BlueBird on Your Shoulder

Just 3 midwestern guys hanging out and chatting up the dysfunctional reality of America today

This is not your mothers podcast, its for the hardcore reality of America today as we see it.   Broken and being dismantled

Listen on:

  • Apple Podcasts
  • Podbean App
  • Spotify
  • Amazon Music

Episodes

14 hours ago

This week on Bluebird on Your Shoulder, the hosts break down a week defined by escalation, contradictions, and a growing sense that global events are being driven by forces far less strategic than advertised.
The conversation begins with the renewed political push around election security and the SAVE Act, examining how narratives around voter fraud are being positioned ahead of the next election cycle. From there, the discussion shifts to internal fractures within the MAGA movement and a series of controversies surrounding figures tied to January 6 and the broader political ecosystem.
The episode then turns toward the rapidly escalating conflict involving Iran and the broader Middle East. The hosts examine the strategic consequences of strikes in the region, the closure pressure on the Strait of Hormuz, and the cascading economic effects that follow when global oil routes are threatened. Shipping attacks, rising oil prices, and the possibility of $200-per-barrel crude highlight how quickly geopolitical decisions can ripple into everyday life.
A particularly explosive topic emerges around claims that donors are being offered access to “national security briefings” in exchange for campaign contributions. The hosts unpack the implications of monetizing sensitive information while the country navigates a volatile international crisis.
The conversation closes with reflections on American leadership, how previous presidents handled wartime responsibility, and what it means to love a country while openly criticizing the direction it is heading.
In a week where the cost of war remains uncertain but the price of secrets appears very clear, the episode asks a simple question: who is really paying the bill?

Friday Mar 06, 2026

Cancel culture, political hypocrisy, religion in politics, and a potential war with Iran—this episode covers a lot of ground.
The conversation starts with the fallout of a co-host leaving the show and quickly moves into the strange reality of modern cancel culture and how speech can affect careers. From there the discussion expands into political identity, the role of Christianity in American politics, and the contradictions between political messaging and religious teachings.
The second half of the episode dives into foreign policy and the escalating conflict with Iran, including the historical roots of U.S. involvement in the region and the broader question of how and why America keeps finding itself at war.
It’s a wide-ranging conversation about power, politics, and the narratives that shape public opinion.

Friday Feb 27, 2026

In this episode, we examine how institutional erosion rarely arrives with spectacle. It moves quietly — through legal reinterpretations, executive expansion, bureaucratic normalization, and the steady conditioning of public tolerance.
We break down how power consolidates beneath distraction, how constitutional guardrails weaken not through collapse but through gradual compliance, and how the language of security and stability is used to justify structural change.
This is not about a single moment. It is about trajectory. About what happens when silence becomes acceptance — and acceptance becomes permanence.

Saturday Feb 21, 2026

This week, international escalation and domestic power plays converge. As U.S. military assets reposition around Iran and evacuation warnings signal potential strikes, questions emerge about whether foreign conflict is strategic deterrence or economic theater. At home, the SAVE Act and proposed voting restrictions—ranging from reduced early voting to documentation requirements that disproportionately affect married women—raise constitutional concerns and revive debates over modern poll taxes. Meanwhile, rising Democratic figures like James Tallarico and Jasmine Crockett represent a generational counterweight built on grassroots fundraising and social media infrastructure. The episode also revisits the Epstein files, foreign prosecutions, alleged document scrubbing, and the broader theme of a two-tiered justice system. With midterms approaching and renewed claims of election fraud resurfacing, the throughline is clear: crisis, whether geopolitical or manufactured, is being positioned as a campaign tool.

Friday Feb 13, 2026

This week on Bluebird on Your Shoulder, the spectacle takes center stage — and that’s exactly the point.
From Olympic athletes criticized for mild political nuance to outrage over a Spanish-language Super Bowl halftime show, the public conversation once again fixates on culture-war flashpoints. The hosts unpack how patriotism is policed, how art becomes political, and how distraction becomes strategy.
But beneath the noise lies something heavier. The episode pivots to the partial release of federal files, questions about transparency, elite power networks, and the mechanics of leverage and coercion. While headlines rage over halftime performances, deeper institutional failures continue — from ICE operations and court battles to administrative incompetence and weakened federal systems.
The central thesis: spectacle keeps the audience busy. Bread and circuses dominate the screen. Meanwhile, power consolidates quietly behind it.
Season 2 Episode 5 frames the moment not as chaos, but as design — a reality show where outrage is the product and accountability is optional.

