Politics Politics Politics

Justin Robert Young
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Dec 27, 2024 • 1h 34min

2024 Year In Review (with Kevin Ryan)

Kevin Ryan, a regular contributor known for his sharp political insights, delves into the year’s significant events. He discusses Alec Baldwin's controversial manslaughter case and its implications for Hollywood. The transformation of podcasting in political discourse, especially in relation to figures like Donald Trump, is explored. Ryan also reflects on societal shifts in attitudes toward cultural phenomena and the evolving landscape of hip-hop. The conversation culminates in heartfelt musings on fatherhood and the joy of connection with listeners.
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Dec 20, 2024 • 1h 44min

Everything I Know About The Shutdown Vote. Trudeau Days Numbered? The Demographic That Won 2024. (with Evan Scrimshaw and Musa al-Gharbi)

Evan Scrimshaw, a Canadian politics expert, discusses Justin Trudeau's political vulnerabilities as his approval dwindles amidst a potential leadership shake-up. Musa al-Gharbi, author of "We Have Never Been Woke," analyzes U.S. electoral trends and the ramifications of a looming government shutdown. They delve into the Republican Party's internal strife, the significance of diverse voting patterns for 2024, and the unsettling influence of media narratives shaped by figures like Trump and Musk. The conversation reveals interconnected political landscapes in the U.S. and Canada.
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Dec 17, 2024 • 1h 17min

Is Kamala Harris a Favorite for 2028? (with Bill Scher)

Bill Scher, a political commentator for the Washington Monthly, shares his insights on the shifting political landscape ahead of the 2028 presidential election. He argues that Kamala Harris may not have broad appeal beyond her Democratic base and suggests her best option might be a gubernatorial run in California. The discussion highlights the enduring popularity of Trump, the internal conflicts within the GOP, and speculates on potential Democratic contenders. Scher emphasizes the importance of authenticity and effective communication in shaping voter perceptions.
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Dec 13, 2024 • 1h 10min

Hunter DeButts Mystery SOLVED? Media, Ego and Trump 2.0 (with Chris Cillizza)

I’m diving deeper into DeButts. Yes friends, there’s been a crack in the DeButts case. To recap, on December 3rd, Anna Navarro tweeted that Hunter DeButts, the brother-in-law of Woodrow Wilson, was pardoned. This is not true. There is no historical record of a Hunter DeButts connected to Woodrow Wilson, and Wilson certainly did not pardon him. Navarro later admitted this was incorrect, blaming a ChatGPT search result. However, nobody could recreate the exact hallucination she posted, and the citation icons in her screenshot resembled an outdated ChatGPT interface.Curious, I discussed this with Andrew Mayne, my co-host on The Attention Mechanism, a podcast about AI. I also asked listeners to try replicating Navarro’s prompt in ChatGPT. Shortly after, I received an email from a listener named Bret, who provided screenshots showing that while he got the same initial answers Navarro referenced—Bill Clinton pardoning Roger Clinton and Donald Trump pardoning Charles Kushner—Hunter DeButts was nowhere to be found.Brett’s search led to a site called living.alot.com, which featured a listicle titled “Five Presidents and Governors Who Have Pardoned Family Members.” Interestingly, this article was last edited on the same day Navarro tweeted. My next move was to contact the article’s supposed author, Ron Winkler. However, the author photo appeared unmistakably AI-generated, suggesting the entire article was likely created by a generative AI model.Investigating further, I found that living.alot.com is owned by Inuvo.com, an ad-tech company specializing in AI-driven marketing solutions. This suggested that the hallucination might not have come from ChatGPT itself but from living.alot.com, an AI-generated listicle site, possibly due to SEO optimization targeting AI-driven search engines. If ChatGPT search pulled from this listicle, it would explain the strange result Navarro saw.Speculating further, it seems plausible that Inuvo.com, focused on generating ad revenue, might have tweaked its content after seeing traffic driven by the controversy to avoid being de-ranked or blacklisted by search algorithms. Bret’s recreation of almost the exact same search result strengthens this theory.If anyone at OpenAI working on ChatGPT Search is reading, I recommend a hard look at de-ranking or blacklisting the alot.com suite of sites. The credibility of search-powered AI depends on filtering out such low-quality content. In the end, the mystery of Hunter DeButts appears to be a hallucination generated by an ad-tech company leveraging AI-driven SEO tactics. Navarro’s strange ChatGPT result wasn’t directly ChatGPT’s fault—it was fed a falsehood generated by a content-churning AI. And with that, the Hunter DeButts saga is solved. All’s well that ends well.Chapters & Time Codes* (00:00:00) Introduction: Media, Politics & New Ventures* (00:01:20) Unmasking the Hunter DeButts Hoax* (00:15:01) Political Shifts: Murkowski and Ocasio-Cortez* (00:17:27) Government Shutdown Negotiations* (00:20:26) Chris Cillizza This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.politicspoliticspolitics.com/subscribe
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Dec 11, 2024 • 1h 30min

