We need to talk about ideas, good ones and bad ones.
Speaker AWe need to learn stuff about the world.
Speaker AWe need an honest, intelligent, thought provoking and entertaining review of what the hell.
Speaker BHappened on this planet in the last seven days.
Speaker AWe need to sit back and listen to the Iron Fist and the Velvet Glove.
Speaker AYes, the last seven days, what happened?
Speaker ACertainly some stuff happened with Donald Trump and Ukraine and a potential peace deal, which I'm keen to discuss.
Speaker AAnd it seems, according to the Murdoch Press, a spate of anti Semitism rolling through Australia.
Speaker AAnd the question is, is that correct or not?
Speaker APlus a bunch of other things.
Speaker AI'm Trevor, AKA the Iron Fist, up there in regional Queensland.
Speaker AScott the Velvet Glove, back again as a regular.
Speaker AHiya, Scott.
Speaker CGood.
Speaker CThanks, Trevor.
Speaker CG'day, Trevor.
Speaker CG'day, Joe.
Speaker CG'day, listeners.
Speaker CI hope everyone's doing well.
Speaker AJoe is doing as well as a man with chronic Crohn's disease can do, but he's got a special treatment.
Speaker AI don't know if you want to tell the people, Joe, or you want to keep that private or.
Speaker BI was going to keep it offline.
Speaker AOkay, we'll keep it offline.
Speaker AAnyway, Joe's as well as can be expected.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AWell, we've got a podcast to do, talk about stuff.
Speaker ALet me just see what is actually on the agenda.
Speaker ASo a new Patreon I'll mention up front.
Speaker AThanks, Melinda.
Speaker AMelinda's actually an old patron who I think is resigned under a new name.
Speaker AShe might have dropped off and come back on, so thank you.
Speaker AMuch appreciated.
Speaker AIt's been a long time since we've had a new patron, so even a revitalized old patron will do.
Speaker AYes, we're going to talk about anti Semitism in Australia and the Cairo takeaway incident and just a bunch of other anti Semitic incidents that have been highlighted and whether that really is a spate or something else.
Speaker AAnd of course, Ukraine and the deal that Donald Trump seems to have agreed with or being ready to agree with Vladimir Putin.
Speaker AI am very interested, gentlemen, in your takes on that one, as to what you think about that.
Speaker AI trust you've been reading up about that one.
Speaker CI've been reading up, but not as.
Speaker CNot as heavily as you have been.
Speaker CIt's just I think to myself that he can't actually negotiate without Ukraine being in the room.
Speaker AHe's going to.
Speaker AHe's going to do it without the EU as well.
Speaker CI know.
Speaker CWhich is utterly ridiculous.
Speaker AWell, it's his war.
Speaker AIf there are any doubts about this being an American proxy war, they're dispelled.
Speaker ANow by the fact that Ukraine and EU are not even invited to the peace talks.
Speaker ABut we'll get onto that.
Speaker ALet's get a couple of other things out of the road.
Speaker AFirst of all, just a quick one.
Speaker AAustralia census question.
Speaker AI just saw something on Facebook, gentlemen, that the religious question will be unchanged for the next one, so.
Speaker COh, really?
Speaker BYou might recall just people were crying into their beers about that.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker ASo we were hoping for a New Zealand style question which was do you.
Speaker AAre you religious?
Speaker AIf so, please tell us which religion, as opposed to the current one, which is which religion are you?
Speaker AAnd the first one being no religion, and then other options appearing.
Speaker ASo it's going to stick to what it was last time.
Speaker AWould have been nice to go the extra mile, but that hasn't happened, so.
Speaker ASo, yeah, that's a quick one on that score.
Speaker AAnd so, gentlemen, Cairo Takeaway, which is an Egyptian style restaurant in Newtown.
Speaker AI think I might have actually been to it because my daughter is based in Newtown or thereabouts, and I think we might have went to this particular restaurant once or twice before.
Speaker ASo not sure if you're familiar with the sort of sting that was attempted, but essentially the Daily Telegraph was caught trying to orchestrate public hysteria about anti Semitism.
Speaker ASo a man wearing a Star of David hat and video glasses went round targeting Muslim and Arab businesses, trying to instigate hostility from staff members.
Speaker ASo it's basically trying to bait people into being anti Semitic and that that would then be recorded and used as evidence of a spate of antisemitism.
Speaker ASo I've got a video here which kind of explains the whole story.
Speaker ASo let's play this one, see how we go.
Speaker DTuesday afternoon and Cairo Takeaway Cafe is buzzing when a man wearing a Star of David cap walks in and orders a hibiscus tea.
Speaker DHe moves to the back of the cafe wearing glasses with a camera.
Speaker DHe turns them on and he leaves, following the female staff member who served him.
Speaker DThey're at the door when the man in the cap speaks up, the alleged conversation relayed to the cafe chef.
Speaker AAm I upsetting you being here?
Speaker AShe said, no, I'm just asking you, what do you want?
Speaker AHe says, because I'm Jewish.
Speaker DSeconds later, a senior journalist from the Daily Telegraph enters with her photographer and allegedly asks the same female server, have you got a problem with the man with the white cap?
Speaker DShe says, why would I have a problem?
Speaker DEventually they leave the cafe worker not far behind and she's now the one with the camera that is out and out intimidation.
Speaker AWho comes into A restaurant and asked.
Speaker CMe a question about this gentleman who.
Speaker DI don't even know.
Speaker EDo you think it's not intimidation that.
Speaker BYou found it appalling that he came into the shop?
Speaker DShow me that you're from the Daily Telegraph.
Speaker AEasy.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker AI think something's upsetting.
Speaker DIt was all part of a stunt planned by the Daily Telegraph, allegedly called undercover operation.
