This Dum Week
This episode of "This Dum Week" opens with both hosts present and in good spirits, kicking off with a characteristically warm story before descending into a dense sequence of institutional and political coverage. RollerGator leads with an uplifting clip about a 91-year-old woman in Westlake, Ohio who triggered a police welfare check by going completely unreachable for hours — because she was locked in trying to beat her high score on a bubble pop game on her phone. The story sets the episode's early tone: before the dum arrives in force, there is room for something human and genuinely endearing. From there, the episode moves through a rapid-fire sequence covering RFK Jr.'s extensive history of roadside animal dissection (raccoon genitalia, a decapitated whale strapped to a minivan roof, a staged bear-cub bicycle crash in Central Park); a rare Congressional defeat of Trump on FISA Section 702 renewal driven by a coalition of privacy-minded Republicans; and a world-record-sized chimpanzee civil war observed by primatologists in Uganda, which RollerGator and Alex treat as an irresistible analogy for human political polarization. The middle stretch of the episode is the densest, covering five major topics in close succession. A decade-spanning Albuquerque police corruption scheme — in which a defense attorney had his paralegal befriend targets, get them drunk, tip off a coordinating cop, and then pocket referral fees after the cop declined to appear in court — generates a broader discussion on the durability of criminal conspiracies and the persistent failure of the "conspiracies are inherently fragile" assumption taught in political science courses. Ruby Rose's public accusation of sexual assault against Katy Perry in a Melbourne nightclub around 2010 — filed with Australian police and generating a genuine formal investigation — is paired with the accelerating collapse of Congressman Eric Swalwell, who resigned his seat following multiple sexual misconduct allegations including a rape allegation from a former staffer; the hosts bookend both stories with a Lauren Boebert clip asking why everyone in politics is "so goddamn horny." The episode then pivots to tragedy: former Virginia Lieutenant Governor Justin Fairfax, whose political career was destroyed by sexual assault allegations in 2019 (which he denied), killed his wife and himself in their Annandale home amid a contentious divorce and custody proceeding that had ordered him out of the house by the end of April. The Tyler Robinson / Charlie Kirk shooting trial gets a substantial update, with newly unsealed documents revealing a handwritten confession note left for Robinson's trans partner Lance Twigs; Alex remains skeptical that the full story is public, citing unresolved questions about bullet ballistics and the disclosure timeline, while listener Donald J. Trump (not the president) offers combat-medicine context on the variability of bullet behavior. The final third of the episode opens with guest Greg Ellis — Hollywood actor (Pirates of the Caribbean, 24) and author of The Respondent: Exposing the Cartel of Family Law — who speaks from direct personal experience about the absence of presumption of innocence in American family court and the documented data on fatherlessness and suicide. Listener Katie Kin connects the family court discussion to Trump's recent executive order allowing psychedelic-assisted therapy for veterans, and Greg Ellis closes with a story of a quadruple-amputee veteran served a domestic violence restraining order while recovering from wounds at Ramstein Air Base. The episode closes with an extended analysis of California's AB 2047 — the "Firearm Printing Prevention Act" — which would mandate that all 3D printers sold in California be equipped with a "firearm blueprint detection algorithm." Alex explains in detail why the technical premise of the bill is incoherent: 3D printers receive G-code, which is geometric coordinate instructions, not identifiable object files, making the required "intent detection" algorithmically nonsensical. The bill is framed as a specific instance of a broader pattern the hosts have discussed repeatedly: legislators proposing surveillance infrastructure under a safety justification that cannot technically achieve what it claims while creating real costs in privacy and civil liberties. Detailed Outline Opening / Intro (00:00:00 - 00:01:15) Main Topic: Hosts reunite; RollerGator's generational confusion; Alex fires up the mute button * Both hosts present from the start of the episode — Alex is back after what sounds like a brief absence * Alex notes he was "having a dumb week" until the show began * RollerGator jokes about hitting the age where kids' slang is incomprehensible and they need to "get the fuck off my lawn" * Alex: "It would all be better if they weren't on your lawn while doing that" * Banter is easy and immediate — no opening drama or technical issues 91-Year-Old Gamer (00:01:15 - 00:04:15) Main Topic: Westlake, Ohio woman triggers police welfare check; found alive and unbothered, trying to beat her bubble pop high score * News 5 Cleveland clip (reporter Scott Knoll) covers a police response to the home of a 91-year-old woman enrolled in the city's "Are You Okay" program * Police received a call from the woman's family; she was not answering the door or her phone * Officers made entry to find her in her