Stay Free - Russel Brand - January 27, 2024


Glenn Greenwald - On if Trump Get Stop the Deepstate & 2024 Elections


Episode Stats

Length

47 minutes

Words per Minute

170.88051

Word Count

8,151

Sentence Count

311

Misogynist Sentences

1

Hate Speech Sentences

5


Summary

Glenn Thrush joins Russell Brand to discuss how the deep state is determined to delegitimize Donald Trump s presidency, and how they are planning to do so in order to keep him from becoming the next president of the United States, and why they are so determined to prevent him from taking power. Russell Brand is a comedian, bestselling author, and podcaster. His work has been featured in the New York Times, CNN, NPR, CBS News, and The Huffington Post, and he is a regular contributor to The Daily Beast. He is also a frequent contributor to Rolling Stone and The Daily Wire, and is one of the most influential people in the financial press in the world. In this episode, Russell talks with Glenn Thrush about how the Deep State is planning to defeat Donald Trump in 2020, and what they plan to do if he does win the election, and the reasons why they don t think he s going to be able to hold on to the White House, even if he s the Republican nomination. Stay tuned for Part 2 of this conversation with Glenn's interview with Russell Brand, coming later this week. Subscribe to his new podcast, Awakening Wonders, wherever you get your podcasts, to learn more about what's going on around the world, and to listen to more episodes of Awakening Wonders wherever you re listening to them. You can expect weekly episodes every single day, 7 days, 7/6/19-9/19. To find a list of our sponsors and show-related promo codes, go to awakingwondering.pod.co.uk/awakeningwonderings. We are giving you access to all sorts of awesome stuff, including our ad-free options, including VIP memberships, best vids, free training, and special offers, and much more! Subscribe and merchandising, including T-shirts, hoodies, stickers, and hoodies! We'll be giving you the chance to win a chance to receive 20% off your first week of the entire month of your choice, and all kinds of goodies, including mass mailers, too! to win $50, including personalized gifts, swag, and more. to receive an ad-only VIP packages, and a discount code to promote your choice of $50 or VIP membership, and so you can win a VIP membership and receive a discount of $100 or VIP access to a VIP discount, plus a personal training membership, plus all other VIP membership plan!


