Neal Larson and Julie Mason spend the morning unpacking two things that have been sitting heavy: how easily we can get locked into a narrative, and how much hotter and more on-edge people feel lately—even after a holiday weekend. They circle back to a heated Memorial Day call/text exchange about Trump’s “obliterated” comment on Iran’s Fordow site, and Neal walks through the nuance: the facilities were devastated, but “nuclear capability” also includes the scattered pieces you can’t bomb out of existence—scientists, know-how, stockpiles, hidden sites, and the regime’s will (plus outside help from countries like China and Russia). The point isn’t to relitigate personalities; it’s to be careful about absolutist claims in a messy world, and to resist letting hatred (of Trump, Israel, whoever) replace analysis.
From there, the conversation widens into media literacy and civic responsibility. They talk about how YouTube/podcasts can be useful but also financially incentivized to amplify outrage, and how algorithms can embed false premises that radicalize people over time. Locally, they touch on post-election burnout, low turnout, and the frustration of voters feeling powerless against “dark money,” plus concerns about ballot confusion and whether expanded early voting windows actually increase participation. They also revisit ranked-choice voting and why they believe Idaho dodged a bullet—especially in races where a “jungle primary” could create strange outcomes. The throughline is simple: take a breath, stay skeptical (including of them), do the homework, and don’t outsource your worldview to the loudest feed.
**Highlights**
– What Trump meant (and didn’t mean) by “obliterated” Iran’s Fordo site—and what “nuclear capability” really includes
– Why algorithm-driven media can lock people into false premises (and why outrage is profitable)
– Voter turnout, early voting, ballot issues, and why ranked-choice voting could have made local outcomes messier
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