room, completely absorbed in a bubble pop game on her phone * She was trying to beat her previous high score and had not heard anyone * Officers reported to dispatch: "We're here with her now. She's playing video games in her bedroom." * Westlake Police Captain Gerald Vogel: "He just said it's some type of bubble pop game. He didn't know which one." * The woman apologized for the unintended concern — case closed, high score pending * RollerGator on the story: "There is something so wonderful about hearing that a 91-year-old was lost, lost in the game trying to beat her high score that she ignored all of her family and they thought she was dead." * Alex: "I frequently wonder, if you're 90, why not go on a heroin bender? Like, it's not going to reduce your life expectancy... I guess the grandma took the same course and went on a video game bender, which I think is totally earned." * RollerGator: "I hope she actually does get her high score and tell her family to buzz off. She's busy." Key Quote: RollerGator — "There is something so wonderful about hearing that a 91-year-old was lost, lost in the game trying to beat her high score that she ignored all of her family and they thought she was dead." Notable Detail: The story is treated as an unambiguous palate cleanser before the dum begins: short, sweet, and genuinely endearing. Both hosts agree it was the week's favorite story before moving on. Pilots Meowing on Emergency Aviation Frequency (00:04:15 - 00:07:45) Main Topic: FAA emergency radio frequency 121.5 plagued by meowing; traced to 2002 Super Troopers bit; $19,000 fine nobody has ever paid * CNN clip covers a persistent phenomenon on aviation emergency frequency 121.5: random meowing and barking sounds * Frequency is reserved for emergency distress calls when other radio signals fail * The meowing trend is widely attributed to a scene in the 2002 movie Super Troopers where characters insert "meow" into conversations * The fear: pilots who hear constant noise on the channel will turn it down, causing them to miss actual emergencies * FAA and FCC rules prohibit the behavior; fines exceed $19,000 per violation * Problem: "There's no caller ID on aviation radio" — enforcement is functionally impossible * CNN anchor sign-off: "...unless somebody fesses up and lets the cat out of the bag" * RollerGator: "I do request that we arrest that CNN host for his pun at the end, because that was a criminally bad pun." * Alex on the enforcement paradox: "It's like we will make this illegal but we have absolutely no way of catching you. Here's a big nominal fine that you'll never pay." He notes this is a classic problem in law and economics — the probability of capture determines the required penalty size Key Quote: Alex — "It's like we will make this illegal but we have absolutely no way of catching you. Here's a big nominal fine that you'll never pay." Hosts' Analysis: Treated as a structurally interesting enforcement failure. The law exists, the behavior persists, and the fine is functionally decorative. Alex extends this to the broader game-theoretic point that when capture probability approaches zero, penalties inflate toward infinity — which is the logic behind certain nominally enormous fines that no one actually faces. RFK Jr.'s Animal Encounters (00:07:45 - 00:14:30) Main Topic: New York Post / New Yorker book excerpt reveals RFK Jr. cut a dead raccoon's genitals off on a highway to study later; recap of the whale and bear incidents; Alex learns Katy Perry was married to Russell Brand * From Isabel Vincent's book RFK Jr.: The Fall and Rise, drawn from private journals RFK kept 1999–2001 * On Interstate 684, Kennedy pulled over his car, had his children wait, and cut the penis out of a road-killed raccoon so he could "study them later" * Quote from the journal: "I was standing in front of my parked car on I-684, cutting the penis out of a road-killed raccoon, thinking about how weird some of my family members have turned out to be" * His daughter Kick Kennedy recalled the whale decapitation incident: Kennedy spotted a whale carcass on Squaw Island near Hyannis Port, beheaded it with a chainsaw, strapped the head to the family minivan roof with a bungee cord — "Every time we accelerated on the highway, whale juice would pour into the windows of the car, and it was the rankest thing on the planet" * Bear cub: Kennedy admitted to The New Yorker he dumped a dead bear cub in Central Park after a botched attempt to skin it, then staged it to look like the bear had been riding a bicycle and crashed * Cousin Carolyn Kennedy's letter to lawmakers during HHS confirmation hearings: described his dorm room as "a perverse scene of despair and violence" where he put chicks and mice in a blender to feed his hawks * RollerGator's summary: "So far, the results of the Kennedys' rigorous whale head and raccoon penis studies have not been publicly disclosed. We need the data." * Alex: "How different could this man's upbringing have been that this is somehow within the realm of the thinkable. I mean, forget doing it — conceiving of it. He's a culture unto himself." * The bear cub-bicycle prank: both hosts concede this one is arguably a comprehensible drunk college stunt Key Quote: Kick Kennedy — "Every time we accelerated on the highway, whale juice would pour into the windows of the car, and it was the rankest thing on the planet. We all had plastic bags over our