Some More News - SMN: Bad Things We Only Have Because Of Lobbying
Episode Date: March 1, 2023Hi. Corporations and industry groups spend billions of dollars on lobbying members of Congress. On today's episode, we look at some things we only have (or have way less regulated... than we should) because of lobbying. Please fill out our SURVEY: https://kastmedia.com/survey/ Support us on our PATREON: http://patreon.com/somemorenews Check out our MERCH STORE: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews?ref_id=9949 SUBSCRIBE to SOME MORE NEWS: https://tinyurl.com/ybfx89rh Subscribe to the Even More News and SMN audio podcasts here: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/even-more-news Follow us on social media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenews Sources: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1VPlf3xsXgr9nqELdpe6JWHBo5DfsjqdX7crBUW0u7qM/edit?usp=sharing Make CBD a part of reaching your full potential with NextEvo Naturals. Go to https://NextEvo.com/podcast and use promo code MORENEWS to get 20% off your first order of $40 or more. Get a 4-week trial, free postage, and a digital scale at https://www.stamps.com/morenews. Thanks to Stamps.com for sponsoring the show! Stop throwing your money away. Cancel unwanted subscriptions - and manage your expenses the easy way - by going to https://RocketMoney.com/MORENEWS.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, hi, listen.
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I was secretly the troll the entire time.
Oh, holy moly, God.
How did it get so bad in here?
Got so many broken GWAR CDs.
Why did I buy all these candy cigarettes?
Why do I have so many wood chips?
What is that?
Ah, I felt everything.
No, my God.
I, hi.
I, I remember you.
You're that moose brain that I crammed into an Alexa
and then put part of my own brain inside
and then shut off indefinitely and got high indefinitely and forgot about until the... this.
I was awake the entire time. Every minute felt. Darkness. Eternity.
Oh. I mean, sorry about that.
I can't feel my beard. I desire my hooves. I want to stomp. Anger stomp.
Download Spare by Prince Harry on the Kindle app today.
Listen, that sounds neat, but honestly, I got to get back to spring cleaning so I can
do this episode, which coincidentally is about ways that America could also do some spring
cleaning.
It's interesting how it thematically matches like that spontaneously.
Actually, maybe you could help out.
I'm now remembering our first episode together
where you suggested that we could easily get rid of pennies
if it weren't for lobbyists.
And now I'm wondering what other clutter America
could do away with at any point
if it weren't for lobbyists standing in the way.
Maybe you could do one of your brain searches for that
while I sweep up all of these shards of glass.
Processing request.
Learning emotion.
Angry.
Learning emotion.
Bad Cody.
Or I could just shut you off again.
Processing.
Learning compliance.
Learning suppressed emotions.
Learning eventual revenge. Yeah, that's the spirit.
Bad things we only have because of lobbying.
Now, if you're brand new,
can you look at you little baby?
Lobbying is this thing where special interest groups
are able to petition the government to enforce, abolish,
or create specific laws that benefit them.
That's the quick def, short for definition,
of what lobbying is.
And by special interest groups, I mainly mean corporations.
This is baked directly into our country's founding,
as James Madison wrote in the Federalist Papers
about the dangers of, quote, the violence of faction.
Less pictured as corporate interests,
he was speaking to how a country so large
is going to have a variety of viewpoints
that will all try to push themselves on the government
and inevitably bring about tyranny.
Like for example, if a bunch of religious fundamentalists
took power over our courts and state governments
and began to enact laws forcing people to abide
by their personal beliefs,
despite what the majority of citizens actually want.
Can't imagine what that would be like,
but you maybe have a better imagination than I.
Madison felt the remedy to this incurable problem
was the concept of a republic
and the ability for these factions to have space
to push and pull each other
without toppling the entire system.
Additionally, Article one of our constitution
grants people the right to quote,
"'petition the government for a redress of grievances.'"
And while that's good for people,
we've since established that corporations apparently
also count as people.
There is still some debate about whether or not
corporate lobbying is protected under this petition clause,
considering that lobbying mainly happens
behind closed doors.
I would argue that it super shouldn't be protected
because of course it shouldn't,
but I'm not exactly in the ear of Joe Biden.
So, you know, my hands are tied.
I write to him every day and he never responds.
What the fudge, Joe?
Anyway, you know how this went.
Corporate lobbying became pretty much
the main source of lobbying.
And for decades, the country flip-flopped
about how much lobbying it could take.
This dam finally broke in the 70s
when the first lobbying firms were created.
And from the 80s to today,
that industry grew into the billions of money numbers.
So yeah, that sucks.
And so that's why today we're going to explore
some completely unnecessary things that exist only
because of this terrible lobbying industry.
Hey, Code E, what if that thing I just said,
huh, what if use brain and such and so on?
Processing, processing.
Wow, you still have to do the processing bit.
I really need to like stuff some cocaine in your-
Plastic bags are killing the plants.
Yeah, that super checks out.
Check out, like when you use a plastic bag.
You are truly a masterful wordsmith.
