Putin and Tucker Talk                                         02/13/24
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Inexplicably,  the  band Spyro  Gyra  came  to  my mind  yesterday.  I
honestly couldn't  remember anything  about them--only their  name was
rattling around  in my memory, disembodied.  So, I looked them  up and
listened to a few songs. As  I was appreciating the particularly dense
and substantial 80's vibe in the  music video for Shakedown, I noticed
that  the  saxophonist (Jay  Beckenstein)  looked  a lot  like  Tucker
Carlson. Just in this video, mainly. You'll see it around 3:35, if you
want to have a look.

This reminded  me that I  was meaning to  write a little  something on
Carlson's recent interview with Vladimir Putin. I don't think my brain
brought  Spyro Gyra  forward for  this reason,  but that  was the  net
effect.

Before I make a couple observations, I'd like you to understand that I
know about  as much about Tucker  Carlson as I know  about Spyro Gyra.
I've never heard his  voice, and I've only read a few  of his words. I
know about him, more than I know him. To me he is just one of the many
heads of the government  indoctrination machine, so readily consumable
for so many--and so utterly  replaceable and unoriginal. That's harsh,
considering that  I already  told you  I don't know  the guy,  and yet
that's my pre-judgement of him. Might as well be honest about it.

To me, Carlson represents a special  niche in propaganda media. He is,
for many,  a Julia or Mr.  Charrington. He allows people  to feel that
they can  rebel, and he is  therefore very useful. He  tells them what
they want  to hear, in a  way that makes them  feel like he is  on the
same page as they are. Is it harsh to call him a Julia? Does he seduce
his viewers  into the forest away  from the monitors, to  take what he
wants from the equation and leave them miserable? Beats me. I just see
that he, like every other facet on that same shiny gemstone of talking
media heads, is in it for  himself and for the message. Everyone needs
their own brand of forest to run to, it's a level of control that must
be provided for, if Big Brother is to be considered intelligent.

But I've strayed from  my point. I just wanted you  to know, I neither
hate nor love Tucker Carlson. The same is true for my view of Vladimir
Putin.

So, Tucker Carlson interviews  Putin, stirring up nonsensical feelings
(and generating  ratings and revenue)  on every side of  the political
spectrum. They made the transcript available,  which is what I read (I
don't have time to listen or watch either party, so this is perfect).

Two things stood  out to me. First, Tucker brings  up Nord Stream, and
suggests  that Putin  bring  forward evidence  of  the United  State's
involvement, for a propaganda win. He said:

"But  I am  confused. I  mean, that's  the biggest  act of  industrial
terrorism ever and it's the largest  emission of CO2 in history. Okay,
so, if you had evidence  and presumably, given your security services,
your intel services,  you would, that NATO, the US,  CIA, the West did
this, why wouldn't you present it and win a propaganda victory?"

Putin's response was just lovely:

"In the  war of propaganda it  is very difficult to  defeat the United
States because  the United States  controls all the world's  media and
many European media. The ultimate  beneficiary of the biggest European
media are American financial institutions.  Don't you know that? So it
is possible to get involved in  this work, but it is cost prohibitive,
so  to speak.  We can  simply shine  the spotlight  on our  sources of
information, and we will not achieve results. It is clear to the whole
world  what  happened,  and  even  American  analysts  talk  about  it
directly. It's true."

What a wonderful  smack in the face. Both of  them are there, actively
producing propaganda in that very  moment. Russia has a long tradition
with propaganda,  and Putin makes  no attempt  to shade that  fact; in
this  case, it's  simply not  cost effective.  The massive  difference
between Tucker  and Putin here  is, in Tucker's reality  propaganda is
taboo, a dirty word, a concept  to be distant from. In Putin's reality
propaganda is a war, an area  to acquire acumen and exercise skill and
prowess.

More  accurately  put:  in  Tucker's  world  propaganda  is  something
shameful you  do in  secret, in  Putin's world  it's something  you do
openly and with pride.

I thought  it was skillful  of Putin to  casually toss the  specter of
propaganda back at  Tucker. To ask him to follow  the money. Tucker is
quite familiar  with the money  trail, I'm  certain. But why  would he
want to  talk about the  hand that feeds him?  Rule number one  in the
UsofA is  to always  accuse everyone  else in  the world  of producing
propaganda, without  ever turning  around to look  at our  own massive
machinery.

Anyway, I enjoyed that little jab. Good job Vlad.

The second  thing that stood out  to me was actually  earlier in their
little  chat. It  was the  moment when  Putin mentions  Tucker's early
attempt at joining the CIA:

"With the  backing of CIA, of  course. The organization you  wanted to
join back in the day, as I  understand. Maybe we should thank God they
didn't  let  you  in.  Although,  it  is  a  serious  organization.  I
understand. My  former vis-a-vis, in  the sense  that I served  in the
First Main  Directorate --  Soviet Union's intelligence  service. They
have always been our opponents. A job is a job."

I'm tempted  to watch the video  for this little clip,  though I won't
bother. The reason  it was fascinating to me is  simply this: Who said
that the  CIA didn't hire Carlson?  Should we really believe  that the
government allows people like Tucker Carlson to get in their positions
of influence without maintaining a level of control?

Personally, I  postulate that Carlson  probably does have ties  to the
CIA, and  that Putin knew  that going in.  He probably thought  it was
hilarious to mention it out loud, frankly. And I think it was too. You
can read in his commentary after he said it, that he perhaps felt just
a tiny bit bad for Tucker. A job is a job, after all!

And that's about  it. The rest was a propaganda  show, no matter which
angle  you decided  to view  it from.  The media  largely ignored  the
interview,  but has  of  course produced  a  blizzard-level flurry  of
counter-propaganda around it.  Figured we might as well  chat about it
in Gopher a  little, before the collective world moves  on to the next
shiny object!