heads with mouth holes cut out, and people on the highway were giving us the finger, but that's just the normal day-to-day stuff for us." Notable Detail: Alex's reaction upon learning Katy Perry was once married to Russell Brand — "You have not mentioned that Miss Katy Perry was once married to Russell Brand." RollerGator: "I did not, no." This kicks off a sidebar on Brand's evolution from drug era marriage to Christianity to healing crystal amulet sales to Tucker Carlson demon possession discussions, summarized as two Christianities that failed to synchronize. FISA Section 702 Defeat / Trump's Congressional Limits (00:14:30 - 00:22:30) Main Topic: House Republicans defeat Trump on clean FISA 702 extension; White House pressure campaign fails; privacy-minded conservatives hold; makeshift skiff set up on House floor * From Axios: Trump suffered a rare legislative defeat when more than two dozen House Republicans voted against two procedural votes for a clean extension of FISA Section 702 * This forced GOP leadership to fall back on a 10-day extension — their last-resort option * The White House brought CIA Director John Ratcliffe to address Republicans at their weekly meeting; held numerous classified briefings; set up a makeshift SCIF off the House floor to facilitate access to intelligence information during vote whipping * Representative Ralph Norman, who voted against: "This is not an accurate characterization of White House involvement at all" (quoting the White House's response) * Johnson will have approximately 12 days to unite the conference and pass something; Trump's sway is being tested * RollerGator: "There's some positive news that the FISA renewal process is not going easily. Maybe if we're lucky, it will go away or have to be reformulated in some way that isn't a complete secret spy mission." * Alex's broader institutional observation: Trump was himself surveilled under FISA in his first term and campaigned against it — "Trump supposedly was against all this spying and stuff, especially for himself, and had experienced it, and he was going to be a real champion. And here he is failing but attempting to—that's another ridiculous thing." * Alex on the makeshift SCIF: "Of course they couldn't leave that skiff there. If lawmakers need on-demand access to confidential information — no, that doesn't exist. That is not a feature of the legislative process. They added that there for this one right now and will proceed to take it away. All things so fucking stupid." Key Quote: Alex — "You don't say, we couldn't possibly have a warrant, you know, the thing that the Constitution requires. Yes — that is the negotiation point. Are we gonna go with it or not? Apparently, couldn't possibly." Notable Detail: Alex's broader structural critique: neither Republicans nor Democrats ever respond to losing power by pulling back executive power to protect against the other side's potential abuses. The FISA renewal is treated as one more example of both parties agreeing that executive surveillance powers should expand and never contract, regardless of who controls the White House. Ngogo Chimpanzee Civil War (00:21:30 - 00:28:00) Main Topic: Scientists document world's largest chimpanzee group fracturing into civil war in Uganda; 24 violent raids; 7 adult males and 17 infants killed; Gamergate comparison * From 404 Media, published in the journal Science: Aaron Sandel, University of Texas at Austin, has published findings on the Ngogo chimpanzee population in Uganda * Once the largest observed chimpanzee group in the wild (over 200 individuals), the Ngogo group has fractured into western and central clusters * The exact moment Sandel identifies as the turning point: June 24, 2015, when the western cluster fell silent and retreated from the central cluster rather than engaging in typical "fusion" behavior * "You act like a stranger, you become a stranger," Sandel said — the polarization planted its own seed * The last cross-cluster offspring was conceived in March 2015; the groups were fully separated by 2018 * Western chimps have since staged 24 violent raids on the central cluster: 7 adult males and 17 infants killed, death toll likely higher * The pattern — an oversized group fractured by internal politics into hostile factions that attack former members — is described as genuinely rare in chimpanzee history * RollerGator: "As of yet, there is no known connection between this and Gamergate, but as are most things that started in 2015, they can be traced to Gamergate." * Alex: "I'm not sure where the propaganda for the sides is going to come from or what form it's going to take. What if they discover the media and their ability to manipulate?" * Both hosts suggest getting Trump to add the chimpanzee war to his list of stopped conflicts — "That'll bring peace among the chimps. It'll bring Rogan back on side." * Alex asks whether there's a Polymarket or KALSHI market on the outcome Key Quote: Researcher Aaron Sandel — "You act like a stranger, you become a stranger. It seemed that planted the seed of polarization." Hosts' Analysis: The story is played mostly for its irresistible parallels to human political fracturing, but the genuine scientific finding — that chimps will attack and kill former members of their own social group once the boundary between "in-group" and "out-group" solidifies — is treated as worth noting on its own terms. Albuquerque