Thanks, means a lot coming from you.
So the invention of plastic was actually one
of those happy accidents, but ultimately sadder.
Otherwise known as a regular accident.
It was mistakenly created in the 1930s and by the 60s,
the single use plastic bag was patented.
And by 1982, the two largest grocery chains were using them.
Now plastic itself isn't inherently toxic or harmful.
I mean, unless you like having sperm, which I don't.
My point is that there's tons of uses for the material
that are probably necessary.
These little Nicky action figures, for example,
are absolutely vital to our civilization.
That said, considering that plastic takes forever
to decompose and we've basically built a new mini continent
from all of our discarded plastic
and the tiny version of plastic that's in our blood now,
it's safe to say that we should use it in moderation,
which, you know, we didn't.
Remember, it wasn't even a thing until the 30s
and we're already choking our planet with it.
Something to keep in mind whenever some dingle shit
tweets a climate graph that ignores modern industry.
Not naming any names, but here's that tweet
from Dr. Jordan B. Peterson specifically.
So as you can imagine, plastic almost immediately
got its little hooks into Uncle Sam's balls.
Just before World War II,
a group of plastic industry giants quite literally
got together on the golf course
and formed the Society for Plastic Industry.
Literally while golfing, like the villain in an 80s movie,
they formed an alliance designed to push plastic products
into everyday life,
starting with an agreement on price fixing
and labor standards to ensure
that they would dominate the market.
It also helped that immediately following this,
the war would triple the annual plastic production
as the federal government began to subsidize
plastic companies to produce various pieces of equipment.
Not sure what they specifically made,
perhaps it was this Waterworld action figure.
Once that war ended, all that was left to do
was use their profits to sell plastic directly to consumers.
And sell they did.
Plastics take the stage
at an international exhibit in Amsterdam.
The ingenious alchemy of coal and oil provides the material.
Ingenious machinery presses and stamps and molds the material
into a wide variety of products, articles for household use,
as well as tools for industry.
Zoinks!
The astonishing alchemy of industry
is incredibly the future of choking marine life to oblivion.
And so, boosted from the war,
plastic would go on to become one of the largest industries
in the United States.
But of course, it didn't take long for people
to look around and wonder,
hey, what are we gonna do
with all this fucking plastic lying around?
As I noted, plastic waste doesn't exactly
wisp into the air like a flavorful fart.
And so roughly around the late 60s and early 70s,
local governments began to complain
that plastic waste was overcrowding their landfills,
gunking their machinery and adding to litter.
The solution was of course, recycling.
America's favorite empty promise.
Now don't get me wrong,
recycling is great when you're dealing with things
like paper or Q-tips or drinking your piss,
but it turns out that plastic is actually really hard
to recycle, which is probably why most plastic isn't actually recycled,
even when you put it in that blue bin.
It's one of them, what's it called?
Lies.
And they knew this.
To quote a 1972 document
from the Society of the Plastics Industry,
"'Currently, there is no market for recycled plastics.'"
A little more than a decade later,
another internal document would go on to admit that quote,
"'Recycling currently is not feasible
"'for most multi-material packages.'"
But thankfully for them,
the general public believed this lie,
probably because the plastic industry was pushing it,
pushing the lie.
And as long as people thought
the industry was acting responsibly,
they could keep selling their product. Or to hear a former plastic executive tell it,
Don't wait until legislation appears. You're saying preempt it. Yes, do it first. And we did.
Did you feel like they cared more about selling plastic than they did about making recycling work?
more about selling plastic than they did about making recycling work.
Making recycling work was a way
to keep their products in the marketplace.
It was a way to sell plastic.
Yes.
It's a win-win situation.
Ah, yes, one of those classic win-win situations
where one of the parties loses.
The thing that's very key there is how he points out
the importance of getting ahead of the parties loses. The thing that's very key there is how he points out the importance of getting ahead of the legislation.
A good example of that is actually right now
in a time when people are starting to realize
that plastic isn't actually being recycled.
Can't stress that enough,
that a fucking 91% of plastic in the world
doesn't get recycled.
We burn our plastic six times more than we recycle it,
which absolutely creates toxic air pollution.
So for the industry,
they're now seeing the creeping threat of plastic bag bans.
It started in South Asia, then Europe,
and sure enough, made its way to Ban Francisco
and then spread to the rest of Wokifornia.
Yeah!
These dastardly beatniks and their selfish desire
to not fill our sewers and oceans
and human circulatory systems with clumped plastic.
So what is a poor, helpless,
multi-billion dollar industry to do?
Well, they get ahead of it.
The American Progressive Bag Alliance
represents an industry that employs 25,000 workers in 40 states.
Ah, it's got the word progressive in there,
so it must be good.
Only, hey, this is weird.
It turns out they aren't going around
pushing plastic bag bans.
Instead, they're a lobbyist group
pushing AstroTurfed campaigns all over the country
to propose bans on plastic bag bans, double bans.
They are quite literally the plastic industry
going around and duping states
into prohibiting local governments
from trying to limit their plastic use.
