This F@#king Country

greg

conversations about the United States and the current state of affairs from politics to pop culture to men's issues

  1. NOV 26

    If We Fail Our Kids, What’s The Country For

    Send us a text The room felt heavy before we hit record, and not because we’re out of hope. We’re two dads who can’t shake a simple question: if we fail our kids, what’s the country for? That focus pulls us from venting into a plan—how to move from scattered outrage to a movement that’s organized, safe, and impossible to ignore. We start with the fragile miracle of America’s founding and the uncomfortable truth that institutions can be dismantled faster than they’re built. From there, we dig into the right’s messaging discipline and why disunity keeps kneecapping the left’s best intentions. Instead of chasing policy debates few people have time for, we argue for speaking to basic instincts: protect your family, demand honesty, and hold power to account. That’s where disinformation meets reality. With fresh proof of bot networks amplifying nationalist narratives, we lay out how to counter them by curating verified footage, court records, and on-the-ground reporting into a shareable stream of receipts that cuts through the noise. Safety matters as much as truth. We talk about documenting ICE and DHS actions without giving authoritarians a pretext to escalate. Nonviolence isn’t passivity; it’s a strategy that slows harmful operations, protects people, and keeps the moral and legal ground. Then we face the pivot many avoid: economics. Prices and healthcare shocks will punch through spin, and when they do, people deserve clear explanations and actionable choices. We connect that to corruption—insider gains, media capture, and a system that shields the ultra-wealthy from risk—while pointing toward fixes that are practical, not performative. This conversation won’t fix everything, but it does draw a map: build an information network, unify a message, protect our communities, and make decisions with our kids’ future in mind. If that resonates, follow, share, and leave a review with one action you’ll take this week to push the work forward. Your idea could be the spark someone else needs.

    39 min
  2. NOV 5

    Media Lies, Power, And Consequences

    Send us a text What happens when lies get a louder microphone than facts? We take you inside the mechanics of how false narratives spread, why the follow-up questions never seem to land, and how spectacle crowds out verification. From choreographed optics around a supposed “assassination attempt” to court cases that unravel public claims without real accountability, we track the playbook step by step and ask a harder question: if institutions won’t do the work, what can citizens actually do that moves the needle? We get practical about leverage. Instead of vague calls for a general strike, we lay out a focused, local-first economic strategy that ordinary listeners can sustain: buy from independent shops and restaurants, starve the corporate pipelines that bankroll disinformation, and coordinate time-bound boycotts that are large enough to be felt in boardrooms. We pair that with a cultural counteroffensive—shareable explainers, receipts, timelines, and smart satire—to raise the social cost of lying and keep contradictions in plain view. When millions adopt small, synchronized habits, supply chains shift and narratives lose oxygen. Protection matters too. We talk through concrete mutual aid that lowers risk for vulnerable neighbors: grocery runs, rides that avoid targeted checkpoints, and multilingual know-your-rights education. No heroics, no recklessness—just steady, lawful actions that make predatory tactics harder and communities stronger. The theme tying it all together is persistence: truth needs infrastructure, and the most reliable parts are the ones we build together—our wallets, our networks, and our attention. If this conversation sparked ideas—or lit a fire—share it with someone who can help organize locally. Subscribe for more unflinching, practical breakdowns, and leave a review so others can find the show.

    42 min
  3. OCT 13

    Rethinking protests by swapping escalation for satire, coordination, and documentation to stay safe and still hit hard

    Send us a text No one wins by giving authoritarians the footage they crave. We unpack a smarter protest strategy that swaps escalation for craft: coordinated visuals that anonymize and unify, quick exits that deny conflict, and an always-on camera culture that turns fleeting moments into undeniable evidence. The goal is simple and ambitious—protect people on the ground while raising the reputational cost for abusive actors and forcing mainstream attention with content too shareable to ignore. We walk through the practical pieces: off-site hubs for changing and briefings, uniform outfits that double as safety and symbolism, and clean roles that separate satirical front lines from dedicated documentation teams. Humor becomes a tool, not a side note, as themed days and synchronized actions across cities create a moving target for would-be aggressors and a consistent brand for supporters. When contact begins, we don’t argue—we move, regroup, and turn the lens back on power. That discipline reframes the narrative and keeps bodies intact. Not all uniforms are the same. We talk about meeting traditional police and National Guard with respectful distance unless conduct proves otherwise, while applying a strict freeze-out to units with documented abuse. It’s a pressure campaign powered by evidence, culture, and coordination. If you’re ready to rethink street tactics, amplify the message, and keep people safe without losing impact, this conversation offers a clear blueprint you can adapt city by city. If this resonated, subscribe, share the episode with someone organizing right now, and leave a review with your best safety tactic or content idea.

    13 min
  4. OCT 1

    The Meaning of Manhood When Everything Seems Broken

    Send us a text The temperature is high and the stakes feel brutal. I’m angry, exhausted, and still trying to make sense of a world where a flotilla carrying baby formula can be framed as a threat and where the institutions meant to protect civilians seem built to protect power. That’s the doorway into a raw conversation about Gaza, media control, and the meaning of manhood when courage is scarce and the cost of silence is paid by the vulnerable. I trace the fear around a humanitarian flotilla and the wider pattern it represents: governments talking about law and order while civilians starve, platforms shaping what we’re allowed to see, and narratives of political violence that many of us no longer trust without evidence. The thread here is credibility—who has it, who spends it, and how ordinary people can still piece together a truthful view when algorithms, ownership, and access all pull toward a safer story. I share where I look for reporting, why platform ownership matters for speech, and how selective outrage numbs a public that needs clarity, not theater. This also becomes a reckoning with masculinity. I lay out a simple code—protect, don’t exploit; tell the truth; never punch down—and ask why so few men with wealth or reach live by it in public. I call out the performance of “both sides” neutrality, praise the artists and a handful of politicians who refuse it, and talk about raising my sons to carry empathy into a culture that rewards bluster. If strength means anything, it should mean accepting risk to defend people who can’t defend themselves. That’s the spine I want to see, and the one I’m trying to grow. If you’re tired of feeling helpless but not ready to go numb, press play. Then subscribe, share this episode with someone who still cares about facts and fairness, and tell me: where do you see real courage right now?

