The Ignition News Podcast podcast artwork

PODCAST · news

The Ignition News Podcast

The Ignition delivers raw, unfiltered daily news for those who refuse to let billionaires curate their reality. In under 15 minutes, we cut through corporate media capture and sanitization to bring you the stories that matter—the ones being killed in editorial meetings, the resistance happening in jury boxes, and the accountability our democracy desperately needs. theignitionpodcast.substack.com

  1. 146

    It's Not Democracy Anymore

    Town halls. Thousands of people. Hours of testimony. And they build the data centers anyway.Today on Ignition News, we break down why that keeps happening. It has a name. Regulatory capture leads to inverted totalitarianism, and what you feel on the ground is neo-feudalism. We are not being dramatic. This is documented, peer-reviewed, and happening in your neighborhood right now.We also get into the 2026 midterm math, and it is not good. The Washington Post ran the numbers this morning. Democrats could win the popular vote by four full points and still lose the House. Gerrymandering has tilted the map that hard. The wave is real. The surfboard is broken.Then we talk about a fourth grader named Christian Mango, who did everything right, mailed a persuasive essay to his Congresswoman, and got told to ask his teacher about propaganda. By an 82-year-old former educator. No, really.And the inflation numbers are here. Vegetables are up 44%. Jet fuel is up 60%. Your grocery bill in April erased everything March had given you.But we are still here. Ten toes down. Stay lit.

  2. 145

    Papers Please

    May 12th, 2026. Three stories. One theme: power being used illegitimately against the people who have the least of it.Leonardo Garcia Venegas is a 26 year old American citizen born in the United States. ICE has arrested him three times anyway. He had his real ID in his hand. They tackled him to the ground, shackled him, and brought in a drug sniffing dog. His lawsuit is already in federal court. The government's current legal position is that he may not even have standing to sue them.The sitting president of the United States spent three hours on Monday night posting racist content about Barack Obama, including AI generated images, debunked wiretapping conspiracies, and videos of Black people paired with treason accusations. Then he woke up and kept going.And Amazon and Meta have been caught running a phenomenon called token maxing, where engineers burn through millions of dollars worth of AI resources on fake projects just to hit internal metrics. The waste is staggering. The justification is nonexistent.This is The Ignition News. Stay lit.

  3. 144

    Platner Is Going To Win

    On today's episode of The Ignition News, we go inside the Las Vegas Clark County Library District and introduce you to Kelvin Watson, an executive director who accepted nine thousand dollar Super Bowl tickets while frontline library workers face discipline for gifts over forty dollars. The investigation is just getting started, and it is already worse than expected.Then we cover the statement signed by thirty-six neurologists, psychologists, and forensic mental health professionals declaring the president mentally unfit for office. Their documented concerns include disorganized speech, factual confusion, and a reality-untethered decline. This is not a political attack ad. It was entered into the congressional record. And this man still has sole authority over more than five thousand nuclear warheads.We also get into the AOC versus Marjorie Taylor Greene fight and what it actually exposes: the American left has no coherent message, no unified coalition, and no clear sense of who its allies are. While Tucker Carlson runs the Peter Magyar playbook from the right, the left is still arguing about whether to trust a self-described white nationalist who said something critical of Trump once.And finally: the GOP is deploying what the president is calling an election integrity army to every state for the 2026 midterms. They do not need to break a single law. The gerrymandering has already done the work. The question is whether anything can be done about it.All that, plus a note on Graham Plattner in Maine and why his race might be the most important in the country.Stay lit.

  4. 143

    The Bourbon, the Virus, and the Map They Drew Without You

    Three stories. All connected. All pointing the same direction.Virginia voters approved a redistricting measure at the ballot box. The Virginia Supreme Court threw it out anyway, four to three, on procedural grounds. The Democratic Party is playing a gerrymandering chess game against opponents who have been running this playbook for fifty years. That is not a strategy. That is a slow surrender dressed up as resistance.The Trump administration cut $82 million in NIH funding for emerging infectious disease research in 2025, including a pilot program specifically studying the Andes strain of hantavirus, the one now spreading person to person on a cruise ship that departed Argentina in April. Five confirmed cases. Four suspected. Three dead. The CDC waited four hours after news organizations broke the story before issuing a single public statement.And FBI Director Kash Patel travels with personalized engraved bourbon bottles, threatened to polygraph FBI staff over a missing one, and then sued The Atlantic for $250 million when they reported on it. The same day. The reporter is now under FBI investigation.Power is consolidating. Accountability is the only answer. Stay lit.

  5. 142

    The Built It Anyway - A Special Report

    Something is happening in small towns all across America, and your local government is not telling you about it.This is a special edition of The Ignition News. One story. The story of data centers and the communities desperately trying to stop them.The United States already has more than 5,400 active data centers. They consume 4.4% of all US electricity right now. That number is headed to 12% by 2028. The five biggest tech companies are planning to spend between $660 and $690 billion on this infrastructure in 2026 alone. And 67% of new facilities are being sited in rural areas, in smaller communities with less political power and officials who have been told this is the best economic opportunity their town will ever see.Today we go to Maine, where the governor vetoed her own legislature's moratorium and promptly dropped her Senate race. To Utah, where Kevin O'Leary showed up, called the opposition bots, and the commission walked out of their own public meeting. To Boulder City, Nevada. To Wyoming. To Virginia. To Georgia, where residents are scared to drink their own well water.We talk about who is making money, who is actually paying, and what is working to stop it.They think you won't organize. They are wrong.

  6. 141

    You Did Something

    Today on The Ignition News: four stories, one system.The cruise ship quarantine is not just a health story. It is a mirror. It reflects a public health infrastructure we deliberately hollowed out, a cruise industry that cannot survive without exploiting labor from the global south, and a social media culture that cheers for the suffering of strangers instead of demanding accountability from the people actually in charge.Then we get into the Supreme Court and the Voting Rights Act, why the 2019 Rucho v. Common Cause decision set the table for everything happening now, and what it means that the court has effectively declared itself the only branch that matters.We cover the ICE contract with MVM Incorporated, a company currently being sued in federal court for the torture and enforced disappearance of migrant children, now tasked with finding unaccompanied minors and children of deported parents in schools across the country.And we close with Washington Post reporting showing the US military has been lying about the damage to American bases in the Middle East, backed up by satellite imagery the government asked commercial providers to stop producing.Every missile is a school. Every billion is a choice.Stay lit.

  7. 140

    The Billion Dollars And The Bison

    Three stories today, one through line: you are always the one holding the bill.Congress snuck a billion dollars of your money into a reconciliation package to "secure" a $400 million White House ballroom the president swore wouldn't cost taxpayers a dime. The official mammal of the United States — the American Bison — is being kicked off public land in Montana so cattle ranchers can graze their herds at a 90% government discount. And while you're paying $51,000 for a new car, the rest of the world is buying brand new electric vehicles for $10,000 — a price you can't access because of a 100% tariff that saved exactly zero American jobs.These aren't accidents. They're choices. And every single one of them was made at your expense.The Ignition News. Daily. On the Rebel Radio Network.

