Behind the Bastards - It Could Happen Here Weekly 143
Episode Date: August 17, 2024All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file. You can now listen to all Cool Zone Media shows, 100% ad-free through the Cooler Zone Media subscription, available ...exclusively on Apple Podcasts. So, open your Apple Podcasts app, search for “Cooler Zone Media” and subscribe today! http://apple.co/coolerzone See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi, I'm Molly Conger, host of Weird Little Guys, a new podcast from Cool Zone Media
on iHeartRadio.
I've spent almost a decade researching right-wing extremism, digging into the lives of people
you wouldn't be wrong to call monsters.
But if Scooby-Doo taught us one thing, it's that there's a guy under that monster mask.
The monsters in our political closets aren't some unfathomable evil.
They're just some weird guy.
So join me every Thursday for a look under the mask at the weird little guys trying to destroy America.
Listen to Weird Little Guys on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Kay hasn't heard from her sister in seven years.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
What was that?
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
Can Kay trust her sister or is history repeating itself?
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio,
and Realm. Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Angie Martinez and on my podcast, I like to talk to everyone from Hall of Fame athletes
to iconic musicians about getting real on some of the complications and challenges of
real life.
I had the best dad and I had the best memories and the greatest experience.
And that's all I want for my kids as long
as they can have that.
Listen to Angie Martinez IRL on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your
podcasts.
Hey everybody, Robert Evans here and I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode.
So every episode of the week that just happened is here in one convenient and with somewhat
less ads package for you to listen to in a long stretch if you want.
If you've been listening to the episodes every day this week, there's going to be nothing
new here for you, but you can make your own decisions.
Welcome back to It Could Happen Here, your daily dose of something a little unsettling.
I'm Molly Conger, your occasional host here on this feed and the host of a new weekly
show from Cool Zone Media called Weird Little Guys that I think you'll probably like.
Today I'm a little shamelessly promoting my own show by giving you a little taste of the
kinds of stories I like to dig into over on the Weird Little Guys feed.
So remember last month when Donald Trump got shot?
I kind of don't.
It feels like it was years ago.
I barely remember who I was during those tense few days where it seemed possible Trump would
ride that momentum to victory, imagining posters of that photo of Trump with blood dripping
down his face, fist raised, and then kind of didn't matter at all anymore. The shooter wasn't a Biden sleeper agent sent to take down the opposition.
He was just some kid with a rifle and the kind of uniquely American
desire to cause chaos with it.
And that was really hard for a lot of people to swallow.
What do you mean? It doesn't seem like he was politically motivated.
He shot the former president.
He shot him while he was on stage at a rally for his campaign to retake the presidency. Everything about the situation is political.
How could the shooter have had any other motivation? Thomas Crooks wouldn't be the first guy to
take a shot at a president or a presidential candidate for no reason at all. Far from it.
While I was doing research for the first episode of my show, which theoretically you could
pick up your phone and subscribe to right now while you're listening if you wanted to,
I got lost on a few side quests.
That's always happening to me.
But as I breezed past a quick mention of George Wallace, the four-term governor of Alabama,
best remembered for his rallying cry of segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever
— I'm not going to do it in his accent, I'll spare you that.
I remembered that he got shot while running for president too.
During the primary in 1972, he was paralyzed after surviving an attempted assassination on the campaign trail.
Surely, whoever shot a man like George Wallace did it out of a deep ideological commitment to something, right? Maybe a civil rights activist
opposed to Wallace's views on race or a McGovern voter concerned that Wallace's cynical attempt
to gain the Democratic Party nomination after winning five states as a third party candidate
in 68 might actually work. Or maybe it was a diehard Nixon supporter who saw Wallace as a
spoiler siphoning conservative votes away from Nixon.
But that's not what happened.
When Arthur Bremer shot George Wallace four times in the chest and stomach on May 15th,
1972, it had nothing at all to do with Wallace's policy positions or Nixon's or McGovern's.
It didn't even have really anything at all to do with George Wallace.
Bremer had been planning for months to assassinate Richard Nixon, but it turned out that was
too hard.
He just wanted to shoot somebody important.
I hesitate to draw too many comparisons to the Trump shooter because there's a lot we
still don't know and may never know, but it did come out early on that Crooks was equally
interested in shooting Joe Biden. Trump just happened to have a campaign rally close to where
he lived in Pennsylvania. And that rally happened to have weak perimeter security.
Crookes had also looked into how to get close to FBI director Christopher Wray,
attorney general Merrick Garland, and inexplicably Kate Middleton. Yes, that Kate Middleton, the
princess of Wales.
If Biden had been campaigning in Western Pennsylvania, or if Richard Nixon's security
hadn't been so tight, Crooks may have shot Biden and Bremer may have killed Nixon.
It doesn't seem like it really mattered to either of them who they shot, as long as they shot someone
important. One of the funny things about history is realizing that we've always been the way that we are now.
There truly is nothing new under the sun.
Because within hours of the attempt on George Wallace's life
before any information was clear at all,
Nixon was demanding his aides put in a call
to the White House Deputy Director of Communications,
Kenneth Claussen, to put out a statement
that the shooter was a supporter of George McGovern.
That was the frontrunner in the Democratic primary who Nixon would go on to trounce terribly
at the election at the end of that year. So Nixon's saying, just say we've got evidence.
We've got unmistakable evidence. Of course, they didn't have evidence of any kind,
unmistakable or not. And when the evidence did emerge, it certainly didn't show the shooter
working on the McGovern campaign, which is the rumor Nixon was hoping to spread in those early hours. That's the first report, interrogation, that's a better candidate person.
Rumors are going to flow, put it on the left right of it.
Can you do that?
You put it to help him get out.
That's terrible. Now, we don't have thousands of hours of secret recordings from inside the offices
of today's Republicans, but we did see something really similar in the immediate aftermath
of the Trump shooting.
He's a Biden voter.
He's a Democrat.
He's a radical leftist. He's Antifa. We can already tell. We just know. It's obvious. We have proof. The fact that there
was no proof of anything on day one doesn't matter. It matters even less that no proof
ever materialized. You just have to get the rumor out first. You have to make an impression while
the cement is wet. And sometimes that's permanent. One thing that is not on the Nixon tapes though,
is a conversation that allegedly occurred
that afternoon in May, 1972,
that was reported by Seymour Hersh 20 years later in 1992.
Despite a Supreme Court ruling in the seventies
that the tapes belonged to the National Archives,
the full volume of the Nixon tapes were not made available
to the public until 2007.
Now, Seymour Hersh is not a making stuff up kind of guy. I don't
think he was fabricating any part of this story. He's still alive and has a substack
at 87 years old, so I don't want any beef with Seymour. That's not what I'm saying.
He has a decades long career as an investigative journalist and has a Pulitzer for exposing
the cover up of the Mylie massacre. I don't think he's padding the truth here. But in
his 1992 New Yorker piece called Nixon's
Last Cover-Up, the tapes he wants the archives to suppress, Hirsch wrote that the unreleased
tapes from the afternoon of the Wallace shooting contained recordings of Nixon directing E.
Howard Hunt, the retired CIA officer who headed his White House plumbers, to break into Bremer's
apartment before the FBI could search it and to plant McGovern campaign literature.
Hunt's own autobiography admits only that at Nixon's direction, Nixon advisor Charles Coulson
did ask Hunt to take a look around Bremer's apartment. Even that this is all taking place
just a month before Hunt did in fact play a key role in the Watergate break-in, this isn't exactly
unbelievable. I can absolutely believe that Richard Nixon would ask E. Howard Hunt to break into a building
for some nefarious purpose because we know he did that at least once.
And one thing the varying accounts seem to agree on is that Hunt was unable to complete
the assignment because the FBI had already sealed off Bremer's apartment in Milwaukee
before he got there.
Hersh's piece claimed the tapes contained recordings of Colson breaking this news to
Nixon that Hunt arrived too late and the apartment was already under police guard.
And further claims that on the recordings, Nixon can be heard berating Colson for not
doing more to slow down the FBI.
Again, all completely believable if you have even a passing knowledge of Richard Nixon.
And Colson himself related this account to Hirsch in 1992.
The problem is, we have the tapes now. 15 years after Hirsch's article was published,
researchers scoured the newly released recordings for proof of this version of events and
it isn't there. It's entirely possible that Colson is recalling conversations that occurred
outside the presence of the tape machine or is misremembering how much of this was actually
spoken aloud and what was simply understood. It's not out of the realm of possibility that
Coulson is recalling something Nixon definitely desired. It's just not all the tapes. Absence
of proof isn't proof of absence, of course, but we do have a pretty complete record of
Nixon's conversations on the afternoon of May 15th, 1972. Those missing 18 minutes are from a different frantic afternoon that summer.
But before we get to the rest of Richard Nixon's no-good, very bad day,
here are some products and services.
[♪ music playing, no vocals playing, and music fades out.
[♪ music playing, no vocals playing, and music fades out.
So on May 15th, Nixon got out of a budget meeting around 4 p.m., which was shortly after
the shooting.
And that's when he first got the news.
And we know from the tapes that his first phone call was to his own wife, Pat, and then
he called George Wallace's wife, Cornelia.
He then asked Secretary of the Treasury John Connolly to call Ted Kennedy to offer him
full secret service protection, which is not allowable under the
structure of how that works, but he wanted it done. Presumably out of some combination of the
idea that Kennedy would be McGovern's vice presidential pick, and maybe just the general
idea that if people are getting assassinated, you need to account for all your Kennedys.
It's actually kind of wild to dig into the tapes and see where everyone's heads were at that
afternoon in the Oval Office.
A recording from around 7pm captures speculation that the shooting may have been a false flag
by Wallace's own people.
But the idea is quickly dismissed.
He wouldn't have his own people shoot him in the stomach.
That could kill you.
They would have gone for something less dangerous, like shooting him in the foot.
Which is a conversation we all had after the Trump shooting, isn't it? Oh, maybe this
is a stunt. Wait, why would he have them fire at his head? That's so crazy. Right? It's
the same conversation with different names and body parts subbed in. And this recording
too captures Nixon's top aides, hoping that whoever did it was a left-wing nut.
Yeah, I like that. Silly thing you think.
Or really a left wing nut. Rather than a right wing nut. They try to make out with on the scale after the fact, but the exact nature of his
meddling will forever be up for debate, I guess.
And the Nixon tapes aren't the only unique primary source for what went down that day.
In the early months of 1972, as
Arthur Bremmer prepared to shoot Nixon, gave up on shooting Nixon, and ultimately shot
George Wallace, he was keeping a diary. And in 1973, Harper's Magazine Press published
that diary. I couldn't find a physical copy of the original bound book published by Harper's
for less than a small fortune, but I did find an archival scan of the diary that was produced as evidence.
The diary is a strange and fascinating document.
Only the latter half was published. He'd thrown away the first 148 pages.
In fact, he notes on the first page of the version that we have.
In 1980, a construction worker named Sherman Griffin found those first 148 pages.
So this, again, eight years after the shooting,
he found them wrapped in plastic inside of a backpack underneath the 27th Street viaduct in Milwaukee. From prison, Arthur Bremer tried to sue Griffin for ownership of the document,
saying it would only be used to embarrass him and it was his, he owned it, I need back.
But in 1981, a court ruled that Griffin could keep it. I'm sure it was more complicated in the end, all the back and forth in court, but ultimately
finders keepers.
The portion we do have is a lot of things.
It's full of typos and disorganized thinking and sexual fantasy and the mundane rambling
stream of consciousness of a guy going about his day to day life as he tries to figure
out how to shoot the president.
A few months after it was published, the New York Review published an essay by Gore Vidal
speculating that Bremer hadn't written the diary at all.
As a literary critic, it was his professional opinion that Bremer could not have written
such a document.
Though it was riddled with typos, Vidal believes they come and go and are not believable in
their structure and format, as though the writer is remembering as he writes that he's
supposed to be a 21-year-old
busboy of mediocre intelligence. He also doubts that Bremer was well-read enough to make reference
to Solzhenitsyn's day in the life of Ivan Denisovich or quip as he crossed the Great Lakes,
call me Ishmael. Both Denisovich and Ishmael are misspelled, but that could be intentional, he says.
No, Gorvodol believes, or perhaps would only like you to think he believes,
it's hard to say, that the diary was falsified in its entirety by E. Howard Hunt, Nixon's
spook.
And Hunt was a prolific writer, giving Vidal a large volume of material for comparison.
And he claims there are similarities in the writing styles.
And also notes that both Bremer and Hunt use the phrase
hairy hippies. They have a distaste for hairy hippies. I don't know, I wasn't alive
in 1972. Maybe a lot of people hated hairy hippies. But again, just as Hirsch's
claims about the secret tapes in 1992 were called into question when we got
the tapes in 2007, but All's essay was published in 1973, seven years before the
first half of the diary was found.
So even if you're inclined to believe Hunt was crafty enough to construct this elaborate
plot with a fake diary and a Patsy shooter, it's a real stretch to think he would even
bother writing 148 pages, wrapping them in plastic, hiding them inside of a backpack
and tucking that backpack into a little nook under a bridge in Milwaukee to be found by
a construction worker a decade later. That part just doesn't make a lot of sense. But maybe Gore Vidal
was just doing an elaborate bit that I don't understand. The legacy of that diary lives
on in some surprising ways. In those early days after the Trump shooting, before we all
forgot it ever happened, I did see a lot of people point out that the last time a president
took a bullet, it wasn't over politics.
John Hinckley Jr. shot Reagan to impress Jodie Foster, remember?
Okay, here's where I admit something kind of embarrassing.
I've always just accepted that statement at face value.
It makes no sense, but he wasn't acting rationally, so it's not something I felt like I needed
to make sense of.
He shot Reagan to impress Jodie Foster.
I guess he thought she'd find that impressive. No need to
interrogate that further. I mean, a lot of women might find it impressive if he
shot Ronald Reagan, so there's not a lot of follow-up to do on that. The thing is,
I'd never seen the movie Taxi Driver. I never pieced together that he thought
shooting the president would impress Jodie Foster because she starred as the
child sex worker in the movie Taxi Driver, in which the protagonist, Travis Bickle, plans to shoot a presidential candidate
named Charles Palatine. Hinkley shot Reagan to impress Jodie Foster makes, I guess, like a
little more sense if you have that cultural context. And I fear I may have been the very
last person in America to find that out. So maybe everybody else already knew this next part too.
I don't know.
But Taxi Driver owes a lot to Arthur Bremer,
the guy who shot George Wallace.
Screenwriter Paul Schrader has always denied
that he based any part of the movie on Bremer's diary.
In a 1976 interview, Schrader says he was inspired
by the shooting itself in 1972,
but that the script was actually finished before the diary
was published in 73. And he registered the script with the WGA. So that is provably true, right?
But he told film comments Richard Thompson in 76, I want to emphasize that the script was written
before any of the diary was published. After I read the diary, I was very tempted to take some
of the good stuff from
it and add it to Taxi Driver, but I decided not to because of legal ramifications. Bremer's sitting
there in jail with nothing better to do than sue us, which is why I made certain the script was
registered before the diary came out, and that nothing was changed after the diary's publication.
And that's actually kind of prescient of him, come to think of it. He's saying this in 76,
that Bremer could file some kind of nuisance lawsuit from prison. And that's years before Bremer tried to get
half a million dollars and his diary back from that construction worker. And I'm obviously
not a film buff, right? We all just found out that I've never seen a movie. So I won't
say Schrader's not telling the truth here. And maybe somebody who knows more about film
would say, well, there's a difference between a script and a screenplay, right? Those are different things. The script was done,
but he still could have changed the look and feel of how it was shot.
Because there are some scenes in Taxi Driver that unless Scorsese and Schrader
had some kind of deep psychic connection to whatever forces in the universe
motivated Arthur Bremmer, they absolutely came from the diary.
I read the diary before sitting down to see what
the movie was all about. So when Travis Bickel, the titular taxi driver, pulls up outside of a
building with his fare, Martin Scorsese himself, in the back seat, I was doing the Leonardo DiCaprio
pointing meme at my TV because the camera pans to a woman in a window smoking a cigarette partially
obscured by a gauzy curtain. And just a few pages into Bremer's diary, he describes a really similar scene.
Before he flew back to Milwaukee to try to cross the border into Canada to shoot Richard
Nixon in Ottawa, he wrote this in his diary.
My last night at the Howard Johnson's in the Jamaica area in New York City.
I didn't sleep much.
A beautiful naked lady across a parking lot in the next motel out by her window, floor
to ceiling, smoking cigarettes, and I had to watch her.
Her table room light was on and a thin veil of curtain allowed me to watch her as she
passionately kissed a man who wore clothes.
I never saw them in each other's arms for more than a minute at a time.
They must have been fighting.
Through binoculars I saw them gesture like Italians and open their mouths very wide,
very often.
So maybe he finished the script before he read the diary, but the diary absolutely influenced the way the film was shot. According to Andrew Rausch's book on the films of Barton Scorsese, De Niro
prepared for the role by getting a New York taxi license and driving around the city listening to
a cassette tape of someone reading the diary aloud. The Diary is Genuinely Odd
The diary is genuinely odd.
Normally I'm firmly in the camp of,
please do not read or recommend that others read
the manifestos left behind by shooters.
There's not much to gain from it. It's what they want,
this, that, and the other. There's plenty of writing on the topic. But I don't really think
anyone will read Arthur Bremer's diary entry about leaving a nude massage parlor frustrated
that he's still a virgin and feel inspired to follow in his footsteps. But I do think it's a
fascinating document. I learned more about what's inside the mind of a nihilist aspiring shooter from Bremer's
diary than I've learned from any self-indulgent little manifesto left behind by a mass shooter.
After failing to get his shot at Nixon at the appearance in Ottawa in April, he wrote,
I just need a little opening and a second of time.
Nothing has happened for so long.
Three months, the last person I held a conversation with in three months was a near naked girl rubbing my erect penis and she wouldn't let me put it through her.
Failures. A few pages later, he writes that he thought about getting really drunk, but, quote, decided against it. Just wanted to pick a fight with a bartender somewhere or someone get arrested and then where am I?
I got something to do. Something big before I ever get arrested again." He writes that he's getting tired of writing.
