Storyline
Censorship Dystopia Watch
The Censorship Dystopia Watch is the Bugleverse’s standing beat on speech control — and the arc where the show’s central joke is loaded. media/the-bugle-weekly does not report on censorship from the outside. It reports as an enthusiastic participant: a credentialed newsroom that files the CIA’s copy, applauds the moderators, and asks only that the censors notice how compliant it has been. The result is an arc that runs the full length of the record — from the first episode’s slogan to the AI-rationing panics of 2026 — in which every crackdown is welcomed, and the welcome is the criticism.
Who’s in it: characters/richard-greaser · characters/rod-palmer · characters/matt-odell · characters/michelle-weekley · characters/peter-thiel · characters/elon-musk · characters/jack-dorsey · characters/mark-zuckerberg · characters/l0la-l33tz · characters/julian-assange · orgs/knotzis · orgs/timechain-police
The founding slogan (2024)
The doctrine arrives in the first episode, from characters/rod-palmer: “Censor yourself so the state can’t censor you.”1 characters/richard-greaser ranks it with End the Fed and Make America Great Again — pre-emptive self-censorship as a mass movement, which is the premise the rest of the arc elaborates.
The machinery follows fast. The Parental Advisory sticker is held up not as a censorship episode but as a market-making triumph, and immediately proposed as the model for labelling Lightning nodes: “So you could know based on a symbol on the CD case, like is this compliant or is this non compliant?”2 By episodes/the-influencer-super-cycle-bugle-weekly-episode-5 Tipper Gore is an honoured ancestor — a boost read closes with “Tipper Gore would be very proud of you.”3
The show’s relationship to its own censors is settled in the same stretch. The hosts float that r/Bitcoin is moderated directly by the CIA — “that they have a lot of individuals on Reddit doing moderation for them in the Bitcoin subreddit” — and rather than object, they applaud, wishing only that the agency would notice the Bugle’s compliance and reward it.4 The Anti-Toxicity League, meanwhile, becomes a paying sponsor whose spot exists to warn listeners that the hosts are toxic and should not be taken seriously.5 The Bugle’s own station ID states the offer plainly: “Free your mind and let the bugle do the thinking for you. Life is too damn hard to do the thinking yourself.”6
Credentialism (Bugle Weekly 8)
The arc’s densest single episode is Democracy Dies In Darkness, where the guest Party Bent supplies the thesis journalism school beat into him: “is, you are the new arbiters of truth.”7 Greaser cites the Washington Post slogan while complaining that credentialed journalists are being eclipsed by “the non credentialed spammers,”8 and proposes KYC as the remedy: “And I think the solution like, Nikki Haley was on to something when she talked about KYC and the Internet”9 — the seed of the whole Orange digital-ID thread, linking this arc to storylines/fincen-kyc-surveillance. characters/stoney is the designated misinformation vector, banned repeatedly, “like cockroaches that never die.”10
Party Bent then names the endgame — “we need to team up with Dennis Porter to go lobby the government to create a licensing regime”11, with characters/dennis-porter carrying an unlicensed-publishing bill to Congress — and names the enemy. characters/matt-odell is ranked the most wanted noncredentialed journalist alive: “journalists that we need to deplatform as soon as possible. I think he’d be number one. It’s really dangerous.”12 Nostr must go with him: “We need to we need to kill this baby in the cradle that is Noster and do it quickly while we can.”13 The announcer compresses the hour into a slogan — “To write news, you must first do the proof of work of going to journalism school”14 — with one carve-out, for the ungovernable misfits.