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Hello there you Awakening Wonders on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you download your podcasts.
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00:00:41.000 ♪ Music Playing ♪ Glen, thank you so much for joining us today.
00:00:50.000 It's an honour to have you, as always.
00:00:53.000 Always a pleasure to see you, Russell.
00:00:55.000 Thank you for asking.
00:00:56.000 It seems like the landscape of American politics has been irrevocably altered.
00:01:01.000 There is no chance that the Republican Party will ever be recaptured by what might have been regarded as conventional or traditional interests, and yet there is an appetite to homogenize the central space of the American political system.
00:01:17.000 Do you think, bearing in mind we're broadcasting this after New Hampshire, it seems that Trump's ascendancy to the nomination is assured and that even within the Republican Party and beyond it, within the American representative democracy more broadly, there is still no antidote for this phenomena and that they are still flailing and conflicted in how to address this, both within media and political circles?
00:01:45.000 I think the key truth that people have to realize if they want to pay attention to politics on a kind of deeper level than just what pundits say on cable news shows is the understanding of power works.
00:01:56.000 And how power works for me as the first law is that establishment forces that wield power not only don't give it up easily, they will fight to the death to hold on to it.
00:02:08.000 The nature of history, you can look at pretty much every historical event where people are fighting over who will build power.
00:02:15.000 And if you try and take power away from status quo institutions, whatever you want to call them, they will do everything and anything like cornered rats to keep it.
00:02:24.000 So you see, first of all, pouring $250 million into Nikki Haley's campaign to stop Trump from the presidency.
00:02:31.000 Obviously, if that doesn't work, which it likely will not, then you have all these prosecutions.
00:02:37.000 I mean, they're serious about forcing Trump to run from prison as the leading presidential candidate from a jail cell or from a courtroom, which is You know, such an extraordinary recipe for civil unrest that they don't care about because they're so desperate.
00:02:54.000 And then even if he overcomes all that and wins, we're going to have the kind of subversion of his elected presidency that we saw in 2016, where the U.S.
00:03:04.000 security state, the deep state, working hand in hand with the media, went to work to try and destroy and sabotage him in every single way, to even encourage people in his administration, generals and the like, to ignore and subvert his orders In order to neutralize whatever he wants to do.
00:03:20.000 They're already trying to do that.
00:03:22.000 They're already planning that.
00:03:23.000 There are articles openly in the mainstream press talking about the kinds of plans that they would intend to pursue if that happens.
00:03:29.000 And so you're gonna have every step of the way because they understand that they've lost the ability to control how people think.
00:03:36.000 People have tuned them out.
00:03:37.000 They obviously, even the most narcissistic and delusional get that by now when you see Trump winning despite all the things they've done.
00:03:45.000 There's a multi-pronged plan to prevent him, even if he wins, from exerting real power, and that is, to me, the great threat to democracy.
00:03:55.000 A contingency of course.
00:03:56.000 It was interesting to see the guy, is he called Diamond, who's from JP Morgan, sort of at Davos, casually advocating or at least assuaging fears around a potential Trump presidency.
00:04:12.000 Certainly he was using some populist language.
00:04:14.000 It seems to me, unlikely Glenn, that something as plausible as a Trump Presidency could be allowed to go ahead without some contingency in place.
00:04:25.000 Do you think when you hear high-profile figures from the financial world cautiously backing Trump or at least being open to a Trump presidency that's an indication that they can accommodate his ascent even without the kind of obstacles that you've indicated could be put in place i.e.
00:04:41.000 to some degree could a Trump presidency ever be co-opted by the same globalist interests that you say are now cowering like rats at the emergence of such a popular figure.
00:04:50.000 I think it's very difficult to imagine Jamie Dimon, of all people, the head of JP Morgan, the person who was so enamored of President Obama that he treated him like the second coming of Christ and Obama.
00:05:05.000 He preys on Jamie Dimon.
00:05:09.000 Dimon was called Obama's banker.
00:05:11.000 Suddenly embracing populist sentiments and trying to say, hey, you know what?
00:05:15.000 They kind of have a point.
00:05:17.000 I think what he was doing there instead was offering strategic advice, which is one of the ways that establishments can co-opt anti-establishment sentiment is by ceasing to be overtly hostile to them, not insulting them, not telling them they have nothing valid to believe, telling them that they're all racist, telling them that they're going to be in prison, and instead kind of throwing them some crumbs to keep them a little bit satiated, to keep them placated, That's really been the history of the United States and the capitalist society we have, the way we've been able to tolerate massive inequality, is occasionally you have things like the New Deal, things to ameliorate the edges of harsh capitalism just enough to keep people
00:06:00.000 They're not quite willing to go out onto the streets and risk their lives to protest.
00:06:05.000 I saw Jamie Dimon's little speech in Davos more as a way of saying, look, what we're doing isn't working.
00:06:11.000 We're fueling all these anti-establishment and populist movements, not just in the U.S., but throughout Western Europe.
00:06:17.000 I think we need to change our tact and start talking to them and about them with a little bit more respect so they start believing we understand their sentiments and aren't completely hostile to and at war with them.
00:06:31.000 The last time we spoke you said that in previous times of mass inequality there were tokenistic moves you said from the likes of the Rockefellers who might cast dollar bills from a passing limousine as a plutocratic gesture to the proletariat and then you said but these days with the rise of the militarization of the police force, anti-protest laws, ongoing surveillance measures it seems less Necessary to even mitigate these rising tensions.
00:07:02.000 And I've felt with speculation around a second pandemic, the disease X, with fear mongering around potential cyber attacks, with the escalating wars around the world, With the unique configuration of global elections this year, that there is something precipitous happening, that it is possible and plausible that the prognoses of giddy, shamanic outlier figures in the dark web are closer to being accurate than the kind of
