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Usury and the Soul of Orthodoxy w/Fr Emmanuel Lemelson

Usury and the Soul of Orthodoxy w/Fr Emmanuel Lemelson

Fr Emmanuel Joined me to discuss the financial world and Orthodoxy in America.

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‼️ Fr. Emmanuel Lemelson: Against The World:

Fr. Emmanuel Lemelson: Against The World

Orthodox priest. Activist investor. Dissident voice exposing corruption in Wall Street, Washington, and the Church.

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The Spirit of ’68 and ’89 found at a Sunday market

Most Sunday’s, weather allowing, I set up a mobile comic book shop at local open air markets. I have done it for the good part of a decade, in doing so you make unique friendships with people who you may only see every so many Sundays over the years, you might not even know their names but you know their opinions on things, what books they read, movies they watch and at times the turmoils in their personal life. In being a fixture, you can be both councillor and sound board or, for some kids, an adult for them to share budding and developing opinions with.

It’s a fascinating thing to see the genesis of a strangers child thrive in social confidence and their ability to conduct themselves in a setting outside of the family or school. At first some approach with tentative unease, they search the comics, or lift up a toy, eyes wavering and when small talk is attempted, they are direct and short in response. Over time, some bring books they have found, or go into great detail about a story they have read, even at times sharing in their own creative expeditions.

This past Sunday, a young lass who when she would first come to the stall with her mother was often in a pink onesie, with buttons and patches she had collected. Most of them were either Care Bears, Strawberry Shortcakes or Pokemon. She would buy whatever comics on those properties, and when I came across any, I would keep them aside for her and her mother. Over the years, the pink she wore had been replaced by black. Leather jackets, the Care Bears buttons now My Chemical Romance album apparel, rings and menacing neck wear more akin on a bikies Rotweiler than a teenage girl. Her face in spots bristles with the barbs of piercings.

Despite that aesthetic, and with greater confidence when she speaks, she is very much that little girl who all those years ago would seek out vintage cartoon books. Outside of the music she listens to, usually alternative, punk and counter-culture, the conversations she likes to raise delves into social commentary. She opened up about her opinions on censorship, social media bans and surveillance with all the in depth analysis I may find in a conversation with a civil libertarian or with a remnant Boomer who retained a degree of humanist dignity. Her passionate words turned into a flurry of gestures and angry repose, perhaps the Gen X lyrics she had listened to had infused her with a defiant dignity. She had after all, that morning asked me if I had Heathers on DVD or the soundtrack on CD. Unfortunately, I had neither.

Her mother rang her mobile, then mine. Some regulars tend to take your contact details for buying and selling, or in their case, trading purposes. She answered, and in the distance sitting on a bench her mother waved and watched on. With health issues, her sweet mother did her best to walk the length of the rows of stalls, opting instead to sit and wait while her much younger daughter picked over thrift and wares.

“I won’t be long,” she said before hanging up.

She turned to me and continued with her extended ability to articulate her words, “I don’t trust any of them to tell me what I can’t watch and listen to. It’s about control.”

I did not express my thoughts on censorship or surveillance, there was nothing to add to the conversation, other than to agree. Her spirit of dissent did not need any further steering.

“I hope you don’t mind me saying this, Mum just nods and when I spoke to a teacher at school they told me not to concern myself with any of it. I have every right to be concerned. It’s nice to speak to an adult who lets me talk about this.”

In that moment, I felt a tinge of pain in my heart. I had gone to university to be a teacher, and I had this naive belief in the, ‘seize the day,’ lie told to us back in the 20th century. A period where the tug of war between individual rights and humanist morality fought with the collectivist ideological order which has now taken hold.

“You can say whatever you want and so long as you listen to other peoples opinions, they will hopefully hear yours. Never stop thinking and questioning, but always be open to other peoples views as well.”

She nodded, thinking as she did so, “What do you think?”

“I don’t like censorship and surveillance and feel that such coercion are immoral. I agree with what you have said,” I noticed a customer who held in their hands a Spider-Man comic. When I returned to her, she was looking over a pile of books. She put them down, “If you want to find good movies that are uncensored, older movies that are not on streaming or YouTube, check out this site…”

“Thank you and be careful on the internet.”

