The Ten Thousand Things

Only posting about shit you have personal experience of? 
  • Ali explains why white middle class people should maybe shut up. 
  • Team discuss different social media platforms and shouting into the void
  • Posting hot photos on Instagram as awareness raising? 
  • The power of posting about stuff you have lived experience with. 
  • Sam talks about the power of herd acceptance and how minds change more often than people realise. 
  • The advantages of podcasts over social media for actually learning things. 
  • The team discuss the information space and Australian politics. Joe talks about becoming a centrist because he’s so sick of being in the inner-city leftie bubble. 
  • The Voice referendum is discussed. Sam accuses Joe of thinking people power is non-existent. 
  • Facebook is waning fast but offered strong predictive data about Boomer voting intentions in said referendum  
  • Ali mentions marriage equality as a successful campaign with a social media element. The Middle East rears it’s ugly head.
  • Ali and Sam conclude that everyone has personal experience of everything and should post whatever they want, Joe is pissed off.
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  • (00:00) - Theme and intro
  • (00:29) - Topic: Posting outside your personal experience - staying in your lane
  • (01:52) - Political Discourse
  • (02:06) - Predicting the Voice referendum based on Facebook posts
  • (03:14) - Reflecting on Personal Social Media Usage
  • (03:40) - Demographics of over posting
  • (03:53) - Personal Background and posting - private school graduates
  • (05:57) - Social Media for Social Change - who to listen to, making space
  • (12:01) - Personal experience resonates more than opinion
  • (29:35) - Analyzing Communication Strategies
  • (30:17) - Class and Political Perception
  • (31:19) - The Impact of Social Media on Politics
  • (32:50) - The Role of Personal Involvement in Political Discourse
  • (35:12) - The Power of Social Movements
  • (37:04) - The Influence of Social Media on Social Movements
  • (39:27) - The Complexity of Political Engagement
  • (44:30) - The Role of Social Media in Raising Awareness

Creators & Guests

Host
Ali Catramados
Diagnosed crazy cat lady/part time podcaster
Host
Joe Loh
Film crew guy and mental health care worker with aspirations of being a small town intellectual one day.
Host
Sam Ellis
Teacher/father/leftist loonie/raised hare Krishna and have never quite renounced it - "I just have one more thing to say, then I’ll let you speak"

What is The Ten Thousand Things?

Sometimes deep, often amusing, therapeutic chats touching on philosophy, spirituality, religion, consciousness, culture, music, dating, and life. Join Sam, Joe and Ali as they discuss the 10,000 illusions that make up “reality”.

Musical theme by Ehsan Gelsi - Ephemera (Live at Melbourne Town Hall)

Joe: There's reality,
which is loving awareness,

Sam: unconcerned by the arising
and passing away of phenomena.

Ali: And then there are the 10, 000

things.

Sam: Hello and welcome
to The 10, 000 Things.

My name is Sam

Joe: Ellis.

I'm Joe Loh.

And I'm Ali Catramados.

Today on the show, only posting about
shit that you have personal experience of.

This came from a conversation
between me and Ali.

Ali got a bit grumpy the other day and we
thought we'd talk about it on the show.

Ali, over to you.

Ali: Oh, I just, I was just having
a, a sook, and, and I absolutely have

been, or could be guilty of doing this
as well, but just white middle class

people posting stuff on social media
like, you know, political things and,

you know, and I, I want to preface this
with, it's not coming, it's coming from

a place of love usually, and it's, it's,
it's wanting to do the right thing.

It's not, it's just more my, I suppose,
seeing people post stuff about experiences

they don't have and how, and rather than,
my view is that rather than just flooding

an already really noisy discourse, we
actually just need to shut the fuck up

and make space for people who actually
have those lived experiences to, to be

voicing their concerns and critiques.

Sam: Yeah.

So when you judge, you do it kindly.

Ali: Yeah, I try to, I try to.

Like, I try not to be an arsehole,
and I just, and I, like I said,

most of the time it's really well
meaning, sometimes it's a little bit

misguided, but sometimes it's just, I
also want to just say, yeah, shut the

Sam: fuck up.

Okay, so without naming any of your
friends or acquaintances, can we...

Ali: They all do it, everyone does it.

Everyone does it.

Anyone who's got a social media
profile will see that you've got your

serial offenders, but most people,
particularly at the moment when

there's a lot going on in the world.

Sam: Would you believe I've
said nothing about anything of

consequence for quite a long time?

Joe: Yeah, I learnt that too.

I mean, Facebook's kind of dead.

It's stumbling on, I guess, but...

Oh,

Sam: no, man, if you want to find
out how cooked the boomers are

about No hang around on Facebook.

I was going

Ali: to say, yeah, like the
comments on an ABC article.

I

Joe: mean, that's true.

I mean, that's true going to...

Have a democracy with this huge
bulge of boomers and then you just

ignore Facebook because it's not
cool and then you turn around and

Yeah, things happen democratically
that you don't quite understand.

Sam: Oh, no, no, no, the no vote
was no surprise to me because I've

been on boomer book this whole
time keeping an eye on things.

All

Joe: right, so Facebook is
still somewhat relevant.

Oh, hugely.

Ali, you said I'm one of the few
people that still posts on there.

Yeah, you do.

But I don't do...

I think I, I think I said something
about maybe Dan Andrews wasn't that bad.

That's about my only political
post of the last year.

Oh, did you?

Sam: Yeah.

But that's something like, I would say.

Did you go out on a limb and say,
yeah, Dan Andrews is not that bad.

Bloody hell.

Ali: But I feel like people haven't
been, like, I think maybe 10 years

ago, a lot of people were saying,
might've posted or made a post

about that, whereas I feel like now.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Barely a handful.

I think

Joe: most of us have learned to
shut the fuck up on social media.

Ali: Is it, is it our age and
our demographic or is it just

that it's just no longer the
place to have those discussions?

Are we

Sam: all, are we all just over shouting
into the void, is that what it is?

I think there's

Ali: a lot of that.

Or there's maybe even...

So

Joe: who are these people
that are still doing it?

That's the, that's what I want to know.

I just, I

Ali: think it's, like I said, it's
well meaning people, like, and

it's just like, you know, Hang on,

Sam: spill.

Are they a bit older or a bit younger?

What are we talking?

I'd say they're, well,

Ali: they're my age.

Right.

Yeah.

Sam: Okay.

Fascinating stuff.

Joe: And they're just doing
a bit of freelancing about

some big political opinions.

Yeah.

And what you should think about them.

Ali: And I think, and this is perhaps
my experience, and so for a little bit

of background, I went to an all girls
school, a private all girls school.

