
It Could Happen Here Executive Disorder: SPLC Indictment, Denaturalization, Iran
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Apr 24, 2026 They dig into a DOJ indictment alleging a major nonprofit paid white supremacist informants and used fake entities to hide funds. They cover USCIS ramping up denaturalization and enforcement shifts. There's a detailed update on Iran’s military actions, naval interdictions, and the fragile ceasefire. The show also flags a defamation lawsuit tied to false J6 reporting and Virginia redistricting fallout.
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Iran's Military Wasn't Rendered Combat Ineffective
- Public claims that US strikes 'took out' Iran's navy and air force are exaggerated; roughly two-thirds of Iran's air force and 60% of its naval arm remain operational.
- Garrison Davis cited CBS reporting and OSINT showing many fast-attack boats and half the ballistic missile stockpile intact, meaning prolonged conflict would be costly.
Iran Is Not A Single Negotiating Entity
- The Iran ceasefire revealed Iran as a fragmented power structure, so diplomatic agreements risk failing if the IRGC won't comply.
- James Stout explained that Tehran's overlapping centers of power mean the foreign ministry may agree but can't guarantee IRGC enforcement, undermining negotiations.
Indictment Says SPLC Funneled Donations To Extremists
- The SPLC allegedly paid neo-Nazi and KKK members over $3 million via fake business accounts, which the indictment frames as donor fraud.
- Robert Evans and James Stout noted the sums and sham entities like "Center Investigative Agency" as legally and reputationally explosive.
