Trillbilly Worker's Party - Episode 66: It Keeps The Lights On
Episode Date: August 22, 2018We get back to the basics in this one by taking a deep-ish dive into recent coal news -- who's mining it, where it's going, and what it means for energy markets, consumers, and elections. We lost some... really good audio at the beginning of this episode and we're really torn up about it so please send us your thoughts and prayers. Music by Tenure
Transcript
Discussion (0)
okay take two take two damn man we we just lost so much good content there was so much good content
that was a banner start to what i was i was like man this will be another fucking bonger
damn son where'd you find this content okay go back we have to redo the entire bit about
We have to redo the entire bit about country songs. Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay.
Where are you going to start at?
Red Army, country songs, or naming customs?
Damn.
Oh, man, there was so much good shit.
You're right.
There's naming customs.
Let's start here.
We'll start with, we'll just perform this everything we do is off
the top of the dome but let's do this right here you want to you want to perform try to perform
okay go i got this okay let's see what you got so anyway like we were talking about earlier before
everything was recording to the wrong microphone if you're like a united states proud fucking uh we won't be pushed around blah blah blah blah
just know that uh we were terrified for a good many decades of the soviets the point i was trying
to make earlier i don't even know i would think
i'm probably going to wind up getting it wrong twice but even try it man shoot your shot all
right i'm gonna shoot my shot we as i said earlier we just passed the anniversary for the atomic
bombings of hiroshima and nagasaki right And the Japanese were trying to sue for peace.
They were trying to get us to stop the war.
Please.
No mas.
No mas.
But it wasn't because they were afraid of little dumbass
Normandy beach storming
American
badasses.
A bunch of guys that would go home to become
Hell's Angels. A bunch of guys that would
go home to make a bunch of memes about
how our generation is snowflakes.
Snowflakes.
And
that was a funny thing that happened this week
where some dipshit
was like my grand my
94 year old german grandfather said that uh he saw images of antifa in the streets and he and he said
oh my god it's just like nazi germany if only we had stopped them then and then it turned out that
this person didn't even exist or have a german have a german grandfather and also also not for
nothing but if you have a 94 year old german grandfather i wouldn't put too much stock into
the stuff he says exactly i mean at that point he's probably having to be wiped and exactly he
was probably having to be wiped and where was his bitch ass when the fucking nazis were he was probably having to be wiped and where was his bitch ass when the fucking nazis were
he was probably a nazi too that's not fair for me to say actually walk up walk it back well it is
fair for you to say because the motherfucker didn't exist in the first place you're right
exactly so i can make up whatever you can make you whatever you wanted to be
well the reason we got into that first place because i was detailing to you my uh soviet
soviet training protocol right who which was come up with by by this guy named uh alexander
folly comrade folly from for those of you on the t-nation boards and it's not even certain much
like this guy's 94 year old german grandfather if comrade
folly even existed but that makes his story all the more powerful yeah to me yeah it's kind of
like john henry or something you know what i mean yeah uh well uh an ardent follower and maybe even
the person behind the fall leaf legend is a guy named pavel Setsulin, who was a former KGB guy who now trains Army Rangers.
Well, this is what I'm talking about.
It's very topical.
You see those videos of like Putin, like body slamming people and shit, like when he was in the KGB in the 80s and stuff or shit, man.
shit man there's plenty of videos on youtube of like the soviet like um red army like doing um like calisthenics and stuff like dancing calisthenic routines you're like god dude
these people would have kicked our fucking asses oh yeah man that's not even a question
well it kind of goes back to that remember that one episode where tanya was here and we were
talking about khrushchev telling Nixon,
basically, like, we build our houses to last.
We build our cities to last generations.
Like, we'll surpass you in 60 years
and you'll look at us in the rearview mirror
and we'll just be waving at you.
Just stunting on Nixon.
Yeah.
Yeah, he was tapping into something real there, which is that they actually believed in something.
That's why the Red Army was the most powerful fucking army.
Granted, they did basically put every man, woman, and child out there, just like, protect your cities.
Mother Russia is under attack, you must protect your cities. that you know mother russia is under attack like you must protect your
cities unorthodox but but like i said the japanese didn't sue for peace because they wanted the
americans because they were afraid of like a little ground invasion from the americans
they knew that the red army was covering a distance over manchuria of hundreds of miles
blotting out the sun exactly they're like fuck no man i'd rather deal with
the americans yeah i'll take my chances with these these guys that just uh you know smoke
cigarettes and write letters to their sweethearts exactly i might see nagasaki tomorrow
i might see it's okay tomorrow meanwhile like some grizzled fucking uh just battle-hardened
soviets just like sitting in a tank watching the fucking like japanese peninsula rise in the
fucking distance jesus christ oh fuck well uh so there was that then we covered the fact that i'm your therapist
and that you have to recount your life to me and in i'm laying horizontally this first time i've
recorded horizontally yeah i listened to myself on the bonus episode and i think i was just holding
my microphone really close but it sounded like i was wheezing like i had sleep apnea or something
i was really self-conscious about that i listen to that my laugh sometimes i'm like man that motherfucker's
got cotton mouth i think that about myself um yeah no i was we were talking about how country songs
these days usually play out in the format of people just listing shit. Just listing things.
Or there's the political polemic.
There's that.
But mostly it's just like virtue signaling against cultural Marxism.
I'm looking forward to the day that country music starts
embedding the message of Jordan Peterson.
Oh, God.
Well.
That's where I saw my first driving movie.
What was Peterson's thing this week about the ants?
Oh, yeah.
Just say that.
I did say that.
Dude, I think he's, you know,
like he subsists on nothing but meat, you know.
Oh, yeah. Weirdly. And I think think he's, you know, like he subsists on nothing but meat, you know. Oh, yeah.
Weirdly.
And I think.
He's going to have gout.
I think this is probably his keto brain coming up with all these things.