Speaker DA leaked planning document reads, meet Gussie at Holt street, call on arrival.
Speaker AAh, the story goes on, but you get the general picture.
Speaker AThoughts, gentlemen?
Speaker CThat's a lot of.
Speaker BIf there isn't a story, make one up.
Speaker CYeah, exactly.
Speaker AAnd, you know, create one like they've been delivered by baiting people.
Speaker CYou know, they went in.
Speaker CThey went into a Islamic area, I would imagine, and they went in there and they deliberately wearing the Star of David and everything on the cap.
Speaker CAnd then the guy actually had to ask the server, he said, well, you know, do you have a problem with me?
Speaker CAnd he says, why would I have a problem with you?
Speaker CYou know?
Speaker AYep.
Speaker BSo wasn't there a Canadian YouTuber a couple of years back that was deliberately going into Muslim areas of Sydney and baiting people and then saying, you know, freedom of speech and they were kicked out on grounds of acting in a manner likely to cause a breach of the peace?
Speaker AYes.
Speaker ALauren something or other, I think her name was.
Speaker BYeah, sounds familiar.
Speaker AAlong those lines.
Speaker ASo this is the problem, isn't it?
Speaker AIs is the baiting of people to get a reaction from them and as a means of drumming up the idea that there's a spate of anti Semitism.
Speaker ASo other incidents that fall into this category would be these nurses.
Speaker ASo you've heard about the two Arab Australian nurses who were also baited by an Israeli influencer into saying on a website that they would kill Israelis if they came into their hospital.
Speaker ASo, you know, that's bad.
Speaker ALike, we don't want our nurses openly saying that they're going to kill people who come into their hospitals.
Speaker ABut in the context of.
Speaker AIf you watch the extended footage of the exchange, it's clear the influencer went out of his way to inform them that he served in the Israeli military and killed Palestinians.
Speaker AAnd one of the nurses has reportedly lost 70 family members to Israeli atrocities in Palestine.
Speaker ASo still you don't want your nurses doing it, but it gives it a context that you have to say to people, how would you react if 70 of your relatives were killed by Israeli military and you're talking to a man who's boasting about being Israeli military and having killed Palestinians, it would be hard to control your anger and emotion in that situation.
Speaker AAnd Caitlin Johnston in her blog says, without defending the irresponsible comments of the nurses, I don't think anyone would expect a Jewish person who came into contact with a Nazi soldier in the 1940s to maintain their cool and avoid violent speech, much less so if that person had lost family members in the Holocaust and they thought they were having a conversation in private.
Speaker ASo not good on behalf of the nurses.
Speaker ABut a clear baiting by this Jewish influencer in a situation where somebody's lost 70 relatives to Israeli soldiers and the guy's boasting that he's an Israeli soldier who's killed Palestinians.
Speaker ASo in that context, is it, you know, add to the anti Semitism that's apparently rife in Australia, or is this more of like the Cairo takeaway where in order to gain sympathy and to get stronger laws, some people are trying to create a problem that doesn't exist.
Speaker BYeah, certainly that as I read the headlines, they were saying that they kill any Jew that came into their hospital.
Speaker ANot good.
Speaker BNo, but, and, and if what you're saying is correct, they were threatening to kill members of the idf.
Speaker BWell, that's probably more justified.
Speaker BI mean a nurse shouldn't be killing anybody and possibly they should be reporting them to the International Criminal Court.
Speaker ABut, yeah, but, so you can't excuse it.
Speaker ABut in terms of the, this, you know, the evidence of anti Semitism in Australia, you can see that influences going into, into websites like this and deliberately provoking people is going to fan flames that maybe if they weren't there would have not happened.
Speaker ASo I mean it's if, if you.
Speaker BWant antisemitism, I'm sure if you recorded enough mosque, what they call them preachers at the imams with their service, I'm sure that there is very much some anti Jewish speech in, in the sermons from the imams.
Speaker BBut this, this doesn't sound anything like, you know, it's storming the teacup, isn't it?
Speaker ASo the other sort of incidents of anti Semitism that's going on was the, the caravan.
Speaker AYou guys were familiar with the Dural Caravan.
Speaker AAnd so we've now learned from the Sydney Morning Herald that that caravan laden with explosive materials, apparently the explosives were like 40 year old and there was no detonator.
Speaker ABut it seems, according to this article, it's involved in a scheme by underworld crime gangs to help negotiate reduced sentences with law enforcement.
Speaker ASo there's a thing where crime gangs say to the police, we'll tell you about a truckload of explosives if you can give time off to some of our friends.
Speaker AThis is what the Sydney Morning Herald is saying is the story.
Speaker AAnd you might recall that the police were saying that there was no ideological basis for the people involved in the caravan incident, that they weren't ideologically driven at all.
Speaker ASo that was another sort of thing thrown up as an example of the spate of antisemitism in Australia, but in the cold light of day doesn't stack up as having anything to do with antisemitism at all.
Speaker ASo it's really easy when these things come into the news at first blush to go, isn't that a terrible example of anti Semitism?
Speaker ABut when the context is put around, it can be quite different.
Speaker AAnother example, Bondi eggs.
Speaker AThere were headlines about an anti Semitic attack at Bondi beach involving eggs being thrown at a group of young women a few days later.
Speaker ATurns out had nothing to do with anyone hating Jews.
Speaker AIt was just teenagers getting up to teenage mischief.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo just example of.
Speaker AOf some incidents where it's.
Speaker AIt's beaten up as if there's a spate of anti Semitism in Australia, but when you look at in some cases the provocation or in other cases, just the facts, not the case at all.
Speaker AAnd meanwhile we're developing laws supposedly strengthening anti free speech, which are a response to the initial reaction and not properly considered, taking everything into account.