He wants to be a madman who kills and then abruptly transitions to saying he goes crazy
when he hears Johnny Cash's new single, quoting the lyrics, I shot you with my 38 and now I'm
doing time, before noting that a baseball game had been canceled that day due to rain.
and now I'm doing time. Before noting that a baseball game had been canceled
that day due to rain.
Honestly, the document that reminds me the most of
is the diary kept by Franklin Seacrest,
the young man who set a synagogue on fire in Austin in 2021.
Large portions of his diary were produced
as evidence in his trial.
And his diary is sort of similar
in that it's a strange stream of consciousness
accounting his frustrations with women,
his daily activities,
going to class, arguments with his mother, interspersed with these strange outbursts of
violent desire. And they're just sort of mixed in without any recognition that these things are
incongruous. After taking two weeks away from his diary to deal with the tragedy of failing to kill
Richard Nixon, Bremmer went to see Clockwork Orange. As he watched the movie, he decided he would kill George Wallace instead. Though he
lamented that this was a second-rate target, writing, I won't even rate a TV
interruption in Russia or Europe when the news breaks. They never heard of
Wallace. If something big and nom flares up, I'll be at the bottom of the first
page in America. The editors will say, Wallace dead? Who cares? He won't get
more than three
minutes on network TV news. I don't expect anybody to get a big throbbing
erection from the news. You know, a storm in some country we never heard of kills
10,000 people. Big deal. Pass the beer. What's on TV tonight? I hope my death
makes more sense than my life. And just days before he finally took his shot, he
wrote, yesterday I even considered McGovern as a target.
If I go to prison as an assassin, solitary forever, guards in my cell, et cetera,
or get killed or suicided, what difference to me?
Ask me why I did it and I'd say, I don't know, or nothing else to do,
or why not? Or I have to kill somebody.
It bothers me that there are about 30 guys in prison now who threaten the pres and we never heard a thing about them.
Except that they're in prison.
Maybe what they need is organization.
Make the First Lady a widow, incorporated.
Chicken in every pot and a bullet in every head, committee, incorporated.
They'll hold a national convention every year to pick the executioner.
A winner will be chosen from the best entry in 40,000 words or less, preferably less,
on the theme, how to do a bang up job
getting people to notice you,
or get it off your chest,
make your problems everybody's.
On May 13th, two days before the shooting,
Bremer attended a Wallace rally in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
There are photographs of Bremer at the rally that day,
and he even spoke to a police officer
who responded to a call about a suspicious vehicle
parked near the venue. Bremer told the officer that day, and he even spoke to a police officer who responded to a call about a suspicious vehicle
parked near the venue.
Bremer told the officer he just wanted to be early
to get a good spot at the rally,
and complied when asked to move his car.
His loaded.38 was in his jacket pocket.
He writes in his diary
that he could have taken his shot that day,
but at the last minute,
two teenage girls got between him and his target,
and he thought they'd be disfigured or blinded
if he fired through the glass they were pressed up against, writing, I let Wallace go only to spare
these two stupid innocent delighted kids. His final entry made the night before the shooting ends with,
got a sign from campaign headquarters here to shield the gun. Is there anything else to say?
My cry upon firing will be a penny for your thoughts."
Around 4 p.m. on the 15th, after Wallace finished addressing a crowd in Laurel, Maryland,
Bremmer pushed his way through the people hoping to shake Wallace's hand and unloaded his.38.
He struck Wallace four times and wounded four others,
a state trooper, a campaign volunteer, Wallace's personal bodyguard, and a Secret Service agent.
He was convicted and sentenced to 63 years, later reduced to 53 years on appeal. He was denied parole in 1996 after arguing at his hearing that shooting segregationist dinosaurs wasn't as bad
as harming mainstream politicians. But he was released in 2007. George Wallace wrote to Bremmer
in prison in 1995, telling him that he forgave him for the shooting and hoped to correspond a bit to get to know one another. Bremer never
responded and George Wallace died in 1998. So we shot George Wallace for no reason. And
Robert De Niro's study of the diary he left behind inspired the performance that made
Hinckley shoot Reagan. There's really nothing hard to believe at all in the idea that Thomas Crooks wanted to shoot a president
just to be remembered as anyone at all.
["The Last Post-Schooler's Diary"]
Hi, I'm Molly Conger, host of Weird Little Guys, a new podcast from Cool Zone Media on iHeartRadio.
I've spent almost a decade researching right-wing extremism, digging into the lives of people
you wouldn't be wrong to call monsters.
But if Scooby-Doo taught us one thing, it's that there's a guy under that monster mask.
I've collected the stories of hundreds of aspiring little Hitlers of the suburbs.
From the Nazi cop who tried to join ISIS, to the National Guardsman plotting to assassinate
the Supreme Court, to the Satanist soldier who tried to get his own unit blown up in
Turkey.
The monsters in our political closets aren't some unfathomable evil.
They're just some weird guy.
And you can laugh. Honestly, I
think you have to. Seeing these guys for what they are doesn't mean they're not a threat.
It's a survival strategy. So join me every Thursday for a look under the mask at the
Weird Little Guys Trying to Destroy America. Listen to Weird Little Guys on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I've been thinking about you. I want you back in my life.
It's too late for that.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
One session, 24 hours.
BPM 110, 120. She's terrified.
Should we wake her up?
Absolutely not.
What was that?
You didn't figure it out?
I think I need to hear you say it.
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
This machine is approved and everything? You're allowed to be doing this?
We passed the review board a year ago.
We're not hurting people.
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Angie Martinez.
Check out my podcast where I talk to some of the biggest athletes, musicians, actors
in the world.
We go beyond the headlines and the sound bites that have real conversations about real life,
death, love, and everything in between.
This life right here, just finding myself, just relaxation,
just not feeling stressed, just not feeling pressed. This is what I'm most proud of. I'm proud of
Mary because I've been through hell and some horrible things. That feeling that I had of
inadequacy is gone. You're going to die being you, so you got to constantly work on who you are to make sure that the stars align correctly.
Life ain't easy and it's getting harder and harder.
So if you have a story to tell, if you've come through some trials, you need to share
it because you're going to inspire someone.
You're going to give somebody the motivation to not give up, to not quit.
Listen to Angie Martinez IRL on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, and welcome to the podcast. It's me, James. And today, I am
joined by Mick. Mick's been doing some reporting on a forest
occupation in Hent, which is a place I used to live, actually.
Mick, would you like to introduce yourself and sort of
explain a little bit about what you've been doing?
Of course. Hi, I'm Mick.
I am incidentally reporting on stuff
and I thought this was a pretty neat
thing to report on that I think people
should know more about and
it's also kind of a fun thing, so...
Yeah, it's very accessible
for people. Like if you want to do
little forest occupying over the summer,
this is one that you can do pretty easily.
Yeah, you can skip European festival season and just go help at a forest occupation,
which is cheaper and much more memorable.
Yeah, you can go out. They used to have one of those near the little town I lived in when I was racing in Belgium,
and it was a scene.
Yeah, just lovely times.
Yeah. Great times.
We should maybe explain like a little bit about
Hunt as a city, because I think if people have seen it
or they've maybe visited, like they've been to the middle of town, right?
And they've seen the castle and the water house bar or whatever.
And they've eaten one of those sugar noses.
But like they may not have seen the whole city.
So like, can you sort of characterize the city?
Of course. It's very diverse in the sense that the scenery changes a lot
You've got some of these like really old buildings that are just like speaking to your imagination
But then there's also almost like concrete deserts Yeah, I would almost call them where like the view on the street is just an incredible amount of gray in varying colors.
Yeah.
That being said, it was a beautiful city. I don't mean to trash talk Chantier at all, but at times it's just really gray.
Yeah, I have lots of memories of springtime in Flanders and gray sky and gray buildings and gray roads.
Yeah, but also some very beautiful areas.
So why don't you go ahead and explain to us a little bit
about this forest occupation?
Okay.
It's an occupation that's happening to a little north of the city center.
In terms of forest occupations, it's remarkably accessible.
So it's called the Wandelgemse Meersersen or pond for you English speakers out there.
And it's part of an industrial area called the Weedaukei, which is located just west of the canal de Lever,
which connects the port of Ghent, the third largest port in Belgium.
The area itself is about 14 to 15 hectares.
I'm not sure how to translate that to US numbers. I'm sorry.
Yeah, neither am I. I just can't tell about it in American.
Doesn't matter. There's internet. And the area has largely been left to its own for
a pretty significant amount of time, past 20 years. Now there's two areas within the pond, as I'm going to call them, a northern part and a southern
part. And later down the line, I'll explain why that is important. Before I continue further on
to highlight, I went there mainly as a form of solidarity and support. I had asked if people
would be willing to talk to me about in a journalistic or reporting
capacity and they agreed to that. But I'm not a local and I also don't want to pretend
I am. Although any listener will hear my accent and know that. So yeah, we'll be mainly talking
about the southern area and there's destination plans for this area. There's essentially two parties that are working together to turn these green areas into the grey concrete deserts that we just talked about.
These parties are the municipality of Gendt and DeLijn, a government organization that handles public transport and landers.
So over the years, there have been several plans to build or develop the ponds, but up
until last week, we're recording this in the week of August 8th, but up until last week
no permits were issued to actually finalize or realize these plans.
The northern part was supposed to be turned into a sort of training area for bus drivers,
while the southern part is intended to be a parking lot for public transport
buses. The activists currently residing in the forests are by no means against the idea
of public transport, but do think that the destruction of this piece of nature is counterproductive
for both the locals and for climate change reasons. There is enough concrete in the city
already and they argue that alternative solutions
have not been given the attention they deserve.
Yeah, it seems like it wouldn't be hard to find like, I think, did they call it like
a brownfield site, like a former industrial site in that area of Flanders, to redevelop
an old factory or a warehouse complex or something to do this rather than taking one of the green
spaces and destroying it and paving it over, you know?
I don't know what the municipality was thinking but I'm sure there is like barren areas elsewhere
that can just as easily be repurposed in a way that doesn't like destroy nature.
So the part that was most surprising to me and at the same time not at all is how this is being played out politically.
To give everyone a quick timeline, about 20 years ago the municipality designated these two zones that I talked about as to be used for common use.
Alhumayn for those speaking Dutch or Flemish.
Well, at the same time, the ground was being bought by the public transport company, the LIME.
Plans for development started.
There was even an unused tram bridge just outside the Green Zone and the occupation.
But for one reason or another, the permit to build on the ground itself had expired,
during which time nature took it upon herself to reclaim the area.
Now what I mentioned earlier is this difference between the north and the south part.
These are separated by train tracks, making a very clear distinction between the two areas.
The line originally wanted to use the north part to make a sort of training area, as I
just said, but these plants never materialized.
At the same time, about three years ago, another action group prevented the destruction of
the northern part.
Now this is where I find it really interesting.
The terrain is still owned by the line and the municipality, but they intend to give
custody to a local environmental group called a Natuurpunt. But only if the plans for the southern part, where there is an
occupation right now, are completed.
Yes.
Yes.
Interesting.
Yeah.
While I was talking to my source, I was reading between the lines there as a
sort of an attempt to play these multiple environmental organizations against each other,
a sort of divide and conquer. Yeah, very nefarious.
When I asked my source about that, they said that it was up to me whether or not I would call it that,
but that the existence of these plans is just a reality. Now, I will not claim,
probably for legal reasons, that there is definitely some attempt to set these parties up against each other.
But from the information that I have, if I were a betting man, I'd know where I'd put my money.
Yeah, that's really interesting. So like, Natuurpunt is not present in the forest occupation on the southern side, is that right?
Not that I'm aware of. And so they'd stand to like, they'd gain custody of the northern side of the
people on the southern side failed.
Exactly.
Yeah, how nefarious.
Exactly. And if the southern side now succeeds in preventing like the tearing
down of the trees, then the northern side could become, you know, threatened again.
And then this whole circus starts all over again.
Right, yes. So both of them have a vested interest in one of these. Well, in theory,
the municipality would maybe would like them to think that both of them have an interest
in the paving over of one of these areas.
Exactly. Someone has to lose in this equation And I find it interesting that it's happening like this,
especially because Gendt kind of promotes itself on these green zones
that are mixed throughout the city and that are then again accessible
for people by bike or for running or walking.
And then in that same breath, there's also still the, oh, yeah,
one of these pieces of nature we need to tear down because we need more concrete.
Yeah.
Those two views just don't align.
Right.
And like we said, there's no shortage of concrete.
This is a very sort of post-industrial area.
It's not like this is like a public facing thing that needs to be in one area to be accessible
to people, right?
Like they could store their buses, train their bus drivers, you know,
somewhere else in Flanders it's, it's, uh, it's not like it needs to be right in town.
No, I'm certain there are other areas where you could just as easily
make a parking lot for buses.
Yeah.
Uh, as for like a training grounds, I'm not sure how that would work, but then
again, there, I think there's roads enough in the city for people to practice.
Even industrial areas tend not to have very much traffic.
So that could still work without having to, again, get rid of a piece of forest just so people can drive around in buses. But again, this is not an argument against public transport, more in the hypocrisy
and senselessness of the plans that are on the table right now. Yeah, and kind of trying to make
people choose between two things when they should be perfectly possible to have both, right?
Exactly. I'm guessing it would also be more cost effective if you take some other parts,
because I'll dive into that later but there's also like
pollution in these areas that needs to be taken care of so just from a cost effective standpoint
I think there should be alternative options that will keep everyone happier. Yeah so yeah describe
to me your visit there like describe how it was and what you witnessed there. Okay.
Well, I went there at the end of July.
I stayed a few days and it was really weird because you're coming from, again,
a tram stop, then you have to walk for a bit and all of the sudden it's
like you're in a forest.
It was, it was really surreal almost to know that you're
in the middle of a big city,
but also have that kind of like isolation
from the sounds of traffic.
Yeah. I mean, that's lovely, right?
It's nice that that's available at least for now.
Oh yeah. I understand 100% why people want to keep
that green space close to their homes.
Yeah.
So the ponds are a mix of terrain. There's water-hungry
swampy areas when the rain has been falling. There's lush grass fields with little curvy,
impromptu paths to take. And there's some parts where the trees have been growing for long enough
that people can now build tree houses in them, which to me is quite a good indicator that not much development or care has been done in this
terrain. There's an absolutely insane amount of blackberry bushes, much to my delight. And yeah,
it's just for an area that is relatively small, but in the bigger picture, it just surprised me how many different faces it has.
It was a delight to be there.
Locals from Ghent tend to use the area for walks or picnics or to take their dogs out.
I've seen multiple people stopping by just to pick the blackberries.
The city itself calls this entire area a green zone and a climate access.
calls this entire area a green zone and a climate access. Therewards, what Gendt has done is trying to create a network of zones and roads that are accessible by car, but not so much that there is
a lot of traffic on these roads, which makes them ideal for cycling, running, recreation,
or even transport, if you would so choose. The website of Kent itself promotes these areas is good for the flora and fauna, for
the environment and subsequently for residents.
Then you need to be thinking of absorption of rainwater or keeping local populations
of animals and plants healthy or just the cooling effect that nature has.
Yeah, compared to blacktop.
Exactly.
Like fully concrete cities tend to like not really
release their warmth as quickly as nature does it. And it was surprising because it was really hot
when I was there. But in the shade of the trees, it was perfectly doable up until the point where
you actually exercised and then suddenly it was less cool but different story. Again, the website from the municipality itself acknowledges the importance of the
area for an endangered species of lizard and the efforts that the city took to make
sure that it can still thrive there.
More concretely, one person I spoke to said that there are 39 protected species of plants
and animals living there,
protected under both Flemish and European law.
So I'm not really sure why that's discarded into the calculation.
I'm not a municipality person.
I don't know.
Also, I believe there have been sightings of foxes there, mainly because we were told
by the activists not to eat the blackberries that are too close
to the ground due to the parasites that foxes may carry
and can subsequently like infect people with.
Oh, wow. Yeah, interesting.
You know what else carries parasites, James?
Is it the goods and services that we rely on to pay for this podcast?
Exactly. There's a 50% chance that these products and services
will give you one or another incurable parasite.
Wonderful.
And we're back. And, um, Bic, you mentioned that there was a problem with pollution in the wilderness space.
Can you explain what kind of pollution that entails?
Of course.
In the past, there has been a pollution of both the groundwater and the soil.
In and of itself, that's not that remarkable.
I've been told by someone that Flanders has
multiple spots where you can come into contact with different forms of pollution. In the ponds,
there is both pollution in the soil and in the groundwater. The soil itself contains asbestos,
although it should be noted that that is within the acceptable regulatory norms.
within the acceptable regulatory norms.
As a refresher for listeners,
asbestos danger lies mainly in the breaking or fracturing of the material
and the fibers that release through that process
is what makes asbestos so hazardous.
An effective way to mitigate this is to make sure that these fibers do not get into the air,
for which water tends to work wonders.
So at least in terms of asbestos, it seems very simple and cost-effective to just leave it undisturbed because it's already an area that likes to
swallow up water, which then will isolate the asbestos from the air and
does, you know, make it less harmful.
Yeah.
The water is contaminated with VOCIs.
That's an acronym for a variety of volatile organic compounds with some chlorine attached to it. I don't know. I'm not a chemist.
These chemicals have several uses and applications in a variety of industry.
One of my sources told me that the specific chemical is 1.4-dioxane, which is used as a solvent.
It's not the type of stuff you want to drink or inhale, but serious exposure from contaminated
soil or water is pretty rare from what I've read.
As my source pointed out, the contaminants in the water will over time degrade organically.
A process called phytoremediation, where the presence of plants and microorganisms
and fungi will degrade the material and reduce the toxicity. While reading into this, I found
that the same is true to an extent for asbestos, which can be a source of inorganic nutrients
for these microorganisms. So while you could point out that phytoremediation is a longer process
than sanitation, I personally think that it's just common sense that letting nature do its
work undisturbed might be significantly cheaper and more sustainable compared to putting additional
chemicals and substances in the ground to neutralize these VOCIs. Also just a fun little side quest here, but in order to monitor the area, the
line employed a concierge to walk the terrain on a daily basis.
I'm unsure if you can spot upcoming or emerging contamination with the naked eye,
but not my money that they used to pay the guy.