It's like, look, 30% of the ants do 70% of the work.
I would like to do an episode one day where we talk about the scientific claims of people like Peterson.
Dude, it's really funny.
It's like every time there's just staggering inequality.
It happened during the late 19th century, too.
They always trot out someone to provide some sort of scientific basis.
We've seen this before, Peterson.
You're not new.
Jordan Peterson country songs, though that is actually a funny concept
when i ate broccoli i heard gave me lower back pain
i heard the millennials aren't going to hooters no more
because they don't like titties. Can you imagine
making that leap?
What? That nobody goes to Hooters
because they don't like titties.
Yeah. Yeah I don't
It's like only
like the lamest motherfuckers went to Hooters
to begin with. You know what I mean?
Right. Yeah you're right.
The
absolute lamest. Just the worst. Yeah, you're right. The absolute lamest.
Just the worst.
Yeah.
The absolute worst.
All right, let's try to re-tackle what we were just...
Well, hold on a second.
The one other thing, the naming customs.
The naming customs.
That was good.
Well, the point was that my country music persona would be much better if you changed my middle name and my last name to Terrence Ray Gentry.
Or Ray Gentry.
Or Ray Gentry.
That would work, too.
I think T. Ray Gentry like T-Bone Burnett would work, kind of.
Right, right.
Even though T. Ray is not really a thing like T-Bone is.
Right, but it would still work.
Yeah.
I get that all the time anyways.
It's really funny when people don't want to say my first name.
Yeah.
You ever like on a sort of relationship basis
with somebody like that
who doesn't want to say your first name,
they just use like a nickname?
Like, hey, T-Ray, nobody says Terrence.
Well, some people do.
You do, obviously. I got a confession, Mac. I've always hated when people call you T-Ray nobody says Terrence well some people do you do obviously
I got a confession
Mike I've always hated
when people call you
T-Ray
hey
it kind of like
grates at me
like you know
it's kind of like
when
I don't know
somebody calls you
like
calls like a fat guy
tiny
you know what I mean
it's just
I don't know
it's just like
I am with you in this
I don't want to say anything
because I'm just trying to keep it cool.
I don't want to snap on it.
If you're going to talk about me,
you answered about any goddamn thing anyway.
Pretty much, right.
Except like,
numbnuts or...
I don't answer to numbnuts.
You answer to numbnuts?
Every once in a while.
Terrence Ray Gentry is my
country singing
anti-cultural Marxism
persona
and
what was the other thing
the naming custom is
like I said before we were cut off
that our buddy
Leslie on Twitter
pointed out that
was pointing out
Loretta Lynn's
children's name
and all of them
have that
Eastern Kentucky
one syllable
middle name
that's almost
always said
with the first name.
Right.
So like
Terrence Ray
Thomas Dale
we both checked
the boxes.
You know that
you're imbued
with white trash DNA
if your name follows
that pattern it follows that basic format yeah you're absolutely right yeah or i've always kind
of wondered about my middle name the fact that it's gentry kind of um has this sort of like
uh you know it's like this sort of saying that everybody's just a temporary everybody's
temporarily broke you know what i mean like you're just on your way i always kind of wondered if that's the whole point
of my middle name like uh we were poor and so the gentry thing was like uh aspirational aspirational
there you go yeah but no really though my birth certificate has two middle names. In which case, I wonder.
I guess I could just go by Terrence Neithercutt, right?
Please don't.
Terrence Jentry Neithercutt, right?
What is Neithercutt?
What's that from?
I think it's British.
That sounds pretty regal.
Neithercutt. Neithercutt. Neithercutt. What is nethercut? What's that from? I think it's British. That sounds pretty regal.
Nethercut.
Nethercut.
Nethercut.
So, coal.
I don't know, man.
I don't know.
Coal.
So, we got several things.
You started it off.
Yeah, well, I just, here's how I would tee it up. It's just that in this moment where,
to borrow the Adam Curtis phrase, hyper-normalization,
everything's hyper-normalized,
and, you know, everything is just so fucking crazy,
and all that.
Like, if you were living in eastern Kentucky in the previous eight to ten years before Donald Trump,
you were prepped for that.
If you were fully prepared for this new world order
through a little something called the Friends of Coal campaign.
Exactly.
Yeah.
And I think what you mean by that,
or at least the way i understand it
is that um you know say what you would have met capitalism um we sort of know it to be a soulless
uh profit driven like immiserating system right right it has no moral center it has no um yeah it has no moral core
right basically it's just a constantly churning machine that just creates profit well there is a
rationality to that to the when you're talking about allocating resources we obviously see it
as immoral and wrong and uh inefficient creates a lot of waste and a lot of environmental harm.
But there is a rationality to it in the sense that, like, if it is too costly to mine coal,
you find another energy source, in this case, natural gas.
Natural gas is cheaper than coal.
Therefore, you would think that utilities and the regulators in states like West Virginia and Kentucky would try to incentivize burning natural gas.
You would think that.
You would think.
But that's not the way it's happening.
And we're starting to see this happen on a federal level.
Me and you have seen this for years in the states we live in,
in Kentucky and we've seen it in West Virginia,
because it's just craven ideology, right?
But it doesn't make any sense.
It makes no sense to continue to force utilities to buy coal
when it's much cheaper to switch to natural gas.
And there's all kinds of anecdotal evidence that this is happening.
First of all, people's power bills are going up.
Second of all, you've got instances,
particularly one I'm thinking of,
this Mitchell power plant in West Virginia in which they bought, they had to sell 400,000 tons of coal that was just laying around the lot.
Just like heaps of coal that they couldn't burn or use or anything.
Right.
So they just had to sell it off for 17 cents more per ton than they bought it for.
So they made a little bit of a profit off of it, I guess.
But the point is,
and we're starting to see this again
at the sort of federal level,
they're regulating from this sort of stance
of an ideologically driven agenda.
