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Exiles

You Better Stay Home and Do What You're Told

27 min · 31 de ago de 2025
Portada del episodio You Better Stay Home and Do What You're Told

Descripción

Is policy-immunized human resources culture what George Orwell was referring to in his masterwork of a novella, Animal Farm (1945)? Probably not, but they're in there along with every other card-carrying member of the barnyard club - both as the cause of and solution to complex issues, often at the same time. And what about the HR-saluting middle management overlord enforcers? We can shoehorn them into the Animal Farm metaphor, right? Can we? How about Pink Floyd? Ya like Pink Floyd? Who doesn't like Pink Floyd? Watch the video. It's slightly more coherent than this description. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit tjosephexiles.substack.com [https://tjosephexiles.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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16 episodios

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The Loss of Music & Shared Culture

A healthy society is one that shares in the appreciation of art...music in particular. Featuring music from Madonna, Michael Jackson, Nirvana & the Spice Girls. Glenn Gould drops in for some commentary on improvisation. •Madonna “Bye Bye Baby” | September 2, 1993 MTV VMAs Universal Ampitheatre | Los Angeles, CA ℗1992 Maverick/Sire/Warner Bros. | ©1993 MTV Entertainment Group/Paramount Skydance “Who’s That Girl?” | September 4, 1987 Ciao Italia: Live from Italy Stadio Comunale | Turin, Italy ©℗1987 & 1988 Sire/Warner Reprise •Michael Jackson “Billie Jean” | March 25, 1983 Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever (aired May 16, 1983 [NBC]) Pasadena Civic Auditorium | Pasadena, CA ℗1982 CBS/Epic | ©1983 NBC Universal •Nirvana “Lithium” | September 9, 1992 MTV VMAs Pauley Pavilion | Los Angeles, CA ℗1992 Geffen/Universal Music Group | ©1992 MTV Entertainment Group/Paramount Skydance •Spice Girls “Wannabe” | May 16, 1996 Hotel Babylon (aired June 14, 1996 [Channel 3]) London, England ℗1996 Virgin/EMI Records | ©1996 Channel 4 [UK] •Glenn Gould “On Improvisation” | November 23, 1966 The Art of Glenn Gould ©℗1966 CBC Radio •Prince “I Wanna Be Your Lover | January 11, 1980 The Midnight Special NBC Studios | Burbank, CA ℗1978 Warner Bros. | ©1980 NBC Universal This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit tjosephexiles.substack.com [https://tjosephexiles.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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episode Conspiracy Query artwork

Conspiracy Query

What really counts as a “conspiracy theory”? And who decides which version of events we’re allowed to believe? In this episode of Rhetorical Forensics, I break down the assassination of Charlie Kirk and the flood of competing narratives around it — from FBI statements and Kash Patel’s framing, to Chris Martenson’s forensic analysis, to media reaction and fringe counterclaims. This isn’t about “solving the case.” It’s about exposing how official stories and alternative theories get built, why some versions gain traction, and how cover-ups are often less about truth than about power, motive, and optics. Under Interrogation: * The “lone nut” problem and why institutions love tidy culprits * How mainstream vs. heterodox claims flip depending on interest alignment * What symbolic violence (public assassination) tells us about motive * Why credibility debts (like the Epstein narrative) weaken trust in new claims -How public reaction can actually ratify or undermine a narrative If you’re tired of both blind trust and nihilistic cynicism, this episode offers a third path: conspiracy literacy — a way to interrogate narratives without being captured by them. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit tjosephexiles.substack.com [https://tjosephexiles.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

30 de sep de 202544 min
episode You Better Stay Home and Do What You're Told artwork

You Better Stay Home and Do What You're Told

Is policy-immunized human resources culture what George Orwell was referring to in his masterwork of a novella, Animal Farm (1945)? Probably not, but they're in there along with every other card-carrying member of the barnyard club - both as the cause of and solution to complex issues, often at the same time. And what about the HR-saluting middle management overlord enforcers? We can shoehorn them into the Animal Farm metaphor, right? Can we? How about Pink Floyd? Ya like Pink Floyd? Who doesn't like Pink Floyd? Watch the video. It's slightly more coherent than this description. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit tjosephexiles.substack.com [https://tjosephexiles.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

31 de ago de 202527 min