The Unfettered Speech Podcast

Kevin Gosztola : The Whistleblower’s Dilemma

1 h 3 min · Gestern
Episode Kevin Gosztola : The Whistleblower’s Dilemma Cover

Beschreibung

War lies do not spread on their own. They move through incentives: access, career safety, secrecy laws, and a media culture that treats “official” as synonymous with “true.” We sit down with Chicago independent journalist Kevin Gosztola, editor of The Dissenter and author of *Guilty of Journalism*, to trace how whistleblowers and adversarial reporting collide with the modern national security state. We start with the Iraq War as a formative media failure and follow Kevin’s path into covering WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, and the machinery that punishes disclosure. Kevin shares what it was like to report on the Chelsea Manning court-martial, including how the “Collateral Murder” video landed in that setting, why the “aiding the enemy” theory was so dangerous, and how even top-tier outlets sometimes walked into the room unprepared to understand what was happening. Along the way we challenge the comforting myth of “proper channels,” dig into how the Espionage Act reshapes journalism, and ask what it means when civil disobedience is treated as treason. From there, we zoom out to the forces that make accountability reporting harder now: access journalism, newsroom profit pressures, and algorithmic gatekeeping that elevates legacy brands while drowning out independent work. We also connect censorship pressures across borders, from subpoenas and leak investigations in the United States to military censorship practices tied to wartime reporting abroad. If you care about press freedom, government secrecy, whistleblowers, and the public’s right to know, this conversation lays out what is at stake and what audiences can do to help. Subscribe, share the episode with someone who still trusts anonymous briefings, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00. Welcome And Guest Introduction * 3:05 Iraq War And Becoming A Skeptic * 12:05 Learning Activism And Media Reform * 19:55 WikiLeaks Influence And Early Reporting * 27:10 Inside The Chelsea Manning Court-Martial * 38:15 Prestige Media Failures And Espionage Logic * 46:55 Access Journalism And The National Security State * 53:35 Algorithms And The Squeeze On Indies * 58:50 Censorship Pressures From DC To Israel * 1:01:55 Two-Party Paralysis And How To Help

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Alle Folgen

43 Folgen

Episode Kevin Gosztola : The Whistleblower’s Dilemma Cover

Kevin Gosztola : The Whistleblower’s Dilemma

War lies do not spread on their own. They move through incentives: access, career safety, secrecy laws, and a media culture that treats “official” as synonymous with “true.” We sit down with Chicago independent journalist Kevin Gosztola, editor of The Dissenter and author of *Guilty of Journalism*, to trace how whistleblowers and adversarial reporting collide with the modern national security state. We start with the Iraq War as a formative media failure and follow Kevin’s path into covering WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, and the machinery that punishes disclosure. Kevin shares what it was like to report on the Chelsea Manning court-martial, including how the “Collateral Murder” video landed in that setting, why the “aiding the enemy” theory was so dangerous, and how even top-tier outlets sometimes walked into the room unprepared to understand what was happening. Along the way we challenge the comforting myth of “proper channels,” dig into how the Espionage Act reshapes journalism, and ask what it means when civil disobedience is treated as treason. From there, we zoom out to the forces that make accountability reporting harder now: access journalism, newsroom profit pressures, and algorithmic gatekeeping that elevates legacy brands while drowning out independent work. We also connect censorship pressures across borders, from subpoenas and leak investigations in the United States to military censorship practices tied to wartime reporting abroad. If you care about press freedom, government secrecy, whistleblowers, and the public’s right to know, this conversation lays out what is at stake and what audiences can do to help. Subscribe, share the episode with someone who still trusts anonymous briefings, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00. Welcome And Guest Introduction * 3:05 Iraq War And Becoming A Skeptic * 12:05 Learning Activism And Media Reform * 19:55 WikiLeaks Influence And Early Reporting * 27:10 Inside The Chelsea Manning Court-Martial * 38:15 Prestige Media Failures And Espionage Logic * 46:55 Access Journalism And The National Security State * 53:35 Algorithms And The Squeeze On Indies * 58:50 Censorship Pressures From DC To Israel * 1:01:55 Two-Party Paralysis And How To Help

Gestern1 h 3 min
Episode “Don’t platform dissidents.” He did it anyway. Tucker Carlson on Free Speech and Independent Media. Cover

“Don’t platform dissidents.” He did it anyway. Tucker Carlson on Free Speech and Independent Media.