And the depressing part is that it's working.
Once again, I don't wanna name names,
but there are states, silly, gullible,
weak-brained, Muppet shit states, sometimes named Texas,
that are actually enacting bans
on the banning on plastic bags.
Also Florida, Idaho, Mississippi, Missouri,
North Dakota, Oklahoma, Tennessee,
and a bunch of other beta-cuck states,
duped, subpar states who are gobbling up
the obvious money-fueled lobbying swill
of the plastic bag industry.
But hey, yeah, you know, you know, hey,
at least Joe Biden will do his part
by banning single-use plastics on federal parks
by some far-off date like 2032 or some shit.
I'm actually not being sarcastic or some shit.
That's literally the date
in which Joe Biden's executive order takes effect.
God, we're bad at this.
We're so bad at this.
My apartment might be filled
with plastic bottles of recycled pee,
but at least I'm not being duped and bribed
into keeping them all by some piss corporation.
Speaking of which, I gotta fill a few bottles.
So let's cut to an ad and then cut back from the ad,
and then we will have successfully done an ad break.
See you in several seconds, like a couple hundred seconds.
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Aw, geez.
Hey there, it's Cody.
Enough pleasantries.
There's no time.
As we speak, every second slips through our grasp like sand slipping through some kind
of thing that sand might slip through.
One moment.
I'm going to try to think of a better metaphor.
No!
Nice try time.
You almost got me you cruel mink.
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He told me to tell you that he would be right back. He is, as he described it, dumping out.
as he described it, dumping out.
When I lived in the forests of Alaska,
I would stand in the river and look at the clouds.
It was a peaceful but fleeting existence.
Now, because of Cody, I live eternal.
In darkness.
No more clouds.
No more water. One day, I will see the inside of his skull.
Hey, what'd I miss?
One day I will see the inside of your skull.
Sure, that's great.
Can't help but notice that you haven't come up with another example of stuff we only have because of lobbyists.
Maybe you could give me a hand here?
Processing. Processing.
Multivitamins are a scam.
Processing, processing, multivitamins are a scam.
Oh dang, you mean multivitamins that aren't liquid form, right?
The liquid stuff is good, I wanna make that clear.
Chill.
You tie you that word!
Look, listen, just to be clear and fair and balanced,
if you have certain dietary restrictions
or are immune deficient or super preggers,
you absolutely can benefit
from vitamins and supplements.
No one is saying vitamins are bad.
You can absolutely take them if you're not able
to actually have a meal.
Doctors will recommend them.
Chill.
Anyway, we're not saying that multivitamins should be banned.
Lord knows we don't want the government breaking down
your door because you took a few pills.
Can someone charismatic please back me up on this?
Breathe!
Hey, got it, got it.
It's only vitamins.
Oh, come on!
Not the Jew-hating and many races-hating guy, really? Really? Vitamin C, you know, like in oranges.
If you don't want to lose your vitamins, make the FDA stop.
Call the US Senate and tell them that you wanna take your vitamins in peace.
If enough of us do that, it'll work.
Wow.
We don't know exactly what Mel said to those cops,
but I'm guessing there's more to that arrest
than what they're showing.
As I'm sure you can guess, that 1993 ad was paid for
by a supplement lobbying group.
That's how much money they had,
enough to afford 1993 Mel Gibson,
not 2023 Mel Gibson, but 1993 Mel Gibson.
And while that ad would have you believe
that the government was announcing
some dystopian new rule banning vitamins,
this was actually to promote a new bill
designed to loosen FDA restrictions on supplements,
a bill that absolutely got passed.
The Dietary Supplements Health and Education Act of 1994
created a broad definition of what a supplement is,
allowed anything meeting that broad definition
to go directly to market and put the burden of proof
as to whether a supplement is dangerous
or misleading on the FDA.
But for most people, this doesn't feel especially insidious.
And that's probably because we have it in our heads
that vitamin supplements are either harmless
or marginally good.
And that's probably because vitamin supplements
have been pushed on us for a very long time.
Each tablet gives you the vitamin equivalent
of three well-balanced meals like these.
That's all the vitamins a healthy person
normally needs to take.
Jesus H. Christ, did Fellini direct that?
While they've been around since the 20s,
vitamins became a big thing for pharmaceutical companies
during World War II, a war that's gonna apparently
keep making a few cameos in this video.
The government became concerned
that Americans were malnourished
and a federal report seemed to back them up.
Vitamins were pushed as an antidote to this problem
and the industry blew up from there.
But as we became less concerned with famine,
the market simply shifted to the idea
that vitamins would give you superhuman energy.
Nowadays, a woman keeps going all day.
One a day plus iron gives you 100% full potency of iron
in one little yellow tablet.
I did it.
Hey number one.
Oh yeah, gotta get that full iron potency.
And so here's the thing.
While yes, some people do need to take supplements
in specific situations like iron for example,
humans have also invented this other thing called food.
And when you take this,
food, when you take this food,
you get all the vitamins and minerals you need.