00:07:39.000 Casual dampening down of expectations that you might read in ordinary mainstream media.
00:07:46.000 Do you think that we are on the precipice of moves towards a more globalist authoritarian regime?
00:07:55.000 Do you feel like the pieces are observable?
00:08:00.000 Do you feel that that's happening?
00:08:02.000 Do you think it can be averted or do you think that that's a sort of a hysterical perspective?
00:08:08.000 There's no doubt that that's happening.
00:08:10.000 I mean, you don't have to be a remote conspiracy theorist, you don't have to be particularly insightful not to impugn the high quality of your observation, but I don't even think it requires that much insight to see that when you have things like one country after the next, Adopting brand new laws to provide really extreme powers, unaccountable, unreviewable, extreme powers to governments to censor the internet and punish people for failing to remove content that these governments deem
00:08:44.000 Dangerous or false.
00:08:46.000 You see this law in the EU, in the UK, in Canada, in Brazil, in Ireland, in all parts of the democratic world now, and you've seen it already in places like the Persian Gulf long ago.
00:08:59.000 that give these states enormous power over the instrument that was supposed to be the thing that guaranteed us the ability to communicate with one another and to organize.
00:09:09.000 They're petrified of that.
00:09:10.000 They decided after 2016, when they had these dual traumas of Brexit being approved and then Hillary losing to Trump, That they simply could no longer allow a free internet and free discourse over the internet because it's too out of their control.
00:09:27.000 And ever since then, they've clamped down on free thought and free discourse, on the right to protest.
00:09:33.000 I mean, I think the thing that happened in Canada with the trucker protest, I even think some of the things you're seeing now with these pro-Palestinian protests throughout Europe and in the United States, where the reaction has been to crack down, because whatever your view on that war is, those protests are against the policy of the EU and the United States that supports Israel.
00:09:52.000 You're seeing with the right to protest, the right to free speech, the right to organize, the right to use the internet, increasingly repressive systems of control that are designed to curb some of these kind of wild excesses that elite see people engaging in, and they're trying to regain control of how people think, how they behave, and put limits on what they can say and do.
00:10:14.000 You and I have both had, in a peculiar way, comparable journeys from darlings of different aspects of the establishment.
00:10:21.000 You, obviously, as a very highly regarded and decorated journalist to apostate and attacker of the establishment.
00:10:30.000 I, from being a Hollywood insider to being very much an outsider and extremely publicly maligned, I always assumed, particularly perhaps around the time of Occupy, That radical movements such as you are describing, or at least you're describing the potential for with the communications miracle that is being addressed through these highly sensorial measures, that it would bear the hue of a kind of
00:10:59.000 Culturally progressive leftist revolutionary movement.
00:11:05.000 Plainly that's not the case with the cultural left aligning itself with authoritarianism.
00:11:12.000 Where does that lead us?
00:11:14.000 What type of aesthetic is it going to be?
00:11:16.000 Particularly when I speak to some journalists who say that even figures like Javier Mele or indeed Donald Trump are ultimately aligned with economic interests that are not Anti-establishment in practice.
00:11:33.000 What kind of inflection do you imagine that these movements might bear?
00:11:38.000 Is this something that you think about?
00:11:41.000 Glenn, I'm gonna have to stop you before I pose the next question because we are going to leave YouTube now.
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00:12:42.000 Glenn, so, Yeah, I think it's a really interesting question because in the 60s and the 70s, the primary threat posed to American power and American domestic stability largely came from the American left, from the anti-war movement, from the civil rights movement, from a lot of black radical groups like the Black Panthers,
00:13:03.000 Malcolm X and all those sorts of movements that were largely, not entirely, but largely left-wing.
00:13:09.000 As a result, all of the weapons assembled to combat them—the CIA, the FBI, the U.S.
00:13:14.000 security state, all these laws, infiltration—became an enemy of the American left.
00:13:19.000 That's why the American left, for decades, had always had a very jaundiced view of these security state agencies, of the U.S.
00:13:26.000 federal government, Then what happened in the era of Trump and the emergence of right-wing populism, not just in the United States but around the world, is the security states switched.
00:13:36.000 They no longer think that left-wing radicalism is harmful.
00:13:39.000 It's very neutered.
00:13:41.000 It's basically harmless.
00:13:44.000 It's not a communist movement.
00:13:45.000 It's basically just a very soft AOC, Bernie kind of like, let's just make things a little more like Denmark.
00:13:51.000 It's not threatening to anybody.
00:13:53.000 And the threats that they decided really exist are right-wing populism.
00:13:58.000 And so the CIA, the FBI, the U.S.
00:14:00.000 security state turned their guns on right-wing populism.
00:14:04.000 They did this explicitly.
00:14:05.000 I mean, you look at their doctrine and they say the greatest threat to United States national security is not Iran, Iraq, or Russia, or the Al-Qaeda or Hamas or Hezbollah.
00:14:15.000 It's right-wing extremism here at home.
00:14:17.000 They've made right-wing extremism, namely the anti-establishment populist right of Donald Trump, the greatest threat.
00:14:26.000 That's why they needed to call them an insurrectionary movement to justify all the surveillance on them and the criminalization of them.
00:14:32.000 And of course it switched so that now most of the liberal left sees the U.S.
00:14:36.000 security state as their ally against Trump and right-wing populism.
00:14:40.000 And especially that's true because the culture war has now become so important on the liberal left.
00:14:45.000 You know, LGBT issues and trans issues and abortion and all that and women's rights and minority rights and, you know, the CIA and the FBI are very happy to go along with that.
00:14:55.000 You know, every week they're posting like, hey, happy Indigenous Day and take a look at our bipolar trans, you know, operative in the field.
00:15:03.000 We're so proud of our diversity.
00:15:05.000 It's really done a great job of persuading.
00:15:07.000 They sold the war in Ukraine that way, also the war in Israel, like, hey, this is good for LGBT rights.
