Navigated to SNAP out of it! - Republican Jesus Wants You Hungry - Transcript

SNAP out of it! - Republican Jesus Wants You Hungry

Episode Transcript

Speaker 1

Understand the thinking atheist.

It's not a person, it's a symbol, an idea.

Speaker 2

The population of atheists in this country is going through the.

Speaker 1

Rule, rejecting faith, pursuing knowledge, challenging the sacred.

If I tell the truth, it's because I tell the truth, not because I put my hand on a book and made a wish and working together for a more rational world.

Speaker 2

Take the risk of thinking.

Speaker 3

Feel so much more happiness.

Speaker 2

Truth Fusian wisdom will come to you that way.

Speaker 1

Assume nothing, question everything, and start thinking.

This is the Thinking Atheist Podcast hosted by Seth Andrews.

Speaker 2

I am going to get to the collar section of the broadcast here in Jesic you, but first we have to talk about these election results on Tuesday.

Democrats making a clean sweep of the three biggest contested elections in the country.

I think the most fascinating one, well one of them for me, is going to be the New York mayoral race, and I was delighted when Zoron Mamdami won.

We saw billionaire after billionaire after billionaire be a part of this smear campaign against him.

You know, he's not just a Muslim, he's an Islamist extremist, terrorist, or whatever else they wanted to say about it, because here in this country, no one really understands the Muslim faith.

They haven't read even part of the Qoran.

Now, admittedly I couldn't get through the whole thing, but I've read part of the Koran, and I understand at least enough about the religion and the difference between a Muslim and an Islamist extremist, and they are different things.

We know that the terrorists are out there, We know that there are people who are destroying themselves and other people because they want to please the prophet and Allah and get the virgins and all that stuff.

But Americans like to paint all Muslims with that brush, and we know that the vast, vast majority of the people who are oppressed by Islamic regimes and extremists are themselves Muslims.

Most Muslims are like most Christians.

They ignore most of their scripture, they have a cultural faith.

They just want to live in peace.

That is not an unfair characterization of the American Muslim and Muslims around the world.

I think that's fair.

So some people are like, well, how could you be happy that a Muslim won the New York mayoral race, and I'm happy for a couple of reasons.

First of all, I think he has more humanist values, more egalitarian, more pluralist values.

And I just like the fact that Maga despises him.

If Maga goes hard against you, that's the first indication that you may be doing something right.

Secondly, I think that democratic socialism is something that we can talk about and debate, but we are living in a culture now where hey, Jesus would be a free market capitalist is the message of the modern day Republican Party.

Maybe it's been the message of the Republican Party since Reagan or before.

I don't know, but you know this idea that he is more of a society has a responsibility to take care of its citizens.

The government has a proper and necessary role.

And this whole pull yourself up by your bootstraps bullshit is usually a narrative that is victim blaming, or it's said by billionaires.

We are a society and we have to take care of our own And I like that about him.

Now, let me play just a few seconds from his acceptance speech, which I found refreshing for its inclusivity.

I have to be a little pedantic and deduct a few points for islama phobia, because that's a bullshit term.

Anti Muslim bigotry is extremely real.

It is very real, and it's horrible.

But islama phobia is a shield against the faith, the criticisms of the Quran and Islam and the doctrine, etc.

Islamic extremists love to use Islamo phobia to keep themselves from ever being challenged.

So I'm not a fan, but I get it.

I understand why he used the term, because you know, Islam was part of the arsenal that was used against him.

Anyway, here's the clip.

Speaker 4

I to Kloma only the best in private life, the final time, I honor his name to the politics that abandons the many and answers them only to the few.

Speaker 5

We believe in standing up for those we love, whether you are an immigrants, a member of the trans.

Speaker 4

Community, one of the many black women that Donald Trump is fired from a mineral job, they from the lam still waiting for the cost of groceries to go down, or anyone else.

Speaker 5

With their back against the wall.

Your struggle is ours too, and we will build a city hall.

Speaker 4

That stands steadfast alongside Jewish New Yorkers and does not flavor in the night against the.

Speaker 6

Scourge of anti.

Speaker 5

Semitism, where the four than one million Muslims know that they belong.

Speaker 7

Not just in the five throws of.

Speaker 5

The city, but in the halls of power.

Speaker 4

No more will New York be a city where you can traffic in Islamophobia and niation.

Speaker 5

Together we will.

Speaker 4

Rusher in a generation of change.

Speaker 5

And if we embrace this brave new course, rather than fleeing from it, we can respond to oligarchy and authoritarianism with the strength it fears, not the appeasement it graves.

Speaker 4

After all, if anyone can show a nation betrayed by Donald Trump how to defeat him, it is the city that gave rise to him.

He cares any way to terrify a testament, it is by dismantling the very condition that allowed him to accumulate power.

Speaker 3

This is not only how he.

Speaker 4

Stopped Trump, it's how we stopped the next one.

So, Donald Trump, since I know you're watchings for you, turn the volume up.

Speaker 2

It was interesting because rights after the acceptance speech, I logged onto Facebook and I was just kind of scrolling around and I saw somebody who was listed on my friend's list on Facebook and they had posted it was an echo of this Fox News newsmax Oann right wing Trump talking point that New York has elected an Islamist domestic ji hottis terrorist and I am just not in the mood.

People are going to say, well, Seth just deletes everybody who disagrees with him, which tells me that you don't follow my page.

But I'm just not in the mood.

Bye, bye life short, get out of my living room.

Jesus.

Anyway, that's the kind of thing we're going to hear.

The Jihattists have again arrived in New New York and we must protect a miracle.

Prepare yourself for an hour by our onslaught of character assassinations.

And it's going to get even nastier, if that's even possible.

Are the tenets of his Muslim faith on the table?

Is Islam fair game?

Absolutely?

He and I could sit down and talk about his Muslim faith, fine, just like I sit down and I'll talk with people about their Christian faith or their Hindu faith or whatever, and we can talk about that.

But more than that, I think he's a good man, and I like the fact that people are bucking the narrative that's coming down from on high.

Speaker 6

Oh.

Speaker 2

Look, Democrat Mikey Cheryl is the governor of New Jersey.

Congratulations Abigail Spanberger, the first Virginia female governor, also a Democrat.

Pennsylvania voters kept three incumbent Democrats on the state Supreme Court, and Prop fifty in California passed solidly.

Now, this is California's response to Texas's plan to try to read district the Gerrymander, etc.

To stack the midterm and actually the twenty twenty eight elections in the favor of a very unpopular party, the Republicans.

So Gavin Newsom said, Okay, fine, we're going to put to a vote before the people Proposition fifty, which is going to allow us to make a new map for US House districts to counter that.

So he's playing more hardball.

Prop fifty past.

It was just a good week, and this is a much needed in fe usion of goodness in what has been a day to day litany of awfulness.