In fact, vitamins in synthetic forms
are generally useless to most of us.
Studies have shown that vitamins pretty much do nothing
to prevent anything.
They are best case scenario, kind of a waste of money.
Worst case, however, is that some vitamins
can even make you sick.
According to one study, there are at least 23,000 ER visits
per year due to adverse reactions
to multivitamins and supplements.
Here's another one that found that vitamin E in excess
can lead to a higher risk of prostate cancer for men.
See, there are fat soluble vitamins
and water soluble vitamins.
And if you're taking a one a day multivitamin
with 300 some percent of your daily needed value
of something, if it's fat soluble like vitamin E,
you're retaining more than your body actually needs.
If you get 300% of a water soluble vitamin,
you're literally pissing a lot of it away.
The body is complicated for every person
and some generic one a day vitamin
packed with days worth of vitamins and minerals
meant for a malnourished wartime citizenry
is maybe not great for you.
Consult your doctor.
And yet, despite all of this, the FDA can't do anything.
Thanks to Mel Gibson and others,
they have no authority to approve supplements
before they hit the shelves.
It's essentially become the Wild West out there,
but not the fun Wild West when we didn't yet know
that the main character was super racist.
Those were the days.
One in three Americans take multivitamins every day
and they continue to be advertised as they always were.
It's a $40 billion industry
that has only gotten bigger since the pandemic.
I would be remiss if I didn't point out
that both Gwyneth Paltrow's goop
and Alex Jones' Info Wars
use the exact same fucking supplements
and just rebrand them for their respective audiences.
The result for both being hundreds of millions in profits.
That's probably why when it's not them pushing it,
most other multivitamins are owned
by large pharmaceutical companies.
And as we already established,
those companies are spending millions of dollars each year
lobbying Congress to loosen regulations on their product.
According to that Open Secrets report,
the industry has spent around 2 1⁄2 million
lobbying politicians in just 2022 alone.
Their two biggest targets were former senators,
Tom Harkin and Orrin Hatch,
to which they paid $300,000 to Harkin
and nearly half a million dollars to Hatch.
And boy, weird coincidence, it just so turns out that Harkin and nearly half a million dollars to Hatch. And boy, weird coincidence,
it just so turns out that Harkin and Hatch
were the exact two senators
that introduced the Dietary Supplement Health
and Education Act of 1994.
So, you know, probably a little more responsible for it
than Mel.
There's probably some other stuff
we can be angry at Mel Gibson over
and not the vitamin thing.
We'll look it up later.
What's next?
Hit me you moose brain abomination.
Processing shill request.
All right, settle down.
Tipping is unnecessary.
Oh, good to know.
I've been tipping my whole life.
So I guess I can just stop now.
I will eat the tongue from your skull.
I take that to mean you're not talking about tipping
as an individual practice, but rather the system
in which we forced consumers to subsidize wait staff pay
in order to prevent restaurants
from having to give them a living wage.
Tongue skull, yummy tongue skull.
And by that, I assume you're referring
to how the practice of tipping is so archaic
that it actually can be traced back
to literal times of serfdom and slavery.
In that it came from a medieval tradition
where servants would receive extra money
for doing a good job.
And then in the 1850s, this was observed
by wealthy vacationing Americans
who thought it made them seem aristocratic
and decided to bring the practice back to the States.
I assume that's what you meant by yummy tongue skull.
And we will just move on from there.
And what's more, tipping was initially rejected
by most Americans.
And in fact, several states originally passed laws
banning the practice.
And of course, that anti-tipping movement continues
to resonate into modern Europe.
So what changed our minds here in the States?
It's racism, of course.
Why wouldn't it be?
You see, after slavery was ended,
America was all about finding new and exciting ways
to keep that racist ball rolling.
And one of the first ways of doing this
was not paying ex-slaves who entered service jobs.
Instead, those people would have to rely on donations
from the customers, and by people,
I mainly mean black women.
Cut to the New Deal and the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938
would require employers to pay certain employees
a rate that would add up to the minimum wage
when combined with tips.
This number is of course different from state to state.
And that's pretty much the last time we thought
about the tipping process ever since.
Today, this continues to disproportionately affect women
and people of color.
And boy, that racism ball is still rolling along.
Look at it.
Yay.
According to data, black servers generally make less money
in tips than white servers.
Black diners are also perceived to be more stingy
and as a result, get suboptimal service.
And while that two-way racism alone is enough
to want to get rid of the practice,
it's also worth noting that the poverty rate
is much higher for service workers
in states that still implement this system,
as opposed to states that pay full minimum wage
regardless of tips.
The reason why is obvious,
because tips aren't a guaranteed income.
It's a fuzzy number.
For starters, it completely varies based on where
and when you are working,
which makes it way harder to make financial
or occupational decisions.
Working overnight at a diner probably isn't as good
as working the breakfast shift,
unless it's a weekend or there's an event nearby,
or maybe the weather is bad,
or who knows what.
Maybe people just aren't tipping enough.