So this guy just his job was to walk around the parts.
Yeah, pretty much.
I'm told he had like a little hut or a little shack from which he worked.
The guy was still working there at the time the activists moved in,
but the shack is gone and so is the concierge.
I'm not sure about the details of what happened there.
Yeah.
But what I do find extremely funny is that now officials and
spokespersons from the development side are claiming that the area is dangerous
and that it is for their own wellbeing that the activists leave as soon as
possible, which doesn't really make sense to me, Like either this argument is like incredibly disingenuous
or they fucked over someone by paying them to take this incredibly risky job of walking over contaminated terrain.
Yeah, and to mention like all the people who they allowed to walk their dogs and pick blackberries there and things.
Exactly.
If it was that dangerous that people should not be there, then I'm fairly certain they could muster better fences than they did at the moment.
I'm not sure on the fence economy in the broader sense, but there should at least have been signs on the fences.
And there were none. So yeah, we're getting to the occupist groups.
The group that is currently occupying the trees is an
assembly of people who care deeply about the area itself. I spoke on the record with one of them
and I would like to play this clip to let them introduce themselves.
I'm Arvid, I'm one of the activists of the Wondelmiers occupation, which we occupied since the 20th of June and we occupied this because it's
endangered since the land which is the public transport company in Flanders
wants to destroy this 15 hectares of nature for building a bus depot so like
a parking for buses. Okay do you want to tell us about what
what you you and the group of activists have done here? Yeah so we live in the
trees as much as possible and we sleep there to make an eviction harder and to have more power in our action. It's way more difficult for
them to get us out if we are on height and use other tactics to block them. And they
also cannot start cutting trees when we are in the trees. That's another reason.
How is that for you? It's intense, always, in occupation of course, but also places of
where we experiment with living together and everyone is welcome. There are no doorbells, no walls.
Forests are very open place where everyone can just come in
and feel like they are welcome
and it's not owned by someone.
It's not, yeah, it doesn't feel like it's belonging
to someone which you can easily have with your house,
I think.
But here there's all the space to make stuff,
to live, to take time for yourself.
Which makes it very healthy, I think, to live here.
By being in nature, people are just more happy, I think,
in general than in the city and in the house.
And yeah, we are mainly building tree houses.
As you can hear, maybe.
Probably.
So, as you've heard, that was Arvid,
one of the activists that I spoke to.
As you've also probably heard,
that is that there is construction going on in the trees.
There's multiple tree houses there at the moment.
And that's where they sleep.
When I spoke further, uh, to Arvid, he made clear like the demands that the activists have, which is mainly that they don't want the needless destruction of
this area, uh, there is intention is to remain in the trees and make it hard, if
not impossible for the trees to be felled.
There are multiple tree houses with enough stability and space for multiple people.
On top of that, they are preparing for a possible eviction, all while also living happily and communally.
Like every night they cook together, they're having dinner together.
I found it incredibly healing and wholesome to just have a meal around a small fire with like a group of like-minded people, not hearing traffic or other urban
noises. A bright spot was one evening where someone played a Dutch protest song just on
the guitar, satirizing an unnamed US president for his role in the Vietnam War, which can't escape US politics even in the
middle of a forest. So then I would like to play a second clip.
And how do you want to talk about how your relationship is with the neighbors around
here?
Yeah, the neighbors, they started their own action committee for more than three years ago, I think.
And they have already saved one piece of the Wilhelmse Messe, which is on the north part of the train hill.
So this one is now safe. it's only three hectares, but it was also the land that wanted to destroy it for
making a place to practice to drive with the bus.
Oh like a training ground for bus drivers.
Exactly, so just put concrete on this swampy area to then once in a while drive with the bus there,
as if there is no other concrete in the city to practice driving with the bus.
But this is now safe and now the neighbors are also for this big piece of
the Rondelheimse Meers are now going to start a court case against the decision
because the Ministry of the Ministry of Environment
they approved the permits for the style plots
for the bus depot.
Okay.
That was yesterday that that was announced.
So how are you feeling right now?
Do you have any plans on how to continue the fight? So how are you feeling right now?
Do you have any plans on how to continue the fight against the bulldozing of this place?
Yeah, we are not surprised that she approved it.
We saw it coming a bit, but it's just very ridiculous and we will keep fighting of course because she's a very hypocrite and
saying that we have to save nature but in the meantime she she approved
decisions to destroy them this kind of nature yeah so we just continue to fight
and the neighbors do it with a court case. We keep, yeah, we stay here and we keep building
and prepare for an eviction.
That's really interesting. That diversity of tactics, that cooperation, I think is really
valuable in these kind of struggles. Can you explain a little bit more about that, like
how that works?
Well, I think it was just the stars that aligned
for this particular goal.
There is a neighborhood committee
that's also like heavily opposed
to the destruction of this area,
but it's mainly a, well, a neighborhood committee.
Like these are people who will stand up
to like the municipality,
but entirely through the legal system
or the judicial system.
And I think this committee was like at least a year or two, maybe even more
old before the occupation happened.
And the occupation also happened separately from the committee.
So you kind of have this alliance now between a group of people who will take more direct action against the plans to destroy the place and this group who is going to do that by filing court cases against the plans that the land and the municipality are trying to realize right now.
It's really funny always because one of my sources said the people who are occupying
the forest came down like angels. The activists really don't like to be called that, but it's sort
of, yeah, just they have a common goal. And for that, they're working together. And from what I've
seen, there is very warm and friendly contact between the groups. I've seen multiple neighbors come by with food or building materials.
Think of screws or nails or wooden beams for construction.
I think there was one person who every Sunday brings pancakes.
I'm not sure if they still do that, but...
That's pretty cool.
Yeah, exactly.
I've seen people come by and drop off bags of dried beans and lentils.
I think it's really fascinating how organically these two groups come together in their common
goal, but also that the two different strategies kind of strengthen each other.
Right.
Yeah.
Obviously, you've got people who wouldn't think of occupying
forests, but then they find themselves in solidarity with the people who do.
And I think that's really cool that like, you said there was no prior communication,
right?
These folks just arrived, began the occupation and the locals were like,
yes, this is exactly what we needed.
Thank you.
Insofar as I understood it, that's how it happened.
As I said earlier, like the combination of tax tactics
just make their path towards their goals so much more tangible.
Because by occupying the forests,
they can't start like early construction in the area.
Or I know some municipalities or cities kind of begin with the destruction prior
to having permission, but then it's like, oh yeah, we've already started, so it's of no use anymore.
Which I'm not sure how common it is in other countries, but I've heard of that within
activist circles in the Netherlands. And all the while this committee is like doing the court cases
and filing legal motions.
And yeah, I think it's a really warm and friendly contact.
Yeah, it's kind of nice to see.
Exactly.
OK, I have one other clip.
How does it make you feel that the neighbors are so supportive,
as you said, that they're bringing food on a regular basis.
I've seen, I think, a few who brought materials even, like screws or nails.
Yeah.
What does that do with your morale or your motivation?
Yeah, I think we wouldn't really be here if they would be pro the best depots but of course they are
not because it's just a very stupid idea to destroy this valuable nature for it.
But yeah we help each other a lot and we keep each other strong by supporting each other.
They were very moved by us being here and they even called us their angels, which we don't like to be called.
Yeah. That's it.
Okay.
Is there anything else you would like to share or to have on the record?
Yeah, we would like to invite everyone to come here.
There's more info on wandermeesten.snowblogs.org. And yeah, there will still be the whole court case, so there is a chance we stay longer.
But they also have the legal rights to evict us, which we will also be paying for. Yeah
Obviously people who listen to the show will be familiar with like forest occupations in Atlanta, right?
What's the state response to to this look like? For a long time there has been very little state response
While I was there the the permit to develop the area was granted.
But for the most part there's occasionally a car that drives by.
I did receive word that a few days ago a few cops came in onto the terrain,
took pictures of everything and the next morning there was a drone flying over the camp.
of everything and the next morning there was a drone flying over the camp.
Yes. So things are tensing up a bit and we'll have to see how it goes. Obviously the case is still in the judicial. So we'll have to see what comes from that.
But up until now things have been quiet and peaceful.
that, but up until now things have been quiet and peaceful.
Okay. Yeah.
Cause like, I think people sometimes obviously make the US really strives to
lead the world in, in police violence.
But, uh, I think sometimes people underestimate the capacity of European
states for first state violence.
That's definitely true.
Like our lack of guns makes it that not many people are getting shot by police,
but against activists or protests, police can be pretty violent. I don't have much experience
with Belgian police myself. I've heard conflicting stories about them. I was at the May 1st celebration
in Brussels and we came incredibly prepared and then it was all okay. Literally nothing noteworthy to mention.
But then when I speak to other people, I hear like, oh, you know, Belgian
police worse than the Dutch, but then that very also varies from city to city.
And that's a whole nother rabbit hole to go down into.
Yeah.
So for now, not much police action against the activists
Not sure if or when that will change, right?
So if people wanted to they said everyone was welcome
Yes, and I presume they can drop in for the day or they can go and stay over a period
Or they can you know commit staying until the forest is safe like is it easy to access? Can you walk there? Could
you like, I guess, ironically, maybe could you take a bus?
There is a tram that stops pretty close by. They have an Instagram account that I don't
know from the top of my head because I don't use Instagram.
We'll link it in the notes.
I think if you just search for like a Wondel Meersen
or Wondel Gemsmeersen, you'll find something. You can contact them there and they can give
you more details on how exactly to get there. Yeah, you can come by for a day, you can come
by for two weeks, that's up to you. You're welcome there. What I would like to urge everyone
is if you plan on going there, contact them about the supplies they need.
When I arrived there, I got some small kitchen knives and literally for cutting veggies and some canned foods and some first aid supplies.
Because it is largely donation based what they're doing there.
So yeah, anything that you can spare or can purchase for them would be greatly
appreciated. Check the website, check their Instagram. There might be a Facebook page.
I think there is a Facebook page for those still using Facebook. So yeah, I would recommend it.
Go over there, help out. They're very friendly people. If you're interested in doing something like this, this is like a very entry level thing.
Yeah. Like you said, it's not just like a good thing to do. It's
also a nice fun thing to do. Like it's these spaces can be
really healing. Like just being among like minded people, like
you said, in nature.
Exactly. And like when I was there, they gave like a climbing workshop.
So they taught me how I should climb a tree with like gear around my waist and everything.
And it's cool. Yeah. And follow the agreements that people make between each other. Besides
that, there's not really any rules. You're free to come for a day. You're free to stay for two
weeks. That's entirely up to you.
Just it's nice to help out.
And even if it's just help with cutting vegetables for dinner, that's
already incredibly appreciated.
And in the meantime, people can do other stuff that needs to happen around the camp.
And yeah, in terms of activism, this is a small step to do, but it can also just be
a really good experience
for years for you. And all the while helping the locals and helping the activists, which
is the sort of mutual aids that I would prefer to see a lot more.
Yeah, yeah, I think it's great that it's integrated with the community. And I think it's great
that it's, it's accessible for people. And hopefully folks will go bring something that they need.
It's cool that they can share skills.
I've learned a lot in different activist spaces.
I think that's really cool.
Mick, is there anywhere that people can follow you
if they'd like to?
Yes, I have a Twitter account now
because I don't see enough horrible shit.
It's at 2soberber Possums or under the name
Mick Smith, M-I-C-K-S-M-I-T. I don't think I've posted anything yet, so I'll think of
something funny. But feel free to reach out there if for reasons. I'm cool with that.
Great. Well, thank you very much. I think that's really interesting. I hope people will
go. If you go, send us a little message. Let us know how your experience was in the forest.
I'd love that. It would make me happy.
Likewise. Hi, I'm Molly Conger, host of Weird Little Guys, a new podcast from Cool Zone Media
on iHeartRadio.
I've spent almost a decade researching right-wing extremism, digging into the lives of people
you wouldn't be wrong to call monsters.
But if Scooby-Doo taught us one thing, it's that there's a guy under that monster mask.
I've collected the stories of hundreds of aspiring little Hitlers of the suburbs,
from the Nazi cop who tried to join ISIS,
to the National Guardsman plotting to assassinate the Supreme Court,
to the Satanist soldier who tried to get his own unit blown up in Turkey.
The monsters in our political closets aren't some unfathomable evil. They're
just some weird guy. And you can laugh. Honestly, I think you have to. Seeing these guys for what
they are doesn't mean they're not a threat. It's a survival strategy. So join me every Thursday
for a look under the mask at the Weird Little Guys Trying to destroy America. Listen to Weird Little Guys on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I've been thinking about you.
I want you back in my life.
It's too late for that.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything
like you always do.
One session, 24 hours.
EPM 110, 120. She's terrified.
Should we wake her up? Absolutely not.
What was that? You didn't figure it out?
I think I need to hear you say it.
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
This machine is approved and everything? You're allowed to be doing this? We passed the review
board a year ago. We're not hurting people. There's nothing dangerous about
what you're doing. They're just dreams. Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller
from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio and Realm. Listen to dream sequence on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Angie Martinez.
Check out my podcast where I talk to some of the biggest
athletes, musicians, actors in the world.
We go beyond the headlines and the sound bites
that have real conversations about real life,
death, love and everything in between.
This life right here, just finding myself, just, just
relaxation. It's not feeling stressed. It's not feeling
pressed. This is what I'm most proud of. I'm proud of Mary,
because I've been through hell and some horrible things. That
feeling that I had of inadequacy is gone.
You're going to die being you.
So you got to constantly work on who you are to make sure that the stars align correctly.
Life ain't easy and it's getting harder and harder.
So if you have a story to tell, if you've come through some trials, you need to share
it because you're going to inspire someone.
You're going to, you're going to give somebody the motivation to not give up, to not quit.
Listen to Angie Martinez, IRL on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's JD?
My Vances.
This is It Could Happen Here,
a podcast that's not behind the bastards.
But today we're doing a little mini episode
on our future possible vice president, JD Vance.
Garrison, how are you feeling today?
Welcome back to the program.
Thank you.
I'm feeling pretty good.
Yeah?
Yeah, I got a great five hours of sleep.
I'm good to go.
Oh, I slept 11.
Good for you.
No, I've also been in the
researching bad people hole,
which keeps me up late at night.
Yeah, I have to do the walls
episodes tonight so we can go back
to back on the VPs.
But I decided to start with JD
Vance and, you know,
I I had debated with myself,
is this guy worth a full BTV
episode? And I decided ultimately
like, no.
I just don't think there's enough to him yet
that he deserves that.
Perhaps that will change in the future.
But what I wanted to do was give the listener,
who I'm guessing has mostly just heard
a few disjointed things about JD.
A few things, what are two things?
Maybe one specific thing.
One specific, they're probably aware of Hillbilly Elegy.
That was like a pretty big book in the day
and the movie was panned and that was kinda news.
They've probably heard the couch fucking stuff
and then they've heard allegations
that he's like a straight up fascist
and he thinks that single women should be dragged out
into the street and shot or something like that.
If you have a cat and you're a single woman,
you are ontologically evil.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, a sociopath.
And so I wanted to provide some context
for how he went from, if you can remember back to 2016,
he was a liberal darling
for having written Hillbilly Elegy, right?
He was this guy, this like never Trump conservative
who was explaining to everyone
how the evil of Trumpism had infested and,
you know, latched onto the minds of small town Americans, right? That's kind of how
he was framed to today where he's like this hard right MAGA guy, literally Trump's, you
know, future right-hand man with what sounds like explicitly dictatorial ambitions. And
the mystery of this story, all of it comes down to Peter Thiel, right?
Many, many such cases.
Yeah, as is often the case, he's a major part of like why things wind up where they
are. The bones of JD's background story are kind of important.
So I'm just going to give them rapidly.
He was born in August 1984 in Middletown, Ohio, born under the name James Donald
Bowman. But his parents divorced when he was a toddler.
His dad, his bio dad is pretty much out of the picture
right away.
He is eventually adopted by his mother's third husband,
whose last name is Hamill.
And that's the name he's gonna serve in the Marines under.
His mother was not very together.
There's a lot of neglect and poverty
and some drug abuse in his early life
before his grandparents move him from Kentucky to Ohio.
Now, a lot of ink has been spilled
when the subject advances supposedly autobiographical book,
Hillbilly Elegy, which paints him as a member
of the aggrieved and abused white underclass,
the forgotten men of American politics.
I'm not interested in relitigating this stupid book,
except to say that I had a kind of similar background.
My dad was in the picture, but socioeconomically,
it was kind of similar.
We grew up in a very poor and troubled small town.
Eventually my caretakers got me out of there
into a more functional part of the country.
And I can see, I see J.D.'s book
as kind of cynically positioned to take advantage
of the liberal outpouring of sympathy for rural whites
that followed Trump's 2016 victory
and attempt to position himself as someone who can explain why this part of the country sweptpouring of sympathy for rural whites that followed Trump's 2016 victory,
an attempt to position himself as someone who can explain
why this part of the country swept Trump into power.
Now the reality is that this part of the country
did not sweep Trump into power.
The core of Trump's support in 2016
were aggrieved but financially comfortable
suburban white people.
Vance did not write about poor folks addicted to oxy
and the hollers with any real empathy.
He painted them as helpless fools and mental children
and himself as better for getting out.
And that's really all I have to say on the matter.
To me, his early life suggests a young man
who wanted to set himself up for a career in public life
and took the most expedient actions to do so.
And that is the context under which I see his service
in the US Marine Corps.
He joined the Marines and got himself the job
that would get him as close to action as possible
without requiring that he actually like do anything.
His specific gig was public affairs
for a Marine aircraft wing.
So he is writing about the shit
that this aircraft wing is doing,
which is about the least job
that you can actually have in the military.
He wrote that he was quote,
lucky to escape any real fighting.
After finishing his term, he got a BA in poli sci.
And I'm not saying that you have to fight for,
most of what the military does is not literally fighting.
I'm just saying I see his specific positioning himself
with this job as him wanting to have Marine on his CV
when he goes into politics, right?
That's my allegation, right?
Not that there's anything wrong with not fighting.
Sure. I mean, it's also just good to point out considering most of the rights attacks
against Walz right now are also about him not actually like seeing combat. And Vance
has gone after him for that specifically. Yeah. Trying to like allude to like Vance
having more combat experience.
