TONIGHT - LIVE on Substack 5:30-7:30 ET
I'm back on Substack Live tonight, with a SPECIAL GUEST and other BIG NEWS! Plus answering your questions and chopping it up on the latest news and political and legal battles.
After what was truly an amazing livestream hanging out with so many of you last week, I’ll be back on Substack Live again tonight from 5:30 to 7:30 ET — answering questions, chopping it up on the latest political and legal news, plus this time I’ll have our first guest. Scott Dworkin will be dropping by!
But wait, there’s more! We’re going to experiment with having this live show turn into a taped podcast episode that will air afterward. So come armed with all your best questions, comments, and thoughts, and you could make it onto the pod.
Also, tonight’s livestream will be limited to subscribers only. And a heads-up, starting soon, the majority of the live shows will be limited to paid subscribers — so make sure to upgrade now. Your support helps me pay the amazing producers, editors, and researchers who are helping me build a much larger pro-democracy media world that will help raise up an entire community of creators and activists.
In the meantime, make sure you have the Substack app, so you’ll get a notification when I go live.
Have questions for me, or for Scott? Leave comments below.
Looking forward to coming on Tristan!
Wonderful show yesterday, Tristan!
I have a question for next time. I know there are various lawsuits against Musk et al for breaking into the Treasury Department databases and code. I don't know if this is the argument, but I'm wondering whether a good angle for the plaintiffs is to say that those resources belong to the American people, and by breaching their security and locking out the administrators and other authorized personnel, he and his hackers are committing theft of our property. Is this the claim the plaintiffs are making, or is it something else? (Obviously I am not a lawyer.)
Thanks so much! I'm loving your Substack.