is its own form of Deus Ex Machina in terms of
this thing entering from backstage that now solves all of these problems we have in the
story of the world.
But I mean, that is I think that's a thing that a lot of people try to find some.
So it kind of allows you to not be in denial about the
current predicament, but still envision a future that is pretty similar to what we currently
have just with this like magical invention or this or this like or this like apocalyptic
event that forces people to like actually solve some some degree of problems. You know,
it's kind of it's kind of like the thing in Alan Moore's Watchmen being like,
if there was a giant squid, then the whole world would team up together,
solve the problem.
And I don't know, that seems a little bit less likely.
Yeah, unfortunately, climate collapse, ecological collapse is not a giant squid.
And there is no Dr. Manhattan.
Yeah, and even after COVID, right, you have this massive like world threatening event.
And it's kind of the perfect example of it's like a version of the giant squid.
And that did not lead to the whole world working together to solve this big problem.
I mean, to be fair, it was like a giant invisible squid. It was, yes, it was.
So be fair as well.
The giant invisible squid is still there.
And like regularly claiming lives,
we kind of just go about our days kind of ignoring us like, oh, you know,
there goes there goes Fred, you know.
Snatched up by the giant squid.
I'm sure in the Watchmen world, there would be a great many of like squid deniers of people
who are like, no, this squid was never real.
This squid was all fake.
That was all fake in New York City.
It was, it wasn't real.
Like that.
I've long said there's no opinion that everybody in the world will agree with. You know, like, if you were to say, for example, that all humans need food to live, there's
going to be a contrarian who's going to tell you, actually, I survive on photosynthesis.
I'm a breathetarian.
You know?
There is no uncontroversial tics.
I think there will be deniers no matter what.
You know, as you were talking about optimism and sort of the dark things you're dealing with,
it reminded me of something that shook me yesterday.
I was watching Sean on YouTube, Sean's video on Palestine, and he shared the story of this young Palestinian boy
who had filmed the video celebrating himself
winning, gaining a thousand subscribers.
And he was sharing his goals of, you know,
he may get in 10,000 and 100,000, maybe even
a million.
And he was killed last year by the IDF.
So I think, I mean, it's connected, but not entirely related.
We're talking more along the lines of ecological collapse and systems collapse and this sort of thing.
And while it's true that for much of the world, collapse is not going to look like a singular event,
I think it is also important to recognize that, and remember, that there are people for whom collapse,
or rather, their subjective collapse, the collapse of their world, their way of
life, their existence, is staring them in the face right now.
Absolutely.
You know?
I don't want to compare misfortunes, but you know, there is that reality that, you know, some people are facing like cataclysm right in their face.
And for others, it's like a slower burn, but ultimately similar feats, you know?
That was something we were also considering when putting together some of the climate
change focused earlier episodes from a few years back and like the effects of climate change or just collapse in general are not like
uniform, right? They, it first targets on the periphery and like
whatever, it's kind of a faulty way of doing that, right? Like an old
term would be like the third world. We we were trying to find better, better terms for this.
So many terms and I'm really fully work.
Yeah, I was actually talking on a live stream about how like.
I come just like I feel like all these
distinction people try to draw like the West is the East or, you know,
global north is global, so they're all a bit messy.
Yes,ual application.
But the people on like the.
The edges of empire, the edges of like the imperial engine are.
Going to fix this a lot sooner than the people in the imperial core.
And like that, that is just whether that's collapsed through like war like like forced
collapse or that's collapsed through like environmental factors like both of those are
often the case. People are going to do a lot of work to maintain the Mecca of New York
City but they're not going to care if a small town.
Not even a small town like Jakarta could sink into the ocean.
And absolutely.
Like just like who cares?
Right.
Hurricanes taking out like I mean, I care just to be clear.
Whole countries.
Yeah, no, absolutely.
Like those these things do not do not get held on the same the same level.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
So, I mean, I suppose to answer my own question, I think you do need a dose of optimism to keep you from falling into despair or completely checking out of the struggle.
Just for the sake of your mental health.
But not to the point of blindness from the truth.
I don't think there's anything wrong with maintaining
some level of emotional cushioning to keep you going,
to, you know, fuel you to wake up in the morning
and make it through your day,
but not to the point of delusion, I suppose.
And so I think this is the value of the outer path as well.
And I think this outer path is fueled by a bit of
inner grace and peace.
You know, you let go of some level of naivete and passivity.
You're moving, acting, doing, adapting.
And here, of course, I'm thinking of
like the primiculture movement, the Transition
Towns Network, all the other ongoing movements and projects, none of which are perfect, mind you,
none of which are gonna save the whole world or anything. But at Sydney Trine, I'm also thinking
of like the movement for the MST in Brazil and you know the Lavia Campesina who we would have interviewed some people
about recently. These groups, these movements, these struggles are thinking, are looking local,
thinking global and actually really making a difference. I think that outlook is necessary.
I think we need more political movements that could be honest about reality, that aren't waiting for a savior or a politician, that aren't waiting until it's too late to act, that aren't removing
power from the hands of people and placing it elsewhere.
Movements that are far less reactive and more proactive.
Maybe we'll never see a global shift to degrowth or a steady state economy in our lifetimes
without a major disruption and shift in the efforts of grassroots movements. never see a global shift to degrowth or a steady state economy in our lifetimes without
a major disruption and shift in the efforts of grassroots movements.
We can definitely see small-scale local resilience systems springing up and spreading that are
better able to endure the coming economic, social, ecological shocks.
I am as pro-social revolution as they come, but I think we need a more expansive understanding
of what that entails.
I was reading actually this morning Anarchy, a Graphic Guide by Clifford Harper, and he
spoke about how 65 years of persistent agitation and organization culminated in the largest, most far-reaching
revolutionary movement of the modern times.
I think when we discuss the Spanish Civil War and the CNT, FAI, a lot of people get
caught up in what was happening during the Civil War. But I don't think there's enough focus on the fact that these organizations were moving
and shaken in their communities and in their regions for decades, prior to any major pop-off.
Like a general strike does not happen overnight, an insurrection does not happen overnight,
especially not without the level of broad-scale support that would be necessary to sustain
those efforts.
On the topic of the transition movement in particular, that movement was officially started
in 2006 in the UK but had some roots before then.
In 2004, permaculture designer Rob Hopkins tasked students at Kinsale
Further Education College with applying permaculture principles to the concept of peak oil,
leading to the creation of the Kinsale Energy Descent Action Plan. Two students,
Louis Rooney and Catherine Dune, developed the transition towns concept, presenting it to the
Kinsale Town Council, which adopted the plan for energy independence. Then Hopkins later moved to Tottnese, England,
where he, along with Nourish Kyan Krandi, developed these concepts into the Transition Model.
Transition Town Tottnese, founded in early 2006, saved its inspiration for other transition
initiatives globally. In early 2007, the Transition Network UK charity was co-founded by Rob Hopkins, Peter Lippmann,
and Ben Brangwin to support and disseminate transition concepts worldwide.
By 2008, the project had expanded, with numerous communities becoming official transition towns.
These are things you don't hear about in the news, these are positive developments that have been happening under the radar for decades at this point.
By May 2010, over 400 community initiatives were recognised as official transition towns
in various countries, reflecting the diverse ranges of communities involved,
from villages and neighbourhoods to cities and city boroughs.
The initiatives have developed citizens'
cooperatives through renewable energy, local and sustainable food systems, new
cooperative economic models, sustainable transport systems, energy descent action
plans, and even heart and soul groups built to respond to the emotional
components of collapse and transition. In the book How Everything Can Collapse, which I referenced in the previous episode, Pablo,
Sylvain and Rafael Stevens talk about the paradox of collapse, and I'll leave it in their words
because I think it was really well put.
Quote, from a philosophical point of view, transition is a strange and paradoxical thing.
It is both catastrophist and optimistic, that is to say both lucid and pragmatic.
Lucid because the people involved in these movements are not in denial about catastrophes.
Most of them have given up the myth of eternal growth as well as the myth of the apocalypse.
They know and believe in what awaits us, and are generally receptive to catastrophists' language
because they already are committed to their search for real alternatives.
Pragmatic, because catastrophists' political thinking is not apocalyptic in nature.
It is not claim to be worried about the end of the world,
but more precisely about a sudden and potentially traumatic reorganization
of ecosystems and societies.
Neither business as usual nor the
end of the world. Just a world to invent together, here and now." End quote. The transition movement
is vitally rooted in imagination and I've spoken about the vitality of imagination in the past.
In fact, my video on the subject was partially inspired by Rob Hopkins' book, From What Is to
What If. You imagine, you sketch out the details,
and then you roll up your sleeves and you make it real.
During the development of the Transition Networks project,
Rob Hopkins, along with others,
published the Transition Handbook,
which is structured in three parts.
The first is the head, which are the facts of the situation.
Then you have the heart, which are the emotional consequences
and desired futures. And then you have the heart which are the emotional consequences and desired futures,
and then you have the hands, which is how you get from imagination to action.
I just thought that was a really great approach, even though the handbook is dated in some ways.
Of course, guiding people through the process of even accepting transition and getting them on the outer path
works well on the small and personal scale. But there is a challenge of scale.
Celine and Stevens point out that you can't exactly announce on a large platform,
listen up everybody, prepare for the end of the world.
As you can imagine, it ends up being a self-fulfilling prophecy.
It's kind of like telling people not to rush out and buy up all the toilet paper.
Transition on larger scales is difficult.