Um, our voices were very important.

It was also very, uh,
you know, a very, um...

Oh, we told you your voices were very
important and, you know, it was a

very, I'd say, homogenous kind of...

That was a lie!

Yeah!

Sam: I mean, it's a lie
on more than one level.

Yeah.

Uh, I mean

Ali: mean yeah, but like, but that the,
the illusion that somehow, yeah, what

we have to say is really important.

Joe: Yeah.

No, no.

But they trained you to be articulate

Sam: as well.

Yes.

No, no.

Look, of course, but also
they probably, no, no.

I don't wanna speak for you Ally,
but was there, was there a diversity

of opinion that needed to be
safeguarded in, you know, or, or

are we talking a fairly uniform?

Ali: It was a pretty uniform.

Um, sort of opinion.

Um, like it was a fairly conservative
school, but I would say that the vast

majority was sort of, I suppose, raised,
it was very much ingrained in us to

have like a sense of social justice.

That was very much part of like
the school, I would say curriculum.

And so you've got a lot of,
a lot of those Anglican.

So a lot of those women then went
off into the workforce and work.

In, you know, these organizations,
you know, not for profits and,

and, and have gone on to do amazing
work and do that in their work.

And I'm not saying somebody like that not
speak, you know, speaking from, you know,

an experience of what they're seeing in
their day to day and, you know, offer an

insight into that, but I'm thinking just
more generally just, you know, as a middle

class white person, what do we really
have To say as far as like say the voice.

Yeah, you know, like should we
like I would be so I would I feel

more comfortable deferring to First
Nations people to hear what they

actually have to say because I

Joe: feel like how many First
Nations people in your Facebook group

Ali: Yeah, no, I'll take it.

So

Joe: this is the fatal flaw in your plan.

Is that if your white middle class
friends stop posting, that just doesn't

mean that suddenly your indigenous
and Palestinian friends start posting.

They don't exist.

So all that happens is there's no content.

Which is maybe not a bad thing, but that's

kind of the reality.

Sam: The thing is, I don't, I don't need,
I don't look to friends for guidance

on these sort of things, honestly.

And like, I'm, and I don't need the
spokesperson for oppressed minority

to be someone I actually know, I
verify or derive trust in other ways.

And for example, the meta
algorithm on Instagram knows

exactly what I want right now.

And I'm not spending a long time on there.

But it is like, it's, it's, it's
Orthodox Jewish person telling

me the occupation needs to end.

It's old Jewish professor telling
me the occupation needs to end.

It

Joe: knows where it out a bit.

So there's only a few people posting
on Facebook really, and they've

annoyed you a little bit, but whatever.

They're not really taking up
a space that would be taken up

by some mythical other person.

But what about people sharing things?

from decent sources about big
world, cause I suppose that's

where my ick kicks in a little bit.

It's like people sharing stuff
that's way beyond their pay grade

of stuff they could ever really

Sam: understand.

Are you on the same page, you two, with
this rant that Ali went on with you?

Joe: I roll my eyes on Instagram, where
I'm just there to post cute photos

and see cute photos of cute people.

Oh yeah.

When there's some heavy duty
political stuff posted there.

Yeah.

From someone who is, you know, if...

I remember I had a, I
had a girlfriend in 2020.

And she was fucking smart, economist,
like, really switched on person.

But there was some trend that went around
where it was like, Turkish women are

being silenced, post a photo of yourself.

And she posted a hot photo of
herself and all their friends.

She was 32 or whatever,
she's a bit younger than me.

Sam: I'm not mad about any of this.

Joe: Yeah, but I was like, what's
with the, I said to her, what's with

the posting the hot photo for the
Turkish women oppressed by Erdogan?

And she's like, oh.

It's just an excuse to post a hot photo.

Hey, hey, come on.

Like she was...

Come on.

I'm not saying she wasn't...

She was smarter than me, you know.

But like, but, but I had an ick
around that where I'm like, really?

Ali: I have an ick about that.

Or like, or

Joe: like people who went...

Sam's, Sam's fine with it.

I remember during the, the,
the Black Lives Matters, like

people all posted black tiles.

Yeah.

Sam: Sure.

Joe: And I posted a photo of the
sandwich I was eating that day because

it was pissing me off, you know?

Sam: Okay.

Joe: Because it's like, I don't...

I never should have gone on Facebook
and ranted, and once I stopped

drinking, I stopped doing that,
and it was a good move for my life.

And the other week when I posted
something about Dan Andrews,

it wasn't a long rant about how
amazing he was, it was just like...

Oh, maybe he wasn't that bad.

And that was only a response to a few
people like rejoicing him, him retiring.

Right?

It was a, it was a mild response.

Sam: Come on, you knew
what you were getting into

Joe: and I thought I might
start a fight and I did not.

I was a fight on Facebook.

I think it's those days are gone.

Then Instagram, it's like,
wow, is it really the place?

I don't know.

That's, you know, like, I feel like
Twitter was, was that place if you,

if you, and I was no good at Twitter,
so I didn't get anywhere with it.

Sam: No, super confusing.

Joe: so that was the place for politics.

Facebook is a place to, to know
who's, who's birthdays, and what.

How racist that guy went
to grade four is now.

Sam: I've said this before, I love
seeing my dad's content on there

and, you know, like stuff like that.

And I, like I said, it gave me an
absolutely amazing insight into what the,

I don't know, I guess over fifties and
sixties thought about the referendum.

And man, there were lots of
passionate older people on both

sides and for all sorts of reasons.

And, Like, for example, my dad posted
many times about it, and I would not,

and for the yes side, just to be clear,
and passionately supporting the yes side,

and willing to take a little bit of heat
over it, and because he does have some

mates that, you know, were pretty cross.

He never posts anything ill considered,
even if it's outside of his experience.

Joe: But in Ali's scheme of things, of
what this topic of this podcast is about,

is if he doesn't have personal experience
of that shit, and that shit is being...

Indigenous.

Should he be posting?

Under your regime, he would not be

posting.

Sam: No, no, but what he has his personal
experience of, you know, watching the

Australian political system for a very,
very, very long time and reading, just

reading a ton of news and current affairs,
like he's well rounded, none of, like

he's in a position to repost an article.

With a brief comment at the top,

Joe: what I would say

Ali: reposting, like sharing
an article or sharing, like say

an opinion piece of somebody.

Yeah.

Like say for the, you know, he's a
First Nations person speaking to that.

Sam: He's not centering himself.

Ali: That's it.

I think that's the thing is
in that, like you said, like.

