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Escape The Echo Chamber

Escape The Echo Chamber

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A political podcast, two friends on opposite sides of the aisle have conversations about current events and political topicsEscape The Echo Chamber Podcast Ciencia Política Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • "The Dow Is Over 50,000 Right Now"
    Feb 14 2026

    The stock market. That is what Attorney General Pam Bondi seemed concerned about during a hearing before the House Judiciary Committee. Not Americans being shot by I.C.E. agents. Not the release (or lack thereof) of The Epstein Files. The stock market. And if you, like Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Kentucky), dared challenge her, then you might be the latest person to have a case of Trump Derangement Syndrome.

    Was this the normal American political theatre? Or was this this the latest in what seems to be a growing list of people surrounding President Trump to be swept up in his cult of personality?

    Join us this episode as we recap AG Bondi's testimony, how it differed from Kash Patel's and how one or both of them may have perjured themselves.

    We give our thoughts on why these files likely won't see the light of day anytime in the near future, and why Democrats and Republicans alike will use the victims and the files as political tools, but neither side will likely ever make a meaningful attempt to release the information for fear of bringing the entire elite class down.

    Furthermore, we discuss how the Intelligence Community, Mossad or the C.I.A., also likely play a part in keeping these files behind closed doors. After all, blackmail only works if the secrets stay secret.

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    50 m
  • The Epstein Files Transparency Act
    Feb 5 2026

    On November 19, 2025 The Epstein Files Transparency Act was signed into law. The law clearly stated that by December 19, 2025 the Epstein Files were supposed to be released unredacted (save for information pertaining to his victims) in their entirety.

    But, as of this episode's recording, only a portion of those files have been released. Even worse, what the DOJ has released has been black inked page after black inked page. And with the recent batch of files that were released, information pertaining to victims was released. Worse still, some of what was released were graphic images of the victims, including some that may have been taken while they were underage.

    In this episode, we breakdown how both the Democrats and the Republicans ignored the Epstein Files until the pressure from the American public was too much to ignore. We discuss President Trump's constant flip-flopping on the issue, and why the government seems more concerned with protecting the identities of the alleged perpetrators than getting justice for Epstein's victims.

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    38 m
  • What Constitutes A War?
    Jan 30 2026

    In this episode, we discuss a debate between Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Senator Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) on what the word 'war' means and who should be declaring it. We talk about the geopolitical chess game that the United States is playing with Venezuela, Greenland and potentially soon Iran.

    We discuss how Israel has played a part in America's decision making about foreign intervention when it comes to states in the Middle East, and how they might be doing it again, as well as what kind of ally they really are.

    We talk about how Congress has steadily given more and more of it's powers to the Executive since WWII and how they have not kept up with increasingly faster military technology, and in a world were seconds can matter in a first strike, how they need to make new laws to help make decisions faster.

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    59 m
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