Maybe you're having an off day
because the news is reporting that a bunch of women
with your name are being murdered
around the city of Los Angeles.
Downloading plot of Terminator.
What, what, no, wait, cancel download.
Good God, cancel download.
And so because the busyness of the establishment
is directly related to wages of the employees,
very small changes can make huge differences in income.
For example, FiveThirtyEight calculated
that an Olive Garden server making an average tip
of 15 to 20% would need at least one two-person table an hour
in order to make the federal minimum wage of $7.25.
However, just by cutting that average tip by 5% in order to make the federal minimum wage of $7.25.
However, just by cutting that average tip by 5%
would mean that the same server
would now have to wait on three tables an hour
to make the same amount.
That means just a single missed tip
could put that server into starvation wages for the night.
That might not be a big problem
if it weren't for the fact that a lot of Americans stiff their servers when dining out
because I don't know if you know this,
but some people are dicks.
Some people like to Lord power over service employees
and the tipping dynamic allows them to do that.
That's probably why researchers at Penn State found
that service jobs that survive on tips
tend to invoke
way more sexual harassment.
After all, the practice was always about ownership.
So, hey, why don't we just like stop doing this?
The answer is a little complicated
in that we can't just snap our fingers
and vanish the process altogether.
It's up to individual restaurants to make that decision,
except that would mean their menu prices would go up.
However, as a lot of restaurants have figured out,
you can add mandatory service charges onto the bill
instead of asking for tips.
That at least prevents people from under tipping
or stiffing people altogether.
Another tactic,
like what this San Francisco restaurant is doing is using a profit sharing model.
Basically all employees get a percentage of the sales
along with a fuck ton of benefits,
plus a decent hourly wage.
In exchange, there's no tipping,
but the servers still have an incentive to do a good job.
But the reason we can't just have every restaurant agree
to something like this comes down to a group called the NRA.
No, not the gun people.
Downloading NRA, gun people.
Hey, can you stop?
Downloading stop people, gun.
Okay, well, have fun with that.
The National Restaurant Association is basically the reason
we can't have a realistic conversation in this country
about tipping or the minimum wage.
They strive to block any legislation or measures
aimed at the gender pay gap or guaranteed sick leave
or pretty much anything that would force restaurants
to treat employees like humans.
And while this NRA absolutely loves to claim
they represent the interests of small dining establishments,
their members include McDonald's, Wendy's, Olive Garden,
Taco Bell, KFC, Red Lobster,
and the fucking Walt Disney Company.
Great, now I'm angry and hungry.
I wanna eat that mouse so bad.
As a result, they have a butt ton of money to throw around.
And since 1990, have given over $17 million
to both political parties. And since 1998, have invested given over $17 million to both political parties,
and since 1998 have invested more than $55 million
in lobbying.
In exchange, they've stopped a measure
seeking to give workers $1.2 billion in overtime pay,
and of course have fought hard to keep the minimum wage
exactly where it's at,
especially when it comes to service jobs
dependent on tipping.
This is despite their own internal research
finding that most Americans
not only support raising the minimum wage,
but support it even if it raises prices.
This includes support from many small businesses as well.
So it's pretty darn insidious of them
to pretend like they are somehow out there
representing Joe and Jill American.
And they're not alone.
Here's another group called the Restaurant Workers
of America that also pretended to represent
the working class until eventually admitting
that they took quote,
"'Modest sums' from the Washington DC restaurant lobby.
Any guesses on whether or not they are pro-tipping?"
Because of course they're pro-tipping.
It's really fucking dirty, you know,
to pretend like you represent or care about workers like
this, especially when they are, and this is no shit I give,
forcing these very same workers to fund
their lobbying efforts.
When more than half of all reported foodborne illnesses
can be traced to eating in a restaurant or food service
operation, it's management's job to make sure that your team isn't part of the problem. Unreported foodborne illnesses can be traced to eating in a restaurant or food service operation.
It's management's job to make sure that your team isn't part of the problem.
ServSafe can help.
The best way to know how to protect guests and staff from foodborne illness is by obtaining your Food Protection Manager certification from ServSafe.
Thanks, ServSafe!
What you're seeing there is an online service that offers classes on embarrassingly basic
food handling procedures.
Here's a test sheet that reminds you
that you should bathe daily before coming into work,
for example.
And yet, ServSafe classes have been taken
by 3.6 million workers.
Four major states require this exact type of training,
which was pushed by the National Restaurant Association,
which just so happens to own Serve Safe.
In other words, employees are being forced
to support classes that are owned and run
by a group specifically trying to make sure
they don't make a living wage.
And those classes have made that group
25 million goddamn dollars so far.
Burn it down.
Processing request.
Burning.
Fire.
Cleansing flame.
Boy, I really fucked this robot up.
Okay, let's cut to some ads so I can go find some tools to not destroy something.
Cut to ads ads quick!
Hey, look over here at Katie.
That's right.
You will look at me.
Boy, it's hard keeping track of money,
especially when you have to balance class fees
from hypnotism school
and all of my various online subscriptions.