Your ex girlfriend, like she's posting
a photo of herself and making it about

herself rather than, you know, people
taking selfies in front of these,

like, or making it about themselves.

It's a bit of a

Nicky Wynmar thing, you know,
it's like, Hey, I'm Turkish.

I'm beautiful.

I'm brown.

I'm here.

Joe: No.

Well, she was not Turkish, but Yeah.

Yeah.

Like I, I think it should be,
no, it wasn't just Turkish women.

It was all women posted photo.

It was just something that went around.

Sam: Oh, weird.

Joe: But those things go around a bit.

Yeah, yeah.

But she didn't care.

Like she was totally self-aware that
the only reason she was doing it

was to get a hot photo up, up there.

Oh.

Yeah.

Okay.

She didn't have any cringe about.

Sam: So ali, this is like, this is like
the, the apex of the thing you're talking

about, like putting yourself in the
middle of it and doing nothing useful.

Ali: Absolutely nothing constructive,
useful, or, and I think, I think

that's where I, I like, is this
contributing to the discourse

in a meaningful or helpful way?

That's where What goes around isn't

Sam: guys.

I just thought a hot photo of me
might help everyone calm down.

Let's all just take a
moment and smell the roses.

You know, appreciate, appreciate something

beautiful.

Joe: That's how I felt about my one,
my photo of a really nice sandwich

during the, everyone else's black tiles.

Sam: It's the same impulse.

Joe: I don't know.

Yeah, no, no, no.

But, but yeah, maybe, so maybe Ali's
regime is a bit harsh and maybe

your dad posting well considered
things is about stuff he does.

What I would say is this though,
stuff that I have lived experience

of, It's the powerful stuff.

So when I've posted about sobriety or
mental illness, that's when I've got

the most likes, the most engagement.

That's when people contacted me
and said, I really moved them.

Compared to my half baked political
opinions, and that's how I learned, and

when we started this show, Sam, you have
a lot of fucking information in your

brain about a lot of things and a lot
of current events and all of that, and I

kept saying to you, we need to come back.

to you being a Hare
Krishna, you having ADHD.

when we got Alia, she's got
the bipolar, she's got the

ADHD, the autism, all of that.

Why?

Not because what you might have to say
about the Middle East isn't interesting,

but no one, you're not an expert.

No one's looking to me for it.

But you are an expert on
being raised Hare Krishna.

I actually have been following that
region for quite a long time and fairly

closely at times, but guess what?

I've searched my soul and
I've not been able to find.

A statement that I wanted to make,
and that I thought would be useful,

and that's, that's, you know...

No offence, no one's tuning
in for the Sam Ellis...

No, no, but there might be...

Like, Sam Ellis fixes
the Middle East podcast.

Let

Sam: me propose the...

The grey area, like case by case
problem that we're actually facing

in this conversation because I
would love to just adopt a shorthand

like middle class white women be
quiet and then, and then obviously

include myself in that basically,

Ali: but it's just, it's not just women.

I should, I should preface it.

It's just like middle class
white people just need

Sam: to be quiet.

I think.

Yeah.

And there's probably a
lot of truth in that.

And especially if.

You know, they're well out of their
lane, and it's a strong take, and you

know, it's lacking in detail, it's not
particularly well contextualized, etc.

I'm 100 percent with you, but the real
issue is the lineball cases, and the,

so, the Jesuits with their case by case
basis, we cannot, there's no universal

principle we can adopt, we have to
case by case everything, which is like

very tiresome, but it's, truly, it's
the only way to do things properly.

And the problem for me is...

where there is an ambiguity about where
everyone stands on a particular issue.

And there are some, there are
some issues that do better if

everyone reveals their hand.

So if there's a body of feeling
that is not being stated about

something, it can leave sort of
middle ground people in some doubt

and then they may think, Oh, I don't.

Yeah, basically sometimes there are
undecided peers that need guidance,

and they actually are looking

Ali: And like the, you
know, the silent majority

Sam: is like No, they're
looking to the herd.

Well, they may not be aware, for example,
you know, this happened in a staff

meeting and I don't want to trigger
anyone, like, it's not the kind of thing

I expected to hear, but basically I heard
some like, very libelous rhetoric about

trans people, like, in a staff meeting.

And so like, this is a context.

Where I'm going to take to Facebook
and like subtweet like what went on

the meeting, but what I am going to do
is I'm going to put my hand up and I'm

going to make a two minute statement
that compacts the things that they need.

Anyone who's in that meeting who's
undecided about whether this is

It's safe, or non libelous content.

I just need to dispel that illusion
immediately, and I need everyone to

know the facts, and to understand
that if you pursue this rhetoric,

not only is it dangerous for trans
people, it's actually counterproductive

for women as well, in every sense.

Within the staff meeting.

Yeah.

To 20 people.

Yeah.

Because there was...

Joe: So let me ask you this.

So I'm not Sorry, Ali, I'm yeah, no, I

Ali: was just going to say like with the,
but having that, like having conversations

as they happen, having those discussions,
white people talking amongst themselves,

that absolutely, I'm not, I was just
talking more, I suppose, in the public

forum, but I think absolutely appropriate,
you know, in that, you know, situation.

Yeah.

And

Sam: of course it is a public forum,
but it's like a very small public forum.

And like, for me, I'd make that
as like, that's a clearly in.

Okay, so that's not a lineball, right?

So the lineball's somewhere
between that and like...

Okay, let me tell you what's in my mind.

The thing that I imagine sometimes is...

There's someone undecided out
there, and just the right two

sentences could come their way.

Joe: That's an illusion.

And could...

How many minds do you think have ever
been changed, or have been changed by

social media in the last ten years?

Well, I've got...

Maybe at the start, when people
were listening, but people...

Sam: I've got

Joe: many examples from My online
contribution to the yes campaign was

taking a photo of my dear old mum,
handing out how to votes for the

yes campaign, and posting, here's my
mum, the lefty ratbag, handing out

how to votes for the yes campaign.

That was my one statement
on the yes campaign.

But I do not, do not

ever think that I will change a
single person's mind on social media.

Yeah, okay.

Well, I think that you don't actually
that's a dry gully and I think I

Sam: think overall you might be right,
but there are marginal cases but also I

don't know I want to disagree with you
your model about human decision making

is incomplete and that for people forget
all the times they've changed their

minds like and I've said this before on
the pod There's a whole science to this.

Basically, we heal over the scars and,
like, maintain this illusion that we've

been the same person the whole time.

Which is, like, a bad concept to
carry around for lots of reasons.

Like, it gets in the way of psychological
progress quite apart from anything else.