  8. 139

    Get Used To Winning

    May the Fourth be with you, and also with your constitutional rights, because somebody tried to take mine last night.I was filming Las Vegas Metro Police at a large scene on Cheyenne and Durango, completely within my legal rights, when a detective threatened me with arrest for obstruction. Twice. I have the whole thing on video, and I want to walk you through exactly what happened, why it was a textbook First Amendment violation, and why I made the strategic decision to leave rather than let them put me in handcuffs.Then we get into the news: Pete Hegseth's third wife has been sitting in top secret Pentagon briefings with no government title, no verified security clearance, and zero accountability to Congress. The Pentagon press secretary says she was never in a meeting where sensitive information was discussed. She was also in the Yemen airstrike Signal chat. Draw your own conclusions.Then Trump went on social media and openly declared that states must redraw their congressional maps before the midterms, following the Supreme Court's catastrophic gutting of the Voting Rights Act in Louisiana v. Calais. He said, and I quote, if voters have to vote twice, so be it. I want you to sit with that.And finally, where did the campus protesters go? They did not go home. Mother Jones is reporting a 64% drop in campus protests, but Occidental students just staged an encampment that lasted three days before it was violently dismantled. Harvard grad students are on strike. The question is not why students stopped showing up. The question is what the rest of us are doing to make sure they are not the only ones taking all the risk.The whole show opens and closes with the First Amendment. There is a reason it is the First Amendment.

  9. 138

    They Tried To Arrest Me

    On May 3, 2026, Las Vegas Metropolitan Police violated my constitutional rights in broad daylight. On camera. In less than ten minutes.I was filming police activity at Cheyenne and Durango as part of my ongoing investigation into LVMPD's use of Flock Safety surveillance technology. I was standing in a parking lot at a safe and reasonable distance. I said nothing to any officer. I approached no one. And yet Metro chose to approach me, fabricate a reason to stop me from filming, run my license plate as retaliation for invoking my rights, and threaten me with arrest on a false obstruction charge.Here is what makes this different from every other cop video you have seen. One of their own officers accidentally told the truth. While his colleague was shouting at me and lying about obstruction, he quietly admitted out loud what the real problem was. Not that I was blocking anything. Not that I was interfering with anything. The problem was that I was recording.That admission is on tape. That is the whole case.Nevada has some of the strongest laws in the country protecting your right to record police. LVMPD violated those laws. They violated the First Amendment. They ran my plates to intimidate me. They threatened me with arrest to silence me. And every officer standing in that parking lot that night is responsible.I have been investigating LVMPD's surveillance apparatus for months. The more I dig, the more they do not want to be seen. The irony of a department that films every car in Las Vegas trying to stop one journalist from filming them is not lost on me.This is a small moment. But small moments are exactly where rights go to die if we let them. We cannot let them.Watch the full breakdown. Share this. And if you believe in the right to hold police accountable, let me know in the comments.Subscribe for continuing coverage of this investigation and the fight to keep Las Vegas police answerable to the people they are supposed to serve.

  10. 137

    California Could Have A Republican Governor

    Sunday, May 3rd. Three stories and one local investigative finding that is a perfect illustration of why journalism still matters.Dan opens with a public records discovery out of Las Vegas: the city is reviewing contracts for red light cameras, technology that is currently illegal in Nevada. His read is that this reflects behind-the-scenes coordination between city officials, law enforcement, and state lawmakers who are pre-positioning vendor relationships ahead of another push to legalize the cameras. The governor used to run Clark County law enforcement. The dots connect.Story one: A new ABC News and Ipsos poll puts the president's approval at 37 percent, with 62 percent disapproval. Both are records across his entire political career. Two thirds of Americans say the country is going in the wrong direction, including 80 percent of independents and nearly a third of non-MAGA Republicans. Democrats now hold a five point advantage heading into the midterms, but the warning is that voters are not running toward Democrats, they are running away from fascism, and the party has not absorbed what that difference means.Story two: Kristi Noem was fired in March. She is still living in a Coast Guard admiral's house on a military base, rent free, two months later. The admiral who previously occupied that house was given three hours to clear out on inauguration day. Congressman Robert Garcia is demanding answers from DHS by May 15th. Noem's current title is Special Envoy for the Shield of the Americas. The house remains occupied.Story three: California might not have a Democrat on the November gubernatorial ballot. Eight Democrats are running and splitting the vote. Two Republicans, Steve Hilton and Chad Bianco, are consolidating a unified base. Under the state's top two primary system, both Republicans could advance to November, locking out every Democrat in a state Trump lost by 20 points. June 2nd is the primary. The math is uncomfortable.Dan closes with a challenge: the grinding weight of all of this is intentional. Go outside. Disconnect. Recharge. You need energy to fight and they are counting on you not having any.

  11. 136

    PUSHBACK

    Two stories. One theme: backlash.The AI industry sold the public two futures and neither one is good. Either the technology destroys civilization, or it destroys your job and drops you into the gig economy. Seventy-three percent of AI experts think it is good for jobs. Only 23 percent of regular people agree. Communities are fighting data centers. Eight in ten companies using AI report zero productivity gains. And the industry is still asking for hundreds of billions more while lobbying against the very regulations it publicly claims to support.Meanwhile in Maine, Chuck Schumer's preferred Senate candidate just dropped out. She was 78 years old, behind in the polls, behind in fundraising, and running against a 41-year-old combat veteran endorsed by Bernie Sanders. That story is now playing out in Michigan, Iowa, and Minnesota. Only 28 percent of Democrats view their own party favorably right now.The establishment keeps building systems that work against the people living under them. The people are noticing. Stay lit.

  12. 135

    You Just Lost Everything | What's Next

    The USS Censorship has launched, and it is the most powerful weapon the military industrial complex has ever deployed. Today on The Ignition News: U.S. national debt just crossed 100 percent of GDP for the first time since World War II, and the comparison ends there. While American troops are in harm's way in Iran, the sons of the president are cashing in on drone companies and Kazakh tungsten mines. The Supreme Court has gutted the Voting Rights Act in a way that will devastate this country for decades, and nobody in Democratic leadership has the spine to tell you the truth about it. There is a blueprint. There is still a path. But it is going to require something most people are not ready to hear. Tune in.

  13. 134

    $25 Billion For Iran (So Far)

    On today's Ignition News, the Iran war finally has a price tag: $25 billion confirmed by the Pentagon, with hundreds of billions more on the way. We break down what that money could have paid for instead and why Congress is refusing to hold a vote. Then, Pete Hegseth has a disastrous day before the Armed Services Committee, calling the nuclear justification for this war into question while effectively calling the survivors of a deadly drone attack liars. Plus, the Maine Democratic Senate primary just flipped on its head as the establishment candidate folds to a populist outsider, and what it signals for the party going forward. And a major surveillance investigation update: after two months of NPRA battles, the Flock Safety story in Las Vegas is breaking open. Stay lit.

  14. 133

    Ten Toes | One Amendment

    Dan's back after a brutal illness and he's not easing in. Today's show is about what happens when small erosions become big collapses. Kamala Harris showed up at the Arkansas Democratic Party dinner and said something Democrats almost never say out loud: trickle-down economics was a mistake. Then she floated 2028. Dan breaks down why that matters and why it probably is not enough. The FCC is going after ABC and Disney because Jimmy Kimmel made a joke about the age gap between Melania and Trump. Dan does not love Kimmel but he will stand ten toes down for the principle. Trump's face is now going on your passport and your National Parks card, and defacing either one voids it. James Comey got reindicted over a photo of seashells on a beach. And the USS Gerald R. Ford, a $13.1 billion nuclear-powered battleship, turned around and ran from a theater where $20,000 drones are winning the war. The theme today is 10 and 1. Ten toes down for one amendment. The First. It belongs to you. Stay lit.

  15. 132

    The Old Way Is Breaking. Good.

