Timcast IRL - Tim Pool - September 15, 2023


Timcast IRL - Democrat Governor Makes NEW DECREE To BAN GUNS AGAIN w-Ashley St Clair & Alex Stein


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 1 minute

Words per Minute

218.08896

Word Count

26,476

Sentence Count

2,009

Misogynist Sentences

83

Hate Speech Sentences

78


Summary

On today's episode of The Real Reel, the crew talks about the latest in the latest news and takes a look back at the past week in the world of politics and pop culture. Plus, we have a special guest appearance from Pimp on a Blimp in Miami!


Transcript

00:00:00.000 So the governor of New Mexico, she banned guns last week and a judge ruled, yeah you
00:00:12.000 So, like any tyrant trying to rule by decree, she has now issued a narrow public order that recognizes and respects the judge's ruling, but this new order banned guns in places where families or children may gather.
00:00:27.000 Yeah, she's still trying to ban guns.
00:00:29.000 And you've got the media being like, she's narrowed the ban and lifted it.
00:00:33.000 No, she didn't.
00:00:34.000 You can argue that she's narrowed the decree, but she is trying to- this is what Cuomo did.
00:00:38.000 When the courts were like, you can't shut down churches, he goes, okay, here's a new executive order for another reason we can shut down churches.
00:00:44.000 Because now we have to keep going to court over and over and over again, even though she knows she's lost these people out of their minds.
00:00:44.000 Sue me.
00:00:50.000 We got really big news today, and it's crazy.
00:00:52.000 Not surprising though because it's Friday and they want to bury a lot of stories.
00:00:56.000 Three men who were charged with attempting to kidnap Gretchen Whitmer have been acquitted on all charges.
00:01:01.000 Yeah, it was a hoax.
00:01:03.000 We got the special prosecutor, special counsel trying to gag order Donald Trump.
00:01:08.000 And then we got this crazy video.
00:01:10.000 You've got people in New York protesting Ocasio-Cortez because of the illegal immigrants, and she's yelling over them being like, don't worry, once we give them all work visas, it will be better.
00:01:20.000 And then they just yell louder.
00:01:23.000 Yeah, she's totally out of her mind.
00:01:24.000 We'll talk about that, but before we get started, head over to TimCast.com, click in the menu bar, TimCast IRLX Miami, or the link in the description below.
00:01:31.000 Come to our Miami event.
00:01:33.000 We hope to see you there.
00:01:33.000 We're going to have a whole bunch of special guests, but October 6th, at 6pm, we got Tim Poole, Luke Rutkowski, your hosts, with Patrick, Matt David, Donald Trump Jr., Matt Gaetz, and of course the whole TimCast crew is going to be there, and a whole bunch of other people are showing up.
00:01:47.000 I don't know if I should shout out who's going to be there just yet, because we're still waiting, but...
00:01:52.000 I don't know.
00:01:53.000 I kind of don't want to, but I think Alex Stein's going to show up.
00:01:55.000 Pimp on a Blimp is going to be in Miami with my thong bikini, so if you guys want to see it.
00:01:55.000 I'm going to be there.
00:02:00.000 I don't know anymore.
00:02:00.000 Tough Friendly.
00:02:01.000 Please, Tim.
00:02:02.000 It's Tough Friendly.
00:02:04.000 This is going to raise your ESG score.
00:02:07.000 Maybe in like a few days.
00:02:08.000 We'll we'll bring out the full list of special special guests And there's probably a few people who jump up on stage people You know and love prominent individuals in journalism on you know good journalism and other personalities So definitely check that out, but also click join us become a member because get this even though We don't do the Uncensored Shows on Friday.
00:02:29.000 As a member, you get access to the members-only Uncensored Shows Monday through Thursday.
00:02:33.000 Every day, Monday through Friday, in the TimCast members' Discord servers, the members host another After Show.
00:02:40.000 So there's the After Dark Show, Monday through Friday, and that means on Friday, if you want to discuss the show, its contents, with other like-minded individuals, sign up today, join the Discord, and you can hang out and get another entire podcast because our members are super cool and they literally just talk about this stuff.
00:02:55.000 So I hope you join and become friends.
00:02:57.000 You can follow the show at TimCastIRL.
00:02:59.000 Smash the like button, subscribe, share it, all that good stuff.
00:03:02.000 We got a bunch of really awesome people hanging out.
00:03:04.000 Obviously, you know, Alex Stein's already here.
00:03:06.000 Thank you for having me, Tim.
00:03:06.000 Pimp on a blimp.
00:03:07.000 Always a pleasure.
00:03:08.000 Absolutely.
00:03:09.000 Ashley St.
00:03:09.000 Clair's here.
00:03:10.000 Hello, hello.
00:03:11.000 I'm back.
00:03:11.000 They let me back in.
00:03:13.000 I'm assuming everybody already knows who both of you are, but I don't know if you wanted to...
00:03:16.000 Well, I do want to shout out, I'm Ashley St.
00:03:18.000 Clair, I work at the Babylon Bee, and I'm the author of a quote-unquote anti-trans children's book, Elephants Are Not Birds.
00:03:26.000 You should check it out.
00:03:27.000 But the Babylon Bee also has a new book out, our Guide to Gender.
00:03:31.000 Right on.
00:03:32.000 And I'm Primetime Alex Stein.
00:03:33.000 I have a show on BlazeTV called Primetime with Alex Stein, and I have a pro trans book, A Penis Can Be a Vagina, is what my book is called.
00:03:39.000 We're actually, we're working on coffee for Alex.
00:03:42.000 Yes, we are.
00:03:43.000 A signature, it's gonna be, I think it's called Alex Stein Primetime Grind, two times caffeine.
00:03:48.000 Primetime Grind, extra caffeine, because I know you guys are, you guys need it for work.
00:03:52.000 We all need it for work.
00:03:53.000 We're tired.
00:03:54.000 You're gonna drink some of this caffeinated java, and you're gonna feel great, and it's gonna give you that clean high.
00:03:59.000 Not the Hunter Biden fentanyl high that you're used to with Folgers.
00:04:01.000 Well, it's an upper, not a downer, but so we got Philobonti hanging out.
00:04:04.000 How you doing?
00:04:05.000 I'm Philobonti, lead singer of All That Remains, anti-communist and counter-revolutionary.
00:04:08.000 Ian, do you caffeinate Alex before some of your iconic news conferences where you step in?
00:04:14.000 I mean, yeah, I'm addicted to Diet Coke, so yeah.
00:04:17.000 Rock and roll, baby.
00:04:18.000 And coffee.
00:04:19.000 I heard a rumor that The Grind is going to come with a free prescription for Adderall as well.
00:04:24.000 Yes, you get Adderall and fentanyl.
00:04:26.000 Legal, legal.
00:04:26.000 You don't.
00:04:27.000 It's a prescription.
00:04:28.000 It's from a doctor.
00:04:29.000 I'm not saying we're giving away everything illegally.
00:04:31.000 Bro, I'm just trying to suck some coffee over here.
00:04:33.000 Now it's an Adderall dealer.
00:04:35.000 No, no free Adderall.
00:04:37.000 Ian's here, of course.
00:04:38.000 Of course, yes.
00:04:39.000 And Serge is pressing the buttons.
00:04:40.000 I am pressing buttons.
00:04:41.000 We're all in now.
00:04:42.000 Let's go!
00:04:42.000 Let's go for it.
00:04:43.000 We got this story from Santa Fe, New Mexican.
00:04:46.000 Governor alters public health order, ending gun ban in Albuquerque area.
00:04:51.000 Talk about a garbage lie of a headline.
00:04:55.000 Because what does it actually say?
00:04:56.000 First of all, they bury it a week after declaring a public health emergency, blah blah blah.
00:04:59.000 There's an announcement of the changes during a news conference, blah blah blah.
00:05:02.000 And then you go all the way down and it actually says that She added, the ban on carrying firearms, open or concealed, will remain in place at parks and playgrounds where families and children gather.
00:05:14.000 That is to say, she is issuing a new order to bypass the courts trying to still ban guns.
00:05:22.000 You can't do it.
00:05:23.000 But she's trying.
00:05:24.000 We're winning.
00:05:25.000 Impeachment!
00:05:26.000 Charge this person.
00:05:27.000 Impeach, convict, indict, prison.
00:05:29.000 I don't know if that's... Is this enough of a reason to impeach a sitting governor?
00:05:36.000 Yes.
00:05:36.000 Then do it.
00:05:36.000 Do it.
00:05:37.000 This is number two.
00:05:38.000 You're gonna let this woman strike out?
00:05:38.000 Strike two.
00:05:40.000 She's intentionally trying to violate constitutional rights and she continues.
00:05:46.000 So now this is the second attempt.
00:05:48.000 So impeach her.
00:05:50.000 Just start the process.
00:05:51.000 Get her out of there.
00:05:52.000 But it's a Democrat trifecta.
00:05:54.000 State's never gonna happen.
00:05:55.000 Fair enough.
00:05:56.000 I don't think that there's gonna be success.
00:05:57.000 That's why she's doing it.
00:05:58.000 Yeah.
00:05:59.000 Because she's insulated, which is a problem, which speaks to a problem that we have in the country, that if your party does something wrong, we just ignore it.
