

Ep. 448 Unpacking Dave Smith's Analysis of Jimmy Kimmel
11 snips Sep 25, 2025
Adam Haman, a podcaster and commentator, joins the discussion to dissect Dave Smith's views on the Jimmy Kimmel firing amid FCC pressure. They explore how government and private firms blur the lines of free speech and the implications of cronyism. Haman challenges whether it's ever justified to silence regime intellectuals, highlighting the risks of censorship. The conversation delves into the role of the FCC, public pressure dynamics, and how Kimmel's suspension transformed a market issue into a free-speech controversy, sparking thoughts on market solutions versus state intervention.
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Expat Money Summit Mention
- Bob plugs the Expat Money Online Summit as a resource to protect wealth, citing Mikkel Thorpe's event details.
- He frames a plan B—residency and property abroad—as essential for liberty-minded listeners.
Intellectuals As State Apparatus
- Dave Smith argues the intellectual class and private entities often function as extensions of the state, creating a mutually reinforcing regime.
- That blurs the private-public line and complicates simple First Amendment claims about government censorship.
When Private Firms Are State Creatures
- Dave uses a weapons-manufacturer/think-tank example to show private actors can be effectively state-dependent and push for state spending.
- That dependence makes it less obvious that government restrictions on such actors are pure First Amendment violations.