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Good evening. It's Tuesday, February 6.
Tonight: whenever the establishment wings of both political parties in Washington announce they are in full agreement on some major legislative package or war funding, it's basically inevitable that bad things, usually very bad things, are about to happen. That is most definitely the case with what Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell have proudly unveiled. While we're being told that the two parties can never agree on anything, they just showed us something they are calling a “bipartisan bill,” even though very few Republicans seem to support it, and it's something they're also calling a border security bill, even though only a small percentage of $120 billion it would spend would stay at home in the United States, with the vast majority instead going to finance the wars of foreign countries, including $60 billion more for Ukraine and $17 billion more for Israel. Just that alone is 77 billion out of the $120 billion.
Almost immediately upon this being unveiled, the populist wing of the Republican Party vehemently denounced it, both on the grounds that the border security provisions are woefully inadequate if not making the border crisis worse and because such a massive amount of the allocated billions would be spent on foreign countries and not—as usual—spent to improve the lives of the American citizens who they ostensibly represent. For that reason, the fate of the bill is very much in doubt, especially since many Democrats also oppose the bill because the immigration restrictions are too severe and they don't want to send more money to Israel, especially without conditions. Meanwhile, one of the primary champions of the bill, Mitch McConnell, is now admitting that it basically has no chance to pass. It's dead on arrival. The bill itself, as well as the fallout from it, shines a very vivid light on the real priorities of bipartisan Washington and is thus very worth examining to understand what happened here.
Then: on last night's show, we reported on the genuinely unhinged, borderline pathological response by many in corporate media and the political class to Tucker Carlson getting caught visiting the country of Russia. Earlier today, Carlson, in a video explaining his decision, confirmed that he is indeed in Russia and is going to interview Russian President Vladimir Putin. To say that the response to that has become vastly more deranged is to severely understate the case but it actually says a lot about America's corporate media. They don't think it's deeply immoral to interview a foreign leader who is an adversary of the United States, something American journalists have long been celebrated for doing, but there are deeper reasons why so many people in the U.S. media are deeply fearful of the prospect of Americans getting to hear directly from Vladimir Putin. It's not because, as they're claiming now, that they dislike how Carlson plans to conduct a fawning interview. For one thing, they don't mind fawning interviews at all. How many of those have we been subjected to over the last two years at their favorite foreign leader, Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine? A large number of American journalists got to interview Zelenskyy. Can you think of a single time when any of those interviews were adversarial, containing even a minimally difficult question? And then, aside from the obvious dishonesty in condemning an interview they have not seen, their desire for Putin never to be heard from or only to be heard from if some American journalist is banging his fist on the table and repeating all the propagandistic talking points about how Putin is the greatest evil, it also has a great deal about what the true function of the corporate media is. Before we get to all that.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.