Police / DWI Bribery Scheme (00:28:00 - 00:39:00) Main Topic: Former APD Lieutenant Justin Hunt pleads guilty as the 10th officer in a 16-to-22-year DWI bribery scheme; attorney Thomas Clear III's paralegal befriended and helped target drunk drivers; conspiracy durability discussion * From KOBY News, Albuquerque: Former APD Lieutenant Justin Hunt — a decades-long veteran — confessed to his role in a DWI bribery scheme orchestrated by defense attorney Thomas Clear III and his paralegal Ricardo Mendez * Scheme mechanics: Mendez would go out drinking with a target until they were drunk; Mendez or others would tip off Hunt; Hunt would pull the target over; the target would be steered toward hiring Clear; Hunt would then fail to appear in court, causing the case to be dismissed; all parties received money and gifts * One documented incident from May 2014: Mendez took a client to a strip club for their birthday, then called Hunt with the target's location when they left by car * Hunt is the 10th law enforcement officer to plead guilty in the scheme * Former APD Chief Harold Medina confirmed the scheme has been operating for at least 16 years, possibly up to 22 years * Attorney Clear is scheduled for a court update; no one who has pleaded guilty has yet been sentenced * RollerGator's institutional analysis: "Criminal conspiracies are far less fragile than people like to imagine and they occur so regularly." References Theranos as another example of a long-running, multi-participant fraud that collapsed only after years * Alex on the scheme's sophistication: notes the "limited hangout" structure — the target knows about the corrupt deal with the attorney (officer won't show up), but doesn't know the friend who got them drunk was also in on it. "It's like layers and layers. It's almost like a limited hangout is being used to extract the gains without revealing the entire plot." * Alex notes the secondary benefit: Clear built a near-perfect win rate advertising-able in DWI defense * RollerGator: "The surprising thing here is not that they engage in conspiracy. That they got caught and somehow it made the news — that's a shocking part. The rest is like, yeah, sure, I mean, I believe it." Key Quote: RollerGator — "I just don't think that these types of conspiracies are particularly fragile despite that being taught in most poli sci courses." Notable Detail: The scheme's layered deception — some participants knowing some layers of the fraud, none knowing all of it — is identified as a key structural reason for its longevity. The person being charged knew about the corrupt deal but not about their "friend" being a plant. The police officer knew about both. Clear and Mendez knew the full picture. Each layer of limited knowledge reduced the risk of any single participant exposing the whole operation. Hosts' Analysis: Framed as an evergreen illustration of two recurring show themes: first, that institutional corruption is significantly more durable and common than the "conspiracy theories are fragile" dismissal assumes; and second, that absence of systemic oversight — nobody looking at Clear's anomalously high dismissal rate and asking why — is what allows these structures to persist. The oversight failure is less dramatic than the conspiracy but more consequential. Katy Perry / Ruby Rose Sexual Assault Allegations (00:39:00 - 00:52:00) Main Topic: Ruby Rose publicly accuses Katy Perry of sexual assault at Melbourne nightclub in 2010; Australian police open formal investigation; pattern of similar allegations surfaces; Perry's camp denies; Australian police interview underway * Ruby Rose posted on Threads accusing pop singer Katy Perry of sexual assault at Spice Market nightclub in Melbourne approximately 20 years ago * Rose's account: Perry "saw me resting on my best friend's lap to avoid her and bent down, pulled her underwear to the side and rubbed her disgusting... private parts on my face until my eyes snapped open and I projectile vomited on her" * Rose noted this is "women on women violence and sexual abuse" which she describes as "100 times harder to speak about than speaking about the male predators" * Rose subsequently walked into a Melbourne police station to file a report; she later posted that she had "finalized all of my reports" and could no longer comment publicly per standard police request * Melbourne's Sexual Offenses and Child Abuse Investigation Team confirmed it is investigating a historical sexual assault at a licensed premises in Melbourne's CBD in 2010 — the incident was investigated as having occurred at the Spice Market, which has since closed * Former nightclub manager claimed he remembered the night but was unaware of any alleged assault or vomiting; said both women "had way too much to drink" * Katy Perry's camp: "These allegations are not only categorically false, they are dangerous, reckless lies." Notes Rose has a "well-documented history" of public allegations * Additional historical accusations against Perry: * Anna Kendrick joked on Conan O'Brien in 2014 that Perry had inappropriately touched her cleavage during "a weird night" * Josh Kloss (appeared in the "Teenage Dream" video) claimed in 2019 that Perry exposed his genitalia at a party without his consent * Georgian-Russian TV host Tina Kandilaki accused Perry of inappropriate touching and kissing * 2018: Perry reportedly kissed American Idol contestant