So I am feeling optimism because I have not been feeling optimism.

In fact, I'm wearing a shirt that was given to me by a couple of friends of mine in Sarnia.

When I go out to Baha Khan, the Bluewater Atheist Humanist events in Sarnia, Ontario, we have a lot of people who come out who are familiar faces and friends, and Casey and Faith are among them.

And they gave me a gift.

They gave me a shirt that made me an honorary Canadian.

It's his honorary Canadian Ah on it.

And so I've been, you know, and when I go up there, I am tempted to ask for asylum.

Hey, you know, I'm just saying, can I sleep on Canada's couch until all this is over?

And they gave me this amazing shirt, So thank you so much for that.

Baha Khan has already listed its lineup for August of twenty twenty six.

These folks like to plan in advance, and they're already promoting it for August.

I also got word in about another big event that's happening in October of twenty twenty six, with a lineup already announced.

It is Rocket City Reason, a conference that's going to be in Huntsville, Alabama, the third weekend in October.

So anyway, if you want to find out about those and much more immediate is my appearance.

I'm going to be at Secular Hub in Denver, Colorado, on the sixth of December in twenty twenty five, like a few weeks away.

I'm going to be in Denver, and all the details are at the Thinkingatheist dot com slash events.

Natalie and I don't get to travel together very often because I'm useless to her when we are out at an event.

I'm doing my thing, and so it's not like we can spend time.

But we've tacked a couple of days on to Denver because, for the first time for me in about thirty five years and the first time for her ever, ever, ever, in her whole life, we are going snow skiing.

Now I'm nervous.

I told a friend I was joking and I said, you know, I'm planning in advance, which acl I would like to tear you.

I mean, I've just you always hear about it.

I fell and I broke this, or I smashed that, or I ran into this, or I just spent the whole day face down.

But then you talk to other people who were like, it was awesome, man, it was one with the mountain and we snowboarded, which I hear is harder than skiing.

Snowboarding, We're not snowboarding, but we are gonna try skiing, and so we are going through these newbie questions.

What do we wear?

Is it layers?

Do you do the down thing?

We're gonna wear helmets?

Obviously we're taking lessons.

How are we gonna do?

Is it gonna be fun?

Is the gondola gonna scare the shit out of us?

Are we gonna you know?

Is the mountain gonna I don't know?

Am I going to careene off into the abyss?

Speaker 7

You know?

Speaker 2

Am I going to hit a tree and pull a Sonny bono?

I don't know what's going to happen, but it's going to happen after I speak.

I actually plan the speech in advance so that in case I am killed or horribly injured, the folks at Secular Hub will have already gotten a good show.

I'm just saying anyway, December sixth, Secular Hub, Denver.

Go to the Thinkingatheist dot com and you will see the events have there.

Okay, I am excited to announce that I have joined the Creator Accountability Network.

Now I talk to Sarah from can a few weeks back, we're talking about this organization that is it's around because there is a need for I don't like the word mediation because it sounds so clinical.

But we have seen in every culture, and the free thought culture included, we've seen harassments and abuse.

We've seen people saying and doing untoward and even offensive things.

And it's going to be a content creator, or it can be someone who is approaching a content creator, and we see a lot of escalation out there.

Something happens, an incident takes place, people don't feel like they've got recourse, or they're just simply pissed off, and they go online and it becomes the nuclear option.

Everybody goes hard at everybody else, very publicly.

It's all escalation.

Well CAN is all about promoting the safety and well being of community members and helping content creator sort of make a pledge to everybody that, hey, I'm going to operate as best I can in good faith, and if I do something that ends up being untoward or offensive or you know, if I do if I make a big misstep, it can be brought to my attention and then there can be a kind of path toward resolution and restorative justice, restoration.

Right, let's find out what happened, Let's make sure everybody's talking, not shouting, if possible, and let's operate in good faith to fix it.

I'd rather build a bridge than burn it.

Whenever possible, not always possible.

But the Creator Accountability Network is a resource that I am now a part of.

So I've listed their website and their phone number.

It's on my pages and whatnot.

And so if something was to happen, I'm trying to think of what I would be doing that was considered offensive.

But I'm trying to lead by example.

I feel like, you know, it's it's a good move.

You know, if something happens and you're like, ah, you know, I'm not going to talk to Seth about it, but Jeezy screwed up, you can contact CAN.

I am listed with.

Can they reach out to me and say, hey, we need a talk.

So it's kind of a It's a cool way to try to build safer communities and encourage dialogue.

And I'm all about that.

Creator Accountability neetwork dot org is the website.

I sure appreciate those folks.

I think what they're doing is a good model, and I wanted to be a part of it.

I have on the agenda here for the month of November an interview with an author.

His name is Scott Latta.

Latta.

He's got a book called Gods of the Smoke Machine, Power, Pain, and the Rise of Christian Nationalism in the Megachurch, and he did a lot of traveling to and through the megachurch scene.

We talk a little bit about these the kind of rock and roll shows.

You go in and they have a membership of I don't tens of thousands of people, and it's a pac performing arts sort of set up with the fancy chairs, big stage, light, fog machine, full band that sounds like they've been touring somewhere.

And then the pastor comes out and he's doing the hip thing with the half buttoned shirt and the jewelry and the tats, and he's given the message from the Word.

And how often do we then see scandal explode out of these churches.

We see some crazy stuff going on, whether it's abuse, sexual abuse and appropriate it's ungodly behave yearned that they have to repent from, or maybe it's a financial thing.

These people are living it up.

They've got mansions and luxury cars and fancy vacations and all these things.

Well, the constituents, the people at the other end of the offering plate, are struggling to get by.

A lot of these folks are working on the prosperity gospel model, GiB till it hurts and God will bless you kind of thing.

And I thought it was an interesting book.

So I'm going to talk to him about gods of the smoke machine later on in the month of November, and a lot of cool stuff as well, So make sure and keep tuning in for that.

Okay, let me take a short break and then when I come back, we will talk to our colors about whatever is on their mind.

Thank you so much for your support on Patreon.

If you like what you hear and you'd like to support what you hear, just go to patreon dot com slash Seth Andrews and thank you so much.

Let me go and speak to I believe it is Jesse at five one five.

Jesse, thanks for being a part of the conversation.

What's on your mind?

Speaker 8

I've been thinking kind of about, you know, the Christian affiliation rates and wondering if those will be impacted by the current administration.

I think I've kind of kept an eye on some of the I want to say it was Pew that had come out with those affiliation rates, and I think as of recent we're seeing like down to like sixty three percent, if I recall correctly.

And I think I know from a personal standpoint.

You know, I was a Christian for twenty years and I'm now an atheist.

So I'm just curious, you know, your thoughts on do you think that you know this administration will have an impact on I don't know.

I kind of feel associated from the Christian Church even from my past.

All right, think you've seen or no, I'm an atheist now.

