449: June 23-24, 2020
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Today, Dan and Jordan check in on a very exhausting couple days on The Alex Jones Show. In this installment, Alex tries to launch a distasteful and racist national movement destined for failure, decides he now hates Gov. Abbott, and consoles two of his friends who've recently lost their social media.
Tidbits
- Year of Seltzer Update: 152/500
- Alex rolls out "We Can't Breathe" movement
- Hollywood is collapsing as pedophiles are outed... ad pivot
- Guest: Gavin McInnes
- Gavin started his own video site, censored.tv
- Blackface is too dangerous
- Project Veritas video with Facebook whistleblower Zach McElroy
- Guest: Zack McElroy
- Guest: James O'Keefe
- James: FB created Cognizant to hide their bias
- Mask waivers
- Gavin Newsom is the new governor of Texas
- Brown people are exempt from wearing masks
- Guest: Alex Jones clone, Jay Dyer
- Book: Ghost in the Shell by Arthur Koestler
- Bubba Wallace wants attention
- Alex falls for mask exemption card
- Guest: Carpe Donktum, kicked off Twitter
- Guest: Bonnie Cutler, won't wear a mask, got fired
- Alex goes socialist
- banned.video censors content
References
- Ghost in the Shell
Detailed Show Notes
Dan and Jordan discuss a couple episodes of the Alex Jones Show, where Alex spends most of his time trying to console his friends who've been kicked off social media.[1]
Topics covered include:
- Alex is trying to start a new national movement against mask-wearing called We Can't Breathe. It's a disgraceful and racist idea, and is almost certainly going to be a giant failure. We Can't Breathe is already the name of a community organization.
- Alex's movement seems to mostly about a march in Austin against mask-wearing. Covid-19 cases are currently exploding in Texas, so this is probably going to end poorly.
- Alex implies that the recent death by suicide of producer Steve Bing was somehow related to pedophilia. There is no evidence to support this claim.
- Alex interviews Gavin McInnes about how he got kicked off YouTube. It's very sad, and is mostly a plug for Gavin's depressing subscription site Censored Dot Tv.
- Gavin McInnes has done blackface. Also, he's written op-eds defending blackface.
- Alex interviews James O'Keefe and his new "Facebook whistleblower" Zach McElroy. Zach actually worked for Cognizant, which is a different company, which Facebook contracted to do moderation work. All of the information Zach has revealed is inconclusive, and at worst implicates Cognizant, not necessarily Facebook.
- It was widely reported in late 2019 that Cognizant was stepping away from content moderation on social media. They laid off 6,000 employees, and much of the work is now done by the many other companies who Facebook contracts, where Zach did not work.
- California does have a number of exemptions for certain people who are not required to wear masks.
- California was not the state that set a precedence about making rules for mask-wearing. The first state was New Jersey, back on April 8.
- Lincoln County in Oregon had an exemption for people of color not having to wear masks. They were bombarded with complaints, and retracted that exemption.
- Arthur Koestler's book The Ghost In The Machine does not argue in favor of cannibalism and human sacrifice.
- Bubba Wallace did not report the noose that was found in his garage. He only became aware of it after NASCAR officials were alerted to it.
- Alex got tricked by the fake Mask Exemption Cards that people were posting on social media. This was a fraud carried out by a group called the Freedom To Breathe Agency, which isn't a real agency.
- Carpe Donktum is probably getting sued by the parents of children that he used in a recently popular race-baiting meme that Trump retweeted.