00:06:09.000 If your party, or if your opposing party, even comes close to stepping on the line, then you have to throw the book at them, which is a massive problem in a liberal society.
00:06:18.000 Well, I think it really what it highlights is that we think we can fix all these problems at a federal level.
00:06:22.000 When COVID showed you that when you fight it at a lower level, even the state level, that's actually where you make change.
00:06:28.000 Now, I'm not saying that she should be able to supersede the Constitution, but this is why it's so important to, I mean, we care about the president, but it actually matters who your governor is.
00:06:35.000 It matters who your mayor is.
00:06:37.000 I mean, for me, I think it just kind of shows you how the smaller level of politics is almost more important because these people aren't going to follow rules, they're going to do whatever they want.
00:06:44.000 So it's really important you put people that are actually making the decisions for your state that you like, but she's ruining New Mexico.
00:06:50.000 This is something that we talk about a lot is how important local politics are.
00:06:53.000 I got to be honest, I think the voters have ruined New Mexico.
00:06:56.000 Yeah, that's fair.
00:06:57.000 Also, maybe they've tried to poison the country, but this is an inoculative success in my opinion.
00:07:02.000 I mean, there's the argument that when they make power grab moves, it is bad for us no matter what.
00:07:09.000 It's not a victory.
00:07:11.000 Kyle Reynolds was not a victory.
00:07:12.000 The fact that they put him over the coals and all that stuff is a loss.
00:07:15.000 And I'm like, yes, in this instance though, I wonder if it actually is a victory in that You're watching the feeble, pathetic nature of, you know, Democrat decree.
00:07:25.000 It is powerless and impotent.
00:07:27.000 And they tried and failed and are being mocked for it.
00:07:29.000 And it's actually hurt them.
00:07:31.000 So I think this is a victory.
00:07:32.000 And it's almost like, you know, she made this move.
00:07:36.000 Slipped on a banana peel, landed in a bunch of dog crap on the ground and everyone's laughing at her for it, and now she's going, like, no, you can't laugh at me!
00:07:44.000 And then she slips again.
00:07:45.000 And we're just like, wow, this is hilarious.
00:07:47.000 Well, I think she likes the publicity, but I mean, honestly, a lot of this is Jesse Pinkman and Walter White's problem.
00:07:53.000 If they wouldn't have made all that crystal meth in New Mexico.
00:07:56.000 I don't think we'd have this problem.
00:07:57.000 Yeah, they gave Albuquerque a bad name.
00:07:58.000 They gave Albuquerque a bad name!
00:07:59.000 It used to have, like, southwestern salsa with, like, corn in it.
00:08:02.000 Now it's... now it's meth.
00:08:03.000 You'd go to Schlotzky's, get the Albuquerque turkey, and now it's just a... What is it called?
00:08:07.000 Albuquerque turkey!
00:08:08.000 It's delicious!
00:08:09.000 On the sourdough bread, turkey, lettuce, tomato... Where?
00:08:11.000 Schlotzky's?
00:08:12.000 Schlotzky's is the same way.
00:08:13.000 Yeah, I know, but that's not based on New Mexico, they have those in Chicago.
00:08:16.000 No, but I'm saying they have the Albuquerque turkeys, one of their signature sandwiches.
00:08:19.000 My point being, it was a bad joke, but New Mexico is... And Netflix is in New Mexico now, I wonder if that has... With their headquarters?
00:08:27.000 Yeah, or they have a big studio there.
00:08:29.000 Really?
00:08:30.000 Yeah.
00:08:30.000 Oh yeah, Schlotzky's is based in Texas.
00:08:32.000 So good.
00:08:32.000 Yeah, Schlotzky's is actually pretty good, yeah.
00:08:35.000 Schlotzky's stream!
00:08:35.000 Yeah, yeah.
00:08:37.000 They got like, um, Rubens, right?
00:08:38.000 Yeah, oh dude, they have a real- I love Schlotzky's.
00:08:40.000 The Albuquerque turkey, you say?
00:08:42.000 Albuquerque turkey.
00:08:42.000 How has this turned into an ad for Schlotzky's?
00:08:44.000 I haven't had Schlotzky's in like, 20 years.
00:08:46.000 The Netflix has eight soundstages at the Albuquerque studios.
00:08:50.000 It's pretty cool.
00:08:50.000 Yeah.
00:08:51.000 So what are you saying?
00:08:53.000 Well, it's just kind of turned into liberal Hollywood-esque.
00:08:56.000 Oh, right, right.
00:08:58.000 But this governor, see, that's the thing is she's realizing she's getting clicks and she's getting a lot of heat from it.
00:09:01.000 They like heat, Tim.
00:09:02.000 They don't care if it's bad publicity.
00:09:04.000 There's no such thing.
00:09:05.000 I think she looks foolish.
00:09:07.000 She had even Democrats like Ted Lieu coming out.
00:09:09.000 I think she looks, I think she understands she looks foolish, which is why she's doubling down.
00:09:09.000 Yeah, Ted Lieu.
00:09:14.000 But what's interesting is she cites increased gun deaths as the reason for doing this and now you can't have them at public parks or anywhere where children are.
00:09:23.000 But I just looked up their stats.
00:09:24.000 It says on average 33 children and teens die by guns each year in New Mexico.
00:09:28.000 49% of those are suicides.
00:09:31.000 So I don't know what she expects to accomplish by banning them in parks.
00:09:36.000 Didn't she specifically say nothing?
00:09:38.000 Because she said that she didn't expect criminals to stop carrying guns.
00:09:41.000 Yeah.
00:09:41.000 She said that in an interview, actually articulated that.
00:09:44.000 So it's intentionally aimed at law abiding citizens who are not going to actually be inclined to break the law.
00:09:55.000 And why are they so obsessed with making everywhere our children go gun-free zones?
00:09:58.000 And making them targets for... It's an excuse.
00:10:01.000 Tragedy.
00:10:02.000 All it is is an excuse.
00:10:04.000 It has nothing to do with child safety and everything to do with, this will get the soccer moms scared for their kids and we will get support this way.
00:10:14.000 Because Karen doesn't want little Tommy to get shot.
00:10:17.000 That's it.
00:10:18.000 It's all just to pull on people's emotions.
00:10:23.000 Well, to what Ashley said, though, you know how a lot of the gun deaths are suicides, so I have a way that we can actually decrease gun violence.
00:10:28.000 We just need to adopt Canada's plan of medically-assisted suicide, and then if we just give out free suicides, there'd be less gun-violent suicides.
00:10:36.000 We could always do it.
00:10:37.000 We could always get the, uh... Canada, your hip hurts?
00:10:40.000 We can euthanize you.
00:10:41.000 I was thinking of the bullet train that they're trying to build in California.
00:10:45.000 That seems to work in Japan, so...
00:10:47.000 People jump in front of the bullet train all the time.
00:10:49.000 Oh my gosh!
00:10:50.000 Man, that's what Logan Paul, the Suicide Force, yeah.
00:10:53.000 And actually, Japan's suicide is higher than the United States, and they have no guns.
00:10:56.000 So the idea that getting rid of guns is going to stop suicides, that's not going to happen.
00:11:00.000 I think it's mental health.
00:11:00.000 Most of it is mental health.
00:11:01.000 I mean, it stems from mental health, at the very least school shootings particularly, a lot of SSRIs and stuff that, like crazy chemicals.
00:11:07.000 Talked about Adderall earlier, like amphetamines on like 12, 13, 14 year olds that don't have a dad around to kind of help them learn how to navigate their rage.
00:11:15.000 That's a lot of this.
00:11:17.000 Well, and that's the point.
00:11:18.000 If she actually cared about ending gun deaths, maybe she should address that 49% of them are stemming from some sort of mental health crisis.
00:11:25.000 Well, and Ian, what you said, you made a really good point.
00:11:28.000 I think they all are.
00:11:29.000 Wow.
00:11:30.000 But I just want to say this, Ian, like you just said, I don't even think it's all about race or class, which that is a big, important factor, but it comes down to if you don't have a parent, if you grew up without a dad, if you grew up without a mom, I think that's really the reason why- Mostly a dad.
00:11:42.000 You're mostly a dad.
00:11:43.000 We talked about this on the Culture War show this morning, that single parent father homes have lower rates of criminal activity and drug abuse.
00:11:52.000 Single parent mother homes have higher rates.
00:11:56.000 And uh, so we don't know exactly why, but when the dad's not around, you will get a child who is high-raised.
00:12:03.000 But we know why, because the dad's not beating the kid's ass when he does that.
00:12:06.000 But not even necessarily that, you know, obviously the data shows that a father figure provides something, but my response was, I gotta be honest, I feel like a kid who grows up without a mom probably has more emotional issues.
00:12:16.000 Maybe emotionally cold, callous, stunted more so than you'd expect from someone else.
00:12:20.000 But we don't track that because we're not as concerned in the immediate