Speaker 2

Well, I can see why you would not be affiliated then with a Christian church.

But I understand what you're saying.

Where before you may have been more charitable, these days you tend to be perhaps more cynical.

Am I reading that right?

Speaker 8

I think so I would say I am cynical in the sense of, you know, I grew up with Actually I just had a conversation with my grandparents the other day, and these are very rural farmers, and as growing up they would talk about that, you know, the importance of the words of Jesus and the constitution and democracy.

But these are also the folks and also support our current administration and see the complete opposite.

And so it's kind of a strange dissociation from the beliefs that I've heard them say for thirty years versus now supporting an administration that flies in the face of, you know, the values that they've esteemed for years, the.

Speaker 2

Stuff of our parents told us don't bully, don't be jealous, don't steal, don't be arrogant, don't love money, don't do all stuff.

And then we see the same people who pounded that into our skulls exposed as total hypocrites.

Keeps me up at night, and I think about the people I thought I used to know, and I went from being well, we've all been victims of ban nine dance.

I used to be that, But after ten years, that part of me is almost dead.

I've really become more the you should know better, and I'm not giving you any quarter.

I don't know, does that make any sense?

Speaker 8

I think so.

Maybe what you're getting at is, you know, I have, in some sense, over the course of my childhood and young adulthood, have felt in some sense of obligation to adhere to these principles that I've been taught, and so watching the folks that have taught me those principles completely do at one eighty and not be able to recognize the you know, the things they talked about.

You know, Nazi Germany was always a you know, an example as I grew up of what you could convince a society to do given the right circumstances.

And now we, in some sense, we're kind of there.

So it's kind of a scary thought and experience watching family go through these sort of intellectual associations, if you will.

Speaker 2

We've got the holidays coming up as well.

You sit at Thanksgiving table with people who are in active opposition to the things and the people that you care about doing active harm.

How does that even work?

And I'm going through that in my own mind.

Part of me like to just do my own thing, and I think I just might because hashtag life is short.

Do I think more and more people are seeing the hypocrisy of the evangelical rite and if nothing else, the silent complicity of many churches and saying screw this.

I do.

I think there are a lot of people I know church affiliation overall has dropped in the United States.

Interestingly, though, I read just recently that attendance in megachurches seems to be on the rise, So apparently the biggest churches are seeing a bit of a surge.

But overall religiosity church going, specifically in the United States is dropping, and I think a lot of folks are and they see it for what it is.

It has been kind of a black light.

Have you known anybody in your circle who has professed Christianity and looked around and said, hey, where's the Jesus and all this?

Speaker 7

Oh?

Speaker 8

For certain, I have a aunt and uncle who you know, they go to one of these megachurches that you kind of talk about, and I would say that they're probably the exception to the rule and their congregation, and that you know, my uncle and I actually get along quite well when it comes to politics, and so him and I will sit down and have these conversations.

But I think he is the exception to the rule where he thinks the current administration is a is an unhealthy one and a dangerous one for our nation.

But coming from the state that I'm in out in the Midwest, it almost seems that social expectations or the beliefs that you were born with with have much more significant impact on their views now than their current religious views are.

Sometimes it seems as if you know, those religious beliefs are more of a Sunday punchline, if you will, as opposed to those are the conditions in which I'm going to live my life.

Speaker 2

I don't think it makes me a politician when I say that we must be fair and say there are devout Jesus loving Christians who are on our side and on our page.

I'm thinking of one person.

So long story, very short.

She was a senior in high school when I was a freshman.

She was like a rock star.

She was dropped dead, gorgeous, super popular, homecoming queen, and if she said hi to a freshman in the hallway, it was like meeting the Beatles.

It was just a big deal.

Oh she's that.

I remember we were doing a production of Fiddler on the Roof and the guy playing Purchack was supposed to kiss her character on stage, just part of the production, and he got sick and I was the understudy.

And they're like, all right, Seth, if you have to go up there, get ready because you're going to kiss her.

I'd like to say her name, but I'm not going to do it.

And of course I was like, oh my god, I'm I'm freshman, she's a senior.

I'm terrified it did not happen.

I got off the hook, but I did have my fantasies.

But after forty years, she materialized on my Facebook page.

I mean, after four decades.

She is a Jesus loves everybody and God bless the children.

She's that kind of person.

Okay, all right, fine.

What I found more interesting was that she started to express on her own page the grief she feels at the culture of cruelty that is being carried out by people who share her faith, Bible bangers who were out there doing the most horrible things.

And so she went on her own page, and I saw the post chiding people going, how could we do this?

How can you believe this?

How can you support this?

How could you be a part of this horror?

When you say that you're about love and charity and feeding the poor and blessed are the immigrants and whatever else is in the Old and New Testament, if you're charity picking, she was like calling out her fellow Christians.

And I'll tell you the people that came after her, they, I mean, they descended like vipers and it was hard to watch.

But she's an example of a brave believer who her Jesus would never put up with any of this, and she's taken a hard stand for it.

And for that I am deeply grateful.

One day and I can sit down and talk about Jesus, we can talk about the Bible.

But there are some Christians who are on our page and they are extremely grieved, and I think that has to be said out loud.

Anything else, Jesse before I move on.

Speaker 8

No, I think that's okay.

Speaker 2

Thanks, Seth, appreciate you so much.

We'll catch you later.

That drives a lot of not as many of these days, but it used to drive a lot of people who were anti theists crazy.

You're giving Christians cover if they affiliate with Christianity.

That means they're giving cover to the Christian nationalists.

Christian nationalists are often aligned with white supremacy in this country, which means they're elbow to elbow with Neo Nazis.

So all Christians are Nazis.

You think that I'm exaggerating, but I hear a lot of this type of stuff and I just don't buy it.

This is not a binary model, and we're not supposed to be binary thinkers.

Nuance has to exist in our conversations about this stuff.

It's all about context and it's just fine, in fact necessary to look at a flesh and blood, three dimensional, often extremely good human being of professors of faith and say what are your values?

And let's start there.

And that's exactly what I do without apology.

Jared, what's on your mind?

What do you want to talk about?

Speaker 6

Christian nationalists?

You know, I was raised in it like you were, and they're so cruel.

And now I look back and I say, you know, they're so You see people saying they're own Christian, but they're not.

They're like the way I was raised.

They're just following their values.

So like the whole SNAP thing, right, the whole argument is, oh, they're lazy, they're taking from us.

Am I still there you are?

Speaker 2

And let me add some context that make a few people, especially those outside of our borders.

We have a global audience.

For those who don't know what SNAP is, it is essentially government assistance to the disadvantaged.

Other people like to use the word welfare.

I find that sometimes a derogatory term, but you know what I mean.

And so with our government shutdown underway, you have the complete or partial I don't know if Trump going to abide the court order.