    15 min
  5. SEP 4

    Raising Children in a Broken Democracy: Two Fathers Speak Out

    Send us a text The political landscape has shifted from theoretical concerns to frightening reality. Two fathers sit down to discuss what many American parents are thinking but few are saying aloud: How do we raise children when democracy itself seems to be crumbling around us? Greg and his neighbor John, each with three children, engage in a raw, unfiltered conversation about parental fears in a nation sliding toward authoritarianism. They articulate the paralyzing dilemma facing politically-aware parents today – the desire to take meaningful action against democratic backsliding versus the responsibility to maintain stability for their families. "I'm willing to lose it," one father admits about the comfortable life he's built, "but I don't want to make the lives of my children and my wife worse." The conversation explores how political tensions have affected their children's worldview, revealing that their young adult children have already decided against having their own kids due to the state of the world. This generational response to political uncertainty highlights the long-term psychological impact of our current climate. Meanwhile, the fathers discuss their frustration with ineffective protests, media complicity in normalizing extremism, and the failure of traditional political responses to counter authoritarian tendencies. Beyond mere venting, this episode captures the genuine anguish of parents watching their children's future possibilities narrow while feeling powerless to stop it. It's a conversation happening in kitchens and living rooms across America as parents ask themselves: What are we willing to risk for democracy? What example should we set for our children? And how do we prepare them for a world we never imagined they would inherit? Listen in as two concerned fathers speak candidly about the choices facing American parents today. Their conversation may reflect your own unspoken fears – and perhaps offer solidarity in knowing you're not alone in having them.

    40 min
  6. AUG 8

    Humanity's Crossroads

    Send us a text Have we become numb to human suffering? This deeply personal and passionate exploration of our collective humanity confronts the disturbing patterns that have plagued our species throughout history. Starting from a place of humility rather than superiority, we examine how regular people continue to enable global atrocities through indifference and inaction. The Israel-Gaza conflict serves as a powerful case study in our discussion. Coming from a position of limited prior knowledge about the region, we share the jarring experience of witnessing civilian suffering while observing the callous reactions from politicians and fellow citizens. When confronted with footage of starving children and targeted killings, how can any person with conscience turn away? More troublingly, how can our tax dollars continue funding such violence while our elected officials—both Republicans and Democrats—stand proudly alongside those responsible? This reflection goes beyond specific conflicts to question fundamental aspects of our humanity. Despite having billionaires approaching trillionaire status and possessing the technological capability to solve world hunger and end needless suffering, we collectively choose not to. We continue electing politicians who serve powerful interests rather than the common good. We rationalize cruelty toward immigrants and "others" while claiming moral superiority. What does this say about us as a species? Can we evolve beyond these destructive patterns, or are we doomed to repeat them endlessly? Before dismissing these concerns as overly pessimistic, take time to examine the evidence around you. Seek out resources like Lyle Fass's "Why America is Like This" to understand the historical context of our current situation. Consider what small actions you might take to resist complicity in systems of oppression. The path forward requires each of us to confront uncomfortable truths about ourselves and our society, then choose whether we'll continue enabling suffering or stand for something better.

    16 min
  7. AUG 5

    Who Let These Morons Run a Country?

    Send us a text Remember when you could reasonably assume political leaders were at least moderately intelligent? Those days seem increasingly distant as Greg and Chris dive headlong into the disturbing phenomenon of breathtakingly stupid politicians occupying positions of extraordinary power. What began as an attempt to find a lighter, less rage-inducing topic quickly transforms into a sobering examination of intellectual decline in American leadership. The hosts tackle the uncomfortable question: Have our politicians always been this unintelligent, or are we witnessing something unprecedented in modern history? While previous generations certainly had their share of corrupt or self-serving representatives, the current crop's fundamental inability to grasp basic concepts feels genuinely alarming. The conversation takes fascinating turns as they examine the voters who continue supporting demonstrably incompetent candidates. Is it simply party loyalty, identity politics, or something more disturbing—like actively embracing incompetence as long as it hurts perceived enemies, even when it simultaneously harms one's own interests? This exploration of the relationship between elected officials and their constituencies offers disturbing insights into American democracy's current fragility. The episode culminates with their "Class Photo" of the five dumbest politicians currently wielding significant power, evaluating candidates based on public statements, policy positions, and basic reasoning ability. The results are simultaneously hilarious and terrifying—especially considering these individuals control budgets, influence international relations, and make decisions affecting millions of lives. Join us for this unfiltered, often darkly humorous journey through the landscape of political incompetence. Whether you're politically engaged or just someone who appreciates the absurdity of our current moment, you'll find yourself laughing, shouting in agreement, and perhaps feeling a renewed sense of civic responsibility by the end.

    31 min

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conversations about the United States and the current state of affairs from politics to pop culture to men's issues