00:12:23.000 with the emotional and social development of the kid. We're more concerned with the
00:12:27.000 like the order of it.
00:12:29.000 The behavior. The behavior itself.
00:12:31.000 And that's the lashing out. Like the dad's the one, not always the one that's going to smack you down.
00:12:35.000 I'm not saying physically violent, obviously, but for whatever reason, the disciplinarian tends to be the male.
00:12:41.000 Not always.
00:12:41.000 My mom is the disciplinarian.
00:12:43.000 Yeah, I don't know if that's true, actually.
00:12:44.000 I think the disciplinarian is the mom.
00:12:45.000 Yeah, I'm talking about things that aren't congruent with my family life.
00:12:48.000 My dad was like the liberal artist, and my mom was the one who was always around and was like, hell no you're not!
00:12:53.000 Put it down!
00:12:54.000 Down!
00:12:54.000 And then the look, you know, the look where like, I'm going to lose all my privileges.
00:12:57.000 Ian's holding a fork and slowly moving it towards a power outlet.
00:12:59.000 She's like, stop!
00:13:00.000 Put it down!
00:13:00.000 He's like, a little closer.
00:13:02.000 And she's like, no!
00:13:03.000 I wouldn't even get that close.
00:13:04.000 You get one chance in that family.
00:13:07.000 That was a hard disciplined family.
00:13:08.000 Reminds me of one like, you see those videos where the cat is looking at the owner and just slowly knocking the jar towards the edge of the table?
00:13:14.000 Like, it's going to do it.
00:13:15.000 That's what my toddler does.
00:13:17.000 That's what my cat Kyle does.
00:13:18.000 He'll look at me and when he's mad or something, he'll just knock something off the table to get my attention.
00:13:23.000 It'll do it when I'm looking at it.
00:13:24.000 Does your toddler make eye contact with you while he's at it now?
00:13:26.000 Oh yeah.
00:13:27.000 Oh yeah.
00:13:28.000 He knows.
00:13:29.000 He'll point at something he's not like an outlet and go, no.
00:13:34.000 He knows.
00:13:35.000 But they seek out danger and death.
00:13:37.000 Yeah, but anyway, you know, the bigger picture here is let this lady have her 15 minutes of infamy.
00:13:47.000 I think she's embarrassing the Democratic Party.
00:13:49.000 And I have to be honest, I feel kind of like you couldn't ask for this kind of publicity in the inverse, right?
00:13:54.000 When you get David Hogg coming out and agreeing with you, that's all you need.
00:13:58.000 Now you can run campaign ads being like, David Hogg says there is no exception for the Constitution and defends Second Amendment rights and stuff like that.
00:14:05.000 That's amazing.
00:14:05.000 Yeah, forever.
00:14:07.000 Can we talk about David Hogg though a little bit about how his dad was an FBI agent and the fact that he wasn't even at Parkland day of the shooting.
00:14:13.000 He was actually riding his bike there.
00:14:15.000 Well, so, he was in a different part of the school, and then he went home, and then when he heard the news had come down, he jumped on his bike and went straight back.
00:14:24.000 So he was really scared of a school shooter.
00:14:25.000 When there's a school shooter, that's what I do.
00:14:27.000 I get my bike and I drive straight to the school shooter.
00:14:29.000 And it's fascinating because you had Kyle Kashuv, and he was trying to speak up too, but they were like, no, ignore that kid.
00:14:37.000 We don't want that message.
00:14:39.000 Yeah, because he was like, I was also at the school and like, I think we shouldn't do this and stuff.
00:14:44.000 But, uh, you know, it's all it's it's it's they David Hogg.
00:14:49.000 Brilliant kid.
00:14:50.000 Absolutely brilliant.
00:14:51.000 He is one of the best in the business when it comes to political manipulation and grifting and spitting in your face for political power.
00:14:59.000 Like, obviously, this kid knows exactly what he's doing.
00:15:02.000 He does this routine where he's like, oh, why won't we debate guns and everything?
00:15:07.000 And any legitimate person, Maj Touré, for instance, who's like, let's have a conversation, bro.
00:15:13.000 Ghost.
00:15:14.000 And then he'll try and target someone who's completely wrong and confused.
00:15:17.000 Has he ever done a debate?
00:15:18.000 Probably not.
00:15:19.000 I mean, look, he's a grifter.
00:15:23.000 He knows he can't win an actual gun debate.
00:15:27.000 That's it.
00:15:27.000 End of story.
00:15:29.000 That's what it is with Democrat politics.
00:15:30.000 That's why they don't engage and come on shows like this.
00:15:34.000 And then they use that they don't come on shows like this as an argument against us by saying he doesn't have people on the left on his show ever.
00:15:40.000 And it's like, yeah, you don't come on because your political arguments get annihilated.
00:15:46.000 Well, Bill Mitchell, he's not on the left, but he did look like a lesbian on your show, to be fair.
00:15:50.000 Well, he was the one who mentioned that.
00:15:52.000 Yeah, I know, that was a funny clip.
00:15:54.000 I didn't even know that was a statement until he said it.
00:15:57.000 And then he said immediately after, he said, I knew the moment I said it, it would be a clip.
00:16:02.000 And to give him respect, He ran with it, and he embraced it, and he said it, and then he made jokes consistently about how he thought he looked like an aging lesbian, and I'm like, I think that's- Who said this, Bill Mitchell?
00:16:16.000 Bill Mitchell.
00:16:16.000 Yeah.
00:16:17.000 Yeah, it's like, he- But look, I mean, like, if someone makes fun of you, and you roll with it and say, well, you know, then, you know, I'll make it the best I can, I can respect that, right?
00:16:25.000 You have to.
00:16:25.000 I think it's insulting to lesbians, and that's not fair, right?
00:16:28.000 You know what I mean?
00:16:29.000 But it's one thing to roll with someone making fun of you while they're doing it, and another thing to bring it up later and to insult yourself, humiliate again.
00:16:37.000 Like, it's unnecessary to be like, I remember all those people that were saying about me, like... But that's not how it went down.
00:16:44.000 He had some zingers and one-liners that were throwbacks, and it was pretty funny.
00:16:48.000 And I'll say this for Bill.
00:16:49.000 You know, when we hung out, we had sushi, we ate dinner after the Culture War show, and hanging out with him and Laura was completely cordial and polite, and they laughed, and it was like normal conversation.
00:16:59.000 Outside of the political space, there was no trouble getting along.
00:17:03.000 And then once they went back on Twitter, it was just throwing fireballs again.
00:17:06.000 Oh, text!
00:17:07.000 It's funny you say that, because I had Laura on my show this week, and I thought it'd be funny.
00:17:10.000 My producer actually likes DeSantis.
00:17:11.000 I had him put on a DeSantis shirt.
00:17:13.000 I thought, oh, maybe she'll just cuss him out.
00:17:15.000 She's very cordial and very nice.
00:17:18.000 I was hoping she was going to tear him a new asshole.
00:17:20.000 Let's jump to this story from the post-millennial.
00:17:22.000 This is huge.
00:17:25.000 Three men accused of Gretchen Whitmer kidnap plot acquitted.
00:17:28.000 There you go.
00:17:29.000 I mean, what more do you need?
00:17:30.000 The last three men who were charged in the plot to kidnap Governor Gretchen Whitmer have all been found not guilty on all charges, by the way.
00:17:36.000 William Knoll, twin brother Michael Knoll, and Eric Molitor were among the 14 charged in the alleged plot, and all three have been acquitted.
00:17:43.000 Adam Fox and Barry Croft Jr.
00:17:44.000 were convicted of kidnapping conspiracy in 2022.
00:17:47.000 The two were also found guilty of conspiring to obtain a weapon of mass destruction, such as a bomb, to destroy a bridge.
00:17:53.000 It's such obvious BS.
00:17:56.000 Let me break down for you how this works.
00:17:57.000 The FBI finds some moron, and then keeps whispering things to him, like, don't you want to do this?
00:18:03.000 Come on, don't you want to do this?
00:18:04.000 And they'll be like, no, not really.
00:18:05.000 They'll be like, come on, let's do it anyway.
00:18:06.000 And they'll be like, no, not really.
00:18:07.000 They'll just get in the car, and they'll be like, OK.
00:18:08.000 Ah, he got in the car!
00:18:09.000 That proves it!
00:18:10.000 Yeah, this happened in Ohio when I was living there in 2012.
00:18:13.000 You can look this up.
00:18:15.000 I mean, it is just like more corroborative evidence that this happens more than once.
00:18:19.000 It's not like a one-off.
00:18:20.000 Three sentenced to prison for plot to blow up Ohio Bridge.
00:18:22.000 They were given explosives, dummy explosives, by the FBI.
00:18:25.000 Undercover FBI agents gave these three dudes fake explosives and apparently colluded with them.
00:18:31.000 It's the same as a controlled drug buy.
00:18:33.000 I want Donald Trump to criminally charge all FBI agents who participated in these conspiracies.