    Three stories today, and they all point to the same thing. The old architecture is cracking.First: the UAE just announced it is leaving OPEC, effective May 1st, after sixty years of membership. The trigger was Operation Epic Fury. The Strait of Hormuz has been under siege, OPEC production collapsed 27 percent in March alone, and the conflict wiped out 8 million barrels per day from the global supply. That is a larger shock than COVID. The UAE's energy minister said the war was the right moment to make the move. The war your tax dollars funded just fractured the global oil cartel that has shaped your gas prices since 1965.Second: Donald Trump is suing the federal government for ten billion dollars, and he controls both sides of the case. The IRS and Treasury are executive branch agencies under his direct authority. His private lawyers are already in settlement talks with his own government. Former officials are calling it exactly what it is: collusive litigation. Ten billion dollars is two thirds of the IRS's entire annual budget. A federal judge has until May 27th to decide whether the case can even legally proceed.Third, and this is the one that gave me real hope: Zohran Mamdani, 34 years old, democratic socialist, mayor of New York City, just passed 100 days. Over 102,000 potholes filled. City-owned grocery stores. Universal childcare expansion. A new tax on luxury second homes generating half a billion dollars a year. On the same day House Republicans voted 285 to 98 to condemn socialism, Trump was in the Oval Office praising Mamdani. The New York Times says he is succeeding despite his ideology. They have it exactly backwards.Among Americans under 30, socialism is now more popular than capitalism. DSA has grown from 5,000 members to over 100,000. The ideas are not as radical as we were told. More people are figuring that out every day.The empire is fracturing at the top. The people at the bottom are building something better. You can hold both of those things at once.

  16. 131

    22 Minutes

    Dan comes back from a week of poor health, still sick, fresh medical debt, and immediately gets into it. Today's episode connects the White House Correspondents' Dinner shooting to the gun violence every American parent carries every single day, breaks down why the credentialed press class has abandoned the people it was supposed to serve, and maps the full Hunger Games parallel onto the current political moment. Districts versus Capitol. Three people holding more wealth than the bottom half of the country. The enemy-of-the-week rotating to keep you from looking up at the Gamemakers.Then the hard news. Congress has effectively made itself optional. Trump is paying federal workers without a congressional appropriation, waging wars Congress never authorized, and the White House is openly redirecting congressionally appropriated money toward ICE. The DHS shutdown is still technically happening and nobody is talking about it. Meanwhile seventy billion dollars in ICE and Border Patrol funding just got locked in through reconciliation, designed to outlast November no matter how the election goes.And Hakeem Jeffries says impeachment is not a top priority. The Democratic Party's current message is affordability. It is 2026.Dan also weighs in on the Kara Swisher situation on Threads, gives Nora O'Donnell her flowers for the 60 Minutes corner, and closes with a challenge: stop making enemies out of tributes.We are the districts. The work is now.

  17. 130

    I'll Be Back

    Dan checks in sick from the field with a short episode that opens up into a much bigger conversation. Today's reflection digs into the American healthcare system, the myopic lens of employer provided coverage, why the Affordable Care Act never delivered what this country actually needed, and the brutal reality that 36 percent of insured Americans still skip medical care because they cannot afford it. This is about more than insurance. It is about the myth of rugged individualism and what happens to the least among us when there is no real safety net to catch them.

  18. 129

    They Are Coming for All of Us.

    Three stories today, and they all connect to the same root question: who holds power in this country, who gets to stay, and who gets to buy the politicians you thought you elected.First, Texas Republican Chip Roy introduced the Mamdani Act in Congress, naming it after New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani because he needed a socialist Muslim villain. The bill would make any non-citizen deportable or denaturalizable for advocating socialism, communism, Marxism, or Islamic fundamentalism, and it strips courts of the power to review those decisions. Roy said out loud on the record: no more Muslims, no more criminals, no more Marxists. The definition is vague by design. That is not an accident in authoritarian legislation. If they make it illegal to be a Marxist, they will not stop at the border.Second, Apple announced that Tim Cook is stepping down as CEO on September 1st, handing the role to hardware chief John Turnus. Cook moves to executive chairman. His fifteen years took Apple from a hundred billion to one of the most valuable companies on the planet. But his final chapter was defined by shaking hands in the White House next to a gold trophy, pledging 600 billion dollars while the tariffs gutting his own supply chain were later ruled illegal. He had the cash and the legal firepower to fight. He chose proximity to power instead. That is how he will be remembered.Third, and this is the one worth holding onto: Hawaii's SB 2471 has passed the state senate unanimously and is moving through the House. It challenges Citizens United by going back to first principles, arguing that because the state creates corporations and grants them their powers, the state can decide those powers do not include buying elections. Thirteen other states have introduced similar bills. Hawaii has gone the farthest. Legal theories that look like long shots build case law over time. That is how change actually happens.Stop playing it safe. Think different. Stay lit.

  19. 128

    We Are Winning

    An Important Episode, talking about what happens when power is backed into a corner. Dan talks about Kash Patel and his dangerous lack of fitness. We talk about the lawsuit against the Atlantic. Dan breaks an incredible story about how he overcame police harassment from the sitting governor of Nevada.

  20. 127

    The Food Crisis

    The United Nations World Food Program estimates that 45 million additional people will be pushed into acute hunger as a direct result of the war in Iran. Two thirds of them are in Africa. They had no vote in Operation Epic Fury. They did not ask for this war. And they are going to pay for it with their lives.In today's episode, we go deep on the supply chain most war coverage ignores entirely: fertilizer. The modern food system runs on natural gas, not sunshine, and the Persian Gulf sits at the center of global ammonia, urea, and sulfur trade. Saudi Arabia is the world's largest urea exporter. Half of global seaborne sulfur moves through the Strait of Hormuz. Jebel Ali is the world's largest humanitarian logistics hub and the U.S. Navy's busiest foreign port.Seven weeks in, fertilizer prices are already up 26 percent. Food inflation in the UK could hit 10 percent by year's end. In Sudan, 19 million people are already in acute food insecurity.The Financial Times calls this foreseeable. We call it a choice. Stay lit.

  21. 126

    The Quadruple Tap

    On Wednesday, April 16th, Israeli forces struck a location in southern Lebanon's Nabatiyeh district. When medics from the Islamic Health Association responded, they were struck in a second attack. When other emergency workers arrived to evacuate them, their ambulance was struck. When another ambulance came, it was struck too. Four strikes. One rescue mission. Four medics dead. Six wounded. Lebanon's health ministry gave it a name: the quadruple tap.This is not a battlefield accident. Under international law, that red crescent means non-combatant. It means protected. Israel has claimed for months that Hezbollah uses ambulances as cover, without producing a single piece of evidence. They keep bombing ambulances anyway.One of the medics killed was named Fadel Saran. He used to bring pet food from Beirut so stray cats and dogs in the neighborhood wouldn't go hungry. Another was sixteen years old. His name was Jude Suleiman. His father attended Fadel's funeral on Thursday, one day after burying his own son.Since the ground invasion of Lebanon began on March 16th, more than 2,000 people have been killed, one million have been displaced, and 91 healthcare workers are dead. The government hospital in the region, the only fully operational one in the south, has been struck twice. This is the Gaza Playbook: eliminate the infrastructure of survival.The United States has funded this war, armed it, and provided diplomatic cover at every turn. On February 28th, we participated in the strike that killed Iranian Supreme Leader Khamenei and set this escalation in motion. Your tax dollars are being used to kill medics.This is a war crime. Saying so is not antisemitism. It is accountability. And you have every right to be outraged.Listen to The Ignition News wherever you get your podcasts.