She said her good bye and ran to her patiently waiting mother. The spirit of ‘68 was certainly inside of her mind. The dissident energy that may have stood alongside a young man holding up a burning draft card, or, held the corpse of a fallen student at Kent State, a Czech protester throwing body or flaming bottle at a Soviet tank in Prague. Maybe still she could just as easily been one of the Red Guards who pulled teachers and counter-revolutionaries from their homes to beat and torture them to death, infected with by a Maoist establishment, anti-establishment revolutionary status-quo tyrannical disorder. Or, I would like to think, with such spirit sh would stand before Type-59 main battle tanks of the Peoples Liberation Army, in 1989 Tienanmen Square. Whatever, the dissatisfaction and energy, her instincts for rights invigorated her.

The unfortunate reality is youth with all their exuberance and idealism, has much of it beaten and educated out of them, so they soon learn to become debt addled, obedient servants of power. What may have once stirred animosity and disdain from within, can become an accepted reality. A free speech advocate who once may have placed Wikileaks stickers about the place, called for the release of Julian Assange, may just as easily support big surveillance and censorship depending on the degrees of cowardice that comes with their age.

A lad around her age once told me, “my parents never want to talk about anything that matters, what colour the new bathroom tiles will be or whether we should renew Disney+, would be a highlight.” Is it an inability to discuss things or, has everything become termed as obscene and hateful, anti-social, dangerous that some people won’t even entertain another person opinion. Even if their own opinions assume coercive violence in order to implement.

Evil thrives on apathy and cannot exist without it,” Hannah Arendt once wrote. Is it apathy? Or, as she also concluded, “the sad truth is that most evil is done by people who never make up their minds to be good or evil.” ‘Just doing my job’, ‘Be like everyone else’, ‘Don’t rock the boat’, ‘Make money to borrow money, to get a mortgage for a house.’ ‘ban anything that I don’t understand or that scares me.’ “The banality of evil,” after all.

Principles are less important than conformity. Perhaps, it’s a Westernised Confucianism, or as it has always been.

Power no longer promises any Utopian vision, the pseudo-religion of communism and fascism found in the past has little impact, outside of a few radicals and hold outs. Ideologies have in practice become a homogenised pragmatic balance between corporate and State interests, careers and profits perfectly aligning under the pretence of law, order and stability. The public, are in essence viewed as possessions, those to be protected and owned. To be mastered. Obedience and loyalty is an assumed civic obligation which is made possible through the direct means of dependency and debt. The notions of social contract and nationalism, infuse the realities that most accept and think little beyond. Freedom and liberty, individual rights are not firm principles, instead they are compromised away, whether through fear or insecurities.

The minds who may disagree are scattered, and by their very nature do not seek power. They are not politically motivated to use the monopoly of government to coerce their neighbours, so the dissent takes on a rather Ghandi like disorderly dissatisfaction. The politically motivated, tend not to believe anything, other than power and their personal ascent. The process is a lie, the system a status quo for power, liberal democracy has gone from a delusional balance of individual rights ensured by the State, so long as the State has certain monopoly powers. Now, it’s assumed that the State should have powers to command and control all things, it’s accepted and despite the magical legalesse meant to constrain, it only refrains the individuals right to self ownership. Maybe, in time this will include our words, our thoughts.

Perhaps, in time such a simple Sunday afternoon conversation in itself may be illegal. Dangerous. It may sound absurd or an unreasonable forewarning made by a philosophical anarchist, but the sharing of a website in a public place, a legally defined minor not being put in their place, and contraband in whatever form, are all which given time may become outlawed acts. The exchange of cash, a book that is no longer approved or thoughts, all can be seemingly harmless thing to a reasonable mind. To an insecure and power fixated one, they are to be controlled and contorted. Society and the political process, perhaps even the public mob, seem to reward insecure power.

Maybe, even the music she seeks out will no longer be available on playlists, replaced by regionally censored and approved versions. AI generated equivalence, and in a generations time, who would remember. When the older generations become apathetic, give up on principles, assuming they had any, to simply exist in crystal palaces or investment real estate Panopticon’s. Enjoying their careers, or pensions. The youth can suffer the world they destroyed, the one where the past in itself is now a nostalgic Utopia, when feral freedom could be in ways had. Free of prying eyes, and hearing voices, pay walls, and ID checks or softaware which monitored every step and transaction. Where dangerous words could be read, forbidden lyrics heard and conversations happened organically, without fear of reprisal.