Again, say what you want about capitalism,
it's craven craving it's terrible
all these other things but it doesn't have that sort of ideological uh imperative to it it's just
you know burn whatever's cheapest extract what's ever cheapest mechanize in a way that makes it as
cheap as possible right i don't know um but now what you are getting is... Well, it's funny because, you know, there's sort of the adage, socialism for the wealthy
and then boots to the neck for everybody else.
Right.
I would argue there's not been a sector more exemplary of that than the coal industry.
Yeah.
And particularly if you look in the last i don't know i mean i keep
throwing out these arbitrary figures last 20 years like i don't know the last little bit right
you look at um this sort of liberal push to address climate change and all these things and
if you listen to the sort of discourse
around coal and our coal future
and our energy future,
all indications say what?
Well, coal's sort of on its last legs.
It's like, you know, we've knocked a leg out.
Now we just got to kind of lean on them
and they're on their way out
and all these employments drop in
and, you know, all this kind of stuff.
But the one serious miscalculation that all these people made in that
is that these coal people have relationships going back decades and decades and decades and whatever.
And so now they have a guy, who basically you know it's well documented that
coal sort of helped him get to where he's at and like you know sort of the narratives around and
all the same recycled friends coal people and so now if you look at what's going on and he's rolling
out these sort of uh bailouts right for the coal companies now in West Virginia
tonight. It's what it amounts to.
Basically...
I didn't know this, that they were rolling it out
like a red carpet.
Not really. They're having an event for it
and it's going to be disgusting.
But it's interesting if you look at it
like
that it is so entrenched and the sense of of we need to
throw these people a lifeline because they helped bring us to this dance and trump's going to do
that and what's and what's going to happen in the miscalculation comes in is that yeah sure coal's on its last legs but these companies will run coal at a
fucking loss if it's advantageous to take advantage of trump's policy proposals to do so well it's
interesting that you say that because there was an article yesterday um or over the weekend in
wymd that you showed me it's pretty It was like, I can't remember the exact.
You got it printed out.
I don't actually have it printed out,
but it was pretty funny because the article.
Hold on a second.
I've got it right here.
I'll pop it up right now.
Dude, the fucking headline was great.
And the video in it was pretty funny too
because they interviewed this woman with Perry County Coal.
It's a coal company in Perry County county which is the next county over um hazard baby the headline reads eastern kentucky
coal company is expanding its workforce thanks to possible attitude change in washington this is
from this is from our local CBS affiliate.
An Emmy award winning CBS affiliate, mind you.
I love the phrase attitude change.
That's all it comes down to, baby.
Obama just had the wrong attitude. My favorite use of that is when our buddy Roy likes to go get high on his car before
his registration.
He says, I'm going to go outside and change my attitude real quick.
That's what the Trump administration's doing, man.
Just went outside and changed their attitude a little bit.
Read the fucking article.
This is what they're doing, Tom.
There's no market for coal, okay?
They could sell this shit, I mean, ostensibly to some...
We're talking about Central Appalachian low-sulfur coal.
This is premium shit, baby.
This is the good shit, baby.
It's ain't steptone.
It's ain't steptone like that pussy Wyoming bullshit.
They'll sell it at a loss, maybe.
But you know how they stay profitable, right?
Read the fine print down there in the middle of the article.
What's the going rate for a
miner that they're paying them if i remember correctly it's the positions okay so basically
there was a handful of new coal jobs coming to perry county 12 12 12 so not even a hand article
doesn't even mention that it's only 12 or something. So if, for example, your local gas station were adding twelve cashiers, that probably
wouldn't be newsworthy in most places.
Yeah.
And when I lived in Las Vegas, cashiers at gas stations made about what coal miners start
out of here.
And that's just for real.
Well, it depends on the mine, and it depends on what the job is.
But this fucking mine in particular is an underground job.
These positions start out at $17 an hour for less qualified employees
and can reach up to $25 an hour for more qualified and experienced employees.
Would you crawl into a mountain for $17 an hour?
Fuck no. I'd rather go work
at Walmart. You'd probably
be getting only $5
less. Probably be making $13, $14
an hour at Walmart. And you would retire with your lungs
intact. Fuck that, dude. I'm not gonna go
bolt a roof in a mine for $17
an hour. Fuck no. That shit's
brutal. My brother-in-law
got his foot crushed.
Yeah. By a bolt machine. But that's how they'll stay profitable man they'll just pay their fucking miners
squad douche and then and then get little local news outlets to run these weird fucking propaganda
stories and the really funny thing is and all it serves to do all this shit serves to do
is to give people false hope
that like
yeah
things are gonna go back
to the halcyon days
when everybody was making
this is just
I mean we're gonna just
you know at first
it's gonna be 17 to 25
but you know
if you stay with us
dude
well the way that the article
is framed
the way the article is framed
it's really funny
that this came out
this week the
same week that the epa did release those new coal pollution rules it's um it's framed in the the
the person that they interview in the article is basically like you know um i don't want to be
too explicit about this but it's basically because the trump administration they've got
an attitude change you know they've come around to i went outside for a few minutes hot boxed and then
they came back in ready to ready to bring fucking coal back baby uh dude it's it's really bad the um
the really funny part about that article though was it was at was at the very end they were like if you want to know how to
apply to this job visit WIMT.com
they basically like positioned themselves
are you fucking serious? I'm not kidding you
it's not in the written part it's in the video part
WMT's
WIMT is not
only caping for coal companies
around here and for Hal Rogers and all the other
powers that be they're like positioning
themselves well dude if I'm not mistaken the guy I only know this because if I'm
not mistaken and people could call me on this if they know better but Wayne Martin who's a guy that
I knew only because he used to be the men's basketball coach at Moorhead way back in the day
so he'd all the time be around the program when I was there. I think that he is the run in the show
at WMT or was at one point
and is also in the coal business.
Really?
Yeah. So it makes sense.
