This Week in Outrage

David and Lisa Beckemeyer

An informal chat where Lisa and David from Outrage Overload discuss items from the news and other topics of outrage. The main podcast is Outrage Overload, a science podcast, recorded and mixed in the highest quality, where David interviews scientists, researchers, authors, and other experts about outrage in society & politics and lowering the temperature. outrageoverload.net outrageoverload.substack.com

  1. Lisa calls "bulls***" on Bebop the robot in 14B 🤖 💺 🛩 - 5/3/2026

    1일 전

    Lisa calls "bulls***" on Bebop the robot in 14B 🤖 💺 🛩 - 5/3/2026

    This week, Lisa and David talk about White House Correspondents’ Dinner aftermath; Comey indicted for 8647 post; MAGA influencer Craig Long caught in prostitution sting; Minnesota women use Tinder to honeytrap ICE agents; Trump’s new surgeon general nominee; Bongino says he planted fake info to catch ‘snakes’ in FBI; man pleads guilty to 2002 murder of Run-DMC’s Jam Master Jay; AI Sector bubbler, massive valuations and record-breaking seed rounds; AI generated podcasts; Kid Rock gets a joyride in Army helicopter and addresses Pentagon; Trump’s image on new passports; Federal appeals court won’t rehear Trump’s appeal of E. Jean Carroll’s $83 million jury award; will the midterm elections be fair?; Sackler family subject to $7.4 billion settlement and lifetime ban; partial shutdown ends while GOP pursues additional $70B blank check for ICE; 40+ blood types; and more. Added Context for Trump Commemorative Passport From NPR: The commemorative passport will be the default document for people applying in person at the Washington office, although those who want a standard passport will be able to get one by applying online or outside Washington, officials said. Snopes says TRUE: What to know about new US passport design with Trump portrait Added Context for Fairness of the 2026 U.S. Midterm Elections Experts express significant concern regarding the fairness of the 2026 U.S. midterm elections, largely driven by the rise of “election-denying” candidates running for key oversight positions. While a majority of Americans still trust local officials to run fair elections, confidence is waning, and widespread worry exists regarding voter turnout, intimidation, and the certification of results. Many experts argue that the 2026 midterms are not just another partisan contest, but a stress test of whether election outcomes are decided by voters or by whoever can control the rules, administration, and certification process first. In that framing, the Trump administration’s strategy is to move the fight earlier—into voter eligibility rules, election administration, redistricting, law enforcement, and post-election certification—rather than waiting to contest results after ballots are cast. The core claim is that Trump is trying to reshape the mechanics of the election before November 2026, using federal power and allied state action to make the terrain more favorable to Republicans. Reported tactics include pressure for mid-decade redistricting, stronger citizenship-proof and voter-ID requirements, staffing key agencies with election loyalists, and aggressive scrutiny of voting systems and materials. The broader warning is that even if ballots are cast normally, the administration may try to create enough chaos, delay, or legal uncertainty that certification becomes the real battleground. For the 2026 midterms, the practical implication is that House control, and possibly Senate margins, may be influenced as much by map-drawing and administrative disruption as by persuasion of voters. The article suggests Democrats and election officials should expect challenges around voter eligibility, ballot access, chain-of-custody disputes, and post-election certification deadlines, especially in close races. In other words, the election could hinge on whether institutions can process and certify results quickly and cleanly enough to withstand coordinated pressure. The 2026 midterms could become a battle over the infrastructure of democracy, not just campaign outcomes. The central concern is that Trump is trying to stack the rules so that a Republican advantage is built in before voters even arrive, and then to preserve leverage if the results still look unfavorable. Even so, many experts still claim the odds look high that the 2026 midterms will be broadly fair and will mostly reflect voter intent, but not zero-risk. The strongest evidence points to a system that still has major guardrails: elections are run by states, most voters will use paper-backed ballots, and post-election audits are standard in nearly every state. Sources: 8 Things You Should Know About Trump’s Effort to “Take Over” the Midterm Elections (Propublica) Local election officials fear retribution ahead of fall midterms (Politico) The Campaign to Undermine the Midterms (Brennen Center) How Trump is moving to control U.S. elections, one state at a time (Reuters) Five ways Trump could try to tilt the midterm elections in his favor (Guardian) How could Trump interfere in the midterms? Here’s what voting officials are watching (NPR) The Trump Administration’s Strategy for Reshaping Elections (Just Security) Links: Outrage Overload Podcast Yergz Radio (yergzradio.com) Dare Talk Radio (daretalkradio.com) This Week in Outrage Substack (outrageoverload.net/twio) Craig Long’s Wife, The Woman Behind the ‘MAGA to the Core’ Influencer Arrested for Human Trafficking (Reddit) Minnesota Women Use Tinder to Honeytrap ICE Agents (Reddit) The Audio Industry Is Grappling with the Rise of ‘Podslop’ (Bloomberg - paywalled) U.S. to issue commemorative passports with Trump’s picture for America’s 250th birthday (NPR) Federal appeals court won’t rehear Trump’s appeal of E. Jean Carroll’s $83 million jury award (US Today) Judge clarifies: Yes, Trump was found to have raped E. Jean Carroll (Washington Post 2023) The Supreme Court keeps overturning precedent. It swears that it’s not (CNN) Trump admin. faces critical 60-day Iran war deadline, but floats ceasefire loophole (The Hill) Alex Zenardi’s legendary last-lap pass in the Laguna Seca “corkscrew” (Youtube) Get full access to Outrage Overload Newsletter at outrageoverload.substack.com/subscribe

