Episode Details
Back to EpisodesLet them eat "Jerky"?
Description
A cheerful sip, a sharp turn. We start with the “record-breaking” Super Bowl halftime claim and walk through the minute-by-minute data that shows a steep drop instead of a surge—an instant case study in how press lines outrun the truth. That becomes our throughline: stop chasing slogans, start reading the receipts.
From there we dig into the Epstein files and the hard reality that some “survivors” also recruited minors. It’s not a comfortable segment, but accountability rarely is. We call out the way media frames tragedy—like the Canadian school shooting—by identity before facts, and why that reflex maps to broader polarization. Then we sprint through a week of claimed wins: Dow at 50,000, falling murder rates, near-zero border crossings, lower rents, and the EPA endangerment rollback pitched as the biggest deregulatory move in U.S. history. Love it or hate it, we connect those levers to daily life—vehicle costs, mortgages, and neighborhood safety—so you can judge trade-offs, not talking points.
Power shifts abroad and back home. Treasury’s Scott Bessent describes maximum financial pressure on Iran, while stateside we examine cartels, a sudden El Paso airspace freeze near Fort Bliss, and what “boots on the ground” prep really looks like. On elections, we trace Smartmatic’s supply chain risks, argue for paper-backed audits, and lay out why a stalled SAVE Act could force national security routes to protect vote integrity. That case hardens with the Fulton County affidavit: missing SHA hashes, shuffled memory cards, and protective counters that don’t match. We’re not re-litigating results; we’re showing where the process broke and why trust collapses when verifiable controls vanish.
We keep it local too: a school walkout chaperoned under “safety,” a sheriff who can’t name his branch of government, and a resident publicly detailing cannabis-permit pay-to-play. The pattern is familiar—institutions follow incentives—so the remedy is practical: identity verification, periodic recertification, independent audits, and citizens who document, show up, and refuse to be gaslit. We close with culture: tech’s chilling effect on dating and fertility, a data-backed rethink of “redlining” as class risk instead of racial design, and a playful rumor about a Trump bid for the Seahawks that would flip Pacific Northwest sports culture on its head.
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