Speaker ALooks like a lot of comments shall be reading any of them.
Speaker AAnything, Any there?
Speaker BOnly just.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BThey're pointing out that, yes, this is a common thing, that clickbait exists.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker ASo you know, the whole idea of just propaganda warfare is people just need to be conscious of, I guess.
Speaker AAny other thoughts on that issue before you move on, gentlemen?
Speaker CSo the guy that that caravan was registered to was in prison, wasn't he?
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker ADon't know that detail, Scott.
Speaker AMeanwhile, we've got an essential poll.
Speaker ASo this is to what extent you think the government is doing enough to combat anti Semitism in Australia?
Speaker AAnd you'll see three lines there.
Speaker AYoung people, 18 to 34, middle aged, 35 to 54 and 55 plus.
Speaker AAnd what you notice is it's the old people, 55 plus, who are saying 56% of them, the government's not doing enough.
Speaker BSo you mean the wrong people who are reading the old people who are reading Murdoch rags and watching Sky News after dark.
Speaker AYou know, young people are really attuned to sort of racism and social issues and social injustice.
Speaker ALike these are not issues that they ignore.
Speaker ABut young people are saying, in comparison, only 28% are saying the government's not doing enough.
Speaker A40% are saying the government's doing enough.
Speaker AContrast with old people who are saying 56% are saying the government's not doing enough.
Speaker AAnd only 23% think the government's doing enough.
Speaker AWhy is it that old people think that way and young people don't?
Speaker CWell, I think Joe's hit the nail right on the head because they're reading Murdoch rags and listening to Sky News.
Speaker BYeah, but, but do you also think that young people are more likely to see Israel as an oppressor and therefore they're not as attuned to anti.
Speaker BIf, if there is antisemitism that they think it's justified?
Speaker APossibly.
Speaker ABut then why are they thinking that and old people aren't?
Speaker BOh, yeah, absolutely.
Speaker BThere's a skew in where people get their news from.
Speaker AIt has to be, well, we should.
Speaker BBan TikTok and then they'll be forced to get their media, their news from.
Speaker AExactly right, exactly right.
Speaker AThat was the reason for banning TikTok was not because of where the data was stored, it was because it was interfering with the Israeli narrative that they were wanting to promote.
Speaker ASo it's just amazing that in this country that there's such a disparity of opinion between old fogies 55 plus and young people 18 to 34.
Speaker AAnd on an issue like this.
Speaker ASo very telling, I think, as to where people are getting their news from.
Speaker AIn a nutshell, I think the day we can just get rid of this Murdoch propaganda indoctrination mess that we're consigned to the better.
Speaker ABut I just can't see it happening in the near future.
Speaker CLike, well, we've got to wait till Rooker's dead because the trust hasn't been locked away from the other kids or anything like that.
Speaker CAnd apparently the other kids are a lot more moderate than Lock one is.
Speaker CSo if they can get Lachlan out of Sky News and Fox News and everywhere else, then maybe you might be able to do something with it.
Speaker AYeah, so.
Speaker ASo, yeah, that's that one.
Speaker AWhat else have I got here?
Speaker AJust a quick update.
Speaker AWe spoke about the ABC and Antoinette Latuf, the journalist who was fired because of her Twitter page or posts that were basically just backing up what the International Criminal Court was saying.
Speaker AAnd ABC had been saying, well, she's just not allowed to have controversial views.
Speaker AAnd during the court case, the counsel for Antoinette Latif was cross examining the.
Speaker ASome of the ABC management And said, well, you've got this other ABC employee, Patricia Cavallis.
Speaker ALook at her Twitter feed.
Speaker AIt's full of opinions about the Uluru Statement, Federal icac, Brittany Higgins, all opinions on controversial issues which she was allowed to have, but Antoinette Latuf was not allowed to have an opinion about, about Palestine, Israel.
Speaker ASo I think the ABC surely should be facing a bitter defeat in that court case.
Speaker ADo you guys watch anything on ABC anymore?
Speaker CNo, I just watch it on Iview if there's something.
Speaker CIf something of interest turns up or watching on Ivy.
Speaker AAnything in particular?
Speaker BTV and years.
Speaker AYeah, I just find it so lightweight and pathetic.
Speaker AI just, yeah, I've stopped even reading the ABC online news.
Speaker AIt's so pathetically childish that I just get nothing from it.
Speaker ASo I often just go days without even skimming it for articles for this podcast because I just never get anything from it.
Speaker ASo yeah.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ALet's see.
Speaker AOkay, gentlemen, Ukraine.
Speaker ASo let's play some clips and then we'll talk about different stuff.
Speaker ASo first of all, who's going to be at the negotiating table?
Speaker ALet's see.
Speaker CRussia and the usa.
Speaker EYou also heard loud and clear that the Europeans need to be at the table and that Ukrainians need to be at the table.
Speaker EAnd you described a parallel structure.
Speaker EYou have a Russia file talking to the Russians and you're talking to the Ukrainians.
Speaker EIsn't this cutting the Ukrainians out of the real negotiations?
Speaker EThe fulcrum seems to be the Trump administration.
Speaker EWith these two things going in parallel, can you assure this audience that Ukrainians will be at the table and Europeans will be at the table?
Speaker AOh, well, you just changed the whole dynamic.
Speaker AFerguson or Victor, thanks for having us today.
Speaker AI appreciate it.
Speaker AThe answer to that last question, just as you framed it, the answer is no.
Speaker ESo the Europeans who have provided as much or more support than the Americans in this process, you don't think should be at the table directly.
Speaker EYou think it should be two protagonists?
Speaker AI don't.
Speaker AI said I'm a school of realism.
Speaker AI think that's not going to happen.