Not to say it's not difficult to build the local community's resilience from disruptions
in food, energy, climate, etc.
But on the macro scale, it's even more difficult.
At least if you're determined to take on a top-down approach.
You get what I'm saying? It's because this isn't exactly a problem
that rulers are capable of solving. The debt system is not going to go away by decree. The energy
system that fills their coffers won't shift until it profits them either. And in a scene like a
state, the anthropologist James C. Scott spends a lot of time discussing
just how that top-down perspective of the world is inherently limiting and incapable
of effecting those sorts of changes.
But thankfully, the people are able to act where rulers don't.
As Venus Stevens put it, transitioners do not wait for
government. They are already inventing ways of living through this collapse in a non-tragic way.
They are not waiting for the worst, but building for the best. Ultimately, I'm trying to get on
the level of the transition town realists on the outer path that are building networks,
building community, and building sustainability. I highly suggest that if you're looking for ways to help out in your local situation,
check out the Transition Town network and see how you can tap in or start your own initiative in
your own area. That's all I have for now. All power to all the people. This is it, good happening here.
I am Andrew. This is Garraraq Pania. I am Honjur.
This is Garra Sun.
Peace.
I don't understand what the big fat ones are.
You don't put those inside of you, do you?
I mean, you do?
Yes.
This is a show about women.
Okay, so I just reapplied my lip gloss after eating a delicious lunch.
We are headed back now to the European Political Systems class at Baruch College.
Woo!
Finally, a show about women that isn't just a thinly veiled aspirational nightmare.
That's it, that's actually the name of the show.
It's not hosted, not narrated, we're just dropping into a woman's world.
It's like reality TV, on the radio.
I found out when my dad was gay when I was 10, we were in a convertible on the 405 freeway
listening to the B-52s.
Looking back, I should have said, this is gay.
This is already all gay.
Listen to finally a show on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. As important as choosing the right destination when traveling is choosing the right travel partner.
Gene!
Eugene Fodor!
Gene, we'll board it!
Much of the joy you will find on the road comes from the person you share it with.
So you write the books, Gene, and the star runs the business.
I understand now, he's a wise man, Mary is a wise woman.
But be careful and choose your travel partner well
because the worst trips result when two partners
have two different agendas.
Get down!
I'm not stupid, Gene.
Something is going on in it's high time
you tell me the truth.
Freeze, Americano!
Gene, run!
So travel before it's too late.
Your money will return, Your time won't.
And we're all too quickly approaching that final destination.
Listen to Fodor's Guide to Espionage on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Hello, this is It Could Happen Here, and I am Shereen.
Today we have an update for you about what is happening in Palestine.
There is a lot that is happening in Palestine, way too much to cover in a single podcast
episode, but I hope this at least gives you a general idea of where we currently stand.
Just for clarity and context, I am recording this on Tuesday, March 12th, so any numbers I mention
unfortunately and probably are different now.
At this point, there have been over five months of bombardment and genocide, and this has
caused a humanitarian crisis in Gaza, with children starving to death due to malnutrition
and dehydration as Israel has imposed restrictions on aid deliveries
to Gaza.
Five months of genocide on top of more than a decade and a half of blockade have caused
relentless mental harm to children in Gaza, according to a report released by Save the
Children on Tuesday.
Twenty-five Palestinians in Gaza, including at least 20 children and a two-month-old baby,
have died of malnutrition
and dehydration, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health. The true death toll due to
starvation is feared to be much higher as many Palestinians, particularly in northern Gaza,
face famine and are almost entirely cut off from the severely limited humanitarian aid
which is entering Gaza through the southern Rafah crossing.
Many Israelis have also been blocking aid from entering Gaza. A group of Israeli protesters have
been blocking aid trucks from crossing into the Gaza Strip for weeks now, vowing that quote,
not a single loaf of bread should reach those trapped in the tiny region of the Gaza Strip until all remaining hostages are released.
The area around Kerem Shalom, which is Israel's only functioning border crossing with Gaza,
is a closed military zone, but the IOWF officers and their presence there hardly deters the dozens of protesters,
who are mostly settlers, families of hostages, and deactivated military reservists, it does not deter them from
trekking through the area and protesting in an attempt to slow aid trucks from entering Gaza.
I'm noticing right now that I'm interchangeably using Gaza and Gaza.
Gaza is just how you say it in Arabic, so FYI, if I jump around, my apologies.
On the ground, CNN recorded an interview with
protestor Debbie Sharon. She pointed to an aid truck convoy and said,
This arrives into the tunnels of Hamas, fighting us and holding our hostages.
There is no evidence that the majority of aid, including food and medical supplies,
is going to Hamas. Sharon and her fellow protesters are demanding that aid stop entering Gaza, where over 30,000
people have now been killed, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.
With people at an increasing risk of starvation, another protester named Katya said,
They should only get the minimum calories to survive.
If they are starving to death, give the hostages back.
Not a single loaf of bread should go there till our hostages are coming back."
When questioned about the scale of human suffering in Gaza, Katya seemed unmoved.
She said,
Even if there is a humanitarian crisis, and there is not, it is my right and my duty to
prioritize the kefir Bivas
over any Gazan babies." Kefir Bivas is a one-year-old who is being held hostage along with
the baby's parents, so that's what she's referring to, prioritizing Israeli babies over Palestinian
babies. Very little aid has made it into Palestine, and perhaps nothing captures what the US and
Israel actually are than a picture that has been making the rounds on social media recently.
It's a photograph showing US aid drops and Israeli airstrikes targeting civilian areas
in northern Gaza happening at the same time, falling on the rubble of destroyed buildings.
The aid and the airstrikes dropping at the same moment.
It's dystopian and beyond fucked up.
Since October 7th, Israel has also shut off entry of food, water, and medicine,
as well as other supplies from entering Gaza,
only allowing a trickle of aid trucks through two crossings in the south. Israel has blamed the starvation that Palestinians are enduring in Gaza on UN agencies,
saying that they fail to distribute supplies piling up at Gaza crossings.
The UNRWA, which is the largest UN agency in Gaza,
says Israel restricts goods and imposes cumbersome inspections that slow entry of aid.
Also, distribution within Gaza has been crippled, UN officials say.
They say that convoys regularly are turned back by Israeli forces, and that the military
often refuses safe passage amid fighting, and that the aid does not get to the people
that need it the most, often being grabbed from trucks by hungry Palestinians en route
to the drop-off points.
Recent airdrops of aid by the US and other countries provide far lower amounts of aid
than truck deliveries, which have become increasingly more rare, and they're also sometimes dangerous.
The UNRWA says that Israeli authorities haven't allowed it to deliver supplies to the north
of Gaza since January 23rd.
The World Food Organization, which had paused deliveries
because of safety concerns, said the military forced its first convoy
to the north in two weeks to turn back on Tuesday.
Shireen from the future is here just for this quick update.
Yesterday, Wednesday, Israeli forces hit a food distribution center
and aid center in Rafah.
The UNRWA said that one of their staff members were killed and 22 others were injured and
it said up to 60 people were believed to have been working there when it was hit.
Those killed were said to be a 15-year-old boy and four men who were between 27 and 50
years old.
Rafah resident Sami Abu Salim said, It's a UNRWA center, expected to be secure. Some came to work to distribute aid to the
people in need of food during the holy month of Ramadan. Suddenly they were struck by two missiles.
The UNRWA chief, Filipe Lazzarini, said in a statement that it was one of the very few
UNWA distribution centers
that was still operating in Gaza after these five months of genocide.
He said this attack comes as food supplies are running out, hunger is widespread, and
in some areas turning into famine.
Every day we share the coordinates of all of our facilities across the Gaza Strip with
parties to the conflict.
The Israeli army
received the coordinates including this facility yesterday. Since October, the UNRWA says at
least 165 of its 13,000 employees in Gaza have been killed and that more than 150 of
its facilities have been hit by Israeli forces. Here are the latest casualty figures as of March 13th at 1240 p.m.
In Gaza, there are at least 31,272 people who have been killed. Of those, there are 12,300 children
who have been killed, as well as 8,400 women who have been killed. There are more than 73,024 people who have been injured,
including 8,663 children who have been injured and 6,327 women who have been injured.
There are more than 8,000 Palestinians who are missing in Gaza.
The latest figures from the Palestinian Ministry of Health for the occupied West Bank is as follows.
At least 432 people have been killed, including more than 115 children.
There are more than 4,650 Palestinians who have been injured in the West Bank.
In Israel, officials have revised the death toll from October 7th from 1,405 to 1,139.
As far as the injured go in Israel, there are at least 8,730 people who have been injured.
According to the latest data from the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs,
the World Health Organization, as well as the Palestinian government as of February 25, Israeli attacks
have damaged. More than half of Gaza's homes, 360,000 residential units have been destroyed
or damaged. There have been 392 educational facilities that have been destroyed, including
all universities. 12 out of the 35 hospitals are partially functioning. 132 groundwater wells have been damaged or destroyed.
267 places of worship have also been destroyed.
I really want to emphasize how damaging starvation is and famine is.
Starvation causes long-lasting damage to the body.
Large numbers of people in Gaza are experiencing malnutrition.
Studies of famines in other countries show that famines can have long-lasting impacts on people's health and even that of their descendants.
A new type of video has been circulating online from the Gaza Strip, footage showing families baking quote unquote bread,
which is made from birdseed, eating weeds, and giving newborn babies dates to suck on
instead of milk.
