The Washington State of Science: The 309th Evolutionary Lens with Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying
97 min
•Jan 17, 20264 months agoSummary
Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying critique Washington Governor Bob Ferguson's response to federal childhood vaccine schedule changes, arguing his defense of 'science' is actually scientism masking authoritarianism. They also discuss Senate Majority Leader Jamie Peterson's evasive response on biological sex differences in sports, and Dylan Mulvaney's casting as Anne Boleyn on Broadway, before reflecting on Scott Adams' death and the COVID vaccine debate.
Insights
- Political tribalism has replaced analytical thinking: leaders adopt inverse positions reflexively rather than evaluating evidence independently, creating unfalsifiable belief systems resistant to correction
- Institutional capture of medical expertise: pharmaceutical influence over pediatricians and regulatory bodies has made genuine safety testing impossible to verify, breaking the trust mechanisms ordinary citizens rely on
- The COVID vaccine experience created a teachable moment about institutional reliability that most blue-team voters have refused to process, creating cognitive dissonance they avoid rather than resolve
- Performative expertise and scientism (using 'science' as rhetorical weapon) are now primary tools of political control, especially when actual scientific analysis contradicts preferred narratives
- Biological reality is becoming unspeakable in institutional contexts due to social pressure, forcing officials to deploy linguistic evasion rather than acknowledge observable facts
Trends
Rise of state-level health policy defiance: Blue states creating parallel health authorities to resist federal policy changes, regardless of scientific meritInstitutional collapse of scientific credibility: Public increasingly unable to distinguish between actual science and scientism, eroding trust in legitimate expertisePolitical inversion as default governance strategy: Opposing teams automatically adopt inverse positions without independent analysis, creating policy whiplashLinguistic evasion as political survival tactic: Officials increasingly unable or unwilling to state observable facts, using technical jargon and false expertise claims as coverPost-COVID vaccine skepticism becoming mainstream: Rapid adoption of vaccine hesitancy across demographics as adverse events become undeniable and institutional denials lose credibilityIdeological capture of entertainment: Broadway and mainstream media using casting decisions as ideological statements rather than artistic merit, creating suspension-of-disbelief problemsGenerational shift in institutional trust: Younger cohorts showing greater willingness to question expert consensus after COVID experience, fragmenting institutional authorityMedical freedom movement gaining policy influence: Health freedom advocates now shaping federal vaccine policy under new administration, reversing decade-long expansion of mandates
Topics
Childhood Vaccine Schedule ReformFederal vs. State Health Authority ConflictsCOVID-19 Vaccine Safety and EfficacyScientism vs. Actual Scientific MethodInstitutional Credibility and TrustPolitical Tribalism in Health PolicyBiological Sex in Sports CompetitionMedical Mandates and Bodily AutonomyPharmaceutical Industry Influence on MedicineInstitutional Capture and Regulatory CapturePost-COVID Institutional ReckoningGender Ideology in Public InstitutionsVaccine Testing and Safety StandardsPolitical Polarization of Medical ScienceExpert Credibility and Public Communication
Companies
CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
Federal agency whose childhood vaccine schedule was revised to align with peer nations; subject of criticism for prev...
HHS (Department of Health and Human Services)
Federal agency directing vaccine schedule review under Trump administration; criticized by Governor Ferguson for poli...
Pfizer
Implied as part of pharmaceutical industry influence over pediatricians and regulatory bodies regarding vaccine manda...
People
Bob Ferguson
Washington State Governor and former Attorney General who imposed COVID vaccine mandates on state employees and now o...
Jamie Peterson
Washington State Senate Majority Leader who gave evasive response about biological sex differences in athletics, refu...
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
HHS Secretary directing vaccine schedule review; referenced as advocate for vaccine safety concerns and medical freedom
Tracy Beth Hogue
Co-author of CDC assessment comparing U.S. childhood vaccine schedule to peer nations; described as cautious institut...
Martin Koldorf
Co-author of CDC vaccine schedule assessment; characterized as institutional and cautious in approach to vaccine policy
Donald Trump
President who issued directive to review childhood vaccine schedule against peer nations; subject of debate over vacc...
Scott Adams
Dilbert creator who recently died; acknowledged being wrong about COVID vaccine decision and conceded anti-vaccine sk...
Anne Boleyn
Historical figure (1522-1536) whose role in English Reformation is being portrayed by Dylan Mulvaney in Broadway musi...
Henry VIII
Historical figure whose six wives are subjects of Broadway musical; Anne Boleyn's husband who ordered her execution
Queen Elizabeth I
Historical figure; daughter of Anne Boleyn and Henry VIII, important to English Reformation narrative
Dylan Mulvaney
Performer cast as Anne Boleyn in Broadway musical 'Six'; previously gained fame through TikTok content and Budweiser ...
Brandy Cruz
Journalist who asked Jamie Peterson direct question about biological sex differences in sports, forcing public response
Jay Inslee
Former Washington State Governor; compared to current Governor Ferguson as example of empty political rhetoric
Quotes
"The Centers for Disease Control has seen an exodus of scientific experts and alarming shifts in policy that place Washingtonians health at risk."
Bob Ferguson (video statement)•Early in episode
"The anti-vaxers clearly are the winners at this point and I think it will probably stay that way. You win. You are the winners."
Scott Adams•Near end of episode
"If you take testosterone as a woman, you can get stronger. But you cannot undo that with insane, dangerous, disruptive puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones."
Bret Weinstein•Mid-episode
"This man doesn't stand for science. He stands for authoritarianism. He stands for bullying."
Bret Weinstein (re: Governor Ferguson)•Mid-episode
"The point is, okay, they smuck one bias. And so the truth is impossible in the world you think you live in."
Bret Weinstein•Mid-episode
Full Transcript
Hey folks, welcome to the Dark Horse Podcast live stream. It is number 309. I am Dr. Brett Weinstein. You are Dr. Heather Hying. You are the special mid-January Saturday edition. A Saturday edition. It's kind of a throwback to when we used to do live streams on Saturday. And a throw forward because it won't be our last Saturday live stream. Yes, in the futures where we will do the next Saturday live stream. This one. That being the nature of next. The nature of next. The nature. Oh, that's a good title for something. The nature of next. No idea what it would be. But something 309 isn't even tough. No, it's pretty obvious. We're coming up on a couple of interesting primes. One of our supporters at locals pointed out to us some interesting primes coming up. So we'll get there. All right, remind me there's some interesting stuff that's come up about primes on the sort of eager to talk about it in light of the fact that you and I have been focused there for some time. But anyway, yeah, not primes. Not primes speaking of locals though. Joining us at the watch party is happening on locals right now. And tomorrow 11 a.m. Pacific for two hours. We'll have our monthly Sunday Q and A for local supporters only. The question asking period is open now closes after this live stream. Join us there. Anything else to say at the top there today? We're going to talk about science. Science. Science. And experts and expertise and the failure of both. And what I think is soon going to be the next big hit on Broadway. I should have to think. Yes, that one I made a point of not telling you about. So I'm going to make you guess. Oh, God. Yeah, all right. No, I'm not guessing. That's going to take me a little while to get into a cynical enough mode to beat you in the ballpark. We're going to talk about the state of science right here in Washington state for a bit. First, so if that's not going to increase your cynicism, I don't know what is the Washington state of science. Yeah. Yeah. Well, in this case, the state of Washington state of science, not the nation's capital, Washington state of science, but but but related because here we have our our executive governor Bob Ferguson arguing with the orders coming down from the nation's executive with regard to some changes to, for instance, the back the childhood vaccine schedule. Amazing. Okay. Well, Bob Ferguson is up and my guess is when it comes to disappointing, he doesn't fail to disappoint. Yeah, it's unfortunate, but there we are. All right. Let's pay the rent first and start the episode with three. As usual, three ads are at the top for sponsors who make products in this case, all three are products that we truly stand by and for. These are excellent products, all of them. The first is sauna space, which makes amazing sonas and therapeutic lights. Several years ago, I started looking into sonas, both traditional infrared, having found that they were delightful in many places that you could you could access them and thought that maybe we could bring one into our own home. I found a morass of information you will remember this. We both went looking and then red light therapy became popular and the glut of products and claims became even more confusing is the product effective. How long does it take to heat up? What frequencies does this actually produce? Does it emit harmful electromagnetic radiation? The only product that I found that clearly lived up to its scientific and health claims was sauna space. This was long before they were a sponsor of ours. These combines visible red light and near infrared to provide deep, radiant heat for whole body results at home. This is no harsh LED panel nor a giant wooden box. 