    1시간 10분
  2. Lisa Wants "Office Space" Justice for the White House Tennis Team Photo - 4/26/2026

    4월 27일

    Lisa Wants "Office Space" Justice for the White House Tennis Team Photo - 4/26/2026

    This week, Lisa and David talk about White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting; Devin Nunes departing Trump Media; Trump mobile phone announced June 2025 still not shipping; Southern Poverty Law Center indicted on federal fraud and money laundering charges; police sergeant caught naked claimed he was ‘wringing out sweaty clothes’; Trump bringing back firing squads; entire NSF science advisory board fired by Trump; Pentagon fires Stars and Stripes watchdog; DHS official accused of seeking sugar daddies; Repair Café event to fix broken stuff; and more. Our sponsor: President Simulator is an AI-powered political sandbox. Go to fantasypresidentcareer.com. Your term starts right now. Added Context on the Southern Poverty Law Center Indictment The Department of Justice has indicted the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) on 11 counts, including wire fraud, bank fraud, and money laundering, alleging that the organization secretly funneled over $3 million to members of white supremacist and extremist groups between 2014 and 2023 under the guise of using confidential informants. The indictment further claims the SPLC created fictitious entities and shell companies to conceal these payments, appearing to manufacture the very extremism it claims to oppose. * DOJ Allegation: Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche stated that the SPLC was “manufacturing the extremism it purports to oppose by paying sources to stoke racial hatred” and then concealing these payments, noting that the organization was doing the opposite of its stated mission. * SPLC Defense: SPLC CEO Bryan Fair has defended the organization’s actions, characterizing the payments as part of a long-standing program using confidential informants to gather intelligence on violent threats, asserting that information learned from informants “saved lives” and was shared with law enforcement. * Republican Scrutiny: Republican lawmakers, including the House Judiciary Committee spearheaded by Rep. Jim Jordan and Senate Judiciary Republicans, are expanding investigations into the SPLC’s connections with the Biden administration and the past role of Nancy Abudu, a former SPLC litigation director now a lifetime judge, calling for accountability from all individuals associated with the organization. * Criticism of Prosecution: American Oversight Executive Director Chioma Chukwu condemned the prosecution as a “politically motivated, retaliatory case” by the Trump administration, arguing it is an attempt to silence a group that champions civil rights and holds power to account. * Advocacy Group Defends SPLC Amid Indictment, Citing Shared Ties The Center for Responsible Lending (CRL), a left-leaning financial services advocacy group, has defended the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) against its federal fraud indictment, calling the charges an “attack on civil rights” that threatens organizations working for racial and economic justice. This defense comes as CRL shares personnel, historical leadership, and coordinated advocacy efforts with the SPLC. * Shared Leadership and Advocacy: One direct link is LaShawn Warren, who serves as chief policy officer for the SPLC and its lobbying arm, and also sits on CRL’s board of directors, publicly highlighting collaboration between the two groups. * Critique of SPLC Defense: Steve Cortes, founder of the League of American Workers, countered CRL’s statement by asserting there is “zero legitimate defense of the SPLC’s lavish spending to finance hate groups,” questioning why the SPLC went to such complex lengths to hide funding if the payments were proper. Links: Outrage Overload Podcast Yergz Radio (yergzradio.com) Dare Talk Radio (daretalkradio.com) This Week in Outrage Substack (outrageoverload.net/twio) Devin Nunes is out as Trump Media CEO after 4 years — and revenue came in 99.8% below what investors were promised (AP/Moneywise) The Trump phone still isn’t real (The Verge) DOJ Charges Southern Poverty Law Center with Funding Extremist Groups (Voz) Kent Police sergeant Simon Ince caught naked in Chatham park (Kent Online UK) DHS Official Under Investigation After Ex Alleges She Sought ‘Sugar Daddies’ and May ‘Pose a Security Risk’ (People) Get full access to Outrage Overload Newsletter at outrageoverload.substack.com/subscribe