Yeah.
Both men did not like fire bullets at enemy combatants.
No, and most people don't,
but what I see with Vance's service is,
I did this because it was a line in my resume.
Sure.
Whereas you don't do 24 years in the National Guard,
like just to set up your political career. No. You do that because you wanna be in the National Guard, like just to set up your political career.
No.
You do that because you want to be in the National Guard.
Yes.
Waltz was definitely more like a career man in that sense.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
After finishing his term, he got a BA in Poli Sci and Philosophy from Ohio State.
And during his first year in college, he worked for a Republican state senator.
He's going to work for a couple of Republicans in his college and grad school, you know,
law school years.
Then he attended Yale Law School where he made friends with Jamil Javani, who would
go on to be a conservative parliamentarian in Canada.
He was mentored by Professor Amy Chua, who wrote a book about being a tiger mom that
made a lot of people angry and was beloved by the chunk of the country who thinks that
children have it too easy.
Chua helped to convince him to write Hillbilly Elegy, which might be her worst sin. Almost
definitely is her worst sin. I can forgive some terrible acts towards children if you don't write
the book Hillbilly Elegy. It was when Vance graduated from Yale that he first made contact
with the man who would come to define his adult political journey, Peter Thiel. The PayPal co-founder and serial entrepreneur investor
had taken a rapid turn from his earlier libertarian politics
thanks to a growing interest
in a line of political philosophy known mostly
as neo-reactionary or NRX thought.
Although today you'll more often hear it described
as the new right.
I'm not in love with either of those terms
for this particular chunk of the right,
but I think neo-reactionary is better than new right.
Not as bad as dark enlightenment.
It's not as bad as dark, and we'll talk about that.
The worst of these three terms.
By far the worst of the three terms.
So I tend to stick with neo-reactionary,
although if you hear new right being used,
that's also what this refers to.
That's a term I've used sometimes.
Yeah, yeah.
What time period is this?
Is this like 2017?
Like where are we at here?
2011 is when he sees Peter Thiel speak at Yale,
which he describes as like the moment
around which his life pivots.
So this is pre the publishing of his book.
Yes, yes, yes.
He publishes Hillbilly Elegy in 2016.
Okay, so he kind of got it on like the ground floor
of some of this kind of stuff.
Yes, he is very early in Thiel Okay, so he kind of got it on like the ground floor of some of this kind of stuff.
Yes, he is very early in Teal World.
He is one of the first, he's going to be one of,
we're getting to that, but I want to talk about
what neo-reactionaries are, because the rest of this
isn't going to make sense unless we go into that.
So Vanity Fair writer James Pogue rather ably described
the new right as a worldview in direct competition
to the liberal idea that economic growth
and technological innovation
would lead us to a better future.
Instead, the growth of big tech surveillance,
nanny state governance, and social justice culture
war dominance has created a system of oppression
that will destroy everything good in the world,
if not stopped.
The primary high priest of this school of thought
is Curtis Yarvin, who in the early aughts
from about 2007 to 2014, blogged prolifically
as mincius mold bug.
Now, Yarvin is a computer programmer.
He is this guy who has had for most of his career,
this desire to create a new computer operating system
that would like fix the way in which knowledge
is disseminated in a way that sounds kind of magical to me.
He never quite gets it working,
and he blogs about political philosophy
the same way he talks about programming,
which he has this dream for a way to reorient society
after a soft kind of peaceful coup.
He always emphasizes how peaceful it needs to be.
That will be, again, it's his way
if he wants to program society to make it work perfectly,
based on his sort of set of values.
And he writes a series of essays
about how he wants to reorient society.
And these essays become kind of the central underpinning
ethos of the messy assortment of philosophies
that we call neo-reactionaries, or the new right now.
The basic idea is that this liberal nightmare hellscape
can only be stopped and turned back
by replacing democracy with an essentially monarchic system.
Pogue describes Yarvin as arguing for, quote,
a Caesar-like figure to take power back
from this devolved oligarchy
and replace it with a monarchial regime run like a startup.
As early as 2012, he proposed the acronym RAGE,
retire all government employees,
as a shorthand for a first step in the overthrow of the American regime.
What we needed, Yarvin thought, was a national CEO,
or what's called a dictator.
Now, a lot of guys in the aughts become enraptured
by Yarvin's ideas, because the way Yarvin writes,
he spends most of his free time,
because he gets bought out of a company he's in,
and he doesn't wind up super rich, but he winds up comfortable enough that he's for a while just spending
like 500 bucks a month on books and reading like old reactionary tracks, like books from
the 1800s of like monarchists arguing against, you know, the enlightenment and socialism
and the like. And so he peppers his essays with a lot of different kind of archaic flourishes, a lot of Latin, a lot of like references to Greek and Roman philosophical figures.
And that is fucking catnip for a certain kind of guy.
No, it makes it makes it seem like esoteric.
It's like some kind of like hidden hidden knowledge that's being like rediscovered that like holds the key to fix all of our problems. Yes. He is. If you've read Ender's Game, he's doing what Ender's brother does in
Ender's Game where he's writing his little essays for the Internet, trying to
like overthrow the government using them. And there's a certain certain kind of guy
who is just deeply attracted to that idea. One of those kinds of guys is a
philosopher called Nick Land. Land is an interesting character.
We talk about him a little during our AI cult episodes.
He's a dude who comes out of academia
and kind of has now moved around
to essentially like fascist political philosophy
would be kind of the quickest way to describe Land today,
although he's a complicated fellow,
but he is the guy who comes up with the term
dark enlightenment for Curtis's writing.
And this is the way in which a lot of these guys,
a lot of the guys especially who are going to come
into Jarvan's work around the mid aughts
are going to think about it, right?
Where it's this, he has pulled the wool from my eyes, right?
He has made it clear how doomed democracy is,
that it's fundamentally evil.
And now that I've had this dark revelation, I can never look at the world the same way
again, right?
And like, Land was trying to do the same thing for like the previous like 15 years. He attracted
a small batch of like, kind of like academic followers. A whole bunch of his colleagues
kind of got more popular than him because they were slightly more reasonable in many ways.
Because Lance writing is never going to be like
the most viral thing on earth, right?
Like, yeah.
And mold bugs is a little better written for that.
But although both of them are too dense,
the guys who are going to like Vance is going to be,
the guys who are gonna take his theories
into like mainstream politics are going to need
to trim the fat off. You know?
It's also worth noting,
Jarvan is the guy who introduces the term
the red pill to right-wing politics, right?
Oh, I didn't know that.
Yes.
As far as I've ever seen,
Jarvan is the guy who starts using the red pill
in a really concerted way to describe,
coming to these understandings about,
race science has a decent amount to do with it earlier
in Yarvin's writing career, but like all of these ideas
that we now call neo-reactionary,
like that's a Yarvin original.
He thinks the matrix is a work of genius.
Of course.
Which it is, but maybe not in the way that he thinks.
Slightly different uses.
Yeah, so anyway, Peter Thiel falls in love,
because Thiel is, by 2009,
Thiel's writing stuff about how he thinks democracy
is incompatible with liberty, right?
And when Peter Thiel refers to liberty,
he's not talking about like your freedom
to like to love the people that you want to love
or do with your body what you want to do with your body.
He's talking about his freedom as a guy with a lot of money
to not have to pay taxes, right?
That's primarily what all of these guys mean by freedom.
So Teal by 2009 is already enraptured
with these anti-democratic ideas and he finds Yarvin.
It's kind of unclear to me,
does Yarvin actually start him on that road?
I think it's more that he has started down that road
and he thinks Yarvin is doing a really good job
of setting up what he's been thinking.
So he starts pumping money into Yarvin.
He funds some of his like software ambitions.
He's just kind of generally supporting him.
And he begins pumping money increasingly
over the early to mid aughts
into an array of influencers and thinkers
who are in alignment with what we might call
mold buggy and thought, right?
And he's doing that up to this present day.
Pogue writes,
"'Teal has also funded things like the edge Lordy
and post left infected new people cinema film festival,
which ended its week long run of parties and screenings
in Manhattan just a few days before NatCon began.
He's long been a big donor
to Republican political candidates,
but in recent years,
Teal has grown increasingly involved in the politics
of this younger and weirder world,
becoming something like an apharius godfather
or genial rich uncle, depending on your perspective.
Podcasters and art world figures now joke about their hope
to get so-called Teal bucks.
And if you're familiar with like the Red Scare podcast
and those ladies,
you're familiar with like the Dime Square set,
a lot of them are into neo-reactionary thought
and are the people that that paragraph is referring to.
Now, while podcasters and cultural influencers
have long been useful to Thiel,
he's also tried to collect up and coming politicians
with uneven success.
In 2011, he gave a talk at Yale
while Vance was still a student
and discussed the stagnation of technological progress
in the United States.
Vance wrote that Thiel was then, quote,
"'possibly the smartest person I'd ever met.
And this moment is the moment that his whole life
pivots around, meeting Peter Thiel at Yale in 2011.
And we're gonna talk about what comes after,
but Garrison, you know what isn't receiving any money
from Peter Thiel?
We also cannot say that.
There's no way to know what he's doing with this investment.
It's entirely possible, it's entirely possible
that we are funded 100% by Peter Thiel.
And if so, thank you.
Gotta get those Thiel bucks.
And we're back.
I've just uncovered that Peter Thiel is the mind behind Chumba Casino.
Garrison, this goes so much deeper than I thought.
What if Peter Thiel instead just got really
into sports betting, you know?
Instead of dealing with all this weird,
like esoteric, traditionalist,
like 1880s racism philosophy,
what if instead he just got really into,
I don't know,
the bucks, that's probably a sports team, right?
He put $8 billion on the Raiders.
That's right.
He took a bath, he's fucked.
He got addicted to it too.
God, we could save so many lives.
Sports betting really couldn't save lives.
I've always said that.
Vance decided to abandon his planned career in law,
although I'm not sure I believe that was ever
his intended path.
Absolutely not.
No, he does a couple of years in law.
And he claims that Teal also is who made him decide
to convert to Christianity by defying the social template
I had constructed that Christians were dumb
and atheists were smart.
I don't know how much to believe that he's actually
a Catholic, maybe.
I don't know, but like there's this whole new batch of like, people who are like,
philosophically Catholic or like, they're Catholic in like a quote unquote Hegelian sense when they
construct these like, larger models of like, human evolution, and they view like, Christianity as
this like, thing that will drive the human species towards its like, perfected form.
And definitely the dark enlightenment people
are a significant chunk of kind of what caused that
to develop.
And we're seeing that now with like these fake movements
like the Hegelian e-girls, which are kind of like
with the like weird stepchild of some of these
like dimes square, like influencer philosophy stuff.
Yeah.
And I would say he's definitely not a Catholic
in the sense that your aunt is, right?
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
He is a Catholic in the sense that like,
he believes there are things about social order
and the roles that people should have in society
that Catholicism gets right.
And that's the sense in which he's a Catholic, right?
So in 2016, the same year that Vance publishes
Hillbilly Elegy and becomes a liberal darling,
he joins Mithril Capital,
a venture capital firm founded by Teal.
Peter Teal and Vance, all of these guys,
pretty much every time they create a company,
it's named after something in the Lord of the Rings.
Fucking a J.R.R. Tolkien bullshit.
He would be so unhappy with this.
Because Tolkien was also a Catholic monarchist,
but in a very different way.
In a super different way, yes.
So the two young men that Thiel adopts,
that he makes what are called generational bets in,
is Blake Masters and JD Vance.
And his bet is that if I really bankroll and back these guys,
they are going to be major figures in US politics, right?
For decades to come.
And his first step is he makes them rich.
He helps them get jobs and stuff that they get wealthy in.
Masters is recruited in the same way as Vance.
He's given a cushy job in venture capital.
He's handed a shitload of teal bucks
to see what he can make of them.
And Vance is, both of them are decent enough at this.
Vance is okay at it.
And within two years, he gets hired for $150 million fund
out of Washington that focuses on finding young companies
in overlooked US cities,
places that weren't seen as traditionally tech hubs.
Soon after this, he goes into business on his own.
If we can call it on your own,
when Peter Thiel is the guy
who backs your new company entirely, right?
Sure.
I do love that Peter Thiel is the guy who backs your new company entirely, right? Sure. I do love that that Peter Thiel somehow picked the two most uncharismatic up and coming dudes.
I mean, look at Peter. What does he know about charisma?
Yeah, but like it is fun that he he made these two bets and Mark Kelly just destroyed one of them.
Yeah. Oh, criticize the man for what you will.
They just destroyed one of them. Yeah.
Criticize the man for what you will, but.
What are these weirdos go up against an astronaut
on a public debate?
Jesus Christ.
You know, say what you will about electoralism.
I'm excited to see the Waltz Vance debate,
because I think it'll be funny.
Yeah, well, because Vance has big daddy issues,
and Waltz has strong daddy energy.
So we could be in for a very interesting night.
So Vance forms his own venture capital form, Narya Capital.
This is another Lord of the Rings reference.
Narya is one of the Rings of Power,
which the Rings of Power are bad.
Very famously.
They're part of a con.
An evil monster creates them to enslave you.
If you are wearing one of the rings of power,
you have been enslaved by Sauron.
That's the point.
They're very famously bad, yeah.
Yeah, and of course, one of the major investments
in Arya capital makes is into Palantir,
which is also named after the Lord of the Rings.
Also famously used by the evil wizard.. Also famously used by the evil wizard.
Yes, famously used by the evil wizard.
Now, in 2016, Vance portrayed himself as a never-Trump-er,
calling the future president a wannabe dictator.
Wow.
How many people in America didn't he rape
is one of the things Vance says about Trump.
So he is not holding his punches against the man.
Broken clock.
But behind the scenes, he is in the process
of being anointed by the Teal crowd,
who again see him as a bet
in the future of American politics.
Now this is not something I can claim to know
with confidence, but it seems to me
from the extant information
that Vance's anti-Trumpism was performative,
calculated to sell books
when he thought he might have a future
with a new, more conservative Democratic party,
triangulating to battle populist Trumpism.
The fact that he remained close to Thiel during this whole period and that Thiel spoke at
the 2016 RNC strikes me as evidence of a lack of any core political beliefs beyond a personal
desire for power.
Now it is worth noting that as a younger man, he displayed none of the signs of social conservatism.
He is always an economic conservative.
He's willing to work with Republicans, right?
He's one of these guys who you could definitely see
economically being in line with the Republicans.
But he does not evince any kind of bigotry
in his early life, particularly towards LGBT people.
One of his best friends from law school
is a transgender woman, Sophia Nelson.
He describes her in Hillbilly Elegy
as an extremely progressive lesbian,
and wrote in an email to her,
I recognize now that this may not accurately reflect
how you think of yourself, and for that I am really sorry.
I hope you're not offended, but if you are,
I'm sorry, love you, JD.
Sophia responded the next day saying,
if you had written genderqueer radical pragmatist,
nobody would know what you mean.
Many such cases.
Right.
The text of their emails has been shared
with the New York Times by Nelson
after Vance took a hard turn
to lean into the right's anti-trans bigotry.
This was a move that pleased Teal himself,
who has a very long, he has been anti-trans
and pushing anti-trans rhetoric for years
before this was a mainstream thing on the right.
Before the Matt Walsh types really started pivoting
Republican messaging around it, right?
Yeah.
And I'm gonna quote from the Times here.
Nelson, now a public defender in Detroit,
said they visited each other's homes,
talked on Zoom during the pandemic,
and exchanged long emails discussing a range of subjects,
from minutiae of daily life to weighty discussions
of current events and public policy issues.
Nelson attended Mr. Vance's wedding in Kentucky in 2014.
They pondered doing a podcast together.
He suggested they call it the Lunatic Fringe.
But Nelson and Mr. Vance had a falling out in 2021 when Vance said he publicly supported
an Arkansas ban on gender affirming care for minors, leading to a bitter exchange that
deeply hurt Nelson.
He achieved great success and became very rich by being a never-Trump-er who explained
the white working class to the liberal elite, Nelson said. Now he's amassing even more power by expressing the exact
opposite." And I think that's interesting. It does kind of point to the whole, there's no core to
this guy. There's nothing that he has ever really cared about other than positioning himself most
advantageously. And I really do think that that gets at what actually is inside JD Vance.
I mean, a proximity to political power
is the driving force for a lot of people
who get into politics frankly.
Yes, yes, yes.
Yeah, that's it.
Now it's relevant that 2021 was the year Vance
chose to pivot away from Never Trump rhetoric
and lean into the right wing culture war bullshit.
Narya had been founded in 2019.
It had been backed by $100 million from Peter Thiel
as well as funding by Eric Schmidt and Mark Andreessen.
Their investments included Strive Asset Management,
an investment fund started by Vivek Ramashwami,
who was Thiel's classmate at Yale.
Oh, I did not know they were classmates.
Uh-huh, oh yeah.
It's the class the shit fell on.
For two years, he'd been allowed to keep up the fiction of a principled economic conservative
who was horrified by the bigotry and corruption of Trump world.
But by 2021, with Trump out of office and Biden's presidency underway, Teel made it
clear that he needed something else from Vance.
We get our best texture of what Vance believed by late 2021 from Pogue's Vanity Fair piece,
which was written about a neo-reactionary summit in October of 2021.
Vance believes that a well-educated and culturally liberal American elite has greatly
benefited from globalization, the financialization of our economy, and the growing power of big tech.
This has led an Ivy League intellectual and management class, a quasi-aristocracy he calls
the regime, to adopt a set of economic and cultural
interests that directly oppose those of people in places
like Middletown, Ohio, where he grew up.
In the Vanceian view, this class has no stake
in what people on the New Right call the real economy,
the farm and factory jobs that once sustained
middle class life in middle America.
This is a fundamental difference between New Right figures
like Vance and the Reaganite right wingers
of their parents' generation.
