Episode

Coffee with BJ Dichter | EP#249

Podcast
Coffee with BJ Dichter
Published
Apr 21, 2026
Duration seconds
4520
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bjdichter/episodes/Coffee-with-BJ-Dichter--EP249-e3i4uej
Audio
https://anchor.fm/s/de0d9204/podcast/play/118699923/https%3A%2F%2Fd3ctxlq1ktw2nl.cloudfront.net%2Fstaging%2F2026-3-19%2F422395003-44100-2-5087889a6648.mp3
JSON
/v1/public/podcasts/coffee-with-bj-dichter-6294147/episodes/coffee-with-bj-dichter-ep-249
Markdown
/podcast/coffee-with-bj-dichter-6294147/coffee-with-bj-dichter-ep-249.md

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Summary

Episode 249 of Coffee with BJ Dichter is a wide-ranging Saturday stream on optimism, politics, media culture, online behaviour, Iran, Canada, Tesla, and the need to stay grounded while the world gets louder. BJ opens with his now familiar coffee toast and satirical Canadian land acknowledgement, using humour and shared ritual to frame a larger point: you can acknowledge negative things in the world without letting them consume your life. From there, he reflects on optimism, community, the growing Discord audience, and why building real digital communities matters more than ever. The episode moves through pop culture and media commentary, including Battlestar Galactica, Star Trek, and why older storytelling did a better job of exploring philosophical questions without collapsing into ideology. BJ also recaps his recent appearance with Mark Petroni and jokes about the increasingly absurd expansion of activist identity language in Canadian media and public life. From there, BJ shifts into technology and automotive analysis, comparing Tesla and Polestar as examples of system thinking versus traditional linear design. He discusses Tesla’s rumoured changes to the Model S and Model X lineup, the future of EVs, and how the electric vehicle conversation often reveals deeper assumptions about innovation, networks, and industry structure. The political portion of the episode digs into Mark Carney, populism, capital flight, the legacy of Trudeau-era governance, and the long shadow of the Emergencies Act. BJ argues that Canada’s political class refuses to confront the deeper consequences of state overreach, including the loss of trust in institutions and the economic damage caused by aggressive government action. He also discusses Alberta separatism, political co-option, and what h…