00:18:39.000 Yeah, but that's what the FBI does, is they'll set you up like, oh, we have a cocaine dealer, and they'll set you up with the cocaine dealer, and the cocaine dealer's an FBI agent.
00:18:46.000 So, I mean, it was all set up.
00:18:47.000 But we're never gonna get any transparency with the FBI.
00:18:49.000 I mean, I think that the FBI and CIA killed JFK!
00:18:52.000 I do not want Trump to go in and just be like, We're shutting it down.
00:18:56.000 No, I want to be like, whoa, hold on.
00:18:56.000 We're defending it.
00:18:58.000 Yes, yes.
00:18:59.000 But first, audit and criminal indictments for any and all FBI agents who were party to criminal plots.
00:19:08.000 And you know what?
00:19:08.000 There's a lot of them we don't know about.
00:19:11.000 Oh, there's thousands.
00:19:13.000 Thousands.
00:19:13.000 I'd imagine more.
00:19:14.000 Because you look at what happens with the Whitmer thing.
00:19:16.000 How many times has the FBI engaged in a conspiracy to say kidnap a politician and then not convince anyone to join them?
00:19:23.000 So we pull up those records and we say, ah, we got an agent John Smith right here.
00:19:27.000 Looks like you engaged in a plot to arrest a mayor or to kidnap a mayor.
00:19:33.000 And they'll be like, well, yeah, but we were doing a sting.
00:19:35.000 Well, it says here you were the one who initiated it.
00:19:36.000 Put your hands behind your back.
00:19:38.000 You have the right to remain silent.
00:19:38.000 Shut your mouth.
00:19:39.000 Lock them up.
00:19:41.000 That's a hardcore dude.
00:19:43.000 But you know those, the men who were just, what were they, acquitted?
00:19:47.000 They should be thankful that the jury was able to learn about these rogue FBI informants because most people in that position wouldn't have that.
00:19:54.000 That's what the FBI does.
00:19:54.000 Rogue?
00:19:55.000 So these guys have their lives Dangling off the edge of a cliff while these FBI agents smirk and give the Kubrick stare and laugh about it?
00:20:05.000 I am done playing these games.
00:20:08.000 This is abject evil.
00:20:09.000 There is no, no legitimate reason for the FBI to make fake plots and then try and trick people to do them.
00:20:16.000 It doesn't make sense.
00:20:17.000 These guys, if they never met the FBI, would be sitting around drinking, talking smack, and they'd be worrying about football.
00:20:24.000 Instead, the FBI comes in and goads them and coaxes them, gives them materials.
00:20:29.000 This is what we see across the board with all these different plots.
00:20:31.000 I say arrest and criminally charge, indict all of the FBI agents because they are party to the conspiracy.
00:20:39.000 I think the law should even be amended that says you cannot charge someone Under this law, unless the plan was created outside of law enforcement.
00:20:51.000 If law enforcement agencies create the plot, then that should be fruit of the poison tree, and none of these men should be able to be convicted.
00:20:58.000 That's like all sting operations.
00:21:00.000 No it's not.
00:21:00.000 No it isn't.
00:21:02.000 Maybe I'm using the wrong word.
00:21:06.000 Here's what some of what the FBI has done.
00:21:07.000 Entrapment?
00:21:09.000 Entrapment is when the person is being forced to either by blackmail extortion or otherwise.
00:21:16.000 But what the FBI has done, which is more questionable but not in this territory... Pretend to be a drug dealer?
00:21:21.000 No, they go to church, they go to mosques, and they just hang out.
00:21:25.000 And then they wait to see if anyone says anything, and then they leave.
00:21:28.000 And there are a bunch of stories where I've heard, I've heard these stories, you can look them up, where there were imams in like Dearborn who reported the feds to the FBI immediately when the guy came in and said, hey, here's what I'm thinking.
00:21:39.000 They were like, oh, okay, have a nice day.
00:21:40.000 And then immediately called the feds and said, this guy's crazy, get him out of here.
00:21:43.000 And they were like, all right, all right, all right.
00:21:44.000 They leave.
00:21:45.000 That is bad.
00:21:46.000 Those are crazy stories.
00:21:48.000 That cop, that FBI guy should be arrested for doing that.
00:21:51.000 But if all they do is, we are going to have a criminal informant tell us if something's going on, I got no problem with that.
00:21:59.000 We want to stop legitimate acts of terror.
00:21:59.000 Right?
00:22:01.000 What we do not want is the feds creating the plot and then trying to trick people into joining it.
00:22:08.000 That right there, the moment it's discovered, wait, wait, wait, who came up with this plan?
00:22:12.000 Agent Smith?
00:22:13.000 Okay, charges dismissed.
00:22:14.000 Case closed.
00:22:15.000 Men, you're all free to go.
00:22:16.000 Yeah, but Tim, Joe Rogan talks about it, you know this, in January 6 we probably know this, is they have agent provocateurs where they can go to a riot or to a protest and actually accelerate things, make things worse, and we never hold them accountable.
00:22:29.000 And it's an actual crime to lie to an FBI agent.
00:22:32.000 And even outside of the context of an investigation.
00:22:35.000 So Michael Flynn was criminally charged even though he wasn't being formally questioned.
00:22:38.000 That's ridiculous.
00:22:39.000 It's like, it's like you're hanging out at, he was, they were hanging out at like a dinner or something at the White House and they were like, so, uh, you know, tell me about this.
00:22:45.000 Then he's like, oh, you know, X, Y, and Z. And they're like, we got him.
00:22:48.000 He just lied to us.
00:22:49.000 Yep.
00:22:49.000 That's it.
00:22:51.000 You're not even under formal investigation if you lie to an FBI agent.
00:22:54.000 Let me, let me, let me, let me, I want to ask you, Alex, why, why, uh, how come Owen Schroer is getting 60 days in jail?
00:23:03.000 And the reason is, the prosecution said he yelled death to tyrants.
00:23:07.000 He said Democrats are tyrants, and he yelled death to tyrants.
00:23:10.000 And Ray Epps, who quite literally said to go into the building several times, was charged with nothing.
00:23:16.000 The argument made by the government was, Owen Schroyer didn't go in to the Capitol, but he didn't need to.
00:23:23.000 The people he was goading on did.
00:23:25.000 Ray Epps is the guy who orchestrated, walked around saying to do it, What's going on?
00:23:33.000 Well, for me, the biggest red flag is when you see the New York Times and you see Adam Kinzinger and you see all these left-wing people.
00:23:39.000 Adam Kinzinger, fake left-winger, fake right-winger, whatever you want to... Fake both.
00:23:43.000 Yeah, fake both.
00:23:44.000 But my point is, when the mainstream media is running cover for Ray Epps, that's the biggest red flag possible.
00:23:49.000 That just makes it seem like, oh, this guy's definitely an agent provocateur.
00:23:52.000 But with Owen, I mean, it's his connection to Infowars.
00:23:54.000 They have to take him down and they were not going to give him probation.
00:23:57.000 They have to send a message by making him go to jail.
00:24:00.000 But what's ridiculous is Richard Barnett, he's the guy that put his feet on Nancy Pelosi's desk.
00:24:04.000 I think he got seven years.
00:24:06.000 I mean, when you're in your 60s and you get seven years, I mean, that's almost life.
00:24:06.000 Yeah.
00:24:11.000 And when these guys let them into the building.
00:24:11.000 Yeah.
00:24:14.000 Those mag locks, you had to turn off those mag locks.
00:24:18.000 But the cops opened the door.
00:24:18.000 They gave them a tour of the Capitol.
00:24:23.000 The QAnon shaman was just having a nice stroll.
00:24:26.000 He was walking around confused and the cops gave him directions and they opened the door for him.
00:24:32.000 They were telling him where to go.
00:24:34.000 But that's an inside job.
00:24:36.000 And AOC is right.
00:24:37.000 When she said that some of these cops were in on it, I'm like, yes.
00:24:40.000 I think that the Republicans should start arresting all these cops.
00:24:45.000 And I mean it 100%.
00:24:48.000 What you need to do is stop allowing the frogs to boil, right?
00:24:52.000 All of us are always sitting in this pot, and it's slowly, slowly getting hotter so nobody moves.
00:24:57.000 And then we go from, in 2018, there's some street fights, to in 2023, they've indicted the president 94 times, or that's 94 charges on several different indictments.
00:25:06.000 They're arresting lawyers and journalists, and it's just like, okay, how do we get to this point?
00:25:10.000 It's because it's incremental.
00:25:11.000 Here's what you do, Republicans.
00:25:13.000 Matt Gaetz.
00:25:15.000 They won't do it because they're like, oh, but we don't want to piss off cops.
00:25:17.000 You immediately say, we agree with Democrats.
00:25:22.000 January 6th was a problem.
00:25:24.000 Here's a video of the police letting them in and helping the QAnon shaman.
00:25:30.000 These police aided and abetted the insurrection and we need to get to the bottom of this.