To Vance, and he said this, culture war is class warfare. Vance recently told an interviewer,
I gotta be honest with you, I don't really care about what happens to Ukraine. A flick at the
fact that he thinks the American-led global order is as much about enriching defense contractors
and think tank types as it is about defending America's interest. I do care about the fact
that in my community right now, the leading cause of death among 18 to 45 year olds is Mexican fentanyl. His criticisms of
big tech as enemies of Western civilization often get lost in the run of
Republican outrage over Trump being kicked off Twitter and Facebook, although
they go much deeper than this. Vance believes that the regime has sold an
elusive story that consumer gadgets and social media are constantly making our
lives better. Even as wages stagnate and technology feeds an epidemic of
depression. Now he is backed entirely by social media money. Teal is one of the major backers of
Facebook, right? He is supported entirely by the money of the people he claims to hate who he claims
are destroying America. I do find this to be really interesting because it's like a more
conservative right reaction to like right wing neoliberalism, right? It's this is so different.
Even though all these guys like kind of talk about how they're like they're like Reaganites,
right? They're really not.
No, they're going back to a much more 19, like 20s style of conservatism almost.
Yes.
Before like the Southern Split, before like, like New Deal.
And we solidified more of like the Democrats being this liberal party, this more fiscally conservative party on the right. And then that kind of gave way to like Thatcherite
England and the neoliberal takeover of the entire world. It's like they're looking at
how like neoliberalism has been totally subsumed even by like the Democrats and like, you know,
centrist left liberals, and they're reacting to it with this much more socially conservative
backlash.
Yes.
And that is really the entirety of what's happened to the Republican Party the last four years.
And Trump's only a small part of that because even Trump doesn't really care about some of these types of like culture war issues.
No.
That these guys care about. Like these guys are even like further to the right of Trump on like most things in this kind of social vein and like where you're viewing like you said
like a like culture war is class war in terms of like this culture war is like beating down
like the poor white working class.
Yeah, absolutely.
These small town farms aren't the real economy.
They simply are.
The real economy is California and Texas.
These beliefs, there's an element to which they sound compelling because parts of this
are the stuff that everyone on the left has complained about neoliberalism, but like his
solutions are fantasies.
Like for one thing, the people who are backing him are the same kinds of people and often
the same people who were very much gung-ho behind getting rid of American factory jobs
in order to maximize their profits and the consolidation of farmland into these giant
agricultural conglomerates.
Right? Like he abandoned this part of the country because he knows it sucks.
Like, yes, it's not like a pleasant place to live, like a decent life. It's very hard. It's very
difficult. Yeah. And it's in part because the these kind of people who came out of the Reagan era,
like have no use for factory workers or farmers in the United States.
All of that can be consolidated into these vast enterprises that when there are human
workers necessary, we can just grab undocumented people from across the border, right?
Anyway, speaking of grabbing people, these ads will grab you.
Ah, we're back. So by late 2021, Curtis Yarvin is still a major figure in the neo-reactionary movement.
Vance has started quoting him kind of obliquely.
And in fact, during this 2021 National Conservative
Conference that Pogue pivots on, Vance
makes direct reference to something
that Yarvin has written his ideas about,
like, we need this Red Caesar when he says during an interview,
we are in a late Republican period.
If we're going to push back against it,
we're going to have to get pretty wild and pretty far out
there and go in directions that a lot of conservatives right now are uncomfortable with.
And you know, what that means is this late Republican, he's talking about Republican
Rome before Caesar, you know, makes his play for power.
Like that's explicitly what he is comparing it to.
And it's because Jarvin's big thing is we don't want a left or a right wing dictator.
We want a king for the whole country, right?
That's going to represent everybody, which is just not what kings do. It's not what dictators do.
It's so clearly, there's also just like a fascist line of argument, like an actual, like actual,
like, like ideologically fascist. I know people call like, you know, Reagan a fascist, but like,
he's not he's he's a neoliberal neoliberal suck. Yes, these guys are going back like actual like
fascist political
theory that's what moldbug is reading that's what he's writing about and in 2021 vance is saying
this i think trump is going to run again in 2024 i think that what trump should do if i was giving
him one piece of advice fire every single mid-level bureaucrat every civil servant in
the administrative state replace them with our people and when the courts stop you stand before
the country and say the chief justice has made his ruling,
now let him enforce it."
Which he's quoting Andrew Jackson there.
But he's describing like the end of democracy.
A dictatorial takeover.
Right.
And laying out with a plan that is very similar
to Project 2025.
Yes.
Which I know Vance does have
something personal connections to
because a lot of his friends were involved
in the planning of that. Yes.
But you can see Project 2025 and what Vance is saying here, these are all downstream of
what Jarvan's saying in 2012 of this rage acronym, replace all government employees,
right?
Or retire all government employees, you know?
By the way, you will be glad to know that by 2021, Jarvan has stopped openly using the
term dictator.
So that's good.
He just calls it a monarchy a lot now.
Oh, okay. That's good. That's good. He just calls it a monarchy a lot now. Oh, okay, that's good.
That's good.
Now, JD's pivot, which he often credits
with his conversion to Catholicism,
although you can see he's been on this road
for much longer than that,
was perfectly timed for his Senate run in 2022.
Peter Thiel was his biggest donor,
providing 15 million to the super PAC that backed him,
which at the time at least was the largest amount
ever given to boost a Senate candidate.
Yeah, $50 million for a Senate run is crazy.
It's nuts.
JD had been a long shot candidate at first because he's very unlikable, but the teal
money allowed for major ad blitz and the kind of media prep work that only a well-funded
PAC can provide.
His PAC published the data on an open medium page with a username at Protect Ohio Values forms,
which allowed the PAC to send info and advice to Vance without violating federal campaign finance
laws. Vance had been hit early for comments made a few years back negative to Trump,
but he clawed his way back into the MAGA good graces by appearing on Breitbart News, Tucker
Carlson's Fox show, Steve Bannon's War Room podcast, and most of all by positioning to
himself as a violent opponent of immigration from a write-up in Politico.
In February, Thompson, who's the guy running the PAC, posted a memo to the Medium site
arguing that Vance had an opening to zero in on immigration and border security, noting
that he had a personal connection to the issue given his mother's struggles with drug addiction.
The issue was near and dear to the primary voters, the memo argued, and crucially could
help in nabbing Trump's support.
To win a Trump endorsement, a candidate has to show a growing ballot share.
To get that, a candidate has to own a critical issue, the memo read.
JD can do that.
And that's exactly what JD does.
When he takes the stage at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Florida, later
that month, he focuses his speech entirely on immigration.
And when his campaign goes up with its first TV ad,
it shows a direct-to-camera Vance telling viewers
that he nearly lost his mother to poison
coming across our border.
Now, by mid-April, Trump has become convinced
that Vance's past mean remarks were water under the bridge,
and he calls an associate of Peter Thiel to say,
"'Hey, I'm moving closer to endorsing Vance.'"
Thiel, by this point, has also introduced Vance
to David Sacks, who adds another million dollars
to his super PAC's war chest. On April 15th, convinced by Vance's rising poll numbers and
impressive fundraising, Trump makes an official endorsement. This helps pull Vance over the top,
and he ekes out a narrow win in the election that followed.
The next year, Vance repaid the favor, writing a January Wall Street Journal op-ed where he endorses Trump
as a candidate in 2024. This was back, and this is the start of 2023, the Republican primary is just
gearing up and the end of it is in enough doubt. You can remember back then, it sounds silly now,
but people really thought DeSantis had a shot, right? And so he is, Vance is kind of in before
any of the other major Republican figures in backing Trump for his
redux round, right?
Yeah, he's like one of the first to fall in line here.
Yeah, and there's a few people like Sarah Huckabee Sanders had been seen as a potential
Trump VP pick, but she waits months to actually like endorse Trump officially.
So Vance gets in on the ground floor and this impresses Trump that he is someone who he can
count on to be loyal.
Vance wins more praise the next month
when a train carrying hazardous materials derails
in East Palestine, Ohio.
Trump makes a visit to the town
as one of the first stops on his campaign,
and Vance organizes the visit.
And he does apparently a good job of this.
Trump says to his entourage,
this guy is turning out to be fucking incredible.
Now, by this point,
Vance has befriended Trump's oldest son,
Donald Trump Jr., and set
himself to the task of well and truly kissing ass to get on that 2024 ticket. By late January of this
year, Vance and his team had received enough friendly feedback from Trump World that they
decided to invest in a full court press. Vance began showing up on TV networks that Trump
considered enemies, doing a reverse Buttigieg and throwing himself into the enemy camp to take
shots on behalf of the boss.
He also devoted himself to raising money for Trump
from the Silicon Valley VC set.
Most of these guys were Teals friends,
dudes like David Sacks.
What finally put him over the top though
was an article Donald Trump Jr. gave his dad
from Breitbart News about the man then seen
as Trump's most likely VP pick, Doug Burgum, governor of North
Dakota. The article's title was, Carl Rove Endorses Doug Burgum for Vice President. And
I do love that Carl Rove's endorsement is the fucking kiss of death right now for a fucking VP
candidate. Very funny place for his story to have wound up. Not a bad call by Trump, though,
I gotta say. Actually, it is a bad call for Trump,
but also I get it. I read one Politico article that argues this was the final straw for Trump,
that was this Karl Rove article. I can't actually speak to that. It is worth noting that in the
months leading up to the RNC, Trump is also being subjected to a charm campaign by all of Peter
Teal's friends, this huge pile of wealthy Silicon Valley investors.
From the Washington Post, quote,
"'In the weeks before former president Donald Trump
announced his vice presidential pick,
some of tech's biggest names launched a quiet campaign
to push for one of their own, Ohio Senator JD Vance.
The former president fielded repeated calls
from tech entrepreneur David Sacks,
Palantir advisor Jacob Helberg,
and billionaire venture capitalist Peter Thiel,
Vance's former employer and mentor,
employing him to add the one-time Silicon Valley investor
to the ticket, according to three people familiar
with the entreaties.
All caps, we have a former tech VC in the White House,
greatest country on earth, baby.
Delian Ashparov, a partner at Thiel's Founders Fund,
wrote on X after the announcement of Vance's nomination.
Delian Asparov, something like that.
Jesus Christ.
I know, it's fucking exhausting.
But that is, you know, the JD Vance story, more or less.
That's where he comes from,
that's who wants him to be the VP,
it's all of these fucking ghouls
who want to own the world and become,
it's these people who have achieved the highest level of
financial success you can achieve in any society on the earth right now. And they found that it's
kind of empty. And it's kind of empty in part because people can still be mean to you. And
they don't have to care what you believe just because you have a lot of money.
They don't like neoliberal capitalism, because it fundamentally still has a shred of like
a democratic value.
And that makes them too mad.
So instead they are going back to like a much more like archaic system where they can still
maintain their personal wealth while being like very influential through like dictatorial
means.
They're still like fundamentally capitalists,
but almost in a more fascistic feudal sense.
Yes.
They wanna be lords.
Well, that's exactly it.
That's what they really want.
They are terrified of death,
and what they're terrified of more than anything,
what scares them mostly about death is the idea
that all the success they've seen goes away, right?
It's meaningless, it doesn't matter.
Fundamentally, all of this passes.
No one is on top forever.
Nobody is like matters.
No one's gonna care about PayPal in 20 years.
That's the price of time, right?
And they want to stop the clock.
That's fundamentally what near reactionaries are.
They are people who think I am special.
I am super special.
The world should be oriented around recognizing how special I am special. I am super special. The world should be oriented around recognizing
how special I am forever.
And anything I can do to turn back the clock
is necessary, justified.
Like that's what these people are.
That's what they believe fundamentally.
Like imagine being so mad
that no one will remember PayPal in 200 years
that you try to install a fascist takeover
Yes, yes.
Of the United States of America.
So that PayPal always matters.
It's these fucking guys.
Anyway, Garrison, that's the James Donald Vance story.
Not his name.
Is that his name?
No, of course not.
Maybe.
I forget.
I always forget what JD stands for.
Who cares?
Who gives a shit?
Hopefully, he's not going to matter much longer. This is my biggest thing going into November, is that if the Democrats win on their ticket,
that still means plenty of bad things around the world.
But I also really don't want these freaks in there.
I really don't want them.
They're spooky.
They're trying to do this esoteric LARP
in like the White House.
Come on.
And most of the things that need to happen
for the world to get better
can't happen while these people are in power, right?
Or close to power.
Like there needs to be damage done to them.
And I'm hopeful about that if nothing else in this election.
And like electoral damage is only like one type.
They have to be like culturally humiliated.
Like they have to be like culturally like rejected,
being like, no, like you are not actually
the wizards of culture that you kind of want to be.
Like no one likes what you do.
No one likes what you believe.
Like it has to be like this larger,
this larger like cultural battle.
That's why they have like the culture wars.
This is like super important thing.
That's why they're so scared wars, this super important thing.
That's why they're so scared of queer and trans people, especially queer and trans people that are influential, whether they be teachers, whether they be working in media, making movies, television, writing books.
That's why they're so freaked out about that kind of stuff.
That's why they're trying to get out of schools. That's why they're trying to stop woke Disney.
It's because they know that no one's going to want to listen to these freaks when like gay people can make a good art or like
Give a good history lesson. Yeah, that that's like there's that's like the strongest like anecdote to these like just really
Really bizarre like esoteric ramblings about wanting to go back to like 1910 like race science and just weird weird shit
Yeah, you know
I think that these guys delved too deep
and too greedily if we're going to continue
the Lord of the Rings references,
which by God, they're not gonna let us stop doing.
So, and I think that there was this thing we used to,
I used to talk about a lot when I tried to explain
like far right terminology to people back in 2019, 2018.
Five decades ago.
A thousand years ago. That's my Elrond moment. I was there Garr ago. A thousand years ago.
That's my Elrond moment.
I was there, Garrison, a thousand years ago.
We've talked about like the term hide your power level,
right, which these Nazis used to use.
And they've just completely given up on that.
And the thing that they are seeing,
there was like all this,
I was reading that 2022 article by Pogue,
which I think is a really important snapshot,
because it's these people about to head into 2024.
And they they know before the dims do how badly down Biden is, right?
The Democrats have not really taking seriously what a dangerous position Joe Biden was going
to be in for reelection yet.
But they also think that, like, wow, all these young people are showing up at our lame
parties. That means there's a broader sweep.
All young people are becoming closer to reactionaries.
They're becoming all weird treadcaps, suddenly.
Yeah, we're capturing the culture.
And that's just absolutely not what was happening.
And it would have been obvious if they had been capable
of actually listening to people.
But what we're seeing now is,
they did the most dangerous thing you could do is
they predicted and understood one thing about the future, but nothing else.
Right.
And so they, they understood the weakness that Joe Biden represented and kind of
the weakness of his control over the democratic party, but they did not
understand that like other things are possible, right.
And including the fact that like Joe Biden
and largely the other people who were running
the Democratic Party might come to understand
that weakness too.
And after a disastrous debate and a shooting go,
you know what, let's change course.
And I really think that that above all else
might be what fucks them is they completely came out
of the woodwork, they were tired of having to pretend they didn't want a king
They thought their time had come and perhaps it has not we'll still we'll all see we'll all see well
I'm super excited to hear what kind of just unhinged and bizarre things Tim Walls has done
Yeah, and in the next tale. Yeah, I'm just going to accuse him of having been the Zodiac Killer.
That's worked on a couple of guys.
It seems to work actually.
Yeah, so we're just gonna do that, call it a night.
Anyway, this has been JD Vance.
We've been, it could happen here.
Go to hell, I love you.
Clean your couch.
Clean your couch.
Shit, I need to do that. ["I'm Not a Man"]
Hi, I'm Molly Conger, host of Weird Little Guys, a new podcast from Cool Zone Media
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The monsters in our political closets aren't some unfathomable evil.
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And you can laugh.
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Seeing these guys for what they are
doesn't mean they're not a threat.
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So join me every Thursday for a look under the mask
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Welcome back to it Could Happen Here, a podcast about Tim Walls.
And in this episode, Garrison and I are going balls to the walls.
Are you happy with that, Garrison?
What's skivvity-ing your Biden?
What does that even mean?
All right, let's get going. Some fucking Jin Z Z bullshit garrison because I won't take part in it
Yeah, I'm excited to hear about how walls is either great or terrible or probably a mix of both
Yeah, he's I mean, he's a politician. Yeah, pretty successful one
So it's definitely got to be a mix of both. For JD Vance, I figured the most relevant thing to do
is to talk about like, what does he actually believe
and where does he come from in the right?
Because people had gotten pieces of that,
but I feel like unless you put it all together,
it's not as useful.
So I hope we did that.
With Walls, he's not a guy where there's anything sinister
for you to know.
So I think the useful thing is kind of going through
his whole political biography and just kind of talk about
like, what has this guy done in his public life, right?
That's kind of what I wanted to do here
so that people actually know, you know,
whether or not you are making your mind up
about whether or not to vote,
you're voting for harm reduction, you're anti-electoral.
Here's this guy who may or may not wind up
being the vice president
And here's what he's actually done in the past when he's had any kind of power
It's worth noting that kind of at this point here walls is maybe the most popular
Politician at his level in the country. This has happened very suddenly
But he's got something like a plus 16 net favorability among moderates, which is insane. Yeah, that's a lot
Yeah, it's it's wild as someone who's looked at a lot of the favorability ratings moderates, which is insane. Yeah, that's a lot. Yeah, it's wild.
As someone who's looked at a lot of the favorability ratings
the past six months, that is astonishingly high.
Especially compared to where we were like two months ago
with Skibbity Biden, which was-
Yeah, very low.
Quite dire.
He's incredibly popular with the normies
because basically everyone in the country
has positive memories of a guy like Tim Walz.
Like whether it was like your favorite
social studies teacher or your dad,
there is like a kind of rotund, balding,
very mechanically capable man,
probably somewhere in your life
that you have fond memories of,
and Walz dredges those up.
We are a very Freudian country.
Yes, yes.
For an idea of how like rapidly people have gone from not really knowing who this guy is to loving him on
August 8th a you gov survey showed him with a net favorability rating of plus 11
Which was up from plus one in a survey conducted in late July amazing in the same time frame
JD Vance has seen his approval rating steadily drop. Yeah, isn't he like at like negative points? Oh, yes
Yes ratings steadily drop. Yeah, isn't he like at like negative points? Oh, yes, yes, yes.
By any stretch of the imagination at negative points.
And if you're just kind of looking at Tim's life,
which we're not really getting into because we have limited
time here and it's not the most important thing I thought
we could be talking about, but he has a long history
of doing decent things in his personal life.