    1시간 7분
  3. Trump's Arch: 250 Feet of Fragile Ego 📉 - 4/19/2026

    4월 20일

    Trump's Arch: 250 Feet of Fragile Ego 📉 - 4/19/2026

    This week, Lisa and David talk about Eric Swalwell sexual misconduct accusations and the California gubernatorial race; sparse crowd for JD Vance at Turning Point USA event; MAGA is pushing that Trump assassination attempt was staged; FBI Director Kash Patel accused of excessive drinking and unexplained absences; JD Vance tells pope to “be careful” talking about theology; Trump’s insane proposed arch; report exposes global "Assault Academy" networks facilitating organized sexual assault; people pretending to be AI chatbots; Caitlyn Jenner passport gender troubles; Philz Coffee reverses Pride flag ban; Voyager I almost one light-year away; and more. Our sponsor: President Simulator is an AI-powered political sandbox. Go to fantasypresidentcareer.com. Your term starts right now. Added Context for Kash Patel and The Atlantic Reporting The Atlantic’s April 2026 story portrayed FBI Director Kash Patel as an erratic and often absent leader, alleging episodes of excessive drinking and unexplained absences. Patel has denied the accusations has filed a defamation lawsuit against The Atlantic over the reporting. What the article said The Atlantic article, published April 17 and updated under the headline “The FBI Director Is MIA,” said Patel had “alarmed colleagues” with “episodes of excessive drinking and unexplained absences.” It also described a specific incident on April 10 in which he allegedly struggled to log into an internal system, panicked, and called people saying he thought he had been fired. The report said sources close to Patel viewed his conduct as raising concerns about judgment and reliability. Some coverage of the piece also noted officials described him as a potential national-security vulnerability, though that characterization came from the article’s sourcing and surrounding commentary rather than a formal finding. Patel’s response Patel rejected the claims, said he does not drink to excess, and accused The Atlantic of publishing false and defamatory statements. Reuters reported that court records showed he filed suit on April 20, 2026, and The Hill said the lawsuit targeted the outlet over reporting on job performance and alcohol use. The Atlantic told TMZ it stood by the reporting and would vigorously defend its journalists. The dispute quickly became a broader political story, with Trump administration allies defending Patel and critics pointing to the allegations as evidence of instability. Why it matters The story matters because Patel is not just any official; he leads the FBI, so allegations about drinking, attendance, and decision-making go directly to public confidence in the bureau. The reporting also triggered immediate litigation, which means the factual record is now being contested in court as well as in the media. Added Context for JD Vance vs. The Pope JD Vance publicly told Pope Leo XIV to “to be careful when he talks about matters of theology” after the pope criticized the U.S. strike on Iran and framed his critique in terms of war, peace, and Christian moral teaching. The irony is that Leo XIV is not just any pope: he is an Augustinian friar and the first pope from the Order of St. Augustine. That makes Augustine especially relevant, because Augustine’s writings helped shape the Church’s just war tradition, including the idea that war can only be morally justified when ordered toward peace and constrained by strict limits. In other words, the pope’s comments were not random activism; they were squarely within a long Christian theological debate that Augustine helped found. Pope Leo XIV’s Augustinian identity is not just a label; it reflects decades of formation, leadership, and scholarship inside the Order of St. Augustine. He entered the Augustinians in 1977, made solemn profession in 1981, was ordained in 1982, and later served as Prior General of the worldwide order for two terms, from 2001 to 2013. He earned licentiate and doctorate degrees in canon law in Rome, which gave him a strong grounding in the Church’s legal and institutional teaching tradition. He also spent years as a missionary and leader in Peru, so his Augustinian formation was pastoral and practical, not just academic. So when he comments on war or theology, he is speaking from a tradition he has spent nearly five decades living inside. Added Context for the “Assault Academy” March/April 2026 investigation by CNN’s As Equals series exposed hidden online networks, described by experts as an “online rape academy,” where men share, coordinate, and normalize the sexual abuse of women. Key findings from the investigation include: * Coordinated Abuse: The groups, operating on platforms like Telegram and various websites, offer instructions on how to drug women—often their own partners—and sexually assault them while they are unconscious. * “Sleep Content”: Participants create and share “sleep” content, which are videos of unconscious or sedated women, sometimes live-streaming the abuse in real-time for cryptocurrency payments. * Scale of Traffic: The investigation identified a pornographic website, Motherless, that hosted over 20,000 of these videos, with a linked site receiving roughly 62 million visits in February 2026, primarily from the U.S.. * Real-World Consequences: These online forums are linked to real-world crimes, including a high-profile case in France where a woman was drugged by her husband and abused by strangers over many years. * Arrests: Following the investigation, authorities (including Polish police) have made arrests, though the anonymity and encrypted nature of the platforms make enforcement difficult. The reports indicate that these digital spaces are not on the dark web but are easily accessible, functioning as communities for sexual predators to learn, refine methods, and evade detection. Trump’s Proposed Arch The 250-foot "Triumphal Arch" proposal—unveiled in April 2026 for the nation’s 250th anniversary—is more than just a massive construction project; it is a textbook example of "Late Empire" aesthetics. By placing it between the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery, the project literally and figuratively overshadows the somber, humble symbols of the Republic with the gilded grandeur of an autocracy. The design—featuring gilded lions, eagles, and a 60-foot "Lady Liberty"—reflects a move away from the "Federal Style" (clean, white marble, restraint) toward something more reminiscent of the Napoleonic or even North Korean style of architecture. Critics argue this represents the "End of History" for the American experiment—a shift from a country that is becoming something to a country that is memorializing itself. It feels like a final, loud exclamation point at the end of a long chapter. It’s worth noting that every empire, from the Romans to the British, hit a "Building Phase" right as their political structures were at their most fragile. Whether this arch is a "triumph" or a "tombstone" for the American Century depends entirely on which side of the political divide you're standing on—but from an architectural history standpoint, it's a classic sign of an empire entering its "Baroque" or final, ornamental stage. Links: Outrage Overload Podcast Yergz Radio (yergzradio.com) Dare Talk Radio (daretalkradio.com) This Week in Outrage Substack (outrageoverload.net/twio) MAGA Is Increasingly Convinced the Trump Assassination Attempt Was Staged (Wired) Who are the missing or dead scientists with connections to government research? (The Hill) Vance Versus the Pope (Catholic Answers) Trump’s arch gets overwhelmingly negative public feedback but appears poised to move forward (CNN) Millions of people are pretending to be AI chatbots — for fun (NPR) Caitlyn Jenner Supports Donald Trump—Just Not His Transphobic Measures (Vanity Fair) Fermi Paradox and the Overview Effect Get full access to Outrage Overload Newsletter at outrageoverload.substack.com/subscribe