Benjamin Glaze on the lips without advance consent * RollerGator plays a comedic bit in which he poses as a detective and reads Perry's lyrics from "I Kissed a Girl" back to her as apparent evidence of admitted consent issues * Alex: "Who the hell knows, right? It's definitely very suspicious when people show up like 20 years later and have things to say." RollerGator provides the counter-argument: "It could be a normal byproduct of complexity in those scenarios and the social consequences of someone making a claim or the cost of going through the effort at the time" * Alex notes Perry came up through Christian pop under the name Katie Hudson — album sold 100–200 copies before the label went bankrupt; followed 6 years later by "You're So Gay" — RollerGator: "She was reborn as most Christians wind up becoming at some point. Born again. And now possibly born again, again, as a rampant sexual predator." Key Quote: RollerGator's mock detective interrogation of "Miss Perry" — reading her own lyrics back to her: "I kissed a girl and I liked it / The taste of her cherry chapstick... Now, Miss Perry, I don't see anything in what you've written here that indicates this activity was consensual." Hosts' Analysis: Both hosts treat the allegations with genuine epistemic care — acknowledging the structural reasons for delayed disclosure while also acknowledging the pattern of accusations could reflect either a real behavioral problem or a bandwagon effect. Neither endorses the allegations nor dismisses them. The formal Australian police investigation is treated as the relevant institutional development. Eric Swalwell Resignation (00:52:00 - 01:00:00) Main Topic: Congressman Eric Swalwell exits California governor's race and resigns from Congress following multiple sexual misconduct allegations, including a rape allegation from a former staffer * ABC News / CNN coverage: Eric Swalwell, once a leading California gubernatorial candidate, announced his resignation from Congress following multiple sexual misconduct allegations * Four women accused him of inappropriate behavior; one former staffer told CNN he sexually assaulted her twice in 2019 and again in 2024 * One woman's testimony (played in clip): "He raped me and he choked me. And while he was choking me, I lost consciousness. I thought I died. I did not consent to any sexual activity." * Swalwell: "These allegations of sexual assault are flat false. They are absolutely false. They did not happen." He separately acknowledged "mistakes in judgment" between himself and his wife * Dozens of current and former Swalwell staffers demanded he resign; some Democrats said they would have supported expulsion from Congress * Swalwell's statement on resignation: "I must take responsibility and ownership for the mistakes I did make. It's also wrong for my constituents to have me distracted from my duties." * RollerGator notes the allegations "accumulated over several days," suggesting coordination — he does not specifically have concrete evidence of violent assault to corroborate the harsher allegations but finds the pattern credible * Alex: Swalwell is "out-of-central-casting" — a politician who succeeded more on physical presence and positioning than on substance, and power going to people's heads is "a thing" * Recalled as the congressman who was likely in a romantic relationship with Christine Fang, an alleged Chinese Communist Party spy * RollerGator's coda, and Lauren Boebert's moment: "Lauren Boebert is going to express my thoughts succinctly here. Go to church, find Jesus. Why is everybody so horny here?" — described as "hopefully the one and only time Lauren Boebert speaks on my behalf" Key Quote: RollerGator — "This might be the one and only time these next words come out of my mouth. God willing. But Lauren Boebert is going to express my thoughts succinctly here. Go to church, find Jesus. Why is everybody so goddamn horny?" Justin Fairfax Murder-Suicide (01:00:00 - 01:10:00) Main Topic: Former Virginia Lieutenant Governor Justin Fairfax kills wife and himself in Annandale home during contested divorce; children were present; court had ordered him out of the house by end of April * Former Virginia Lieutenant Governor Justin Fairfax, 47, shot his wife Dr. Serena Fairfax, 49, several times in the basement of their home, then shot himself in the primary bedroom * Their teen son called 911 and reported his mother was bleeding and he did not know where his father was; cameras Serena had installed in the home confirmed the sequence of events * The couple was separated but still living in the home in separate bedrooms; Serena had filed for divorce in 2025 * A judge had recently granted custody of their teen children to Serena and ordered Justin to move out of the home by the end of April — "That may have been a spark," Fairfax County Police Chief Kevin Davis said * Justin had been fined $300 per day for failing to comply with court orders and owed Serena money * Court records: Justin had spiraled into alcoholism and self-isolation following the 2019 sexual assault allegations; in 2022, he purchased a handgun with money intended for his children's horseback riding lessons * Serena had cameras installed precisely because Justin had called police in January to accuse her of assaulting him — cameras cleared her; no charges were filed * Serena was described as an accomplished dentist, Duke and VCU graduate, beloved