00:25:34.000 Subpoena the cops and then criminally charge them and make them go into the prisons with the J6ers.
00:25:40.000 Each and every one.
00:25:42.000 Every single cop.
00:25:43.000 Especially the one who shot Ashley Babbitt.
00:25:45.000 No questions.
00:25:46.000 You should do it.
00:25:47.000 And then what happens?
00:25:48.000 Uh-oh.
00:25:49.000 Now you're gonna have the Capitol Police going to Democrats being like, what did you do with this can of worms?
00:25:54.000 Why are we involved in this?
00:25:56.000 And there's not going to be a public- you get AOC on your side right away.
00:26:00.000 The first thing I do is I go to AOC and say, how would you like to indict the cops who helped the J6ers?
00:26:05.000 She's gonna say yes.
00:26:06.000 She's already on camera saying it's a problem.
00:26:08.000 Then you put it in Pelosi's face and you put it in the Democrats' face being like, you're right, all of these cops that help these people come in, we're going to lock them up too.
00:26:15.000 Now you've created a problem for Democrats in that the press now becomes the Capitol Police that they championed, cherished, and celebrated are all going to jail too.
00:26:25.000 Turn it back on them.
00:26:26.000 Turn it back on them.
00:26:27.000 Yeah, but that's never gonna happen.
00:26:30.000 Well, it's not a question of never gonna happen.
00:26:32.000 That's what it should be done.
00:26:34.000 I tend to agree with you.
00:26:34.000 We should hold these people accountable.
00:26:36.000 The only thing that's gonna stop this stuff, though, I think is actually abolishing bureaucracy.
00:26:41.000 Get rid of the FBI.
00:26:43.000 Or fire everybody there.
00:26:44.000 How do you do that?
00:26:45.000 Because everybody says abolish the FBI.
00:26:48.000 I agree.
00:26:49.000 There's been a weaponization of our DOJ and all these three-letter agencies, but how do you do that?
00:26:55.000 I don't know that any president really could go in and actually do it.
00:26:58.000 Well, wasn't the FBI created by decree?
00:26:59.000 Wasn't the DHS?
00:27:00.000 I don't know that they're going to be able to dismantle that.
00:27:03.000 The last person who tried was shot in the head in Texas.
00:27:06.000 Well, what they're going to do is they're just going to have a, and I wouldn't be surprised if law enforcement, and this is probably not going to happen very soon, but just like with COVID, how we had the contact tracing apps, they're going to have like law enforcement contact tracing apps with the phone.
00:27:16.000 They're going to be able to look in your phone.
00:27:17.000 They're going to know if you're doing anything illegal.
00:27:19.000 They're going to know, artificial intelligence will be able to scan your text messages, listen to your phone calls.
00:27:23.000 So we won't even need the traditional cops like you think, you know, we'll almost need like...
00:27:27.000 And you do need, I mean, there are some good things that the FBI does, you know.
00:27:32.000 What?
00:27:32.000 There's nothing good.
00:27:33.000 Child exploitation.
00:27:34.000 No.
00:27:35.000 You know.
00:27:35.000 Well, they, you know, Tim Ballard.
00:27:37.000 Oklahoma City bombing?
00:27:38.000 Not good.
00:27:39.000 I think, I think Ballard said he worked with FBI on trafficking stuff.
00:27:42.000 I'm not saying every FBI agent is bad, but the majority of their work is not.
00:27:46.000 No, it's just a bad organization.
00:27:48.000 The idea that the federal government needs to have a police force, you can argue that the federal government needs to have a police force for secret service to protect the president, and maybe for Capitol Police and stuff like that.
00:28:00.000 The entire, like, every state has state police and they're all capable of working together.
00:28:06.000 They're all capable of sharing information.
00:28:10.000 It is not necessary.
00:28:10.000 But even the state police are a problem.
00:28:12.000 Because who was enforcing all the COVID stuff?
00:28:18.000 You're right, and that's totally true, but again, it still decentralizes.
00:28:23.000 The problem becomes the centralization of power in Washington.
00:28:27.000 Everybody knows that Washington does not have the individual people or the state's best interests at heart.
00:28:33.000 Washington is concerned with Washington, and that's the way it's always going to be as long as power is centered there.
00:28:39.000 Now, I've heard people talk about moving Bureaus and bureaucracies and stuff to other parts of the country, and maybe there's an argument for that, but really?
00:28:47.000 Just get rid of it.
00:28:48.000 Get rid of it.
00:28:49.000 Cut it out.
00:28:50.000 Abolish it.
00:28:51.000 It's a good point that it's the danger is the organization of it itself.
00:28:54.000 Yeah.
00:28:54.000 It's the way it's organized.
00:28:55.000 The centralization essentially of top-down authority that one guy, I don't know if it's Merrick Garland or who is he?
00:28:59.000 He's not the head of the FBI.
00:29:02.000 He's the attorney general.
00:29:04.000 He's not the head of the FBI, but he's the head of the Justice Department.
00:29:06.000 You get these tops, Giving all the soldiers, basically, their marching orders, so all these capital police are told, let them in.
00:29:13.000 We don't want them to break all the windows.
00:29:15.000 Just open the doors and let them in.
00:29:17.000 So the cops stand back.
00:29:18.000 That's why, according to how you were saying, Tim, about arresting them, I tend towards like what they did to the Nazis, is you arrest the ringleaders, you arrest the ones at the top, and then the other ones, you know, they're basically going to be your soldiers.
00:29:31.000 But there's videos of these cops opening the doors and saying, come on in.
00:29:36.000 I think that if we, if the Republicans right now, there's a video of this.
00:29:41.000 Say, I want to know who those cops are.
00:29:43.000 You bring them in for open public congressional testimony.
00:29:45.000 Say, why did you open the door and let them in?
00:29:47.000 Let them say it on C-SPAN to be reposted and rebroadcast by everybody on Twitter.
00:29:52.000 The officer says, We did open the doors.
00:29:55.000 Then, you can say, okay, the question now becomes, officer, you let them in, and some of these people have been in jail for two and a half years, how much time in prison do you deserve for being the one who opened the doors?
00:30:06.000 Let the public decide.
00:30:09.000 Should these officers go to prison?
00:30:10.000 Because if you say no, we must release the J6ers.
00:30:13.000 I'd be open to investigation, because you could get those cops to be like, I was told by my commanding officer by name to bring them in and make them testify on their own.
00:30:20.000 It would be an easy chain of command to figure out how those doors got opened.
00:30:23.000 But I do want to congratulate the FBI on one thing.
00:30:25.000 Because they did great police work when they found two passports on 9-11 of the terrorists.
00:30:30.000 They weren't able to find the black boxes, but they were able to find those passports, so that was great.
00:30:33.000 Well, I got really lucky that they didn't get burned up in the explosion.
00:30:36.000 It must have fallen out of the plane before it hit the building, because they found it a couple blocks away.
00:30:36.000 I know, thank goodness.
00:30:40.000 No, it could be blown.
00:30:41.000 It could be blown in the wind.
00:30:43.000 I mean, a lot of debris went very, very far.
00:30:45.000 They were blowing out the sides of the buildings, a lot of that debris.
00:30:45.000 Oh, that's true.
00:30:48.000 I mean, in the initial crash, debris was launched, like, hundreds of yards.
00:30:53.000 It's crazy.
00:30:54.000 But, uh, they were just lucky that they didn't get hurt.
00:30:56.000 Yeah, the passenger just went through the nose cone of the building, and then two blocks down the street.
00:31:01.000 No, he must have thrown it out the window.
00:31:02.000 I mean, you know why I'm really impressed with that?
00:31:04.000 Because I lose my passport all the time.
00:31:05.000 Yeah!
00:31:06.000 In my own house.
00:31:07.000 You just need to hire an FBI agent!
00:31:08.000 That's not a good thing to lose!
00:31:10.000 Dude, what?
00:31:11.000 No, but like, I'll put it in the safe or something, and then we'll travel, so I'll take it out, and then we'll put it in a suitcase, and then we'll come back and put the suitcase in the room, and then I'll be like, was it in the bag, or was it in... Oh, and I gotta tear the whole bag open, and I'm like, no, I put it back in the shelf, and then I'll open it, and there it is.
00:31:26.000 You know, but it's hard sometimes, because I don't use it that often.
00:31:29.000 Well, call your FBI agent.
00:31:30.000 They'll know.
00:31:31.000 Well, you know, maybe they could work with that because they weren't able to find the swatters who swatted us 15 times.
00:31:38.000 Abolish the FBI!
00:31:40.000 Back to the main point.