The Accountability Program Director at Defense for Children International Palestine said,
"...it is unthinkable that in 2024, in a world that produces more than enough food
for all people, that Palestinian more than enough food for all people that Palestinian children
are starving to death. The starvation of children is a hallmark of genocide and a deliberate
political choice by Israel, backed by the Biden administration. It is complete madness
that Israeli authorities continue to prohibit and restrict food and other life-saving supplies
to a starving population while the international
community stands by.
Palestinians in Gaza started to experience chronic hunger within weeks of October 7th.
At this point in time, Israeli strikes have killed more than 30,000 Palestinians, and
this is according to Gaza's Ministry of Health.
The death tolls that come out of the Palestinian Ministry of Health,
they account for Palestinians who die at hospitals or whose families report their deaths to the
ministry. Due to the telecommunications blackout, the collapse of the medical system, Israeli ground
invasion, and continued Israeli aerial bombardment, many Palestinians are not able to reach hospitals,
and so this number is likely far, far greater
than it actually is.
And as I mentioned, Israeli authorities have repeatedly blocked and severely restricted
any humanitarian aid from entering Gaza.
On Tuesday, Israeli forces attacked Palestinians who were waiting for aid trucks at the Kuwait
roundabout south of Gaza City, and they killed seven people.
Keep in mind, this is after what has become known
as the Flower Massacre. On February 29th, the Israeli occupation forces, aka the IOF, killed at
least 118 Palestinians who were attempting to get aid from a convoy in Gaza City. In this Flower
Massacre, along with the 118 Palestinians who were shot and killed, at
least 750 additional Palestinians were injured.
They were just trying to get food from the aid trucks to feed their family.
The United States recently delivered two airdrops of aid alongside the Jordanian military into
northern Gaza.
The airdrops contained a total of 74,800 meals and this was widely criticized as a
public relations move because the Biden administration is still clearly complicit in Israel's genocide
of Palestinians.
International criminal law prohibits serious atrocities including core crimes of genocide,
the crime of aggression, crimes against humanity, and war crimes, and provides
for individual criminal responsibility for perpetrators.
The crime of genocide constitutes the deliberate killing of a large number of people from a
particular nation or ethnic group with the aim of destroying that nation or group in
whole or in part.
Genocide can result from killing or by creating conditions of life that are so
unbearable, intentionally using starvation of civilians as a method of warfare is an
underlying act of genocide, and it amounts to a war crime."
I've said this before on this podcast, I'll say it again, but at this point international
law means nothing. It hasn't meant anything for a long time. Nothing happens when Israel continues to break international law. So, that phrase is a little
empty to me when they are in violation of international law. But here we are. And it
should be noted that starvation of civilians also contributes and is an act of genocide.
I've talked about why this is genocide in other episodes,
but it's a clear act of genocide what Israel is doing to Palestinians, and many scholars agree
with that. Anyway, let's continue. As weeks of blockades on food and other aid have turned into
months, starvation has reached historic proportions. One recent report by the Global Nutrition Cluster, which is a United Nations Children's
Fund aka UNICEF-led partnership of humanitarian organizations, found that in December of 2023,
in January of 2024, 9 in 10 children under the age of 2 and more than 9 in 10 pregnant
and breastfeeding women surveyed had consumed
two or fewer food groups in the previous day. This situation is considered severe food poverty.
Nearly two-thirds of households were eating just once a day, if at all. In the northern Gaza Strip,
one in six babies and toddlers were acutely malnourished. Aid organizations say
that these numbers today are likely to be far, far worse, and that the rapid onset and
complexity of Gaza's food crisis is unprecedented. Ted Shaiban is the Deputy Executive Director
for Humanitarian Action and Supply Operations at UNICEF. He said in a recent statement, The Gaza Strip is poised to witness an explosion in preventable child deaths.
If the conflict does not end now, children's nutrition will continue to plummet, leading
to preventable deaths or health issues which will affect the children of Gaza for the rest
of their lives and have potential intergenerational consequences.
There are nearly 2.2 million people living in the Gaza Strip, nearly half of whom are
children.
Nearly 160 million other people worldwide are facing hunger, including millions of people
in Somalia, Afghanistan, and Sudan.
The short-term health consequences of food scarcity have been studied extensively.
In children, an especially vulnerable group, severe acute malnutrition can lead to muscle
wasting, stunted growth, and medical complications, including sepsis, meningitis, diarrhea, and
severe anemia.
Worldwide, nearly half of all deaths of children less than five years of age are linked
to malnutrition. A growing body of research is finding that even if these children return to
normal nutrition levels, a period of acute malnutrition can lead to long-lasting damage
later in life, and it may impact future generations. This is one of many examples of why Israel's genocide of the
Palestinian people isn't just about death and the lives they've destroyed and the land that they've
taken. Israel's genocide is also about robbing Palestinians of any livable future, affecting
generations of Palestinians to come. And they've done this since 1948. That's why it's no accident when children
are targeted by the IOF, when they're starving, or when they're shot. They are murdered as a way
to prevent Palestinians from having a future or having any hope. We see how the IOF shoots children
with the intention to kill. There are many, many examples of this, but here's a recent example. Two
children were killed in November in the West Bank. Adam Samer El-Rul, 8 years old, was
shot in the head. Bazda Suleiman Abu Al-Wafa, 15 years old, was shot in the chest. These
children were both murdered and shot with the intention to kill.
The Israeli military and border police forces have been killing Palestinian children with virtually no recourse for accountability for decades. Back in August of 2023, well before
October 7th of 2023, Bill Van Esfeld, who was the Associate Children's Rights Director at
Human Rights Watch, said,
Israeli forces are gunning down Palestinian children living under occupation with increasing
frequency.
Unless Israel's allies, particularly the United States, pressure Israel to change course,
more Palestinian children will be killed.
And that is exactly what has been happening. Many, many more Palestinian
children have been killed. All preventable. Human Rights Watch researchers in documenting
four killings that happened, interviewed in person seven witnesses, nine family members,
and other residents, lawyers, doctors, staff, and field workers at Palestinian and Israeli
rights groups, as well as reviews
CCTV footage and videos that were posted on social media, as well as statements by Israeli
security agencies, medical records, and news reports.
In all cases that they researched, Israeli forces shot the children's upper bodies without,
according to witnesses, issuing warnings or using common, less lethal measures like tear gas,
concussion grenades, or rubber-coated bullets. I also want to draw attention to how this genocide
is also a mass disabling event that will harm an entire generation and make them reliant on
infrastructure that does not physically exist. More than 10 children a day lose a limb in Gaza. And this is from the source Save the Children.
At least 17,000 children, which is 1% of Gaza's overall displaced population of 1.7 million,
have now been orphaned in the Gaza Strip.
And the number of children who have been killed in Gaza, this number is now reaching 13,000
children. The number of children reported killed in
just four months in Gaza is higher than the number of children killed in four years of
war around the world combined.
Let's take an ad break, and we'll be right back.
And we are back.
In the 24 hours between Sunday March 10th and Monday March 11th, during which the vast
majority of Americans were busy watching the stupid fucking Oscars, 7 massacres were committed by Israeli
occupation forces against families in Gaza, killing 67 Palestinians and injuring 106 others.
This happened as people were distracted by watching this dumb display of nothing.
Palestinians are continuing to be murdered.
And as for where things currently stand right now,
there are more than 1.7 million civilians who are trapped in the Rafah,
which is Gaza's last place of refuge.
It's right on the south on the southern border.
And this is after Israel kept telling Palestinians to go south
because of these quote-unquote safe zones that were clearly not safe at all.
A massacre is happening in the Rafah right now and the world is silent.
And to make matters worse, not that they can get any worse,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says that he intends to press ahead
with the invasion of the city of Rafah.
Joe Biden, useless, warned that the offensive would be a quote, red line.
But as we know, a slap on the wrist
for Israel means absolutely nothing, and they continue to act with impunity without any repercussions.
When asked on Sunday whether Israeli forces would move into Rafah, Na'anyahu replied,
we'll go there, we're not going to leave them. You know, I have a red line. And you know what the
red line is? That
October 7 does not happen again. It never happens again." He also dismissed the idea
of a ceasefire for Ramadan, saying that he would like to see another hostages release
because without a release there's not going to be a pause in the fighting. And he also
doubled down on his rejection of the possibility of a Palestinian state. He says,
reject the attempt to ram down our throats a Palestinian state. That is something they agree on.
The evening of Sunday, March 10th, was also the first day of the Holy Muslim Month of Ramadan.
Tariq Ahmad, who is the UK Minister of State responsible for relations to the Middle East, North Africa, and the UN, on Monday he urged Israel to quote,
allow unhindered access to Jerusalem's holy
sites during Ramadan.
What has Israel done since then, you may ask?
Well Israel has put up a barbed wire fence around the Al-Aqsa Mosque, something it hasn't
done since 1967.
Israel erected barbed wire on a fence around the Lion's Gate area adjacent to the Al-Aqsa
Mosque complex
in occupied East Jerusalem.
The Jerusalem governor's office itself said in a statement on Monday, this is a dangerous
precedent that has never occurred since 1967.
The Lion's Gate, also known as Bab al-Asbat, is located within Jerusalem's Old City and
is one of the main gates leading to the Al-Aqsa
Mosque. Israel clearly aims to prevent Palestinians from entering Al-Aqsa Mosque during the holy month
of Ramadan. Israeli forces have also imposed a strict siege on the Al-Aqsa Mosque for the past
five months, preventing entry into it. On Sunday night, Israeli forces prevented hundreds of Palestinians from entering the mosque to perform the Teraweeh,
a special night of prayers during the holy month of Ramadan.