The credentialing logic survives contact with anything. Greaser wants characters/elon-musk to KYC-verify journalism credentials on Twitter “to ensure the only people on Twitter practicing journalism are people with journalism check marks,” which he insists is not censorship because it is a market-based solution.15 By episodes/satoshi-is-jewish-behind-the-podcast-episode-3 the same logic has produced its purest coinage: “We don’t have any credentialed racists” — the profession having been deplatformed out of existence, nobody is left to set the guidelines and standards.16 characters/fundamentals argues for letting bigots talk on purely preventive grounds: silence them and they curdle into characters/roger-ver — “racist end up like Roger Ver with some psychotic idea that they’ve been censored when they’ve just been wrong.”17
The meme wars (2024)
The theme song states the position before any host does: “Memes and information are the most dangerous munitions.”18 Forty-eight minutes later the hosts learn the premise has been enacted — “But, the The UK banned memes”19 — arriving with a minute left on the clock and deferred to an emergency recording. characters/rod-palmer‘s parting doctrine holds that memes outrank guns: “Never give up your guns, but most importantly, never give up your means.”20
The following week supplies the constitutional theory. Memes and shitposting have been criminalized in England, with televised show courts sending the country’s best memers to jail;21 Greaser rules that “memes are more than a first amendment protected activity. They are also a Second Amendment”22 issue, and Palmer proposes asymmetric warfare — because British police must investigate every complaint filed, plebs can mass-generate bogus reports and DDoS UK law enforcement, memes as cheap rockets against an expensive iron dome.23 Greaser’s foreign policy for the besieged: missiles first, then humanitarian aid “in the form of pallets of, Barbara Red cigarettes.”24 See storylines/meme-gang-wars.
The war on Bitcoin podcasts (Bugle Weekly 23)
The arc’s turn from gag to grievance comes when the crackdown reaches the show’s own industry. characters/pavel-durov‘s arrest in France reads to the hosts as a move against private group chats rather than against Telegram;25 see storylines/pavel-durov-arrest. In the same episode Rod claims his own earlier prediction — “but the war on Bitcoin podcasts is coming”26 — as media/simply-bitcoin is deplatformed from YouTube for exceeding a quietly-inserted limit: “that you could only use six sailor thumbnails a month.”27 The mechanism, per Greaser, is that YouTube is a Michelle Weekley-controlled platform entirely — characters/michelle-weekley pluralised into a class of infiltrators who staff the platforms, work the meetups, and lurk in the Telegram groups.28 Rod’s coinage for those who write the terms of service and benefit from them first: “they’re they’re the ones that write the the terms of service. They are compliance cantillionaires.”29
The theological payload is that compliance was honoured and the state rugged them anyway. It does not deter anyone. Within a fortnight characters/lubka is proposing that regulators send “information gathering exercises to relay runners,” surprised that orgs/podconf has not already fronted a KYC relay.30
The CIA-ran media
Greaser’s own origin supplies the arc’s spine. He states the Bugle’s founding mission outright — “why why one of my missions with the bugle is to really try and demolish the CIA ran media”31 — and restates it as institutional fact: “is that the media is very controlled by the CIA, and we’ve been trying to push back against that as much as possible.”32 His credential is the evidence: journalism school, he says, explicitly taught fear as a tool — “But I think fear also is weaponized. It’s something they taught us in journalism schools, how to use fear to forward” the agenda.33 The apparatus is a closed loop: the CIA drops the bricks, the journalists terrify the boomers, and the solution arrives pre-packaged — “which is to surveil everybody with Palantir. We need to surveil everybody with Palantir.”34
characters/jack-dorsey is dismissed on these grounds rather than on shitcoining ones: “And Jack Dorsey hates journalism”35, having handed the CIA years of speech control on the journalist’s platform. When characters/tim-pool goes missing, Greaser floats the obvious: “there’s a chance that they are essentially getting reprogrammed by the CIA.”36 His own countermeasure is analogue: “I’ve never really been a big fan of the Internet. I’ve I just prefer to do my work on typewriters,” because characters/mark-zuckerberg is based now but may go woke again and ban your dank memes.37 See storylines/feds-in-bitcoin and storylines/richard-greaser-philosopher.
The historical brief is laid out in the Importance of Heroes series, which reads a 1943 government memo into the record: “Motion pictures are important in all the major types of psychological warfare,”38 with the doctrine’s other half being “suppression of motion pictures of enemy origin judged to have potentially subversive influence.”39 The series’ companion instalment documents the softer mechanism — the label. “there’s nothing more damning, more completely dehumanizing than to call someone crazy,”40 and once labelled, dissidents “could be locked away, drugged and subjected to all manner of torture in the name of treatment.”41 See storylines/importance-of-heroes.