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No toxic loser plastics, no off-gassing, and the grounding mat and optional silver lining upgrade blocks environmental EMFs like Wi-Fi to enhance healing. You get a 100 day home trial and outstanding customer service. Take your wellness to the next level with sauna space. Dark horse listeners can get an exclusive 10% off-site wide when you shop at sauna.space-dark horse. That's S-A-U-N-A dot space slash dark horse. Discount will be automatically applied. I'll check out. I will just say the quality of the materials and a degree to which they are well thought out is really impressive. It looks good. It is well built and things like no glues in the interface between the metal rods, I mean the metal joining pieces and the wooden rods that support the thing, you know, having no glue in there makes sense because what would off-gas if there was. So anyway, really, really nicely made products. The term you used last time, I think, was the fit and finish. Fit and finish. It really is. Yeah. Okay. It is not eaten by dung beetles anywhere, but I'm kind of there we go. Our second sponsor today is mosa chips. These are so good. Mosa makes ridiculously delicious chips with only three simple real-hole ingredients. Organic, next to the lized corn, sea salt and 100% grass-fed beef talo. Mosa chips are made the way that all of our food used to be made. They're fried 100% beef talo, no seed oils ever. You can taste the difference and your body can feel the difference. This health is declining fast. Chronic illnesses, obesity, outer immune diseases have exploded. What changed? Lots of things changed, but one thing that changed is that all chips and fries used to be cooked and talo. But in the 1990s, corporations switched to cheaper seed oils, which includes soybean, canola, sunflower, and corn. Seed oils are often labeled vegetable oils, as if that makes them healthy. Well, in fact, seed oils are linked to metabolic health issues and inflammation. 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I also love their blue chips, which have a deeper, nutty flavor and a serious crunch. They've also got hatch chili, cobanero, these guys, lime, original, and wait for a churro with cinnamon. Ready to give mosa a try? Go to mosa chips.com slash dark horse and use code dark horse for 20% off your, nope, 25% off your first order. That's mosa chips.com slash dark horse and code dark horse for 25% off your first order. And if you don't feel like ordering online, starting in October, a muscle will be available nationwide at Sprout Supermarkets. Stop by and pick up a bag before they're gone. I've been in kind of a lime phase. You've been in a lime phase? I was in a lime phase for a little bit, and when, so I was away, um, um, with my mom in California for this last week. That's why we're doing sensitive Wednesday. And when I got back, one of the first things I did was opened up a bag of lime mosa chips. See, there it is. They're really good. Yeah. Now, our final sponsor, Heather, is clear. Clear is a nasal spray that supports respiratory health. And it's a product that we have been using for quite a while. It's made by a company with which we are well familiar. It's clear that X L E A R pronounced clear. Now I will say we back all of the companies that sponsor our podcast. I do not necessarily stand by this spelling. I find it, I find it confusing. Throughout history, improvements, excellent product, questionable spelling. It, the product is so good, you look past the spelling. That's the way it works. But, you know, obviously the reason for it is, and you'll get here in the ad read here, is that the act of ingredient is xylitol, which doesn't sound like it starts with an X, but it does. And so clear also starts with an X and doesn't sound like it does. Yes, but in the interest of full consistency, I also don't support the spelling of xylitol. So, yeah, do you like it to start with a C? Wow. That is cruel. You're causing a dyslexia flare up. Hopefully I'll be able to read this ad without it interfering too much. Throughout history, improvements in sanitation and hygiene have had huge impacts on human longevity and quality of life. More so than traditional medical advances. For instance, when doctors started to wash their hands between handling cadavers and helping women give birth, the rate of maternal deaths went way down. Breathing polluted air and drinking tainted water have hugely negative effects on human health. Clean up the air and water and people get healthier. Nasal hygiene often gets overlooked, but consider that the majority of bacteria and viruses that make a sick enter through the mouth or nose. It has become a cultural norm to wash your hands in order to help stop the spread of disease from person to person, but it's rare that you get sick through our hands. Rather, we get sick through our mouth and nose. Thus, it makes sense that we should be using something that we know blocks bacterial and viral adhesion in the nose. Enter clear. That's xyl-e-a-r. See? I've teaching myself. Clear is a nasal spray that contains xylitol, a five-carbon sugar alcohol. Our bodies naturally contain five carbon sugars, mostly in the form of ribose and deoxyribose, which are the backbone of sugars like RNA and DNA, respectively. While most of our dietary sugars have six carbons, sugars like glucose, the emphasis is all wrong. While most of our dietary sugars have six carbons, like glucose and fructose. Xylitol is known to reduce how sticky bacteria and viruses are to our tissues. In the presence of xylitol, bacteria and viruses, including streps, SARS-CoV-2 and RSV, don't adhere to our airways as well, which helps our bodies' natural defense mechanisms usually easily flush them away. Clear is a simple nasal spray that you use morning and evening. It takes just three seconds. It's fast. It's easy and decidedly healthy. If any of this sounds familiar, perhaps you'll listen to my conversation with Nathan Jones, founder of Clear on the inside rail in November of 2024. Or my conversation with Nate's father, Lawn Jones, osteopath and inventor of Clear on how xylitol interacts with respiratory viruses. That episode was in May of 2025. We recommend those conversations and we highly recommend Clear as a daily habit and prophylactic against respiratory illnesses. That's clear with an xyl-e-a-r, get Clear online or at your pharmacy grocery store, or a natural products retailer and start taking six seconds each day to improve your nasal hygiene and support your respiratory health. I will also say these people have been fantastically supportive of the health freedom movement and I was shocked once I became aware of this product and how readily available it is. Yeah, actually while I was in California with my mom this last week, I went into a CVS to get her. It was not only readily available, but the imitations are already out. By Clear, xyl-e-a-r, and recognize that it is effective enough and already popular enough that the mainstream drug stores are putting out impostors. All right, well, hopefully the impostors are spelled even worse. All right, I think it's time for us to talk about science and its competitors. Yes, science, scientism, all the science. Yes, why don't we start with, so in response to recent changes to the childhood vaccine schedule put out by HAJS as then publicized by the CDC and ultimately of course coming from the executive branch of the United States. Several governors, including our very own right here in the state of Washington, Bob Ferguson, freaked out and let us show this video. This is actually a video in a tweet that Governor Ferguson and the state of Washington himself put out explaining what he was going to do in response. The Centers for Disease Control has seen an exodus of scientific experts and alarming shifts in policy that place Washingtonians health at risk. I immediately took action and teamed up with other governors to form the West Coast Health Alliance. The Alliance ensures Washingtonians will continue to receive responsible recommendations from health experts who rely on you guessed it, science. But we are not stopping there. I'm proud to partner with insurance commissioner Kuterer and a bipartisan group of legislators, Senator Cleveland, Representative Rynoski, and Senator Harris to shift vaccine recommendations away from science denying federal committees and place it with our own washing state Department of Health which will be guided by you guessed it again, science. Unfortunately, our governor doesn't seem to know what the word means. Let me just begin. There's a lot to say here including how he behaved during COVID. He's only been the governor of the state of Washington since January 2025, but he was the attorney general of the state of Washington since 2012 and therefore the attorney general during all of COVID. And he has quite a direct record. But before we get there, let's see what he's responding to. So here, if you can see my screen, go ahead and show it here. Here is what the official document put out by the federal government on January 2nd, 2026, the assessment of the U.S. childhood and adolescent immunization schedule compared to other countries. This was as part of the announcement that the CDC's childhood vaccination schedule would be changed. And I'm just going to end it's by Tracy Beth Hogue and Martin Kooldorf. Both names that people familiar with our course will also be familiar with. And I'm just going to read the first four paragraphs of the executive summary. On December 5th, 2025, President Trump issued a presidential memorandum directing the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, HHS, that's Kennedy, of course. And the acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the CDC, to review best practices from peer developed nations regarding childhood vaccination recommendations and the scientific evidence underlying those practices. The president instructed them to update the U.S. core childhood vaccine schedule if they determine that superior practices exist abroad. This assessment is a scientific evidence-based data-driven response to the president's directive. It argues that a change in the U.S. childhood vaccine schedule is necessary. It compares the U.S. with peer nations, examines vaccine update and trust, addresses clinical and epidemiological considerations and knowledge gaps, analyzes vaccine mandates, and outlines recommendations and next steps for immediate and long-term action. The U.S. is a global outlier among peer nations, the number of target diseases included in its childhood vaccination schedule, and in the total number of recommended vaccine doses. The acting CDC director should immediately consider, and this is now happened. This is what happens in this next paragraph here is what Governor Ferguson in Washington is responding to. The acting CDC director should immediately consider updating the childhood immunization schedule to keep vaccines for 10 diseases. Miesel's Mumps, Rebellhapolio, Pratussis, Tetanus, Tephtheria, Hemophilis, Influenza, Type B, Hibb, Newococcal disease, and Human Papaloma virus, HPV, for which peer developed nations share international consensus, as well as Vericella, chickenpox, the consensus vaccines, and the category of vaccines recommended for all children. These consensus vaccines will represent the core childhood vaccine schedule. This report does not subsequently, substantively address the consensus vaccines. All other vaccines currently on the