They also beat a Palestinian man near Baab al-Zahra, one of the gates leading to the mosque, before detaining him.
Soldiers also reportedly detained an Al-Asa Mosque guard from the old city of
Jerusalem. Continuing along with the news from just this
week, on Monday Israeli forces arrested six Palestinian boys from the town of Al Asawiyah,
northeast of occupied Jerusalem. Video footage showed a group of Israeli soldiers tying the
Palestinians with a rope and dragging them in a humiliating manner
through the streets of Al-Asawiyah. You see this in this footage. They wrangle them and
treat them like fucking cattle, worse than fucking cattle. They're treated worse than animals.
And the entire world is witnessing this. And what it's absolutely sickening to me is that so many
Americans would probably care
more about a dead dog than about a dead Palestinian.
And if that sentence made you uncomfortable, well, it's supposed to.
Palestinians have not been treated or depicted as human for so long that it's just become
normal.
But it is not normal, and Palestinian life matters just as much as any other.
I want to also take a moment to talk about what's happening in the West Bank.
According to Amnesty International, Israeli forces have unleashed a brutal wave of violence
against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank in the last five months,
carrying out unlawful killings, including by using lethal force without
necessity or disproportionately during protests and arrest raids, as well as
denying medical assistance to those injured. The organization investigated
four emblematic cases where Israeli forces used unlawful lethal
force.
Three incidents in October and one in November, which resulted in the unlawful killing of
20 Palestinians, including seven children.
Researchers remotely interviewed 12 people, 10 of them eyewitnesses, including first responders
and local residents. The organization's Crisis Evidence Lab verified 19 videos and 4 photos in examining these
4 incidents.
Amnesty International's research also found that Israeli forces obstructed medical assistance
to people with life-threatening wounds as well as attacked those attempting to assist
injured Palestinians, including paramedics.
Since October 7th, Israeli forces have stepped up raids, carrying them out almost daily across
the occupied West Bank in what it describes as search and arrest operations. In one recent
incident that you may have seen online, Israeli forces carried out a raid masquerading as medical staff. In 2023,
at least 507 Palestinians were killed in the West Bank, including 81 children, making it
the deadliest year for Palestinians since the United Nations Office for the Coordination
of Humanitarian Affairs began recording casualties in 2005. Erika Guevara-Rosas, Amnesty International
Director of Global Research, Advocacy and Policy said,
Under the cover of the relentless bombardment and atrocity crimes in Gaza, Israeli forces
have unleashed unlawful lethal force against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, carrying
out unlawful killings and displaying
a chilling disregard for Palestinian lives. These unlawful killings are a blatant violation of
international human rights law and are committed with impunity in the context of maintaining
Israel's institutionalized regime of systematic oppression and domination over Palestinians.
regime of systematic oppression and domination over Palestinians. These cases provide shocking evidence of the deadly consequences of Israel's unlawful use
of force against Palestinians in the West Bank.
Israeli authorities, including the Israeli judicial system, have proven shamefully unwilling
to ensure justice for Palestinian victims.
In this climate of near total impunity,
an international justice system worth its salt must step in. The prosecutor of the
International Criminal Court must investigate these killings and injuries as possible war crimes
of willful killing and willfully causing great suffering or serious injury. The situation in
Palestine and Israel is a litmus test for the legitimacy and reputation
of the court.
It cannot afford to fail it.
Since October 7th, across the West Bank, Israeli security forces' use of unlawful force during
law enforcement operations has been unrelenting, sowing fear and intimidation among entire
communities. It has also been used to
disperse rallies and protests held in solidarity with Gaza and demanding the release of Palestinian
prisoners and detainees. Between October 7th and December 31st of 2023, 299 Palestinians were killed,
marking a 50% increase compared to the first nine months
of the year. At least 61 more Palestinians, including 13 children, have been killed so
far in 2024 as of the end of January, according to the numbers reported by OCHA. Israel has
a well-documented track record of using excessive and often lethal force to stifle
dissent and enforce its system of apartheid against Palestinians, leading to a historic
pattern of unlawful killings committed with impunity.
In one illustrative case investigated by Amnesty International, Israeli military and border
police forces used excessive force during a 30-hour-long raid on Noor Shem's
refugee camp on October 19. During the operation, Israeli forces killed 13 Palestinians, including
six children, four of them under the age of 16, as well as arrested 15 people. Israeli
military sources quoted in media reports said that one Israeli border police officer
was killed and nine were injured after an improvised explosive device was thrown at
them by Palestinians.
Residents told Amnesty International that during the operation Israeli soldiers stormed
more than 40 residential homes, destroying personal belongings and drilling holes in
the walls for sniper outposts. Water and electricity
to the camp was cut off and soldiers used bulldozers to destroy public roads, electricity
networks, and water infrastructure. Among those killed during the October 19th raid
was 15-year-old Taha Mohammed, who Israeli forces shot dead in front of his house when
he came out to check whether Israeli forces had left the area.
Taha was unarmed and posed no threat to the soldiers at the time he was shot,
and this is based on eyewitness testimony and videos that were reviewed by Amnesty International.
A video filmed by one of his sisters in verified by Amnesty's Crisis evidence lab, shows Taha walking on the street,
peeking to check for the presence of soldiers, and then collapsing on the street outside
of his house, after the sound of three gunshots.
Fatima, Taha's sister, told Amnesty International,
They did not give him a chance.
They did not give him a chance.
In an instant, my brother was eliminated.
Three bullets were fired without
any mercy. The first bullet hit him in the leg, the second in his stomach, the third in his eye.
There were no confrontations. There was no conflict."
An eyewitness told Amnesty International that when Taha's father, Ibrahim Mohammed,
then attempted to carry his injured son to
safety, Israeli forces shot him in the back.
A verified video filmed by one of Taha's sisters immediately after the shooting shows
Taha's father lying on the ground next to him before limping away.
My father raised his hands, showing the soldiers that he had nothing in them, he just wanted
to take his son.
They shot him with one bullet, and my father fell next to Taha."
I wanted to mention that one example, but many, many more have happened since then and before then.
Protests in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza have been held frequently across the occupied West Bank since October 7th.
Some protesters have been seen throwing stones in response to the presence
or forceful intervention of the Israeli forces. The IOWF's use of lethal force in response
to rock throwing is not new, even if the rock throwing is done by children. In theory, lethal
force in law enforcement can only be used when there is an imminent threat to life.
Its use is not a proportionate response to stone throwing.
In another egregious case that happened on October 13th in Tolkaram,
two eyewitnesses described to Amnesty International how Israeli forces
stationed at a military watchtower, both at one of the main entrances to the town
as well as on the roof of a nearby home. And then they opened fire on a crowd of at least 80 unarmed Palestinians who were peacefully demonstrating in solidarity
with Gaza. Two journalists who were at the scene separately told Amnesty International that they
saw Israeli forces firing two tear gas canisters at the crowd, and shortly afterwards opening live
fire at them without any warning shots.
The two journalists saw four people being shot and injured as they tried to run away from the shooting.
A few minutes later, Israeli forces then opened fire in the direction of the journalists,
even though they were both wearing vests clearly marked as press.
They hid behind a wall along with three children and had to remain there for about two hours as the operation continued.
During this time, they also witnessed a Palestinian man who was riding past them on a bike, being
shot by an Israeli soldier.
One of the journalists also saw another demonstrator being shot in the head.
She described how the victim was suddenly shot and fell to the ground.
The obstruction of medical assistance by Israeli forces during operations like this across
Palestine is unfortunately a routine practice and Amnesty International has documented this
for years, saying it is a part of Israel's system of apartheid.
Under international law, Israeli forces have an obligation to ensure anyone injured by
their forces is able to access medical treatment.
Amnesty International investigated five occasions where the Israeli forces hindered or prevented
those who were seriously injured in demonstrations and raids from receiving critical medical
assistance.
They also shot at Palestinians trying to help, including medics tending to the wounded.
During the raid I mentioned earlier on Nur Shams on October 19th, three eyewitnesses,
including a paramedic on the scene, said two ambulances were stopped at the entrance of
the camp and prevented from reaching the injured.
The witnesses said the residents were forced to transport the wounded
to a hospital in private cars. Since October 7th, according to the UN, more than 400 Palestinians
have been killed, 107 of those being children in the West Bank. I also want to mention the
settler attacks on Palestinians, not just by the IOF, because these settler attacks have also become
routine. Settlers have burned cars and houses, blockaded roads, damaged electricity networks,
seized farmland, severed irrigation lines, attacked people in their fields and olive
groves, and killed people, all without repercussion.
The UN has recorded 573 attacks by settlers in the West Bank since October 7th,
with Israeli forces, the IOF, accompanying them half of the time. At least nine people have been
killed by settlers, and 382 have been killed by the IOF, according to these numbers by the UN.
Human rights groups in Israel and the West Bank allege a long pattern
of violence that has been enabled by the IOF. The army, however, of course, denies this.
Human rights groups in Israel and the West Bank allege a long pattern of violence by
settlers that is enabled by the occupation forces. The army, of course, denies this.
As I mentioned earlier, the IOF has a long history of using unnecessary lethal force,
and we're seeing that increasingly happen in the West Bank. I want to end this episode
with a quote from the Israeli group B'Tselem. They told the BBC,
"'Since the beginning of the war in the Gaza Strip, Israel has continued to implement a lethal open fire policy in the West Bank.
Of the almost 400 Palestinians killed by Israeli forces since October 7th, many did not pose
a threat at the level that would justify the use of lethal force.