00:15:13.000 The establishment has done a very good job of branding itself as left-liberal from a culture war perspective and aligning itself with the liberal left by making their primary enemy the same enemy that the left has, which is right-wing populism and Trump.
00:15:27.000 And it has completely reversed the political dynamics in this country of who trusts those agencies and who doesn't, who cares about free speech and who doesn't.
00:15:37.000 And the reason is, is because these Western power centers do now view right-wing populism, anti-establishment politics, even from the left, but also from the right, to be their greatest threat.
00:15:50.000 I'm astonished at how effective that modality has been in rebranding deep state interests and formerly assumed bad actors such as the CIA, as well as globalist corporate interests.
00:16:01.000 We saw this, of course, during the pandemic, where the formerly loathed pharmaceutical industry were welcomed with open arms as saviors.
00:16:10.000 And it's astonishing to me that in such a relatively short period of time, such an effective rebrand can be enacted.
00:16:17.000 It leaves me though with questions about the depth of anti-establishment feeling that was ever present in the left and perhaps it was a brief cultural hiatus that just took place in that sort of post-beat cultural revolution moment of the 60s and immediately Receded and you know that perhaps sort of the left has always been authoritarianism certainly has been centrist and centrism and authoritarianism might easily be aligned with one another and the other question that leaves me with Glenn is what type of other than libertarianism practiced at the level of the individual
00:16:53.000 Aligned with some principles gleaned from Christianity and patriotism, what kind of movement is likely to emerge out of this new feared MAGA Trump populist movement?
00:17:09.000 If we've already had four years of it, where is a true anti-establishment movement, if you agree that what's happening on the right isn't one, is likely to emerge?
00:17:22.000 Well, I think one of the problems with the anti-right populist movement is that there's a lot of doctrinal ambiguity and even a lot of doctrinal conflict.
00:17:31.000 So, you know, you might have seen people like Steve Bannon saying things like, oh, we need economic populism in this country.
00:17:37.000 We need to go to war against the bankers and the globalists and protect Social Security and Medicare and raise taxes on the rich.
00:17:46.000 And that was Donald Trump's campaign rhetoric in 2016, but then he gets into office in 2017 and one of the first things he does is he cuts corporate taxes for the wealthiest, increasing the debt, feeding all the corporate donors in the swamp that he said he would drain, actually one of the best presidents they could possibly have had, making Mitch McConnell and his donors and lobbyists very happy.
00:18:05.000 And I don't think there's been a kind of coherent anti-right populist, anti-establishment politics that has fully emerged.
00:18:12.000 If you look, for example, at the way economic populism works on the right, if you look at people like Donald Trump, who say we're never going to let them touch Social Security and Medicaid, and you look at Marine Le Pen, who actually ran to the left, of pretty much every party in France, including the socialists, when it came to things like raising retirement benefits and opposing increased retirement age.
00:18:35.000 These things, you know, the idea of right-wing populism is, let's close the borders, get rid of the people who don't belong here, but then make life better for our own citizens.
00:18:44.000 If you don't get somebody like Malay in Argentina or even Bolsonaro in Brazil who kind of gets grouped into anti-establishment right-wing populism just because they kind of rail against the same elites that everybody hates, That has nothing to do with those people.
00:18:59.000 I mean, Bolsonaro hired, you know, kind of like an austerity-mad University of Chicago economist, Paulo Schette, to be his Minister of the Economy.
00:19:09.000 Mollet is a really hardcore libertarian, you know, like, let's deconstruct the government, get rid of social programs that help the poor, just let the free market run wild.
00:19:20.000 So I don't think there's a clarity of thought yet, but I think the important nugget that does tie it together, that is important and that can be worked with, They've identified correctly who the enemies are, who the people are who are wielding power, and the ways in which that power is being wielded correctly.
00:19:36.000 There is obviously a tendency to conflate a divergent range of interests in the way that you've just described because of the way that media functions now and of course politicians in places like Hungary and Brazil and Argentina are going to be at odds with one another and dealing with a sort of a different range of challenges and problems even though the enemy is likely to be the same because globalism is real and if even within the sort of right when all of these sort of figures these populist figures Our group together on analysis, it seems that there is a degree of variety.
00:20:10.000 Is it necessary that the opposition to globalism is in itself global?
00:20:16.000 And is this even something that there can be a contingency for, Glenn?
00:20:20.000 Or is it that we simply have to continually identify corruption and hypocrisy in the manner in which you do?
00:20:28.000 And allow whatever movements emerge as a result of that, because I see independent media clearly relating to independent political movements, just if you take the example of RFK.
00:20:40.000 It's unthinkable that that would have happened 20 years ago, that he would have, you know, without the support of legacy media, been able to rise to the prominence that, you know, who knows where it will lead, but at least he is popular.
00:20:51.000 And a few years ago, he's someone I wouldn't have on a podcast because he's, you know, he was just a pariah.
00:20:56.000 So, yeah, I wonder then, are we at risk of, because of the nature of globalism, simplifying what type of form opposition to globalism might take because it is a ubiquitous phenomena but that may not require a ubiquitous response?
00:21:15.000 I do think it's important to have a positive, coherent agenda that people by and large who are part of the same movement more or less agree on.
00:21:23.000 Obviously, you're going to have differences and some debates on the margin.
00:21:27.000 Because anti-establishment hatred gets you only so far.
00:21:32.000 You know, you can kind of get rid of certain establishments, certain groups of authority, but then if you don't have a clear idea for what replaces them, you're gonna have a lot of people within that movement that did that, that think those people didn't go far enough.
00:21:51.000 Then you're going to have people in that movement who think it went way too far, and you're going to have people who think, no, it just needs to be on a completely different path.