    1시간 5분
  4. Blasphemy In The Kitchen: New "Science" Claims Dishwasher Loading Is A Free-for-all - 4/12/2026

    4월 13일

    Blasphemy In The Kitchen: New "Science" Claims Dishwasher Loading Is A Free-for-all - 4/12/2026

    This week, Lisa and David talk about Melania press conference, why?; Matt and Tawni Browning Secrets of Polygamy docu-drama; why Europe is begging J.D. Vance to campaign for their rivals; Trump posts video of a woman being bludgeoned to death; judge says US must turn over evidence of Renee Good’s killing by federal agent Jonathan Ross; FAA releasing a “manic” ad campaign targeting gamers on Twitch; Festival cancelled after Kanye West blocked from visiting UK; California gas taxes; new “science” claiming your dishwasher rules are a lie; and more. Our sponsor: President Simulator is an AI-powered political sandbox. Go to fantasypresidentcareer.com. Your term starts right now. Added Context for Melania Trump Press Statement Melania Trump made a rare White House statement denying any personal ties to Jeffrey Epstein and urging Congress to hold a public survivors’ hearing, which immediately pulled the Epstein issue back into the center of politics. Melania’s statement was unusually direct: she rejected claims linking her to Epstein, said the allegations were false, and called for survivors to testify publicly before Congress. News coverage described the moment as striking because she usually keeps a low profile and rarely intervenes so forcefully. The statement mattered because it shifted attention back to the Epstein controversy and created tension with an administration that had wanted to move past it. It also gave Democrats fresh political ammunition, since her comments effectively reopened a subject the Trump team preferred to contain. Amanda Ungaro appears in coverage as a former model and ex-partner of Paolo Zampolli, a Trump associate, who publicly threatened Melania and claimed she knew damaging things about her. Articles tied Ungaro’s name to the same news cycle because her posts and alleged personal history were circulating at the exact moment Melania made her statement. Most Epstein survivors have reacted with frustration and skepticism, saying Melania Trump’s call for public testimony shifts the burden onto victims instead of focusing on accountability for abusers and officials. The core complaint is that survivors should not have to re-litigate their trauma in public to make the government do its job. They argue that the priority should be releasing files, investigating failures, and bringing perpetrators to trial. In short, survivors are welcoming attention to the issue only if it produces evidence, prosecutions, and structural change rather than another round of performative testimony. Added Context for Iran Negotiations Recent events suggest a shift in the administration’s approach to Tehran. Vice President JD Vance led the U.S. delegation during marathon talks over the weekend, while President Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio attended a UFC event in Miami. Key developments: * VP Vance represented the U.S. directly in negotiations. * President Trump signaled indifference toward the outcome, stating, “Whether we make a deal or not makes no difference to me… We win regardless.” Links: Outrage Overload Podcast Yergz Radio (yergzradio.com) Dare Talk Radio (daretalkradio.com) This Week in Outrage Substack (outrageoverload.net/twio) “The Hate Next Door” – Matt and Tawni Browning Outrage Overload Episode JD Vance curse strikes again as Orbán’s 16-year Government ends (Indy100) Trump Promises to Pardon Everybody Before He Leaves Office (People) Trump Posted a Murder Video. The Woman’s Name Was Nilufa Easmin (Yahoo) Judge orders evidence of Renee Good’s killing by federal agent to be turned over (WDIO ABC) Ivanka Trump Gets Emotional as She Reflects on Mother Ivana’s Life & Death (TMZ) FAA Tries To Convince Gamers To Become Air Traffic Controllers (Jalopnik) Online Zen Garden (Paint Toys) If you like [insert artist], you may also like... (music-map.com) Get full access to Outrage Overload Newsletter at outrageoverload.substack.com/subscribe