Kind of most notably in the early 90s, like 93, 94,
he sponsored the Gay and Lesbian Alliance
at his high school.
And his reasoning was that, you know,
he was a soldier in the National Guard
and the football coach at that point.
And he decided, you know,
him sponsoring the club in particular
would have the biggest impact.
And I honestly, I think that's the kind of thing
that might've saved lives.
Yep.
Good thing to have done.
Anyway, this isn't an episode about his life and background.
We're not gonna litigate.
We're not gonna waste any time litigating the attacks on his military career,
which seemed to confusingly say that after extending his time in the guard
by four years to participate in operation during freedom,
he owed his soldiers staying on even longer to fight in Iraq.
I could make the point that no grunt in any U.S.
war ever found themselves in the shit and said, boy,
I wish the command sergeant major was here.
But given that JD Vance was played onto stage at the RNC
to a song with the refrain,
we gotta get out of Iraq and take our country back,
I just don't think these attacks
are worth acknowledging at all, right?
The right has already acknowledged
that was a stupid war to fight in.
Walls decided not to fight in it, good for him.
Now, when it comes to the current war
that is on everyone's minds,
or one of the wars that's on everyone's minds, Walls is fine on Ukraine. But when it comes to the current war that is on everyone's minds, or one of the wars that's on everyone's minds,
Walls is fine on Ukraine.
But when it comes to the war that he's not fine on,
the genocide in Gaza,
Walls is in no way that I can find really better
than Kamala Harris,
but he did take a stand against the Iraq war
back when that mattered,
which is, I guess, a little bit of a point,
but again, doesn't really matter today.
And in any case, we're far afield from the subject,
which is what has Tim done in politics?
So Tim's political career, he came late in life to that.
He was a social studies teacher for a couple of decades.
He was a coach.
He lived in Nebraska, then moved to Minnesota.
And in 2006, after retiring from the guard,
he was elected to Minnesota's first congressional district.
Now this was a tough campaign.
His opponent in this race
was a six term Republican incumbent, Gil Goodnecht.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, Goodnecht?
Goodnecht.
I'm guessing his family were knights
and it used to be like good night or something like that,
like G-U-T-K-N-E-C-H-T.
But I don't know enough about ancient German
to tell you if that's really where his last name came from.
Yeah, yeah.
But Walls came in, he kind of goes against this guy
who had promised not to run for another term
and then decided actually I don't wanna give up power.
Not a thing that's ever happened again.
And Walls kind of came in both when this guy
had violated his promise to not run again
and near the peak of disillusionment
and exhaustion with neocons, right?
This is kind of the twilight of the Bush years.
Even conservative Americans are pretty fucking tired
of the Republican party right this second.
And Walls exhibited a notable ability to connect
with rural Americans who mostly voted red.
He did so with basically no funding
or larger national operation behind him.
From a write-up in the New York Times,
he had no money, no nothing,
said Representative Betty McCollum of Minnesota,
who that cycle worked on House Democrats' recruitment team
under their campaign chief, Rahm Emanuel.
He had a grassroots campaign that he had put together
that I just knew was going to be Dynonite.
So I went back and I told Rahm Emanuel,
this guy's going to win, he's great.
And Rahm looked at me like I was crazy. Walls was a dark horse candidate and would claim
around that time that his whole inspiration for getting into politics was when he tried to take
two students to a rally for President George Bush and they were kicked out because one student had
a John Kerry button. Now I found a blog by the Republican staffer who kicked them out
where he admits
he made a dumb call. He was kind of trying to be a dick. He had seen Walls out protesting
against Bush like the day before, and he knew he was going to kick them out of the rally,
but he made them stand in line for a long time before he kicked them out. And he was
like, I shouldn't have done that. But his angle was that Walls wanted to get denied
and kicked out so that he could make a big deal about it
and use it as a line on the campaign trail.
That's probably what happened.
Regardless, this is a very funny little domino
leading to Big Domino.
Everyone likes Walls who tends to meet him.
Joe Biden, for the last like year or two,
has seems been trying to get him to do more events
with Walls just because he put Biden in a good mood.
I think that's a big reason why Kamala picked him.
He just seems to be a very likable guy,
but he's very okay with lying to get what he needs.
I mean, he's a politician.
He's a politician.
Another good example of this would be his DUI, right?
When he was 31, he got a DUI,
and he has at times claimed basically that's why I decided
to like, I stopped drinking, I changed my life, I moved,
you know, I got my shit together
But his campaign manager made a statement recently. Oh, he wasn't drunk. He just couldn't hear the cop I don't know who to trust politician or cop in this case
But the cops attitude is like well, I would be fine if he had just like fixed his shit up
But he definitely was drunk and I don't have any trouble believing that a man in rural
Nebraska a football coach in rural Nebraska drove drunk
once, right?
No, that is not the most surprising thing in the world.
So I think he's a guy who's certainly, he's not naive political actor, right?
He's not one of these guys who's so good and pure that he's not willing to like fudge in
order to make shit work for him.
And that's probably what he did at this Bush event, right?
Now that said, it would be hard to overstate
what a difficult task he picked for himself
and trying to unseat Gutnacht.
At the time that Walls ran,
Minnesota's first district had been held
by one other Democrat in the last hundred years.
So he was the second Democrat in a century
to win in that district.
And as soon as he left, by the way,
a Republican took back over.
During his six terms in Congress,
he was one of the more interesting legislators
in the country.
Walls was a risk taker,
supporting liberal votes on major issues
even when he was politically vulnerable.
He opposed Republican legislation
to make doctors vulnerable to criminal penalties
for performing abortions.
He supported a climate cap and trade bill
on greenhouse gas emissions that failed.
And this really pissed some folks off,
he supported the Affordable Care Act.
And kind of one of the more notable things about him is there's stories of when he was
running for reelection, he would do town halls in southern Minnesota and he would get attacked
by these red voters who had supported him early on for backing the Affordable Care Act.
And rather than backing off, he would lean into it and argue with them and try to convince them.
And his numbers with conservative rural Republicans
got worse and worse every cycle basically.
So you could argue how good he was,
but it is worth something to me that he didn't back off.
He didn't do the,
well, this might fuck up my chances of reelection.
He's never really been that kind of guy.
There's things that he believes
and he will just kind of like
jam his flag into the mud over them.
That said, Tim was a pragmatist.
He voted for a resolution calling for the withdrawal
of U.S. forces from Iraq within 90 days.
But when that failed, he voted in favor of continuing funding
for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Tim also received an A from the NRA during much of his time in office,
voting against gun control based on what seemed to be
a natural inclination to firearms and hunting.
Walls may have been the best shot
in the Minnesota National Guard
during the time when he was there.
He's apparently a very good shot.
He is an avid and skilled turkey hunter.
And if you talk to people who want game in the US,
turkey is one of the more difficult game to hunt.
He developed a reputation as a guy who wouldn't apologize for voting with liberals, but who
would go across the aisle when it mattered.
During his time on the Veterans Affairs Committee, which he ultimately chaired, he voted with
Republicans to make it easier for the VA to fire employees even with union opposition,
and he also pushed through changes to improve GI Bill college access for veterans
post 9-11.
One of the things I find interesting about his record is that in 2018, he voted against
most of his party, opposing an overhaul of the VA's healthcare system.
He agreed, everyone agrees, that the system needed to be overhauled, but he argued the
proposal in place would force the VA to cannibalize itself, basically starving the organization
to try and fix it, and his attitude was, while it needs to get fixed, I'm not going to vote
for a change that might be worse than what we currently have.
While chairing this committee, Walls made strong connections to Nancy Pelosi, who, like
basically everyone, really came to like Walls, and she's going to be one of the people who's
one of the strongest voices for picking him as VP.
And we will be back to talk about more of that.
But first Garrison, you know who else loves Nancy Pelosi?
Probably these products and services
if they come from San Francisco.
If they're based in the Bay area,
she will break their kneecaps
if they don't like her enough.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Ah, and we're back.
So, one of the big shifts for Tim during his time in Congress was away from the NRA.
This started after, in 2017, after the Las Vegas mass shooting and then after the Parkland
mass shooting.
And then in February of 2018, he writes an op-ed supporting what he calls
common sense gun reform and donates the NRA contributions
to his campaign that cycle to some sort of,
I think, gun control cause.
Walls' common sense gun regulations
include an assault weapons ban,
and he is currently in line with the Democratic Party
on that, if you were curious.
That same year, 2018, he launched his campaign
for governor of Minnesota.
By this point, Walls had bled much of his ability
to win rural red votes.
It is accurate to say he was only really good at this
during his early years in Congress.
His margins grew a lot narrower over time.
And once he hit the governor's office,
his support was largely in the cities.
Now, it's one of those things where I think
there's been debate, like some people have argued,
well, he's maybe not the best VP pick because he actually isn't all that good at getting these red rural votes.
But I just don't see that as where the election's coming down to.
Walz has great favorables with like suburban white people and particularly suburban like moderates.
And that is like one of the most important demographics to win. So I don't believe the fact that he's kind of bled his support with rural conservatives
is really necessarily a mark against him in an electoral sense.
One thing I do appreciate about Walls is how direct he is to people I dislike.
He decides in 2018 to run for governor and during that run he has a meeting with a bunch
of business leaders at a luxury hotel.
The president of a machining company asks
if Walls felt corporate taxes hurt workers.
And Walls replied,
we're not taxing people,
we're taxing corporations.
And I wanna quote from a CNBC write-up.
For Jeff Baker,
it was a bit of a no shit moment.
That's not what I wanted to hear, said Baker,
president of McFarland Truck Lines.
There's a lot of stories like that.
He's been very willing to tax the wealthy
and to tax corporations to pay for things
like children's lunches.
This is a consistent Walls move
and it's something that he absolutely is unapologetic about
and I think that's fine.
Minnesota currently taxes corporate income at 9.8%,
the highest rate in the nation.
Walls did not back down on this during his time in office.
In fact, that CNBC report found that,
Walls' policy battles have a common theme.
Walls supported either higher taxes on the rich
or businesses and corporate leaders fought back.
One of their fights was over a 1% surtax
on passive investment income over a million dollars.
Another was a tax on the wealthy Walls signed into law that limits standard and itemized
deductions for households with gross incomes over $220,000.
Due to Republican control of the legislature, Walls's first term was not hugely eventful
up until the COVID-19 pandemic.
This is because Republicans retained control of the state legislature and were able to
stop much of his planned reform.
We did get to see more of the politician Tim Walz during COVID, when he stood up against
Republican resistance for common sense pandemic safety regulations.
He earned a lot of hate from the right for some of the more extreme COVID restrictions
in the country, which were put in place in Minnesota.
In particular, Walz threatened citizens with up to 90 days in jail during the shelter in
place period and threatened $25,000 fines
for meeting in public.
Minnesota instituted a COVID hotline where people could inform on their neighbors if
they saw rules being broken.
And I get why the right is uncomfortable with this.
I'm not fully comfortable with this kind of stuff either, but given what was going on
at the time, I'm not going to slam the man for trying to save lives in a very uncertain
and desperate situation.
It beats the nothing that a lot of state governors did.
So I guess that's kind of where I stand on that shit.
Not long after the pandemic lockdown started, George Floyd was murdered in Minneapolis.
Walls mobilized the National Guard after three days of riots, earning praise from President
Trump on June 1st, who said said what they did in Minneapolis was incredible.
They went in and dominated and it happened quickly.
And this is, you know, the National Guard do a lot of very violent shit coming into
crackdown on these protests.
I know a lot of people who were the ones cracked down upon.
It's one of those things where, yeah, he's a governor.
You know, I think pretty much any governor in this situation would have sent in the National Guard
in that sort of situation.
Especially after the burning of the third precinct.
Especially after the precinct got burnt,
which doesn't excuse it.
It's just like, well, yeah, he's not an anarchist, right?
Like, he's not your communist revolutionary hero.
He is the governor of Minnesota.
I'm just really not surprised that this happened.
It's a pretty normal thing
for a guy in his position to have done.
Yeah.
Now, like every other dim in creation,
during the height of the uprising,
Walls voiced support for a wide host
of police accountability reforms.
He even voiced some degree of support
for ending qualified immunity.
But this did not last long.
And as the backlash against police reform swelled up after the election, Walls joined many of them and pulling back and even
quashing moves for greater police accountability. When he ran for reelection, he did so as a tough
on crime law enforcement friendly Democrat, right? Many such cases. Now he did push through some
accountability measures. He used 15 million in COVID funds
to pay for grants for community violence prevention.
He pushed through some requirements to increase data sharing
from the police licensing board.
He pushed through a demand for state law enforcement
to share footage of police killings
with the family of the victim within five days.
These are, I think we can all say,
minor accountability moves.
Very, very, very minor.
Very minor.
He said of these moves,
they build trust in police,
they build trust in the systems,
they build trust among communities,
and they provide the community with some basic closure
and understanding for families.
Nothing builds trust like a video
of your cousin getting shot in the back.
Yeah, I think the biggest accountability thing
is that you get first look at the murder video.
I don't know, man. I don't like yes, I do think you probably have to legislate that because
otherwise police just won't give it up at all. But like, yeah, I wouldn't hang my hat on that.
It's it's it is ignoring the main issue at play. Yeah, which is the fact that we have murder.
Right. Right. It's like, come on.
Now, there were some bigger reforms, including limitations on no-knock warrants, although
again not like a ban or anything, but it lacked a lot of the stuff that activists in the state
had pushed for, including limits on police stops of motorists, and Walls had agreed that
there needs to be more movement in this direction, particularly after the murder of Philando
Castile. It also left out and asked for end to the statute
of limitations for wrongful death cases against officers.
Walls had personally voiced support for a ban on officers
with white supremacist gang affiliations,
but this was also left out ultimately.
State Rep John Thompson said to Walls at the time,
you have the power to do something,
and all I've been getting from your office is lip service.
And I mean that.
We don't need a news conference from you, governor.
We need a leader.
So you're not gonna get a lot of police reform
under Tim Walls.
That's just a pretty consistent reality of the guy.
That said, he can be forced to do some things
if you scare him enough.
So, you know, keep that in mind, I guess.
First, keep in mind these ads,
and then we'll talk about the environment and stuff,
which is a happier story for Walls.
We're back!
So Walls ran for re-election under the slogan,
One Minnesota, and he managed another solid victory.
Up to this point, you would say he'd been
a pretty standard dim governor in a swing state,
but something happened in the 2022 midterms
that changed the course of Walls' career
in maybe the nation.
The Democrats won a slim majority in the state legislature.
As David Schultz, a political science professor
at Hamlin University told CNN,
Walls' message immediately jerked away from One Minnesota to
damn the torpedoes and fuck the Republicans.
Quote, that agenda included codified protections for abortion access,
restored voting rights for felons who've completed their sentences,
driver's licenses for people regardless of their legal status,
a state child tax credit, free public college for families making less than 80,000 annually,
protections for gender affirming care,
a paid family and medical leave program.
Walls signed legislation to move the state
towards achieving 100% clean energy by 2040
and to establish a universal free school meal program
that provides breakfast and lunch.
And that is a real solid spade of shit
for a governor to get done.
And all of this is about in a year, right?
Like most of the shit that Walls has gotten done as governor has been very recently,
because the DIMMs had just taken back control, right?
And it's very narrow control.
Amy Koch, a Republican and former Minnesota Senate majority leader said Walls definitely
had not governed like a moderate and unlike other governors with trifecta control,
had not emphasized in making deals with
Republicans everything that went forward with science
She said I'm not sure what that says about him
But it definitely puts a dent in his argument that he's just this moderate Democrat from the Midwest and this is why
Progressives many of them are excited about walls is that when he actually had the opportunity
He was willing to say fuck the Republicans. Let's get some shit done. I don't care that we only have one vote, right?
Yeah.
Now, Walls has stated that in his opinion, political capital exists to be spent improving
people's lives. And this is an area where you can say that he's put his money where
his mouth is, right? This is how he actually governed. Now, it's worth noting, obviously,
he also promised to burn political capital on major
police reform, and he gave that up.
So you know, the fact that he says he's going to do something like any politician, not a
guarantee it's going to happen.
Well, and some of the more of kind of upsetting things, but not surprising things is now that
Kamala has basically secured the nomination.
She has rolled back many of the progressive policies that she ran on in 2020 when those
seem to be more popular.
Right.
You know, that's not necessarily walls. That is that that's combo.
But they're running on the same ticket.
And again, like it's not surprising that she's not advocating for Medicare
for all now that she is the actual nominee.
Right. But it still is, you know, disappointing for people who are like,
hey, her actual policies four years ago were actually relatively progressive.
Yeah. And now they are slightly more kind of in line with like
the mainstream Democratic Party views on you know
Most of these issues right and again one of the reasons maybe for a little bit of hope is that?
Walls has not really been that guy during his time with executive power right and kind of the area where he's been best
Maybe actually is climate change right this is the thing dim seem to like to compromise on the most
And Tim's history here is interesting to me particularly
because he doesn't have a perfect record,
but it's genuinely pretty positive.
His major achievement was a policy passed in 2023
that required Minnesota to have a carbon-free electric grid
by 2040.
Now this is the kind of legislation
that could just be virtue signaling,
but Walls didn't just say,
yep, we'll get it done by 2040
when I won't be the governor anymore.
He backed it up by approving a historic amount
of state spending on energy.
The legislation included rebates
on climate friendly technology like air source heat pumps
and electric vehicles, as well as spending
to improve home insulation and a hundred million dollars
for city extreme weather preparedness.
Walls also signed a bill to cut red tape
for wind and solar farms and transmission lines
and the speed up permitting for infrastructure
needed to replace coal and gas plants.
So it was not just a, yeah, we'll definitely do this.
It was a, well, there's certain things that need to happen
for this to be possible.
And I am going to work to make it easier to do those things.
I'm going to make sure that we're passing legislation
that makes it easier to do those things.
And that shows me someone who sees this as important
as not just a thing that's virtue signaling,
but as we need to figure out
what the actual concrete steps are to make this doable.
And that's something that gives me a little bit of hope.
The more questionable side of his environmental history
is the Inbridge Line 3 pipeline,
which he and state regulators approved in 2020.