00:22:00.000 You look now at the America First ideology, which speaks a lot about things like non-interventionism, about focusing on America before we start financing foreign wars, and yet suddenly you have a lot of people who identify that way as wanting to fund the war in Israel, wanting to deploy American troops to the Middle East to get involved in all these Middle East wars that I thought we were supposed to be done with to protect Israel.
00:22:24.000 You have a lot of people wanting to confront China and kind of turn everything into a Cold War, which of course is going to only fuel the intelligence agencies and the arms industries that a lot of people say that they're against.
00:22:37.000 So I'm seeing a lot of ideological incoherence That at some point is going to have to be resolved in some way, otherwise you're just going to have this mishmash of ideas that I think is going to end up replicating, or won't have the focus necessary to overthrow establishment doctrines, even if you put different people in place.
00:22:59.000 Yes, because if ultimately these movements are undergirded by, if not the same, but comparable economic interests, there's a trajectory that can be predicted.
00:23:10.000 Ultimately, the resources will be directed to operate with and move within the lines that are established, always within that kind of framework.
00:23:21.000 I suppose that's why it's interesting and such a hideous phantom from the past to consider those truly ideological movements that were to some degree not materialistic, i.e.
00:23:33.000 the great movements of the 20th century, obviously I will acknowledge the horrors that they led to, but when you start to establish ideals that are not about materialism, and it seems that much of the populist America First or You know, many of the ethno-national, even if they're not explicitly ethno-national, even if they're sort of patriotic or nostalgic, many of these movements seem to me to be trying to revitalise and establish a kind of a sense of purpose, a sense of tribe, a sense of unity, a sense of coherence,
00:24:03.000 a sense of meaning that goes beyond we're just going to let the markets decide or we're going
00:24:08.000 to let globalists or you know in the case of the region of the world I live in sort of EU
00:24:13.000 bureaucrats determine what our life and lifestyles are going to be. It seems to me that that's kind
00:24:20.000 of what's burgeoning, that's what's you know waiting to be born.
00:24:24.000 Something that is explicitly anti-materialist perhaps, or certainly anti-establishment seems like a step in the direction of movements that are not able to be housed within the current rubric.
00:24:40.000 Yeah, I mean, if you look at, let me just give you a couple examples.
00:24:43.000 If you look at Vivek Ramaswamy's campaign, that was, I think, very difficult to pigeonhole ideologically.
00:24:49.000 One of its principal themes, I would say, its central theme, was that the main problem with the United States is not that we have too much debt or social spending or this or that, that we've lost any kind of purpose greater than ourselves.
00:25:02.000 And so everybody wakes up every day and focuses on their little job in their cubicles.
00:25:06.000 People don't have religion, they don't have spirituality, and that's why everybody's on antidepressants, everybody's depressed, everybody has all kinds of mental health struggles.
00:25:16.000 We're social animals who are meant to be part of something bigger than ourselves, and if you lose that as a country, and I think this is a big part of right-wing populism, then you lose what it means to be human, you know, this kind of connective tissue that makes us feel like we are part of something.
00:25:35.000 The other issue is, you know, if you look at what Steve Bannon was saying in 2016, I once got in trouble because I said, I think Steve Bannon and Tucker Carlson are both more socialists than a lot of people who identify that way.
00:25:48.000 And if you listen to what Steve Bannon was saying during the 2016 campaign, or if you listen to what Tucker Carlson in 2018 I did one of the most anti-capitalist segments on Fox News that I've ever seen in my life.
00:26:00.000 It was kind of like, what are all these hedge fund managers who are billionaire overlords actually doing for our country?
00:26:05.000 They suck out wealth, they de-industrialize our country, and then all this wealth is just banker wealth.
00:26:11.000 It doesn't produce anything.
00:26:13.000 It's like vulture capitalism.
00:26:15.000 And I think Steve Bannon has a lot of that sense, too.
00:26:18.000 You know, this kind of idea that what you need actually is greater empowerment of American workers.
00:26:23.000 Now, that has to be paired, in their view, with the idea that you can't have millions of people flowing over the border.
00:26:31.000 into the country, especially illegally every year, otherwise we'll lose the ability to, you know, kind of have a healthy society where people can live fulfilling, economically prosperous lives.
00:26:42.000 But a lot of that ideology is focused on the need to get away from corporatism, this kind of extreme view of capitalism, and return to a sort of sense of what is the welfare, prosperity, and happiness of the ordinary citizen.
00:26:56.000 Similarly, Tucker notably opposed that other great myth of our time, progressivism.
00:27:03.000 And I don't mean cultural, but the idea, of course, that we are broadly progressing along technological and medicinal lines, reaching Icarus-like, and we all know how he ended up into New Appaline territories when he said that he wouldn't hesitate to ban AI truckers and automated work in order to facilitate greater negotiating conditions for American workers and drivers.
00:27:28.000 And it seems to me that those kind of principles, when espoused by someone who identifies with conservatism, likely come from many of the principles of fraternity that
00:27:39.000 would be found in Christianity.
00:27:41.000 And it's often said of British socialism that it owes more to Methodism than to Marx.
00:27:47.000 That having a set of social principles, I don't mean socialist principles, but the idea
00:27:51.000 that people oughtn't only be regarded in terms of their utility, and when their utility expires,
00:27:58.000 so do they.
00:28:00.000 These values, these ideas, which I can see why they might be coupled with anti-immigrant
00:28:05.000 pro-boundary type politics, it seems to me have a certain value to them, and they're
00:28:11.000 certainly values that appear to be popular.
00:28:15.000 And ultimately, I figure that even if these views are at odds with many of the contemporary
00:28:22.000 ideas around no boundaries and immigration is beneficial.
00:28:26.000 I suppose these things, people have the right to hear those views, don't they?
00:28:31.000 And have the right to entertain them and even vote for them.
00:28:35.000 Yeah, exactly.
00:28:36.000 You know, it's so interesting.