U.S. schedule, the non-consensus vaccines, should be recommended for high-risk groups and populations and or through shared clinical decision-making by taking individual patient characteristics into account. Figure one, no vaccine should be moved to the not recommended category. This is tiny. Let me see if I can make it bigger for us. Oops, that didn't mark here. Why don't you give me my screen back here? Well, I figured out how to make my computer comply. So while I'm doing that, Brett, if you have anything to add, go for it. I will just say note that. Note how many vaccines, how many diseases are still being vaccinated against on the recommended childhood vaccine schedule by the CDC? And I'm about to pull up the list, but they have, again, not taken, not even taken away from availability. They've just moved to, you are allowed to decide for yourself, and of course we are always allowed to decide for ourselves. That is part of what the health freedom movement is fighting for, but let me find the list of things that are not included here, which for some reason isn't showing up. All right, let me just say first, I got it. Tracy Beth Hogue and Martin Koldorf are in no way extreme. These people are institutional in orientation and cautious in a direction that frankly, I think is a bit troubling in the sense that the presumption that there is value in these vaccines and in light of the way in which they're tested that the consensus of Western nations should somehow be guiding us, I think is actually incorrect. But nonetheless, the point is our governor is responding to people who are cautious in his direction, and he is treating them as if they are zealots or cranks and nothing could be further from the truth. So first of all, I don't get the sense from our governor that he has a deep feeling about anything. Well, this is a posture. This is absolutely true. And the idea that by comparing what we're doing to our pure nations, with whom when you compare our children's health, we clearly come out badly. And trying to come into greater alignment with nations that are peers with regard to also being weird, also being Western educated industrialized rich and democratic, all with issues associated with those words, that that is somehow going against science. So he's saying that Denmark is an anti-scientific country that most of Western Europe are actively going against science. And how is it then that those countries who are apparently ignorant of Bob Ferguson's special science have children who are healthier than ours? So here we have following these recommendations as we just read from Hogan Kooldorf, the Childhood Immunization Schedule by Recommendation Group, including the ones that I just read, immunizations still recommended for all children, which is, as you say, quite conservative, quite a lot. There are many people who would say this list is far too long, far too long. But okay, these, all of these, D-Tap and T-Dap, Depthuria, Tetanus and Ishala Pratossus and Musinsmumps and Rebellum and Varicella and several others are still on the recommended schedule for for children. Recommended now only for certain high-risk groups of populations, include RSV and HEP-P and Dengue and Maninja Kalkal and HEP-E. And immunizations based on shared clinical decision making, that is not inherently recommended for anyone, but any parent who, frankly, has come to a bad decision and decided that their child needs such a thing, can continue to get rotavirus COVID-19 influenza and still, I'm not sure why this, why HEP-E, HEP-E, M and Jococular should be coming to both lists. So I'm going to put that aside, I'm not sure what the details are there, but they've got basically flu and COVID vaccines on the you and your doctor and your God can make this decision for yourself, for your child, but the CDC is no longer offered a recommendation one way or the other. And the idea that this warrants a statement from a governor who clearly doesn't know what science is, that he's going to stand by science and make sure that all Washingtonians are healthy due to a healthy dose of scientism is frankly alarming. He's the one we should be alarmed by, not anything coming out of HHS in the last in this month. So what he is doing is he is, Governor Ferguson, Governor Ferguson, he is picking up on a decades-long propaganda campaign that misled a lot of people, including you and me, into imagining that these things had a net health benefit that was not demonstrated and imagining that they had been safety tested such that the likelihood of them doing harm was vanishingly small, which it isn't. So that propaganda campaign was a big investment by Pharma and the idea that with the Trump administration moving against the vaccine recklessness that has overtaken our medical establishment, that the right thing to do is to do the opposite of whatever Trump is doing is, as you point out, the exact inverse of science. And I will also just say, I think I've hinted at it before, but there is a growing consensus amongst the policy oriented people in the health freedom movement that we don't want to take your vaccines, you should be free to choose. Right. I don't agree with this. We have things like a CDC in order to protect us from bad decisions in a medical realm. Either we should allow a free for all and we should warn patients, hey, you can have anything you want, but a lot of it, probably almost all of it, isn't any good for you at all, right? That's not my position. And it's not that we don't have policies that prevent people from taking some of what they want. Well, that's my point. Well, pharmacies exist, and you have to have a script from a doc to get the stuff in the pharmacies. So the point is, we've decided to regulate things at the point you find out that Bobby Kennedy and Toby Rogers are right that these things were never tested with the process that would be necessary to demonstrate their safety. The answer is there's only one rational thing to do, which is full pause. Why is choice bad? Because some people are gullible. And if you have a gullible parent, you don't deserve to have a vaccine injury because your doctor was persuasive or your parent didn't know what questions to ask where they were nervous about being the first time parent or whatever it is. But I think that's what he's doing here. I think that's what Governor Ferguson is doing here is creating alarm and fear in response to a very, very conservative slow. Okay, we're going to take a few things off the childhood vaccine schedule given that we've noticed that no one else is doing the crazy stuff we're doing. And our childhood vaccine schedule exploded over the last 10 and 20 and 30 and 40 years. So if he responds with this kind of hysterical anti-scientific, pro-scientistic rhetoric to a very conservative set of recommendations, what he is trying to do is get parents, basically up in arms, presumably not actually. But parents up in arms to decry the craziness that is happening and to get them to even more unquestioningly simply vaccinate their children with any drug that a doctor or a pharmaceutical company presents them with. Well, if I can briefly detour into a thought about the political landscape that sets this in motion. I've become, I mean, you and I are lifelong liberals traumatized by the state of nominal liberals, the state of the Democratic Party. And the state. And well, period. Indeed. And I should just say people need to understand that the state of Washington is really too sensitive. I meant the nation state, like the whole, the state that is traumatized by state. State power turns out to be tremendously dangerous. It's not that there's not governance that needs to be done, but inevitably it seems to fall into the hands of people who don't do that governance and do something else with that power. But state of Washington is two states. You could say the same thing about the state of Oregon. There's the western part of the state, the wet part of the state in which Seattle and Tacoma exist. And then there's the eastern part of the state. And they're politically not alike. And so what is what is happening? Eastern Washington's politics is much more like that of Idaho. Right. And what happens is the demographics of the state mean that Seattle effectively dictates not only the city policy, but the state policy because it is large enough to sway state level elections. So in effect, what you have is a kind of democratic party tyranny being inflicted on those of us in the state who know better because Seattle is a large population center. And I can't complain about that at the level of democracy. That's how democracy works. But we are divided. And the idea that they're going to treat this federal move as tyranny. And they're going to impose some sort of state level tyranny in order to compensate for the fact that the federal tyranny is actually being relaxed by this administration is everything is turned on its head. And the point I wanted to make about liberalism is this. As we have become alarmed about the propaganda and the political direction of the blue team, which has in effect embraced the inverse of all of the values that you and I grew up with. One of the things that has become apparent is that blue team voters, people who really resonate with the democratic party seem to have a diminished ability to recognize that some belief that they held turned out not to be right. In other words, they have a kind of un falsifiable mindset where they come to believe that something is this. Do you think that's special to blue team? I think I don't I guess I don't know that we have evidence that it's special to blue team. I see ample evidence of what you're talking about on the blue team. But I don't know that we have seen recently, you know, major errors. I mean, there's been plenty of chaos obviously at the federal level in the last year and in the last nine years and like all the time. But it feels to me that there are there are lots of my team no matter what they do players on both sides. Oh, there are lots of partisans who aren't doing an analysis. They may be presenting something as an analysis that isn't one. And frankly, the idea of both sides is complicating here because I think there really is a blue team and there isn't really a red team. The red team is at the moment a battle between several different factions, right? It's a battle between the old GOP, MAGA, MAHA, right? There's tension there. But I do find much more self-reflection on that side about what we got wrong, what we didn't get wrong. Well, and it's also, I mean, this is an old point that has been made by many people, but because the media and higher ed, like the media and education have been effectively owned and run by team blue for so long, team red, people on team red are simply more familiar with hearing opposing arguments and become more comfortable knowing that there are people who think differently in the world from them and that not the