Speaker ABut I said that's one of the reasons I'm here talking to people.
Speaker CWho is that guy?
Speaker CIs that Hegseth?
Speaker ANo, that one there I think was Kiss.
Speaker BHe's sorry too sober.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker AThat was Keith Kellogg, Trump's special envoy for Ukraine and Russia.
Speaker BOkay, so that was Yalta on in the background.
Speaker BWere they in Yalta?
Speaker AThere might have been a reference to it being a Yalta type, post war type of.
Speaker BThat's on the Crimean peninsula.
Speaker BSo it's just around the corner from Sevastopol.
Speaker AIf it was, it's sort of Yalta like in that it's right, okay, war's over or coming to a close.
Speaker AHow are we settling all these schools?
Speaker BHow are we diving up Europe between the two powers?
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BThrough any other countries that might have a say in it.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AAnd if you thought he was speaking out of turn about Ukraine not being part of it, of the peace deal negotiations, here's Trump himself.
Speaker BOh, yeah.
Speaker AUkraine as an equal member of this peace process.
Speaker AIt's an interesting question.
Speaker AI think they have to make peace.
Speaker ATheir people are being killed and I think they have to make peace.
Speaker AI said that was not a good war.
Speaker ASort of cuts out at my end there that he was asked whether Ukraine's going to be part of the deal.
Speaker ANope.
Speaker AThe answer there and.
Speaker BTo them is what he said.
Speaker CHe said it was not a war for the.
Speaker CIt was not a good war for them to go into.
Speaker CSo apparently they provoked the Russians to invade them.
Speaker ASorry.
Speaker CWell, apparently, if, you know, if.
Speaker AWell, he actually said, I wanted to join NATO.
Speaker CYes, they did.
Speaker CJesus Christ.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker CThe Ukrainian thing.
Speaker CThey were never going to be part of NATO.
Speaker CThey might have tried, but they couldn't actually get in.
Speaker AWhat?
Speaker AThey were never going to be part.
Speaker CNo, they were never going to be part of it.
Speaker CAnd especially after the, after the Russians had invaded them.
Speaker ABecause then why didn't, why didn't they say, well, we won't be part of.
Speaker AWhy did they say that they were going to be part of it?
Speaker BThey wanted to be part.
Speaker AYes, but.
Speaker BBut they needed to have fixed various things that were quite a long way off.
Speaker BSo they weren't going to be in NATO anytime in the near future.
Speaker AI'll tell you on.
Speaker ADo you guys know Mark Root, R U T T E Dutch politician, served as the 14th Secretary General of NATO in October 24.
Speaker ASaid Ukraine's path to membership is irreversible.
Speaker AThe day will come that Ukraine is a full member of NATO.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThe day in 2080 will come when Ukraine.
Speaker AMaybe you're saying they were never going to be a member and he's saying Ukraine's path to membership is irreversible.
Speaker AThe day will come.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CThe day will come which wasn't specified when it was going to come or anything else.
Speaker CIt's just, I think that Putin shot his mouth off far too early.
Speaker AA matter of four months later, Trump said, I don't think it's practical to have Ukraine join NATO.
Speaker AAnd on the same day, Mark Root Said Ukraine was never promised NATO membership.
Speaker AWell, they've played pause Ukraine as complete.
Speaker BSuckers has one of the American TV hosts said Trump has always been Putin's holster.
Speaker BHe was always going to bend over to Putin.
Speaker AI'm going to get shafted by the West.
Speaker AFight this war for us that you'll never win.
Speaker ALose all these men and when it's all a complete mess, we'll just leave you.
Speaker BWe'll just hand it over to Russia anyway.
Speaker AYeah, we'll leave you in your mess.
Speaker AWell, so we've talked about whether who's going to be at the negotiating table.
Speaker AThe question is, will Ukraine ever be part of NATO as part of this deal?
Speaker AWhat's the story?
Speaker ABecause that was the demand by Putin when it came to peace talks.
Speaker AHe said the key part of any peace deal is we keep Crimea and you don't join NATO and you never will join NATO.
Speaker AAnd that was unacceptable to the Ukrainians into the West.
Speaker AAnd that was why a peace deal could never be settled.
Speaker AAnd here's what they're saying now.
Speaker FThe United States does not believe that NATO membership for Ukraine is a realistic outcome of a negotiated settlement.
Speaker FInstead, any security guarantee must be backed by capable European and non European troops.
Speaker FIf these troops are deployed as peacekeepers to Ukraine at any point, they should be deployed as part of a non NATO mission and they should not be covered under Article 5.
Speaker FThere also must be robust international oversight of the line of contact.
Speaker FTo be clear, as part of any security guarantee, there will not be U.S.
Speaker Ftroops.
Speaker AOkay, and just to finish off with clips before we then talk without interruption, just on what about the border?
Speaker AWhat's going to be part of the deal with the border?
Speaker AWhere will, what will happen with the land that's been taken by Russia?
Speaker AEtc, Here we go.
Speaker FWe want, like you, a sovereign and prosperous Ukraine.
Speaker FBut we must start by recognizing that returning to Ukraine's pre2014 borders is an unrealistic objective.
Speaker FThe United States does not believe that NATO membership for Ukraine is a realistic outcome of a negotiation.
Speaker ASo he just repeats the same thing there.
Speaker ASo it seems the deal that will be negotiated between the US and Russia at a table, whether it will not be the EU or the Ukraine will be that Ukraine will never ever be part of NATO and that the borders will be more or less where the borderline is now.
Speaker AAnd you guys must think that's a terrible deal that should just not happen and the war should continue, is that right?
Speaker CI think that Crimea was lost to them in 2014, so that's 10 years old.
Speaker CI think they've got to walk away from Crimea.