This angered a lot of local environmental groups and several
indigenous tribes in the area.
The pipeline was argued to be necessary because the old one was
corroding and a spill risk.
And of course, when the new pipeline was constructed, workers
punctured multiple aquifers.
This seems to have been a case of Walls being the politician that he is.
Trade unions supported the project because jobs.
And it's also worth noting this is 2020, So the DIMMs do not have a majority in the legislature and there's just a lot less of a stick available to Walls at this point.
So, you know, maybe he would have ruled differently or maybe he would have acted differently,
you know, had he been in a more friendly situation.
Yeah, I reported on this back in 2021. Yeah, we did a two part series on stop line three,
where I traveled to the pipeline. Yeah, like it's not it's not surprising, especially with
pressure from trade unions to to approve this pipeline. From what I've seen, he did not
have much to do with the police crackdown on protesters. I've seen that alleged, and
I'm not finding much to back that up. There's a lot of like county sheriffs and other task forces working directly with the
pipeline company.
Like, you know, Walls never used National Guard against these people.
I don't see much from him being personally involved in suppressing these protests beyond
the fact that he's the governor.
Like he's the top guy in charge.
He could shut that all down if but he also doesn't need to be like actively involved for that to happen. Right. Police will do it themselves. Right. And that seems to be
mostly what, what took place. Yeah, that seems fair to say. And most of the extreme charges that
stop line three protesters were getting like a felony theft for locking down onto construction
equipment, mostly have since all been dismissed in the courts or at least taken
down to a lower more appropriate charge.
Yeah.
So again, like with everything about this guy, he's not perfect.
He's not without some fucked up things in his background.
He's a politician.
But on balance, a better history on environmental stuff than most governors in the country.
I should also note here under walls, Minnesota passed the nation's most comprehensive ban
on PFAS chemicals, a category of industrial compounds
that do not break down and run off
and have been associated with a bunch of cancers
and other health risks.
It is a ban that rolls out over an eight year timeframe.
So, you know, maybe it's not like,
who knows how well it will actually get executed,
but literally no other state has passed a ban this strong. So I'm putting it in the ups for walls category. Now that
is kind of what I had to say. I did want to end talking a little bit more about Palestine
because again, walls has a very mixed record here at best. While he was in the house, he
received a PACS endorsement and spoke at the group's 2010 conference where he said this, Israel is our truest
and closest ally in the region with a commitment
to values of personal freedoms and liberties
surrounded by a pretty tough neighborhood.
You know, I might quibble with most of that.
Well, except for with our closest ally in the region,
that's kind of hard to argue with.
After October 7th, he ordered state flags flown
at half staff and condemned the Hamas attacks.
In early March, he began endorsing calls
for a permanent working ceasefire.
A few days after Harris called for a six week ceasefire,
he's made statements about how the uncommitted protesters
should be listened to.
Same thing about college protesters,
but he's not backing an embargo, right?
He's not pushing any kind of stick
to actually force Netanyahu's hand in any way.
You would not say he's the worst Democrat on Gaza,
but he's not particularly good either.
He didn't lie about volunteering with the IDF as a teenager.
He did not lie about volunteering with the IDF as a teenager.
That's one thing we can say.
But unfortunately, the bar is quite low these days.
Yeah, so, you know, that's Tim Walz, a political biography.
I hope you now can walk away being like,
okay, that's more or less who Tim Walz is.
I do feel it's important to end with one more kind of anecdote
about Tim Walz that I learned this morning.
Okay. Is that on, I believe, his first date with his with his soon to be wife
when he was teaching geography, he took her to see the movie
Falling Down, the 1993 Michael Douglas masterpiece.
Incredibly based.
Which I feel like every single politician should be forced to watch.
I would make it a mandatory part of graduation.
You know, that was an important movie for me.
It is a pretty funny first date movie.
It's not the worst.
You know, it's not like American Psycho, which is also a great movie.
But you know, it is a curious first pick.
But I think it is important that whoever is sitting in the White House
is familiar with falling down
as it kind of displays American male violence.
It predicted a kind of guy who was just starting
to like creep up into public consciousness
when the movie came out
and who now commits a mass shooting every four weeks.
Yeah.
So I think that is a very funny anecdote.
Watch Falling Down, folks.
It's a great date movie.
Maybe double pair it with Event Horizon
and really, really get some action.
Jesus Christ.
All right, Gary, that's the end of the episode.
How you feeling?
Pretty good, pretty good, honestly.
Well, not great.
Actually, the whole situation politically in the country
is kind of a nightmare. It's fine, it's fine fine somehow i feel slightly better than i did two months ago i'm going to
tell you this is the best it's been in a while and maybe maybe the best it'll ever be again
which also just points to how low the bar is at the moment yeah yeah it's fine look best case scenario
Look, best case scenario, Matt Walsh is- Is mad.
Is a little further than mad.
We'll see, we'll see if we can get like a welfare check
over at his house.
Anyway, that's the end of the episode.
Good night and good luck.
Carl Walsh. Hi, I'm Molly Conger, host of Weird Little Guys, a new podcast from Cool Zone Media on
iHeartRadio.
I've spent almost a decade researching
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the Supreme Court, to the Satanist soldier who tried to get his own unit blown up in Turkey.
The monsters in our political closets aren't some unfathomable evil.
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Seeing these guys for what they are doesn't mean they're not a threat.
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So join me every Thursday for a look under the mask
at the Weird Little Guys Trying to Destroy America.
Listen to Weird Little Guys on the iHeartRadio app,
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Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio and Realm.
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podcasts.
Welcome to Cheaters and Backstabbers.
I'm Shadi Diaz.
And I'm Kate Robards.
And we are New York City stand-up comedians and best friends.
And we love a good cheating and backstabbing story.
So this is a series where our guests reveal their most shocking cheating stories.
Join us as we learn how to avoid getting our hearts broken or our backs slashed.
Listen to Cheaters and Backstabbers on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts.
In the last few weeks, indeed the last few months, the eyes of the world have been on the atrocities inflicted on the people of Palestine on a daily basis. For the first time in most of our lifetimes, tens of thousands of
people have taken to the streets to lift their voices for the stateless nation of Palestine,
and against Israel's unchecked mass murder of civilians. It's something I never thought I
would see in the US. On one of my first visits here, I was staying at a bed and breakfast in
the Bronx in late December. It was cold and I was wearing a kaffir to stay warm, as I still often do.
I remember wearing it while I was talking to some old guys while I was waiting for the
train and we talked about Palestine for a long time. I ended up giving one of them my
kaffir and he gave me some cool badges I still have on a jacket somewhere. I was hopeful
after that. But since then I've lived here for more than a decade. It was really not for about 15 years that I saw someone else
in the US without a direct connection to Palestine who wanted to show up for the Palestinians.
It's an important cause and it's one that we've been supporting here on our podcast
with our coverage and speaking for myself also with my presence when I can.
But as the world looks at Gaza, bombs also fell on Kurdistan.
It's equally hard, if not harder, to find solidarity for the Kurdish freedom movement
in the United States. I have a Kurdish kefir as well. A Kurdish migrant that I met in the
mountains gave it to me on one cold night last year after I said good evening to him in Kumanshi.
It stinks of campfires and cigarettes and I wear it all the time.
I don't think anyone has ever recognised it, Lelone said anything positive about it.
But someone did once ask me if it was a rasta thing.
So while our eyes have been on Gaza, those of Turkish drones and warplanes have been on the mountains of southern Kurdistan. Bombs have been going off in Kurdistan for a very long time.
Indeed, before Gernika, Britain was dropping bombs on people in the Middle East without paintings to commemorate it.
State boundaries and alliances have changed a lot since those first bombs, as has technology,
but the fact that death from above has remained a consistent tool of the colonial state hasn't changed.
When I was in Kurdistan in October of
2023, it was amidst almost constant drone strikes. I had to conduct my interviews in a climate of
secrecy and concern, somewhat for my own safety but also for the safety of my interviewees,
who took great and serious personal risks to come and meet me. One of the people I met was Zagros Yua, a spokesman for the Kurdistan Communities
Union, or in Kurdish, Komis Yivakyn Kuristani. It's generally known as the KCK by its Kurdish
initials. Recently I connected with Zagros again and I asked him to explain this latest round of
aggression. Hello dear James, I hope you're doing well. As far as your first question is concerned, I can say that this operation has started
from 16th of April, six days before Erdogan's visit to Baghdad.
And in the last weeks, the Turkish army has extended these operations and this invading army has moved further deep into the Iraqi territory
and the Kurdistan region.
Now they have set up checkpoints, they stop civilians, they interrogate them.
According to CPT report, CPT stands for Community Peacemaking Teams. It is a civil society
organization active in Iraq and Kurdistan region of Iraq. According to
CPT report in the last months there has been 238 bombardments in those areas.
And the 2000 hectares of agricultural land have been burned to ashes.
And now 602 villages are under the threat of displacement.
And 162 of them have already been displaced they have been
raised to earth. From the start of this year according to CPT data 1,700 attacks
have been have been done and this comes against the backdrop of attacks in 2023, where 1548 bombardments have taken place.
If you're not familiar with the KCK on whose behalf Zagros is speaking, you can think of
it as the umbrella group that unites the various Kurdish freedom movements in Bakur, North,
Bashur or South, Rojava or West and Rohelat, or East, to use the Kurdish terms.
These parts of the Kurdish homeland are found in different states.
Respectively, they are in Turkey, Iraq, Syria, and Iran.
In each of these states, Kurdish people represent a minority.
Under the Assad regime in Syria, Syrian Kurds were stripped of their citizenship
and forced out of their homes in what is known as the Arab Belt Programme. In Turkey, they've been
bombed, banned from speaking their language and even had their very existence denied by the state.
In Iran, tens of thousands of Kurds were killed when they rose up for autonomy in 1979 and they
still cannot teach their children in their own language. In Iraq, they
were subjected to genocidal violence, chemical weapons and the murder and forced Arabization
of tens of thousands of Kurds during what is known as the Anfal. If you ever find yourself
in Sulaymaniyah, or Sulaymani as it's known in Kurdish, you can visit the incredible museum
there which documents the tortured history of the Kurdish people at the hands of the
Iraqi state. It's a very moving place. On entering the museum, you'll walk through
a hallway that's covered from floor to ceiling with broken pieces of mirrors. Each represents
a life cut short during the Anfal. After this entrance, the first exhibit you'll see has
a large sign that says, in those days we had no friends but the mountains.
It's an old and sometimes overused aphorism about the Kurds,
but it's not untrue.
In the mountains of Southern Kurdistan,
the Kurdistan Freedom Movement aims to liberate
the Kurdish people from all four states
and indeed from the state altogether.
And it's in these mountains that it's found a place
where it could avoid state violence.
The mountains of Kurdistan have long provided a safe place.
And especially in recent years, the mountains of Iraqi Kurdistan, controlled by Ba'fet
Talibani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, which shares power in the Kurdistan Autonomous
Region of Iraq with the Kurdistan Democratic Party, headed by Masoud Barzani.
The Kurdish Freedom Movement,
that is the KCK, has been able to exist largely without the state. This, of course, has always
been unpopular in Ankara and indeed in Baghdad. A recent offensive by Turkey seeked not only to
displace the PKK, that's the Kurdistan Workers Party, which is part of the KCK, and its allies
from the mountains, but also to extend their
state control there. Now, I could go on a fun a diversion about James C. Scott here,
but that's another episode that I'm working on, so I'll spare you. Instead, I asked
Mohammed Hammesila, a Kurdish historian, to explain the impact of this latest round of
aggression and how local people felt about it. People here in Sulaymaniyah or in the PUK controlled area, or even in Kudusan, all
South South Kudusan, have sympathy with PKK, have sympathy with Rojava, with Rebecca, have they see that they are really a struggle against an enemy, when to invade the Hukulistan,
when to move the Hukulistan, want to go to the Hukulistan. In my point of view, it's not that
the case of PKK of Rojava. And they have the same issue on the same standards
with Rojava, with the Epoca,
with the Syrian part of the standard.
So people here, especially in Guilinan,
or most of the people control,
I think that all folks are proud of the struggle of Rojava, of the struggle of Yempeke, and
they did very hard issues for their people, and they have actually very concrete programs
for the future.
Turkey, however, seeing the existence of the movement as a threat to its national security,
has begun a campaign to eliminate the movement wherever it finds it.
As Mahabad mentioned, the history of the Kurdish people in Turkey is one that's riddled with state
violence, and it's that which I want to discuss today. Turkey has long vacillated between a
genocidal denial of the existence of Kurdish people, recognising that they exist only insofar as it allows them to be targets
for bombing. We could really start this history almost anywhere in the 20th century. Indeed,
following a series of suppressed rebellions, the entirety of northern Kurdistan was closed
military area in which Turkey did not allow foreigners from 1925 to 1965.
But I want to start it just after a coup in 1980 when Abdullah Ocalan had recently founded
the PKK and was beginning to view a vision of Kurdish liberation that was rooted in a
Marxist-Leninist and socialist analysis and ideas of national liberation.
Soon after the 1980 coup, Turkey began to refer to the Kurds as mountain Turks, and although it doesn't do this as much anymore,
it did recently release school books in Diyarbakir, a majority Kurdish region, that made no reference
to the Kurds or their language and asserted that people there spoke a dialect of Turkish.
It's this denial of their very existence, Zagros told me, that made the Kurdish freedom
guerrillas take up arms in 1984, which is actually 40 years ago yesterday, if you're
listening to this on the day it comes out.
But after the military coup of 1980 and the inhumane tortures in the notorious prison of the Yarmoukheh Amat city. The movement embarked on a strategy
of legitimate self-defense and waged a military struggle against the Turkish state starting
from 15 August 1984.
Since then, there have been periods of ceasefire and periods of conflict, with tens of thousands of lives lost. Both sides have killed civilians as part of their attacks on the other. The
most recent ceasefire was signed in 2013, and as a result the PKK began slowly withdrawing
to the mountains of Iraqi Kurdistan. In 2015, when the Syrian Kurdish, YPG and YPGA fighters
were leading the battle against ISIS,
Turkey broke the ceasefire between the PKK and itself, began attacking the Kurdish fighters, forcing them into a war on two fronts. As far as Turkey is concerned, the YPG, YPJ,
KCK, YBS in the Azadi areas and all other elements of the Kurdistan Freedom Movement
are just different names for the
PKK, which it considers to be a terrorist organisation.
Everyday life for Kurdish people in Turkey can be hard. I've spoken to hundreds if
not thousands of them in the last year, often sitting around fires in the mountains, working
together to build wooden shelters for their children, or sharing the bowls of beans that
my friends cooked because the state refused to feed the people it was detaining in the open air for
days. These aren't conversations I recorded, because that wouldn't be safe. There's
a very real danger of these folks not getting asylum and being sent back to a country where
they've seen their friends murdered, their election results denied, their job applications
thrown away and their language suppressed.
Having them on the record would be a huge risk to their safety. And not every interaction I have with people, even people I'm writing about, has to be turned into content to go between the adverts.
So sometimes I just do things because I like to do them. If you'd like to know more about these
stories, you can find a link to a piece I wrote for the Kurdish Peace Institute in the show notes.
stories, you can find a link to a piece I wrote for the Kurdish Peace Institute in the show notes.
Anyway, here's an outbreak.
The situation in Iraq is different. The Kurdistan Autonomous Region enjoys a great degree of autonomy from Baghdad, and is chiefly run by two parties, the KDP and the PUK. The KDP
enjoys influence in Obil, or Haulair in Kurdish. In Slamani, the PUK is in control. In these
areas, especially those of the KDP, a more neoliberal vision of Kurdish identity is pursued.
And how Larisar skyscraper has lit up all night, huge mansions, but also whole areas
of the city struggling to get by, or sometimes not even having access to year round water.
The vision of Kurdish identity here is not as threatening to Turkey, and the KDP seems
to take the line that the PKK ought to keep its struggle within the Turkish borders.
The P.U.K has been more sympathetic to the KCK, the PKK, and keep its struggle within the Turkish borders. The P.U.K. has been more sympathetic to the K.C.K. and the PKK, and it's often in the mountains near Suleymaniye and Duhok
that Turkey cargates Kurdish guerrillas and their infrastructure.
For the last 40 years, Turkey has remained extremely hostile to the vision of Kurdish
liberation with the democratic and federal system that Ocalan and the movement that follows him
have adopted. I asked Sagros to explain the connection between the Kurdish struggle in north and east Syria,
which many listeners will probably be familiar with, and the elements of the Kurdish freedom
movement in other parts of Kurdistan which they might not be familiar with.
In our last interview, I spoke to Zagros about history in Spain. Now it was his turn to give
me a history lesson. By the way, he calls the Ocelen Leder Apo here. Reber Apo in Kurdish. It's a common
contraction that's used all over Kurdistan and Apo is also the vocative form of the Comanche
word for a paternal uncle.
Leder Apo migrated to the Middle East, he migrated to Syria and Lebanon, I mean, months before the military coup in Turkey,
the military coup of 1980.
He went there on his own.
There was only one comrade with him.
First, he entered the city of Kobane and from there he found his way to Lebanon, to Beirut.
In Lebanon he made relations with the Palestinian groups.
He even took part in the resistance of the Palestinian groups against the Israeli invasion of Lebanon.
For nearly 20 years he waged the freedom struggle from Lebanon and Syria. In doing so, he educated, he trained and organized
the Kurdish people in Rojava Kurdistan. In this sense, his struggle is twofold. Firstly,
he developed self-awareness in the people of Rojava with regard to their national and
cultural identity and brought the Rojava people together
who had been divided by the many Arab builds and demographic change operations of the Baath regime.
All these organizational activities were done despite the Syrian regime and he managed to run a delicate balance to foil the repressive
measures of the Syrian regime there. I'll just interject here to explain these terms. Baathist
Syria and Hafez al-Assad and his son Bashir al-Assad attempted to divide and deny the existence of the
Kurdish people in many ways. Some of these included omitting them from censuses, denying them citizenship, prohibiting the public use of their language
and demographic transfers that installed belts of Arab people in areas that were majority
Kurdish. Nonetheless, Assad also saw benefit allowing the PKK to exist within his borders,
especially in the parts of Lebanon that Syria occupied, in order to use them as a tool against
other states.