The court said he could not suspend SNAP benefits, but we're talking about tens of millions of people who are potentially not able to pay for their food, who may go hungry, and this has become a massive political football, and I think Trump wants them to go.

I think he wants SNAP to cause misery the absence of it.

I think he wants whatever harm happens to be there so that he can blame his political opponents for all the misery.

And I also think he's a sadist.

So I don't know.

Did I set it up?

Okay for you?

Speaker 6

Well, yeah, that's good background.

But I think i'd like to point out that the Christians want those people to suffer as well.

Speaker 2

Which Christians, the.

Speaker 6

Christian nationalists, the right wingers, the Evangelicals, the people I was raised by and who are still in it.

And here's the logic behind it.

God is in control.

The nature of man is evil.

So if you're disadvantaged, if you're experiencing hardship, it's God's plan to use that hardship to bring you to Him.

So if we help those people through the government, then they become reliant on the government instead of relying on God.

Whereas if the church provides the charity, you know, the lunch counter or the roof over their head or whatever, that's bringing them to Christ.

So I guess the political subtlety I was raised with is that government providing charity is inappropriate because it subverts God's will.

The government there is to provide justice, but they only look at justice from the sense of vengeance or retribution, not justice in the sense of allowing everybody to live as equals.

So it's twisted.

It's gross, it's bad news, but it's not illogical, and it's not uncreat the position they're taking.

And I think it's it's so subtle that you know, if you weren't in it, what I've just laid out is just absolutely bumpers.

Speaker 2

When I was about Christian if I may our position was more, we didn't see it as cruel as much, but it was.

It's the whole bootstrap thing.

This is the land of opportunity.

Just pull yourself up by your bootstraps, and the world is your oyster.

Work hard, It's what they used to say, work hard and your dream will come true.

These bumper stickers about what's possible and what that allowed us to do is partition in our minds that a lot of the people who fail simply weren't motivated enough to succeed.

And of course it's monumentally dismissive and wrong and harmful and crazy and cruel, but that's often how we thought.

We didn't see it as well.

God is using your light in momentary affliction to produce for you an eternal glory that far out to weigh them all.

It was more like, I'm not doing you a favor by giving you a handout.

I'm not going to give you a fish and feed you for a day.

We need to teach you to fish so that you can eat for a lifetime.

The thing is, none of us wanted to teach anybody to finish.

We didn't want to long term commitment.

We were busy living our own lives.

So I did see a lot of that as well.

Speaker 6

Yeah, and the thing is like, it's not the government's role to teach these people how to fish.

That's the role for Christians to step up and be an example to the heathen masses, the unwashed masses.

They need to see.

You know, if the government fed everybody, there wouldn't be poor people, and the Church wouldn't have a role to bring people to salvation because it's such a predatory thing.

They recruit from the destitute, and if the government eliminates destitute people, their entire recruitment pool is gone.

If you don't have to rely on the church for medical charity, for your food, for your healthcare, for your kids education, if our society provides that, then what's the church going to offer some blank check to a non existent bank.

But I think that's the angle people are missing, is that Christians don't want to help their fellow man.

They want to bring them to Christ, and they do bring them to Christ as the legitimate goal.

I buy that book Temporary Trials and Tribulation.

Speaker 2

Christians, but don't or Christians do.

It doesn't work for me.

I think this is situation.

I know Christians who genuinely are grieved by suffering.

Hell I just gave you an example.

And there are others in my circle and they do want to help people, and they are charitable and they would give you the shirt off their back.

And so to say Christians do or do not, I think we can probably expand and make that more contextual.

That's fair, isn't it German?

Speaker 8

Oh?

Speaker 6

Absolutely?

Okay, So what I'm saying, I guess I misspoke.

I'm not saying Christians don't want these people to be helped.

They want to do the helping.

They don't see a role for government in that because it cheats them of the opportunity to shine for Christ.

If you follow what I'm saying.

Speaker 2

Maybe in some cases I don't remember speaking it or thinking it when I was a devout believer, but I can see what you're saying that it might be true for some out there.

That's something to chew on.

Jared, and I appreciate you so much being a part of the conversation.

We'll talk about it, okay.

Speaker 6

Well, and thanks for all you do, Seth.

Speaker 2

Thanks for calling.

We'll see you later.

Speaker 6

Yeah.

No, I'm taking easy.

Speaker 9

I'm sorry.

Speaker 2

I tend to hear a space and want to fill it.

Sometimes I overstep my caller.

It's a host of flaw.

I'm so sorry, by the way, at my feet and I'm hoping that nothing outside happens while we are doing our show today.

But I have my grand dog here.

His name is Harry, seventy pound golden doodle.

This dog loves me, so he's right here.

He's trying to lay on my feet, but he can't quite get there.

This dog loves me.

It's like having a big, fuzzy four pod toddler.

He's what seven years old, bounces around the house.

He's just a puppy.

He's a puppy.

And he's got this big, deep, booming, guttural, imposing sounding bark that will rattle the teeth out of your head.

And you know what, he barks at everything.

So I've got my window partially cracked.

He likes to look out, and I'll be in here trying to record audio, whether it's for this channel or true Stories, or him narrating something else.

And he will see the mailman drive by, he goes crazy.

Speaker 4

Woo.

Speaker 2

Somebody's walking their dog.

He goes crazy.

A moth flies by the window, he goes crazy.

I'm astounded he has been as quiet as he has been.

I haven't sedated him, so maybe he just got worn out from today's walkies.

But if at some point something happens out there and it becomes canine chaos.

You will know my granddog Harry has activated.

Don't worry, it's okay.

I'm not being mauled to death here in the studio.

Forgive my digression.

Let's see I've got down.

He's calling out a Texas four three zero.

Hi.

Don you there?

Speaker 7

Yes, I am.

Speaker 2

Welcome to the show.

It's on your mind.

Speaker 7

Great to talk to you, first time caller, and for you, man, you're a You're luck, You're like a celebrity of mine.

Anyway, I want to talk to you about the soul.

Yeah, I know, especially like EVPs or something like that.

I'm not going to go into storytime, but i have had my experiences and I'm not a ghost hunter or anything else like that, but I've had experiences as a Christian, I've had experiences as a Muslim, and I've had experiences as what I am now a heathen.

So I know what aarn Ross says.

I know what's all the call in shows say about it and everything that.

It's something that I have a block I cannot get past in order to be full on atheist.

And I'm, you know, kind of needing some help with it because I'm right now, I reserve judgment on this sort of thing.

Speaker 2

So explain what you mean by EVP.

You mean like the patterns you hear in static well.

Speaker 7

Electronic voice phenomenon is what it's called.

I captured one myself, and like I said, no, I'm not no ghost hunter.

It was me and my son.

My son was eighteen years old, and we were we were living in this rent house in Arkansas and there was crap going on and during that time, grabbed my digital recorder and I just let it roll on the record, and I was doing what the ghosts But you know, hunters always do, you know, they have questions, and so I was asking, you know, I asked a question, why are you here?