With extremely rare exceptions that usually involve low-ranking soldiers, no one is brought
to justice for
the killing of Palestinians. This reflects Israel's profound disregard for the lives
and bodies of Palestinians."
And that is our episode for today. As usual, please, please keep talking about Palestine,
please keep raising awareness about this ongoing genocide that's happening in both Gaza and the West Bank. And yeah, just don't stop talking about it. Free Palestine.
I don't understand what the big fat ones are. You don't put those inside of you, do you?
I mean, you do?
This is a show about women.
Okay, so I just reapplied my lip gloss after eating a delicious lunch.
We are headed back now to the European Political Systems class at Baruch College.
Woo!
Finally, a show about women that isn't just a thinly veiled aspirational nightmare.
That's it, that's actually the name of the show.
It's not hosted, not narrated, We're just dropping into a woman's world.
It's like reality TV on the radio.
I found out when my dad was gay when I was 10, we were in a convertible on the 405 freeway listening to the B-52s.
And looking back, I should have said, this is gay. This is already all gay.
Listen to Finally a Show on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
iHeart podcast update this week on your free iHeartRadio app.
In retrospect, revisit pop culture moments from the 80s and 90s and try to understand
what it taught us about the world and a woman's place in it. Crying in public, two 20-something college women living in NYC dive into growing up at a time
when there was no distinction between what's public and what's private. Best of both worlds,
a discussion on work-life balance, career development, parenting, time management,
productivity, and making time for fun. Hear these podcasts and more on your free
iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
As important as choosing the right destination when traveling is choosing the right travel partner.
Much of the joy you will find on the road comes from the person you share it with. So you hide the books, Gene. I have a lot of stuff on the sea business.
I understand now.
This wise man marries a wise woman.
But be careful and choose your travel partner well,
because the worst trips result when two partners have
two different agendas.
Get down!
I'm not stupid, Gene.
Something is going on in it's high time.
You tell me the truth.
Freeze, Americano! Gene, run! So travel before it's high time you tell me the truth. Freeze, Americano!
Gene, run! So travel before it's too late.
Your money will return, your time won't, and we're all too quickly approaching that final destination.
Listen to Fodor's Guide to Espionage on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, and welcome to it could happen here podcast about things falling apart and people putting them back together.
I am back after, after a lengthy court battle, I've been allowed to return to
the podcast, which I'm very grateful for.
And I'm joined today by John and Haval, two friends of mine who volunteer
right here in the Cumber a lot, a lot more than I do.
And we're going to explain some developments that have happened, give you an update on the situation here and let you know how you could help.
So welcome to the show, both of you.
Hello.
Thank you. Good to be back.
Yep. Welcome back.
If you'd like to just introduce yourselves, like your name, like whatever role you play out here, pronouns and any like affiliation with any organization
you feel is relevant.
So my name is John.
I'm someone that lives in the area.
This situation just kind of showed up in my backyard.
I was kind of forced into it rather than volunteered into it.
And I've been dealing with it nonstop since the beginning.
Yeah, I'm one of the main sets of boots on the ground.
I'm Hval.
I use they, them pronouns and I organize with Direct Action Drumline and Zine Distro, doing
a lot of mutual aid, which is how I got involved in all this.
And also with El Loto Lotto, helping out on the ground since the beginning with John pretty
much just a little after John started.
So yeah, so that's what, like nearly six months?
If you're not counting May.
Yeah, yeah, wow, yeah.
So yeah, it started in May and then it stopped during the summertime.
It picked up again in September and we've been dealing with it nonstop since then.
People have heard briefly from John's father, Sam, in our May episodes about Title 42, which we did,
yeah, it seems like forever ago.
It also doesn't seem like very long ago.
It's just one big weird collapsing of time.
So last time we spoke, last time I spoke with Havel,
we had this situation where we had
three distinct concrete camps, right, adjacent to spoke with Haval, we had this situation where we had three distinct concrete camps, right?
Uh, adjacent to gaps in the wall, which volunteers were servicing with food,
water, warm blankets, we were building shelters and we've heard a lot about
those camps.
Does one of you guys want to explain how things have changed since then?
And really particularly in the last what six weeks?
So yeah, it's changed quite radically actually. So between the months of September and December,
we were servicing these three camps kind of more or less in our immediate area.
It was pretty straightforward. Our routine would consist of stopping to each camp two times a day
and feeding people, providing them with all the different things
that the US government was not.
And I kind of wish things were simpler like they were back then.
Yeah.
So at the end of the month of December, Secretary Blinken made a visit to Mexico.
And I suspect that he pressured the Mexican government to police our border for us.
One of the immediate changes that we saw as a result of that was the foundation of two
Mexican National Guard camps at two of the gaps that feed into those camps in our area.
And that has basically stopped any people coming through those areas.
This has not made any less people come into the country, actually.
The numbers have been fairly consistent.
It's just that people have been forced to go in through other areas.
So there have been many, many new OAuths that have popped up.
West of us, we have to drive quite a bit further
into towards San Diego to go and service those areas.
The main one being sliders,
which we're seeing about 200 people come in
sometimes in a night.
It's not a good scene.
Whereas those three ones that we were originally servicing
had dumpsters and porta potties at the very least.
They still do.
With no one coming in.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Still there.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Moving at the speed of government.
The new ones don't have that and people are having to spend, how long were the people
there most during that crazy, crazy time just like a few days ago?
I think they were up, they were there for up to like 19 hours.
Yeah, going on a day, right? Yeah.
Because we first, so to backtrack to people, like we heard from a member of the community
that there have been people seen held there, right, at sliders.
And then we went out there and we kept finding like warm fires, like where people had clearly
been there and built fires. We could see where people have scavenged to brush and a lot of documents
ripped up around the area.
Yeah.
The telltale signs.
Yeah. Yeah. All these signs. And so we were able to use that to,
to suppose that was a place where people were. And then I guess was it eventually
someone stayed the night there and that was what allowed us,
or we bumped into people there, someone bumped into people there.
Well, we have an acquaintance that's been very helpful towards the cause that lives just close
by to there. And he's kind of the one that sounded the alarm. And from there, it's like you said,
it's a lot more difficult, right? Like it's probably a 30 minute drive, it's a steep off road. So like
when it rains, it's hard to get to, so that makes it more difficult for us to
provide stuff for people there. And like, I guess people should realize that we didn't find out about this because Border Patrol called us and said like, hey, there are people here without food,
water or shelter. They don't do that. Yeah, that's not a thing that they do.
We actually did. Another volunteer, Brendan and I, were driving out and we stopped on the road. I
don't think you were with us, John, but we started talking to one of the agents
because there was two or a group of people from,
I think Egypt, it was the day everyone did the mass exodus
from 177.
So we stopped and we're talking to one of the agents
and he did slip that there was another camp.
He didn't name it, he didn't say where it was,
he just said it was that way.
And that was around the same time
that Morgan had mentioned it to us.
So it's, you know, we kind of pulled it out of this agent
because we were talking very nonchalantly with him
and he was being generally nice,
but yeah, they don't tell us about this stuff.
Yeah, and we have to end it myself.
And what I think that brings up is that
there are potentially more, right?
We know for a fact there are.
We know that there are more.
And like, I think it's obviously people, people think of
California, and they think of LA, and they think of San Diego,
and they think of the beach and like pleasant weather. But can
you explain like, it's been really cold out here and pretty
miserable, right with the wet weather we've been having?
This is a pretty unknown part of Southern California, you know,
we're a mountainous region, just, just east of San Diego,
within San Diego County.
It's not crazy high.
It's about an average of 3,000 to 4,000 feet above sea level.
But yeah, it gets very windy over here.
Gets very unpleasant.
It often drops down to freezing.
Yeah.
And that's if you're out there all night and you have any shelter and any way to get warm
and you're potentially wet from crossing a river or crossing a stream that often pops up in the desert can be a really miserable situation. So like, it's important that these people receive help. And right now it's just through word of mouth and the local community that we're able to find them right and give them that help. Yeah, yeah. So going forward, like we've seen like
this movement of migration west, what does that mean for the
ability of volunteers to provide services to migrants? And what
does it mean for the safety? Like you said, that the push
factors haven't changed, right? So people are still coming
here. And they still have things to get away from that lead them
to come here. But they're not coming the same way where we could so
easily help them in these three concrete sites so like what does that mean?
Well it's takes a lot more time out of our day just to drive there for one the
main one sliders is up a very shitty road yeah so I think they call it
sliders because it's so muddy and slidey over there when you're
driving.
Yeah, I put someone's head into the roof of my truck driving up there.
That's how long you go.
Yeah.
And we're not the only ones that are displeased with this.
It makes the life for the border patrol more difficult, makes life for the emergency medical
services more difficult, and of course, it makes life for the migrants more miserable and the owner of the property and the owners of the right in
which they're hosting these you know detaining these migrants yeah we I think
they've every single one has been on private property so far right and I
think we spoke to most of the property owners at this point and it just seems
to come out of the blue at them I guess it's a very strange permission is never
sought yeah and I think why no one of them is suing the border patrol for it it just seems to come out of the blue at them. I guess it's a very strange. Permission is never sought.
Yeah, and I think one of them is suing
the border patrol for it, but I'm sure that will take months.
But obviously it does have an impact on the landscape as well.
People understand the bare coals,
so they're cutting down whatever they can to burn,
to make shelter, to make their experience
a little bit less miserable.
So that's kind of a bargaining tool that we try and use when trying to convince the property owners to allow us to build shelters over there.
