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    “The first time I ever really listened to Kyle Kulinski’s show was in the back of a cab last summer. The driver had his phone hooked up through the stereo and was pumping out an episode through the car speakers — loudly, as if looking to convert a captive audience.

    “Do you like Kyle Kulinski?”

    The driver, Ahmed, was a recent immigrant and apparently a die-hard fan of Secular Talk, the political talk show that Kulinski broadcasts on YouTube. I told him, yes, in fact. I do like Kulinski, had come across his show several years ago, and, all things considered, he seemed pretty good.

    “He understands what we’re up against,” Ahmed said. “Like Bernie.”

    But I was surprised to hear Kulinski’s name mentioned in the same breath as Bernie Sanders, particularly with such adoration. Because what I did remember about Kulinski’s show struck me as mostly capital-P “progressive” takes on the news — the left wing of the Netroots crowd more than the democratic socialism Sanders has popularized.

    It’s an impression that wasn’t entirely incorrect.

    “I have no time for philosophical, airy bullshit,” Kulinski tells me from his home in Westchester, New York. “I don’t want to hear about Lenin. I don’t want to hear about Marx. I just want a super plainspoken, straightforward agenda with a straightforward way of selling it.”

    With over 800,000 subscribers and nearly 670 million total views on YouTube, selling a progressive agenda is clearly something Kulinski knows how to do — even Democracy Now, the long-standing flagship of progressive media, cannot match his reach on the platform. Chapo Trap House can certainly boast a wildly devoted fan base (and a not insignificant degree of media influence), but their audience is roughly half the size of Kulinski’s.

    While Secular Talk might be more likely to be looped in with the progressive networks around Air America and Pacifica alums like Sam Seder than the more resolutely socialist world, Kulinski’s fiery rhetoric, razor-sharp class instincts, and knack for withering takedowns sets him apart from his peers. Judging by his rhetoric alone, he’s closer to a Eugene Debs than a Chris Hayes.

    But unlike Hayes, Amy Goodman, or his friend Cenk Uygur of The Young Turks — who began airing Secular Talk on his web network seven years ago — the thirty-two-year-old Kulinski is virtually invisible in the mainstream media. Despite his enormous fan base, his show has never once been mentioned in the obligatory trend pieces on “the Millennial Left” pumped out by the prestige media. Nor has Kulinski’s name ever popped up at all in the New York Times, Vox, the New Yorker, New York Magazine, or the Washington Post, despite his leading role in cofounding Justice Democrats, the organization widely credited with sweeping Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the rest of “the Squad” to power.

    Just last week, his Wikipedia page was deleted. The reason? “There is very simply no [reliable source] coverage of this person,” according to one moderator. In new media, he’s king — the Sean Hannity of the Berniecrat left. In old media, he’s nobody.

    I suspect there are a few reasons for that. There is nothing “cool” about Kulinski’s show. (As a friend put it, “‘Welcome to Secular Talk’ sounds like something you’d hear on Egyptian radio.”) His no-nonsense social-democratic politics won’t get him much cred with the Full Communism crowd. He records his show not in Brooklyn or Los Angeles, but in a studio he built himself in his modest Westchester home. His hair is too groomed and his taste in clothes too preppy to qualify as “Dirtbag Left.” Nor has he ever attended an n+1 release party. “Not only have I not attended one,” he says, “I have no idea what that means.”

    And yet he’s astonishingly plugged-in for a young man in the suburbs. Wondering how Sanders ended up on the Joe Rogan Experience? Kulinski, a frequent guest on Rogan’s wildly popular show, introduced them. “You make the most sense to me,” Rogan told Kulinski on a recent episode. “You’re a normal person.”

    Much like Sanders himself, Kulinski’s show has a massive audience that just doesn’t compute with our media’s understanding of “what the kids want” or even “what the left-wing kids want.”

    It’s probably for the best — the very woke and very WASP-ish decorum haunting much of the media world is nowhere to be found in Secular Talk. “Corporate Democrats over-focus on identity as a trick to divert you from the issues that unite us all — class issues,” he said on a recent episode. “That Raytheon decided they don’t hate gays or trans people — frankly, I don’t really give a shit what their take on that is…”

    Read More Here!:
    https://jacobinmag.com/2020/03/kyle-kulinski-bernie-bros-secular-talk-joe-rogan-youtube

    #KyleKulinski #SecularTalk

    20 Comments

    1. People in countries with effective banking just speculate but in places with failed currencies people use stable coins and btc to transact.

    2. What do you mean my fake internet money is worthless? You know what else is pegged to 1 USD….1 USD! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    3. Gold is a good investment because it's tangible, and has a looong history of being valuable, which is the opposite of crypto, which is therefor more subject to peolpe's ideas and feelings about it.

      It's just gambling.

    4. My only argument about the bitcoin versus inflation thing is that because we now realize that there were so many con men, we can’t fully gauge what the accurate value of bitcoin is because it was artificially inflated through current criminal/ predatory means.
      I think once we get actual legislation that holds people accountable and holds projects accountable then we can see OK well, this value of bitcoin or whatever is rising or falling or holding steady and then we can say OK. This seems like a safe or not so safe hedge, because right now Everything is in the dark because we don’t really know what is based off of real genuine interest and incentives versus fake, manufactured interest if that makes sense..

    5. If everyone withdrew their money from a bank or all banks, the banks wouldn't have the liquidity they needed either and they'd go bankrupt. This is an objective fact. It's called a "bank run". Stay in your lane Kyle, Binance is one of the few decent exchanges left. Under no circumstances should anyone use an exchange as custodial storage. Not your keys, not your coins. Exchanges are only to be used to get into the market and do your trades and then gtfo the exchange asap. For long term storage, store your coins on a hardware wallet. Exchanges are the centralization of crypto, which is the exact opposite of the core values of what motivated cryptocurrency's existence. Binance is leading the front on decentralized crypto solutions.

    6. Crypto aren’t currencies. They’re mere vouchers, disneyland dollars,.. It was totally parasitic to and dependent on the real actual economy while presenting itself as an alternative. This was always obvious. Cryptobro’s are suckers. They weren’t sheltering from the 2008 crash. They were participating in a ‘get rich quick’ fraud.

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