
Show overview
Parallax Views w/ J.G. Michael has been publishing since 2019, and across the 7 years since has built a catalogue of 1,018 episodes, alongside 4 trailers or bonus episodes. That works out to over 1000 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence.
Episodes typically run an hour to ninety minutes — most land between 46 min and 1h 22m — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. Roughly 38% of episodes carry an explicit flag from the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Society & Culture show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 5 days ago, with 50 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2021, with 182 episodes published. Published by J.G..
From the publisher
A podcast where politics, history, and culture are examined from perspectives you may not have considered before. Call it a parallax view.
Latest Episodes
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Iran's Strategic Thinking: A View from Inside Iran w/ Peiman Salehi
The Empire is Failing, the Police State is Intensifying w/ Lt. Col Karen Kwiatkowski
Congress Blatantly Ignores Concerns on U.S.-Israeli Military Integration w/ Kelley Vlahos
Iran, Lebanon, Palestine, U.S.-Israel Military Fusion, Unhinged Propaganda, & More w/ Mouin Rabbani
The Dangerous Stealth Move by Congress to Integrate U.S. and Israeli Militaries w/ Benjamin Freeman
Israel's "Nuclear Ambiguity" Under Fire in Congress: The Bigger Picture w/ Geoffrey Aronson
Thomas Massie's Primary Loss and the MAGA Break w/ Jack Hunter
Thomas Massie Defeated by Trump & AIPAC in Kentucky w/ Blaise Malley
How an Ultra-Zionist Rabbi Inspired Candace Owens’ Conspiracy Theories w/ Jay Michaelson
Trump/Rubio's Tough-on-Cuba Policy Has Yet to Bear Fruits & May Be a Disaster w/ Lee Schlenker
The Yellow Vests and the Battle For Democracy w/ Ida Susser
Media Watchdog Project Censored Turns 50 Years Old! w/ Misch Geracoulis
Will the Future Like You?: Reflections on the Age of Hyper-Reinvention w/ Patricia Martin
Stuck: How Money, Media, and Violence Prevent Change in Congress w/ Maya L. Kornberg
Fighting Oligarchy: How Positive Populism Can Reclaim America w/ Charles Derber
The Complicit Lens: US Media Coverage of Israel’s Genocide in Gaza w/ Robin Andersen

Ep 1146Are U.S. Elections Secure?: The 2024 Election and Election Forensics w/ Nathan Taylor
👉 Pitch in on Patreon and fuel the future of free-thinking conversations. https://www.patreon.com/parallaxviews Also visit our returning sponsor Mike Swanson's Wall Street Window for the best financial and trading newsletter around: https://wallstreetwindow.com/ On this edition of Parallax Views, host J.G. Michael speaks with Nathan Taylor, a representative of the Election Truth Alliance (ETA), about controversial claims regarding vulnerabilities in U.S. election systems and the group’s ongoing efforts to investigate potential irregularities in recent elections. Taylor explains the Election Truth Alliance’s stated mission: conducting nonpartisan investigations into the integrity of American voting infrastructure. Drawing on election forensics methods, public records, field research, and statistical analysis, ETA says it is examining whether existing voting systems and administrative processes are adequately safeguarding the democratic process. During the conversation, Taylor discusses findings the group says raise questions about election infrastructure and data integrity in several states. In Florida, ETA has examined voter rolls, ballot custody logs, and turnout data in places like St. Lucie County, where the organization claims to have identified unusual turnout figures and discrepancies between votes cast and registered voters. The group has also reviewed historical concerns about cybersecurity threats to election systems, including reports of malware activity in Florida counties during the 2016 election cycle. The discussion also turns to Pennsylvania, where ETA has conducted statistical analyses of voting patterns across multiple counties and says it has identified anomalies that warrant further scrutiny. Taylor explains that the organization has pursued legal action related to voting system reliability and describes issues such as ballot-scanner failures reported in Cambria County during the 2024 election. Throughout the interview, Taylor emphasizes that ETA frames its work as independent of partisan politics, arguing that election transparency and verifiable vote counts should be priorities regardless of which party benefits. At the same time, the group’s findings and interpretations remain controversial and are part of a broader national debate over election security, voting technology, and public trust in democratic institutions. J.G. Michael presses Taylor on the methodology behind ETA’s analyses, the evidence supporting their claims, and how critics view these investigations. The result is a probing discussion about election forensics, statistical anomaly detection, cybersecurity concerns surrounding voting infrastructure, and the broader challenge of maintaining public confidence in U.S. elections. Whether one views the Election Truth Alliance’s work as an important call for greater transparency or as part of a contentious debate over election integrity claims, this conversation explores the arguments, evidence, and questions at the center of the controversy.