    1시간 12분
  5. 4월 6일

    Lisa is Done with the "Fraud Czar"—and She Has a Spreadsheet 🧮 - 4/5/2026

    This week, Lisa and David talk about Hegseth fires Army chief of staff Gen. Randy George; White House ‘OnlyFarms’ website; the Daily Mail photos of Kristi Noem hubby wearing fake breasts; report finds AI sycophancy influences user behavior and relationships; OpenAI secures $122 billion funding at $852 billion valuation ahead of IPO; Anthropic Claude code leak; rumors of White House unrest and paranoia; North Korea’s ICBM tests and claims they can reach the U.S. mainland; J.D. Vance’s search for the ‘Fake Fraud’ narrative; Artemis II; dark matter; exoplanets and interstellar travel; and more. Our sponsor: President Simulator is an AI-powered political sandbox. Go to fantasypresidentcareer.com. Your term starts right now. Added Context for Trump "Fraud Crackdown” Claims As of April 2026, President Donald Trump has initiated a “fraud crackdown” or “war on fraud” targeting what he describes as massive, systemic theft of taxpayer money in Democratic-led states Critics have accused him of using the initiative as a political weapon and described his actions as a form of corruption, according to a report from The New York Times and comments from officials Key Details of the Trump Administration’s Fraud Crackdown: * “Fraud Czar” Appointment: Trump appointed Vice President JD Vance to lead this effort, calling him the “fraud czar” in a Truth Social post. * Targeting Blue States: Trump stated the crackdown would focus on “Blue States” where he alleges “Crooked Democrat Politicians” have allowed a “free for all” in the theft of taxpayer money. He specifically mentioned California, Illinois, Minnesota, Maine, and New York. * Initial Actions: The administration claimed the effort has already shown results, with officials reporting arrests in Los Angeles related to a $50 million health care fraud scheme and holding up federal reimbursements to Minnesota. * Controversy and Allegations of Hypocrisy: Critics have pointed to a conflict of interest, noting that Trump has been found liable in civil fraud cases and has pardoned several individuals convicted of fraud. * Political Motivation Concerns: California Governor Gavin Newsom accused the Trump administration of targeting state-managed programs for political reasons, arguing that the federal government is trying to deflect blame from its own management issues. * Concerns over Targeted Data Mining: Democratic officials have raised concerns that the crackdown is a “Trojan horse” for mass surveillance rather than a sincere effort to fight fraud. Links: Outrage Overload Podcast Yergz Radio (yergzradio.com) Dare Talk Radio (daretalkradio.com) This Week in Outrage Substack (outrageoverload.net/twio) GOP praise pours in for Army chief of staff ousted by Hegseth (The Hill) Webcam Model Linked to Bryon Noem Asks DHS Not to Kill Her (Newsweek) Trump Knew About the ‘Secret’ Fetish of Kristi Noem’s Husband says Megyn Kelly (Distractify) AI chatbots are suck-ups, and that may be affecting your relationships (Scientific American) OpenAI, not yet public, raises $3B from retail investors in monster $122B fund raise (TechCrunch) Here’s what that Claude Code source leak reveals about Anthropic’s plans (Ars Technica) Trump is considering more changes to his Cabinet in the coming weeks (NBC News) 2017–2018 North Korea crisis (Wikipedia) Get full access to Outrage Overload Newsletter at outrageoverload.substack.com/subscribe