Speaker CHowever, the Donbass and everything else that was part of his latest raid, I don't think he should be rewarded with any more Ukrainian territory.
Speaker ASo this peace deal as it's framed should not go ahead and the war should continue.
Speaker CNot without the return of the Donbass.
Speaker AJoe, are you the same opinion from.
Speaker BWhat I've read of the.
Speaker BThe history?
Speaker BYeah, absolutely.
Speaker BIt seems like basically 2014 Ukraine was horribly, horribly corrupt and under resourced and basically they had no armed forces as such, and the loyalty was divided.
Speaker BAnd I think that very quickly, as soon as Russia was seen to be interfering, solidified because the Ukrainians want to be Ukrainian, even if they're Russian speaking.
Speaker BThey wanted to be Ukrainian and there was a small number who wanted to ally join with Russia, but most of them wanted to be Russian speaking Ukrainians.
Speaker BAnd so there wasn't.
Speaker BApparently most Ukrainians speak both languages and will speak will just switch between them with the assumption that everybody is completely bilingual.
Speaker BSo this idea that the Russian speakers were being persecuted is bullshit spread around by Putin to justify his interference with the regions that were majority Russian speaking.
Speaker ASo the bombing of the Donbass region by the Ukrainian forces wasn't a persecution of the.
Speaker BYou mean after the separatists that were.
Speaker AFunded as part of a Minsk agreement that never really was.
Speaker BWas this the agreement where Russia agreed that the borders would stay the same if Ukraine gave up its nuclear weap weapons?
Speaker ANo.
Speaker ABut was that bombing not a persecution?
Speaker BDidn't they.
Speaker AWas, was that bombing not a persecution.
Speaker BSpeaking after an armed insurrection, after an armed separatist group started?
Speaker ARight, so that wasn't a person.
Speaker AI mean, they told them, you can't speak Russian, you're gonna have to speak Russian.
Speaker AThey didn't.
Speaker ANo, that's not the story I heard.
Speaker ABut there was no persecution of the Donbass region by the Ukrainian forces as part of the whole Minsk Agreement.
Speaker AThat's the whole point of the Minsk agreement was to stop the fighting that was occurring between the main Ukrainian forces.
Speaker AAnd you call them rebels.
Speaker AYeah, one man's rebel is another man's freedom fighter, isn't it?
Speaker BWell, but I mean, the question is how much of a freedom fighter are they and how much are they armed and funded by outside forces?
Speaker AWhich is what you also say about the Ukrainian government when you say they were a government that had been overthrown in a coup by the American.
Speaker BPutin is very happy that you have secessionists in Donbas, but as soon as the Chechens talk about Wanting their own region.
Speaker BHe crushes them ruthlessly.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABut you know, you could say, well.
Speaker BHe'S basically asking for, can we just.
Speaker ANarrow it down without dragging in all these other ones.
Speaker AYou know, you're saying that they're just paid, rebellious, you know, infiltrated by Russians to be a rebel group.
Speaker ABut the other argument is also applicable that the Ukrainian government had been, had been basically a color revolution had taken place orchestrated by the Americans.
Speaker ASo they were not, you know, you could argue they were not legitimate either.
Speaker BWell, I know that Putin has argued that.
Speaker BI'm not sure that the evidence backs it up.
Speaker AAnd lots of other people have anyway.
Speaker BThat, you know, there were.
Speaker BThe majority of Ukrainians wanted nothing to do.
Speaker BSorry.
Speaker BThey saw Russians as their brothers, but they didn't want to be part of Russia and they didn't want.
Speaker BThey wanted closer ties with Europe and they wanted trading partnerships with Europe.
Speaker AIt's really hard to say that because you could look at somewhere like Crimea where there's been polls done by Westerners that say that the Crimeans were happy to be re embraced by the Russians.
Speaker ANow you could also say, well, they were bombarded with propaganda, so of course they'd think that.
Speaker AOr people who don't like the idea of Russia had already left the Crimea.
Speaker ALike, there's always sort of counter arguments, but you can't make.
Speaker BDuring Ukrainian independence, the, the Crimean peninsula were the lowest percentage of people who wanted independence from Russia, but they still wanted independence.
Speaker BAnd a lot of people who wanted to be.
Speaker BThey didn't want to be part of Russia, they wanted to be part of the Soviet Union.
Speaker ANo, we've done an episode where there were polls done by Westerners that confirmed that the opinion in the Crimea was they wanted to be aligned with Russia.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd it's possible that the Crimea was a lost cause.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo, you know, you can't make blanket statements about.
Speaker ABut, but what the people of Ukraine wanted because there's lots of different factions wanting different things.
Speaker BOh, yeah.
Speaker AAnyway, your opinion, and then Scott as well, would be that this peace deal is not a good idea.
Speaker BThey're probably going to be sold down the river by Trump.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker ASo they shouldn't agree to these peace deal and keep fighting, even if it's organized by somebody like the US and the Ukraine don't even get a choice.
Speaker AIt's just a bad deal for Ukraine and they should keep fighting.
Speaker BIt's a bad deal for the Ukraine and it's down to them to decide whether they want to keep fighting or not.
Speaker AAll right, that's A good spirited discussion like those.
Speaker ASo what else have we got here?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou guys want to say anything else about Ukraine?
Speaker BWell, I'm still fighting my way through the book, which book called Putin's Revenge, which is from a journalist who lived in Moscow and then spent quite a bit of time in Ukraine covering the background and talking to people on the ground and getting a feel for what the average person in the street thought and talking about going to Crimea when the little green men appeared.
Speaker BSo he was actually there when the invasion happened and saying that the average person on the street were not happy that they, they wanted, they wanted to be a self governing part of Ukraine.