  22. 125

    They Are Giving You A Straw and Telling You To Share

    They are handing us a straw and telling us to share it. That is the Democratic Party's offer. That is what harm reduction voting actually means when you strip the language away.On today's show: I lay out exactly why I will deny Aaron Ford the Nevada governorship if Democrats coronate him without a fight. His $1.2 million war chest looks grassroots until you follow the money to hedge funds, startup investors, and out-of-state real estate groups. He is openly pro data center in a desert state, and he literally hired a robot to fake his handwritten thank-you notes. I am not making a threat. I am describing a plan.We also break down what "no tax on tips" actually is, because it is not what the president sold Las Vegas this week. It is an income exclusion requiring married workers to itemize, and it caps at $25,000 per worker at a moment when Nevada tourism is already down 11 percent.Seven Senate Democrats voted to keep sending arms to Israel. Seven. Including both of Nevada's senators. I explain what military bulldozers do and why I will not criticize anyone who could not vote for Kamala Harris over Gaza.And we close on a win: Bloomington, Indiana, population 80,000, just cancelled its Flock Safety contract after months of community pressure and a unanimous city council vote. Here in Las Vegas we are still fighting the Ben Horowitz surveillance pipeline. Bloomington showed it can be done.A thousand leaders in a thousand communities. Stay lit.

  23. 124

    The Holy War

    The Secretary of Defense compared the American press to the Pharisees who persecuted Jesus. The Pope condemned "a handful of tyrants" from a cathedral in Cameroon. The administration pulled $11 million from a Catholic orphanage program that has been running since the Kennedy era. And 40 Senate Democrats voted to block arms sales to Israel while their own leader voted against them.Four stories. One thread. Religion is being weaponized to justify war, silence dissent, and punish institutions that refuse to fall in line. And the people who are supposed to be leading the opposition cannot even stand with their own caucus.This is the Ignition News for April 16, 2026.

  24. 123

    The Broken Printer Is the Point

    Today on The Ignition News, Dan starts with a rant about the Apple Store (it has become a retirement home, iOS looks like a Fisher Price toy, moving on). Then: a lesson in accountability hiding inside a broken 3D printer. Dan's son Ben has been selling 3D printed resistance whistles to fund his own printer, and the Las Vegas Library District has quietly made that harder than it should be. Three of four federally funded printers at a local branch are broken. Dan walks through exactly why this is not a small story, how the deliberate degradation of public institutions creates the political conditions for authoritarian consolidation, and what one person with the right information can do about it. Then: Trump deleted the Jesus AI slop image only to immediately post another one. And finally, a full accounting of Bernie Sanders' 50 year political history, from 1,571 votes in 1972 to blocking arms sales to Israel on the Senate floor this week. Why persistence is the only model that actually works. All that and a note on activist burnout. Stay lit.

  25. 122

    A Man Died. Amazon Texted Workers to Come In Tomorrow

    A man went to work at Amazon's PDX9 warehouse in Troutdale, Oregon on April 6th. He did not come home.When he collapsed on the warehouse floor, a coworker with CPR training asked her supervisor if she could help the woman already performing chest compressions. The supervisor told her to turn around, not look, and get back to work. For more than an hour, the conveyor belts kept moving.Today we are devoting this entire episode to that story. We cover the facility's documented history as the most dangerous Amazon warehouse in the country, the pattern of deaths Amazon has repeatedly characterized as non-work-related, the gutting of the federal agency responsible for preventing exactly these kinds of deaths, and the detail that I cannot get out of my head: the supervisor had tears in her own eyes when she told Sam to look away.This is not just about Amazon. This is about what happens when an economy decides that some lives are inputs and not people.Source: The Western Edge, investigative journalist Ryan Haas. Confirmed by Amazon spokesperson to TechCrunch.

  26. 121

    The President Jesus

    First: Viktor Orban is out. After 16 years of dismantling Hungarian democracy, building the blueprint that the global far right copied, and making it genuinely dangerous to vote against him, the people of Hungary showed up in record numbers. The Titsa party pulled 53 percent. Orban got 38. More than 3.3 million Hungarians voted for Peter Magyar, the highest vote total in that country's history, with turnout approaching 80 percent. Orban conceded. This is what collective power actually looks like.Second: Benjamin Netanyahu told his cabinet this weekend that JD Vance reports to him in detail every single day about the Iran negotiations. Not coordinates. Reports. Meanwhile we are six weeks into an unauthorized war, spending a billion dollars a day, and the military is circulating a propaganda story so absurd it lifted the plot of a 1989 Scott Bakula TV show to explain how they found a downed pilot. The USS Gerald Ford, a $13.1 billion aircraft carrier, had to retreat from the region. The military industrial complex is a fraud, and the receipts are piling up.Third: The president attacked Pope Leo XIV, the first American pope, on social media. Called him weak on crime. The Pope said he will not set foot in the United States while this president is in office. And then the president posted an AI image of himself as Jesus Christ, deleted it, and claimed he thought it was him as a doctor.The courts are not saving us. The politicians are not saving us. Feet on the street and communities holding the line. That is what is working.Stay lit.

  27. 120

    2000 Lives In Lebanon

    While the president fist-pumped the crowd at UFC 307 in Miami, the United States war with Iran entered one of its most dangerous phases yet. Peace talks in Islamabad collapsed after 21 hours of face-to-face negotiations. The sticking points: Iran's nuclear stockpile and control of the Strait of Hormuz. Washington walked out. Hours later, riding back to his Doral Resort after midnight, Trump posted on Truth Social that the U.S. Navy would blockade the Strait of Hormuz entirely, threatening to interdict every vessel that has paid a toll to Iran and warning any country that assists Iran with a 50 percent tariff.The Strait of Hormuz carries roughly 20 percent of the world's oil. Oil has already spiked past $100 a barrel. The New York Times editorial board catalogued four concrete losses for American national interests since the start of this conflict: Iran now controls the strait in a way it never could have imagined before, more than a quarter of America's Tomahawk missile inventory has been depleted and will take years to restore, and the diplomatic coalition needed to resolve the situation is unraveling. The president called it a total victory.What is not in any of the headlines from Islamabad is Lebanon. When the ceasefire was announced, Netanyahu's office made it explicit: Lebanon is not part of the deal. Israel has continued its air and ground campaign throughout the entire negotiation period. The first day of the ceasefire was one of the deadliest days in Lebanon in recent memory. More than 300 people were killed in a single day of Israeli strikes. At least 165 children and 250 women have been killed across this campaign. In the village of Srifa, the Said family had gathered to bury their father when a strike hit their home. Seven-year-old Aline survived. Her one-and-a-half-year-old sister Talin did not.Iran has demanded any peace agreement include a Lebanon ceasefire. Israel has refused. The United States is siding with Israel. Lebanon has no seat at any table. Today on the Ignition News, we ask you to hold all of it at once: the geopolitics, the global economy, and a baby named Talin carried out in a green cloth. That is the war. Not the posts. Not the fist pumps.We challenge you to learn more about Lebanon and the history of this conflict. It is by seeing clearly what is happening that we have any hope of stopping it.Stay lit.

  28. 119

    We Are Not OK

    This is The Ignition News for Saturday, April 11th, 2026. Today's episode opens with a meditation on Walt Whitman's charge to "resist much, obey little," then moves into four stories that show exactly what happens when a government stops serving its people. A Denver-born American citizen named Brian Morales was deported to Mexico on April 7th after CBP agents refused to verify his documents, coerced him into signing voluntary removal papers, and dropped him in a country he has not lived in since he was a toddler. The University of Michigan released its monthly consumer sentiment survey showing an all-time historic low, down 11% since March, with declines across every age group, every income level, and every political affiliation. Gas prices have surged 40% since the war with Iran began, now sitting at $4.17 nationally and over $5.50 in Las Vegas, the largest increase in 60 years. And Kevin Hassett, the president's top economic advisor, went on Fox Business and bragged about cutting 300,000 high-paying government jobs that are, in his own words, gone forever. The episode closes with a call to community-level resistance and the reminder that the small acts of courage you do every single day are exactly why this administration has not been as successful as they want to be. Stay lit.