What Happened In Syria and What Happens Next. The Hunt for Hunter DeButts. (with Andrew Mayne and Ryan McBeth)

Ryan McBeth, a Middle Eastern politics expert, dives into the complexities of the Syrian conflict, examining the fallout from the Al-Assad regime's potential collapse and its implications for regional stability. The conversation also touches on the shifting dynamics involving Hezbollah and the Kurds, as well as the uncertain role Turkey may play under Erdogan's leadership. Moreover, they delve into the dangers of AI misinformation, exemplified by a fabricated narrative surrounding Hunter DeButts, highlighting the challenges of navigating digital information today.
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16 snips
Dec 6, 2024 • 2h 32min

The Self-Pity of the Harris Campaign Interview. Future of Pro Choice Movement. Where Do Dems Go From Here? (with Ettingermentum and Alice Ollstein)

Ettingermentum, a keen political analyst, deconstructs the Democratic Party's reliance on a single narrative and the fallout from the Harris campaign's missteps. Alice Miranda Ollstein from Politico dives deep into the future of the pro-choice movement, discussing how recent elections have reshaped strategies and challenges for advocacy groups. Together, they unravel the intricacies of coalition building and messaging, revealing the importance of adapting to a divided political landscape.
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Dec 3, 2024 • 1h 14min