Speaker BThey were pushing very heavily for what they called federation.
Speaker ADo you remember us doing an episode on Poles in Ukraine to find that for next, next week?
Speaker ABut you know, okay, it's, it's difficult though for one man wandering around Ukraine to, yes, get a good feel for what all Ukrainians want and that might shift as well as things happen.
Speaker CSo, yeah, I think they're all, I think they're exhausted and they're buggered.
Speaker CThey're buggered.
Speaker CThey're sick of the war.
Speaker CI think that's true.
Speaker CBut I think Joe is right.
Speaker CI think that they should keep fighting.
Speaker ATo the last Ukrainian.
Speaker CNo, not to the last Ukrainian.
Speaker CYou're just being foolish now, Trevor.
Speaker CI just think that they've, I just think they've got to actually, they've got to actually say to Vladimir Putin that this is supposed to be wrapped up in two weeks.
Speaker CIt's now gone on for three years.
Speaker CYou're not going to win the way you wanted to.
Speaker CAnd I think they've actually got to tell him that the war is virtually over now.
Speaker CSo we are accepting peace terms, but we're not going to accept peace terms.
Speaker CThat means that you walk away with the Donbas.
Speaker AWell, he'll just keep fighting.
Speaker AHe's winning.
Speaker AHe's not winning.
Speaker CHe's not winning.
Speaker AYes, he is.
Speaker AHe's taken the, a large proportion.
Speaker AHe's taking a large portion.
Speaker BSecond most powerful army in the world.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BThat was beaten up by a bunch of third rate reservists.
Speaker AThis is how Russia fights.
Speaker AWhat, slow nutrition?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BWell, yeah, and that's, that's how Russia fights.
Speaker BPutin's plan was that the west would lose focus, the west would give up and he could just as long as he kept on plowing in his resources, the west would get bored and would walk away.
Speaker AHe's dead.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker BAnd he's won.
Speaker AYes, he's winning and he's won.
Speaker BBut so I think, I mean, apparently Trump is already talking about reducing sanctions against Russia.
Speaker AYeah, wouldn't surprise me in the least.
Speaker AHey, the other thing in all this was Trump is saying to the Ukraine this is being a costly exercise.
Speaker AWe now want all of your rare earth minerals.
Speaker CThank you very much.
Speaker CThat was fucking criminal, wasn't it?
Speaker BYes.
Speaker AWell, do you know what, People like Taiwan look at this and go, should we be bowing and scraping for US support?
Speaker AWill we end up as another Ukraine?
Speaker AWill we be shat upon and end up like a Ukraine?
Speaker AWe need to find another solution.
Speaker AThat's what's, that's what Taiwan, if they've got any sense, we cannot trust these Americans and these Westerners.
Speaker AWell, no, we get into an armed conflict, we'll all be killed and they'll drop us at the end once the last.
Speaker BUntil Trump.
Speaker BYes, they could trust the west to support them.
Speaker BI think Trump is the outlier.
Speaker BHe's shut down US Aid, which is America's soft power weapon.
Speaker BAnd you know, there are, I was reading a report about Ugandans who are reliant on U.S.
Speaker Baid for their AIDS treatment, their HIV treatment.
Speaker BAnd you know what's going to happen?
Speaker BChina will come in and supply that medication and we'll provide the, the aid.
Speaker AAnd probably a hospital as well.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd that's all Chinese are going to go in there and.
Speaker AWell, no, I mean do it properly.
Speaker BOh yeah, exactly.
Speaker BAll of the investment the US has put into these countries, it's going to be forgotten.
Speaker CYeah, it's what I, I actually said at the time, I said they're just leaving the way open for China to go in and take the Pacific and everywhere else.
Speaker ABut you know, you're saying it was Trump because Trump's come in, that's why the Ukraine war is going to be finished.
Speaker BTrump is the vigorhead of a bunch of right wing lunatics.
Speaker AOften it takes just a new president to come in who is not got any sort of responsibility for what has happened previously to say don't like the look and smell of this war we're in, I'm stopping it.
Speaker ALike, you know, any new president potentially was going to stop the war on these terms, not just Trump.
Speaker ALike this isn't particularly, I don't think because Americans don't leave other countries high and dry like this, Is that what you're saying?
Speaker BNot in the same way.
Speaker BI mean the, the Ukrainians were seen as European and therefore not dark skinned and therefore we couldn't abandon them.
Speaker ANo, I think seen as fighting Russia and they Wanted to cause Russia to bleed.
Speaker ASo they told the Ukrainians, I think.
Speaker BThere was a lot more solidarity with Ukraine than there were with other countries, because I was just reading about a loophole that was allowing Ukrainians in, or maybe this was the uk I can't remember.
Speaker BBasically a refugee thing that allowed Ukrainians in and some other nationality had come in and they weren't the right sort of refugees and therefore the.
Speaker BThe government was desperately trying to overturn this.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThey were the wrong skin color, basically.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AProbably a bit like those Russian soldiers who looked suspiciously North Korean because of their Mongol features.
Speaker ACould have been.
Speaker AShout out to John there.
Speaker AAh, well, it's going to be interesting to see how it all pans out just while still on Trump.
Speaker AWere you guys aware that bill has been put to Congress to the House, and it's now going to committee for discussion.
Speaker AHR 1161, and it's called the Red, White and Blue land act of 2025.
Speaker AYou know what that's about?
Speaker CNo.
Speaker AYou know that place called Greenland?
Speaker BOh, yes.
Speaker AThis is a bill to authorize the President to enter into negotiations to acquire Greenland and to rename Greenland as Red, White and Blue Land.
Speaker CFor God's sake.
Speaker AI kid you not.
Speaker ARed, White and Blue Land.
Speaker BIt doesn't surprise me.