in the Northern Virginia community * RollerGator ties the story to the Swalwell/Perry sequence: "Moving on from sexual assault world, which — hopefully the one and only time I say that Lauren Boebert speaks for me — why is everyone so goddamn horny?" * Fairfax had been considered a rising star in Democratic politics; history: he was the second African American elected statewide in Virginia; his career crumbled in 2019 when two women accused him of sexual assault, allegations he denied * Alex: "It's slowly then all at once kind of situation." Notes the courts "can intervene in very ham-fisted ways that can definitely make situations a lot worse than they have to be" — the expected conclusion will be that more immediate action should have been taken * RollerGator: "If you do kill your wife and yourself, you will be blamed." Alex: "That's the worst one, yes." Key Quote: Alex — "It's slowly then all at once kind of situation. And yes, it could be causal that way — you get accused of something and then you spiral. But it could also be the other way: you're just a person who's entitled and is getting used to getting everything, and you hit a wall somewhere." Notable Detail: The April court deadline — Justin ordered out of the house by end of April — is identified by police as a probable precipitating trigger. The gun purchase in 2022 with money intended for the children's riding lessons is documented in the custody case. Serena's home cameras, installed because of the January false accusation call, became the evidence that established the sequence of events. Tyler Robinson / Charlie Kirk Shooting Update (01:10:00 - 01:37:00) Main Topic: Newly unsealed confession note to trans partner Lance "Luna" Twigs; Alex's ongoing ballistics skepticism; Donald J. Trump (listener) provides combat medicine context on bullet variability; defense strategy speculation * Newly unsealed court documents reveal a handwritten confession note Robinson left for his partner Lance Twigs (who used the name Luna), found under a keyboard at their shared St. George, Utah townhouse * Robinson set an automated text to send moments after the September 2025 rooftop shooting at Utah Valley University, directing Twigs to find the note * Note content: "Luna, if you are reading this per my text, then I am so sorry... I left the house this morning on a mission and set an auto text. I am likely dead or facing a lengthy prison sentence. I had the opportunity to take out Charlie Kirk and I took it... I wish we could have lived in a world where this did not feel necessary. I love you always, Tyler." * Robinson had been planning the shooting for "a bit over a week" per texts * Twigs was initially cooperating with Robinson — the note is believed to have been burned, with its contents recovered under what Alex describes as "aggressive interrogative stance" per Kash Patel's phrasing * Discord messages that appeared to show Robinson confessing to friends were reportedly sent after the time he had been booked — creating timeline confusion * Robinson has not officially confessed to police and is not admitting guilt; his defense has not yet filed its strategy * Alex's continued ballistics skepticism: the bullet that struck Kirk shattered internally, which Alex notes is inconsistent with standard behavior for the type of ammunition reportedly used; he cites Chris Martinson's trajectory analysis as the most compelling analytical work done so far * Listener Donald J. Trump (regular caller, not the president) provides firsthand context: * Describes treating a colleague shot 24 times (7 in armor, rest pelvic); the man still killed 4 people and walked out; a colleague took one in the throat and died * "Bullets are some of the weirdest damn things you've ever seen on a planet. They just won't do things that they're supposed to do sometimes." * Suggests looking at hunting forum photos of non-penetrating deer shots as real-world variability evidence * Confirms the energy transfer in the Kirk shooting footage — spine moving backward, rib cage flexing — is consistent with massive internal energy transfer at a plunging angle * RollerGator: "In order to add just a little bit of clarity to the situation: we can all say for certain who didn't kill Charlie Kirk. Gator." Alex: "Me." RollerGator: "Okay, so we've eliminated two people. We're narrowing it down." * RollerGator's position: Robinson was likely involved but possibly encouraged by a third party; he would entertain the possibility that Robinson was "weaponized" via his strongly held beliefs * Alex: "My best guess right now is that Robinson was somehow involved, but more likely than not, there were other people involved, and there was a deeper story we're not seeing." * Defense strategy speculation: the discovery documents' focus on precise message timestamps suggests the defense may concentrate on the timeline — possibly that Robinson was at or near the scene but did not fire the shot Key Quote: Robinson's handwritten note — "I had the opportunity to take out Charlie Kirk and I took it. I don't know if I will/have succeeded, but I had hoped to make it home to you." Key Quote: Listener Donald J. Trump — "Bullets, man. I had a colleague shot 24 times, 7 times in the armor. The rest were pelvic shots. He still killed 4 people and walked out of the house. The guy in the next room took one in the throat and died." Notable Detail: Alex flags that