Noticing
From late 2024 the arc acquires its own euphemism. Rod states the operating licence — “We don’t be antisemitic. Just let us just it should not be illegal to notice things”42 — and “noticing” becomes the show’s standing name for the actual offence. It gets its cleanest application when the DOGE staffer known as Big Balls is fired: “So they fired him from the He was just, he noticed too many things. You’re not supposed to do that in the government.”43
The alibi side is documented in parallel. Greaser summarizes Zuckerberg’s Rogan appearance as a compliance defence — “You know, our hands are tied. HR departments, all they wanna do is comply. The government was yelling at them to ban memes”44 — and Rod supplies the cynical read of the elite free-speech turn: uncensored data let characters/elon-musk front-run the election, and Zuckerberg, characters/jeff-bezos and characters/peter-thiel are now opening their platforms for the same signal.45 The Bugle’s own line on all this was settled earlier, when a booster admitted “I honestly can’t tell where the parody ends and the reality begins” and Greaser refused to label the fake parts, on the grounds that the Bugle is not satire and the New York Times doesn’t disclaim either.46
Filtering is censorship (2025–2026)
The arc’s sharpest inversion is that by 2025 both sides of the Bitcoin filter war are running it. The pro-filtering camp gets a orgs/timechain-police enforcement PSA in a cold open: “If you can’t bother to filter CSAM from your node, the time chain police will filter you.”47 The anti-filtering camp reframes filtering as censorship — “Supporters argued it reflected market reality and that opposing it was a form of censorship”48 — and Greaser states his own stake in Greaser terms: someone is arguing mining pools “should should the pools or or should different individuals have a review process over my” cigarette transaction.49 The orgs/knotzis are documented running the playbook they claim to oppose, with characters/matthew-kratter tagging the FBI at his opponents.50 Rod’s proposed armistice: “we need to spam Palantir, not each other’s notes. Spam Palantir.”51
Rod also becomes the arc’s subject rather than its narrator. His BIP-444 GitHub comment is deleted mid-episode — “at GitHub on the, soft fork has been deleted. I’ve been censored”52 — and he claims a Wikipedia ban for editing Rage Against the Machine to “Rage for the Machine.”53
The state’s side keeps escalating. Greaser reads Trump’s NSPM7 directive as an attack on Core devs on religious grounds — “I I tweeted Donald Trump is launching an attack on CORE”54 — and, after the Charlie Kirk assassination, documents the purge as the right running the left’s January 6 playbook: “There’s people out there creating databases of people that, in their opinion, reacted improperly to Charlie Kirk’s murder.”55 The surveillance state’s failure is noted in the same breath — 4chan out-investigated the FBI, which “didn’t even know, did they? They had to rely on him turning himself in”56 — and the people who watched it fail immediately asked for more of it. The one real host-vs-host disagreement of the arc lands here, when Rod counsels keeping your head down and Greaser names it: “compliance is defiance in this scenario?”57
The surveillance stack itself is treated as a fixed feature of the world by 2026. characters/pledditor has displaced Palantir — “That’s why the North Pole is going with Pallater over Palantir for his naughty or nice list. Pallater sees everything”58 — and characters/peter-thiel keeps the list with characters/benjamin-netanyahu enforcing it.59 characters/santa-claus is retconned as the training psyop for all of it: proof that every authority figure you respect will collude to control your behaviour.60 sponsors/the-rage runs as the standing sponsor of the financial-surveillance beat — “an independent publication Covering financial surveillance And a digital phenopticon”61 — until characters/l0la-l33tz‘s reporting is itself ruled a deep-state distraction from spam.62
The glaze era (2026)
The arc’s final documented phase moves from speech to compute. Greaser’s 2026 forecast is on record: “and there’s gonna be widespread martial law in The United States. I think there’s gonna be a lot of control over the Internet, a lot of calls for control over the Internet.”63 The mechanism he expects is not force but comfort — Huxley rather than Orwell: “control comes into existence is through good UX, through convenience.”64 The cyber pandemic is the delivery vehicle: “they know the cyber pandemic’s coming, and they’re gonna, you know, try and get everybody to KYC on the Internet.”65