But also, it means that we would
be convinced that we'll never

change anyone else's mind and
no one's ever changed our mind.

But, like, I can think of many occasions.

Where I came across the right content,
not necessarily from a friend, but

like, the algo, And it changed my
perspective almost immediately.

Like, this has happened many
times, but maybe I'm weird

Joe: and different.

Yeah, I mean I'm, I'm
wider, I'm too susceptible.

I, I'll basically take on whole, like
I've spoken about it before, I'll

read one blogger for a month and then
I'll just have all their opinions.

Yeah, I'm wide open.

I'm completely open.

yeah.

You know, I'm a completely
open field for other people's

opinions and I, the one thing I've
learned is to watch out for that.

Yeah.

and I can't switch it off.

So what I do is folk try and be
really aware of what I'm taking in,

if I'm taking in too much of one
thing, which, like, I, I've, I stopped

reading some of these, these two
bloggers that I spent a year reading.

Mm-Hmm.

That was time for a change anyway.

Yeah.

And, and the year, the years before
that, I, I spent a couple of years

reading The Economist and I had these.

Incredibly articulate, centrist
positions on everything, because

that's what all I was reading.

And, yeah, so, it's like, so I'm wide
open, I just don't know if, how open,

and maybe you're right, but Ali When
these people are posting their middle

class white stuff, is it sparking debates
that you can see in the comments and

then things are getting worked out?

No, it's mostly getting ignored.

Or

Ali: or boy or whatever?

Yeah, or just mostly getting ignored.

I would say.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Sam: Yeah.

And look, I think if a lot of it gets
treated with the contempt it deserves,

and I'm including my own comments
here a lot of the time, and you know,

just it, something being ignored
is way more hurtful than getting a

pile on even like, you know, and it
does send the message eventually.

but you know, there were times,
yeah, look, I'm not going to claim

to have an enormous track record
of like rescuing drowning puppies

here or anything, but I do think.

Um, I do think I've thrown a
couple of starfish back, you

know, like, and that's about it.

Like I've put a lot of work
in and it's not a lot to

Joe: show.

Have you ever posted about your own
struggles with, say ADHD on Facebook?

No.

No, no, no.

Have you ever seen what impact
you could have by revealing

some vulnerability rather than

Sam: being an expert on things?

No, no, no.

I've been vulnerable in a different way.

And actually, now that you mention
it, the one thing I could mention

as a listener of the show, Craig,
there's one thing I wanted to mention.

I didn't really change his
mind about a particular issue.

It was more just like
a shift in perspective.

That he was ready for anyway, and then
I say something and it like, it just, it

forms a small piece of like a change in
the heart that was taking place anyway.

And other people have
done that for me, right?

And that's what, that's kind of the
thing I'm more interested in is change

of heart anyway, rather than change of
mind, if you can separate those two.

But I didn't know this at the time, but
yeah, he said years later, you know, just.

I can't even remember what the issue
was, it might have been Brexit or

something, and obviously feelings were
high, he's Australian, he lives over

there, hasn't done for a very long time.

And, you know, he was, like a lot
of people at the time, struggling

with the outcome of that decision,
and, kind of like we are now.

And I think I said something
that just made him feel less

cross and less hopeless.

And just little by little, it kind of,
it was a perspective that he took on.

And it's not one I've always lived by
myself, but it was kind of along the lines

of, yes, we can and probably should be
mad at the really cynical people who were

spreading lies in Brexit, but I don't know
how mad we should be at Kind of the little

people, you know, the kind of small R
racists who are just kind of shit kickers.

I don't know how much,

Ali: but that's how much, how much, yeah.

What you're going to say is going
to, it's like, yeah, I would use the

argument of like, you know, talking to.

So you're trying to convince my
conservative boomer parents of something

it is like against a brick wall right like
it is it's like there's there's gonna be

so people just dug in with their opinions
that you just no matter what you say it's

not going to they're not gonna change
have a change of heart or a change of mind

Joe: I wouldn't no there's no nuance
either and that's what Like a format

like this is much better to us
because we talk a lot of shit, but

like, yeah, to listen to someone
in depth for an hour and a half.

I know you're a big fan of that.

That's, that's, that's
the experiences I've had.

If I've, if I've spent an hour
really listening to someone, that's,

that's changed things for me.

Um, What I would say is that maybe
Ali's gone a little bit hard.

But I would say that if people want
to actually connect with what they're

putting out into the world in whatever
format, be vulnerable, make it about

your personal experience, your lived
experience, and stick to things

that you actually are somewhat of an
expert in, and you will get traction.

If you just add fucking bullshit
to a bullshit fire, then

like, you know, it's, it's...

Yeah, like it's just not gonna,
it's just gonna do what you're

talking about, which is you post
something, everyone ignores it.

You feel a bit crap, you haven't even,
like, what have you achieved, you know?

Ali: There's better use of your time,
is what I feel, but like, like you,

Joe, like I similarly, the very few
times I've ever spoken about anything,

I suppose, mental health related on
social media, and it's not often, like

I don't put a lot out there, but the
few times, that's when I've had the

most meaningful, I suppose, feedback or
people message me then directly about

stuff, and I think, yeah, because it's
coming from a place of experience,

like, and I think those things.

Yeah, I would write, I would search
out experiences like that and, and

I suppose voices from friends or
people who are experiencing things

directly, rather than, you know, just
a white person speaking for everyone.

But

Joe: then there's the other cringe
and people find it cringe if people

share about mental health on Facebook,
you know, and, but it just depends.

Like if the share on mental
health on Facebook is.

When the people don't do it
anymore, but they did 10 years

ago, oh, having a down day today.

Oh, you see, and I

Ali: didn't, that wasn't so, yeah, no,
no, I see, it wasn't stuff like that,

but like, I might, but like, yeah.

Joe: It's gotta be, like, a bit of a
story, it's gotta be a bit of a narrative.

Yeah, there's gotta be

Ali: something to it, like, I
did something at New Year's last

year, like, I just sort of was...

You know, like a little personal wrap
up of what was quite an unhinged year

for me personally and like a lot of
people reached out and messaged me about

that and I just wanted to say thank you
to some people that, you know, that's

one of the very few times I've ever
posted on Facebook in recent memory.

Yeah,

Joe: and I think you're someone that
people would say, it's like all the

people that write into us constantly.

to tell us to stop interrupting you
and we have meetings about it and

we try and do it and whatever but
you're just so much more polite than

me and Sam that it's quite hard.

I think that you're someone
that people think you have a

good perspective on things.

Yeah, agreed.

I mean, listeners to the show have written
in and said the same thing, so people

want to hear more from you, you know.