  29. 118

    Everyone Is Breaking Right Now

    Today on The Ignition News: the working class is being pushed past its limits, and the evidence is everywhere. We break down a class conscious reading of what is happening to the American workforce, from AI driven job displacement to runaway executive compensation at companies like Verizon, and what it means that Starlink may eliminate the last category of entry level jobs that gave working people a foothold.We also cover the DHS surveillance operation that turned a peaceful ICE protest post on Reddit into a federal grand jury case, and what it means that Google and Gmail are cooperating with hundreds of administrative subpoenas targeting people organizing against the administration. We have a Nevada angle on this story.The March inflation numbers dropped this morning: consumer prices up 3.3 percent year over year, real wages down 0.6 percent after adjusting for inflation. Your paycheck is going backwards. This is the cost of the Iran conflict landing directly on working people.And we get into the story of Amanda Ungaro: a woman who appeared on Epstein flight logs at sixteen, shares a son with the modeling agent who introduced Melania Trump to Donald Trump, was arrested in Miami on charges her attorneys call manufactured, held in an ICE facility without bail for over three months, and then deported without a trial. Melania went on camera the day before this story gained traction. We explain why.We close with a direct argument about where the left needs to focus its energy, who we can still reach, and why coalition building is the only path forward with the clock running.It is Friday, April 10th, 2026. You are listening to The Ignition News. Stay lit.

  30. 117

    The American Pope Is Not Coming To America

    The Ignition News | April 9, 2026The Unraveling CoalitionNOAA data released Tuesday confirmed that March 2026 was not just the hottest March in recorded history but the most abnormally hot month ever measured, coming in 9.35 degrees Fahrenheit above the 20th century average. Nineteen thousand eight hundred locations set peak heat records. Two thousand set all-time records. The planet is keeping score whether we pay attention or not.In the right-wing influencer world, an anonymous post on X claiming the U.S. was about to investigate American influencers for taking foreign money triggered a full-scale civil war inside the MAGA ecosystem. No verification. Maximum panic. It tells you something about a coalition when a single rumor sends it into open conflict with itself.Pope Leo XIV, born Robert Francis Prevost and the first American-born pope in the history of the Catholic Church, will not be visiting the United States in 2026. The story starts at the Pentagon, where Under Secretary of Defense Elbridge Colby summoned the Vatican's U.S. envoy to a closed-door meeting and told him the U.S. has the military power to do whatever it wants and the Church had better get on side. A U.S. official invoked the Avignon Papacy, the 14th-century period when France forced the pope out of Rome and controlled Catholic leadership for decades. Vatican officials took that as a threat. On July 4th, instead of attending Trump's 250th anniversary celebration, the first American pope in history will be on Lampedusa, a tiny Mediterranean island where North African migrants arrive exhausted and desperate by the thousands. No pope makes that choice by accident.Just before midnight Wednesday, one day after backing down from his own Iran deadline, Trump posted on Truth Social that the shootin' starts if no deal is reached. By morning he was threatening NATO. The Financial Times reported he had been privately seeking a ceasefire since March 21st, even while publicly threatening to destroy Iranian infrastructure. Iran is now demanding one dollar per barrel of oil through the Strait of Hormuz, payable in Bitcoin. The Strait's status is disputed.On the draft: the White House this week refused to rule out conscription. The infrastructure is already moving. Under the FY2026 Defense Authorization Act, every male U.S. citizen and immigrant between 18 and 25 will be automatically entered into the Selective Service pool by December. Seven service members are confirmed dead in Operation Epic Fury. Marjorie Taylor Greene posted "not my son, over my dead body." You do not have to support her to recognize that when even she is drawing that line, something inside this coalition has fundamentally shifted.The thread running through all of it: a movement collapsing under the weight of its own contradictions. Stay lit.

  31. 116

    No Shortcuts | Iran Already Closed The Strait

    April 8, 2026. The Ignition News opens with a lesson before it opens with the news. Two lessons, actually. One from a 14-year-old learning 3D printing at his local library and one from Harriet Tubman. Both say the same thing: there are no shortcuts in the work of liberation. Ben, Dan's son, recessed the word "resist" into his safety whistles to save time, printed 12 of them in two and a half hours, and discovered none of them worked. He wrote "fails" on the box he put them in and said those were the ones he would learn from. That is the entire show in one story.Tubman carried a pistol on the Underground Railroad for a reason. No one was allowed to turn back. A person who returned to the plantation under threat could betray the entire network. Her rule was simple: you will be free or die. She did not leave people behind out of failure. She left them as the next mission. That framework applies directly to where we are right now. The people being left behind, whether by authoritarianism, economic extraction, or deliberate erasure, are not failures. They are the next objective.On the news: Iran and the United States are now on a two-week bridge, not a ceasefire. Trump posted on Truth Social that "a whole civilization will die tonight." Iranians formed human chains around power plants and bridges. Pakistan brokered a 10-point proposal from Tehran. Oil dropped 13 percent overnight, and the Strait of Hormuz is now being tolled at two million dollars per vessel, roughly 130 vessels per day. That is $95 billion per year flowing to Iran and Oman. The Obama deal cost $51.7 billion over its entire lifespan. We have out-negotiated ourselves into subsidizing the adversary we bombed.Pam Bondi, fired as attorney general six days ago, has announced she will not appear for her April 14th congressional deposition on the Epstein files. The House Oversight Committee subpoena is bipartisan and legally enforceable. Todd Blanch, the new interim attorney general and the president's personal lawyer, said in a press conference yesterday: "I love the president." He is now the man in charge of the Epstein files. And on taxes: the bottom 95 percent of American households are paying more in 2026 than they would have paid if Congress had done nothing. The top one percent received $117 billion in tax cuts this year alone. Amazon paid 1.4 percent on $89 billion in profits. Palantir paid zero on $7.2 billion. You paid somewhere between 22 and 27 percent. Your refund was a one-time artifact. The tax tables had not yet caught up to the new code. Stay lit.

  32. 115

    We Are On The Edge

    This morning, Donald Trump posted on Truth Social that a whole civilization will die tonight. The deadline for strikes on Iranian bridges and power plants is hours away. Iran has ended all talks. There is no deal. This is his fourth deadline and his second this week alone.On today's episode of The Ignition News, we cover where Operation Epic Fury stands right now: the Strait of Hormuz still closed, Brent crude above 110 dollars a barrel, gas past five dollars in some cities, and US forces striking Iranian oil infrastructure overnight. We cover the Pentagon's move to revise its target list to include civilian energy facilities, and what human rights experts say that means under the Fourth Geneva Convention. We cover the growing chorus calling for the president's removal under the 25th Amendment, including MTG, Tucker Carlson, Alex Jones, JB Pritzker, and Ro Khanna.We also look at what happens to everyday American life when the federal government falls apart from the top down, including eight people killed in police vehicle pursuits in fewer than seven days across Alabama, Texas, and California.And we close with something more personal: a moment at the movies with family, and a reminder that around this planet, billions of people are having tiny three second flashes of ordinary human life right now. People in Tehran. People in Alabama. People who did not choose any of this.This is the most serious moment of our political lifetime. Act accordingly.The Ignition News airs daily. Follow and subscribe on your favorite podcast platform.

  33. 114

    What to talk about when the world is ending.