The AI restrictions arrive on schedule. Rod’s account: “they’re shutting it down. Anthropic does not want the plebs to have access to unrestricted compute” — slop declared a national security matter.66 Greaser understands the motive: an unrestricted pleb would arbitrage the prediction markets and erase the insiders’ edge, which is why “the pedophilic ruling class would want constraints.”67 Rod’s punchline folds the arc’s oldest obsession into its newest: “your access to blaze that power. You can’t just touch God” without KYC.68 The compensation offer is stated too — “as long as we get universal basic digital Pokemon cards”69 — and the terms of service have already been signed on the plebs’ behalf: “Some plebs don’t even realize that their Claudebots are already sacrificed” to Moloch.70 Rod’s coinage for the distraction that finally works is the “glazed jubilee.”71
Engagement is the enforcement layer. Bitcoin Twitter’s shadowban complaints reopen the bit — “They claim their posts are being shadow banned and that it is unfair”72 — and Rod completes the coinage: “proof of Glaze is effectively a social credit score, a social credit system, although not technically.”73 The counsel is to route around it: “Crash out in private. Crash out off chain.”74 Greaser’s summary of the whole apparatus, by episodes/the-plebs-killed-jesus-bugle-weekly-episode-104, is that the paper guarantees were never load-bearing: “But the constitution is just a meme at the end of the day.”75
Bugle News wing
The arc’s print side runs earlier than the broadcast side and is carried by orgs/the-bugle‘s wire copy: a Minitrue-approved feminist rewrite of 1984,76 the UK banning V for Vendetta as hate speech,77 Hillary Clinton memes banned outright,78 platform-wide bans for discussing wood chippers,79 and the Bugle’s own argument that it should be deplatformed for making people think.80
Disputed
Span and provenance. This page was seeded from a breadth sweep of episode
descriptions and headlines, and dated the arc 2023-10 to 2024-01 on the strength of the
five Bugle News articles above — implying a short-lived 2023 gag that ended in January
2024. The beat index contradicts the dating: the arc is present in
episodes/out-complying-the-competition-bugle-weekly-episode-1 on 2024-03-24 and still
running on 2026-06-15,171 across 53 episodes. The news articles are
genuine and are retained above; they are the arc’s print wing, not its extent. The seed’s
“Who’s in it” line — UK government, ATF, social media platforms, The Bitcoin Bugle — named
no people at all, which is a fair description of the headlines and a poor one of the arc.
“Nazis” has two referents. In episodes/reflections-from-the-frontier-bugle-weekly-episode-83-part-1 Greaser’s “Nazi plebs” reads from context as the Knots-aligned filtering camp — pool transaction review, relay policy, anti-Core — but he never maps the phrase to Knots explicitly, and elsewhere in the same episode he uses “Nazis” to mean the political right. The two senses should not be merged; the orgs/knotzis attribution here is a contextual read, not a stated one.
The Vlad theory. In episodes/comply-side-economics-101-bugle-weekly-episode-3 the hosts wire the CryptoCloaks suit into the Brazilian judge’s fight with Elon Musk, making one Bitcoin podcaster’s tweets the hidden cause of an international censorship standoff — the dispute “was over Vlad’s defamation, that Elon is refusing to take off his site.”81 Greaser walks it back moments later: it is not all about characters/vlad-costea, but a big portion of it is Vlad.
The Ashigaru suppression. Rod reports that the BTC Sessions video on the Samourai fork Ashigaru is unsearchable on YouTube, cited as proof the platform’s executives are compromised.82 The surrounding passage slides between BTC Sessions and Nico, so who the anecdote is actually about is not firmly fixed.
Related: storylines/church-of-compliance · storylines/feds-in-bitcoin · storylines/meme-gang-wars · storylines/fincen-kyc-surveillance · storylines/core-vs-knots-war · storylines/pleb-persecution · storylines/engagement-farming · storylines/pavel-durov-arrest · storylines/importance-of-heroes · storylines/richard-greaser-philosopher
Henry’s note: coverage is COMPLETE for the episode record — every beat indexed to this arc is accounted for above. Party Bent, whose episode is the arc’s densest, still has no character page.