It's just to try and convince them that it'll be good for them to have migrants not be in a position to be forced to have to cut down the vegetation on their land and trash their land. And by allowing us to build shelters on their property
and give firewood to the migrants
that are being held on their property,
it's better for them in the long run.
Yeah, and the first time we went out there,
they had created these shelters by just ripping brush
and creating these like semi-circles
that were maybe about a foot or two.
Some of them were very impressive.
Yeah, very, like two, three feet high.
And it was nice and enclosed. So they had some sort of shelter, but yeah, they
had to rip all that from the vegetation around the area, which just ruins the ecosystem there,
I'm sure. Yeah. And it must tear up your hands as well. Like lots of thorny bushes and stuff.
Yeah. It's not desirable for anyone. Talking of things that aren't desirable, we unfortunately
have to take an advertising break. So we will do that, hit some stuff that you don't need.
All right, we're back. Those are some products and services.
Now we're going to talk about the way, John being very local to Hacumba, right?
How it is like organizing in a rural community and the way that obviously you have people of very disparate political leanings in the area and like how you've managed to like phrase what we're doing and to organize in such a way that at the very least people aren't like actively pissed off at you.
Yeah. So first of all, I'm a Quaker come from a Quaker family.
And, uh, first and foremost, I am doing this for religious reasons.
And I like to try and remind people of that.
So when people try and come at me with anti-immigrant sentiment, I just try
and remind them that, you know, this is, this is basically what you're supposed to do according to the Bible.
And, you know, to hate on any of these people is very unchristian.
And when I do so, it's very hard for them to come at me with any of that stuff.
But still, yes, for the most part, the community over here have not been very helpful towards this.
They have not been very enthused with all these migrants coming in.
And you know, they've been very regrettably misinformed about it all.
They're still looking at various crazy sources for their news, like YouTube channels and
stuff like that.
And it's kind of hard to believe.
It's like you guys live in the area, you can just drive out there you can talk to me a person that you guys know yet you
still choose to look up all these various whack jobs on YouTube.
Yeah, yeah we've had something of a problem with the YouTube people right there's a whole
info a whole ecosystem of right wing youtubers that I think probably most folks don't know
about even if you take an interest in other like right wing conspiracy that I think probably most folks don't know about. Even if you take an interest in other right wing conspiracy
stuff as a whole ecosystem of right wing border YouTubers who have been.
I mean, describe what you've seen, right?
We've had like a new right wing fascist out every day.
It seems there's Oreo Express.
Anthony Oguero has been out here.
JLR Investigates, JLR Roger Ogden was out here the other day.
Classic. It's kind of
calmed down though in the last couple of days, but there was a period in
late February where it seemed like they were coming out every single day. Yeah.
Just a different guy in a different lifted Jeep. Yeah. Exactly. Just after that
whole border, what was it, that take back our border convoy. Yeah. I got them all
riled up to come out.
Yeah, actually what really set them off to, to be aware of all of this is when Fox
did their big piece out here and they were out here for multiple days.
Yeah.
That's what kind of like turned on the tap.
Yeah.
And that's very common anyway.
You go on the border, right?
Like Fox has a border reporter, uh, Bill Mulligan, people will be familiar with
Bill Mulligan from publishing a story in 2020
which suggested the police officer had a tampon, used tampon put in his Starbucks coffee which was
demonstrably false and didn't really very much look like a tampon you can google more about that
if that's interesting to you but like someone who perhaps should have lost their journalistic
credibility at that point is now doing border reporting for Fox. And this is, when I speak to people all along the border,
right here, Arizona, Texas, yeah,
the stuff that Fox puts out very strongly correlates
with anti-migrant sentiment, both locally
and with like these folks coming in and streaming.
And they're always asking for donations, right?
Like it's not a, they're not like advert funded
or like publicly funded, like they're not like, uh, advert funded or like publicly funded.
Like they're funded by donations for.
Yeah.
Well, I forget the channel that Aguero was on, but he's constantly asking for
donations and like, Oh, thank you.
You just dropped $10.
Are you, thank you for the five spot.
Love it.
Like they're sitting in his car.
That's what they're grifters.
That's, that's what they're out there for every, it seems like a third of their
broadcast time is spent asking for donations.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like a, like a charity stream, except it did.
So it's the opposite of charity, I guess.
Exactly.
So pay me to do hateful things streams.
Yeah.
And I think like that as we get, as we look between now and November, I think
it's really important that like the border will be a topic that people who never come to the border will argue about constantly between now and November,
right? Fox News will have reporting on it, NBC will have reporting on it, like, and both
of them will have reporting that isn't anchored on what we see every single day out here,
which is a wide variety of people from all over the world who are having a very difficult time
right here and need our help, right? And we're doing what we can to help them. So I guess what
like people who are listening to this will in the next, I don't know how long it is till November,
what six months? Seven, eight months. They'll have conversations with their family members, with their friends, with
people in bars, whatever, regarding the border.
What do you think they should know about like what we're seeing and like what,
what the thing, because there's this whole border invasion narrative, right?
And then like, this is not an invasion.
We were just out joking with some people and helping them get the firewood prepped.
Like these people are not a threat.
I think people often make the mistake of considering this issue to be a political issue. It really
is just a humanitarian issue. The vast majority of the people that I've talked to have very
legitimate reasons for needing to come into this country. Whether they're from Ecuador,
you know the situation over there. Recently there were gangsters that took over a TV station or in Guatemala,
where I spoke to a man who told me that his children with college degrees can
make enough family money to feed their families. Uh,
or even in Afghanistan where people have literally had the Taliban
threatened their families lives.
Same with Iran and the Ayatollah, escaping all of the-
Kurdish people in Turkey.
I mean, the list goes on.
Uh, or, you know, climate refugees, like the Mauritanians that we just spoke with
earlier, yes, they're, they're coming and they have really reasonable grounds
for asylum over here.
Yeah.
And it wouldn't be such an quote unquote invasion
if they were just allowed to walk through the port of entry.
This process is so silly because they could just do this all at the port of entry.
They really could.
But the policies just choose not to do this.
Yeah.
That's the part that really doesn't make sense is like,
we're letting them in anyways.
Why do we need to make their lives so uncomfortable?
Yeah, and dangerous, right?
Dangerous.
I mean, John, you and I were on a water drop, maybe two months ago now, six weeks ago, in slightly west of here, right?
Yeah.
Do you remember we were driving down to where we're going to get off and we met that family from Guinea?
There was a like, do you want to just describe what you saw?
Cause I think it was like, at least for me, that was like, I've seen this a lot,
but it still emotionally affected me.
So yeah, there was a, there was a Guinean woman and her kid.
I think he might've been like, what, four or something.
Three, three.
Yeah.
And, uh, and there was also a Nigerian woman, you know, Nigerian speak English
and Guineans speak French.
They weren't really able to communicate with one another.
And yet they were still traveling side by side because they, they just teamed up
because they were in a desperate situation together.
One of them was, was she in sandals?
One of them didn't have shoes at all.
Didn't have shoes at all.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's six weeks is a long time, you know, when you're doing this? Yeah. Well, you see horrible things every day. Yeah. It's
been a very eventful time. Every day feels like a new story. Um, yeah. Yeah. And, uh, they just kind
of sat on the side of the road and, uh, we're out of breath and they were just basically asking us
to help them. Yeah. I remember the little girl that we, cause we were obviously concerned with
the lady who didn't have shoes and trying to help like bandage her feet and stuff.
But then I remember the little girl just wasn't saying anything.
And I suddenly realized, oh, this little girl is probably very cold.
She was like, you know, early, like, uh, mildly hypothermic.
Yeah.
So I had her wrapped up in a little, uh, mylar blanket with me to warm her up.
And it's just, I don't know, it just for one reason or another, that was a moment
where I was like, why on earth are we doing this to a three year old?
Like what possible reason could there be for this three year old girl to have
hypothermia here in like the richest country in the world?
Who could possibly agree that this is a good thing?
Yes. Yeah.
Or another experience I had in the beginning of February where there was this Colombian
man who was in tears who approached me and told me that his daughter was very, very ill
and he dragged me over to a porta potty and she was there bundled up with like nine blankets
or something, not really responding to my questions.
He was trying to contact 911, but the responder on 911 or the dispatcher
didn't speak Spanish.
So I had to communicate with them
and navigate the whole situation.
Turns out she did have hypothermia.
Yeah.
And, but the ambulance would not take him along with
the mother and the child to the hospital.
So again, it's another case of family separation.
Who knows what might have happened?
They would have gotten processed separately.
He could have ended up in Louisiana and she could
have ended up in Riverside or somewhere else.
And at that point, once again, it's not the government
or your taxes that will pay for those people to be
reunified right, that's work that's done by NGOs
and voluntary organizations.
Exactly. Yeah.
Despite the massive amount of money we spend on, and we were just talking the other day
about how the architectural marvel of sections of the border wall, right? Where they've poured
concrete at like a 45 plus degree angle and spent millions of dollars for every yard of
that. And we don't have enough money to give this three year old girl a blanket or to get
that family back together.
It's pathetic.
It's, it's, yeah, it's mind boggling.
Even today with that dude from Brazil, he came up to me when we first got here, they
were starving, wanted food, water, and he was like, I'm sick.
I have a fever.
So I hooked him up with some cold medicine that we had in our med kit.