Speaker BAfter they named the Gulf of America Gulf of Mexico into the Gulf of America.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker BAnd have you noticed, by the way, I don't know if you've looked at Google Maps or Apple Maps, even over here it says Gulf of Mexico.
Speaker BBrackets, Gulf of America.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AI think if you're in Mexico, it would probably say still Gulf of Mexico.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, but the US it says Gulf of America.
Speaker AYes, yeah, but, but Red, White and Blue Land.
Speaker BI.
Speaker BI saw something mentioning that they were changing the name by law, but I didn't see to where.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BOkay, that makes a lot more sense now.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo this is a bill that is before the House and is now going to some sort of committee for discussion.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ASo, yeah, Section one, this act may be cited as the Red, White and Blue land act of 2025.
Speaker ASection two, the President authorized to enter into negotiations with the government of Denmark to purchase or otherwise acquire Greenland.
Speaker AOh, I didn't notice those words before.
Speaker ATo purchase or otherwise acquire Greenland and.
Speaker AAnd renaming Greenland shall be known as Red, White and Blue Land.
Speaker AFor God's sake.
Speaker AThis is just.
Speaker CThey're just children.
Speaker AThis is Night Stage imperialism.
Speaker AHe's gonna.
Speaker AHe's gonna put a horse in the Senate next.
Speaker BDid you see that article I sent you?
Speaker AYes, I did.
Speaker AWhich One was that one the right.
Speaker BWing op ed who said, yeah, if, if this had been Biden doing half of these things, we wouldn't have stood for it.
Speaker BWhy the hell are we standing for it?
Speaker BJust because he's a Republican.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BWhich I was quite impressed by.
Speaker ABut why didn't he think about that years ago before voting for him?
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AThat's what I didn't understand.
Speaker BThey like to pretend that they hadn't realized he was going to be quite this crazy this time around, despite him telling everyone he was going to do.
Speaker AExactly this, exactly that.
Speaker BAnd yeah, there's been an awful lot of why didn't the Democrats tell me he was going to do this?
Speaker BAnd everyone's saying but they did.
Speaker BWhy didn't they tell me more?
Speaker BWhy didn't they shout louder?
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker BThe same with the whole Elon.
Speaker BHave you seen the, the nice articles showing exactly which departments, US Departments he's gutted and how many of those were investigating one of Elon's companies?
Speaker AMost of them probably basically right.
Speaker BI think there were 13 pending cases that have just been stopped in their tracks by him gutting various government departments.
Speaker AWell, you sent me that link to the Bernie Sanders video which was Bernie Sanders by saying this richest man in the world spent $260 million on the Trump campaign and now is the most powerful unelected bureaucrat person in America and just an example of money buying power.
Speaker AAnd it is just an oligarchy, plain and simple.
Speaker BYeah, I would agree.
Speaker AThat's where it had.
Speaker AI'd much rather a Chinese communist system than an Elon Musk dominated oligarchic.
Speaker BI wonder exactly what it takes before we get the Gillethenes out.
Speaker BI, I honestly can see a French revolution occurring in the U.S.
Speaker Bin the U.S.
Speaker Bi, I think even, even the Republicans, they are hurting and they are going to end up hurting more.
Speaker BAnd I can see them going, doing a Luigi, just going for the top, chopping their heads off.
Speaker AIt's a long way off.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhat else we got here?
Speaker AStill on Trump.
Speaker AHis, his, his cryptocurrency called, called Strump with the S being a dollar sign that he launched on January 17.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker AWas a shameless cash grab that netted nearly 100 million in trading fees to his family and partners so far on.
Speaker BA loss of 2 billion to his supporters.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AAccording to an analysis by the New York Times made it a fitting sequel to his overpriced made in China Trump bibles and his $900 Trump watches predictably the crypto coin and Melania's equally tone deaf Melania coin plummeted in value, leaving loyal supporters who bought the meme coins holding the bag with yes, losses totaling $2 billion.
Speaker AIt's the kind of thing you'd expect from a talentless influencer, not from a sitting president.
Speaker BSo, sorry, what was the difference?
Speaker AYeah, yeah, that's Trump.
Speaker AAnd just briefly, in Australia, Scott, you've been following this electoral funding law reforms.
Speaker CYeah, I have done.
Speaker ASo it seems that Parliament passed on Thursday.
Speaker AAnytime labor and Liberals get together and agree on something, you're going to be worried.
Speaker AThat's right.
Speaker ATo cap campaign expenditure to $800,000 per.
Speaker CElectorate, which sounds quite reasonable until you realise that the Teals basically had to spend more than a million bucks each to take the seats that they had got.
Speaker AYes, and there's an exception to this.
Speaker AThere's a cap of 800,000 per electorate.
Speaker ABut registered political parties can access $90 million war chest for general advertising.
Speaker ASo any particular, say, Liberal candidate can spend 800,000 in their electorate, but then the head office can be accessing a $90 million war chest, which will obviously help in those electorates and for the independents.
Speaker ASo the explanatory memorandum for the federal law says that a registered political party may have only one nominated entity registered, and a nominated entity may only be registered to one party.
Speaker ASo the sort of limited $90 million slush fund, you can have one entity per party that holds that $90 million war chest and spends it, you know, generally for that party.
Speaker ABut a body like Climate 200, it couldn't register as the nominated entity for a range of different independent candidates.
Speaker AIt could only register for one party or one candidate.
Speaker ASo it is the.
Speaker AThe labor and the coalition getting together and completely shafting the deals the Independents and the Teals through.
Speaker AThrough supposedly a cap on each electorate.
Speaker ABut this slush fund structuring it such that Teals and independence are at an extreme disadvantage.
Speaker CDid you see Zoe's Diggle tearing a new one on the minister?