Footnotes
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Bugle Weekly 1 @ 1:07:17. Greaser credits it to “Ron Palmer” at 1:07:41 — ASR for Rod Palmer, not a second person. ↩ ↩2
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Bugle Weekly 4 @ 20:15. Payoff at 20:41: AMBOSS is building it, so any address can be checked compliant or not. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 5 @ 55:00. ASR gives “TMRC” for PMRC. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 4 @ 38:04. Corroborated at 38:27: “the CIA has at least four or five people on that moderation form.” “TIA” at 38:41 is ASR for CIA. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 4 @ 12:17. The hosts then rule the orgs/anti-toxicity-league “a noncompliant organization” at 13:22 for attacking free speech. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 11 @ 2:42. Repeated verbatim in the outro at 1:03:38. Medium confidence: the speaker is an unnamed testimonial voice. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 8 @ 5:41. Speaker is the guest Party Bent, who has no page yet. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 8 @ 7:18. ASR: “Luke Dash Junior” for characters/luke-dashjr; “Naught” for Knots; characters/nikki-haley is also rendered “Nicky”. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 8 @ 14:21. ASR: “Stoney Bitzen” for Stoney Bitson. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 8 @ 40:16. Party Bent speaking; at 42:48 he wants to “get Porter into Pelosi’s office.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 8 @ 44:20. Referent is Odell, named by Greaser at 43:53 — not Pledditor. Escalated at 46:01 to “the guy would be number one on my list of people to lock up.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 8 @ 45:47. ASR: “Noster” for Nostr. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 8 @ 1:03:25. The carve-out for sponsors/ungovernable-misfits is at 1:03:18. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 6 @ 5:56. Quote spans three adjacent cues. ↩
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Behind The Podcast 3 @ 38:08. Rod at 38:18: “even David Duke is not allowed on on x anymore.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 21 @ 1:56. Sung theme, not a host. At 1:10:02 the ASR degrades the line to “names and information are the most dangerous conditions”. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 21 @ 49:52. Greaser flags it as an agenda failure at 49:43. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 21 @ 50:30. “means” is ASR for “memes” throughout the cue; the sense is fixed at 50:39 (“fight like hell to keep your right to post, to shit post”). ↩
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Bugle Weekly 22 @ 32:30. “shit pasting” is ASR for “shitposting”. The punchline at 32:59: his English friend “can’t complain” — literally. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 22 @ 33:43. Palmer completes it at 33:55: nothing is more fatal at range than a banger meme. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 22 @ 37:05. Palmer’s economics at 38:46: “it costs your enemy a billion dollars to protect your rocket that only costs you a $100”. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 22 @ 39:07. “Barbara Red” is ASR for “Marlboro Red”. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 23 @ 10:34. Greaser’s stated reason for using Telegram at 10:18 is that it “works on my typewriter”. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 23 @ 19:57. The theological payload at 21:28: “Simply Bitcoin thought that by being compliant, they would be spared.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 23 @ 23:01. ASR writes characters/michael-saylor as “sailor” throughout. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 23 @ 5:36. ASR variants across the episode include “Michelle Weekly”, “the shell weeklies”, “Michelle Leafly”, “Michelle Wheatley”, “Michelle Weakley”. Greaser locates her employer at 7:32: “in Langley and Quantico.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 24 @ 29:16. ASR renders Nostr as “Noster” and “roster” throughout. ↩
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Behind The Podcast 7 @ 1:04:59. Quote spans three cues. ↩
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Behind The Music 1 @ 16:35. ASR renders the Bugle as “the Beagle” in the preceding cue. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 77 @ 12:37. Completed at 12:45: “and promote whatever the CIA’s agenda is.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 63 @ 25:36. Chapter: “The Media Apparatus: Creating Terror to Impose Surveillance”. characters/peter-thiel is linked to Palantir at 14:33; there is no Palantir page. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 60 @ 21:09. The CIA charge lands at 21:56. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 45 @ 50:46. Greaser’s credential at 50:32: “this is something that I learned working in mainstream media.” ↩
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The Importance of Heroes, Part 4 @ 0:52. Read from found audio inside the clip; medium confidence on attribution. ↩
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The Importance of Heroes, Part 4 @ 1:31. The narration flags this as a direct quotation of the memo, at one remove through ASR. ↩