Of course you don't hear anything while you're recording and stuff like that, but if you stop it, I stopped it, rewinded it, played it back, heard my voice why are you here?

And a voice said I like it here, and it was a voice that was deep throated, not like me or my son.

And then after that it started whistling a tune.

So things like that is just that's what puts me on the sense maybe something like this is emergent property of the human consciousness.

Speaker 6

I don't know.

Speaker 2

Well, having not been a part of that, and having not heard the actual recording, I have no idea.

I fall along the Okham's razor side of it.

Do I think that there are other worldly spirits who have passed on or exist in an outer membrane somewhere, who are contacting us in the physical world, and the way they communicate it on a frequency that our radios or tape recorders or whatever pick up.

Yeah, I tend not to go that direction.

I tend to think there's a much simpler explanation beyond that.

Speaker 10

Though.

Speaker 2

Let me ask you a question, because I find this more interesting.

Do you believe in a god, any god anywhere?

Speaker 6

No?

Speaker 7

Not anymore?

Speaker 2

Okay, well, you're an atheist.

There are atheists who believe in spirits, ghosts, reincarnation.

There are atheists who believe in a great many things.

Atheism relates only to the lack of a belief in a god.

And I've talked to a lot of atheists who say, well, I don't think there's any God out there, but I'm withholding judgment, or I have a auspicion that there might be.

I don't know something beyond the physical realm, and you know, I'm spiritual.

I've heard the gamut.

But those people are still atheists.

And I wouldn't get hung up on whether you call yourself that or not.

At the end of the day, though, we have to see ourselves as patterns seeking primates, often with a tremendous aptitude and desire to connect dots.

We have in many cases a desire to believe.

And honestly, if you heard something on a recording, I would want to hear that.

I would want other people to hear that.

I would want it analyzed.

I'd want to see if that could be repeated.

I'm not going to knock that down.

And you know, whatever's true, let's do that.

And I think that's the responsible way to approach this kind of stuff.

Don't beat yourself up because well, I need to call myself an atheist.

I think, yeah, you're living your own life and and you discovered something that you found difficult to explain, you're fascinated by it, you're keeping your eyes years open.

I buy that.

Does that make any sense?

Speaker 3

Don Well, yes it does.

Speaker 7

And I also take into account the history of it, the concept of the soul or something with you know, other than that's within us.

Is that's a concept that's older than religion.

It's older than Homo sapiens.

I mean, it's on cave drawings and stuff like that, of some kind of notion of an afterlife or something like that.

And then you know, you go into the spiritualist movement at the nineteen thirties and forties and things like that, and it was so prevalent that even Thomas Edison, right before he died, he was going to invent an electronic device that would do just that, that would pick up the voices of spirits and stuff like that, because it was just so prevalent during the spiritualist movement.

And that's where we got where these spirits can communicate through electronic devices.

It was during that time, and we know it came with the with the Industrial Revolution, we invented electronic devices.

Never we're hearing things on them, just like I did on my digital quorder.

Speaker 2

Well, there are a few challenges.

One is we have to come back to patterns seeking the reason that someone was hearing something on a frequency which has recently only recently been discovered and translated to an electronic device.

I mean, that's where they're going to hear the pattern.

That's where the brain's going to connect the dots.

The fact that people pre dating specific religions believed in the spirits, first of all, if you relate it to religion.

I remember Christopher Hitchins once said that religions were our first explanations for all things, and because they were our first, they were our worst.

So somebody two thousand years ago who didn't know what the stars were, who didn't know what epilepsy was, who didn't understand that there were germs in the world, they weren't part of the noledge economy.

What they believed is interesting, but I don't put any special credibility to it simply because it happened a long time ago and there are people who emulate that today.

Is there a spirit world?

I think it has to meet the burden of proof, and that's a fair approach.

All right, Fine, is there something that is trying to communicate?

Is there something that is being received on a recept or somewhere, Well, show me, let's take it into laboratory conditions, let's replicate it, let's peer review it.

And as far as the soul is concerned, I still think the soul is a scientific question because those who are brain dualists, who believe that the soul exists in the spirit or the mind is the physical flesh of the brain.

I still think there's a point where the soul would actually be connecting to the physical body and then that could be measured.

So the soul is a scientific question.

There's a neuroscientist named doctor Julian who's got a great book about this, called The Soul Fallacy.

But I'm not going to discount what happened to you, what you saw, what you heard.

But I think that's the beginning of our conversation, and I think there's a burden of proof that we should be pursuing.

Speaker 7

Okay, yeah, and that eedt and things when when it that's my proof.

But you know, that happened so dull and long ago, and it stuck with me.

I no longer have that digital recorder anymore.

It was just too long ago.

But you know, when it happens to you, you know we isn't that proof?

Speaker 4

You know?

Speaker 7

Can't that be proof?

I mean, if you get it on a digital recorder, you know, I mean, well, I heard.

Speaker 2

A sound, I heard a sound.

Is it's interesting?

But that's the first part of a much larger journey toward meeting a burden of proof.

I myself think, wow, I saw, I heard, I felt well.

Human perception is flawed and we are creatures of susceptibility, conditioned response bias, etc.

And again back to Wakham's razor.

Do I think it as a spirit world thing?

Or do I think there may be another explanation?

I tend to go toward the more simple.

Hey, just something happened here and we connected dots.

But keep scanning, use a different recorder, and if you find something else, then let's find a way to get that into a lab and see what else happens.

Speaker 3

Okay, I really do want to do that.

Speaker 2

Okay, all right, good luck, let me know if you find anything.

Speaker 7

All right, Thank you, mister Andrews.

Speaker 2

Thank you, Seth.

Please all right, we'll see you later.

Bye, mister Andrews.

I can feel part of myself turning brittle when someone says that I was on the tennis court two nights ago and I was playing a match for my team.

There's a guy.

He's a singles player playing the singles line.

His name is Matthew, twenty five years younger than he's on the bench while I'm playing my line.

And after the match was over, he came out and he said, you know, I was telling my friend over here.

He said, you know, older guys like you play smart because you have to place the ball because you can't necessarily run fast enough to get there, totally straight faced.

Older guys have to hit more accurately because they can't breaking move.

That was supposed to be a compliment.

Three other people in the circle just looked at him like, oh, no, you didn't.

And I'm sitting there about to just, you know, find a sharp object and just impale myself on it.

Oh my god, you old people, you have to hit the ball strategically because you can't cover the distance.

Ah.

That wounded me deeply.

Okay, I'm going to go and don my wole brown old man sweater and get some ensure, and uh, you know, I'll be right back.

I want to talk a little more about snap in just a second, because I remember that I posted something on Facebook which kind of clarifies a couple of things.

I'm going to do that and take a whole lot more of your calls in just second.