Secondly, he got this nationally and culturally aware people of Rojava
to support the struggle in North Kurdistan. Therefore, thousands of Rojava youth were first organized and educated in villages, in cities, and Then they joined the guerrilla struggle and fought in North Kurdistan, in Baku, Kurdistan.
This struggle served to unite Rojava and North Kurdistan, Baku, Kurdistan, and developed
shared national political awareness and attitudes.
Thousands of Rojava youth, boys and girls fell martyr in the ranks of the guerrilla
struggle.
Leader Apo tried to reach out to all cities, to all villages, to all families and even
to all individuals in Rojava, this has created a strong national, social, cultural, and let's
say philosophical bond between the leader of the people of Rojava, because a neglected
and divided people had united around him.
This isn't an episode about the entire history of the PKK, and I wouldn't be the person
to write that, But I will attempt
to speedrun it here anyway.
Appa was arrested in Nairobi in 1999. Ever since then he's been held in prison, often
without access to visitors or his lawyers and at some points on an island where he was
a solitary prisoner surrounded by hundreds if not thousands of guards. His human rights
are almost universally acknowledged to have been violated by this arrangement, and despite a quarter century of detention and Turkish moves towards Europe,
there seems to be no willingness on a part of the Turkish state to release him.
In his time in jail, he began to read more and correspond with many thinkers, including
Murray Bookchin. Bookchin influenced his thinking a great deal.
And gradually, through this and other influences, Arsor moved away from a Marxist-Leninist analysis and national liberation goals, and instead began
to conceive of a feminist and ecological revolution that decentralised power, ensured all authority
positions were shared by a man and a woman, and valued the environment as much or more than the
economy. This libertarian left ideology came to be known as democratic
confederalism, and is the guiding ethos for Rosh Ava, and indeed the KCK as a whole.
The civil war in Syria provided an opening that the Kurdistan Freedom Movement took advantage of,
as Assad's forces withdrew from their regions to fight elsewhere. They didn't spring from the
ground in 2011, but instead they'd spent decades building a movement
that they felt could replace the state. Today, millions of people live, work and play under
a democratic confederate ideology in the autonomous area of north and east Syria where I was last
year. It's not paradise, but it's a special place, and by any metric life there is better
than in the rest of Syria right now. For over a decade, they've navigated a complex system of adversaries, including the Syrian state, the Islamic state,
and the Turkish state. Just this week, all three of them have tried to attack Rojava.
More than 15,000 people, men and women, have died in the decade-long war against the Islamic
state, which, contrary to much reporting, remains ongoing. ISIS actually car bombed a place not far from where I stayed last October,
after I'd come home.
At times, the USA has supported the people of Rojava in their battle against the Islamic
State, but it's also stood by as Turkish bombs fell on them. Although Rojava is by
far the biggest territorial area in which democratic confederalism is in practice, much
of the movement remains in the mountains of southern Kurdistan, in what is technically
Iraqi territory. There are many more Kurdish people in Turkey, and as recent election results
show, revolution by the ballot box is not really an option for them. Rojava enjoys autonomy,
but is still very much ideologically twinned with the part of the movement that remains
in the mountains and dedicated to its struggle against the Turkish state. Turkey, in return, has crossed the border with Iraq to attack
the KCK and anyone else who gets caught in the crossfire. As Zagros explained, this is not new,
but the recent change has been notable. Well, during the 80s, 90s and even after 2000, the Turkish army used to do military operations
to the other side of the border, into the Iraqi border for several months, to withdraw
back to the other side of the border, to its own border, afterwards, after several months.
And in that period it only had limited number of barracks and bases in the Iraqi territory.
The change now is that Teke has built new military roads from scratch to the Kurdistan region, to northern Iraq. It has built more
than 100 big and small military bases and barracks in the area and has no intention
to withdraw. As I said, the ultimate goal is to annex all these lands to the Turkish
territory.
Today, Turkish troops can be found deep inside Iraq.
According to the Community Peacemaker Teams,
since December of 2017, Turkish forces have built
over 40 bases anywhere from nine to 25 kilometers
into Iraqi Kurdistan's territory south of its border.
End quote.
They have dispatched hundreds of troops
and military vehicles into another state, set
up checkpoints and even killed civilians, a member of the KIG's military, the Peshmerga.
Fighting has caused massive wildfires. For example, in Sagale village, about 55% of the
agricultural land has been burned by Turkish attacks. Incidentally, Turkish shelling in
the autonomous area of north and east Syria has also caused
similar fires and destruction of crops in agricultural areas.
The Kurdish freedom movement is very well established in the mountains of southern Kurdistan,
where they live in tunnels and caves.
These are not caves or tunnels like you played in as a little child, we're talking about
villages underground.
This makes tracking them very hard.
As we heard in another episode, many of the
fighters sent to Kurdistan are Syrian Arabs, repurposed by Turkey and jinned up on anti-Kurdish
sentiment. But this is perhaps the least concerning of the dogs into the tunnels and they explode the dogs via remote control.
In addition to the dogs, he says that the Turkish state uses chemical weapons inside the tunnels,
and there are also reports of suicide bombers detonating themselves.
The KCK also claims that Turkey uses thermobaric bombs, sometimes called bunker busters,
which create
a huge pressure wave and subsequent vacuum.
Also, they are using thermobaric bombs. We have documented the use of these thermobaric
bombs. There are remnants of these bombs. They are using thermobaric or vacuum bombs
against the tunnels. And they are using some form of explosives which are more powerful than thermobaric bombs.
Curtis and Freedom Guerrillas have developed a literature for it because they do not know
what kind of explosive it is but it has the effect of a nuclear bomb. Curtis and Freedom
Guerrillas call it a nuclear bomb. They call it so because the effects are higher than the thermobaric
bombs.
I asked Mohammed to explain how people are reacting to the current situation.
You know, Turkey now invaded some parts of Kyrgyzstan. Actually, the areas under the control or under the influence of the state of KDP.
And you know, the people here have this issue.
This is not just in person.
It's killing people besides the elements and killing people and burning the whole agricultural
area and you know so on so on. So it's kind of an inversion and here some people and forces in
the southern part of Kurdistan or southern Kurdistan know, Iraqi Kurdistan, like their sympathy with the PKK.
They have sympathy with the PKK, and they see that they're alive.
So they're struggling against Turkey because if there is no PKK, even if there is no PKK,
the Turkish forces will not withdraw from Komsomol. When it controls any area of Iraqi
Komsomol, it will not withdraw. And it's excuses speak again, but things on earth is telling something else.
Despite what both my guests have seen as alienation of the local population,
Turkey's continuing with his attacks. I asked Zagros what he thought the goals of
this Turkish invasion of Iraq were. The invasion and annexation of these lands
is the prime goal of Turkey. This goal is a long-term goal of the Turkish state since it has been created after the
Lausanne Agreement.
It has two aspects.
Firstly, Turkey lays claim to what was once part of the Ottoman Empire 100 years ago. This claims to the cities like Mosul and Kirkuk
and claims that these are lands of Turkey.
So the invasion operation in the area of Bahdina
ends up in Matina and Abashin in the areas around the cities
of Amediyat, Dereluq, Shiladize, and Duhuk.
There are attempts to take control of these
mountainous areas and to materialize those long-range goals. Turkey already has a big
military base near Mosul, I think 15 to 20 kilometers north of Mosul, it is called the Baashiqa base.
So if Turkey manages to invade all these areas in Bahdina, I mean in cities of the Huk, mountainous
areas of the Huk, Turkey will be able to create a land bridge between these areas and its base in Mosul and it will be far easier for Turkey to annex
the city of Mosul and Kirkuk to its lands.
Secondly, Turkey has a long-term goal of demographic change in Kurdistan. As you know Kurdistan is a land, the
ancestral land of the Kurds being divided between four countries Turkey,
Iraq, Iran and Syria being divided by borders. People from one side of the
border are Kurdish, people on the other side of the border are Kurdish. In many cases the
border line go through the cities, they divide the cities, they have
divided the villages, they have divided the tribes, they have divided large populations,
they have even divided families. This is one of the characteristics of the border in Kurdistan.
In fact, Turkey has begun something of an Arab belt program which is owned in Syria.
Seeking to resettle Syrian refugees and Turkish-backed
Syrian anti-government rebels in the areas that it took from Mojave in military operations
over the last eight years. This is part of Turkey's plan to return as many as a million
Syrian migrants to a country still in the grips of a brutal civil war, and push the
autonomous administration of North and East Syria back from the Turkish borders, or crush
it altogether. For Turkey, there's no distinction between
Rojava and the PKK, and thus Turkey claims the entirety of Rojava is a haven for terrorism.
Many Kurdish fighters and international volunteers who fought ISIS for years died fighting the
Turkish army in Afrin and the many other territories that Turkey has expanded into since 2017. The
fighting there was fierce, and so the YPG and the YPJ, the men's and women's armed forces
of Rejava, battling a NATO army with modern armour and modern air power. After taking significant
losses they retreated. And I asked Sagros what this means for people living in Afrin,
who had just managed to return to some semblance of
normalcy. After Assad's forces left, an attack from the Al-Nusra Front became less frequent.
This is genocide. I'm enforcing people to leave their lands and replacing those people with people
which are not from that land, forcing people to leave their ancestral land, lands which they have lived on for thousands of years,
for more than 10,000 years, and getting Arab jihadists, Chechen jihadists to live in those areas,
it is a genocide. Along with the ecocide which is now taking place,
thousands of hectares of forests, of agricultural land are now burning.
So what Turkey does is femicide, is ecocide, is genocide in Kurdistan.
And these, let's say what now happens to the Kurds,
it's the same thing that happened to the Armenians 1000 years ago.
The genocide of the Armenians was done by the people who had the same mentality and
same mindset of Erdogan, I can say. So these areas are very strategic for the Kurds. They
bind the four parts of Kurdistan together demographically. And now Erdogan wants to draw a jihadist buffer zone between these areas. If a Kurd from Syria
wants to go to the Kurdistan under the invasion of Turkey, we call it North
Kurdistan, he will have to go through cities and areas populated by Arab
jihadists, by Chechen jihadists, by Turkmen jihadists,
by jihadists which have been collected from around the world.
So this buffer zone, which is more than 1,000 kilometers long according to Erdogan's plan
and 30 to 40 kilometers wide is expected to be inhabited, to be settled by the jihadists which Erdogan
has gathered from ex-Daesh members, ex-Nusra members, ex-Al Qaeda.
At present, this Turkish occupation is a situation in parts of Syria, but it's also increasingly becoming likely that it will be the situation in parts of Iraq. As is often the case, the
states are trying to use divisions in Kurdistan to their advantage, and Turkey in particular
is relying on the well-worn excuse of counterterrorism
to mount its incursions deep into Iraq. Here's Mohamed explaining that. And KDP say that they follow the instruction of Turkey.
And actually here the force and influence of Turkey and even Iran in the area is very
strong. And people here, as people of the nation, are not feeling comfort with such an impasse
and such issues.
So we are not like the owner of our right decision in the area.
So we are divided between Iran and Turkey and so on and so on and we are not
depending on our people. You know, thousands of people killed for the nationalist, you
know, hopes and now people are frustrated with such issues, with such situation.
Mohammed also said that it was really frustrating for him to see Kurdish politicians so influenced
by the states that they've been trying to escape for a century.
So we are here in a situation from the North Turkey, from the East Iran, from the South
Iraq, and all are they working? That the people who
pay thousands of martyres, thousands of laws of the people, why you are not depending on
are not depending on your will or the force of your people, why you are became like a feather, a feather to the winds of the snow forces, which are not your friend. Even in the East, in the North, in the South, they are not your friend.
But if you depend on your own people, on your own struggle heart, and you have the legacy
of this issue, you have the legacy of the struggle in this area from 1960s.
Indeed, the invasion of southern Kurdistan would not be possible without the consent of both the Iraqi and Kurdistan regional authorities. As Sergius mentioned, Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan visited Baghdad on April 22. This was his first visit to Iraq since 2011. During the visit, Iraq and Turkey signed a joint security agreement allowing Turkey to
conduct military operations deep within Iraqi territory.
In return, Iraq will receive desperately needed water from Turkey.
And now in those areas, tens of thousands of Turkish troops, hundreds of tanks, armored
vehicles, drones, radars have been deployed to the area,
they are active every day, and they are invading northern Iraq at a time when the border guards
of Iraq, Iraqi army border guards are standing by and just watching.
As you may know, as the result of the agreement between the Iraqi state and Turkey state,
Iraqi border guard forces, let's say they were decided to be sent to the Iraqi Turkish border,
but now these border guards are not on the Turkish Iraqi border, the border that we know.
These border guards have been deployed 40 kilometers, 30 kilometers deep into
the Iraqi territory. They don't go to the border. They are guarding the invading Turkish army.
For the people of the region, this means yet more trauma and more displacement. There are already
more than one million displaced people in southern Kurdistan. Some of them are living in pretty
terrible conditions. I've seen those refugee camps when I was there last October. But these operations
have created more. Here's just one anecdote of displacement shared by CPT on their website. His dreams of a cafe had been shattered by Turkish artillery and small arms fire coming
from the Turkish base on the hillside nearby.
He was originally from Sigire village, but had been displaced to Gani village by the
Turkish military five years ago.
Due to the loss of his farm in Sigire, he has planted some vegetables next to the site
of his cafe.
He gave each CPT member some sweet basil and invited us to his village.
When we arrived, a man dressed in immaculate traditional Kurdish clothes stood transfixed,
staring into the valley.
He was staring at Mize village, his home.
Mize is one of at least nine villages displaced by the recent Turkish operation.
Kak Bashir told us that displaced people from the valley would visit this place
daily to gaze upon their cut-off towns and farmland below.
Despite months of shelling and bombing, the military strongholds of the Kurdistan Freedom
Movement remain intact, and the more obvious damage has been done to civilians rather than
military targets. The HPG, which is the fighting arm of the BKK, has been able to obtain loitering
anti-aircraft munitions,
shot down several drones, but it's still unable to shoot down fighter jets like the US provided
F-16s to the currently bombing them. For civilians, without mountain caves or tunnels to hide in,
the impact is severe, and people who have faced oppression and persecution from Saddam Hussein,
ISIS, and numerous other states and groups are now once again being displaced.
I want to finish up with the end of Zagros message to me, in which he made a comparison
with Palestine like I did at the start. On the day I first interviewed Zagros, bombs made in the US
had just been falling from Israeli planes onto civilians in Palestine again. And we discuss
the fact that all the solutions being discussed hinged
around the need for states, one state or two states, to solve the problem. But this was a
problem created by states. And it was states sending bombs to another state to drop on children,
both in Kurdistan and in Palestine. There was a problem.
Here's Zagros' reflection on nearly 10 months of bombing in Palestine and Kurdistan.
And I just want to explain here that Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was at one point the leader of
ISIS, he's dead now, and when he says Daesh, he's referring to the former so-called Islamic
state.
The struggle that is now waged in the mountains of Kurdistan against the invading Turkish army.
It is a continuation of the struggle against Daesh in Iraq and Syria.
Because ideologically, there is no difference between Erdogan and Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
Baghdadi first took Mosul and now Erdogan wants to invade Mosul too.
Erdogan attacks all those places which have been hubs of resistance against Daesh.
He attacks Sinjar, he attacks Kobani, he attacks Kandil mountains,
which are the home of those who inspired and organized the fight against Daesh on the ground.
Erdogan's army is Daesh in NATO uniforms, in NATO fatigues. In recent days, Erdogan accuses
Netanyahu of committing genocide against the Palestinians. Netanyahu also accuses Erdogan of committing genocide against the Kurds.
In fact, what these two men say against each other is to some extent right. Both of them
have been commissioned by the forces of capitalist modernity to eliminate two people, to eliminate
the Kurds and the Palestinians.
What Netanyahu does against the Palestinians is exactly what Erdogan is doing against the
Kurds.
What is needed is to draw the attention of the world public opinion to the atrocities
of Erdogan's regime and the genocidal and ecocidal crimes he commits against the Kurdish people and
their land, which is Kurdistan.
The struggle in Palestine and Kurdistan are one struggle, the struggle of two people against
genocide and extermination.
Both struggle needs support from the youth, from the women all around the world, from democratic
forces, from intellectuals, students, unions, workers, from all people. People need to be
united against Erdogan as they were united against Daesh, as they are now united against
the genocidal attacks in Palestine. The Turkish regime can be protested everywhere,
in many ways Turkish goods and commodities can be boycotted because they are the source of funds
for Erdogan's war machine, for Erdogan's genocidal army. Delegations can be formed and they can come
to visit Kurdistan and see with their own eyes
the extent of the genocide and genocide in Kurdistan.
Free journalists can shed more light on the atrocities of Erdogan in Kurdistan.
Revolutionary youth, revolutionary people, men and women can come and join the struggle
in the mountains of Kurdistan.
Kurdistan is your home.
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.
For more podcasts from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, coolzonemedia.com,
or check us out on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts. You can find sources
for it could happen here, updated monthly at coolzonedmedia.com slash sources. Thanks
for listening.
Hi, I'm Molly Conger, host of Weird Little Guys, a new podcast from Cool Zone Media on
iHeartRadio. I've spent almost a decade researching right-wing extremism, digging into the lives
of people
you wouldn't be wrong to call monsters.
But if Scooby-Doo taught us one thing, it's that there's a guy under that monster mask.
The monsters in our political closets aren't some unfathomable evil.
They're just some weird guy.
So join me every Thursday for a look under the mask at the Weird Little Guys Trying to
Destroy America.
Listen to Weird Little Guys on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Kay hasn't heard from her sister in seven years.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
What was that?
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
Can Kay trust her sister or is history repeating itself? There's nothing audio of a woman's nightmare. Can Kay trust her sister?
Or is history repeating itself?
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
I'm Angie Martinez, and on my podcast, I like to talk to everyone from hall of fame athletes
to iconic musicians about getting real on some of the complications and challenges of
real life.
I had the best dad and I had the best memories and the greatest experience.
And that's all I want for my kids as long as they can have that.
Listen to Angie Martinez IRL on the iHeartRadio app,
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