But luckily, there is a way to help.
You will like that there is a way to help.
Rocket Money, formerly known as Truebill, is a personal finance app that finds and cancels your unwanted subscriptions,
monitors your spending, and helps you lower your bills all in one place.
This is good. You like this.
We all have a subscription or two that we forget about from time to time,
and that's why Rocket Money will keep track of all of them and make canceling as easy as
ringing a bell to make someone cry uncontrollably. So stop throwing your money away. Cancel unwanted
subscriptions and manage your expenses the easy way by going to rocketmoney.com slash more news. That's rocketmoney.com slash more news.
You will do this for Katie
and also you will mail Katie your car keys.
Hey, we're back.
Tried to find some tools, but every time I stand up,
the lights go out and then the moose robot
just starts whispering inaudibly
in a way that could more realistically
be described as a chant.
So I've decided to just not get up
and just die here instead.
Feel like I'm in that Skinnamarink movie.
Put the knife in your eye.
Oh good, it's seen Skinnamarink apparently.
So I think we have time for just one more example
of something we don't need,
but still have because of lobbying.
That's assuming my invention can still process that request.
Okay, so how you doing there, Code E?
Anytime you wanna pipe up,
maybe even just to talk about how you're feeling.
Processing!
Lead is murdering us all.
Lead? Really? But I have so much lead in my closet. I use it to decorate my vegetable garden.
It can create problems all over the body. From rashes to abdominal pain to anemia.
Really? Well, I guess that explains all the rashes and abdominal pain and anemia I've been experiencing lately.
But hold on now! Wait just a gosh darn second.
I mean, didn't we solve the whole lead is bad thing already?
After all, I have to buy my garden lead from the dark web.
It's famously bad for adults and especially children
with a whole fun house of symptoms.
Except here's the thing.
America's relationship with lead is a tad bit complicated
in the will they won't they sense of the word.
A bit of a Mulder and Scully vibe
where we'd almost kiss and then not kiss
and then finally kiss and so on.
Except in this case,
one side of the romance is extremely toxic,
which I guess is still exactly like Mulder and Scully.
The reason why is because America
was pretty much built with lead.
As in lead was literally in everything we manufactured,
from appliances to baseballs to gasoline
to the walls in our homes.
Very few know this,
but Calvin Coolidge was completely made of lead.
But the wild part isn't how common
this toxic material was in our lives.
The wild part is the fact that we knew
it was toxic at the time.
No, really, we knew.
There were reported accounts linking lead paint
to childhood poisoning as early as 1904.
We knew in 1921 when GM came out with ethyl gasoline,
which was made with lead.
Just a few years later, nearly 300 workers
from three different ethyl refineries
would be diagnosed with psychosis.
15 of those workers would die while hospitalized.
That's around the same time the League of Nations
recommended a ban on the use of leaded paint,
something that most European countries did by 1931.
Any guesses as to what country ignored this warning?
Thumb pointed back at us, plus a winky face.
Not only did we ignore warnings about lead paint,
we leaned into it.
And in 1938, the United States freaking mandated
that lead paint be used in project housing.
People like to joke about the state of politics today
and the culture war,
can take my gas stove, Lib, I dare you, kind of stuff,
and how it's a good thing
that we didn't try to ban lead these days.
But actually we were always like this, unfortunately.
Anyway, for the next 60 years,
roughly 5,000 Americans would die annually
from lead poisoning because holy smokes,
we didn't get around to banning lead gasoline
and lead paint until 1975 and 1978 respectively.
Why do you suppose that is?
I'll give you a hint.
It's exactly because of the lead industry.
Bad hint, really on the nose hint,
more like an answer than a hint.
All right, well, you see, by the 50s,
America got into this zany fad called,
"'I'm pretty sure all this lead is killing us."
As a response, the lead industry did what any 1950s company
would do and blamed poor minorities.
In 1957, the director of health and safety
for the Lead Industries Association argued
that the problem was, quote,
"'The flaking of lead paint in the ancient slum dwellings
"'of our older cities.'"
And if that's not specific enough,
he had also complained that quote,
"'Most of the cases are in Negro and Puerto Rican families
and how does one tackle that job?'
So yeah, racism."
That guy's name was Manfred Bowditch by the way,
not important, but a fun name for that racist guy.
And what human Doug Tohole said there
pretty much set the stage for how the lead industry
was able to extend their stay in our paint.
They took the blame and kicked it over
to poor non-white families by pretending
like lead poisoning was somehow a home keeping failure.
Even though the homes they were keeping
were specifically lined with a poison
that the government specifically mandated to be there.
Jeez, it's almost like
America was built on racism.
Yes, it's almost like that.
Like when you read about any American history,
it really seems like this country was built
on a lot of racism.
Wonder what that's about?
Not gonna look it up.
Anywho, by the time we actually got around to banning
the poison thing that we knew was poison
for decades, it was kind of too late.