It makes sense that the same people that are over
WMT probably have skin in the game in coal too.
I could be wrong about that
but I think that's true.
It really wouldn't surprise me in
the slightest um but you're not getting any sort of uh i don't know man that's the dose of reality
you get yeah you're just tuning in well but also i think you know maybe we should term this co-literacy.
But, you know, you're talking about like the new dumping rules and all this kind of stuff. I think something that's lost on people, particularly liberals, when they see something like, oh, my God, they can dump it in the creeks now.
It's like the Clean Air and Water Act has never been enforced in any meaningful way in the coal states.
Right, right, right.
Clean Air and Water Act has never been enforced in any meaningful way in the coal states.
Right, right, right.
So, like, when you see stuff like that and you get outraged, it's been going on for a long damn time.
Yeah, I don't know if I... So now they're just dropping the pretense.
Right, exactly.
That's what it means.
I mean, I can't really explain it more explicitly than this.
In the early 80s, after a decade and a half of militant anti-strip mining activism,
I mean, we're talking about people literally firing weapons at strip miners.
Yeah.
A decade and a half of unregulated strip mining,
just the worst sort of environmental problems imaginable you you know, you could think of.
Well, it also sort of created a labor conundrum, too.
I don't mean to cut you off, but just to draw the distinction,
strip miners are people that work on mountaintop removal sites,
and underground miners are people that do it sort of an older way,
to put it in layman's terms.
But when I was a kid, it it's well not not quite that old
not you put it send a canary in there uh not quite that old they've made they still mine like that in
like pakistan and china and it's why there's millions of black lung victims in china it's
fucking insane oh dude totally methane explosions and they'll just like kill 20 motherfuckers and
just like put them in wheelbarrows
and drag them out of there and keep running coal.
Yeah, yeah.
Even here, that would be a huge news story.
I mean, it used to be like that here in the early 1900s.
No exaggeration.
Yeah, yeah, totally.
But anyway, the point I just wanted to make about that is from the labor perspective,
when I was a young man, the underground miners fucking hated strip miners
they were scabs right because right i mean they knew the particular math of the situation was
well if they need if they use more machines to get this shit out they need fewer employees like
you didn't need any sort of yeah advanced you know whatever to to see that And when the Friends of Coal campaign sort of
hit a fever pitch,
somehow that all got
absorbed together and like if you were
critical of one facet of the industry
it was an affront to us all.
Yeah. You know what I mean?
And I'm interested to chart when that
happened and I'd be interested to know what your
thought is on that or when you could pinpoint it.
Well, let's see. Let's look at a timeline um like i was saying a minute ago
in the early 80s uh after like i said a decade and a half of sustained sort of pressure and just
outrage that they were letting this happen strip mining um they passed what is called the surface
mining control and reclamation act yes macro and it's really carter and the rose guard all these past what is called the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act, SMACRA.
Jimmy Carter and the Rose Guard, all these old fucking hippie activists.
I was with Jimmy Carter and the Rose Guard, and they signed SMACRA.
Hey, you want a fucking cookie?
Everybody's still fucking dying. Right.
That created the Office of Surface Mining.
What it basically did, though, just uh it introduced to the industry
a loophole i mean a way for them to um mechanize and revolutionize their means of production
and the way they did that was mountaintop removal so it's really funny how you get
the surface mining uh regulation in the early 80s and then you get mountaintop removal which was
even more destructive because what they did was they would go in and place dynamite charges blow up massive parcels of
land and then just get drag lines and just fucking just basically spread it all around just
dump all the fucking shit into the water you You know, the Obama administration for years said they were going to do this drink protection rule
that would update the science that OSM was operating on from the 80s.
Surprise.
And then the Trump administration came in and did away with it literally immediately.
Liberals were outraged.
It would have done nothing.
Anyway.
Not for nothing too
they had to pine and fucking beg for a hundred was it a hundred feet stream buffer from the
obama administration and even they were reluctant to to give that to concede that i was a part of
some of those conversations man i mean yeah and it's the obama administration this isn't fucking republicans right right yeah yeah no it's it's it's a total joke regulatory agencies in this country exist
solely to facilitate business and maximize profit yeah that's the only reason they exist they don't
exist to protect the environment they don't exist to protect your health they exist solely to
maximize profit and to do it in a way that
doesn't piss off enough people a critical mass of people to where they get you know they get back up
on strip mines with guns and start shooting at people that's that's exactly the deal and so if
you're a fucking liberal out there then you think that obama was a champion of fighting climate
change and all your fucking liberal heroes are these just you know exemplars
of fucking excellence where saving the environment's concern and curbing uh climate change
you're completely moronical you literally are the biggest fucking dipshit that ever existed
and you should go you should go fucking seriously i have no tolerance for
these fucking people dude you're you're right and the clean it's really funny because
it's really funny because like the administration like basically had a few
things that they were just it's it's hilarious they they tolerated us for a few years um
it's it's hilarious they they tolerated us for a few years um i remember um sally jewel wasn't that her name department of interior yeah who obama plucked she was the ceo of rei
i mean that's peak liberalism if you ask me if you go find an outdoor company ceo because the
outdoor companies are all ran by these fucking reactionary assholes that just have like a hippy dippy aesthetic.
They want enough river.
They want to be able to fish some cold water trouts and to not.
Yeah, in North Dakota or wherever.
Exactly.
To be able to watch the elk and stuff.
So the Obama administration rolled out this clean power plant you know that this this uh
back in probably um i was working it at voices that would have been 2015 is when they came out
with us yeah and the whole point was to reduce our carbon emissions and to uh reduce public health
costs associated with carbon emissions it was totally toothless um had no way to really enforce it it was uh
it was just a gesture man right i mean liberals banked on the idea that hillary would win and
continue that they could limp that along for another eight years giving everybody minor
concessions here and there or not even minor concessions really just uh symbolic gestures
exactly exactly but it was just a symbolic gesture right
so basically what the trump administration put out today is um is they're calling it the affordable
clean energy rule and it's a replacement of the of the clean power plan and this rule is fucking
hilarious this is a trumpian document it is a platonic trumpian document is perfect in
every fucking way because i'm tying off in it they openly admit that carbon emissions will increase
and will lead up to 1400 premature deaths annually. The Clean Power Plan tried to basically say it will save up to 3,000 premature deaths annually or something like that.