Don't forget.

My second podcast is releasing roughly three times a week.

I'm trying to do Monday, Wednesday, Friday if production time allows.

We're up to like four hundred and twenty five episodes over three and a half years True Stories with Seth Andrews.

You can find that on all major podcast apps, or go to True Stories podcast dot com.

Let me roll back to SNAP for just a second.

This idea of government assistance for the disadvantage and the narrative that, well, these people are all parasites.

I wrote something on Facebook a few days ago, and I think it relates here.

I said, according to the USDA, thirty nine percent of SNAP participants are children, twenty percent are elderly, ten percent are individuals with disabilities.

Now, the claim coming out of Magaville, the Trump administration, etc.

Or that all these people are and I'm just going to be crashed because they are.

They're saying it's all a bunch of meth heads and crackhores and welfare queens.

That's how they're getting away with justifying the cruelty.

They're saying, they're all freaking they all deserve it.

If they starve to death, only the weak will fail.

So despite the claim that people of color primarily benefit as well.

Twenty twenty three data would feels that whites white people outnumber black and Hispanic Latino recipients on SNAP.

Adults who receive SNAP often work, and they work hard in low wage in often on the bubble service jobs, cashier's cooks, and health aids.

The US Census bureaus twenty twenty one survey revealed that most of the recipients of SNAP have jobs.

Trump claimed largely, when you talk about SNAP, you're talking about Democrats.

It is true that general numbers show Dems at a higher percentage slightly, but one in seven rural households depend on SNAP.

Rural areas are overwhelmingly Trump and ultimately, I wrote, the big picture is about human beings who deserve better than to be branded crack cores and welfare queens.

Many were born into or are locked into disadvantage, and any SNAP benefits they get are nothing compared to the sneezed away riches of the billionaire class.

Snap is just another way to divide people, the haves and the have nots.

They're rich and the poor, and the poor deserve to be poor.

I've got six y one nine.

I do not see a name.

Who's this?

Uh, Lenny, letn me appreciate your calling.

What's on your mind?

Speaker 9

I kind of wonder if you have similar thoughts about a thing.

I struggle with the society and the world that we function in.

It feels like it's all very incoherent, the mega crowd, the religious, it's tribalism, it feels like, and we come up with an idea of who we are and what we're doing and why we're doing it.

But really we're all just kind of meeting our needs, the same human needs.

And then after we've met those needs, however we've learned to meet them, we kind of come up with the narrative or along the way, we develop a narrative while meeting those needs, and you know, whatever community groups we come up in, we view those as being the right ones.

Speaker 4

You know.

Speaker 9

I wonder if a lot of the things we're dealing with where you can kind of look at how people have interpreted Bible doctrine or religious doctrine in general, and you can see it shifting over time to meet the needs of the people of the era that they're in.

It's kind of similar to how the constitution works, and you can see it being reinterpreted to meet the needs of the people.

And it's kind of words changed and have different meanings, but we don't see it as that.

And I just wonder if really we're all locked in the different tribes meeting our needs and creating a narrative that really has never been coherent.

Speaker 2

I get.

I think what you're saying, people will fashion the model for or the framework maybe for a kind of culture, society, coping mechanism to meet their needs, be it religion, group that's wrapped around a specific philosophy.

We look for families that validate and support us.

And I tend to think that people construct a God, a religion of faith, a denomination, a culture in their own image.

That's why when you meet a Christian, that's the first part of the conversation.

Well are you a Bible literalist Christian or do you not hold it the body?

Do you think Jesus is a fire in brimstone god or do you think Jesus would forgive and love everybody?

And I think people if you go to different cultures, and Jesus is a great example, you will find different looking and sounding Jesus is based on where you go.

There's an African American Jesus, a ative American Jesus.

There's an Asian Jesus.

It's wild to see these people depicting Christ in a way that relates specifically to them.

And you show that stuff to white evangelicals in the United States and they lose their minds because Jesus is white, because he has to look like us.

But you know, if you're making the point that people will construct a framework to navigate through life based on what they want and what they need, whether it's religion or otherwise, absolutely, I think they do so, and I think they are attracted to tribes that validate those things in them.

So was I tracking with you or did I miss the point?

Speaker 5

No?

Speaker 9

I think so simultaneously.

It's kind of met up.

It's like a loop.

It like reinforces itself in the sense that we need you know, we're social creatures, so we need a tribe, right, And then I feel like that is a very natural web or quote unquote normal or the typical way that humans in general engage with dislike that we have and trying to make sense of our existence.

But I feel like that in and of itself, you spoke about our biases and things like that.

And I feel like those proquivities that we have in our nature kind of lean away from actually having a coherent behavior that relies on truths.

Rather we rely on what our experience is, how we feel, how it that we're trying to meet these needs, and truth doesn't necessarily feel like it's a need for a great many people.

Speaker 2

People are often more interested in using confirmation bias, scanning around to be proven right, the inconvenient truth that makes them uncomfortable, that may be a challenge to the model that they are living in, and so they're not as interested in whether or not there is accurate information.

They want to be personally validated emotionally, and that's what drives them.

And I think that is very much a human tendency.

It's why you and I walk into a room and there's somebody who has a deeply held, baked in belief that is part of their identity, and we're like, well, no, actually that's factually incorrect.

And not only do they not change their mind, but often the fight flight or freeze reflects kicks in and it's even harder to break through.

They are more interested in feeling right or being proven right than they are in actually being rights?

Am I close?

Speaker 6

Yeah?

Speaker 2

What's that line when an honest man realizes he is wrong, he will either cease to be wrong or he will cease to be honest.

I always like that quote.

I know it's a little bit simplistic, but there's a lot of psychology to belief, the desire to belong and believe, tribalism, etc.

I think it all plays in.

So anything else before I move on?

Speaker 3

My friend, and I.

Speaker 9

Just wondered if that's on those things.

Thank you.

Speaker 2

It's messy and it's a long ask conversation, but thanks for starting it here.

Take care out there, all right, all righty, all right, we'll see you later.

I've got Harold on a web call who wants to talk about Jared on a previous call.

Harold, are you there?

Speaker 10

Oh yeah, I didn't actually think I called it in time.

Speaker 2

Hey, back off your mic just a little bit.

You're distorting just a bit on the show.

Speaker 8

Figure this out.

Speaker 2

It's all good.

Usually it's just a couple of inches further away from the from the microphone and you should be fine.

So Jared had called earlier and he was talking about how Christians are motivated when it comes to snap benefits.

Speaker 3

Yeah, just just a few things like maybe you'll see the connection, maybe maybe people won't.

I totally get that, like a lot of former Christians and current Christians, is completely unrelated to the motivations Jared described.

But there are also some things.

So if you remember the HPV vaccine or when they were firststributing narcan to people, or you can go all the way back to the AIDS crisis.