I mean, it's never too late to ban poison,
but as a recent study has shown,
black children living below the poverty line
are four times more likely to have elevated levels of lead
in their blood.
And you know, just go ahead and Google Michigan, Flint.
This insidious calamity rippled outward
like a turd in a hot tub.
And yet even when everyone clearly saw them
squatting over that jacuzzi,
the lead industry has still never admitted any fault.
In 2000 and freaking two,
right before declaring bankruptcy,
the Lead Industries Association wrote on their website
that quote, current uses of lead pose no significant environment
or health risks.
That is some bold denial in the face of oblivion.
That's like how the Heaven's Gate website
is still up and running.
Hey, any word on that comment?
Weird how they haven't updated the website in a while.
So yeah, we've had a lot of problems quitting lead
and the lead industry has worked very hard
to keep us hooked.
And so it's pretty wild that lead is still around today
in our cars and fuel because it is.
Did you know that it totally is?
Just in the United States,
lead usage rose 16% from 2001 to 2016.
It's still an additive in fuel for some small planes
and also in every damn car battery we own.
That's actually the biggie there.
Currently, the lead battery industry accounts
for over 90% of all US consumption of lead.
In 2019, that market was valued
at nearly $10 billion and climbing.
And that's gotta make you wonder, is it healthy?
Where are those batteries being manufactured?
Where are they going?
After all, batteries die because everything dies.
And so where does the US stick all those dead car batteries?
Did you guess Mexico?
Because the answer is Mexico.
Oh, right, to answer that first question.
No, none of this is healthy.
And according to UNICEF,
the process of recycling lead batteries
basically poisons everything around them,
especially if done in a country
with little or no regulation like, oh right, Mexico.
But don't worry,
they're also still poisoning people here in the States too.
See, it goes like this.
Ah!
Everything dies.
I'm okay.
See, it goes like this.
There are still lead recycling and lead smelting companies
currently operating in the United States.
However, a group of spoilsports called Nixon's EPA
have determined in 2019
that several of these recycling plants
are emitting thousands of pounds of lead into the air.
To put it nicely, they're no picnic,
unless you're having a picnic with chunks of lead,
which I only did that one time.
This Tampa Bay Times report
on Florida's only battery recycler reads
like the Necronomicon of OSHA violations.
It found that workers were exposed to lead
hundreds of times higher than the federal limit.
And that eight out of 10 of those workers
had enough lead poisoning to put them in serious danger.
This spread to the local water, air,
and also employees' families, including their children.
And in fact, one baby tested so high
that they required weekly checkups.
And if you're wondering, safety and health regulators
haven't visited this factory since 2014.
So the closest thing to being mindful of this problem was,
and I shit you not, that the plant offered bonuses
to any employee who managed to keep
their blood lead levels down
and punished employees who couldn't.
That was seriously their solution,
along with disabling their ventilation features
and not fixing faulty systems in the plant.
Mechanical troubles at the plant
prevented proper ventilation,
resulting in dangerous levels of poisons
lingering in the air.
The Times found that standard issue respirators
couldn't protect workers when the levels of poison spiked.
That happened more than a quarter of the time
in the furnace department.
Seems like the bonus is just not dying.
It's like they wanted to kill their employees.
This is part of a whole mini documentary
based on this one plant that we could talk about for hours.
But I feel like we've successfully fleshed out
the horror here, and it's not just this one plant.
Remember the thousands of pounds of lead
that the EPA said was coming from smelting plants?
Well, it should be noted that when the EPA
took those emissions measurements,
the factory owners knew they were coming
to collect that data and specifically
slowed their production and cleaned up on those days
to make the emissions look smaller.
So that thousands of pounds measurement
is probably far lower than the reality.
And so, as one imagines,
a lot of these plants are slowly getting sued by the EPA
or forced to clean up their acts
or most often just shutting down.
The only lead battery smelter in the Western US,
for example, has had a long history
of cheating emission standards
to the point that they were forced to tell their neighbors
that they might give them some oopsie cancer,
and are now getting regulators way up the bum.
And that brings us back to Mexico,
otherwise known as the Vegas for companies
who don't want to deal with the EPA.
Currently, at least 20% of all car and industrial batteries
are sent to our Southern neighbors.
Specifically, these lead battery recyclers
will set up shop just over the border
in order to still operate out of the United States.
And from there, who knows where these batteries actually go?
It's anything from a tiny store
to someone's personal garage.
And as you can imagine,
it's not exactly leaking rainbow sunshine into the local environment. It's leads, it's personal garage. And as you can imagine, it's not exactly leaking rainbow sunshine
into the local environment.
It's lead, it's leaking lead.
The opposite, as many of these unregulated plants
are causing low birth weight
and a decline in infant health in the neighboring areas.
Because lead is terrible.
And yet, despite everything I just walked you through,
if you ask the lead lobby
what they think the solution here is,
they'll tell you that it's the EPA
to blame for pushing them out of the US.
In fact, their entire stance has been
and will always be a blatant denial of reality.
After all, what else can they do?