So they're not even making any bogus health claims.
They're just saying like, yeah, we're trying to kill you a little bit.
Exactly.
That's exactly what's going on.
We tortured some folks.
Okay, let's read some of this the clean power plant i'm quoting from the new york times article on this the clean power
plant aimed to curb planet warming greenhouse gases by steering the energy sector away from
coal and toward cleaner source energy sources like wind and solar according to its calculations
the decreased coal burning also would reduce
other pollutants like sulfur dioxide
which poses respiratory risk and nitrogen
oxides that create ozone.
Obama's EPA
also estimated that by 2030
the Clean Power Plan would result in
180,000
fewer missed school days per year by children
because of ozone related illnesses.
I have asthma
it's probably some form of result from this granted i grew up in the oil fields is a little
different but um by contrast the trump administration analysis finds that finds that
its own plan would see 48 000 new cases of exacerbated asthma and at least 21,000 new this is okay this is by their
own admission listen listen listen folks i'm not gonna lie to you there's gonna be a toll
but to get this thing back rolling, we're going to sacrifice 14,000 children, particularly the weak ones with asthma and other respiratory illnesses.
Dude, the analysis also includes a section called foregone climate and human health benefits.
That is, instead of listing the health gains of the Trump plan, preventing premature deaths, for example, or avoiding a certain number of increased emergency room visits from asthma attacks, it is instead describing the effect of the Trump plan as benefits lost.
So basically, they're just conceding up front.
And mind you, people, they're throwing a party for this tonight in charleston they're throwing a party for this tonight in charleston
oh fucking dude uh there's another core aspect of it which is really good i really like it when
these plans have like anti-science uh components of them like anti-methodology components or whatever
so um uh the clean power plan uh had something in it known as the uh six cities study
which is a harvard like a landmark harvard university study that tracked thousands of
people for nearly two decades and ultimately formed the backbone of federal air pollution regulations okay
the agency is now considering epa a separate rule to restrict the use of any study for which raw
data cannot be published as is the case with the six studies six city study which is based on the
confidential health records of its participants so basically the point is like if you have any scientific data whatsoever based on reported health data to a physician or scientist or anything like that, you can't use it.
They made it impermissible.
Impermissible.
Exactly, dude.
And again, there's a party going on. impermissible impermissible exactly dude um and uh
and again
there's a party
going on
tonight in
Charleston
for this
it's so funny
it's so funny
man
I was
I was
I was watching
like
paying attention
on Twitter
to some of the
tweets about
the event there
uh huh
and when
Jake Tapper
and the CNN
crew walked in
they just got
booed out of
the fucking building.
Which would be
great if it, you know,
under different circumstances.
Dude, that's a really
funny thing. Jake Tapper, that piece of
that bootlegging piece of shit.
Dude, what a fucking...
Can't even win it with the Trump crowd.
But even, dude, just seeing, like, fucking actual figures on the left
just, like, losing their shit over Jake Tapper being disingenuous about some study.
I saw that.
You made a good point today.
Dude, it's just unreal.
About Bernie calling out jake
tapper for some bullshit like well i mean and i mean i and i'm not getting back into our
anti-electoralism i mean we've beat that horse to death but it's really like
it's it's weird to see these people that we looked at two years ago as like our hope yeah slowly be absorbed into that
sort of like liberal media complex too like so much so that they're just pining for their approval
and wanting their message to get out there and it's like the only time i know that people around
here watch cnn is when there's like a west virginia town hall or something right like they
might know people like oh i'm gonna watch that to watch that and see if I see Jeff on there or whatever.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, or when like somebody, Anderson Cooper comes here and does a story on like Black Lung or whatever.
Like was the case, I guess, a year and a half ago or something.
I'll get into the, I'm never afraid to get into anti-electoralism, my man.
I'm always ready to down that hill
we have found a new niche in that
no but really
the reason why this comes from personal
experience this isn't just some abstract
fucking thing I believe
that like oh it doesn't make sense to engage
in the electoral I mean yes it does with some
caveats and I think like in a
if you could have a workers party that sort of all those things aside.
Nobody's telling you not to go vote for Ocasio-Cortez.
Exactly. Exactly.
Yeah. Do whatever the fuck you want.
But my larger point is that I've lived long enough and have experienced these things long enough.
For example, the clean power plan that don't fucking amount to shit they're all gestures to release a pressure valve
on the outrage of certain segments of activists or whether they're environmentalists labor
activists or whatever they're specifically designed for that and now i see our grip is we
see socialists falling for the same pitfalls exactly you know what i'm saying yeah and it's
it's i'm saying i don't want y'all to get okie doked in the same way that we got okie doked in
the environmental movement yes it's 100 true we're speaking totally from experience exactly
i've sat down with these people and they've lied to my fucking face yeah that's squared off with congressman senators and country lawyers
yes they lie to you they'll tell you whatever they think you want to fucking hear
just to make you not as mad as you really should be yeah um man it's it's it's really funny um
Man, it's really funny.
Oh, fuck.
Who was it on that choppo where they interviewed the Parquet Courts guy?
I love Parquet Courts, man.
But they were talking about how, like, back when we were a teenager,
we used to listen to Rage Against the Machine, like, fuck yeah.
And then in our 20s, we're like, man, that's corny as fuck.