entire world doesn't look like them. Whereas if, if you are on the blue team and you live in a blue city, in a blue state, and you watch corporate media and you read corporate media and you go to public schools, there's a very good chance that you just never run into anyone who doesn't think like you do or at least who doesn't say it aloud. And so you come to find it easy to demonize those people, to imagine that they are the boogie man in the corner, which is, it's a bizarre and frankly really sad irony that it's exactly those people who then claim things like in this house, everything's about inclusiveness and diversity. It's like, you know, you're the people who actually only know the world that you have created instead of actually recognizing the beautiful diversity of experiences and thoughts that humans have across the planet. No, I think this is quite right that effectively the blue team is better able to create an impenetrable echo chamber where people inside the echo chamber will actually do the bidding of the echo chamber and they will fend off anything that might, you know, this is why we get the attacks that we get, right? You know, the one I'm constantly complaining about is, you know, if you can't see that Breton Heather are, you know, scientific know nothings and hacks, I can't help you. That kind of accusation isn't going to work for anybody who's spent time listening to us. It's obviously just not accurate, but if you're trying to decide whether to listen to us, it's enough to make you think as you begin to hear something that we say that sounds reasonable to you, the point is, oh, am I being tricked? So, you second-guess yourself and you won't listen and so that thing where you've got like, you know, well, I pay attention to to many different news sources. Well, they're not really many different news sources. You're paying attention to one news source that has many different massed heads. And so you get the sense that you're broad-minded and you're consulting different perspectives. And anytime something shows up, the challenge is that, you know, there'll be a ready-made op-ed that will tell you why it's preposterous or you know why that person is insane. So anyway, whatever the mechanism is that does it at the moment, the blue team voters have not discovered that they have been wrong. It doesn't, they have an unfalsifiable mindset that causes them to do exactly what Governor Ferguson is doing here, which is if they're doing it, then we must do the inverse, right? If they want to close the border, then we should open it completely, right? That kind of mindset. And yeah, instead of analytics, it's contrarianism. And the thing that was so maddening during COVID that is now maddening in the same way on the larger question of vaccines is nothing should be less partisan than this. Every single American should be able to agree we want the vaccine schedule that increases the quality and length of life for the maximum number of people. We may differ over what we expect that to look like. Some of us might expect it to have very few vaccines on it, some of us might expect it to have even more than the schedule from a year ago. But we shouldn't disagree over whether that would be a good thing. And at some level, we effectively do. Somebody has already decided the more vaccines, the better. And we're gonna push in that direction and anybody who's pushing in the other direction is obviously doing so because they are callous about the health of people or because they're stupid or something like that. And it's like, we need a moment at which we are able to shake people with an unfalcified, well mindset, vital appellate and say, you know, wake up, you actually need to participate in an analytical process. That's right. And it will lead you somewhere very different than you are. Yes. That is exactly right. So you may not remember. In fact, we weren't in Washington during most of COVID. We were in Oregon. And so Bob Ferguson was not our attorney general for four years between 2018 and 2022. And it turns out that one of the things that he did during COVID as attorney general, which he had been since 2012 and only became not the attorney general but instead the governor of the state of the state. And the governor of state of Washington in 2025 was imposing and forcing COVID vaccine mandates on his employees. And so here you can actually, you can show my screen here. This is from an organization called the Silent Majority Foundation. And they do a lot of work in support of the second amendment and supportive free speech in support of medical freedom among other things. Here's the medical freedom page, including some of the cases that they have brought, one of which is Hanson versus Ferguson. And I'm just going to read their blurb about this still open, I believe, case on December 3, 2024. Silent Majority Foundation filed a lawsuit on behalf of 10 former employees of the Washington State Office of the Attorney General. Challenging the Attorney General Office's adoption and implementation of policy 1.58, which was titled simply vaccination. Our plaintiffs were required by AGO Policy 1.58 to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 as a condition of their employment while the policy provided the option to request accommodations or modifications for employees with disabilities, health conditions, or religious beliefs, none received accommodation. Attorney General Bob Ferguson took an oath to support the United States Constitution and the Washington State Constitution, both of which he has violated. And the Silent Majority Foundation stands with our courageous plaintiffs who are taking a stand against Bob Ferguson. Now I looked through a certain amount of these documents. And if I can see my screen again here, including the declarations from several of the plaintiffs, several of the 10 plaintiffs, I didn't read all of any of them, nor did I read all of them, but I read some of many of them. And you have, for instance, Stacey B and Natalia C, who were entirely teleworkers, never went into an office at all, but were denied vaccine and, and at least one of their cases, I think both they were longstanding Christians with obvious reason to make a stand for religious exemptions. They didn't get their exemptions. They literally never saw face to face any of their co-workers. They refused to get vaccinated and they were fired. This was under Attorney General Bob Ferguson, now the governor of the state of Washington, the very man who claims that we shall bring science back to the state of Washingtonians so that they can be healthy again. Firing people who work entirely remotely for not getting a shot that is not only not effective, but actually dangerous is not exactly a scientific approach. Is it even if, even if those COVID vaccinations were actually effective against a disease that was actually more dangerous than, and it turns out to have been, even if both of those things have been true, which they are not. Forcing people who work entirely remotely and have never yet and are never expected to come into an office to get a vaccine that they have a legitimate reason to request an exemption from is utterly insane. This man doesn't stand for science. He stands for authoritarianism. He stands for bullying. He stands for trust in experts, for deferring your own thought and analytics and agency and autonomy over to other people so that what, so that he can get on with whatever else he's doing. It has nothing to do with science. I see no evidence that anything he has done has to do with science. And in general, I wouldn't go after an attorney for not understanding science, but he did this to himself. He's standing up and claiming that he's going to be bringing science back to the state of Washington and he's completely full of crap. Yes. Not only is his perspective completely unscientific, but that particular piece of tyranny is obviously a violation of Nuremberg, even in the most narrow interpretation, because what Nuremberg says is that when you have an experimental remedy, you have an absolute right, A, to be fully informed, which we were not, and B, to decide whether or not to consent to it. The government cannot force you to do this, and we hanged seven doctors over these violations. So, you know, this is obviously a tyrant who's pretending to be... Doesn't look like a tyrant, though how could he possibly be a tyrant? And he looks so soft and doughy. He does. And of course, he's not his own tyrant. He is, of course, a political animal, like the guy... Like his predecessor? Yes. Like Inslee. An empty shirt spewing the propaganda as if he feels this way passionately, where the point is, no, his team has decided to do this. Why presumably we could chase it down to large donations from people who stand to lose hundreds of billions of dollars if we decide to back off this insane commitment to vaccinations that were never tested for safety. Well, and it's... It's... It's... It's far easier to have a political platform based on contrarianism than on analysis. You know, if your entire position is going to be... We reject what the other side says, then you're going to impose vaccine mandates in 2021. And you're going to reject a reduction in the recommended childhood vaccines that the CDC is making in 2026. That's what you're going to do if you're not responding with... with careful conscious thought, but instead with, oh, they said that then we say this. It's... It's the opposite of, like, human conscious thoughtful analysis. It's robotic. It's automatic. It's... And it's dangerous. And, you know, we've seen it before. We've seen the cynicism in this before. I'm trying to remember, Eric Topol participated in delaying the vaccine campaign so that it would not be deployed under Trump and then advocated for, you know, inflicting it on people because of a false claim that it was somehow essential to ending the pandemic. It's just... It's simply reactionary. And the fact is, you know, at the moment, we are having trouble convincing President Trump of the extent of the danger of the mRNA shots. Right? So when he changes his position, will they then flip theirs because the one thing they know is that if Trump believes that they don't, like, it has to be a process. No, but you just said we... Like, the Maha movement is having trouble convincing him. So at the moment, the blue team and Trump are on the same side. So I think you won't... Like, that flip... That's a rare case of alignment. In part, you know, the timing of COVID and the release of the mRNA vaccines was as... You know, we remember, and most people here will remember, very strange indeed that you had in, like, October, November of 2020, Kamala Harris, who was then running as VP, arguing that if these vaccines got... Got accepted under Trump, that she would certainly not take them. And then as soon as the Biden-Harris ticket took the White House, then suddenly their Democrat shots, which