The following is an abridged transcript from System Update’s most recent episode. You can watch the full episode on Rumble or listen to it in podcast form on Apple, Spotify, or any other major podcast provider.
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We are happy to be back from our vacation.
We want to thank Lee Fang, who did a great job as I knew he would, and our team here who worked with him to produce what I think were five great shows.
Tonight: The state-driven attack on free speech rights saw a really major and genuinely disturbing escalation today as the Trump administration dispatched ICE – the Immigration and Customs Enforcement – to arrest a grad student at Columbia University who is not in the U.S. illegally – not in the U.S. illegally.
Meghnad Bose, who has been covering this case for Drop Site News, will talk to us about all this, including a court injunction issued just before we went on air that bars the Trump administration from deporting this grad student, at least until a hearing on the merits can be held.
Also: Ever since Donald Trump's confrontation with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the Oval Office two weeks ago, European leaders have become increasingly strident – I'd even say unhinged – about their need to re-arm, even to nuclearize. They're very alarmed by what they saw from Donald Trump talking about NATO and about abandoning Ukraine. We will also examine what I think are some of the serious implications of this European mania over their role in the world now that they perceive for the first time that American workers will no longer be able to subsidize or be forced to pay for both their social state and their defenses.
Free speech is something I've been defending for many decades. It's something that I first really became engaged with when I was a philosophy major and began studying the Enlightenment and all of the great philosophical works that emerged from it and understood how it became a major factor in the American founding and this document that I do still today consider to be genius in terms of the guarantees of the Bill of Rights as well as the system of checks and balances.
There are lots of changes you can make, but, by and large, to create out of nowhere within this Enlightenment context a document that guarantees all these rights but understands the rotted and malignant parts of human nature and has decided to guard against them is something that I began being interested in, even before law school and while I went to law school, it was a motive for my doing.
So, I studied it a lot there, I took it very seriously when I was a lawyer and of course, when I'm a journalist, I've been having it be a major focal point as well. There are definitely times when I consider free speech to be under attack. I think it's been more under attack over the past several years, primarily because of the internet and the history I've told many times that after 2016 with Brexit and the loss of Hillary Western elites concluded they could no longer permit a free internet because they could no longer control what the masses think and that's when this censorship industrial complex emerged to control the flow of information online. We've gotten a lot of revelations about how that happened. Obviously, after 9/11 it absolutely was and there have been other times as well. But I don't want to be hyperbolic about this.
I want to be a little bit restrained in what I'm saying, but what I can say for certain is that the last year and a half in the United States, since October 7, 2023, it has been one of the darkest and most alarming times for censorship in any period that I can remember, certainly going back to 9/11, and I might even count 9/11 as being less threatening than the current moment.