    1시간 5분
  6. 3월 30일

    Lisa Wants to Know Why the Generals Aren't Saying 'F---ing No' 🎖️⚖️ 💣 - 3/29/2026

    This week, Lisa and David talk about No Kings 3 street interviews; Democrats flip Trump’s Mar-a-Lago district; Todd Blanche gaslights about ICE at polling places; why aren’t the generals saying “No”; Hegseth stopped promotions of Black and female officers as report alleges chief of staff claimed Trump wouldn’t want to be seen with a black female army officer; popular MAGA influencer turns out to be a sexy AI grift (because of course it is); billionaire Walmart heiress Christy Walton takes out full page NY Times ad protesting ICE; Meta and YouTube found to have intentionally built addictive social media; IOC new supposed “transgender ban”; Trump’s past self trolling his current actions in old tweets; and more. Our sponsor: President Simulator is an AI-powered political sandbox. Go to fantasypresidentcareer.com. Your term starts right now. Added Context for ICE at Polling Places Blanche’s question ignores a basic election-law concern — placing ICE officers at polling places can itself look like voter intimidation, especially for voters who may already feel targeted or vulnerable. Federal law broadly prohibits intimidation, threats, or coercion around voting, and election-site rules in many states also restrict law enforcement or armed personnel from being stationed at or near polls without specific legal authorization. The Brennan Center also notes that federal and state laws can bar federal forces from polling places, and that voters who feel intimidated can seek court relief. Links: Outrage Overload Podcast Yergz Radio (yergzradio.com) Dare Talk Radio (daretalkradio.com) This Week in Outrage Substack (outrageoverload.net/twio) The Unity Paradox (Outrage Overload Substack) Beyond MAGA: A Profile of the Trump Coalition (More In Common) Blanche: ‘Why is there objection to sending ICE officers to polling places?’ (The Hill) The most popular MAGA influencer you’ve never heard of is an AI foot fetish model (Fast Company) Walmart Heiress Educates On Why ICE Needs To Release 70% Of Detainees In New Ad (Black Enterprise) Can Sheryl Sandberg’s Lean In take on tradwives and the manosphere? (Fortune) Sex test used in IOC’s new transgender ban more likely to exclude from Olympics intersex women who were assigned female at birth (The Conversation) Fairness, Biology, and Outrage: The Complexity of Sex Development (Outrage Overload) Get full access to Outrage Overload Newsletter at outrageoverload.substack.com/subscribe

    1시간 14분
  7. Lisa wants to be teleported to Waffle House too 👽 🌀🧇 - 3/22/2026

    3월 23일

    Lisa wants to be teleported to Waffle House too 👽 🌀🧇 - 3/22/2026

    This week, Lisa and David talk about the ‘Bachelorette’ 22nd season canceled; Ms. Rachel uses her platform to call for end to ICE child detention; the case against privatizing the Postal Service; Trump didn’t get even one judge to agree with his “big lie” suit; Trump to deploy ICE at airports while TSA agents still unpaid; ICE collecting DNA from arrested protesters; Rubio defrauding legal immigrants; Trump about Robert Mueller’s death: “Good, I’m glad he’s dead”; top FEMA official says he was teleported to Waffle House; Meta throws in the towel on Metaverse; Pokémon Go players trained global mapping AI; and more. Links: Outrage Overload Podcast Yergz Radio (yergzradio.com) Dare Talk Radio (daretalkradio.com) This Week in Outrage Substack (outrageoverload.net/twio) Taylor Frankie Paul’s ‘Bachelorette’ canceled. Can ABC get a refund? (USA Today) Ms. Rachel Aims to Help Close ‘Diley’ ICE Facility (NBC News) Voice of America staffers sue, alleging Kari Lake put on propaganda (NPR) ICE officers deployed to some airports as TSA callouts worsen (CNN) ICE officers are taking DNA samples from protesters they’ve arrested (NPR) Government Defrauds Legal Immigrants and US Sponsors (CATO) Pokémon Go players built a 30-billion-photo map that’s now training robots to deliver your pizza (Fortune) Apple Blocks Vibe Coding Tools From Store (Forbes) Get full access to Outrage Overload Newsletter at outrageoverload.substack.com/subscribe