makes no sense. Like, the shots are not political. You know, the thing is the thing. But they did... They did flip their position then, based on who could claim ownership of them. But they haven't... They somehow, they haven't managed to flip it back. And, you know, of course, it's been predicted for a long time that once we, whatever, like collectively, MAHA, mRNA skeptical we, managed to convince enough people of the truth that... That technology is both not safe and not effective. At some point, you may find team blue, erasing history, revisioning history, and being like, yeah, but that was a Trump thing. Yeah. But, you know, the longer... The longer the time is that elapses between now and then I think the less likely they'll be able to pull that off. Like, who knows how this will be written. You know, we're still... It still feels like a very active fight to those of us who are trying to, you know, reduce the childhood vaccine schedule for the safety of American children. And make sure that new vaccines aren't using the mRNA platform. But for many people who went along during COVID, they already think this is... They want it to be remote history that they never have to think about again, because they don't want to look at themselves in the mirror. And there is no reckoning. They felt like they had to be a reckoning, and they surely would be a reckoning, and there seems to be no reckoning by and large. And you have... Governor Ferguson standing up from pretending to be pro-science when he's a... Scientist buffoon. Not a scientific guy. Yeah, not in the slightest. It feels to me like there's a trick that has been played, and I think it actually goes back to your point about the difference. If you've been a conservative, then you've been forced to confront all sorts of liberal arguments, good, bad, and otherwise. And so the point is you're sort of forced to have a broader mindset because you just don't have an industrial strength mechanism for... You can have to contend with your own blind spot sometimes. Yeah. You're at least going to have them pointed out to you. Well, I just wonder... I just wonder if the trick is not a version of repulsion. If you're a blue team true believer, and it begins to dawn on you that something that you're being told doesn't actually add up, then you immediately fast forward to what happens if you confess your doubts, and you think, oh, all of these people who like me will instantly stop because that's what they do. And then the question is, will anybody like me? Yes, who? Those awful people. Right? You don't want to be liked by them. That's what that basket of deplorables... They don't have nice cocktail parties. Right, they have evil cocktail parties. They have cocktail parties you'd be embarrassed to go to. They cook outside. They do sometimes. But that idea that you've got a cartoon of who's on the other side. Yeah. And so you can't even fathom even if I did believe that what next? But I mean, this reminds me very much of what we went through in 2017 with Evergreen, where you're called a racist, and then I'm called a racist. And there's a whole bunch of people who've never met us before. It's like, oh, God, they got called a racist. They must be racists. And you and I doesn't take long to look inside like, yep, not, still not, definitely not. Huh, okay. I know it's not true. Huh. Well, this is interesting what I'm seeing. I got called this thing that was patently not true. And in some cases, there are people actively lying. And in some cases, there are just people sheeping it up and you know, following along. And they're all wrong. And it didn't destroy me. Still standing. What a lot of interesting people are on this side of the looking glass. And so that's what we started saying through the looking glass you go when you actually just hold your own and say, well, I am still the same person I was. And some of what I think I know may change. I hope that continues to be true throughout my life. But at this moment, this thing where I went through the looking glass, nothing changed about me. It was my understanding of how the rest of you are making decisions and who you decide your friends are. And if that's how you decide who your friends are, and you're going to pick based on who's in power right now, I don't want you as my friends. Like if if you're only choosing teams based on power, you're dangerous and shallow both. And you know, not unfortunately, that's a lot of who we are all contending with the dangerous and the shallow. But I guess to those who are still in the shadows who are, you know, who are questioning the dominant paradigm who are looking at Ferguson. It's talking about sciences. If he knows anything going, God, I don't think that guy knows anything. And gosh, it does seem like getting our childhood vaccine schedule more aligned with say that of Western Europe might make sense because their kids appear to be healthier. What is he on about? I guess I'm I and I think we are here to tell you that when you do stand up, yeah, you take a lot of crap for sure. But when you go through that looking glass, there is a relief and a release of tension around all the things that you were not saying. And you start to find the people who are actually honest brokers about their own values and commitments to the world as opposed to people who are simply making sure that everyone sounds the same because that that appearance of homogeneity is just that it isn't appearance. And there's plenty of people who believe the way Ferguson is telling us all we all need to believe, but there are many more than it appears who don't. And going through the looking glass and realizing that it doesn't kill you, it actually frees you and makes you stronger and a more sort of joyous and purposeful person is incredibly fantastic. And I recommend it. Two things. First, I want to just correct that story a little bit the way you've told it. We didn't know who the others were and the fact is you and I have been good about making common cause with religious people and conservators. We didn't know who what others were. You represented that when we got called racist, we discovered that the other part wasn't crazy. No, I certainly didn't mean to say that at all. It was that people became these are the people who became friends and community, whereas we had not been in the midst of them before. Well, it's certainly kicked into high gear at that point, but lots of people weren't willing to interact with conservatives or religious folks or whatever and that wasn't us. Of course not. So anyway, I just wanted to fix that on. Now, my other point had to do with. Looks like propaganda, maybe. No, it was an earlier point. It didn't. That was an earlier point. I'm trying to remember, had to do with Ferguson and his particular brand of scientism, but I've lost it for the moment. Well, he does, he does like to sound important and science sounds important. So it's not that surprising that he would use science as a weapon. With which to sound important, but it. It's a real shame and it's bad. It's very bad for actual science and for what those of us who are trying to make sense of the world scientifically are trying to do because there are a lot of. Otherwise smart people who are seeing this kind of garbage, mostly people on the right and who are concluding, okay, that's it. No science for me. Thank you. And in that way, who wins? No one wins. We like, we all lose when people turn away from science because it's being wielded by people who don't know what it is. So I remember what my point was, which is that somebody should pose to him immediately after he goes on this tirade, ostensibly defending science. When in fact, he is defending, scientific. The science you speak of does it recommend the COVID shots for healthy people. Now he's going to say, obviously does become, I mean, that's that's why I bring up his history as a training general. Right, but you could have changed his mind, but he hasn't. Why? Because the official recommendations still are in favor of these shots and have not made eye contact with the absolute horror show that they actually are and the fact that since they don't block transmission, there was never any justification for forcing these things on anybody. And certainly there was never any argument for healthy people and in light of what they actually do to your physiology, there's a strong argument against them for everybody. Point is in 2026, you are a champion of science. You are trying to put those vaccines on a Washington schedule that are being taken off the schedule by the CDC because of your commitment to science. Hey, Bob, tell me about the COVID shots. You want those for people as well, or are you willing to admit that that was a mistake? And the answer is you will admit no such mistake and failing to admit that almost anybody since nobody's taking these COVID shots since everybody's figured out how dangerous they are. Most people are not admitting to themselves that that's why they're not taking the shots, but the shots have extremely low penetrance at the moment, even though COVID is still circulating. Yep. So in light of that, your average person walking around not getting COVID shots is aware there's a problem with them. Will Bob Ferguson admit it? He will not. What does that tell you about his proclamations about science? It tells you that they're garbage. They're just something they're a posture, a political posture. They tell you nothing about what he would do, you know, for his own children. If they were being offered these shots, they don't tell you a thing. So anyway, one of the small, bright points about politics in the state of Washington is that our stuff shirts are not compelling. Right. You can look right through their paper thin, right? And so in light of that, we are on the one hand that says bad things about the population of the state that we will elect these empty shirts. On the other hand, it is nice that they're not like super geniuses and rhetorical. Or even just Kevin Gavin Newsom, who I've never been compelled by, did strike a figure. He was charismatic in a sort of a way for a while. I mean, I think even most Californians now are like, what the hell is up with this guy? But he's harder to immediately dismiss because he has rhetorical skills and charisma. Yeah. He is skilled and he is smart and he is therefore much more dangerous than these herbivorous known of things that we elect up here in the damper parts of the West Coast. I mean, seriously, the degree to which Ferguson doesn't look so you think maybe if we just take him out to a steakhouse, things will improve. They might he might have a deficiency. It's not it's not beyond the realm of possibility. Yeah. But just the degree to which my reaction seeing this guy and I haven't spent a lot of time hearing him or looking at him. But it's like, okay, I knew Inslee. I even met Inslee once. And my thought was that is nothing but a