It's true.

But you don't sit there thinking Oh,
the way to, you know, give people

more of what's in my head is just to
post about whatever's in the news.

Like you've actually got
this format now and...

Sam: Yeah, okay, I think, look, I
think I guess it's useful to say...

If it's all getting filtered through,
like if your statement is really just

kind of just a pale echo of whatever
the narrative is in the mainstream media

on that particular day, or even just,
no, no, sorry, I'm going to introduce

a fancy term, whatever the dominant
narratives are in the information space

at that time, don't talk about media.

It's an information space.

Okay, that's a thing I learned on

Joe: the weekend.

I've been talking about the
information environment, but

only for the last week or two.

Someone, someone did
ask my opinion on the...

on the referendum.

And I said, I think it has a lot to
say about our information environment.

Yeah.

Big time.

That's what I think.

Yep.

I think it's a referendum on that.

Because so confused.

Yep.

Big time.

Uh, I think it was like, how's
your information environment?

Oh, it's poor.

It's

Sam: cooked.

Joe: Yeah.

Yeah.

So, you know, which is no joke,
but if you didn't laugh, you know.

Uh,

Sam: yeah.

No, it is, it is funny to me because.

I've been living with this knowledge
for a really, really long time.

But you know what

Joe: happened at the last
federal election was...

Somehow dropped into the information
environment was Skomo is a dickhead,

and then that just spread like
wildfire and that was it because

Sam: clearly it was helicoptered in by

Joe: headquarters, not a progressive
country looking to do progressive

things for some reason people
just decided to vote against

Morrison all of a sudden, right?

If you look at the referendum,
we're not a progressive

Sam: country.

No, no, no, no.

See, that's not...

So what

Joe: happened in the same
intervention environment, you

elected a Labor government, but how?

That's what the referendum
got me wondering.

Sam: Well, you're averaging a bunch
of stuff here and then concluding

that everything's in the middle.

That's not how it works.

Like, there are plenty of extreme
positions in this country, progressive,

anti, like, reactionary, and then there's
a real rainbow spectrum in between.

So it's not that there's no appetite
for progressive action in this

country, but it is It's inchoate.

The energies aren't being directed
in any particular direction.

So that's the main issue that I see.

What

Joe: does inchoate

Sam: mean?

Oh, it hasn't started
to, it's not lumping.

It's like incoherent.

Yeah, inchoate.

It's not lumping together.

Right.

It's incoherent and inchoate.

It's not, like, basically, social
movements happen when, this is going

to go against everything we've just
said to a degree, social movements

happen when people, instead of just
reacting to headlines and having a hot

take, So it's half of what you guys
said and half of what I'm saying, that

the herd makes decisions, believe it
or not, by listening to what everyone

is saying, and maybe even disagreeing
with an awful lot of what they're

hearing, but then seeing, oh, all their
heads are starting to point this way.

Yeah.

And when about 60...

55, 60 percent of the heads
start pointing one way.

Guess what happens?

The herd

Joe: goes there.

How else can you go from
Obama to Trump, right?

Yeah.

Yeah.

No.

And, and, but the funny thing is
in your herd or in, like in mine in

Footscray or in yours here in Thornberry
and yours in Preston, we're talking

like 90 percent of people voting yes.

Right.

If you look at the polling booths.

Yeah.

Yeah.

So we're in this, but, but see,
I know that I'm in the bubble.

Yeah.

So, and I have kicked against it
somewhat by becoming a bit more centrist.

Yeah.

Cause I'm so sick of everyone having
the same fucking opinion on everything.

No, that's fair.

That's fair.

But I also find other people's opinions,
like outside the bubble, completely toxic.

Why don't you just go far right?

Sam: Really differentiate yourself.

You have alt right, Joe.

Joe: Well, yeah, I mean, I've
flirted with the alt right.

Yeah, you have.

Like, at times, It's

Sam: there to be

Joe: flirted with.

That's what it's for.

And the herd thing.

It's like, oh

Ali: man.

You just want to be a rebel.

It's just like, it's
just rebelling against

Joe: like...

No, but it's contrarian.

I know a few people who are
just contrarians on everything.

It's,

Sam: it's...

If they detect a majority
emerging, they go

Joe: the other way.

Northgate and voted no, did
it purely to be a contrarian.

Sure.

Or possibly.

Like they found some marginal position
that they could then secretly go and...

And

Sam: you know what?

And quite a few people voted no
because they thought that a lot

of other people were going to.

And they want to back the winning side
and they're not really that invested.

And that's why News Corp ran so hard.

on Aussies don't want this,
Aussies don't want this.

That's what they said
from the very beginning.

And I remember hearing an analysis
basically 18 months ago, a

communication strategist saying,
here's what I'm thinking right now

if I'm yes, here's what I'm thinking
right now if I'm the no campaign.

They need to go, they can't
go too hard on the anger.

They need to mainly emphasize
nothing in it for you and

everyone else is thinking no.

So just stick to those two messages,
which is what they basically did,

and then provide a little bit of
permission in the form of, this

won't really help blackfellas anyway.

So they gave them those three things, and
just did it very consistently, and then

we had KUKA, far right, genuine Nazi stuff
starting to come in as well on Sky News.

So

Joe: yeah.

My uninformed take is it became very much
upper middle class, inner city liberals.

A, a issue.

It looked like that to me.

Yeah.

From somewhat outside of that class.

I wasn was strongly invested in it class.

Yeah.

I wasn't.

And you know, I remember we were at a
party a couple of weeks out and I'm one of

these treaty s we were joking about Yeah.

We were joking about
someone having a a Yes.

Sign out the front because
they're middle class.

Well it and that the yes sign
became, I'm part of the upper middle

class . It made you, and that's
not a majority in this country.

Sam: That's not a majority.

This is what I'm saying, this herd thing.

It affects freethinkers like you and me,
just as much as it affects the masses.

This is what I'm saying.

I felt that same shame
about putting up a yes sign.

I'm like, this is not where the herd's at.

It was

Joe: a political

Sam: disaster.

And I knew it was.

I saw it coming from, I don't
mean to sound like such a smart

ass, but the whole thing did not.

Like I remember when I first heard
about the Statement from the Heart and

the Uluru thing, and I'm like, yeah,
they're gearing up for a thing here.

And I just saw this three years
ahead of time and going, this

is not where to put the energy.

This has, this has a real...

Joe: Coming back to the topic, all of
us, and I think we need to hear from Ali.

Yeah.

God knows our listeners
want to hear more from Ali.

Yeah.

Coming back to the topic, all
of us basically played dead

on the referendum, right?