00:31:43.000 When I think about things like this, like, hey, bring in these cops and have them testify.
00:31:47.000 How come nothing like this ever happens?
00:31:50.000 Even when it comes to impeachment, it is the most mundane and predictable thing you can expect from the GOP.
00:31:57.000 There's evidence.
00:31:58.000 It's been around for years that we've known about with Hunter Biden.
00:32:01.000 In 2019, Politico wrote Biden Inc.
00:32:04.000 We have that whole, all of it laid out by a journalist, and now four years later, it's like, let's ask this question.
00:32:10.000 It's like, where's anyone to be like, I am going to file a subpoena for all of the police officers and make them come testify.
00:32:17.000 I just, I really don't think anyone ever does anything.
00:32:22.000 It's so boring.
00:32:23.000 I mean, I get it.
00:32:24.000 I just, I don't understand this man.
00:32:26.000 About anything in life, I just don't understand why nobody does anything.
00:32:31.000 And I'm gonna say this to the extreme, I mean this in the most literal sense, to the most extreme degree, no one does anything.
00:32:40.000 Now I'll clarify what I mean by that, because obviously we all do different things.
00:32:44.000 But I mean, there are prominent, powerful people with lots of money who you'll hear complain and then do literally nothing.
00:32:50.000 You answered it.
00:32:51.000 Because they're powerful, prominent people with lots of money.
00:32:54.000 That's why they don't do anything.
00:32:54.000 That's my point.
00:32:56.000 Because they want to continue being prominent, powerful people with lots of money.
00:33:00.000 You don't lose that.
00:33:00.000 You don't lose that from... Elon Musk does stuff.
00:33:04.000 He's an anomaly.
00:33:06.000 Absolute anomaly.
00:33:06.000 And that's my point.
00:33:08.000 And he's... I think it's massively beneficial for him.
00:33:11.000 I mean, granted, they're coming after him.
00:33:13.000 Well, not really.
00:33:14.000 He's getting sued.
00:33:14.000 Now they're coming after him.
00:33:16.000 DOJ's coming after him, too.
00:33:18.000 But they don't do anything because it's not... They don't want to.
00:33:21.000 They'd rather go on the news and line their pockets and increase their net worth by $100 million.
00:33:25.000 But what do they do?
00:33:26.000 I think they should be sent to the barracks when they serve in office.
00:33:29.000 They're NPCs.
00:33:29.000 And they're not allowed to leave.
00:33:30.000 They should be in the barracks.
00:33:32.000 They are NPCs.
00:33:33.000 And I tell you this because...
00:33:35.000 I know people who go on more adventures and take more risks, who are lower income than wealthy individuals in this country and in this world.
00:33:43.000 There's very few people who are willing to take large, ridiculous risks in order to affect some kind of positive change.
00:33:52.000 And it's like, off the top of my head, who can I even think of?
00:33:54.000 Elon?
00:33:54.000 That's maybe it?
00:33:55.000 Vivek?
00:33:57.000 Vivek!
00:33:58.000 Even he had, I mean I like Vivek, but I mean he even had a pharmaceutical deal that went bad, so I mean he's not... No, but the deal went good.
00:34:03.000 He made a lot of money.
00:34:05.000 In terms of doing crazy stuff, like big boisterous things, like Vivek is... He's doing something, yeah, I'm not hating on that.
00:34:11.000 If he's saying he's gonna end the FBI, he's basically putting himself in JFK's position.
00:34:14.000 Oh, I love it.
00:34:15.000 I think he's great.
00:34:15.000 That's taken a huge risk.
00:34:17.000 Just so we are clear, Tim is not saying that he loves the idea of Vivek being in JFK's position specifically.
00:34:23.000 He loves that he would do that, and that he's not in JFK's position.
00:34:26.000 We're a different place and time.
00:34:27.000 I love that he's stepping up and saying, I am willing to put my face out there with these statements, taking all the risks that come along with it, because it's the right thing to do.
00:34:35.000 Yes.
00:34:35.000 Well, after this pandemic... I have an idea.
00:34:39.000 Okay, let's hear it.
00:34:39.000 I just want to hire a hundred clowns to run around Vegas.
00:34:43.000 Well, I'm clown-pilled.
00:34:44.000 I'm into it!
00:34:44.000 I don't even know why!
00:34:45.000 Everyone's gonna think they were the hackers.
00:34:48.000 Well, how about we just... How about, Alex, we get you a hundred... Okay, maybe a thousand.
00:34:52.000 We hire a thousand clowns.
00:34:54.000 Extras, yes.
00:34:55.000 And you just... They just will do what you ask them to do?
00:34:58.000 They'll put FBI informant in it.
00:34:59.000 Don't do it.
00:35:00.000 We're talking about doing a street show like Oprah did.
00:35:08.000 Let's have them go to DC, the clowns, and then we'll put little signs.
00:35:12.000 Remember when Oprah had the I Got a Feeling song and it turned out everyone in the audience were actually dancers?
00:35:18.000 I'm talking about having clowns do a street show to, like, be comedic and generate attention on some issue.
00:35:24.000 You guys go to dark places with this stuff.
00:35:27.000 Inside Job, 9-11.
00:35:28.000 Yeah, a bunch of clowns gonna be like, it was worse than January 6th.
00:35:31.000 Clowns stormed the building.
00:35:33.000 The makeup was terrible.
00:35:35.000 I want to make this point, though, it sounds so bad, and I hope it doesn't get me in trouble, but I've lost almost all faith in humanity after the pandemic.
00:35:44.000 I think the dumber, the bigger the group gets, the dumber it gets.
00:35:47.000 So that's why I'm almost empathetic to the elites that don't want to interact with us.
00:35:51.000 Oh, dude, I totally get where Bill Gates is coming from.
00:35:53.000 That's what I'm saying, I get where Bill Gates is coming from.
00:35:55.000 He's like, just give them all a vaccine, shut up, just go about your business.
00:35:58.000 Hold on, hold on.
00:35:59.000 Anybody who's run a large company, Understands the frustrations of what can go wrong will go wrong.
00:36:07.000 And you know, like running this company, there are things that happen where it's like, I am genuinely shocked that something happened.
00:36:14.000 Like I don't understand how explicit instructions of take A to B and then do C turns into X, Y, and Z. And I'm like, I, I, how did this, how did this happen?
00:36:25.000 And no one has an answer.
00:36:27.000 And I'm like experiencing that.
00:36:29.000 I'm like, ah, so now I get it.
00:36:31.000 Bill Gates, with his, you know, how many, 100,000 employees, at a certain point, his eyes are bleeding, they're bloodshot, and he's like, why did you put the mop in the server room?
00:36:43.000 And it's just like, I don't know, sir, and he's like, ah!
00:36:46.000 And then his head explodes.
00:36:49.000 Because most humans, we are, I hate to admit it, we're all kind of dumb.
00:36:52.000 I bet if you asked 10 people on the street, psst, psst, psst, 80% probably wouldn't know who Kamala Harris is.
00:36:59.000 Probably two people would know.
00:37:00.000 Oh, no, I agree.
00:37:01.000 I mean, the majority wouldn't.
00:37:02.000 So people are just not dialed in.
00:37:04.000 They're in debt, they have an ex-girlfriend, baby mom, or whatever.
00:37:08.000 They're not dialed in to what's really happening in the world because they're so distracted.
00:37:12.000 We're all basically debt slaves just trying to make it.
00:37:14.000 I do, in all seriousness, I do think people like Bill Gates and a bunch of the other wealthy, powerful elites.
00:37:23.000 I think if you were to talk to them, for one, they're Malthusian, they do think there's too many people, and they will legitimately tell you, I mean I'm sure if you're hanging out at Bilderberg with a lot of these powerful international elites and politicians, they're going to say, look man, think about how stupid the average person is, okay, now realize half of them are stupider than that.
00:37:40.000 Hmm and they vote and that's like so that's half of that the first half was George Carlin But that's probably what they're thinking and they're thinking we don't want Stupid people to have political power and so what do you get?
00:37:55.000 Look at what's going on with everything politically in terms of abortion, sterilization, etc.
00:38:01.000 This is not a detriment to conservatives, who are more resilient, more self-reliant, and protective of their kids.
00:38:10.000 It's mostly detrimental to urban liberals.
00:38:13.000 The COVID lockdown policies mostly negatively impacted urban liberals.
00:38:17.000 All the things we see defund the police.
00:38:19.000 It's bad for liberals, conservatives, and then the people flee to more conservative areas where they can be more resilient and, you know, resolved.
00:38:27.000 And then it is the leftists who are suffering tremendously under their own policies that's resulting in them having less kids.
00:38:34.000 Yeah, I understand that.
00:38:36.000 But, you know, people having less kids is bad for society and civilization in general.
00:38:41.000 But if conservatives have twice as many kids, which they're probably going to start doing, then problem solved.
