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When Propaganda Blinks

Alternate Current Radio Presents: Boiler Room

Learn to protect yourself from predatory mass media

”When Propaganda Blinks”

The Social Rejects Club: Hesher & Ruckus


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There are moments when power hesitates — not because it’s confused, and not because it’s honest — but because it assumes it no longer has to explain itself.

This episode of Boiler Room examines that moment.

Broadcast live from Central Texas, host Bryan “Hesher” McClain is joined by Adam “Ruckus” Clark for a long-form breakdown of a week defined by narrative overreach, information saturation, and the growing difficulty of separating signal from psychological operations.

From escalating rhetoric surrounding Iran and unverifiable reports of mass casualties, to the quiet normalization of AI integration into military systems, to domestic crowd-control preparations and raw political optics caught on camera, the discussion traces a single through-line: modern propaganda no longer collapses cleanly — it blinks.

When credibility becomes collateral damage, saturation replaces persuasion, and consent is assumed rather than earned, the cracks begin to show.

Topics covered include:

Escalation narratives and information warfare surrounding Iran

Viral imagery, casualty claims, and the credibility gap between speed and verification

Grok and the normalization of AI inside military and classified networks

Technocracy, dual-use technology, and the consolidation of power

National Guard “response forces,” civil unrest planning, and historical precedent

Media degradation, AI-generated deception, and epistemic collapse

Political optics unraveling in unscripted moments

Disaster narratives, pattern recognition, and the limits of skepticism

This episode is not about debunking individual headlines — it’s about recognizing patterns of behavior when authority stops whispering and starts rushing.

Boiler Room remains a space for critical analysis, open-source scrutiny, and conversations that resist narrative management — especially when the information environment itself is unstable.

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