And now we're like like fuck yeah and then in our 20s feel like man that's corny as fuck and now we're like fuck yeah again like the there's a line from a rage song that's like your anger is a gift yeah and that is 100 true man yeah that's the one fucking thing they
can't take from you i always knew the history would be more kind to to uh tom rell on the boys
exactly that's the one thing they can't fuck Don't let them take that from you because it's
legitimate. It's
totally legitimate and while these
just total fucking
psychopaths
do the song and dance tonight for
this like
letting them put more shit into
the air so you can die a little bit faster
that's
what you're up against man and
your little measly clean power plant or whatever will never change that it will never uh stamp that
out no i don't know man i don't know i remember being at a permit hearing a few years ago
and um and this guy this guy talking about how um you hear this a lot, right?
I mean, I've heard this multiple times, where you'll have guys come in, and I don't know if they're paid by the industry or if they really just do believe this.
I think there are some that really do believe this, where they extol the benefits of high walls and flat areas.
For economic development.
For economic development.
And even polluted streams,
like we were saying earlier,
just this machismo aspect,
like, buddy, I drank this my whole life
and I'm fine.
But, hey, bud,
I've heard people literally say in bars,
like, oh, my water comes from off the strip mine,
so you know it's good.
Like, they have literally
my cousin worked at cumberland river coal and he said buddy i'll go i'll go there you'll see
the biggest fish in there now you tell me that water's bad and those fish probably like fucking
got some sort of my friend yeah plutonium and they cause it to to be like the Hulk or some shit. Absolutely.
But it's all ideology.
And this is why Trump winning was not that big of a
shocker to us. Yeah. Because
we saw what people
would be willing to put up with for that.
Yeah. You know, people can put up with
quite a bit of
even when the material circumstances
around them, when the material reality
around them is telling them that like...
Points to the contrary.
Right.
It's a hyper-normalization.
Yeah.
But yeah, our sort of...
I just like saying that word.
Yeah, I know.
Yeah, it's pretty dark, man.
You know, I'd printed off a lot of stuff.
There's a lot of good examples of this, though.
A lot of good anecdotes.
There's an article in Inside Climate News by Jim Bruggers
that was just put out a few weeks ago
about how electric bills are skyrocketing across Appalachia,
mostly because a lot of people are leaving Appalachia,
but a big reason is because they're shutting down
all these old piece of shit power plants
and they're making the customers pay for it.
And that's how the ideological reactionary sausage gets made.
It's made, friends.
That's funny, man.
It's like with the AEP rate hikes last year
and how they bait everybody into this is that
they see what it's going to cost them to remain in operation, giving everything like the shutdowns,
the plant shutdowns and all that kind of stuff.
And they say, well, if we're going to keep our profits going at a certain percentage,
at a certain, I'm trying to say trajectory, but that's not the right word.
I'm sitting here gesturing with my hand up.
Anyway, if we're going to keep this profit machine rolling,
here's what we're going to have to pass on to our customers.
And then here's how they do it.
They say, well, we need 9%.
Well, we're going to come out and say we need 18%.
Yeah, yes.
And then once we get what we want, then can say guys it was tough but we made all the
necessary adjustments that we could we and we bum scraped and borrowed and the poor son of a bitch
that i feel sorry for not really feel sorry for but it's funny it's like always the pr guy that
has to get up on stage and take the abuse from the pissed off customers yeah because the fucking
ceo's fucking disgusting ass is sitting three rows
back and it's two chicken shit to get up there and take his own bullets yeah yeah no it's pretty
absurd man and it's funny because you'll even see some of the cold guys like that dipshit brandon
smith is like it's like you know like goddamn guys you gotta fold the pat hand every once in
a while so they don't know we've got the deck stacked you know and he'll get up there and have this faux outrage i see people
struggling yeah yeah and it's like shut the fuck up smith sit down yeah man it's it's um
it's pretty it's pretty crazy it is absolutely wild i mean um we're sort of at a situation where
the trump is trying to incentivize they're trying to create market incentives for purchasing coal.
But, you know, I don't know if it's really hard to explain this, but even if you're strip mining, it's still very expensive to do so because, man, a lot of these hills have been mined out so many times
over and over and over.
There's just not a whole lot of fucking coal left.
No, all the best things are gone.
That's something we've known since I was a child.
This shit's on the wane.
And the way, yeah, I really need to get some of my coworkers in here
to talk about this because it's connected.
It's all connected, right?
It's like the reason why.
We'll do a part two.
All right.
It's connected.
It's all connected, right?
It's like the reason why... We'll do a part two.
All right.
The reason why black lung is so...
It's just skyrocketing at rates we haven't seen in 30, 40 years
is because those seams are so thin.
Yeah.
And when you are mining in a thin seam,
you're breathing a lot of dust.
Yeah.
It's really hard to control for that,
even though we know that they're not controlling at all for those things.
Right, right.
And it's particularly disgusting just like you pointed out several times when you have
other developed countries who have eradicated black lung england germany right etc etc yeah
it's pretty it's pretty wild i didn't yeah that's fascinating i didn't know so we're recording this
on tuesday by the time this comes out that thing will have already happened in Charleston.
But that's pretty funny, man.
I'm kind of like a glutton for punishment.
I kind of want to go turn on CNN and see what's going on with it.
Oh, man.
Well, it's hard for me to know how much time because we lost all that fucking audio at the beginning.
Let's take a quick break real quick,
and then we'll come back for just a second.
We'll close out.
How's that sound?
Sounds good. guitar solo guitar solo guitar solo Oh, man.
Talking about the neither cuts.
My people.
My people.
I'm watching this show right now on AMC called The Terror.
Have you heard of it?
It's about the...
It's like the 1847 British naval voyage to find the Northern Passage over the Arctic Circle.
And they get stuck in the ice, basically, and wind up staying there for years.
I mean, it's a fictionalized account of that.
The real thing that happened is no one made it back alive.
They don't really know what happened.
They suspect there was cannibalism and some stuff.