media figures like Michael Schellenberger have described Robinson as a "confessed killer" without qualification — which he notes is inaccurate given that Robinson has made no official confession to police and is currently fighting the charges. The note and texts are prosecution evidence, not a legal admission of guilt. Hosts' Analysis: The hosts maintain genuinely suspended judgment: the note's content strongly suggests Robinson's involvement and intent, but the unresolved ballistic questions and timeline anomalies — particularly Alex's view that the reported bullet behavior is difficult to replicate — prevent either host from treating the official narrative as complete. The defense's apparent strategy of focusing on the timeline is noted as consistent with a scenario where the defense needs to establish that Robinson's presence and intent do not conclusively prove he fired the specific shot. Greg Ellis / Family Court Discussion (01:37:00 - 02:00:00) Main Topic: Hollywood actor and family court advocate Greg Ellis discusses the absence of presumption of innocence in family courts; listener Katie Kin connects to Trump's psychedelic therapy executive order and veteran mental health; fatherlessness data; Guildford Four comparison * RollerGator introduces Greg Ellis — actor (Pirates of the Caribbean, 24) and author of The Respondent: Exposing the Cartel of Family Law * Ellis brings in the Fairfax story as a direct context: his own experience with family court motivated the book * "Family law is the only branch of the legal system where there's no presumption of innocence. Murderers, rapists, terrorists, pedophiles have more rights than law-abiding citizens who happen to have signed a marriage contract." * Ellis on the stakes of fatherlessness: more than one-third of American children live absent their biological fathers; these children are more likely to use drugs, experience abuse, go to prison, drop out of high school, live in poverty, and become pregnant as teens * Data on male suicide: American men kill themselves 4 times more than women; divorced men kill themselves 8 times more than women; for every child who loses their mother to suicide during or after divorce, 8 children lose a father * "Every day family courts are open in America, 4,000 children lose a parent." * The structural problem Ellis describes: DVROs and protective orders can be issued with no evidence and immediately impose real consequences — loss of home access, stigma, record — on the accused, with no means of quick remedy even if the accusation is false * Ellis's reform proposal: if someone is found to have made a false accusation, they should face the same penalty the accused would have faced if convicted * He invokes the Guildford Four — four people wrongly imprisoned for 12–15 years for IRA bombings, exonerated after evidence withheld by the Crown Prosecution Service was discovered — arguing that the prosecutors and detectives who withheld the exculpatory evidence should have served the same prison time as the wrongly convicted * The family court system is now a "$125 billion a year industry," Ellis notes — an industry structurally incentivized to generate conflict rather than resolve it * RollerGator's characterization of the DVRO paradox: "Having one of those issued against you is in some ways a punishment. So if you are innocent, you are being immediately punished for something you haven't done — and it has penalties for violating those restrictions in addition to the reputational damage, without having had a proper airing to defend yourself." * Listener Katie Kin connects the discussion to Trump's recent executive order allowing ibogaine and psychedelic-assisted therapy for veterans * Notes 17–18 veterans per day commit suicide; approximately 20% die attempting to get treatment ("literally in hospital parking lots") * Contrasts conventional depression medication (benzodiazepines — she mentions Jordan Peterson as an example of long-term benzo damage) with the emerging psychedelic treatment paradigm * Greg Ellis responds with a story: a quadruple-amputee veteran served a DVRO while recovering from an IED at Ramstein Air Base in Germany — lost his arms and his legs, then came home to a restraining order and homelessness; later wrote Ellis that his advocacy had "given him hope" * Ellis on ibogaine: "It is huge and can not only help veterans but so many of the people suffering with mental health." * Katie Kin's closing question: "How would we essentially prevent more shooters? If we're talking about the LGBTQ trans issue, the family law issue, the social media issue — we can fix the nuclear family by having a parent home, but if kids are exposed to social media and political division that compels them to fight for their in-group..." Key Quote: Greg Ellis — "Family courts are basically going back to the days of the Spanish Inquisition or the Salem Witch Trials... It literally is as simple as if you're the petitioner, you file. You don't really have to present any evidence. You are forced as the black-hatted respondent to prove a negative." Key Quote: Greg Ellis on the Guildford Four — "Those detectives and those attorneys who knowingly withheld the evidence should go to prison for the same amount of time as if they'd committed the crime, which is what the people found guilty spent." Notable Detail: Ellis's book title — The Respondent: Exposing the Cartel of Family