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Good evening. It's Wednesday, November 8.
Tonight: On March 27 of this year, a person identifying as a trans woman entered a private Christian school they once attended in Nashville, Tennessee. This person began randomly shooting and ended up killing six people, three teachers at the school and three schoolchildren, all of whom were nine years of age. The shooter's name was Audrey Hale. They fired 150 rounds in the school until the police entered and ended their life. It was clear from the start that at least part of Hale's motives were political. Almost immediately, it was reported that they left behind a manifesto explaining the causes in whose name they were acting on the shooting spree. When mass shooters attack minority groups favored by corporate media, and their ideology can be said to be right-wing in some way, media outlets have a field day with these types of documents, using them not only to blame the right-wing ideology that they say inspired the shooting but also to pin the blame on prominent people in media and politics who they can assign blame to for having “inspired” the shooter by expressing their political views. Yet in this case – where the shooter was trans, the ideology was evidently left-liberal and the victim group was white kids at a private Christian school in Tennessee – there was almost no curiosity about or interest in the manifesto on the part of the media.
The Nashville police and the FBI immediately refused to release that manifesto, and there were very few media outlets suing to compel them to do so. We on this show retained counsel in Nashville to file a Freedom of Information Request and then a lawsuit but shortly after, we understood that a court was ordering its disclosure. Yet, the Nashville Police Department and the FBI appealed and the appellate court stayed the order requiring disclosure and to date, they have not ruled, which means we have never seen the manifesto either in whole or in part six or seven months later.
Until Monday. That was when the Rumble host Stephen Crowder announced he had obtained several pages of the manifesto. He published them on Twitter and his online show. The Nashville Police Department acknowledged their authenticity, expressed outrage at the leak, and ordered an investigation to find the leaker immediately. The pages of Hale's writings published by Crowder contain vicious and hateful, anti-white and anti-Christian sentiments, prompting the question: Who in media or politics radicalized Audrey Hale to go murder people in the name of these anti-white and anti-Christian bigotries?
Yet, immediately, Big Tech's platforms – including Google’s YouTube and Facebook's Instagram, censored the publication by Crowder of these excerpts. We only know about them and we're only able to read them because Twitter X and Rumble refused, as usual, to censor, highlighting yet again the vital importance of these free speech platforms – if it weren't for them, nobody would have ever been able to read these pages because Google and Facebook acted to suppress them for reasons they haven't yet explained. We will report on the latest developments in this case and examine their implications.
Then, as we said a few days ago, we have been trying for weeks to book a prominent Israel supporter to come on our show to discuss their perspectives with me, especially one who has been cheering the kinds of censorship measures and cancellation campaigns that the right has long claimed to despise and yet suddenly embraced. Unfortunately, all of the ones we had asked on, including people who had previously been on our show or whose shows I have been on, were extremely booked from November – bizarrely so – and were sadly unable to schedule an appearance. But over the last couple of days, we have been able to schedule several of the most good faith and most knowledgeable supporters of Israel in media that we know to come on our show and they will be on over the next several days. We start tonight with Batya Ungar-Sargon, a journalist who is currently the Opinion Editor of Newsweek. She is a stalwart supporter of Israel, both in general, but also in terms of their military actions and bombing campaigns underway right now in Gaza but she's also been one of the very few who has remained consistent in opposing the types of censorship and cancellation measures and victimhood narratives that most conservatives have long denounced. I have known and admired Batya Ungar-Sargon's work and over the last several years got to know her personally a bit and have a lot of respect for her as a person and as a journalist. So I'm delighted that she will make tonight her System Update debut to talk about these inflammatory and difficult issues.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.