100%.

We certainly didn't do a show
about it, uh, we didn't post about

it, I've posted one photo of it.

No, no, no, we endorsed

Sam: it quietly.

Quietly.

Joe: Four or five weeks ahead.

yeah, of course, we should do something.

Sam: Yeah, we're all voting, we
just confirmed we're all voting yes.

That's it.

That's it.

But

Joe: we didn't get excited about
it, we weren't posting about it.

Did you see?

I saw

Ali: a lot

Joe: of people posting about it.

I saw a lot of people online
getting very excited about it.

Yeah, for sure.

Sam: I

Joe: was actually surprised.

All those same people now want me to
sign a petition to somehow stop a war

in the Middle East from Melbourne.

And I'm like, what the fuck?

I thought you were in mourning
from the fucking referendum.

No.

When do you get to this?

Come on, we can.

Do

Sam: you ever get a day off?

No, you can't.

. We can chew gum and walk at the same time.

No,

Joe: but just can't you work out that
you're completely fucking like impotent?

Sam: Well, no, that's
where we don't agree, Joe.

See,

Joe: you think just, you know.

Sam: So you think people
power is non-existent.

You're basically, you're not
persuaded that there's any such

thing as social movements because
you haven't seen one for a while.

But you've forgotten what you
and your kind did at Jabba Luka.

You've forgotten.

Yeah.

Joe: Or on the docks with the MUA.

I was at, I've been at a
lot of frontline protests.

That, that was before

Sam: social media.

Now stopping, yeah, stopping a war, that's
a whole nother story, but nonetheless.

Well,

Ali: I was going to say like an
interesting one that happened, I

suppose, in the time of social media
that was a social change was like

marriage equality that we did see.

Yeah.

That was just a home

Joe: run.

Ali: Yeah.

Yeah.

But, but like, I think that.

As far as seeing like a social
movement on social media in a positive

Sam: way.

Yeah, the groundwork was laid
for that 15 years earlier.

A lot of careful work
was done over a very long

Ali: period.

Yeah.

So I think like, it's one thing,
yeah, to be like just sharing things.

Yeah, that you've seen.

Versus like, like the actual groundwork
or like, as you would say, quiet

supporting, which is like stuff you
do behind the scenes or stuff you do,

discussions you're having with people
directly or organisations you choose to

support, you know, that sort of thing.

Joe: So, I mean, but what I'm saying is
it's the same people that, you know, the

people who are going to post about the
latest issue and you roll your fucking

Sam: eyes.

Well, yeah, I mean, I do too
sometimes, but then I'm like, look,

man, I'm glad someone is out there.

Doing something like on this, at least,
even if it's just to like, cause look,

don't forget the consensus on not talking
about the actual politics on the ground,

the facts on the ground over there.

But I will say this, we need to keep
in mind how much the consensus has

shifted and like people, this is
what I'm saying, about talking about.

Invading Gaza and things like that,
because even just talking about this,

a lot of people were very nervous about
criticizing Israeli domestic or foreign

policy for a very, very, very long time.

And basically there's a whole bunch
of people who just kept shtum for

a very, very, very long time about
things that they felt were not right,

but they were worried that they would
cause a greater harm by speaking up.

So all of that seems to have shifted.

And I'm

Ali: very quickly I
might add, it's very like

Joe: I want this to be a show that
people can listen to in a year's time.

So I'm wary of talking about things
that It bears on the matter at hand.

I'm about it was decided.

I didn't want to talk about it before
it was decided because it won't

Sam: age very well.

None of us had to discuss that.

Joe: We all knew.

And

Sam: I about the discourse.

I'm talking about how people
feel they need to say something.

And I'm not going to shit on that.

Because I've seen plenty of evidence
of bad things go down in that part of

the world, and no one really say much.

So, to see someone saying, look, mind
you though, that's not quite right,

because I had friends running the, or
acquaintances running the blockade.

Way back when, like, in the Mediterranean,
so, like, I've actually kind of been

in and around this issue for a really,
really, really long time, including

around people that really know

Joe: their stuff.

Oh yeah, and it's the, it's the pet
issue, Palestinian causes, the pet

issue of leftists of the last 20 years.

Well, it has been since
the second intifada, yes.

So I know who the ones who
are going to pipe up on it.

And to, to, to be fair, if they're
there at the rally on Sunday

in Melbourne, full respect.

And if you're posting yourself
a photo of yourself at a fucking

rally, I actually respect that.

No, I

Sam: was going to say that's fine.

It's not that it takes

Joe: guts.

I don't know.

No, I think it does.

But I think that it shows that
you've, you're willing to get

off your ass and off your phone
and actually go and be somewhere.

And I've been to climate rallies
and I'll go to more climate rallies.

Yeah.

so I kind of respect that more.

Look, I do find it interesting who pops
up and he, oh, someone who's 10, 20

years younger than me popping up with
a Palestinian flag and I, I just note

that and think, oh, that's interesting.

Sam: there's been a, yeah,
a grounds, a ground shift.

Ali: Within like a matter of

Joe: a week.

Yeah.

It's been huge.

But, but I strongly, strongly feel.

That no one needs my fucking opinion.

No,

Sam: but

Joe: that's where you're wrong.

I don't know how much
further from my lived

Sam: experience.

They don't need a detailed, they
don't need, they I don't think they

need, I don't think they need...

Joe: No one's asking us to vote on this.

Sam: They don't need you
sounding like an expert.

Ali: Yeah, no, they don't need
your opinion, but they, but I

don't think there's any harm in
sharing other people's stories.

I wrote to Ali.

Sam: That's right.

Joe: Ali started posting
about Gaza and I wrote...

Centering voices.

Yes.

Yeah.

Ali started posting
about Gaza on Instagram.

Oh, interesting.

And I wrote to her and I said,
really, Ali, you're really

going to be posting about this?

Silencing.

Ali.

Sam: Joe.

And...

Joe: I'm disappointed.

Well, she's a middle class, she's
actually working class, she just thinks

Sam: she's middle Okay, Joe.

Guess, guess who, guess who
spoke up against horrors all

through the 20th century?

Often, it was white middle class people.

And guess who marched
besides the people at Selma?

The Jewish

Joe: Antith So Ali, was it really
you want to get embroiled in this

particular ancient fucking word?

No, it's not,

Sam: not an ancient

Joe: converse.

No, no, no, let's not get sidetracked.

Okay.

But Ali?

Ali: I, what it was is seeing, and
I, and I, again, being really careful

not to share any of My, cause I
have no, absolutely no personal,

you know, experience of that.