00:28:38.000 In the 2022 French election, when Macron was re-elected, It was right around that time, maybe it was a little bit after, when the French were rioting the way they always do, but this time it was over Macron's attempt to increase the retirement age by two years from, I think, 62 to 64, which obviously for the United States, where it's been 65 for a long time, seems like a big luxury.
00:29:01.000 But in Western Europe, they've always valued more this idea that you retire earlier, you have more workers' rights.
00:29:08.000 And he gave this speech, Mélenchon did, who's considered a far-left figure in France, We talked about how so much of human worth in today's society is determined by a human being's utility.
00:29:23.000 How much utility do you have to a corporation?
00:29:25.000 How much utility do you have with your labor?
00:29:27.000 How much utility do you have to the economy?
00:29:30.000 So that the minute you lose that, you kind of lose your wealth, your value as a person, as you were just saying.
00:29:36.000 And he was saying that this ability to work your whole life, 40 years of hard labor, and then get to, you know, 62 and maybe have like 10 years based on life expectancy, where you kind of get to reflect and ponder and like read and do what you want, this kind of human freedom that you don't have when you're working hard jobs five days a week, 40 hours a day, is of such great human value, especially at the end of your life, to try and rob that in order to empower the IMF and the World Bank and European elites in Germany, is like criminal.
00:30:11.000 And I think this is something that you could hear and resonate just as much on whatever is called the far-right or the populist-right, this kind of attempt to get away from this dehumanizing, mechanizing form of capitalism that's globalist, that's spirit-crushing, that's human-crushing, and find ways to once again re-emphasize what human connection and what human fulfillment are.
00:30:34.000 I had a set of wonderful conversations with my friend Adam Curtis.
00:30:39.000 A few things that have always stayed with me.
00:30:42.000 Once when we were doing something live, he was saying, you don't know what you want, he said to the audience.
00:30:46.000 What is it that you want?
00:30:47.000 You just want the banks to be a little bit nicer.
00:30:50.000 Is that the extent of it?
00:30:52.000 Adam Curtis, I think, sort of identified quite early on, as he often does in his filmmaking, what actually is happening.
00:30:59.000 At the beginning of our conversation, Glenn, when we talked about it's plain that we are at a precipitous point, not because of evangelist, shamanic figures.
00:31:12.000 The prognosis of zealous figures like Alex Jones or whoever saying, look, because of observable legislation.
00:31:20.000 Does it seem to you, too, possible that a counter-movement could emerge?
00:31:25.000 I sometimes sense that there was like the Assange, Snowden, and indeed Greenwald moment.
00:31:32.000 Something got frozen in time there.
00:31:34.000 It was the end of something.
00:31:36.000 Media changed in that moment.
00:31:38.000 People's ethics changed in that moment.
00:31:41.000 The left and the liberal classes had to rewrite their agenda in that moment.
00:31:46.000 It was an odd time in history for it all to have occurred.
00:31:49.000 All that information is out there and is still true and yet more true.
00:31:53.000 Everything that Sandra Veale, everything that Snowden spoke about, it's all still out there and the culture is sort of kind of reformed around it and they're still there those guys like Telltale Hearts Or pictures of Dorian Gray, exiled away in Shadowlands, and the problems are unaddressed, and the culture's sort of tried to morph itself around, this is why this is okay, and yet he, like, Assange's name in particular can't even really be spoken.
00:32:19.000 Do you think that the media and the establishment more broadly had to reconfigure itself because of what is indicated by the punishment of those two men and because of the nature of what they revealed?
00:32:31.000 That it's them that have to be impugned and condemned rather than what was indicated by their revelations?
00:32:39.000 For sure.
00:32:40.000 I mean, I think it is still underestimated the extent to which Julian Assange is a true visionary of our time.
00:32:46.000 I think easily the most consequential journalist of this generation.
00:32:53.000 For whatever people want to say about me, I mean, I feel like Julian's impact is so systemic and so broad that it's really not even a close competition.
00:33:06.000 And the reason for that is that he was the first person to really realize that in the digital age, these institutions of power, I mean the main ones, like the big ones, had a huge vulnerability, which is that by storing all of their secrets, the secrets that show their lies and their crimes, in digital form it becomes much easier to take it You know, to like find a way to suck it up.
00:33:32.000 One of the things that's so interesting to hear Daniel Ellsberg when he talks about the Pentagon Papers leak was one of his biggest challenges was just like, how do you Xerox 40,000 top secret pages without being detected?
00:33:42.000 You know, you like go to the grocery store, you go to the drugstore, they have these big Xerox machines, you have to put a diamond for every page.
00:33:50.000 And he actually did that sometimes.
00:33:52.000 Whereas when Chelsea Manning wanted to download the Iraq and Afghanistan war logs, she did it in about 20 minutes just by pretending she was listening to a Lady Gaga album by downloading it onto her thumb drive and then sending it to WikiLeaks.
00:34:05.000 Same with Snowden.
00:34:06.000 He planned it, but it didn't take that much time to take all that information.
00:34:09.000 Julian was the first one to realize to create WikiLeaks as a kind of anonymous way to do that.
00:34:15.000 And then, of course, the Snowden leak, which was by far the biggest national security leak, came from the most secretive agency inside the world's most powerful government.
00:34:22.000 And both of those created a lot of support and popularity.
00:34:27.000 And like I was saying before, when you're the establishment, when you have establishment power, you will do anything to figure out how to protect your power.
00:34:37.000 And right away, you know, the smear campaign against all of us that were involved in those things began.
00:34:44.000 But more than that, like, trying to put Snowden in prison for life, putting Assange in prison for life.
00:34:50.000 But then also, you know, right away, what happened was when these things happened, It was already 10 years since Al-Qaeda had attacked the United States.
00:34:58.000 Nobody thought about Al-Qaeda anymore.
00:34:59.000 Nobody cared about Al-Qaeda.
00:35:01.000 It wasn't really a useful force to scare people any longer.
00:35:04.000 And then within a year of the Snowden reporting starting, then it became, oh, ISIS is worse than Al-Qaeda.