So there was an argument when the HPV vaccine came out that they shouldn't give that to kids because that would encourage them to have premarital sex.

So the risk of cervical cancer should be a deterrent, And when they were distributing narcan, doing that takes away the deterrent that comes from supposedly overdoses.

Or way back in the eighties, when the gay activist came up with ways of preventing HIV infection, there was interference with them trying to spread the message of this is how you prevent it, because there was a desire that to be a deterrent from acting in the way they acted at all.

Speaker 2

Yeahs riff on, we don't support birth control because if people can have sex outside of wedlock without consequence, specifically the consequence of a potential pregnancy, or if we have preventatives against STDs, well, then they might be even more likely to participate in carnal and ungodly behavior.

That kind of thing.

Speaker 3

Yeah, to me, that kind of ties in with his idea of, oh, you take away the snap benefits, and that can steer people towards the behavior that we approve of.

And so instead of the government benefits that give people fighting chance to get back on their feet, you can make them dependent on the churches so that they'll go to where they hear the right message.

Speaker 2

I know that some religiously uned and themed outreach shelters might be trying to meet physical needs because they are more interested in a spiritual need.

Oh look, now that you're here, if you want your meal, your hot meal for the night, you are required to sit through a sermon and we're back to behavioral control.

So yeah, we'll meet your needs on our terms, for our reasons, and we have a larger goal in mind.

Speaker 3

Yeah, Yeah, there's nothing new.

Just think that there's there's a precedent for what I think Jared was talking about.

Maybe he was talking about something different, but.

Speaker 2

I think they overlap.

I think they overlap, and that's something to consider.

It's certainly true that when we saw Jesus giving the sermon on the mounta and he you know, when he is walking and doing his miracles, and he fed the five thousand, right the loaves and the fishes.

He fed them physically, but the point was to satisfy their bodies so that then he could feed their spirits.

And a lot of people within the church hole to that same thing.

Look, let's go out and meet physical needs when we take a mission strip or et cetera.

But the larger goal is to get them to a point where we can then speak to the soul, and we can speak to behavior and gain allegiance and another soul into the kingdom kind of things.

So there's a lot of good stuff there, Harold, and I appreciate the call to the show.

Is there anything else?

Speaker 3

No, I mean, I just maybe contrast that with the other vision, which would be you have a stable safety net and then you let the individuals build off that to decide what their larger goal is going to be.

Speaker 2

All Right, I appreciate you very much.

Thanks for Colin, Harold, thank you.

Yeah, we'll see you.

Later, somebody brought up the salience point that the elimination of snap was in Project twenty twenty five.

I find that interesting.

So maybe the tactic is okay, fine, we can blame the Democrats when we actually are doing what we always plan to do.

Anyway, here's an article from the New Republic.

This is from a few years ago, but it has to do with the Republican's hate of food stamps.

The paradox of the food stamp program is that it was originally designed to benefit three Republican constituencies, farmers, grocers, and wholesalers.

Even today, one of the program's biggest supporters is Walmart.

Yet food stam have come under near constant attacks since nineteen seventy six, when Ronald Reagan, then challenging Gerald Ford for the Republican nomination, disparaged a largely mythical African American welfare queen who used quote eighty names, thirty addresses, fifteen telephone numbers to collect food stamps, social security veterans, benefits for four nonexistent deceased veteran husbands, as well as welfare.

Food stamps were first conceived of as a subsidy to business During the Great Depression, President Franklin Roosevelt's Agriculture Department had been purchasing surplus crops from farmers and distributing them to hungry families.

Food wholesalers and retailers, including the supermarket chains that were just starting to appear and that marketed themselves as heavy discounters, objected to being cut out of the deal.

Food stamps were the resulting compromise.

Out of the government purchasing the surplus food wholesalers did.

The wholesalers sold the food to retailers, who in turn sold it to individuals able to make their purchases with government issued stamps.

Today's Republicans fulminates about non working counch potatoes who collect food stamps, never mind that most recipients work already in households with children seventy five percent due unless they are disabled or elderly.

But back in nineteen thirty nine, being unemployed was the reason you went on food stamps.

As with most New Deal social welfare programs, the idea was not to punish jobless people, but to help them.

Christopher Bosso, a political scientist at Northeastern University and author of the forthcoming book Why Snap Works told me that eligibility for the New Deal program often depended on the recipients being enrolled vocally in a relief program.

No welfare, No food Stamps, SNAP or the Supplementary Nutrition Assistance Program is what food stamps were renamed in two thousand and eight, and a half hearted attempt to reduce the stigma, which didn't take The very first recipient, some machinist in Rochester, New York named Ralston Thayer, was thirty five, able bodied, and unemployed.

I never received surplus foods before, Thayer told reporters.

But the procedure seemed simple enough, and I certainly intend to take advantage of it.

Food stamps appeared as the economy recovered during World War II.

In the nineteen fifty Senator George Aiken, a Vermont Republican, agitated for food stamps revival, but the Eisenhower administration wasn't interested.

These were prosperous years then, As Michael Harrington would observe in his nineteen sixty two book The Other America, the poor became invisible even to liberals.

That began to change under President John F.

Kennedy, partly because of Harrington's book, and by nineteen sixty four food stamps had been legislated back into being.

The Food Stamp Acts preamble stated as its purpose first quote, to strengthen the agricultural economy, second to help achieve a fuller and more effective use of food abundance, and only third, oh, yeah, to provide for improved levels of nutrition among low income households.

Even so, Republican opposition, combined with resistance from Southern Democrats, nearly tanked the bill.

Representative John McCormick of Massachusetts, the Democratic House speaker, finally secured support by tying it to aid for cotton and wheat farmers.

McCormick's maneuver established a precedent.

Since nineteen seventy three, the food stamp program has survived largely because it's been folded into the big farm bills past every five years or so, on which big agriculture relies.

As the political scientist Matthew Gritter observes in his twenty fifteen book The Politics of Food Stamps and Snap, the strategy provided the program with an institutional place outside the contentious welfare program.

It wasn't enough to spare the program.

Reagan's scorn, but it was sufficient to win support from key farm state Republicans like Kansas Senator Bob Dole, who in nineteen seventy seven teamed up with Democratic Senator George McGovern to expand access to food stamps.

Reagan's nineteen eighty election prompted a series of cuts to the food stamps program.

President Reagan told Congress in nineteen eighty one that a program originally intended to ensure adequate nutrition for America's needy family had devolved into a quote generalized income transfer program, but in fact, about ninety percent of the families receiving food stamps or below the poverty line, with the average living on thirty nine hundred dollars a year.

That's about thirteen grands in current dollars.

Among the reforms Reagan imposed were a ban on federal outreach to let poor people know food stamp benefits were available, a reduction and cost of living adjustments from twice yearly to annually, and the first in a series of escalating work requirements.