This is the future we all built. Be happy with it. It’s what you wanted.

As for the Youth, they pick through records and CD’s to listen to the music some once took for granted, anti-establishment punk bands which now are fashionable shirts for politicians to wear. The spirit of ‘68 may have whispered away, the courage of 1989 when the tank man stopped a column of armour, the Berlin wall crumbled away and Romanians executed a despot and his wife, but to be forgotten remnants. Would such courage exist now, such dignity? Or, did we all just sell out. The price it turns out was pretty cheap. What did you get in return?

Hopefully she does not lose that spirit, and her peers find it too. Because, the adults in her life likely don’t care, sold their kids out and swallow power one eager mouthful at a time.

The Kyle Anzalone Show: Scott Horton Breaks Down What’s Really Happening

The Iraq War didn’t just “happen” it was sold with a storyline, staffed by specific operators, and justified by a strategy that had been circulating for years. I’m joined by Scott Horton of the Libertarian Institute to unpack the Clean Break doctrine, what it tried to achieve for Israel’s right wing security vision, and how a set of wildly wrong assumptions helped push the US into a war that ended up strengthening Iran instead of containing it.

We walk through the mechanics of how the war case was built: exile sourcing, the Office of Special Plans, alternative intelligence streams, and the WMD and terrorism claims that made Baghdad sound like an urgent threat. Then we connect the fallout to today’s Middle East power map, where leaders are still trying to “fix” the original mistake, often by escalating in new arenas. Scott also explains why Israel’s objectives toward Iran can look less like clean regime change and more like limiting Iran’s ability to support Hezbollah and project power into the Levant, even if that means betting on destabilization.

From there we shift to the Trump era crisis: ceasefire fragility, Iran’s demand to release frozen assets as a trust test, and the hard technical reality behind the slogans about nuclear enrichment. We also talk about how Lebanon, Gaza, and the West Bank remain active fronts that can sabotage diplomacy at any moment, and what it would take for Washington to actually restrain Netanyahu if a real US-Iran deal is the goal. Subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review, then tell us what you think: is a durable peace even possible with these incentives in place?

The Kyle Anzalone Show: Is Trump The Best Israeli President Ever?

Trump says he wants a deal with Iran. Netanyahu hints the real goal is regime change anyway. That contradiction is where diplomacy goes to die, and it is also where Americans get dragged into a war they did not vote for. We roll solo and ask the blunt question a lot of people are thinking but few say out loud: is Trump still representing the United States, or is he effectively acting as Israel’s president on the Iran war?

We unpack Netanyahu’s media strategy and why he may be one of the most effective political operators in modern U.S. history, able to keep influence across parties and across administrations. From there, we get specific about the Iran nuclear program: what “enrichment” actually means, why civilian nuclear energy and medical isotopes matter, and how redefining enrichment as a weapons program guarantees a stalled negotiation. We also compare the coherence of Iranian messaging with the whiplash of American statements on ceasefires, blockades, and end goals.

Then we zoom out to the battlefield map and the economy. The Strait of Hormuz, tanker attacks, and regional retaliation all raise the risk of a wider Middle East escalation and higher oil prices that hit U.S. households fast. We close with the House War Powers resolution, why Washington calls it “symbolic,” and why that should worry anyone who still believes Congress is supposed to decide when America goes to war. If you want more clear-eyed analysis of U.S. foreign policy, subscribe, share the show, and leave a review with your take on where this is headed.

You don’t need the sun glasses…

You don’t need the sun glasses…

It turns out wearing the glasses made no difference.

In the John Carpenter film, They Live, our hero John Nada is one in many workers stumbling from hunger to poverty and piece work in an economy that is only built to exploit them. It’s a film both critical of Reagan economics and power itself, in all it’s guises. Nada comes across a box of sunglasses and once he wears them, he is able to see the subliminal messages hidden beneath advertising, on the television and to see the true ghoulish face of some people who it turns out, are alien invaders. The overlords who have made a deal with the humans in government and with wealth to steer society in a symbiosis of control that satisfies the elites and alien rulers.