00:35:11.000 And then a year later, it became, Russia is an existential threat to democracy, and then Trump, of course.
00:35:18.000 And these institutions of power successfully re-scared everybody into believing that unless they put their faith and blind trust into these agencies, They would not be safe.
00:35:29.000 They would be threatened.
00:35:30.000 They need these agencies.
00:35:32.000 And you see the polling data that now shows that these agencies are viewed far more favorably, especially by left liberals, than they were a decade ago.
00:35:40.000 So this is part of this cycle where you push them, you attack them, but they attack back.
00:35:47.000 And if you're not Aware of that fact that if you attack establishment power successfully, they're going to attack you in at least ways that are at least as harsh.
00:35:56.000 You shouldn't do it.
00:35:57.000 But that is the cycle of history.
00:36:00.000 It is the cycle of history.
00:36:01.000 I mean, indeed, isn't that the initial contract between the governing and the governed right down to sort of feudal system?
00:36:09.000 You give us your taxes, we will keep you safe.
00:36:13.000 And if people start thinking, but I don't need to be kept safe, we could keep ourselves safe.
00:36:16.000 Like once that dynamic starts challenging, the whole thing falls apart.
00:36:20.000 So how do you think that the culture has sort of reformed, metastasized, like when you see a wire in a tree and the tree kind of grows around it?
00:36:29.000 How is it that, you know, the Guardian and the various European and American newspapers that were advocates of Julian's have sort of Regrouped and said oh, yeah, it's okay that he's in Belmarsh without trial and it'll be alright if he's extradited to America Well, how is it even maintaining the pretense of being like moral arbiters and reliable conveyors of information?
00:36:54.000 How can they do that?
00:36:55.000 What is the trick they have pulled?
00:36:58.000 I think one of the things that establishments need, and especially security states need more than anything, is a villain, is a scary villain that they can convince people they should need to be scared of and want protection from.
00:37:12.000 So, of course, during the Cold War, that was communists.
00:37:14.000 The communists were coming to take your God away, were coming to take your church away, and it sustained, you know, this five-year, five-decade massive growth of the security state, of wars all over the country, and then once the Berlin Wall fell, We were supposed to have, oh, this peace dividend, but right away we started getting new enemies with, like, Milosevic and, you know, having to go to war in Yugoslavia.
00:37:35.000 And then right away 9-11 happened and suddenly we had a 20-year war on terror.
00:37:39.000 And then along the way as well, we got these new enemies like Russia and Trump and the threat of right-wing fascism.
00:37:47.000 And now suddenly all these people who are scared of those things are convinced that these are the good guys, you know, the FBI, the CIA, the NSA, these major corporations, these major media outlets who are protecting people from these threats.
00:38:02.000 And that's really all there is to it.
00:38:04.000 Trump did change everything by, you know, if you look at what people say about Julian Assange now, the main reason why people are happy he's in jail is because they think he's a Russian agent.
00:38:13.000 Which is, you know, it's such an insane accusation that it doesn't pass the most minimal scrutiny of anyone who knows anything.
00:38:21.000 But it seems like if you're afraid of Russia, if Russia is what you're told is contaminating every part of your society, ruining all things decent, anyone remotely connected to them is an enemy, is someone who is a danger and needs to be crushed.
00:38:36.000 And that's how you turn a population authoritarian.
00:38:38.000 Because much of what you do is about bringing together complex information and telling stories using that data.
00:38:45.000 It's interesting to me when one discovers in conversation that still the modes and methods of the powerful involve quite arcane ideas like just flooding a population with terror.
00:39:00.000 That the issue of Julian Assange's imprisonment seems just less Significant, relatively, if you feel like you're in an existential crisis.
00:39:12.000 It also helps me to see, now, the value, importance, and power of independent media almost in real time.
00:39:19.000 If you take something like the Nord Stream pipeline, it was almost like it seemed ridiculous when it was reported that it was Russian sabotage when it was clear what the dynamics and effect and point of that pipeline was.
00:39:32.000 People could quickly say, No, it's more likely that this is a sort of a Navy SEAL op.
00:39:37.000 Maybe Poland were involved, potentially.
00:39:40.000 Everything has collapsed.
00:39:41.000 The amount of time has collapsed.
00:39:43.000 That's why it's interesting to discover, for example, Lee Fang, the journalist, did some reporting on Moderna's surveillance and the amount of money Moderna are spending on tracking and de-amplifying dissenting voices like Alex Berenson and Jay Bhattacharya.
00:39:59.000 But, you know, obviously I was targeted by them.
00:40:02.000 It's interesting to see how independent media voices will be smeared, maligned and attacked in order to preserve these interests.
00:40:11.000 And I afforded myself a wry smile and a slightly terrified chuckle when you said, if you want to attack establishment power, do be ready for them to attack you a lot more seriously because of what's happened to me recently.
00:40:25.000 It's a sort of a recognisable playbook, is it?
00:40:28.000 And now that independent media is so influential and effective, it's something that we're likely to see more of, I suppose.
00:40:33.000 I think people forget, because of everything that happened in the Julian Assange case, that the very first thing they did to him after that 2010 leak of the Iraq and Afghanistan war logs and the diplomatic cables, Beyond trying to convene a grand jury to criminally prosecute him, and they ultimately found they couldn't find anything, but what they really tried to do was use allegations of sex crimes against him.
00:40:59.000 Suddenly, these two women in Sweden appeared together.
00:41:02.000 They didn't really claim he had raped them, but it became a rape charge because they said that they were having consensual sex with him.
00:41:10.000 They asked him to use a condom, and he didn't, which under Swedish law is rape.
00:41:15.000 It ended up, you know, they were clearly not interested in investigating it.
00:41:19.000 They could have gone and interviewed him at the embassy.
00:41:21.000 They chose not to.
00:41:22.000 They pretended they had to get him onto Swedish soil, but he wouldn't go there.
00:41:25.000 The Ecuadorians protected him because they knew if he went there, they would give him over to the Americans.
00:41:30.000 The whole thing was a farce, but that was what led to the entire process.
