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This episode spirals through politics, religion, and real-world consequences like a storm that refuses to pick just one direction. Vince and Napalm open by calling out JD Vance as a political “shape-shifter,” using his shifting identity and messaging as a symbol of a broader problem: leaders driven by optics, not principles.
They argue that Donald Trump has lost interest in governing, treating the presidency like a reality show while chaos builds globally. From rising gas prices to tensions involving Iran and the Strait of Hormuz, the hosts connect foreign policy decisions to everyday economic pain back home.
The conversation then pivots into religion and power, criticizing Christian nationalism and questioning how faith is used as a political tool. They explore skepticism, historical rewriting, and how control systems—whether political or religious—shape public thinking.
By Controlled Burn5
11 ratings
This episode spirals through politics, religion, and real-world consequences like a storm that refuses to pick just one direction. Vince and Napalm open by calling out JD Vance as a political “shape-shifter,” using his shifting identity and messaging as a symbol of a broader problem: leaders driven by optics, not principles.
They argue that Donald Trump has lost interest in governing, treating the presidency like a reality show while chaos builds globally. From rising gas prices to tensions involving Iran and the Strait of Hormuz, the hosts connect foreign policy decisions to everyday economic pain back home.
The conversation then pivots into religion and power, criticizing Christian nationalism and questioning how faith is used as a political tool. They explore skepticism, historical rewriting, and how control systems—whether political or religious—shape public thinking.