Speaker CWhat was his name?
Speaker CDon Farrell.
Speaker AI didn't see it.
Speaker CYeah, but it was really quite good.
Speaker ARight, but he would have stood there smiling and saying, I don't know what you're talking about.
Speaker AIt's all completely.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker ASo everyone thought Albanese was a good guy.
Speaker AHave you been looking at the poll, Scott?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CIt's looking like your prediction of a Dutton prime ministership could be right.
Speaker CAnd it's all Albanese's fault.
Speaker CHe has up very badly.
Speaker CAnd I bet the Labor Party is probably ruined the day that they decided to Put him in the office.
Speaker CAnd I think that they would have been better off under tenure.
Speaker CClip a sec.
Speaker AAnyway, anybody who was prepared to do anything.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AIt could have gone to the electorate and said, we've done a bunch of really good things here.
Speaker AOr we've tried to at least.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker ASo I.
Speaker AI just.
Speaker BI think I'll be volunteering for whatever get up type organization.
Speaker BBecause he can't be Prime Minister if he's not a Member of Parliament.
Speaker AYes, yes, that's true.
Speaker ABut would the Liberals without Dutton be any better?
Speaker CNo, because they've been taken over by the Christians.
Speaker AAnd just who's the shadow?
Speaker ALike who's the likely.
Speaker AIf Dutton lost his seat, who's the likely leader?
Speaker AIs it that.
Speaker AWho's the Shadow treasurer who's completely hopeless?
Speaker COh, he's a National Party man.
Speaker CSo that's okay, is it?
Speaker AYeah, no, no, Liberal.
Speaker ABut the shadow treasurer is the guy who did the chunky deals on water.
Speaker AAngus.
Speaker CAngus Taylor.
Speaker AIsn't he Liberal?
Speaker CI'm about to find out.
Speaker ASee if you can get there before the chat room.
Speaker BWell, of course we've also got the shadow Minister of Government Efficiency.
Speaker AWho was that?
Speaker BThat's.
Speaker CYeah, you're quite right.
Speaker CHe's a Liberal.
Speaker CHe is a Liberal.
Speaker BSome of the price.
Speaker ARight, okay, so.
Speaker ASo that idiot.
Speaker AWouldn't I say quotes his name.
Speaker AI've got it already.
Speaker BAngus.
Speaker CAngus Taylor.
Speaker AComplete numbskull.
Speaker AYou know, he's no better than.
Speaker AThan Dutton anyway.
Speaker ALike if Dutton doesn't get in.
Speaker CBut if Dutton doesn't get in, then that'll be good because he.
Speaker CI don't think.
Speaker CI don't think Taylor's as big a nut job as what Dutton is.
Speaker CDutton is a complete fool.
Speaker CI think Taylor's just an economic nitwit, but I don't think he's a complete fascist like Dutton is.
Speaker AMaybe he doesn't have the fascism going, but he's a.
Speaker AHe's a com.
Speaker CHe's a complete.
Speaker AVery dim and not very bright.
Speaker CNo, he's not bright at all.
Speaker ANot across his portfolio at all.
Speaker ASo he'll be the leader.
Speaker BSee, we need Barnaby back.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CNo, you don't want Barnaby back.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ASo, yeah, what are we saying in the chat room, Chris?
Speaker AShould we vote independent or nothing?
Speaker AI think you should vote an independ or a Green myself, depending on what you've got in your particular electorate.
Speaker AThat's all right.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CI think you should vote for an independent.
Speaker ALet me see what else is in the chat here.
Speaker ALet me just bring this up.
Speaker AOh, Watley, you've got to watch your language there.
Speaker AChris says, I think the important point with the Bloated Orange King is to look at what's actually happening by Project 2025, not what's being flooded over media.
Speaker ASo I know what he's got, how far he's got on his 2025 agenda.
Speaker AStuff hard to keep track of.
Speaker AAnd John says it doesn't matter if the US or China do the aid sl soft power.
Speaker AThe US is making a mistake but backing out of US aid.
Speaker ASo I'd like to see at some point somebody reputable to demonstrate what percentage of funds in USAID were for helping people genuinely with food and vaccinations and health outcomes and how much was on propaganda and journalists and media outlets.
Speaker ASo I'd like to know what the breakdown is of.
Speaker AOf good work done versus evil regime change propaganda.
Speaker BI know that there's an awful lot of farmers in the Midwest who are suffering because US aid was buying their crops and I don't think they were buying their crops to print newspaper articles with.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker AAnd this is genuinely.
Speaker ASome of the money was going for genuine aid, for sure.
Speaker AIt's just how much of it is the what I'd be keen to know.
Speaker CA hell of a lot more than what is going there now because they've just scattered it.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BAnd apparently it was less than 1% of their national budget.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker ASo, and one question here.
Speaker ADo you guys have a comment about the oil slash gas Christmas dinner from Friendly Geordie's?
Speaker ADon't know anything about that one, Chris.
Speaker AYeah, don't know.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ARight, well, that's eight.
Speaker A29 just gets us through to avoiding the shark tank.
Speaker ALandon, hard bottom.
Speaker AGood on you in the chat room for joining in.
Speaker AIs there anything quickly that needed to be discussed?
Speaker ACrypto Gaza usa.
Speaker AThat's about.
Speaker AI think that's the main things.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ASo, yeah, thanks for tuning in.
Speaker AIf you're listening.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AThank you to the new patron.
Speaker AAnd Melinda, if you're listening and you're not a patron, feel free to sign up, look at the show notes, there'll be a link there and talk to you next week.
Speaker ABye for now.
Speaker CAnd it's a good night from me.
Speaker BAnd it's a good night from him.
Speaker CGood night.