    1시간 8분
  8. 3월 16일

    Lisa asks "WTF are we doing!" - 3/15/2026

    This week, Lisa and David talk about Karoline Leavitt performing for an audience of one; Trump’s weird shoe obsession signals broader, gutless sycophancy; DOGE staffers testify to prioritizing executive mandates over program merits in grant reviews; Facebook new policies will give us more clickbait videos; Washington state Spanish hotline provides accented AI English; what’s up with Ben Shapiro’s eyebrows; Pentagon calls Stars and Stripes “woke” and sets to strip editorial independence; FBI Director introduces UFC training for agents in peak “unserious” era; New "Emerging Liberty Dime" discards olive branch; Palantir CEO claims AI will shift economic power from the college-educated to working-class men; Erika Kirk appointed by Trump to Air Force advisory role despite no traditional military or academic governance credentials; McDonald’s CEO burger bite PR disaster; why Homo Sapiens might be much older than we thought; Trump endorses Jake Paul; and more. Added Context for DOGE Staffers’ Testimony Former staffers from the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) have recently testified that they were directed to review and recommend cuts to Department of Justice (DOJ) grants by rigidly applying President Trump’s executive order language, with little or no regard for program merits or statutory goals. What the former staffers said * One former DOGE staffer described looking at grants “through the lens of complying with” the executive order, suggesting that any program language touching on disfavored themes (like certain diversity or gender-related terms) was flagged, regardless of its public safety value.​ * Documents show that Tarak Makecha, a DOGE-associated staffer with a prior connection to Elon Musk’s Tesla, created a spreadsheet identifying hundreds of DOJ grants for termination without consulting the program managers who ran those grants.​ * According to accounts reported from these whistleblowers, DOJ leadership had approved this process, effectively outsourcing a major grant-screening function to a small political/ideological team rather than career grant administrators. Scope of the grant cuts * In April 2025, DOJ moved to terminate or rescind the remaining balances of more than 360–370 awards, originally valued at roughly 812–820 million dollars, across the Office of Justice Programs and related components. * A later analysis estimated that grantees actually lost on the order of 500 million dollars in remaining funding, hitting community violence intervention, research, law enforcement support, courts, and victim services programs.​ * Some grants were quickly restored after media and external scrutiny, including funding for pet‑friendly domestic violence shelters and similar victim‑support programs, but most remained canceled.​ How the cuts were targeted * The staffer’s spreadsheet and subsequent reviews targeted 365–373 grants for elimination, often without input from the program offices; many program managers first learned of cuts only after grantees received termination notices. * While some defunded grants included diversity, equity, or gender‑related language, roughly 60% of the terminated awards did not reference such terms, indicating that cuts went well beyond explicitly “DEI‑branded” projects.​ * Numerous terminated grants in fact aligned with the administration’s stated priorities—such as violence reduction, support for crime victims, child protection, and law enforcement capacity-building—suggesting that political or ideological filters overrode public safety considerations.​ Examples of affected programs * Community violence intervention and prevention: about 169 million dollars in initially awarded funding was eliminated, including roughly 145 million for front‑line violence intervention programs and technical assistance, plus 8.6 million for related research and evaluation.​ * Law enforcement and prosecution: around 71.7 million dollars in grants were cut, including training and technical assistance tied to Project Safe Neighborhoods and other longstanding violent crime initiatives.​ * Research and data: roughly 64 million dollars in grants from the National Institute of Justice were rescinded, including work on domestic violent extremism, elder abuse and financial exploitation, and hate‑crime reporting improvements.​ * Courts and access to justice: about 29 million dollars in grants were revoked, including funding for capital case integrity efforts and training to protect Sixth Amendment rights to counsel, speedy trial, and an impartial jury.​ Fallout and ongoing responses * Grantees and DOJ staff reported significant disruption, including layoffs at affected organizations and a flood of calls to DOJ; staff were even given scripts for dealing with “confrontational” grantees.