Law — is his term for the structural self-interest of attorneys, evaluators, and family court infrastructure that profits from extending conflict. The website therespondent.com [http://therespondent.com/] is shared to the Space. He notes the problem affects mothers as well as fathers, though the data shows it falls disproportionately on men. Hosts' Analysis: RollerGator handles Ellis with genuine care, pushing on the most difficult trade-off: the court's "err on the side of caution" posture when issuing protective orders exists because some fraction of those requests come from people in genuine danger. The interesting question he raises is whether any mechanism exists to compensate for that trade-off once a person is proven innocent — and Ellis's answer is essentially no. California AB 2047 / Ghost Gun 3D Printing Legislation (02:01:00 - 02:11:25) Main Topic: California's "Firearm Printing Prevention Act" mandates certified firearm blueprint detection algorithms in all 3D printers sold by 2029; Alex explains why the technical premise is incoherent; state surveillance infrastructure comparison * Alex describes sending RollerGator a link with the message: "Soundbites, OH MY GOD, you have GOT to listen to these brain-dead morons in the assembly" * California AB 2047 (Assemblymember Rebecca Bayer Cain), mirrored by similar legislation in Washington State and Colorado: * By July 1, 2027: California DOJ must investigate "firearm blueprint detection algorithms" and publish performance standards * By July 1, 2028: any business selling 3D printers in California must attest that each printer model is equipped with a certified firearm blueprint detection algorithm * By September 1, 2028: DOJ must publish and maintain a list of compliant printer models * By March 1, 2029: only DOJ-approved printers can be sold in California * Violation: misdemeanor plus civil penalties up to $25,000 per infraction for businesses selling non-compliant printers * The technical problem, explained by the "3D Printing Nerd" YouTube channel clip and Alex: * 3D printers do not receive files — they receive G-code, which is geometric coordinate instructions: move left, move up this far, extrude * There is no readable "shape" or "intent" embedded in G-code that a detection algorithm could evaluate * The bill is, as the clip explains: "like asking a pen to stop you from writing a sentence the government doesn't want you to write" * The only way to make this work would require all print jobs to route through a cloud server that evaluates the reconstructed shape — at which point you have mandatory government surveillance of all 3D printing activity * Alex's analogy: "Forget the 3D printing thing entirely. Just consider that the analog is you don't like certain things being printed — not 3D printed, normal printed, inkjet printed, on paper. Your solution is to inject software that prevents you from printing bad things. That's what we're talking about." * Alex on the "ghost" naming convention: "Ghost, because the government can't see it. Cannot track it... You're looking at it from the eyes of a bureaucrat who wants to have full visibility of all things in a certain class. The fact that there's certain ones you cannot see makes you really uncomfortable. So you call them ghost whatever." * Comparison to Russia's "ghost fleet" (ships not insured by Lloyd's of London, therefore not in the Western insurance system): "They're just not in the system because it's illegal for them to be in the system. Russia said, fine, we'll make our own insurance companies. The ships are normal ships — they're made of metal." * The bill either: (a) is pointless — it fingerprints known gun files, which anyone can circumvent — or (b) requires comprehensive surveillance of all 3D printing activity, which is the actual unstated goal Key Quote: "3D Printing Nerd" YouTube channel — "G-code is just math. It's instructions like 'move left, move up, extrude.' To screen that, the 3D printer would have to understand the intent of these moves. The bill is like asking a pen to stop you from writing a sentence the government doesn't want you to write." Key Quote: Alex — "Either it's pointless, or it is incredibly dangerous. But all in all, I'm just noticing this new thing now — they call things 'ghosts,' right? The ghost guns. What is ghost? Is it a gun or is it not a gun? It is a gun. Ghost, because the government can't see it." Notable Detail: Alex notes this bill follows a pattern the show has discussed repeatedly: legislation is proposed under a compelling safety frame (stopping ghost guns), but the technical implementation required to achieve the stated goal would require a surveillance infrastructure (all print jobs routed to a government-accessible cloud evaluation system) that is far more invasive than the problem being addressed. The safety frame is either technically naive or strategically misleading. Hosts' Analysis: The analysis is Alex's strongest of the episode — methodically working through why the bill's premise is technically impossible as stated, then identifying the only implementation that would actually work (comprehensive print-job surveillance), and framing the whole thing as consistent with a recurring pattern: "legislate the surveillance infrastructure you want, justify it with the safety problem you're claiming to solve."
47 episodios
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