Nada, played by Roddy Piper spends much of the film trying to convince others, including his new friend played by Keith David, to wear the glasses. This gives us shoot outs, examples of the alien technology and a supreme street fight between Piper and David. The duo join a resistance and try to take down the alien signal so that normal humans can see the world for how it really is. A world free the deceptions. Our heroes are blue collar, the common person, those who endure the struggle and suffer beneath power no matter how hard they work.

The humans who comply with the alien are yuppies, corporate types and government goons. Those who would and tend to serve any master so long as it profits them. The film is about class struggle, from a somewhat Left-wing perspective, when those from such an ideology concerned themselves with the worker and the oppressed, before it’s academic and elitist obsession with identity took hold. We may not have the sun glasses in the film but we have technology that gives us instant access to the realities of the world.

Ignorance is a choice. We can search out whatever information we desire, even if algorithmic forces tend to hide certain things on specific platforms. Anyone curious, with a degree of honest intrigue can investigate, or, one can simply stumble across footage and testimonies of those on the ground across the world, Despite this, ideological bias and other forms of bigotry or conformist inclinations steer the minds of some away from nuance and critical thinking and instead rewards emotion and simplified narratives. The murder of a child, or gang rape of a girl can be contextualised, or hidden according to an ideological and narrative need. In some cases, to speak up on behalf of the victim can draw punishment from authority, and many in the public seem fine with this.

It’s with the mass murder of children and families, the corruption of elites don’t go unnoticed, instead are twisted into arrogant dismissal, to censorship enforcement that a decade ago would have seemed conspiratorial to even conjure up. We now live in the post whistle blower-age. There is no need for the Snowden leaks, Wikileaks, Vault 7, or the countless papers or exposes which have revealed the sinister machinations of government. Now, they mostly tell us, techno-fascism is on the rise with corporations like Palantir, to the numerous private equity firms and AI obsessed companies which both boast and lie with no consequence. So long as investors are happy, and in many cases this includes numerous common people who want money, a return on their investment. They simply do not care.

Government often are the best customers, who need the technologies and infrastructure to kill with and for the surveillance of the populations. Consumer facing models are not as profitable, difficult to satisfy fickle markets and competitions, instead governments need data to be sifted through, contained and controlled while the lives of every person is to be monitored. Call it security, safety, for the naive, in truth it is both profitable and authoritarian. In the past a police state such as that of East Germany was expensive and complex, now, it can be privatised and assisted with tech companies whose investors are happy, as well as the government and corporate customers.

Others are dependent on government whether trough employment, contracts or welfare that they are incapable of articulating dissent, and if they do, it’s to vote for the other side of the equation through the limited heights of party politics. Is it that most do not care, or are simply apathetic. Or, the many who do care are scattered and their concerns and dissatisfaction is lost beneath the winds of rhetoric and digital deceptions.

Perhaps instead we are in a post-truth age. Despite the courage and frequency of leaks and whistle blowers, there is an increase in the debasement of truth and an ever reliance on gate keeping. The modern fixation with podcasts and social media has steered people to rely and trust those who, in some instances never proclaimed reliable expertise, though because of their digital status and downloads, popularity ensured authority. Having on guests who are close to power and who dabble in wild and outlandish conspiracy, blends the basis for fact and fiction. Instead it becomes a listening environment that resides in the realm of infotainment, but in the age of short term memories, most of it is forgotten and disregarded by the time the next thing arises. This allows for political and corporate power to invest in these platforms and massage messaging and manipulate opinions through limited hangouts, where some dark truths are revealed in order to curtail further investigations. Or, to provide a human face, a likeable entity which seems disarming and relatable.

Once a host is familiar and trusted, they tend to become the guide as to where trust may be laid. And as social media and short form content has had it’s part in the erosion of critical thinking this has led to an adherence to such authorities. The naive belief that a person can claim to have been cancelled, while they are on the biggest media platform on the world advertising their Netflix special, or that a podcast host can be a challenge to power and authority while platforming in the positive representatives of the CIA or running presidential candidates, while never really challenging them with questions that may expose their corruptions and deceptions. Podcasts have become the Late Night without the randomness that it once had.