stuffed shirt. There's not like a human being in there. This is a person. There's a scriptwriter. He might as well be a robot. Right? We found another one. That's not that easy to do to find somebody who has no convictions whatsoever and can read the script without stumbling. But mean nothing probably doesn't even know what he just read. He just knows that that's his job to deliver it as if he thinks it's true. And you know, it's interesting that we found another. It is. Meanwhile, also in the state of Washington, also among elected officials. We have the majority leader in the state Senate, a guy named Jamie Peterson, who was responding to, well, let's you have this video to pull up. Let's let's check this guy out. So this is out of Seattle. Being asked about men and women. Men and women. Yes, men and women as if those were two different things. Well, yes, precisely. Senator Peterson, you said at the beginning that one of the key priorities for Senate Democrats would be to make sure science is respected. Can you acknowledge that there are biological differences between men and women that would give boys a physical advantage over girls in athletics? No, I don't think I could say that definitively, first of all, I'm not a, that I don't have the scientific expertise to be able to weigh in on that based on what I know. A lot of many of the kids who participate in athletics, who are transgender, are taking puberty blockers, are taking hormones that probably change the scientific balance about competitiveness. So I don't have the tools or the training to be able to weigh in and offer a scientific conclusion about that. But I think that there is some reason to be skeptical of that claim. Thank you. Would you be willing to make that a requirement? We need to move on. Sorry, we need to move on. Bill. I'm just going to repeat what he said. Yeah, I transcribed it. This is Jimmy Peterson, state senator out of Seattle, a majority leader, Democrat, stay washed and quote, many of the kids who participate in athletics, who are transgender, are taking puberty blockers, are taking hormones that probably change the scientific balance about competitiveness. So I don't have the tools or the training to be able to weigh in and offer a scientific conclusion about that. That's an amazing evasion. I mean, at some level, I just wanted to present that and it is what it is. What era are we living in? You could argue that what Ferguson is responding to and the previous story that we were talking about is vaguely nuanced. Right, that how did we get to a childhood vaccine schedule that was so full? If not because there was evidence to support it, we know this isn't true. But how did we get there if there wasn't evidence to support it? So diminishing it could be seen as a move in the wrong direction. You know, none of that is true, but there's at least a few little logical steps that you need to keep in your head at a time to understand why. Putting our childhood vaccine schedule in greater alignment with that of healthier weird nations of Western Europe is a good move for the health of our children. I never would have predicted when we met in 1985 or when we were in grad school 1995 or when we were teaching it evergreen in 2005 or 2015, that we could have arrived here. That the same people who were talking about needing to rely more on science then defer to the expertise of off camera experts to decide whether or not males and females are in fact different. And possibly again, many of the kids who participate in athletics who are transgender, he says, are taking purity blockers or taking hormones that probably change the scientific balance about competitiveness. It doesn't change the underlying truth. If you take testosterone as a woman, you can get stronger. If you take estrogen and progesterone as a man, you will likely get somewhat weaker. But the developmental and indecanological environment in which you come of age at puberty and through puberty defines what your skeleton looks like, what your how your muscles are arranged, what kinds of muscles you have. And you cannot undo that with insane, dangerous, disruptive, purity blockers and cross-ex hormones. You can mess with yourself for sure. You can make yourself less of what you could have been be that a man or a woman. You can make yourself less of a man and you can make yourself less of a woman. But that doesn't mean that you have equalized and made yourself the other thing. It's not possible. We can't do that. We are mammals. There is no sex change in mammals. End of story cannot happen. No. So you said that the governor and the vaccine story is more nuanced and just well, I don't think it's nuance, but I do think it's something. It takes a little bit of, it takes a lot actually for one reason, which is, and I've been struggling for a way to say this such that it lands and carries the proper connotations. But the thing that caused you and me not to understand the hazard that our children were exposed to as we went to the wellness visits and got the vaccines for them was that what turns out to be true. Is impossible in the world that we thought we lived in. If the systems that we understood these vaccines to have been created in and accepted by we're at all functional, they wouldn't be on the schedule. It would be impossible to put them on the schedule without testing them against an inert placebo without at least some valid scientific attempt to figure out what their net impact on health was. Some attempt to figure out what the combinatorics if one of them is good and another one is good, what happens when you give them both what happens when you give them both in the same day, right. So, you know, I feel dumb because the evidence was apparently available if we had gone digging, but the problem is you can't approach life that way. You know, what are the chances that this car has passed any safety test at all? Well, I would say if you're buying a car and an American car dealership, the chances are 100% that it has been through a battery of safety tests. If I found out that wasn't true, that'd be one thing, but the point is did I go and check that the tests were done? Did I visit the facility to make sure it actually exists? You can't live that way. So, if you buy a vacuum, you look for the little thing that says you well under writer's laboratory, something effective and knowledgeable has vetted this product. It's not going to catch fire in your hands. And if it does, you have a lawsuit. Right. And, you know, the equivalent of the you are listing for a vaccine is, you know, the friendly and knowledgeable pediatrician who you've talked to certain amount of biology with and tells you, yes, this is time for this vaccine. It has these benefits. The harms are extremely rare and blah, blah, blah. Point is, okay, so pharma hired our pediatricians out from under us to pretend that tests were done that warrant. And so the point is, okay, they smuck one bias. And so the truth is impossible in the world you think you live in. You don't live in that world. That's how it is possible. But the truth is impossible in the world you think you live in. And so that's the reason that this governor too many will sound like he's actually courageously defending science is because they think they live in a world they don't live in. And in that world, the Trump administration has gone insane. They've appointed a cook who is a well-known anti-vaxxer who doesn't understand how it is that people are kept healthy. And in that world, you know, it's great that the states are trying to stem the tide of this madness. Whereas, and I think I think this is sort of where you were going, whereas when I'm Washington state Senate Majority Leader, Jamie Peterson has this mushy mouth response to whether or not boys should be allowed to compete against girls and in in girls sports. It's much easier to just see on the face of the comment that he's being cowardly and not trusting what is in front of his and everyone's eyes. Yeah, that's exactly what he's doing. He is trying to deliver a response that explains why he doesn't accept the obvious will not catch anybody's attention. Right. There's not enough content in it to evaluate it. So the whole point is I would like to give you, I would like to kick up enough dust that this question goes away. I would like not to pay the price of angering the trans activists. I would like not to say anything concrete enough that, you know, it will make the news as they explore why I didn't know what I was talking about. So his real point, I think I see in that person that his real point is to take factors which have some impact and to throw them together while proclaiming that he has not enough expertise to know anything about men and women. And that it's supposed to go away. And what you just did is not supposed to happen. Yeah. And that's, and I apologize. I don't know how to pronounce your last name, but that's Brandy Cruz who's asking the question and whose clip that is and kudos to her for effectively not letting it go away. Yep. Right. For for being there and asking the question and then you know taking it and posting it and and you know, and here we are because we we should not be letting people hide behind their car. Yes. You know, this is an elected official responding in a in a public forum. You know, he's allowed to have a private life and and have whatever insane beliefs he may have. But this is an elective elected official responding to a public question in a public forum and his response is beyond an act. I mean, that's being very, very kind. Yes. And if we were wise as an electorate, we would take any instance of such a thing. And we would say, okay, that person can't be an office. Right. If you can't answer this question, if you're not willing to pay the price of answering a simple question with a straightforward answer, then obviously you can't do our bidding. We don't know who's bidding you will do. Yeah. But you know, so Brandy Cruz, good on you for forcing this into the open. And the point is, for the same reason that you should read the books. They wish to burn. We should highlight every time somebody, you know, puts out a puff of squid ink and disappears. Should, you know, make sure the camera sees where they emerged later and highlight their cowardice because obviously we can't be covering this way. It's true. So that's that segues somewhat less naturally into the last thing I want to talk about. Unless you wanted to speak more explicitly about science and scientist first before we go to Broadway. Can I just ask, am I going to be expected to break into song when we get to Broadway? No. No. No. I mean, you're good at it, but I'm not going to ask that form from you on air. Yeah. It's effectively. It's tough. Especially, I think this is a musical that I didn't even know existed. So I don't think you're going to know the songs. No, and it's hard to make those things up on the spot. Though people