But man, and I don't even really like the show that much,
but it's really effective at depicting what it would be like
to get stranded in the Arctic Circle in the 1840s.
Oh, yeah.
Lost in the Arctic, stranded in the Arctic Circle in the 1840s.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, like, you know, like, there's all the stuff like gangrene and... Scurvy.
There's all that.
Scurvy, right.
Which is pretty interesting.
But back then, you really also had to deal with a lot of poisoning because, you know, they didn't really have a full understanding of...
Because, you know, like you heard the phrase mad as a hatter.
You know, it usually came from like the glue or whatever that they would use.
Mad as a hatter.
You know what I'm talking about?
The mad hatter.
Yeah, right, right.
I guess the glue and the hat they would use would drive people slowly insane.
Really?
Yeah.
Interesting.
Yeah.
I didn't know that.
But back then, people were all the time getting bismuth poisoning,
like lead poisoning and stuff.
It just slowly drives you insane over time.
My reliance on Pepto-Bismol might be to blame for my erratic behavior lately.
Oh, wow.
Tom's just staring off into space and rambling about...
Bismuth poison.
I've been Bismuth poisoned.
It usually turns your shit black, doesn't it?
Yeah.
Bismuth?
Yeah.
Which is kind of scary because it if it could mask you feel like you
really were like bleeding out of you right innards right at this point it's just kind of like you
take that for granted though yeah i mean you just kind of part of that part of the ibs lifestyle
you're gonna see blood and you poop time to time oh man um man i had a good idea for a bit the
other day and i was totally gonna save it for you and tanya but um it's just too good for me not to
share um the idea is a um you it's it's like a um you know how they're always using call centers
and stuff as economic development around here?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They'd be like, oh, we're going to put a call center.
It's going to open up 100 jobs.
Man, motherfuckers were flourishing when Sox was around.
Yes, exactly.
Because it's like, no matter how bad you fucked up, you know you could always fall back on Sox.
Exactly.
exactly yeah it's like it's basically this thing was a call center that was like the urban equivalent of like uh like ups i guess you know what i'm saying like as long as you could pass
a drug test there was a place for you on the chain somewhere right well which i don't know
ups store store yeah, those good.
I worked at UPS store job for three fucking years, my friend.
Yeah.
Three years of my life I gave to the UPS store franchise.
I'm never getting that back. Dude, you can never have dignity or anything when you are,
anything when you are um when you're trying to like meet someone in a bar or even go out at a date or something like that when like for the previous 10 hours that day you wore a little polo
shirt with your stupid fucking name tag on it that's like my name's terrence ask me any question
you like people ever abuse you? Absolutely.
Like just fuck with you about stuff sometimes?
Absolutely, man.
Did you have to keep your resolve?
I did, but there were a few times I did not keep my resolve.
I always have a good chuckle.
About every year during Christmas time, during the high season,
UPS out of hazard, they always put out a call for part-time package handlers. Yeah.
And I can't think of a job description that I am more qualified for.
That's right.
Just a part-time?
Not full-time.
Just a part-time package handler.
Which I'm sure is hard work, really, but I'm making a joke here.
Yeah, man.
It's all jokes.
Yeah. No, it's pretty badass you get to ride around like on the golf
cart too if you're the part-time package handler easily yeah that looks man but i feel so sorry for
those guys from like because it starts right around thanksgiving like with the black what
do you call it like friday shit and all that stuff. Is that what it is?
The big shopping holidays.
I think it's Black Friday.
And then the next thing is Cyber Monday.
And the shit just does not let up through the whole season.
That's where you have cyber sex.
Do you ever have cyber sex?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, I went to a place called The Attic.
Chat room.
Oh, nice. And you throw out the ASL. Oh, we've Yeah, I went to a place called The Attic. Chat room. Oh, nice.
And you throw out the ASL.
Oh, we've talked about this before.
Like, theoretically, you found out that you had been cybering with one of your best friends.
You know what I mean? Like, you're, like, a 35-year-old and me, and you realize that we cybered together.
We cyber sex together.
You were, like, strawberry blonde hair, and I was, like, rubbing my dick.
Like, oh, yeah. Just imagining it. Yeah. You were like strawberry blonde hair And I was like rubbing my dick Like oh yeah
Just imagining it
Got that is weird
I talked on the phone
With one of my
One of the girls I met on there
One time
Yeah
And I was pen pals with several of them
Like when you were like 12, 13
It was kind of weird
I was extremely online even then
Even before online was a thing, really.
Right, right, right.
Oh, yeah, we've always been extremely online, man.
Yeah.
We've all been extremely online.
I used to, one of my favorite things to do also,
I'd get on the WWF chat rooms, like the wrestling chat rooms,
and I would always put like, the real Rock or the real sean michaels and act like i was like
ask me anything you want ask me anything you were doing ama before it existed
the people would sit like oh when are you coming back to eau claire wisconsin
not gonna look at the schedule looks like i'll be there in february
not gonna look at the schedule looks like i'll be there in february did you ever pretend to be um chris benoit i was never that he was wcw then i probably would have they found what if they
would have found those trends those transcripts and you were just fucking around with some kid
you were like i'm gonna kill my wife and kid i'm gonna kill my whole family that would have been crazy that's
that's one for the safety manuals
right
then they track you down
and they
they
yeah
could you imagine
if you were in a
Matt Damon like movie
where they
lead you into a room
you wake up
and they fucking take the
the
bag off your head
or whatever
you're like god
you know what I mean
your hair's all fucking...
Start snatching at people.
Right.
They were like, how did you know Chris Benoit?
Man, I was fucking 12, dude.
I was just fucking around with some people in a chat room.
It was Eastern Kentucky in the late 90s.
You had to be there.