Hunter and Joe Brought This All On Themselves

Hunter Biden brought all of this on himself.Joe Biden has damaged his legacy.All of this can and should get worse for both of them.Two Things I Don’t Want to Hear in Response to This Argument:* TrumpDonald Trump is his own conversation. Not everything related to any Democratic politician needs to be held in contrast to him. It’s lazy at best and corrosive at worst.* AddictionI don’t often play this card, but I am the son of an alcoholic and was raised by a problem gambler. Both went to 12-step programs for their issues. Addiction is a multi-faceted problem that deserves sophisticated empathy, but it is NOT an enchantment shielding you from the consequences of your actions. Quite the opposite: the 12-step program is designed to rebuild your sense of responsibility by repairing the damage you caused while afflicted.The pardon not only reveals the 46th president as a craven cardboard cutout of a decent man, but it also expands the bounds of presidential pardons in a uniquely selfish direction under the sickening guise of loyalty to family.But no one should be surprised if you’ve followed this story from the beginning. It is one unforced error after the next. One hapless mistake after another defended by unhinged self-indulgence. Let’s walk the timeline that led us to the most recent crimes:* Hunter Biden’s LaptopHunter leaves a laptop at a computer repair shop and forgets it. The shop owner realizes who owns it and turns it over to the FBI. After nothing is done and Joe Biden’s campaign makes statements the shop owner knows to be false, the laptop is leaked to the press.* Joe Biden’s ResponseHis campaign denies fault, deflects blame, and hides behind Hunter’s addiction.* 51 intelligence experts sign a letter calling it Russian disinformation.* Biden repeats this during a debate.* Twitter and Facebook are pressured to suppress links to coverage.The laptop is later proven real.* Tax InvestigationIn 2020, Hunter announces he is being investigated for tax fraud (ongoing since 2018).In 2023, a plea deal is reached. Hunter agrees to plead guilty to two misdemeanor tax charges and enters a pretrial diversion program for a felony firearm offense (illegal possession of a gun while using drugs). The deal is expected to avoid jail time.* IRS WhistleblowersTwo IRS whistleblowers testify before Congress, alleging misconduct and interference in the Hunter Biden investigation. They claim their efforts to pursue charges were stymied by higher-ups in the Justice Department.* The Plea Deal CollapsesDuring a court hearing, U.S. District Judge Maryellen Noreika raises concerns about the plea deal's scope, particularly its immunity from future charges. Hunter pleads not guilty.* Specifically, the deal reportedly included an agreement not to prosecute Hunter for any federal crimes going forward:"The United States agrees not to criminally prosecute Biden, outside of the terms of this Agreement, for any federal crimes encompassed."* Hunter’s MemoirThe gun charge stems from Hunter’s own admissions in his memoir, Beautiful Things, where he describes active crack cocaine addiction during the period he purchased the firearm.* Quote: “I used my superpower—finding crack anytime, anywhere.”* Despite knowing his addiction, he lied on ATF Form 4473 when purchasing the gun.Hunter sabotaged his own sweetheart plea deal by overreaching for immunity. He was the star witness for his own prosecution because he had to write a book about his new found sobriety.But if Joe just commuted Hunter’s sentencing for these crimes, it wouldn’t be as big of a deal. Sure he’d be a hypocrite but what’s the real world damage? Hunter didn’t spend a month in prison? He avoided probation?But that’s not what Joe did. He did something far greater and no one should forget it.Joe Biden granted his son a blanket pardon for any and all crimes committed from 2014 to 2024—an unprecedented eleven years.This goes beyond Hunter’s tax crimes and gun charge, extending into the period when Hunter joined the board of Burisma—the focal point of influence-peddling allegations against the Biden family.For context:* Ford’s pardon of Nixon aimed to move the country past Watergate.* Biden’s pardon serves his own family and raises fresh suspicions about influence peddling.The White House’s defense: the incoming Justice Department might weaponize its authority to target the Biden family on exaggerated charges.I would say for the forever power hunger Joe, that same logic fueled Trump’s resurgence from a pariah to a potential two-term president. Maybe they should have let it happen.Instead, this pardon undermines Biden’s credibility, damages the perception of the presidency, and sets a dangerous precedent for self-serving executive overreach.So let’s get to the “But Trump…” of it all. Trump issued two pardons that are similar to this one.* Kodak BlackTrump pardoned the rapper after serving a year of a 46-month sentence for lying on a federal gun form.* Charles KushnerConvicted and served time for a 2005 charge. Pardoned to clear his record.Both of them spent time in prison for their offenses. Either got blanket pardons that extended beyond what Dick Nixon received.TheTrump pardons may be gross but don’t set new precedent. They don’t personally benefit the president.Biden’s pardon of Hunter does.Hunter never paid a price. Joe Biden’s legacy should. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.politicspoliticspolitics.com/subscribe
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14 snips
Nov 27, 2024 • 1h 29min

Turkey Hunt: What We Got Wrong In 2024 (with Tom LoBianco and Michael Cohen)

Tom LoBianco, a political analyst and contributor to 24/7, and Michael Cohen, author on modern political campaigns, dissect the shifting tides in American politics post-election. They explore the surprising trend of ticket splitting and its implications for the GOP's future. The duo analyzes how Trump's era has reshaped political alliances and candidate strategies, especially for figures like DeSantis. They also discuss the legal challenges facing Trump and their effects on fiscal debates, revealing how campaign messaging may have faltered under Democratic focus on Trump.
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Nov 21, 2024 • 38min

EMERGENCY: Matt Gaetz DROPS Run For Attorney General (with Kimberly Leonard)

Kimberly Leonard, a Politico reporter focused on Florida politics, joins to discuss Matt Gaetz's surprising withdrawal from the attorney general race. They explore the political ramifications of Gaetz's decision amid serious misconduct allegations. The conversation highlights the ripple effects on Florida's political landscape, including power struggles between key Republican figures and challenges facing Florida Democrats. Leonard's insights shed light on the strategic maneuvering and evolving loyalties within the state's political scene.
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Nov 20, 2024 • 1h 48min

Matt Gaetz Sex Scandal Guide. #TheResistance Has Fallen. Trump Coalition Cabinet. (with Mary Katherine Ham, Karol Markowicz and Gabe Fleisher)

In this engaging discussion, Mary Katherine Ham, a political commentator, Karol Markowicz, known for her sharp insights, and Gabe Fleischer, creator of the Wake Up to Politics newsletter, dissect the Matt Gaetz scandal and its implications for his potential future in politics. They explore the murky legal waters surrounding sugar baby relationships, the evolving media dynamics with Trump, and the shifting political landscape. The trio highlights the complexities of political scandals and public perception, providing listeners with a nuanced understanding of today's political climate.

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