Reagan's assault on food stamps and on welfare benefits generally abated in the mid nineteen eighties because Bosso said Republicans got their heads handed to them on being so cruel to the poor and hungry.

At that point, Republicans and Democrats struck an unspoken bargain.

Democrats would be permitted to enlarge overall eligibility in the food stamp programs so long as Republicans were permitted to tighten it in petty and politically charged ways.

Sometimes the Democratic hostage is something other than expanded food stamp eligibility.

Today the hostage is the debt ceiling.

In nineteen ninety six, it was President Bill Clinton's welfare reform.

When Clinton said he wanted to end welfare as we know it, he meant cash welfare, not food stamps.

But one of the prices Republicans demanded was a variety of restrictions on food stamp eligibility, including the denial of benefits to legal immigrants who weren't American citizens and a three month limit on benefits to able bodied recipients who didn't work.

President George W.

Bush broke this pattern by expanding food stamp eligibility in various ways in the spirit of quote compassionate conservatism, But the Republican food stamp trashing Caucus roared back to life under President Barack Obama, whom Newt Gingridge labeled the most successful food stamp president in history.

He didn't mean it as a compliment.

More likely, he meant it as a racial slur, HARKing back to Reagan's Welfare queen epithet TEA Party Republicans and later Freedom Caucus Republicans tried to break into the Farm Bills of twenty fourteen and twenty eighteen so that food stamps could be separated from farm programs and McCormick's old left right coalition be broken apart, but both efforts got halted in a Republican controlled Senate.

The odd thing Bosso said is that there's no good evidence that snap disincentivizes work.

Two decades of studies have shown that work requirements are effect that kicking recipients off the rolls, but not at getting those recipients to acquire a job.

Yet Republicans keep at it.

At this point, we have to conclude the GOP long ago stopped caring about getting into the workforce.

That minority of able bodied food stamp recipients who aren't working already, all they want to do is take away their food.

That article penned by Timothy Noah of The New Republic back in twenty twenty three.

Why Republicans hate it when poor people have food to eat?

One last break, and then we're back to the phone.

It's next.

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Let's see, I think I have.

It's a web call out of Hell.

I don't know where it's from, but I'll put you on the air.

What do I call you?

What's your name?

Speaker 10

Heyeth, It's Zito from Costraca, Latin America.

Speaker 2

What's on your mind?

Speaker 10

Well, a little bit of everything.

First, preparing for war against the United States.

Speaker 2

You're you're preparing for war?

Speaker 4

Oh?

Speaker 2

Are you in Venezuela?

I missed it Costa Rica, Okay.

Speaker 10

From Venezuela.

Speaker 2

Okay, I have.

Speaker 10

I have Venezuela and half a straet Censers, so half and half.

I have family in Venezuela.

My father was Venezuela and et cetera.

So you know, after the US terrorist military group marines that drug have committed over sixty four murders in the recent months and two days Agojima, one of the battleship, I'm not sure if it's the battleship or or one of those ships is now near to the Venezuela and waters.

We expect that to blow up this month and it's gone of the amass.

Speaker 2

I don't know how Donald Trump is not on trial for murder for targeting those boats.

You know, they say that it's drug runners or whatever that are coming, and logistically that does not make any sense.

But let's say that they were trying to smuggle drugs into the United States.

You're going to have to demonstrate that and then there is a process, not hey, wow, bad people, let's kill them.

I was reading an article here in the United States.

Culturally, we as an entire nation are at expecting, We're not fearing.

We are expecting a dramatic increase in political violence and in the next ten years the assassination of a major political figure.

And I don't think it's going to be ten years.

I think it's going to be probably tragically much sooner.

And I fear an actual civil war even as we are looking at potential wars against.

I mean, how many people does Trump wanted to go to war with or invade or co opt or take over or make one of our own.

Now you know he wants Canada to be the fifty first age.

This guy is playing army five time draft Dodger wants to play army with the billions of dollars force of the American military.

And I think he's a psychopath.

I think he has no ability to empathize.

I think he has the weak man's idea of what strength is.

And he is getting people killed and it's going to get worse.

So I share your fears.

Speaker 10

It's no longer fears.

It's fading up to what's going to happen today.

Ago I saw the publication from the ex Ambassador James Story, an interesting analysis in regards of his experience as an ambassador of the United States Venezuela, and he actually was an ambassador for the first administration of Donald Trump, and all this that is happening was delayed because Donald Trump was expecting to kick off if he had not lost to Biden.

That's one part of it.

I don't know.

Have you read about what happened in the field somewhat correlated to this story, Rio Genato, but tell me about it.

So the Major Really Genaro, contrary to the federal government that was recommending other actions, executed a twenty five hundred men's raid to Major file Us in Really Gennaro to attack the Commando of Vermelo.

So they did, and one hundred and thirty two people were killed by the armed forces of the major A really Genera, including cops.

Because they were received with heavy governments, they were opposed, so a war broke out.

In fact, both were using new technologies like drones to attack.

Once the doest settle, one hundred and thirty two people were dead.

The pro Orznado Mayor has now been heavily criticized in regards of the massacre he committed, and the second in command of Commando Bermelo was able to escape.

So bittersweet situation over there in Brazil.

Speaker 2

Well, the world's on fire.

I think that's the point before I'm going to have to move on here in just a minute.

But I understand that you are rightly concerned that we are essentially looking at violence from within and from without, and it is always seems to be the innocent to pay.

So I do share those fears, okay, And.

Speaker 10

Before I move on, And the issue of the so called drug war, that's complete another responsibility of the United States and has been so since seventy one, from the Nixon administration onward the last ten presidents, and that responsibility of the deaths as well as in Mexico, Colombia now Gracil Venezuela.

The excuse that's being used, there's no doubt.

And this is a bipartisan problem, but it has been aggregated on the Republican mandate, especially Bush, both Bushes, Reagan and Trump.

And I implore to people like you, citizens of the United States, to start calling it out, because I'm putting the dead while up there y'all are debating what's left and what's right.

Speaker 2

You know, well wait here you did, so thanks for calling from Costa Rica, and we'll talk again Okay, we'll talk again, all right, see you later.

I want to say a huge thing you out to Rebecca, who has super jatted the show and is a wonderful supporter.

She said, got a bit of extra funds today.

Happy November.

We love you, Seth, you your soul of neurons and your voice.

Oh you're very kind.

Thank you so much.

And the support really does matter, especially saying that, hey, I might get banned in the next few months, depending on what happens with the administration.

We've already got major major networks who are self censoring, or they're censoring at the request of Donald Trump what might be considered inconvenience information.

Because the oligarchy is tied up the channels of official media, the rest of us around here thinking, hmmm, I wonder when they'll come after me.

I'm not going anywhere.

We'll figure it out.

And in the meantime, thank you so much for watching and for listening.

Be safe.

We'll do it again next time.

Speaker 1

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