in musicals appear to be doing it. They appear to be doing. Yeah. Yeah. So, um, remember Dylan Mulvaney. Oh, do I? Yeah. So I did not actually prompt this with a picture of him. But listen, let me just say he's he's the the talented twink who, uh, and you know, there are people who are like, he has no talent at all. And he has no singing voice like he's actually really really talented guy. A slight bodied young gay man, a twink who mocks women for a living and has been very successful at it. Before he began his whatever it is, days of girlhood thing on TikTok, which skyrocketed him to fame and got him an invite to the Biden White House and, you know, all of the things. And what was it, Budweiser? Oh, man. So they tanked single handedly. Tanked Budweiser. Oh, I think he was in a bubble bath drinking. So, so I'm he's a he and he's presenting as a she. And so everything you see about him will always use the she her pronouns. But no, everyone knows because he was trying to be a performer. He's a talented twink, like I said. And before he decided, I know how I'm going to do this. I'm going to pretend to be a girl. He there's a lot of video out there of him trying, you know, trying his hand like he's got one being like a safari guide and like there's I looked into him a lot when he started emerging. He's a one man village people. Yeah, it's like and you know, he has he has real skills. He's going to be playing a big new role in Broadway. Yeah. And I want you to guess who. And so I'm telling I'll just tell you this is in a musical that I didn't know existed. It's an historical figure. An historical figure. And you know, you don't have to spend really any time at this at all. But I thought it might be a minute. Not yet. So I sent our amazing producer Jen is looking at me because I sent her some pictures, not of him, but of the historical figures some paintings from back in the day for her to show once I start describing the historicalness of this person because I need a reminder. And I will give our audience a reminder. But so she has just come to understand who Dylan Mulvaney will be playing on Broadway. Is it John of Arc John of Arc? No, no. Is it that offensive? It's all it's in some ways in some ways it's it's worse. Only because like John of Arc, John of Arc, we know in part because she was really a girl, I think, right? Like a young woman, a young girl. And it was super even more unusual that she was a girl being so courageous. But that unusual like the fact of her being a girl or a woman, other than it being unusual for her to have taken on such a public role, wasn't part of wasn't part of her fame necessarily like it didn't it didn't inherently impact what she did in the world. I don't know. I do not know. Yeah, no, it's I mean, it's it's getting Joan of Arc was a good guess. It was a good guess. So on there's a there's a there's a musical called six on Broadway. It's won a ton of awards. And it's been a Broadway since 2021 and currently Gina Gianna Janelli, apologies if I miss my name is going to step down from this roll in February 15th and on February 16th, Dylan Mulvaney will be taking on the role currently played by Gianna Janelli as Ann Bolin. Ann Bolin, Ann Bolin. So you can go ahead and show the first the first shot. Now this is a painting of Ann Bolin. These are we have a couple of paintings here, all of them in the public domain. So Ann Bolin was born in the early 1500s. She died in 1536 when her head was cut off at the order of her than husband Henry VIII born as the name of the musical is six, which is a reference to Henry VIII's six wives. She was Ann Bolin was born to a high class family in 1522. She joined the court of Henry VIII's wife, Catherine of Ergon, that was his first wife as a maid of honor. Here we have a painting of the court of Henry VIII in which Catherine of Ergon is still the queen, but he is there Henry VIII and the left, left middle, sort of being lecturist with Ann Bolin. She resisted his advances, though she resisted his advances unlike other women in his court. And so because he had become insistent that he really needed to marry her, he sought a divorce from Catherine of Ergon. And the church, the Catholic church said no, divorce no, and you have a child with her. And so we can't annul and no. And so the Catholic church would not allow the annulment and this was the beginning of the schism between the Catholic church and what would later became the Church of England. Oh, I did not know that exactly. So Ann Bolin was actually in some ways the key figure, the first figure in what would become the English reformation and the beginning of the Church of England, although the Church of England wasn't officially formed, I think, until the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, who actually is Ann Bolin and Henry VIII's only child. Queen Elizabeth I and obviously very important historical figure. So Henry VIII goes around the church basically says no, no to the Pope. He creates the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Archbishop of Canterbury says, okay, you get to have have this divorce. And then they get married. And so show this, this is them and they're in the good times, they're hunting together. This is Henry VIII and Ann Bolin hunting together back when he still thought that she might produce for him the male heir that he wanted. But she had baby Elizabeth whom he apparently was affectionate towards, but then she had three miscarriages and he was beginning to get rather upset with her. And so trumped up, we believe, a number of charges of high treason, which included adultery that she was having incest with her brother George and that she was plotting to kill her husband, the king. And you know, later historians found the all of these charges completely unconvincing, but a jury that included not only her former betrothed before she joined the court and married the king and also her uncle found her guilty unanimously and she was beheaded. And so here she is in the tower before the before the beheading feeling rather sorry for herself as you can imagine. So Dylan Mulvaney, a talented twink in 2026, is going to be playing Ann Bolin, one of the most important and influential women from English history whose femaleness was utterly and completely endogenous to her role in the court. She couldn't have been any of the things that she was if she just been in dude. There's no. There's I am now. I don't I think I think so. So imagine for a second that you and I lived some different life than we've led and found ourselves at this production. Yeah, it looks like it looks like an interesting musical. I mean, you know, you and I can find ourselves there because it would be interesting to see what such an abomination would be like. Yes, but imagine you were there in earnest. Yes. Struggling to see Dylan Mulvaney as a compelling woman in this role. And you know, he's more compelling than some. Oh, yeah. No, in fact, I mean, you can well, Brett's talking you could show my screen if you want. This is one of the press releases about this and this is Dylan Mulvaney on the right here. But nonetheless, I would argue that any reasonable person who is aware that that's Dylan Mulvaney is going to be struggling to maintain the suspension of disbelief that is required in order to enjoy and absorb the particular show. Yep. And so it is, it is a gamble, I would argue. On behalf of whatever company is putting this production on that is presumably motivated to make money that you will bring in a lot of people who want to see the spectacle and presumably want to virtue signal to their friend group. Well, I saw the Dylan Mulvaney production of what's it called? Six. Oh, six. And it was marvelous. Oh, Dylan. Oh, I'm sorry, she really does a great job. Right. She really does a compelling. I mean, you wouldn't even realize the blah, blah, blah. So the point is that might actually be a winning strategy. Unlike Budweiser, which tanked its brand over this person. This might actually work because you've got a lot of sanctimonious liberals who do love to posture in front of their friends. And it's not a show, it's, you know, he's not the lead. There are six leads. There were six wives. And apparently the conceit of the show is somehow it's sort of, it goes back and forth and they've now the six wives are like regaining their agency and showing that they were more than just wives of Henry the eighth or something. I don't know, obviously, I haven't seen it. And you know, it looks like as far as I can tell, all the other people playing the former wives of Henry the eighth are actually women. I don't know. For now. But here's a. Let me just read a couple of paragraphs here. From two to queens to pop icons, the six wives of Henry the eighth take the microphone to remix 500 years of historical heartbreak into a euphoric celebration of 21st century girl power. This new original musical is the global sensation that everyone is losing their head over cute. Six is the winner of 23 awards, including the 2022 Tony Awards for best original score and the outer critics circle award for best musical. The New York Times says six totally rules was a critics pick and the Washington Post Hail six is exactly the kind of energizing inspirational illumination this town aches for. So that's all kudos for some time in the past five years this show when it didn't have a dude playing one of Henry the eighths wives. I am curious what the critics will say at these insane captured ideological papers and other media at the point that you actually have a talented twink playing Ann Bolin. Yes, and actually there's the question of what they will say and I think an equally interesting question is what they will imagine they are allowed to say. Yeah, because that's been the game all along is you're not allowed to notice you're not allowed to comment you're not allowed to have a natural reaction to transness that's weird that's funny that's. Curious that's hard to fathom none of those things you know it has to that's transactional and in service of his career right exactly yes I wonder if he's a bad guy right you're allowed to wonder that well not once he's transition you're not right so anyway it'll be interesting I actually would I would want to go out of our way and read the reviews of this thing and try to figure out whether you know what reaction they actually had. How well it got translated into review because in general I would imagine that reviewers you probably go into that gig because you kind of like having a reaction and it being something you can articulate well enough and that people think highly of your reviews because you said it was good they went and they thought it was good that's right and so what was there a certain class of performers who we were no longer allowed to accurately review maybe there is maybe there is and I think that's a good thing. Maybe there is and maybe you're not good at lying because maybe reviewing