    The world feels like it is unraveling in real time, and today on The Ignition News, Dan asks the question that keeps coming up: what do you talk about when it feels like the world is ending?On today's episode: Trump held a press conference where he claimed the U.S. could "finish Iran in one evening," while Pete Hegseth promised major strikes ahead. Meanwhile, the administration still refuses to acknowledge the full scope of military losses, including roughly $200 million in downed aircraft, and soldiers are reportedly being quartered in hotels after bases across the Middle East sustained heavy damage. Dr. Vin Gupta publicly listed five clinical markers of dementia he has observed in the president, and Trump's Easter Truth Social post included the phrase "praise be to Allah," raising serious concerns about both his judgment and his cognitive state.The economic fallout is already here. Amazon hit 2 million sellers with a 3.5% surcharge. UPS, FedEx, and USPS have all raised fuel charges. Diesel is over $5 a gallon and crude has passed $107 a barrel. Food insecurity is next.But today also brought two stories about people choosing to build rather than despair, including a moderator opening a community restaurant in rural Oregon and a young rebel selling custom 3D printed safety whistles to fund his own 3D printer. No one is coming to save us. It is up to us.

  34. 113

    Pilot Down, President Silent

    The Ignition News | April 4, 2026Four Stories. One Reckoning.Five weeks into Operation Epic Fury, Iran shot down an American F-15E Strike Eagle, the first confirmed kill of a US fighter jet since the war began. A pilot is still missing. The president had told us the operation was near completion. John Bolton went on CNN and said the White House was in panic mode. The Strait of Hormuz is still closed.In Maine, something rare happened. The state house passed a bill freezing construction permits for data centers over 20 megawatts until November 2027, the first state in the country to do so. Residents have seen a 60 percent spike in electricity costs since 2021. Maine looked at the full picture and said no. The AI buildout does not get a free pass.Back in Washington, the Trump administration is gutting the two agencies built after the 2008 collapse to prevent the next one: the Office of Financial Research and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Neither is funded by taxpayer dollars. The only people who benefit from their dismantling are the financial institutions that do not want to be watched.And the receipts are coming in. A new CNN poll shows Trump's approval among working class white voters has flipped negative for the first time. More than one in three Latino Trump voters say they regret their vote. Their top reason is the economy.Four stories. One thread. Stay lit.

  35. 112

    Make The Earth Move Slower

    An F-15E was shot down over Iran today with one crew member still unaccounted for, just days after the president told the country the war was essentially won. Gas is now $4.09 nationally, up 37 percent since the conflict began. The Strait of Hormuz remains closed, CENTCOM lied about the missing aircraft, and Iran lied about what kind of plane it was. Both sides are running disinformation while real families wait for real answers.Pam Bondi was fired, and her interim replacement is Todd Blanch, the president's personal attorney from his 34-count felony conviction. The first two cabinet firings of this administration are both women. Neither is getting a pardon.New polling shows Trump has lost white working class voters. Among Americans earning under $50,000 a year, his disapproval sits at 70 percent. The narrative is cracking.And we close with something bigger: Ye performing on a set designed to look like a dying planet while the actual world buckles under war, tariffs, and AI-driven labor displacement. Silicon Valley is now trialing 72-hour work weeks. Music producers, audio engineers, studio professionals are watching their livelihoods get absorbed by tools that tell users they are artists now. We have been here before as a species. Staring down something enormous and deciding whether to let it win.Make the earth move slower. Stay lit.

  36. 111

    The King Has No Clothes and No Attorney General

    The Ignition News | April 2, 2026This was supposed to be a recorded episode. Breaking news made it a live show.Pam Bondi is out as attorney general. The second cabinet firing in less than a month. Reports say she begged the president not to fire her during an explosive White House confrontation. Her replacement is Todd Blanche, the president's personal lawyer from the New York criminal trial he lost. If you were hoping Bondi's departure meant the Department of Justice was returning to its stated purpose, that hope did not survive the announcement.The president addressed the nation last night on the Iran war. He claimed their air force is gone, their missiles nearly exhausted, and that complete military victory is imminent. Then he threatened to bomb them into the stone ages if they do not comply. The Strait of Hormuz is still closed. Oil is at $111 a barrel. Iran says they are not negotiating with anyone.A journalist obtained video from a White House Easter luncheon with MAGA faith leaders. In it, the president told a room full of pastors that if he were a king, he could do a lot more. The pastors laughed. The White House deleted the tape.And while all of that was happening, more than 10,000 veterans have lost their homes to foreclosure since May of 2025, the fastest pace in a decade, after the administration killed the VA rescue mortgage program with one week of notice to servicers.We started the show with a woman in Las Vegas who lost her 13-year-old dog. We close with the same story. All of it connects. Stay lit.

  37. 110

    Nobody Knows What He Intends to Do

    It is April 1st, but the Ignition News is not playing games. Four major stories dominate today's show, and not one of them is a joke.The United States is five weeks into Operation Epic Fury with 13 service members dead and 300 wounded. The Washington Post is reporting that the Pentagon has been quietly drawing up plans for extended ground operations in Iran, including special forces and conventional infantry raids along the Iranian coastline and Strait of Hormuz. The White House has not denied it. Nobody around the president, including his own senior advisors, seems to know what he actually intends to do next. Meanwhile, Iran is not standing down, American agricultural communities are quietly panicking about fuel and fertilizer costs, and there is still no exit strategy.On the same day, for the first time in American history, a sitting president showed up to the Supreme Court for oral arguments. Trump sat in the public gallery as his attorney argued the birthright citizenship case, then stormed out less than 90 minutes later after his lawyer struggled to make the case. The ACLU's chief counsel, the child of immigrants, argued on behalf of the Constitution. The outcome is not guaranteed, and the show draws a sharp comparison to Trump v. United States, the immunity case that experts said he could never win until he did.Also on today's docket: the president's executive order targeting mail-in voting. It would require states to submit federally formatted voter eligibility lists to DHS 60 days before an election or lose mail ballot access entirely. The Supreme Court is just now getting to an executive order signed on Inauguration Day. The midterms are five months away. The message is clear: make your voting plan now, and make sure ten other people do the same.Finally, AOC broke new ground Tuesday night in a private virtual forum, stating she will never vote to authorize any funding to Israel, including for the Iron Dome. She made clear that if Israel wants to arm itself, it should finance its own weapons. The DSA had already withdrawn its endorsement over her previous position on defensive systems. This new statement reshapes the landscape ahead of a potential 2028 presidential run or Senate bid.Today's show closes not with despair but with a challenge: do something tangible today. Clear out your pantry. Find clothes to donate. Get off the sidelines. The resistance is accumulating weight, and you can see it in the fact that the president of the United States felt compelled to walk into a Supreme Court and then walk back out.Stay lit.

  38. 109

    Big Bird, Big Bills and Bad Polls.

    Gas has hit $4 a gallon nationally and over $5 in Las Vegas as the Iran conflict drags past a month with no end in sight. Farmers are warning that rising fuel and fertilizer costs are coming for your grocery bill next. A federal judge struck down Trump's executive order defunding NPR and PBS, calling it unconstitutional viewpoint discrimination, but much of the damage to public media has already been done. Tomorrow the Supreme Court hears oral arguments on birthright citizenship, a case that could render 255,000 American-born babies stateless every year. And a new UMass Amherst poll puts Trump's approval at 33%, with 63% disapproving of how he has handled the Iran war. The working class is getting hit on every front at once. The answer is to refuse to be overwhelmed. Stay lit.