No, the answer would be that you talked to your son 30 years in the future 90s you had to be there no the answer would be that you
talked to your son 30 years in the
future because of a
of a wave
of a solar wave that came off the sun
or whatever and took the
man for reference on that one
see last episode
episode number 12 or some shit
um oh yeah
we do have a premium we do have a patreon i need to
remember to plug that we have a patreon that we are posting episodes on every week so and we're
trying to make it worth your while t-shirts are coming we have a t-shirt design now they're they're
coming they're coming uh they should be i'm gonna i'm going to guess they will probably be getting out to you
by the end of September, 1st of October.
That's what I'm shooting for.
Right.
If you pre-ordered shirts, those are coming around that same time too.
How long ago did people pre-order?
Gosh.
Actually, extract that from the extract that from the
no no no
we're all transparency
here baby
yeah
look me and Tom
are
two people
um
you know and Tanya too
like we're just
Tanya's part time now
yeah well Tanya's
part time right
but uh
which means that we've
uh
kicked her out of the union
and uh
taken her health care.
She's going to lead a scab driver
or something like that.
JK, JK, JK.
She will go scab boards though
when we do go on strike.
But really, we're sorry about the shirts.
I mean, Jesus.
Well, there's only a handful that we've said,
but they are coming.
There have been so many times when I'd be talking to you like, man's only a handful that we've said but there are so many
times when we i'd be talking to you like man this is i'm stressed that we are so yeah i'm well here's
what here's what i'm gonna do those people pre-order shirts i'm gonna refund their money
and give them a shirt for free okay for you that's that's what we're gonna do but anyone
else who's a patreon subscriber um or wait i don't know what i'm saying. I don't make the deals.
You make the deals man.
What are the deals?
If you've been a Patreon
subscriber for at least
six months
and that's a good chunk
of you by now
you'll be getting
your shirt for free.
Make sure your sizes
and addresses
are updated
and for those of you
that pre-ordered
I will be
refunding your money
shortly
and we will send you
a t-shirt for free for basically
loaning us $18 for
seven months. Yeah. Is that what happened?
People just... Well, no.
Well, what happened was I was in search
of an outfit that...
Well, look. We need to be straight up with you right here.
Me and Tom are grifters. Alright?
We're con artists.
No. Not so much as i'm just kidding that is is i i wanted
to find a place that union made and union printed and union made shirts in the south and that proved
to be a harder enterprise than i thought uh-huh until i found there's a teamsters represented
factory of baytown in tennessee that's pretty. And that's the idea that we're going to use their shirts
to print stuff on.
All right.
Well, don't tell me.
Anyway, no, I don't have to tell you that.
See, I'm the member of this outfit
that looks the other way when injustice occurs.
I'm just like...
Terrence always turns a blind eye to injustice.
Whatever it fucking takes, I don't care.
I'm cutthroat, baby.
We're taking this shit to the top.
Hems the brakes, kiddies.
Oh, I didn't finish my hypothetical earlier.
So, you know, they use call centers.
Well, a funny idea that would stimulate economic development
and create like a self-regulating internal sort of perfectly
thermodynamic system or whatever would be if it was call centers for environmental non-profit
conference calls so if you needed to um call in you know if you needed to if you needed a uh
basically they would set up conferences for you need to troubleshoot an sjw problem
you call the uh call center you're like like oh my god the trump administration is trying to
pass affordable clean energy bill they're like all right hold on one second and they put you
in a conference call where you basically hear a bunch of ideas that make you want to go to sleep and you lose all of your outrage
completely and they send you back out there completely indifferent to what you were calling
about in the first place exactly you're feeling me yeah you're good you were looking at me but
i see you're on my level i'm with you
all right that'll do it you know what i mean like it'll uh but I see you're on my level. I'm with you. I'm with you.
All right, that'll do it. You know what I mean?
Like, it'll never,
that business will never die.
Seems like there's always
going to be an industry
of people just thinking
about problems
and then thinking about
how they can not
actually solve them.
Or thinking about
how they can solve them
about 70%,
but not enough
to put them out of a job.
Exactly.
Exactly, man.
Exactly.
Incrementalism.
There's too much money in incrementalism.
That's why it's not going on.
Well, what it is is you become part of the status quo.
I mean, literally, materially,
you become part of the status quo
and that's the same thing with the Democratic Party, man.
Yeah.
And if you really want to get into cahoots with them, that's what you are getting.
And just as a practical matter, incrementalism is how we get shit like the student loan crisis, right?
Yeah.
It's like they don't want you to pay that off in one fell swoop.
They want to limp you along over time.
Right.
Because that way they've always got, you know, a blue million people with their revenue streams right which is much better
than if somebody just pays you off and one wax oh well no fuck that right we always want to be
able to get money from you yeah yeah yeah it's about streams of revenue dog so we know more
about economics than most economists yeah man, it's about latchkey businesses,
baby.
Right.
Yeah,
no,
you become...
Not latchkey,
what am I saying?
Turnkey businesses,
turnkey operations.
I think I know
what you're talking about.
Like car washes.
Oh,
in what ways?
I took that
from King of the Hill.
Oh,
okay.
I'm sorry.
All right, well, the point is uh the point is keep your outrage
high i don't know man i don't know i'm talking talking listen to rage against the machine
cool again yeah and sign up for us on patreon because I know you want that extra weekly content.
Patreon.com slash Trill Bailey Workers Party.
No apostrophe.
Right.
Yeah.
If you've got five bucks on your couch cushions, if you, you know, maybe you want to skip a,
you know, lunch at McDonald's one day a month.
Here's what you could do.
We'll take that.
This would be the cheap way to do it but I totally respect it
if you do it.
Sign up for one month,
$5.
Listen to everything on there
and then just unsubscribe,
do it again in six months.
Binge, listen to it.
You know what I mean?
Just,
if you don't want to spend,
how much is that?
12 times five?
$60 a year?
Yeah.
You want to spend $10 a year?
We're cool, man.
Yeah.
We don't really care.
It's time to go.
All right.
Thanks for listening,
everybody.
We'll see you next
in a few days.