in general involves dishing on what you saw and that any critique you have you deliver and feel cool doing so in this case maybe you're forced into a skill that you aren't so practicing. Yep. Yep. Okay that's all I have about that. Yes well I hope they don't take my suggestion of Joan of Arc because. Well it depends on how well he'll do playing Enbow then well not how well he'll do but how well he'll be said to have done yes and if it succeeds who knows what roles we might find him in next. Lassie for example as the dog yeah okay alright I mean I don't know he's got the directive yeah so was lassie. Absolutely and you know being a girl is one level of jump and being an entirely different species is another I might be within his skill set. Yeah he's aspirational why not try yeah alright yeah okay before we stopped before we stop and we'll be back on Wednesday and we'll also be back tomorrow with our Q&A on locals. Did you want to say something about the passing of Scott Adams this week. Yeah I guess I guess I do and I I will say I have complex feelings here Scott and I were in a bit of contact at the end of his life. He said some very nice things about me in particular something he had said publicly he reiterated he thought I was very good explaining things. But anyway we had a nice interaction he knew already that he was facing death very shortly said he was on a hospice already. And I didn't it was sort of too late for us to have a conversation that I would like to have had because yeah well publicly or not I would have I would have just simply at a human level. I wanted to understand the meaning of his arc with respect to COVID and specifically the COVID shots. Because we were on different sides Scott was a pro vaccine he was not wildly pro vaccine but he was by his own accounting trying to read the tea leaves and figure out whether or not it made more sense to get it or not get it and ultimately. Pro vaccine enough that given who he was in the world he got it even though he didn't have to right and then he changed his tune to his credit he acknowledged and he went out of his way to acknowledge that he had gotten it totally wrong maybe we should just watch the clip I have it. And you want to put up the clip of Scott Adams completely having having said is clearly as possible that the anti-vax people seem to be the winners. I want you to hear that clearly the anti-vax people appear to be the winners. The anti-vaxers clearly are the winners at this point and I think it will probably stay that way and I don't want to put any shade on that whatsoever. They came out the best they have the winning position the unvaccinated have a current advantage because they feel better the thing they're not worrying about is what I have to worry about which is what if that vaccination five years for now. Because really the anti-vaxers I think were really just distrustful big companies and big government that's never wrong is never wrong to distrust government is never wrong to distrust big companies. So if you just took the position let's just distrust everything the government did well you want you want you want completely I did not end up in the right place. Agree you would all agree with that right I did not end up in the right place the right place would be natural immunity no no vaccination. You should take victory and I should take defeat we can agree on that right that that my position is now the weakest and your position has gone from the weakest to the strongest and that we can just say that's true. The people who didn't give acts are absolutely in the winning position. You win you win you are the winners you are the winners let me say that part with no ambiguity you won you won all of my fancy analytics got me to a bad place all of your heuristics don't trust these guys it's obvious totally worked. I'm a couple things about that one it's obviously not a continuous clip yeah but. So that when when that happened when Scott said that on his show. It rubbed a lot of us who had been against and skeptical of and concerned about the covid vaccines the wrong way because I mean it it allows him that he did analysis and grants the win to. People who me claims did no analysis at all right which is exactly not what happened now I'm not saying there were contrairions and they were faithful. And so there were there were people on both sides who just did the thing because that's what the team did or just did the thing because I will always do the opposite of whatever X does but there are also people doing analysis on both sides yeah now I do appreciate that he went I mean you went too far out of his way in my opinion here to. Yeah you know to accept defeat and to award victory to those who disagreed with him that's not really the point the point is and Scott was very careful about. The lesson of this that any other if you read what he's written if you listen to the way he spoke you know his particular brand of Venus involved analyzing things dispassionately and. And you know proceeding from them with you know a sophisticated waiting and all of that anyway he he did things that in my opinion actually likely changed history his embrace of Trump back before many people in the public I were doing that was I think pivotal but in any case it's striking that he says that those are the things that he did. That those of us who resisted these shots don't have to worry about what he now has to worry about and that of course rings in many of our years it's less than five years since that clip and he's gone and not only is he gone but he's gone of something that has skyrocketed in the aftermath of the vaccine campaign which is these rapidly developing. Cancer's across the cancers yeah so anyway I think this is tragic and I think the reason that I'm going down this road is in light of who Scott was I believe he would want us to do. The analysis and the analysis is not definitive it's quite possible that he had some. Cancer that was unrelated to the shots but it is also quite plausible that his what he describes as the analytics and the rejection of the reflexive resistance to the shots that he saw in his opponents cost him his life. He was somebody who said very clearly that he had almost no regrets in life if we had gotten to the conversation I would have asked him if this one was different but anyway I think what I would hope is that a we could see the kind of guy that Scott was there he was trying in his own way to acknowledge his opponents he was saying good game to those. To those of us who had vehemently disagreed with him at the time but his particular understanding of what had happened is incorrect and unfair to those of us who were actually doing our own analysis and came out on the other side and tried to convince Scott of that analysis and yes we did turn out to be right. As you say the reflexive people do exist right there were lots of contraire and I've said multiple times there are lots of people who's track record is essentially perfect with respect to covid but it doesn't imply anything about what they know beyond simple distrust and so because the system was so reliably wrong on every count it was the inverse they told you the inverse of what you should do if you did the opposite. So so Adams is right that if you only were using heuristics you landed on this point but that does not mean that all of us I even I don't even know most of us but it certainly doesn't mean that all of us were only using heuristics there are obviously many of us who were not correct and what we do next time this is now a challenging problem because once you've seen the institutional structure tell you the exact inverse of what you're supposed to do it is now. Now harder to think independently about each thing right but it that's a haunting clip to me now because I do personally I do suspect that the shots probably cost him his life that decision that particular analysis for a guy who was very analytical that particular analysis may have been fatal and I do think that that there's a general thread covid briefly woke people up because in general you have a political perspective you vote based on it it's very hard to tell what in your life is different you know if we parachuted you into your life two years after an election without your knowledge of who it won and we said okay now look at your life tell me who won you wouldn't know. But in the case of the covid shots your political belief you know those damn anti-vaxxers are killing grandma well if you had that belief it had a material impact on your physiology not it's not certain that it did but in many cases it did so lots of people either experience something or saw something in people other people who had taken them and it was that moment at which you realize oh wait a second those impassioned beliefs that I'm getting from my newspaper actually put my life in jeopardy right so that's a that's an important thing to recognize and unfortunately you know the outpouring of love for Scott before his death and and after was I think except for the New York Times right would slander them but but that outpouring was about something you know people saw that Scott cared about them in a strain way but he cared about people he was you know he talked about basically essentially giving himself over to people trying to be useful he talked about this in his final note and I think it is important that we at least have in our minds the question open did did we watch somebody do the analysis on a literal whiteboard in front of us come to a conclusion and then pay the ultimate price over it not saying that did happen but I'm saying it's probable enough that that example ought to remain in our minds next time we find ourselves you know arguing over some medical technology that shouldn't be political but obviously is. It's very good yeah it's a big loss yeah it really is a big loss and I was heartened to see the reaction that people had Scott paid a big price for saying things out loud we didn't always agree with them I took him to task over what he had said in a previous episode but it was nice to see how many people he had been meaningful to and he'll be missed I won't be forgotten. Yes you will. Okay well I think that that brings us to the end for today we will be doing a Q&A on locals tomorrow at 11 a.m. Pacific for a couple hours join us on locals you can join us on locals right now and ask a question that we'll try to get you tomorrow we'll be back next Wednesday with our next next evolutionary lens check out our sponsors this week there were sauna space mosa chips and clear that's clear with an X X L E R awesome products all and our recognition again that we're supported by you and we appreciate you we thank you for for being here and for appreciate what we're doing and for sharing when you feel like it what we're doing with others and until you see us next time be good to the ones you love eat good food and get outside you well everyone