​ * DOJ has restored at least a handful of the most politically visible or sympathetic grants, but the bulk of the cuts remain in place while grantees pursue appeals within DOJ or in court. * The whistleblower testimony and document releases are feeding ongoing congressional and media scrutiny, and they intersect with broader litigation over politically driven grant terminations at other agencies (e.g., CDC and NIH) under the administration’s anti‑“ideological” funding push. Videos of the DOGE staffers’ depositions about the grant cuts exploded across social media, then were ordered taken down from YouTube by a federal judge, which has now become its own controversy. How the videos went viral * Academic groups suing the government over DOGE‑driven grant cancellations uploaded about 25 hours of deposition video from former DOGE staffers, including Justin Fox and others, as part of their court filings.​​ * After a New York Times piece drew attention to the case, short clips spread rapidly on X, TikTok, YouTube, and other platforms, where viewers mocked the staffers’ inability or refusal to define “DEI” and their descriptions of using ChatGPT and keyword scans (e.g., “black,” “homosexual,” but not “white” or “caucasian”) to flag grants for termination.​ * Commentary channels and progressive pages framed the clips as “humiliating” or “way dumber than we thought,” highlighting admissions that the process did not meaningfully reduce the deficit and that thousands of grants and jobs were affected.​ Why YouTube removed them * The government told Judge Colleen McMahon that the plaintiffs had improperly shared the deposition videos on YouTube, arguing that wide distribution had “no legitimate bearing” on the case and was endangering witnesses, citing harassment and death threats directed at Justin Fox.​​ * On Friday, the judge ordered the groups who uploaded the videos to remove them from YouTube and elsewhere online; the plaintiffs’ emergency request to keep them up was denied, at least for now, pending a hearing.​​ * As a result, original uploads and many embedded players in news stories went dark over the weekend, and outlets that had directly embedded the YouTube videos had to pull or update those embeds. Ongoing circulation despite takedowns * Even as YouTube removals went into effect, copies of the deposition footage were quickly mirrored: reporters found full archives re‑uploaded as torrents and to the Internet Archive and clipped across other platforms.​ * Advocacy and partisan pages have leaned on those mirrors and on short commentary videos (which often use brief, arguably fair‑use clips) to keep the content circulating despite the takedown order.​ * Critics of the order argue that taking the videos off YouTube undermines public oversight of senior officials, because the depositions go directly to how AI tools, ideology, and executive power were used to cancel large numbers of federal grants. Added Context for Attacks on Stars and Stripes Stars and Stripes is a U.S. military newspaper with roots in the Civil War and a long‑standing reputation for trying to be politically neutral and independent, even though it sits inside the Defense Department’s structure. Historically, Stars and Stripes has described its mission as providing independent news and information to the military community, and external reference works echo that it operates inside DoD but is “editorially separate.” Stars and Stripes is generally seen as providing nonpartisan coverage and to present a full picture of military life, not avoidance of critical stories about the services or civilian leadership. This week, a senior Pentagon spokesperson publicly labeled Stars and Stripes “woke” and accused it of focusing on “distractions” and “repurposed DC gossip columns,” signaling a political realignment of its mission. An 8‑page “modernization” memo issued March 9, 2026, tightens control by: * Severely restricting or effectively banning use of wire services like AP and Reuters. * Prohibiting comics and other syndicated features. * Requiring content to align with “good order and discipline,” a Uniform Code of Military Justice term that can be used to suppress critical coverage.​ * Directing greater use of official PR material and narrowing the range of permissible sources. Impact on the newsroom and coverage * Stars and Stripes journalists and former staff say they fear an “America First takeover” that would turn the paper into a mouthpiece rather than an independent watchdog, undermining its ability to hold military leadership accountable. * Reporters worry they will be unable to provide timely, global coverage—especially of combat zones like the new conflict with Iran—because they lack their own reporters everywhere and have depended heavily on wire services to fill those gaps. * The memo’s restrictions also affect everyday content troops rely on (sports, March Madness, lighter features), which has historically been part of Stars and Stripes’ service‑memb

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An informal chat where Lisa and David from Outrage Overload discuss items from the news and other topics of outrage. The main podcast is Outrage Overload, a science podcast, recorded and mixed in the highest quality, where David interviews scientists, researchers, authors, and other experts about outrage in society & politics and lowering the temperature. outrageoverload.net outrageoverload.substack.com