00:41:34.000 First of creating a big cloud around Julian Assange, and then You know, forcing him to seek asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy and not be able to leave for nine years, and then ultimately bullying the Ecuadorians out of asylum and going to arrest Julian Assange.
00:41:49.000 The thing that always amazes me, Russell, I always go back to this, is when Daniel Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers.
00:41:55.000 What the Nixon administration did was they ordered a break-in of his psychoanalyst office to try and find out what are his psychosexual secrets to release them so that you kind of hear about Daniel Ellsberg's sexual fantasies or deviations or whatever.
00:42:12.000 And everyone's like, ew, I don't want to have anything to do with Daniel Ellsberg or his Pentagon Papers.
00:42:17.000 It always struck me as such a non sequitur when I was young and naive.
00:42:20.000 Like, why would you break into a psychoanalyst office as a response to the Pentagon Papers?
00:42:25.000 But that's the playbook.
00:42:26.000 And if you can create kind of a personal sexual scandal around a dissident, which is almost always done, you can get a lot of people to just instinctively turn away and say, oh, this person is someone who's kind of scummy, who I shouldn't trust, who I just kind of want to avoid.
00:42:42.000 And that is something that you see over and over and over happening to people who end up in those positions.
00:42:48.000 I suppose it's difficult for me to entirely indulge that because it feels self-aggrandizing to put myself into that kind of category when really what we're doing... I'll say it for you!
00:42:58.000 I mean, I've said it for you, so you don't have to.
00:43:00.000 But it seems like by putting videos online where you're critical of the deep state or corporate interests or COVID policy or the origins of the war in Ukraine or the increasing power of organizations like NATO, WF, WHO, It's like, I know how it will be reported on outside of these spaces.
00:43:18.000 They'll go, conspiracy theorist Russell Brand claims.
00:43:22.000 Then that's disrespectful!
00:43:23.000 You know, but it's... There is a precedent, it seems, for that.
00:43:28.000 Russell, think about this.
00:43:30.000 The people who call you a conspiracy theorist, and of course I've been called that, everybody who's a critic of the establishment gets called that, these are the people who went around for four years claiming that Vladimir Putin had secretly seized control of the United States by having a PP pornographic tape of President Trump urinating on prostitutes in the Ritz-Carlton Hotel.
00:43:54.000 They were constantly claiming that Russians were hiding under every bed, were controlling our country, even while Trump did exactly the things that would be most harmful to the vital interest of Moscow, like Blood Ukraine with lethal arms and trying to sabotage Nord Stream 2.
00:44:10.000 He was trying to bully the Germans out of buying natural gas from the US and not from Russia.
00:44:15.000 I mean, what a weird blackmail victim to go around doing the worst possible things to Putin.
00:44:21.000 But it doesn't matter because these are the real conspiracy theorists.
00:44:25.000 And, you know, all the stuff with COVID, the minute you tried to question whether or not this was done through a lab leak and not through a natural occurrence.
00:44:32.000 Oh, that's a malicious conspiracy theory they publish in Lancet.
00:44:37.000 These are the ways that they control dissent.
00:44:39.000 They're free to disseminate the most ins... Remember, the Hunter Biden laptop came out right before the 2020 election, and what did they say?
00:44:45.000 It's Russian disinformation.
00:44:47.000 The Russians are behind it.
00:44:48.000 It was a total lie.
00:44:49.000 It was a total deranged conspiracy theory that came from NBC and CNN and major media outlets.
00:44:55.000 It didn't come from independent media.
00:44:57.000 So this idea of conspiracy theory is always what they try and do to discredit anybody who deviates from their orthodoxies.
00:45:06.000 Thanks.
00:45:07.000 Gonzalo Lira has died in jail in Ukraine.
00:45:12.000 At his most recent White House press dinner, Biden talked a lot and passionately, within the limitations that he always appears to experience, about the importance of the free press and how it's a foundational principle and our site in Jefferson and stuff.
00:45:29.000 Gonzalo Lira predicted his own death And why is it important?
00:45:35.000 Why is it not reported on in the legacy media where you know when they would talk about other journalists that were behind bars and it'd be something they would sort of celebrate and magnify?
00:45:46.000 The way human rights concerns work is very simple.
00:45:49.000 Human rights concerns are weaponized against the countries we dislike and want to destabilize.
00:45:54.000 So you hear constantly about the mistreatment of LGBTs in Iran or the mistreatment of women in Iran, but you almost never hear about the mistreatment of LGBTs in Egypt or in Saudi Arabia or women in those countries or at the UAE or Or Bahrain or Jordan, because these are all American allies.
00:46:15.000 We have no interest in destabilizing those countries, so we don't care about the human rights abuses of them.
00:46:20.000 But Iran, which is a more open and democratic place than any of those other countries I just named, certainly than Egypt and Saudi Arabia, it's a constant drumbeat of How are they treating their women?
00:46:33.000 How are they treating their elders?
00:46:34.000 Why?
00:46:34.000 Why do we hear so much about Iran and nothing about these other more savage countries?
00:46:38.000 Because Iran is a country adversarial to the United States, and these other countries are our close allies.
00:46:42.000 We prop them up, we arm them, we finance them, so the U.S.
00:46:46.000 media ignores their abuses.
00:46:48.000 So when you have somebody like Gonzalo Lira, an American citizen, clearly not just being arrested, and imprisoned for his criticisms of this war that he has every right as an American citizen to criticize since his government is financing it, but to kill him in prison through mistreatment and negligence, it's the kind of thing that ordinarily the United States government would be screaming bloody murder over.
00:47:10.000 It's their obligation to protect their citizen.
00:47:12.000 But Ukraine is our puppet government, and we have no interest in criticizing Ukraine, and so The idea that Gonzalo Lira was a critic of the war means in a lot of people's minds, like Julian Assange, that he's a Russian agent and therefore he got what he deserved.
00:47:28.000 That's extraordinary.
00:47:29.000 Glenn, thank you for coming on and providing, as usual, the standard of education and passion that we associate with you.
00:47:38.000 Cheers for coming on, Glenn.
00:47:39.000 I appreciate your time, mate.
00:47:40.000 Always great to see you, Russell.
00:47:41.000 Hope you're well.