00:38:41.000 Yes.
00:38:46.000 But we can never have more kids than Venezuela's having.
00:38:49.000 I mean, they have a culture.
00:38:50.000 I mean, seriously, they have a culture.
00:38:51.000 I doubt they're doing a lot of abortion.
00:38:53.000 So they can just let people come in from other countries.
00:38:55.000 My biological stepdad, Tucker Carlson, you know, gets a lot of heat for saying the Great Replacement Theory.
00:39:00.000 But I don't know.
00:39:01.000 It would be hard to debate that if you really look at immigration policy.
00:39:04.000 This is a really good idea.
00:39:05.000 Powder PZ says to send 100 clowns to D.C., each with a senator's name and badge.
00:39:09.000 And whenever they see the senator, they go there and they start dancing.
00:39:12.000 That's actually a really good idea.
00:39:14.000 To just have like, you know, someone waits outside and then when they see the senator walking to the car, the clown is behind camera going like... That would be funny.
00:39:21.000 With kids and, like, the value of having children equating to, like, the species propagating, I wonder if there's... there's got to be a diminishing return.
00:39:29.000 I think that, like, yeah, you can have four kids.
00:39:32.000 That's maybe better than having three.
00:39:33.000 But if you have 19 kids, you don't have time for 19 kids.
00:39:37.000 A lot of those kids are going to grow up without a parent.
00:39:39.000 I don't know that that's the... Well, sort of.
00:39:39.000 So, like, that's worse.
00:39:41.000 The siblings help a lot in those situations.
00:39:43.000 Like, in the past, like, people, like, families have had as many kids as they could in the, like, anticipating some of them dying off.
00:39:51.000 You can still manage to raise... Yeah, like bees.
00:39:53.000 That's what bees do.
00:39:54.000 I mean, they have a ton of babies, and then a bunch die, but some survive.
00:39:57.000 The point is, though, like...
00:39:59.000 A hundred years ago, families were much larger.
00:40:00.000 Before any kind of birth control, people weren't like, no, we don't want to have sex because we might have kids.
00:40:06.000 Like, they were still getting it on.
00:40:08.000 And you had big families and stuff like that.
00:40:10.000 I want to segue this because overpopulation, families and stuff is a good way to segue into this story.
00:40:16.000 We have this from TimCast.com.
00:40:17.000 Protesters chant, send them back, at AOC during NYC press conference.
00:40:22.000 An estimated 110,000 illegal immigrants have arrived in the city since 2022.
00:40:26.000 This story is fascinating, and the video is even more fascinating.
00:40:29.000 Take a look at this.
00:40:31.000 You gotta hear this.
00:40:32.000 Let's play it.
00:40:34.000 Listen, listen, listen.
00:40:35.000 I have two points of consensus here that are very important in getting a solution to this issue.
00:40:40.000 The first is that there is various consensus here across geography and states on increased federal resources to
00:40:49.000 cities and municipalities dealing with this issue.
00:40:51.000 There's consensus all right.
00:40:53.000 Listen, listen, listen.
00:40:54.000 Authorizations.
00:40:55.000 Okay, I have to play that again.
00:40:56.000 To cities and municipalities dealing with this issue.
00:41:00.000 The second is to allow for work authorizations so that folks in here can get to work and start supporting themselves as soon as possible.
00:41:09.000 AOC is abject evil.
00:41:11.000 And you can hear these people screaming at her, and what is her response to them?
00:41:13.000 Don't worry, we're going to give them work rights so that they can displace your wages, lower your wages, displace your jobs.
00:41:21.000 Have a nice day.
00:41:22.000 They are prevented from getting jobs.
00:41:24.000 They are prevented from employment.
00:41:26.000 And that is part of the strain on our public systems.
00:41:28.000 The faster that folks can access the work that they're asking for legally, the better we can solve this problem.
00:41:34.000 And the third is extension of temporary protected status for many of the veterans who are the largest population
00:41:41.000 that are arriving here.
00:41:42.000 So with that, we thank you all.
00:41:44.000 She is so evil that people are screaming at her and protesting across the board in these cities.
00:41:50.000 And what does she say?
00:41:51.000 We're going to spend more federal resources on them.
00:41:53.000 We're going to give them work rights and protected status over you.
00:41:57.000 While they're screaming at her, send them back.
00:42:00.000 Are those her constituents?
00:42:01.000 Hopefully, yeah.
00:42:01.000 Yes.
00:42:03.000 So those are the people she's representing?
00:42:04.000 Yep.
00:42:07.000 I mean everybody, they're freaking out about it.
00:42:09.000 Curtis Lee has been arrested protesting this a bunch.
00:42:11.000 I mean this is a big deal that there are actual vets that they're kicking out of hotels to put these illegal immigrants in.
00:42:16.000 That makes no sense.
00:42:17.000 Why would a vet that went and risked their life in Iraq be less likely to get social services than an immigrant from Venezuela?
00:42:24.000 I'm sorry to tell you Alex Ocasio-Cortez, not you Alex, I'm happy to tell you.
00:42:29.000 Yo, you are not here to govern the world, an illegal immigrant.
00:42:34.000 Your job is to protect and serve the United States and the citizens of the United States, lady.
00:42:34.000 It's not your job.
00:42:38.000 Get it straight.
00:42:39.000 That's not her job.
00:42:40.000 The Democrats want us to just be one big globalist homogenous blob.
00:42:46.000 It's gotta happen slow.
00:42:49.000 That's why she's an international communist.
00:42:51.000 Like, even though she's a representative from New York, she's a member of the DSA, and she's an actual communist.
00:42:57.000 They don't believe in borders.
00:42:58.000 They don't believe in nations.
00:43:00.000 They think that if you believe in borders, you're a nationalist, and a nationalist means you're a Nazi.
00:43:06.000 She's a communist, and that's the reason why she wants to have all the free, open borders.
00:43:11.000 When you say she doesn't believe in borders, you mean she just envisions them differently?
00:43:15.000 No, no, no.
00:43:16.000 The Democratic Socialists of America think that there should be no borders at all.
00:43:20.000 But then you would have no states.
00:43:21.000 Exactly.
00:43:21.000 No cities.
00:43:22.000 That's what communism is.
00:43:24.000 Ian, Ian, Ian.
00:43:25.000 Ian, that's what communism is.
00:43:26.000 Communism is a global thing.
00:43:28.000 Like when they say real communism has never been tried, it's because there has never been a full global communism.
00:43:37.000 So when you say, the Soviet Union was communism and they tried communism and it didn't work, then the communist reply is, real communism has never been tried.
00:43:43.000 And the reason it's never been tried is because it was not global, there was class, there was nations, and as long as that is the situation, it's not real communism.
00:43:54.000 The new world my favorite is when you ask a communist like what do they want to go? I've usually like Star Trek
00:43:58.000 Yeah, and i'm like, oh you mean post scarcity world where you can telecomputer to just fabricate something from free
00:44:05.000 energy from from ambient energy And it does bro. I'll tell you this property when we get to
00:44:10.000 the point where we have replicators And you can literally be like computer ham sandwich and
00:44:15.000 then it does Sure, we can have some agreements on labor reforms at that
00:44:18.000 point But spare me this utopian vision while 100 100 million
00:44:21.000 people over the past, you know, 100 some odd years were murdered in mass
00:44:25.000 Even then, man, when that replicator's in action, who built the replicator?
00:44:28.000 What is the replicator's code base?
00:44:29.000 The replicator built the replicator.
00:44:30.000 So, is the replicator giving you actual water when you say water, or is it giving you something slightly different and it's telling you that it's water?
00:44:36.000 It's gonna be like Delta 9 weed compared to real weed.
00:44:39.000 That's what I'm talking about.
00:44:40.000 Large, large complicated replicators replicate small replicators.
00:44:44.000 What they do is there's ambient energy they absorb and then it fuses the particles together to make the appropriate elements and then that's the world of science fiction.
00:44:51.000 Hey, maybe one day we'll get there.
00:44:53.000 And if we do, we can have a conversation about labor reforms.
00:44:56.000 And then we can talk about how everybody just has unlimited food and all that stuff.
00:44:59.000 And then what's going to happen is the communists are going to say, too many people are eating food, getting fat, and having babies.
00:45:04.000 And then you know what communists do?
00:45:05.000 They do what they always do.
00:45:07.000 The too many people.