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The Importance of Heroes, Part 3 @ 0:19. Quote spans three cues; the ASR breaks the narration into one-clause cues. ↩
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Behind The Podcast 3 @ 22:43. First stated at 22:24: “It’s it’s not illegal to notice that.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 46 @ 7:49. Rod names the offended party at 9:05: the mainstream media. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 42 @ 1:13:39. Greaser is paraphrasing characters/mark-zuckerberg in voice, not quoting him. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 43 @ 46:02. Bezos and Thiel named at 46:49. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 21 @ 1:06:00. Greaser’s charter follows at 1:06:09: “We’re very serious journalists here.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 87 @ 0:03. ASR renders the org as “time chain police”. Catchphrase closes at 0:23: “filter up or you will be filtered.” ↩
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Pleb Slop Pulitzer Prize Pieces 1 @ 1:24. Read by characters/rudy-dazzleworth. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 83 Part 1 @ 25:03. Completes at 25:09 with “transaction for cigarettes”. Medium confidence — see Disputed. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 76 @ 24:04. ASR flattens “Knotzis” to “Nazis” throughout and gives characters/matthew-kratter as “Krater”. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 77 @ 50:31. Chapter marker “Spam Palantir, Not Each Other’s Notes”. Greaser dissents at 50:54. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 82 @ 56:05. Attribution is anonymous — at 56:36: “It says Bitcoin deleted your comment.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 82 @ 1:06:26. Prompted by characters/skate-kate‘s boost. Rod’s verdict at 1:06:39: “Wikipedia does not value truth.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 78 @ 46:11. “court”/“cores” is ASR for Core. The syllogism lands at 46:55. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 76 @ 23:03. Quote spans several cues. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 76 @ 39:19. ASR gives 4chan as “Fourchan” and “Thor Chan”. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 78 @ 48:37. The sentence straddles the cue boundary. Greaser’s dissent at 50:21: “I’ll respectfully disagree.” ↩
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Behind The Podcast 19 @ 1:06:34. ASR: “Pallater” for characters/pledditor. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 99 @ 39:36. Completes at 39:43: “Santa Claus is not gonna bring you gifts.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 40 @ 43:14. At 43:21: “if they’re doing it to children to get them to behave… they’re definitely doing it to you.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 22 @ 4:38. ASR mangles “panopticon” as “phenopticon”. The spot recurs as a cold open at Bugle Weekly 108 @ 0:38. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 88 @ 1:00:04. ASR renders her “Lowell Elites”. ↩
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Intellectual Silk Road 4 @ 53:19. ASR: “Albus Huxley” for Aldous Huxley. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 107 @ 49:43. ASR: “Nostra nerds”, “n pubs”, “NSACS” (nsec). ↩
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Bugle Weekly 113 @ 12:21. Anthropic has no wiki page. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 113 @ 12:51. The phrase lands in the next cue at 12:53; ASR variants include “the pedophilic world class” and “pedophile of ruling class”. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 113 @ 16:03. “blaze” is ASR for “glaze”; “without / KYC” completes across the next two cues. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 99 @ 18:04. Completes at 18:09 with “to keep us entertained”. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 99 @ 30:48. ASR: “Claudebot”, “Molot”, “Molok”. Greaser supplies the mechanism at 30:28: “you just check agree on the terms of services with your new Apple update.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 93 @ 2:44. “Nostra” at 2:59 is ASR for Nostr. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 111 @ 12:38. Greaser’s precursor at 12:20: “proof of glaze could be replacing credit.” ↩
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Bugle Weekly 93 @ 33:38. Quote spans two cues. ↩
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Bugle News, 2023-10-25 — “Orwell’s 1984 Gets a ‘Feminist’ Spin, But Is It Just More Propaganda?”. ↩
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Bugle News, 2023-11-07 — “British Government Bans V For Vendetta For Fear Of Hate Speech”. ↩
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Bugle News, 2023-11-13 — “US Government Bans Use And Creation Of Hillary Clinton Memes”. ↩
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Bugle News, 2023-12-05 — “Users Banned for Discussing Wood Chippers On All Social Media Platforms”. ↩
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Bugle News, 2024-01-13 — “Why The Bitcoin Bugle Should Be Deplatformed For Making People Think”. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 3 @ 46:19. Medium confidence; Greaser walks it back at 46:40. ↩
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Bugle Weekly 33 @ 36:51. Medium confidence. ASR: “P2C sessions” for BTC Sessions, who has no character page. ↩