You can feel when a society loses its ability to talk and starts reaching for labels instead. Unfettered Speech brings on Tucker Carlson for a frank conversation about how he went from the top of corporate news to independent media, and why the most punished questions are often the most important ones: What are we doing overseas, who benefits, and what is it doing to us at home? Leonard, Patrick, and Tucker get into the mechanics of modern propaganda, including how accusations like “racist” or “anti-Semite” can function less as arguments and more as social tools to shut down curiosity. From there, we talk diplomacy and dehumanization, why interviewing adversaries used to be normal journalism, and how the post-9/11 era hardened the idea that understanding an opponent is the same as defending them. The conversation turns toward war ethics and public morality: euphemisms like “collateral damage,” the normalization of killing innocents, and the blowback that follows when a superpower stops caring what it does in other people’s countries. We also connect foreign policy to domestic reality: the shrinking middle class, globalization and union decline, corporate consolidation, and why free speech becomes fragile when ordinary people lose economic power. We close with leadership, accountability, and unanswered questions around political violence and government secrecy. Thanks for Watching or Listening to Unfettered Speech. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What claim in this conversation do you most agree or disagree with? CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00. Welcome And Guest Introduction * 0:56. From Corporate News To Independence * 6:59. Smears That Block Real Debate * 11:49. Diplomacy Dies When We Dehumanize * 18:30. War Morality And Killing Innocents * 25:52. Israel Policy And The Fear Trap * 34:16. Economics Behind Censorship And Control * 44:34. Globalization Kills Unions And Loyalty * 51:16. Trying To Stop War Up Close * 57:38. Butler Shooting Mysteries And Hidden Files * 1:01:01 Citizens As Shareholders Final Thoughts

2. Juni 20261 h 3 min
Episode EP:41 [Guest] Wyatt Reed : A Week In Iran And Two Weeks Under Bombs In Lebanon Cover

EP:41 [Guest] Wyatt Reed : A Week In Iran And Two Weeks Under Bombs In Lebanon

A ceasefire that gets violated every day isn’t a ceasefire, and that’s where our conversation starts. We’re joined by Wyatt Reed, an editor at The Grayzone, calling in from Beirut after spending about a week reporting inside Iran. He walks us through what he’s seeing in Lebanon right now: ongoing Israeli airstrikes, mass displacement, and a pattern of attacks that he says hits civilian infrastructure, medics, and journalists, not just fighters. We dig into the biggest questions people have but rarely get answered with specifics: what Israel says it wants in Lebanon, what a “buffer zone” could really mean, and why Hezbollah remains the only force actively resisting Israeli troops in the south. Wyatt explains Hezbollah’s origins in the 1980s, its Shia base and ties to Iran, and how Lebanese public opinion can be skeptical of Hezbollah while still rejecting disarmament under threat of occupation or civil war. We also talk about how cheap FPV drones are reshaping asymmetric warfare by knocking out high-cost military hardware. Then we shift to Iran, including how Wyatt entered after the skies closed and what he found on the ground in Tehran and Isfahan that clashes with the usual Western stereotypes. The hardest segment is Minab: Wyatt describes visiting the site of a school strike, the “double tap” dynamic, and why blaming AI targeting doesn’t remove human responsibility or the need for accountability under the laws of war. If you value firsthand reporting, independent journalism, and clear-eyed analysis of Lebanon, Hezbollah, Iran, and U.S. foreign policy, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Chapter Markers 0:00 Welcome And A Reporter In Beirut 2:08 No Ceasefire On The Ground 6:27 Israel’s Stated Aims In Lebanon 8:38 Lebanese Army Limits And Hezbollah’s Role 14:24 Hezbollah Origins And Core Objectives 24:03 Drones And Asymmetric Battlefield Reality 27:31 Hospitals, Medics, And Journalists Targeted 38:30 Law Of War And Collective Punishment 40:19 Lebanon’s People Versus U.S. Narratives 43:46 Entering Iran After Skies Closed 45:46 Iran As A Normal Country 50:48 Minab School Strike And The Double Tap 1:00:19 Where To Follow Wyatt’s Reporting Our theme music, Adventures In Jazz, was used with permission. Composed and performed by Bob Mamet.