And then later when we went back to do the second round of feeding, he got more food and he was like, thank you so much. We're starving. We were told to,
when we were dropped off to wait in the mountains at 6 PM to 6 AM. So they were just hadn't really,
I don't know if they were on the American side yet or how that worked, didn't really describe it,
but had to wait in the mountains before crossing. And so people are getting sick out there.
We ran into that dude with the dog bite at 177.
He was just, we always go check this one camp
because there hasn't been, since Guadalajara
had put their camp on the other side,
there hadn't been a whole lot of people crossing
in this area, but we go check it periodically.
And one morning, yeah, we saw this man hobbling towards us
as we're driving down the road with a stick.
And we're like, why is he walking like this pulled over?
And he was bitten by a dog.
He said he went to take a drink of water and some dogs attacked him.
Two dogs, I think.
Yeah.
He described it as a wolf, right?
Like he used the word wolf.
Yeah.
So we called EMS and they picked him up and took him to the hospitals.
Right. But if you hadn't been there, it's a long way to walk with a dog bite in your leg.
Yeah. And who knows, Border Patrol might not even have EMSed him out. They might have just tried to process him with the dog bite in your leg. Yeah. And who knows, Borda Vittorio might not even have EMSed him out.
They might've just tried to process him with the dog bite.
Yeah.
Could get him, could have gotten infected.
And got worse.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But just to go back on the mutual aid question that you had earlier, it
hasn't all been negative.
It's actually been a really great experience in which I've met really
great people from all kinds of walks of life who have just joined together because they see a problem and know that they're the only ones that can make a difference.
And it is a sure easy way to be really important and make a difference in other people's lives.
You don't really need to have much more than a good heart and a willingness to work.
Yeah, like, I think we should talk about that more because not
that some of us had some like prior life experience, right,
working with refugees or migration. But I think most of
us just were people who were like, yeah, this isn't right.
And I am able to help. And so I'm going to help. And so can
you talk about like how people can help? And then, like you
said, I think I've actually got a lot out of this in that
I feel more affirmed in my belief that like we can look out after each other
without the need to control each other.
And like, we don't necessarily need people with guns and badges for, to
create a society that cares for people who need taken care of.
And so perhaps you could describe like how people can help and then what it is
that you've got out of this that keeps you wanting to do this. Well first of all yeah we don't we don't have a clear structure of
authoritative structure over here it's we take ideas as a collective different people have
contributed different things there's a woman that really nailed down the PB&J making system and
we've all just been following her lead there some people came up with the idea of having a cell phone charging station.
That was you.
And it's just the list goes on.
And if you want it to help, you could just come by to the border, come to one of these sites
and just start distributing food or teaming up with us somehow or by donating
to the GoFundMe.
Yeah.
What's the GoFundMe, John?
So it's GoFundMe.
That was set up by my dad.
I don't actually know what it's titled.
Yeah.
Hacumba Migrant Aid.
I think if you search GoFundMe, Hacumba Migrant Aid, it comes up.
Samuel Schultz, I think, is by Samuel Schultz.
You'll know because it has like $50,000 on it and like maybe seven words as a description.
Google Hacamba.
There's not much else that's going down here, I guess.
But yeah, people can help that way.
And we've had people come who listened.
We had two people this morning who had heard about it on the podcast and it come and helped.
Yeah.
And it made a really, really great difference.
Yeah, they camped out at the sliders
and really held it down, which is really important.
I mean, for some of us, we, you know, like John and I,
we kind of do like a morning shift
where we get up really early and make sure
to do everything that we need to do,
prepping sandwiches, checking on all the camps.
But a lot of people come in in the middle of the night,
sliders had people come in, what, at midnight or 1 a.m.?
Oh yeah, all throughout. A group came at midnight, a group came at like 1am, and
then there were also more that came at 4am. Yeah, so like having someone on site camping,
you know, making sure that people's needs are met and that if any emergencies take place
that they're taken care of. And it's just that smiling face when they get here, it makes
a huge difference. Like that dude from Brazil, like earlier
he was saying to me, he was like, thank you so much. Like this is like, this is humanity right here.
Like I'm a human and I'm like, yes, we will treat you like humans here. Like at the end of the day,
you know, uh, these people coming through central America and Mexico, they go through so much,
you know, uh, extortion people ripping them off, just feeling unwelcome throughout that whole
voyage. Just having a group of people, welcome them into the country and treat them with
dignity is worth more than any bottle of water or sandwich that we can give them. And you
know, that's, that's the main ways that you can send us stuff, you
can send us money, or you can just show up.
If you just have a weekend, that's totally fine, or a day is totally fine.
Or if you just want to come and make sandwiches, that's totally fine.
They like, um, it, it were a very diverse group of people.
And some people have had more time than others, but everyone I think is valued.
And like you said, I think like we're the way that we organize without anyone, like
we organize horizontally has allowed us to be so much better.
Like, do you remember the day?
There was a day when we ran out of plates, uh, and we were, we were like down in Willow and it was just, it was like chaos. Um,
and then someone who just arrived that day was like, Oh,
what if we put the beans in a sandwich bag and give people that was actually
Peter who's back now after going on room trigger for a while.
But yeah, like if we had been like, no, I'm in charge,
we've been doing this for longer than those people wouldn't have got fed, right. But because we were
like, willing to listen, then the people got fed and like, we were all happier
because the people got fed, right. Like it worked better that way. So like as
things change, because like it boarded patrol have said explicitly that they're
trying to push people west, right? What do you think? Like, what do we need going forward? What do you see like the situation being?
And like, it would be good to explain the context of like the changing seasons here as well.
Yes. So, uh, I think what we're going to see more of is people that are crossing in, uh,
unorthodox areas, more people that are hopping the fence, more people that are crossing in unorthodox areas.
More people that are hopping the fence, more
people that are cutting holes in the walls, just
popping up all over the place.
So yeah, it would be great to have eyes along the
border, people that are willing to travel up and
down along the border to find out where these
people are coming through.
Cause for the most part, we don't know a lot
oftentimes where these people are coming through.
There are a couple of new OADS, open air detention sites
that are relatively close to us that we can't find even.
Right, yeah.
Like maybe if we had a super fancy drone,
we could find them or just boots on the ground.
A nice off-road vehicle.
Yeah.
All those things.
Yeah, then these are all things that cost money
that we don't have, but like we've all put lots of miles on our trucks and
Lots of miles on our boots trying to trying to help out my exhaust is falling off
Yeah, my my transfer case took a beating but like yeah
If we had more people some of us could focus on feeding people here because there was what how many people were there when we?
Just left now 120 something like that. Yeah. No no, actually probably more. Uh, if you count the new group, I think, uh, you know, uh, a conservative
estimate would have been maybe 140.
Yeah.
So that's, we'd made 140 sandwiches to feed them today and we'd chop
firewood and taken that out.
And, uh, we'd be given all that out, right?
That was after the same thing at breakfast time.
That doesn't leave much time to go meander along the border
and look for another site. So if we have more people, we could do that. And that will be really valuable. after the same thing at breakfast time, that doesn't leave much time to go meander along the border
and look for another site.
So if we have more people, we could do that
and that will be really valuable.
Also, if you have connection to firewood.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
If you are a person who can bring us a lot of firewood,
that would be- We have one homie right now
and he's breaking his back cutting wood for us.
So yeah, that's a definite big need out here.
Yeah. Is there other stuff like that that people who maybe aren't here but have connections to
or they could they could send that's particularly needed?
A nice off-road vehicle. They got one lying around.
Firewood is definitely a big thing. That's a huge need. Yeah. See, it's getting really cold up here
and especially in like sliders too. I think it's higher in elevation.
So exposed to there's nothing between you and the wind.
Yeah, very cold out there.
Yeah.
But and just other things that are that are easier for us to get, but we just
constantly need such as blankets, bread, yeah, make a lot of PBG.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Tents, all these things, right?
Like the wind and the sun destroys
everything that we've stockpiled after a while and we have to keep reinventing the wheel. And then
sometimes water patrol destroys our stuff as well. Or sometimes some chubs come and destroy our
stuff, which... Oh, the chubs destroying our stuff. Yeah, we should talk about the destruction of the
shelters before we finish, I guess, just to end on a sad note. Well, it's a happy note because we built them again and they're fine.
So there were some shelters, I think, mostly they were ones that have been built,
or they were ones that have been built volunteers.
Yeah.
And what, John, you saw what happened to the shelters, right?
Yeah. So we built some shelters at one of the sites at one of the main sites.
You know, it was very simple just by having a plywood as
the frame, holding it up and then nailing down some tarps on it with battens. It
was a nice thing. It stood up to the heavy winds that we have here very
well. So incomparably better to not having a shelter out there. Oh yeah, it's a
completely different experience. Yeah, they're instantly used.
Once people cross and it's awesome to see like adults
that are alone will get out and force families
and children in the shelters.
Like yeah, you get it first for sure.
Yeah, and yeah, we built those.
It was working out good.
Then one day the border patrol showed up
or a company that was subcontracted by them
and demolished them all using skip
loaders and bulldozers and such.
We showed up the following day, we rebuilt all the shelters and we were really happy
about it.
You know, it was kind of a big fuck you to them.
You can tear down our stuff, but we'll just come back and build more.
But then what was it like a three, four days later or the next day?
Maybe I'm not sure.
I wasn't the next day.
Two days.
It was close.
Yeah.
Uh, some guys just showed up and they tore it all up with a hammers.
They are finishing a tiny little finishing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Luckily they didn't really come equipped like, uh, maybe with the, with the tools.
Uh, they didn't really know what they were doing.
Yeah.