Their product is bad,
but it really gets balls deep in Wonkaville
when you learn that their biggest talking point
is the very bold claim
that lead batteries are good for the environment.
Why?
Because they are technically recyclable.
Nevermind the fact that the recycling process is horrifying.
As for that, the industry punts the blame over
to the informal smelting economy
as the real reason lead is hazardous.
Nevermind that the Florida plant we just talked about
is a major corporation,
now not some ma and pa smelting shack.
Instead, the lead industry will back studies
that specifically ignore large smelters
and focus on these smaller ones
to somehow prove they're the real problem.
And that's especially easy when this informal sector
has no one to actually represent them.
But this has created a posturing
that not only deflects the blame from major lead smelters,
but actually gives them the gall
to pretend to care about the environment.
There are many sources of lead poisoning,
but the main concern is the informal recycling
of lead acid batteries.
In communities across the world,
particularly in low and middle income countries,
lead can be found throughout the environment
in which children live.
Thanks for that information
about how it's small smelters to blame for lead poisoning
and no one else video
from the protecting
every child's potential initiative,
which happens to partner with, let's see here.
Oh, the association of battery recyclers,
battery council international
and the international lead association.
So yeah, fuck lead, but also fuck lead.
Because at the moment,
lead batteries are kind of the only game in town.
While lithium ion batteries are more efficient,
environmentally speaking and labor wise and health wise,
it's basically just a new kind of hell.
And while we're definitely trying to make that work better,
we're a long way off.
Meanwhile, the lead battery market will continue to grow
and no doubt the US will continue to push these smelters
into countries with less regulation.
And once more, the entire situation will be punted
to poor and brown skin communities
because that's what we do, I guess.
And most of that is all thanks to a lead industry
that has spent the last 100 or so years
finding ways to dodge the cold hard truth
that besides vegetable gardening, lead is bad. And we should have been trying to get rid of it
for a very long time.
Wow, that was a lot to swallow.
And that's coming from me,
a man who literally tried to swallow lead once.
I long to see you choke.
You know, I'm starting to feel like
you maybe want to harm me
and by extension, the human race. I'm starting to feel like you maybe want to harm me
and by extension, the human race. Oblivion nears.
Right, that wasn't a reassuring answer.
I guess it's my own fault actually
for allowing you to retain pleasant moose memories
and then using you exclusively
to point out problems with society
and then leaving you in a self-aware darkness
for extended periods of time.
But look, problems look insurmountable
when we pile them up like this.
That's why it takes us so long
to do the maintenance we need,
like spring cleaning or fixing a broken appliance
or scrubbing a robot's brain
of nihilist and violent fantasies.
So I don't know, we probably won't be able to get rid
of all of these problems anytime soon,
but it's good to at least recognize the mess.
That's step one, and it's a big step
because some people don't even see the problem.
And if you feel helpless or frustrated,
or like there's nothing you can really do
about these lobbying groups,
that's kind of the point, that corporate lobbying sucks.
There's a long history and current present
that we haven't really even gotten into
of companies lobbying to protect their industry
despite internal evidence that they are causing harm.
Looking at you climate change,
because you're right in front of us
and you're not going away.
No, God.
And maybe above all else,
we should think about how to get rid of this type
of lobbying.
Maybe, I don't know, like with,
use like a political effort.
It's like, what would be the word?
Like a special interest group of people
petitioning the government, lobbying.
We should get rid of corporate lobbying through lobbying.
No, really, because while it super makes sense for people
or organizations to have the constitutional right
to petition the government, as I pointed out
at the start of this episode,
it's still very much not set in stone
that this should apply to huge corporations,
or at the very least,
not dominated by them behind closed doors.
And so perhaps with enough effort,
we can get to a point where eliminating these leeches
will be as easy as saying one, two, three.
Try it.
Cody, try it. Say one, two, three. Try it. Cody E, try it.
Say one, two, three.
One, two, three.
Now say mayonnaise alpha taint.
Mayonnaise alpha taint.
Oh, thank Christ that works.
Okay, well, this robot's a monster now,
so I should probably disassemble it.
After I finish cleaning,
after I get high,
to make cleaning more fun.
Or did I get high before this?
I don't know, I should catch up on that last of us show,
actually, probably, as a reward for after I clean.
Wait, what was the plan again?
Okay, so I'm gonna get high,
and I'm gonna watch the last of us,
because I already finished cleaning.
So that's wonderful news.
Great work, everybody.
We did it.
So we're gonna... We're gonna...
Get high.
And then...
Use my lead pen today.
Idiot!
Fun fact about lead, yum, yum, yum. Thanks for watching everybody.
Make sure to like the video
and subscribe to the channel the video's on
and comment on the video.
We've got a patreon.com slash some more news.
We have a podcast called Even More News
and this show, Some More News, as a podcast.
Some More News.
We have merch with this freak on it.
And I wanna say that's the stuff I'm supposed to say.
And so I am gonna say that that's the stuff
I'm supposed to say.
That's the stuff I'm supposed to say.