27. Mai 20261 h 4 min
Episode EP:40 [Guest] Melissa Witte "The Village Crazy Lady" - Follow The Money! Cover

EP:40 [Guest] Melissa Witte "The Village Crazy Lady" - Follow The Money!

American politics isn’t just polarized, it’s profitable. We sit down with Melissa Witte (known online as Village Crazy Lady) to pull on the thread that connects forever wars, lobby power, and the strange reality that “safe” politicians still raise mountains of cash they don’t need to win. If you’ve ever wondered why Congress feels bought even when your representative runs unopposed, this conversation puts real numbers and real mechanisms on the table.  We start with the big picture Mel sees in the United States right now, then move into foreign policy: Iran, nuclear fear narratives, and how incentives shift when agreements like the JCPOA get ripped up. From there, Mel shares her own background as a military wife in North Carolina and how watching Gaza changed her worldview, pushing her to research, post, and challenge the stories both parties repeat.  Then we get technical and practical about campaign finance corruption: why most districts are safe, how fundraising exploded after 2016, and where the money actually goes. We talk political consulting, “digital advertising” spend, opaque LLCs, and the nonprofit pathways that can keep money moving long after a campaign ends. We also explore Christian Zionism and dispensationalism, why theology shows up in modern power politics, and how public pressure campaigns can shape what prominent voices feel safe to say.  If you care about transparency, anti-war politics, dark money, foreign lobby influence, and building real left-right coalitions, you’ll want to hear this one. Subscribe, share it with a friend who still thinks fundraising equals virtue, and leave a review with the one reform you’d demand first. CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:23. Meet Mel And The Big Picture * 2:06 Iran War Talking Points And Reality * 8:43 A Military Conservative Turns Anti-War * 15:17 Where Campaign Money Actually Goes * 21:49 Nonprofits As The Next Slush Fund * 29:00 Christian Zionism And Prophecy Politics * 37:19 The Israel Lobby And FARA Debate * 40:14 Charlie Kirk Assassination Skepticism * 51:53 Left Right Coalition On Policy * 55:38 AOC Versus MTG And Closing

15. Mai 20261 h 2 min
Episode E:39 - [Guest] Trevor Timm : If Truth Can Be Prosecuted What Comes Next? Cover

E:39 - [Guest] Trevor Timm : If Truth Can Be Prosecuted What Comes Next?

A single phrase can shut down scrutiny: national security. We sit down with Trevor Timm, co-founder and executive director of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, to unpack how the modern secrecy system works in practice and why it so often protects power instead of the public. From overclassification to the state secrets privilege, we dig into how courts and journalists can be boxed out, leaving voters with curated narratives rather than verifiable facts.  We also get concrete about the law that quietly shapes the entire landscape: the Espionage Act. Trevor explains how it’s been repurposed to target whistleblowers who speak to journalists in the public interest, and how defendants can be barred from telling a jury why they leaked or what wrongdoing they exposed. That legal structure doesn’t just punish individuals, it trains everyone watching to stay silent.  From there, we trace the rise of financial censorship through the WikiLeaks payment processor blockade and the origin story of the Freedom of the Press Foundation. We talk Julian Assange, why publishing truthful information should be First Amendment protected, and why the precedent set by prosecuting a publisher reverberates through every newsroom. Then we zoom out to today’s threats: jawboning, FCC pressure, lawsuits designed to drain resources, and the way surveillance narrows the space for future WikiLeaks-scale disclosures.  If you care about press freedom, whistleblowers, government transparency, and the future of investigative journalism, listen through and join the conversation. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the one free-speech line you think we cannot afford to cross. CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00. Welcome And Guest Introduction * 1:05 Guantanamo And Secrecy In Court * 8:45. Classification Abuse And State Secrets * 12:55 The Espionage Act As A Weapon * 19:30 Why WikiLeaks Mattered In 2010 * 28:10 Financial Blockade And Press Freedom Fight * 38:05 Assange Prosecution And 2018 Split * 45:35 Jawboning FCC Threats And Lawsuits * 52:15 Bipartisan Censorship And National Security * 57:50 Europe Speech Limits And Global Spillover * 59:55 Can Whistleblowing Survive Surveillance * 1:01:05 Final Thoughts And Thanks

11. Mai 20261 h 11 min