Yeah.

but sharing things that I felt really
just questioned my sense of humanity,

really horrific things that I feel
like we need to all be aware of this.

And whether it, I am posting it into the
void, which I don't think I am, because

quite a few people actually responded
to it, responding to it, on both, you

know, with very different takes, but
um, but I think, I think the more people

that can, we need to be, I think What's
going on now, people need to be aware

and I felt that that was important.

So you're

Joe: doing the exact thing that
this topic of this show came from

you telling people not to do.

I'm a hypocrite.

Sam: no, okay, but let's do the checklist.

Were you centering yourself?

Ali: No, I was absolutely,
yeah, no, it was absolutely not.

I shared our Jazira footage.

Yeah, that's it.

That was it, like I felt, you know, that

Sam: it's...

Yeah.

At some point, because it's not just the
information itself, or, you know, the

images itself or whatever that you're
resharing, what you're, the metadata.

is important and the metadata is, I
find this to be of significance and I'm,

I think this is, I'm going to turn my
head towards this and you're inviting

others to turn their heads towards it.

Don't underestimate the power of that and
yes, white middle class women actually

have done a hell of a lot of good.

I'll, I'll, there, I'll say it.

Yeah, no,

Ali: I'm, I'm, I'm, like I feel like.

Like the overall, who knows, but
the topic came across as like very

judgy and bitchy, which I really,
I'm a hundred percent there for it.

I want to have it both ways, but I
feel like, yeah, there is nuance in it.

And I feel that, yeah, we need to,
yeah, each, like you said, it's

a case by case, discussion rather
than just, you know, a blanket rule.

But I do think, you know, it is okay
to like hang shit on middle class

white people because, you know.

Joe: I mean, this is a case where
I think you should practice what

you preach and shut the fuck up.

Sam: You might, look, you might tempt
me, you might tempt me to like, raise

an eyebrow if you went, uh, uh, I don't
know, Hey everyone, do you like my, uh,

Palestine flag cupcakes or something?

I don't know.

I'd be like, I'd be tempted.

No, I'd be like, nah, you know
what, it's, it's something.

That's what I'd say.

Look, I just got an email today.

From a member of my, you know, my
sub branch of the union, asking us if

we're going to pass a motion or not.

And, you know, not just a
question for me to consider, but a

question for everyone to consider.

And it's like, oh, well, it
might seem silly, but like...

Joe: A motion on what?

Sam: Basically taking a position.

They're asking to take a formal

Joe: position.

Does anyone realise where we live?

Do you realise how irrelevant we are?

Ali: We have family
and friends over there.

Sam: It matters.

It does matter.

Anywhere less relevant than

Joe: where we live.

No,

Ali: but like, like, I'm talking to
my friend in Lebanon, like every other

day, checking in on him and that's
how I, I mean, and I'm asking him and

he should be posting and that's fine.

And he is.

Joe: Yeah.

Like, and you could post
about your friend in Lebanon.

I think that's fine.

But I just think.

Generally posting about the Middle
East, it's just like, fuck, it's

exactly what you're talking about and
I agree with you and now we've turned

it complete 180 and it's like oh well
no, actually I definitely should be

posting about Gaza and it's like,

Sam: no.

I don't think, look, it's not like But
it's not like you went out and staked

out like a particularly hot territory.

You just kind of like go here.

But yeah, it

Ali: wasn't, it wasn't,
it wasn't a position.

It wasn't a side.

It wasn't, it wasn't.

Joe: You said, we, we can't take,
we can't feel bad about what one

group of children dying and not
feel bad about the other group.

Sam: I think that's a
pretty good statement.

I'm fine with that.

Joe: But it's taking a

Ali: position.

No, but like, no, it really wasn't.

Sam: No, it's

Ali: taking humanity's position.

Yeah, the footage I shared was just
simply sharing something that is

going on over there at the moment.

And I felt that that was
worthy of, of people seeing.

Sam: Yeah.

But I, I go, you're not imagining
it, Ali, that you feel this

way, but we're not imagining

Joe: your Insta stories.

I expect to see.

Some stupid meme about being a
Sagittarius, and instead I'm creating

some gruesome image of a hospital, and
it's like, whoa, it's just like, I just

don't think Instagram is that place,
like, it's either one or the other, it's a

Sam: category error.

Joe: Nah, man.

It's just like, it's either
trash or it's not trash.

And Instagram is pure trash.

Nah, I see.

I disagree.

And you can't then put
serious heavy duty shit.

Man,

Sam: everyone said Twitter was just for,
like, for irrelevancies and like, uh...

And look how bad that's ended up.

No, no, Hold on.

Hold on.

Everyone's forgetting how crucial
that was in a number of...

Well, like the Arab

Joe: Spring.

Yeah, the Arab Spring didn't
fucking work out anyway.

No, agreed, but...

It was exciting at the time.

But

Sam: the platform had an impact on events.

Yeah.

That's all I'm saying.

But there, but, but,

Joe: but what I'm saying is I don't
think there is a platform at the moment.

Good one.

No,

Sam: I disagree.

Meta good one.

I hate, I hate to give everyone
the bad news, but meta is kind

of kicking ass at the moment.

Unfortunately.

I, I,

Joe: I don't see it.

I don't, I don't see anywhere
where I would go to see my,

Sam: I'm not saying they're do, I'm
not saying they're doing good work,

but they're winning the information

Joe: space.

I don't, yeah.

See I, 'cause I don't wanna be on Twitter.

It's horrible.

I want trash on Instagram.

Yeah, Facebook is a fucking dumpster fire.

Of course, at best that's
when something's happening.

But nine, nine time

Sam: dad's sunset

Joe: photos are on there.

Well, 99% of the time nothing's
happening on Facebook.

That's what I see.

Sure.

I get my Cricket Club
updates and that's it.

No, I was hearing from Nazis in
New, I tried to be on Threads.

I tried, I thought, I thought
I'll try threads 'cause it's

a new platform and whatever.

Sure.

And I've already got an Instagram account.

Yeah.

Within two weeks I was
somehow getting, oh no.

X like non stop posts about Donald
Trump, who is someone I do not want to

think about until next November, man.

You followed the wrong accounts.

I did.

I tried not to though, Sam.

I don't have a particular interest
in American politics at the moment.

I get nice

Sam: ladies telling me about books
and like, Oh, I wrote this poem.

Anyway, my

Ali: experience is.

Mine's all just like people with
poor mental health sharing their

poor Oh, I get a lot of that.

That's all my social media.

Can you not

Joe: see what I'm saying?

That Ali's like consistently...

Light hearted.

This is what music I'm listening to.