I think it's fair to say that but still it's annoying when you put the
time into building it right and it border patrol didn't destroy contractors
didn't destroy the shelters. First we were like oh maybe they're not using
this but there were 140 people there right now like in the shelters that got
rebuilt for a third time. So like, I guess, even we do appreciate people donating and
we understand that people's resources are scarce and like the economy is bad and the
rent is too damn high, etc. But like every time we build up enough stuff, we have to
like, we're always running uphill, because like, stuff just gets destroyed, either by
the by the weather or by the border patrol or by
volunteer border patrol judge. So like we could, I guess, desperately need your help and like,
at some point the news cycle will move on from the border and that doesn't mean that we will be able
to move on from having people to help here, right? Because like John said, there were people and
people always deserve to be treated with dignity. Is there anything else that you guys think that people should know about the situation
here?
Or we wrap up?
John's looking deep in curious.
It's kind of chill.
It is really nice.
I like being here.
I come here because it makes me happy and my friends are here.
Yeah.
And like the slider's location is located in a really awesome, like you can see down just past the border wall.
There's like a nice little train track that used to go from US into Mexico, I guess.
And just beyond that, there's like sheep on a farm that you can see in the distance, like rolling hills, the clouds come through and like say it's a really beautiful place to be and to hang out.
And a lot of the locals that don't hate what we're doing are very nice.
The people at the hotel are very supportive.
Yeah, we're a great group, really good people.
It's always really fun to do anything like this.
People are generally enamored by our project and want to be involved and come back a second time.
I mean, we're kind of like cowboys.
I mean, we're doing this all on our own.
We're driving up and down, looking at the sites,
looking around, and that whole responsibility is on our shoulders.
Yeah. It feels good to take responsibility for something.
It definitely does.
We're doing this.
Yeah, it's like no one else will, so we got it.
We'll just do it. Like, that's fine.
It's very like, it reminds me of the punk scene growing up,
but like, it's a big important thing.
Like you said, Foxy, every national news network has been down here.
Every grifting streamer has been down here, but at the end of the day, it's a,
it's a few dozen random people who are actually the ones making sure that people
don't die here for all the government attention for the millions of dollars
spending, it's just us.
Yeah.
Working on a fraction of the, I mean, it costs them more to fly a helicopter
for a few hours than we've ever spent in our entire go fund me. Yeah. And yeah, like we
get it done. We are, we're very efficient, I guess in that sense, but yeah, we would
love more people. People have come because I listened to the podcast and that also like
just for me personally means the world to me. Like most of the time we just talk into
a microphone and then you can't really see who you're talking to, unless you
go on like social media, and that's not always the best reflection of humanity. So like,
it really means the world to me that someone like listens to this when they're driving
to work or, you know, going on a jog or whatever they're doing. And it's like, no, I will,
I will go and I will help. I think that is how we solve so many of our problems.
Like, there is a massive problem with people not being able to afford rent living on the
street in this country.
And we solve it in the same way by just showing up for each other.
And there's also different ways to get plugged in.
Like, if the desert's not your thing, it doesn't.
I mean, this is like where the process starts as far as like the spectrum of the whole border
crisis or not crisis, but the whole border crisis, or not crisis,
but the whole border humanitarian situation
we have going on here.
So this is what we're doing out here,
but there's also airport runs.
A lot of them get ditched in the airports.
So I think we all, we got SD and maybe MDEF,
Immigration Defense Law Center, kind of hold down.
They do airport runs.
Border Patrol just, I guess at night,
they don't drop them off like after 10 or something.
They don't drop them off at the Iris station.
They'll just drop them straight off at the airport
so they need help being fed.
A lot of them don't have plane tickets.
They need to kind of, some, you know,
people need blankets because they have to sleep there.
So we all, I mean, we all we got is great for that.
You can plug in with them.
And I think Al Ocho Lado and who else is it?
M-Def as well, that's doing the Irish street releases.
So when the border patrol just releases them on the street,
like a lot of people just get in a cab and go,
they have the resources, they can do that.
They're already planned,
but some people don't have any money
or they got robbed on the way here.
So they have nothing, they need a lot of help.
They need to figure out where to go.
They need a place to stay.
So there's the street releases, there's the airport.
There's, I think that's kind of.
Or by just helping with shelters and organizations in whatever city you happen to be living in.
You know, the majority of the migrant, well, not the majority, but a very typical answer
migrants give me when I ask them where in the United States they're going to is New
York City or Chicago or any of these major cities. Yeah.
Lincoln, Nebraska.
The other day, some weird ones.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's going to be a Idaho have fun.
We, it was beautiful.
It is.
Yeah.
It was a guy, how long I met from minority ethnic group in Russia.
We met in September.
Like, I remember one of those first really cold nights and I was talking to this person and they were in Pennsylvania and I checked in with
them a few weeks ago and they're like happily living in Pennsylvania, can't understand a
word anyone else is saying.
It's nice to see and yeah, you can help those people in whatever community you're in.
And like if you're further along the border, there's our Samaritans, there's no Masuartes,
there's Humane Borders, Tucson Samaritans, there's no mass worth days as humane borders, Tucson Samaritans as
well. Right? Yeah. All along the border, you know, there are the
there are lots of good people in Texas, right? It's a sidewalk
school in reno, so my tomorrow's the people at the National
Butterfly Center, very nice people who we've heard from
before, like, all along the border, and like, all around
this country, there are there are things you can do to help
and like, I want to reinforce it.
It's not like this penurious thing we do that's miserable and
we all get together and cry every night.
Like we do have a nice time, even though we have seen some
really stressful things, like we all look after one another and
hold space when people do need help or extra time to process
something, but it's a very supportive community and we
support each other through lots of other things, like aside from this.
And I think a lot of people in general in the 21st century America struggle with
isolation and that's a thing that, that capitalism does to people, right?
It isolates us from each other.
And so hopefully, like, I think this is a solution for me.
This, this has been a really positive thing,
but like generally my sense of hope.
Yeah. And like what we're doing,
this kind of disaster humanitarian relief effort,
it's kind of with the way the climate is going in the world
and climate, all climate change.
Yeah, it's not gonna get less common.
Yeah, this will just be getting more common
and like this kind of like preparing and building community and like this disaster scenario is gonna yeah definitely be more in common.
So it's not that easy to do. I mean, it's not that hard to do. You know, you just got to have the intention and then you just got to get together and do it. That's all. That's all you really need to do.
Don't think that it's like if this if someone had said to us what plus or minus 50,000
people probably have come through I've no idea on the numbers but somewhere around there. Yeah
probably more than that. Yeah if we like I remember in May when we cleaned up the first OADS
um when we were like when I first met your mom and dad John like we were cleaning up the first
OADS and and we were like wow that was a horrible thing to happen that was really fucked. If someone
had said right well between now and uh next March 50,000 people will come through here and it's
mostly going to be you guys who are here picking up trash and that's, that's all it's going to be.
Like it's on you. It would have been, it would have seemed overwhelming, right? But it, I don't
think people should feel afraid to confront these big problems because like between the group of
people who, who we've assembled here, we've been able to confront this problem and make it survivable and treat people
with dignity and bring some dignity and humanity into a situation where there
wasn't any.
Right.
Nope.
Yeah. And there's a role for everybody.
No matter what you do, you can find your niche of what, you know,
you makes you feel good or something that you're good at, you know,
where it's finding the little
fascists that destroyed our things online and doing all that online footwork or it's
building shelters or it's making PB and J's or a French made a website.
They made a really good website.
Website.
Yeah.
Or even, yeah, just being someone that speaks multiple languages is a huge need
out here, especially, I mean, Spanish is pretty common,
but the harder languages like, I mean, Mandarin, Mandarin, Mandarin, Mandarin, Mandarin, Mandarin,
and you reach out to us and we can call you then that will be huge, right? They can be
real in a medical emergency that could be a life or death thing. Yeah. And so there
are a ton of ways to help and I've really encouraged people to get involved if they
can. Where can people follow along with you? Do you have like social media or anything that you want to plug?
Um, yeah, I don't.
I'm going to keep mine private.
No, I don't.
We're depriving the world of such a beautiful thing.
Um, yeah, one of the, I, how I got involved in this is through members of a drum line
that I am part of, so we show up for protest, um, have been since 2020, um, direct
action drum line on Instagram. We
post a lot of different stuff from organizing for Palestine to, you know, we were doing a lot of
Black Lives Matter stuff early in 2020. And now it's, you know, kind of cross-mixed with
border aid since I've been out here. So we occasionally will make posts so you can follow along there. Alotjolato is a good one to follow on social media.
IncoPAL Wellness on Instagram.
Borderlands Relief Collective.
I'm sure a lot of the people listening already follow a lot of these people.
But yeah, there's a network through all of that.
And so once you start following one or the other, we all tag each other and reshare each
other's stuff so you can get involved that way and figure out what's going on.
Yeah.
And the book is it bought?
What's the website for?
That's a great resource.
borderay.github.io I think if you give it a Google somewhere somewhere around that you'll
find it is a good website.
And like if you are facing similar issues in your community wherever you are, whatever
it is like, we've definitely made a lot of mistakes and we've learned a lot.
And so we've tried to document the things that we've learned so that you guys don't have to reinvent the wheel
somewhere else right like you know you can be an efficient PB and J maker just like us
learn Shirley's technique
all right thank you so much guys i really appreciate your time thank you cheers
hey we'll be back monday with more episodes every week from now until the heat death of
the universe.
It Could Happen Here is a production of Cool Zone Media.
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