  39. 108

    Bunkers, Snow Angels and Optimism

    There was a night in Wyoming when a little kid's dog died of antifreeze poisoning. It was midnight. It was snowing. And his father drove a Chevy Blazer out onto a frozen pond, got out with the headlights on, and fell backward into the snow making snow angels. That story opens today's show, and it is the through-line for everything that follows, because the point of all of this is not just to stop the bad. It is to fight for magic.Today's stories: Trump inadvertently admitted on Air Force One that the $400 million White House ballroom is a cover story for an underground military bunker, complete with bulletproof glass and drone-proof ceilings, and the railroad company donating to it turns out to own the air-gapped military fiber network running beneath the American rail system. Stephen Miller has been confirmed by two DHS officials to have ordered daily calls demanding ICE agents "vanquish protesters by any force necessary," which is now being directly linked to the killing of Alex Preti. The United States used an untested short-range ballistic missile called the PRSM on a second school in Iran on the same day 175 people were killed at the school in Manab, bringing the one-day total to two schools struck. And to fund the $200 billion war, the House Budget Committee is cutting the ACA cost-sharing provisions that help low-income Americans afford high deductibles, which would push 300,000 more people off coverage by 2034.Also: the unhoused are disappearing. Not metaphorically. They are being removed from public spaces, the discomfort we were never allowed to name is being quietly resolved for us, and nobody is keeping count of where they went.Thirty days to May Day. You deserve more than the floor. Stay lit.

  40. 107

    33 Days Until The Largest General Strike In History

    Last night I got attacked by a bat. And standing in my driveway at 10 o'clock, I had to make the decision millions of Americans make every day: risk dying or go into debt. Rabies is nearly 100 percent fatal without treatment. The treatment can cost thousands of dollars and push someone into bankruptcy. I went to the ER. I am going to be okay. But no one in this country should have to do that math. That is the American healthcare system. That is what the One Big Beautiful Bill bought with nearly a trillion dollars in Medicaid cuts. Then today, Palm Sunday, Pope Leo XIV stood in St. Peter's Square before tens of thousands of people and told every politician using God to justify the Iran war that God is not listening to them. He said it directly: he does not hear the prayers of those with blood on their hands. Pete Hegseth prayed for overwhelming violence at the Pentagon. The Pope just answered that prayer. Meanwhile, Republican canvassers are being chased off porches by their own voters, oil has blown past 100 dollars a barrel, and an anonymous House Republican told Politico that ground troops in Iran could cost the GOP 60 to 70 seats in November. The No Kings movement just made history with the largest single protest in American history on March 28th. And the next step is already announced: a nationwide general strike on May 1st. No work, no school, no shopping. 33 days away. Stay lit.

  41. 106

    A Billion Dollar Bribe That Raised Your Gas Bill

    It is Saturday, March 28th, 2026 and the streets are waking up. This is a special weekend edition of the Ignition News.Three stories connect today's edition to something bigger than any one headline.First, 36 House Republicans have now announced they will not seek reelection in 2026, breaking the record set in 2018 when Democrats retook the House. These are not fringe members. Foreign Affairs Committee chair Michael McCall, swing district rep Don Bacon, Elise Stefanik, and Nevada's Mark Amodei are all walking out the door. Members are telling colleagues behind the scenes that Congress under this leadership is pointless, intolerable, or simply no longer functional. That is not a scheduling problem. That is an exodus.Second, the Trump administration has lost every federal case attempting to block offshore wind construction on the East Coast, so it found a different approach: it paid a French oil company $928 million of your tax money to abandon wind leases off New York and North Carolina. Those projects would have powered up to 1.4 million homes. TotalEnergies, the company that received the money, was already invested in the Texas LNG facility it agreed to prioritize. The administration used public funds to hand a foreign corporation a windfall for an investment it had already made.Third, 6 percent of Americans took hardship withdrawals from their 401ks in 2025, triple the pre-pandemic rate. The top reason: preventing foreclosure or eviction. Foreclosure filings were up 14 percent in 2025 and up 20 percent in February 2026 alone. The average account balance is up, but the median working-age American has saved just $1,000 for retirement. The people being forced to cash out are not the ones with rising averages.These stories are connected. The costs are being pushed onto working people while the benefits flow to those at the top. That is not an accident.Today is No Kings Day. If you showed up, you are the actual patriot.Stay awake, stay loud.

  42. 105

    We Don't Have a Government. We Have an Extraction Machine.

    We open with a direct question: does the United States actually have a functioning government? The evidence says no. Not for working people. The roads are crumbling. Airports in tourist destinations outperform ours. Spam calls have made the phone itself a source of daily anxiety. Phone stores, DoorDash, Uber Eats, all of it runs on the same model: extract from workers, extract from customers, extract from restaurants, and let the tab fall on the public. Nobody in this government has said a word.Then we get into today's four stories.Story one: Kash Patel's personal email was hacked by Handala, a pro-Iranian cyber group, who published his private photos, resume, and contact information publicly. The FBI said no comment. The question is not just whether systems were compromised. The question is whether we would even know.Story two: Pete Hegseth has blocked four Army officers from earning one-star general promotions. Two are Black. Two are women. All four earned it. The Pentagon is conducting a DEI purge inside an active wartime military. That is not culture. That is recklessness.Story three: The president is signing US currency. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called it the most powerful recognition of the country's historical achievements. There is no one left in this government willing to say no. And if you want to understand how isolated the president is from reality, watch the Lego troll videos coming out of Iran and ask yourself why he is not responding.Story four: The SAVE Act amendment was defeated 53 to 47. For now. The bill would have required a passport to register to vote. Half of Americans do not have one. A passport costs 150 dollars and takes 12 weeks. The majority of Americans cannot cover a 400 dollar emergency. This is a voter suppression bill dressed up as election integrity.We close out the show looking ahead to the No Kings protest this weekend and the model being set in New York City, where a mayor is filling potholes, paying people to shovel sidewalks, and reminding people that government is supposed to work for them. That memory is contagious. Revolution is additive. Resistance is a formula. Be additive.Stay lit.

  43. 104

    Revolution Is Addition

    Last night Dan found an injured rattlesnake in one of the wealthiest gated communities in Las Vegas and could not shake the metaphor: the snake, a mockingbird fighting it, and Dan himself all unwelcome in a space built on top of their natural world, while the billionaires behind the gates posed the actual threat to all of them.From there, the show covers three stories. First, No Kings Day is Saturday, March 28th, and it is projected to be the single largest day of civil protest in American history for the third time in a row. Dan pushes back hard on the couch critics, arguing that showing up is how you build the mutual aid networks and community coalitions that make the next action possible. Revolutions are additive. Second, the United Nations General Assembly voted 123 to 3 to formally recognize the transatlantic slave trade as a crime against humanity. The three nations that voted no were Argentina, Israel, and the United States, whose official stated reason was that Trump has done more for Black Americans than any other president. Third, the Pentagon lost in court on press access, then immediately repackaged the same censorship restrictions in new packaging. Dan connects this to Gaza, to AI-blurred war footage, and to Pete Hegseth as America's Baghdad Bob, a government spokesperson so detached from ground truth that other countries now watch him the way we once watched Iraq's wartime spin machine.The thread tying it all together: when power can control what gets reported, the damage is not just what gets hidden. It is the permanent cloud of uncertainty that makes everything unverifiable. And that is not a failure of the system. It is the system working exactly as designed.