Friday Feb 06, 2026

This episode examines the accelerating collapse of MAGA political power as the consequences of authoritarian overreach collide with electoral reality. The hosts break down the release of millions of documents tied to the Epstein investigation and the visible fractures forming inside Trump’s base as long-standing narratives fall apart under public scrutiny.
The discussion moves through mass resignations within the military, DOJ, and federal agencies, highlighting what happens when institutions are pushed to violate constitutional norms. The hosts analyze the use of ICE and federal force against civilians, the political backlash from visible violence, and the growing recognition inside the GOP that these tactics are costing them elections.
With midterms approaching, the episode connects special-election swings, Republican retirements, and internal defections to a broader pattern: voter fatigue with extremism, collapsing turnout on the right, and rising resistance across institutions and communities. The conversation closes with a warning about civil conflict rhetoric, rejecting violence outright while emphasizing that authoritarian movements often collapse not from strength, but from overreach.

Friday Jan 30, 2026

This episode centers on the killing of Alex Peretti in Minnesota and what it reveals about federal law enforcement, protest rights, and the accelerating breakdown of constitutional norms. The discussion reconstructs the events leading up to the shooting, challenges the official and online narratives used to justify it, and interrogates the contradiction between “law and order” rhetoric and the reality of masked agents, unclear commands, and lethal force used against a non-threatening citizen.
From there, the conversation broadens to the political fallout: ICE operations, Republican infighting, selective outrage from MAGA voices, and the sudden reversal of Second Amendment arguments when gun rights no longer serve partisan convenience. The hosts draw direct lines between free speech, the right to assemble, and the danger of accepting “they should have complied” as a moral or legal standard.
The episode closes by examining wider implications—paramilitary policing, state and federal power creep, economic instability, and how normalized violence against civilians reshapes public behavior through fear. The throughline is blunt: when citizens can be killed for observing, recording, or protesting, compliance is no longer safety—it is submission.

Friday Jan 23, 2026

This episode breaks down how tariffs, market manipulation, and state power are being used as tools of personal enrichment. The hosts dissect the Greenland push, tariff threats against the EU, and the financial incentives driving foreign policy decisions, arguing that “security” rhetoric masks corruption and ego. The conversation moves into ICE operations, civil liberties concerns, and the normalization of actions that once would have been unthinkable. The episode closes by connecting economic policy, authoritarian tactics, and a growing erosion of democratic guardrails—framing it all as a presidency increasingly treated like a commodity for sale.

Friday Jan 16, 2026

Season Two kicks off with a no-nonsense, data-driven review of the current administration one year in. The hosts break down jobs, unemployment, manufacturing, GDP, inflation, national debt, deportations, and pardons—cutting through political spin to examine what the numbers actually show.
The episode then shifts to immigration enforcement, civil liberties, and the growing militarization of federal agencies, questioning not just outcomes but the methods being used. Foreign policy, military posture, and strained global alliances round out a raw, confrontational return that sets the tone for a sharper, more focused Season Two.

Friday Nov 21, 2025

Season 1 closes with a heavy week in Trump-land: the markets stumble, affordability collapses, ICE storms into Charlotte, the Epstein files explode into Congress, and Trump’s legal team faceplants in federal court. The crew breaks down the S&P’s plunge below its 50-day moving average, holiday cost spikes, renewed ACA fights, and the political fallout of mass walkouts in Southern schools. From military warnings about illegal orders to the unraveling Israel–Hamas ceasefire, Episode 41 brings the biggest stories of the week together in one final, chaotic rundown as Bluebird signs off for a two-month break.

Copyright 2025 All rights reserved.

Podcast Powered By Podbean

Version: 20241125