Here's a meme about being bipolar.

You're telling it to go back to cats.

Ali: Just stay

Joe: on brand.

Well, get on threads and share your
fucking Gaza stuff or get a Twitter

account or go somewhere else where
people want news at that moment.

Maybe I've just been reading
the news for four hours.

Instagram is the white middle

Sam: class woman's domain.

That's where she speaks.

Alright, let's

Joe: finish up.

But in the end, the conclusion of people
should only post shit they have heard.

The conclusion of the people
should only post shit they have

personal experience of topic is that

Sam: Ali doesn't do it.

She has personal experience of
being horrified by images she saw.

Right,

Joe: so suddenly we've broadened
it out to just post whatever

you want on any platform.

No, no, no, no, no, no.

One minute it's a Sagittarius
joke, one minute it's a cat photo.

Oh look, there's
someone's guts ripped out.

Sam: Welcome to post
modern, post modernity.

All of this was described in
1985 by Frederick Jamison.

It's

Joe: all flattened.

Welcome to the present.

It all has a similar

Sam: impact.

Oh my God, you read these
essays in like 1995.

All of this has been
described and said and done.

It's just reality.

It's what we live in.

You don't

Joe: really do it.

Ali's out there doing it.

She's, she's the problem.

I am the problem.

Sam: Have you seen my reshares?

It's all kinds of, it's
all over the shelf.

Ali: Sam likes a political reshare.

I've seen you share some.

Sam: But I'll also reshare
like, he's a funny guy and

Ali: I'll share anything
that takes your interest.

And I think that's the thing,
like our social media is a

reflection of us as complex.

People who are, and unless you're
trying to curate a certain experience

of like very certain, like it's always
going to be a bit of everything.

Joe: I'm always touched by Sam's
post because I know that someone

is watching Greens speeches in
parliament and posting them.

Oh, there's a Greens Senator
making a speech and Sam's

posted that up and good for Sam.

I'm sure him and that guy with the
hyphen in his name will get together

one day and have a chamomile tea.

Oh,

Sam: I love it.

I love it.

Do you know what?

I love how much hate Max Chandler
Mather attracts, because it

tells me I'm onto something.

This guy's a star, I'm telling you.

Anyway, I think we should wrap it up.

He upsets you.

I don't know where that went.

No, no, I think it was fun.

And it went serious for a bit there too.

Sorry everyone.

Well, we

Joe: pretty much stayed out of Gaza.

Yeah, we did.

We certainly didn't invade.

God knows we don't want to do a three hour

Sam: episode on that.

No, no, no, no, no.

It's beyond our expertise.

I'll agree with that.

I don't think it's beyond anyone's
expertise, though, to say...

Gee guys, I'm a bit upset by what I'm
seeing, I'm, you know, I'm worried that

there's an awful lot of human suffering
taking place, um, on all sides, I'm

very concerned that it might become a
larger problem, I'm very concerned that

there might be some cynical people that
are to some degree behind this or...

Yes, but also just a whole lot of
stuff, momentum and things happening.

It's not just being orchestrated.

Geez, I'm worried, you know,
I think it's okay to say that.

And I think it's okay to say, geez, is
there a way for karma heads to prevail?

Like, is every person in that country hell
bent on the destruction of the supposed?

Other, or are there a whole bunch
of people that have just been

ignored and sidelined and completely
left out of the political protest,

uh, process this whole time?

Much like a lot of us in
Australia just, we don't really

get heard from at elections.

We just get averagified.

And then we get a narrative
saying, this is how everyone

feels, that's how that lot feels.

That's not how the world is.

That's kind of my point.

That's why people have to like,
yeah, I agree with you that just

kind of hitting a headline and going,
here's my take on the headlines.

Yeah, that's shit.

But here's how I'm feeling owing to
things that are coming on my radar.

I think that's it.

Like, here's my state of, I think

Joe: that's kind of, yeah, that's not
what Ali's like, see this, feel horrible.

Well, like you watch
this, you feel horrible.

It's not like, Oh, I'm watching this
and I'm worried about the world.

It's like, here's something horrific.

I'm just going to shove this in your face.

Even though you were looking
for a cat video, ah, sucked in.

That's my experience of
interacting with her on Instagram.

Okay.

I

Sam: love that.

Ali: Like, no, I

Sam: just,

Ali: I don't know.

It's a marvelous narrative.

I just felt like it was,
yeah, it was horrific.

It really genuinely was horrific.

And I felt like.

Yeah, we need to be talking about
this, or we need to be aware of

Joe: it.

While you're raising awareness,
you need a hashtag for that, Ali.

White people do love to raise awareness.

Gotta raise that awareness.

Look, we should have a day for Ali,
Ali Day, where we raise awareness of

whatever's on Ali's mind that day.

Oh

Sam: man, I've done some
awareness raising myself.

We're all guilty

Joe: here.

You work There's a lot of days.

Ali: Why work in public service?

There's a lot of days.

Joe: Wear, wear purple.

Wear fun.

Don't even

Sam: get me started.

Oh, hey.

Teacher's Day was the other day.

I gave that the big wide berth.

favourite.

Joe: You can

Ali: get mental health.

Sam: Yeah, yeah, exactly.

Guys,

Joe: guys, guys.

We're fading.

We're still recording here.

I

Sam: boycott Teacher's Day.

I told, I told my students to take
no interest in it and they all obeyed

Joe: me.

I don't think people are taking
much more interest in this

episode, so we should shut it down.

No, no.

Sam: Yeah.

No, I agree.

I just want to add one more thing.

I think there is something hopeful
to take out of it, which is that

there's a desire in Ali to...

To encourage thoughtful and useful
communication and maybe creating a

note, a little note to self in amongst
the observation about the peers.

And I'm going to have a bet each
way, genuinely, I do agree with you.

There's a whole lot of, look
at me, look how right I am.

Got to say though, Joe, you're not
wrong to find it annoying, don't

underestimate the power of self centered.

Me, me, me, virtue signaling.

There's a reason it
triggers the right so hard.

It actually does affect things.

And whether we think that justice
should look different, oh, justice

should look like sweat and getting
arrested and hard work and getting

dirty and it's boring paperwork.

No, there's vanity in there too.

I think, so I'm willing to be somewhat
forgiving, but I'm sure the next time I

see someone just vainly In every sense.

encouraging me to think they're wise,
then yeah, I'll probably remember

this and go, yeah, come on, man.

But I just can't hate on it completely.

And maybe mainly because I'm guilty.

I don't know.

That's probably why.

Ali: We're all hypocrites
to a certain extent.

Alright, see ya.

See ya.