A lot of Westerners live in a household that is at best one part blue collar, and one part white collar. With many members of the family working corporate or government jobs, while aspiring for what was once considered a yuppy lifestyle. The belief that a house should be an investment, that all can be put on credit and living beyond ones means is an addiction that is so widespread it is now normal. It also serves power, and as those in the film They Live desired, it ensures servitude and concentrates wealth. With every bubble and currency that can be debased endlessly because borrowing will never end, the wealthiest often are bailed out, inflation ensures that holding debt is not a fear and the worker and shrinking private sector (not dependent on government contracts), can be taxed until they no longer exist. Eventually only government, private equity and mega corporations will remain.

This will provide a satisfying homogenised economy and society for some. It was after all the desire of the aliens and their human goons. It ensures the State has more power and control over most things, and billionaires grow their wealth. It destroys independent lifestyles and anything that is non-conformist. We can see and know this is happening, and yet, even though we have better vision than any films sun glasses may grant us, it seems that most now want this? Or, are so apathetic and debt laden or defeated that they accept it. Which is fine for individuals in the now to do, but disregards the world children and the yet to be born will inherit.

Such a system is based on development and waste. Even the non-market forced ‘green’ sectors and smart technologies have consequential outcomes. From the pollution of horse manure in the cities to the choking smoke of coal, petrol-chemicals and microplastics apocalypse and what the new technologies bring to the now and beyond. The hedonistic treadmill is running faster and it appears that many are never satisfied, and want more. More what?

The awareness of enshitification, shrinkflation and destruction of food to fast fashion and the cannibalisation of all culture is more than post-modernist ideologies. It’s finance and debt economy that has left classical economics in the last century which now suits endless government growth and corporations that can make money without actually turning profits or delivering services and products that anyone wants or needs. To put debt into investments, whatever that happen to be, crypto, NFT’s, art, Pokemon, real estate, wherever the human fancy decides. Bubbles to swell wealth, to then be invested elsewhere, and on and on. Is it sustainable?

The question is, how many parking lots can be made, and high rise apartments, data centres and rare earth ripped from the ground until all are satisfied? The wealthy now, live at the expense of not just many of us, especially those in the developing world, but those to be born in the future. And, those who are inside the hierarchies of government the power and allure of politics provides them with a lifestyle that transcends those they are elected, anointed or ordained over to rule and command. We don’t need a secret alien conspiracy to conjure up this reality, they are simply a metaphor for very human people who do not care about consequences or the rest, and if they do, they see themselves as human gods with an omnipotence to oversee the rest of us with both benevolence and disdain. Whatever the case, they always profit. Always want more, and the government never stops growing, neither will the debt or the wealth of some.

Perhaps the fictions of the past all gave us fragments of a reality, censorship, surveillance, spectacle, wars, debt, prohibition, degraded food, automation, killer robots and so on. But, you wanted this? Many seem to be working towards this outcome. To trust power, to adore authority, to embrace corporate monopolies and the great monopoly of the state, is a choice. Put the sun glasses away, they are not needed. Piper and David got the signal down, but people kept on with the status quo. In the end, most really don’t care. Tomorrow, that’s someone else problem. The yuppies and aliens won?

The Kyle Anzalone Show with Jim Webb: Trump to Netanyahu: ‘You’re F**king Crazy’

Trump didn’t just get “frustrated” with Netanyahu. He confirmed he told him, “Are you effing crazy,” and that single moment raises a bigger question: if the White House is truly fed up, why does the region still look like it’s sliding toward wider war?

Jim Webb joins me to break down what matters beneath the gossip-cycle headlines. We talk about Israel’s expanding operations in Lebanon, Iran’s promise to respond harder than tit-for-tat, and the messy reality behind CENTCOM messaging and casualty reporting after attacks tied to Kuwait and Bahrain. If you’ve been wondering whether a ceasefire exists when missiles and drones still fly, we define the terms in plain English and map out where escalation pressures are coming from.

We also go where Washington loves to hedge: Israel’s nuclear “non-position” and the legal and political incentives that keep it that way, even though everyone on Capitol Hill knows the score. From there, we connect foreign policy directly to your wallet, from fuel shocks and the Strait of Hormuz risk to what prolonged conflict could mean for inflation and household budgets.

Finally, we dig into domestic politics, including the Thomas Massie primary and what massive outside spending signals to every other member of Congress. If you care about US military aid, the Israel lobby, ending the Iran war, and how this all hits the midterms, this is the connective tissue. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a rating and review, what do you think is the one move that would actually change US policy?

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