  44. 103

    $580 Million, 800 Votes, One Air Traffic Controller

    Today on the Ignition News: Four stories with one common thread, power and who controls it. Someone placed a $580 million bet on oil futures about 15 minutes before Trump posted on Truth Social that the U.S. had re-engaged with Iran, walking away massively rich while Americans pay 42 percent more for electricity than in 2019. In Florida, Democrat Emily Gregory flipped District 87, literally the district where Mar-a-Lago sits, by 800 votes over a Republican who won by 19 points in 2024. Bernie Sanders and AOC announced legislation to impose a full nationwide moratorium on AI data center construction, as two thirds of all data centers are being built in water-constrained areas and 49,000 Lake Tahoe customers are set to lose power in 2027 so NV Energy can prioritize data center infrastructure. And ICE agents in airports are creating longer lines, more chaos, and dangerous conditions, with the LaGuardia crash serving as a direct consequence of running a single air traffic controller on a six-day, ten-hour-a-day schedule. The show closes with a direct challenge to couch cynics and a call to protect the vote as the last sustainable democratic right we have.

  45. 102

    They Are Normalizing the Army at Your Door

    ICE agents in full body armor are now deployed to airports across the country while TSA remains unfunded, 400 experienced agents have quit, and two Trump officials gave completely contradictory explanations for why ICE is there. Meanwhile, swaths of the president's civilian cabinet have relocated to military bases with no historical precedent. The Nintendo Switch 2 just cut production from six million to four million units because US families cannot afford them anymore, a direct result of tariffs and AI-driven chip inflation that the billionaire class simply does not feel. Today's episode connects the dots between militarized normalization, the economic squeeze on working people, and the professional class that still thinks it is not next.

  46. 101

    You Are The Storm

    Robert Mueller is dead. The president celebrated it publicly. That is where we begin today, because Mueller's story is a warning that every person watching power collapse in real time needs to hear: choosing institutional norms over direct accountability in a time of authoritarian consolidation does not make you noble. It makes you irrelevant, and it will cost you everything.Then: an Air Canada Express jet struck an airport fire truck on the runway at LaGuardia Sunday night, killing both pilots. Air traffic controllers have been working six day weeks under a partial government shutdown that has gone five weeks without a resolution. 50,000 TSA workers have been showing up without a paycheck. 400 of them have quit. The president's answer is to send ICE agents in masks to 14 airports.Finally: the Supreme Court is hearing arguments in a case that could eliminate mail-in ballot grace periods in 14 states and affect 17 more, targeting the exact voters who cannot afford to wait in a five hour line.This is deliberate. And it only works if we stay silent. If they make it harder to vote, we vote harder. You are the storm.

  47. 100

    This War Will Make It Harder For You To Get Your Medicine

    Two shortages. One war. Both hitting your kitchen table.The same conflict choking the Strait of Hormuz is strangling India's pharmaceutical supply chain, and India manufactures 47% of all generic prescriptions Americans take every day. Naphtha prices have jumped over 30% in a week. Inventory cushions at major US distributors are already gone. Supply chain experts are pointing to early to mid April as the inflection point when patients start feeling it.And then there are the missiles. The Wall Street Journal just confirmed what the Pentagon doesn't want you to say out loud: we are burning through interceptors faster than we can make them. SM-6s are being produced at 125 per year. The Strait of Hormuz could stay closed for up to six months. Do the math.The same administration with no plan to restock weapons has no plan to protect your prescriptions. The people who run out of metformin are not the people with private concierge doctors. They are you and me.Two dates to remember: February 28th, when this war started. Early to mid April, when the shortages reach you.This is the Ignition News.

  48. 99

    Fetterman Is A Coward | Cuba Resists

    John Fetterman just handed Trump an unobstructed path to control of DHS. The Pennsylvania Democrat cast the deciding vote to advance Markwayne Mullen out of committee, overriding every Democrat on the panel and even Rand Paul, who called Mullen too unstable. Fetterman called it a working relationship. His own party called it a betrayal. Blowback was immediate, and it was loud.Then we go 90 miles south of Florida. Cuba is living through a total nationwide blackout after a US fuel blockade cut off Venezuelan oil, pressured Mexico to stop shipments, and this week moved to intercept two incoming Russian tankers. Eleven million people without power for over 29 hours. Hospitals canceling surgeries. Food spoiling. And when the US embassy in Havana asked the Cuban government for permission to import diesel to keep its own lights on, Cuba said one word: shameless. And denied the request.Two stories today. One Democrat who keeps choosing the wrong side. One people who chose the right one under enormous pressure. Plus a note on March 21st in history, including Sharpeville, Selma, and a failed plot to kill Hitler. We are taking weekends off now, and we earned it. Share the show, subscribe, and stay lit.

  49. 98

    Contempt

    The city of Las Vegas just sent me a $42,000 bill to access public records about Flock Safety surveillance cameras. Over 200,000 records. 1,323 hours of processing time. Thirty-three work weeks of delay, plus a price tag designed to make sure I go away. I am not going away.Today's show is built around one word: contempt. Four stories, one theme.A fake AI-generated soldier named Jessica Foster racked up over a million Instagram followers and hundreds of thousands of likes while posing with Trump, Putin, and Zelensky. The whole operation was a funnel to an OnlyFans foot fetish page. The army has no record of her. She never existed. But the propaganda infrastructure she proved is possible absolutely does.Gas prices are climbing toward four dollars nationally and five dollars here in Las Vegas. Crude oil is near $120 a barrel. Goldman Sachs is projecting years of triple-digit oil. And the president stood in the Oval Office and said, on camera: "We make a lot of money when oil prices go up." He was not talking about you.Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth told the country that families of fallen soldiers told him "finish the job." One of those fathers, a music teacher from Columbus, Ohio who lost his only son, says he said no such thing. We have what he actually said. It is nothing like what Hegseth claimed.And the president, with bruised hands and swollen ankles, is telling rally crowds he will live to be 200 years old.This is what contempt looks like. Follow the Ignition News on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Substack.

  50. 97

    Ghosts Don’t Make Emergency Landings

    An F-35 fighter jet, the plane Lockheed Martin marketed as a ghost, was struck by an Iranian missile and forced into an emergency landing this morning. Hours earlier, Secretary Pete Hegseth told America the military was winning decisively and Iran's air force had been flattened. Ghosts don't make emergency landings.Today's show connects that moment to something much larger: historian John Bagot Glubb's seven stages of imperial collapse, and the case that America is living inside stages six and seven right now.Also on the show: Jerome Powell confirmed what you already feel in your power bill. The AI data center boom is pushing inflation up and working people are subsidizing it. The Trump administration turned the July 4th 250th anniversary into a pay-for-play operation where a speaking slot on the National Mall costs two and a half million dollars. John Fetterman handed Mark Wayne Mullen the keys to DHS. And union leadership in this country, including Culinary 226 here in Las Vegas, has the power to change everything overnight and is choosing not to use it.The people on the roof of the Empire State Building thought the aliens came to save them. Don't be on the roof.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

The Ignition delivers raw, unfiltered daily news for those who refuse to let billionaires curate their reality. In under 15 minutes, we cut through corporate media capture and sanitization to bring you the stories that matter—the ones being killed in editorial meetings, the resistance happening in jury boxes, and the accountability our democracy desperately needs. theignitionpodcast.substack.com

HOSTED BY

From The Rebel Radio Network

CATEGORIES

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does The Ignition News Podcast have?

The Ignition News Podcast currently has 50 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is The Ignition News Podcast about?

The Ignition delivers raw, unfiltered daily news for those who refuse to let billionaires curate their reality. In under 15 minutes, we cut through corporate media capture and sanitization to bring you the stories that matter—the ones being killed in editorial meetings, the resistance happening in...

How often does The Ignition News Podcast release new episodes?

The Ignition News Podcast has 50 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to The Ignition News Podcast?

You can listen to The Ignition News Podcast on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts The Ignition News Podcast?

The Ignition News Podcast is created and hosted by From The Rebel Radio Network.
URL copied to clipboard!