00:45:08.000 What they're doing right now.
00:45:09.000 Well, communists have a history of just murdering millions upon millions of people.
00:45:13.000 Oh, we don't have enough food?
00:45:14.000 Face the wall, please.
00:45:15.000 But it's not even that.
00:45:16.000 When there's too much food, they're gonna be like, okay, now that food is infinite supply, or near infinite, and people are eating too much of it and they're getting sick, we gotta deal with the, like, they're going to excise the people they deem to be wrong.
00:45:30.000 This world doesn't exist where they think... I love that meme where someone said, what are you going to do once communism is achieved?
00:45:37.000 And they said, I think I'll teach people how to do poetry on my farm and maybe do art classes.
00:45:42.000 And then the response was, your farm?
00:45:45.000 These people don't get it.
00:45:46.000 They're first order thinkers and they're going to be in a world for hurt if this ever happens.
00:45:49.000 The Italian island of 6,000 we talked about before the show.
00:45:52.000 I'm not going to say on air what I was saying before the show because it's horrific to envision what could happen to a mass of migrants that move into a place where they're not wanted.
00:46:01.000 If you don't try and stop it ahead of time and you just let it keep happening.
00:46:04.000 It's going to get really, really bad.
00:46:06.000 It could get so bloody.
00:46:08.000 You do not want to see that.
00:46:09.000 Let's talk about the southern border and where we're at right now.
00:46:12.000 New York, Chicago.
00:46:14.000 These are liberal bastions freaking out.
00:46:16.000 AOC is getting screamed at.
00:46:19.000 One of the risks that I fear because they are not properly securing our borders and dealing with the crisis of illegal immigrants flooding into the system is These people who are coming in do not recognize our government.
00:46:32.000 Governments fall when the people do not have confidence in those governments.
00:46:36.000 So if you look at, let's go back to when we talked about Lexington and Concord and the American Revolution.
00:46:41.000 When the Crown said, Massachusetts is in a state of rebellion and here's what you have to do, the militias outside of Boston says, we don't recognize you and we're going to do whatever we want.
00:46:51.000 Because there was no confidence that they could do anything and there was a willingness to reject them.
00:46:56.000 Let me put it this way.
00:46:58.000 If a guy walks up to you wearing a clown suit and says, I'm from clown division, put your hands against the wall, you'd be like, what?
00:47:05.000 No.
00:47:05.000 Clown division, hands against- Why would you put your hands against the wall for someone showing the clown division badge and they have a big clown hair and nose and they go, ee ee ee?
00:47:14.000 You'd be like, bro, is this a joke?
00:47:16.000 I don't know who you are and you have no authority over me.
00:47:19.000 You can claim to be the king, you can claim to be the president, that doesn't mean anything, I don't know you.
00:47:23.000 What happens when you import millions of people every year who do not recognize your government and your laws?
00:47:30.000 At some point, you're going to have large groups of people in New York who are going to say, I don't know you, dude.
00:47:35.000 A guy's going to show up, I'm a cop, and they're going to be like, what does that mean to me?
00:47:38.000 You're in our territory now.
00:47:39.000 I'll give you a real world example.
00:47:41.000 It's called Rinkeby in Sweden.
00:47:44.000 They brought in a whole bunch of Somali migrants in the 90s.
00:47:46.000 They sent them to these... they basically had them all go to the same places.
00:47:50.000 There was no regulation and control as to where they were going.
00:47:53.000 What ends up happening is the Somali refugees and migrants who go to this neighborhood of Rinkeby have kids.
00:47:59.000 Those kids grow up surrounded by Somali individuals.
00:48:03.000 They do not see the Swedish people or government as anything to do with them.
00:48:08.000 When the police come in, they start throwing stones and bricks at the cops saying, get out because they are the authority in that area.
00:48:15.000 And that happened to me when I went there.
00:48:16.000 They didn't throw stones or anything.
00:48:17.000 They started yelling at us and threatening us.
00:48:18.000 And the cops were like, you probably want to leave.
00:48:21.000 We'll follow you out.
00:48:22.000 The simple, I'll give you the simple version.
00:48:24.000 It's more complicated than that.
00:48:26.000 But I asked them, like, should we should go?
00:48:27.000 And they're like, it's gonna get very dangerous.
00:48:29.000 They could start throwing bricks.
00:48:30.000 We can't do anything to help you.
00:48:32.000 And what we were told by the people in the country who are honest is, well, when you have a generation, all these young men who are in their 20s, and they've got no, they don't interact with government.
00:48:42.000 They don't run for office.
00:48:43.000 They're not, they don't, it's not possible for them to win office.
00:48:47.000 The police don't come in these areas.
00:48:48.000 They don't pay taxes.
00:48:49.000 Right.
00:48:50.000 And so in their minds, Sweden, they are not Swedish.
00:48:53.000 They do not live in this country.
00:48:55.000 And the police who come in, it would be no different than if you saw a dude wearing a badge, a clown badge, walked onto your property.
00:49:01.000 You'd be like, get off my property, you're trespassing.
00:49:04.000 And they'd be like, no, I'm from clown division.
00:49:05.000 You'd be like, I don't recognize what that is and don't care.
00:49:08.000 You are trespassing.
00:49:10.000 Now, we as Americans recognize what law enforcement is.
00:49:13.000 The sheriff, the FBI, or otherwise.
00:49:16.000 But what happens when you have all of these non-citizens who are going to be like, I don't know who you are, what you're doing here.
00:49:22.000 I do not know the systems of governance in the United States.
00:49:24.000 I don't know anything about your laws, your politicians, your law enforcement.
00:49:28.000 Then what happens on the southern border when you have these instances occurring in places like New York and finally in Texas, they say, guys, The federal government is not going to protect our borders.
00:49:40.000 And so what does Texas do?
00:49:41.000 Was it Texas, right?
00:49:42.000 They put up the floating barricades in the river.
00:49:43.000 Yeah, Texas, yeah.
00:49:44.000 Arizona put up the chipping containers.
00:49:48.000 The federal government said, you have no right to do this.
00:49:50.000 And it's technically true as to how the government works.
00:49:52.000 States don't have the right to deal with international borders.
00:49:55.000 But they're starting to, which means states have begun to reject, and it's been going on for a while, federal authority.
00:50:02.000 What happens then when local law enforcement say, we are going to secure the borders by force because we can't contain this anymore?
00:50:10.000 Here's a scenario.
00:50:12.000 Texas is being flooded by non-citizens.
00:50:14.000 Non-citizens who are not going to recognize law enforcement will probably flee from law enforcement, not recognize taxes and laws and try and work under the table.
00:50:22.000 We are seeing economic repercussions and economic damage and crime and drugs.
00:50:25.000 Not all of them are bad people, but there are a lot of drugs and child trafficking.
00:50:29.000 The feds won't do enough about it or they're not doing anything about it.
00:50:32.000 So what happens then when in Texas, a local town or a county sheriff, they say, we are... You hear the screaming that's going on in Texas.
00:50:41.000 I'm sorry, going on in New York.
00:50:43.000 Imagine a scenario in a year from now where the same amount of screaming is happening to a sheriff and they're screaming, I don't care what you do, but stop this now!
00:50:52.000 And the sheriff says, okay.
00:50:54.000 We're going to get a bunch of guys to the border, and we're going to defend the border by force if necessary.
00:50:58.000 We're going to build barricades.
00:50:58.000 We're going to bring cars.
00:51:00.000 The federal government says stop, and they say, I don't know who you are, what you're talking about, and they do it anyway.
00:51:04.000 What happens then when conflict breaks out between the people who are trying to flood through the border and the people who are now sick of it?
00:51:09.000 This is a path to violence.
00:51:11.000 What you need in this country is a federal government who says, in order to avoid violence, conflict, and crisis, we have to have procedural, we have to have a process for how we deal with this.
00:51:21.000 We have to deport people.
00:51:22.000 We have to create security barricades and not let them just come in.
00:51:25.000 But they're doing everything it seems in their power to escalate things to the point of social breakdown, violence, chaos, etc.
00:51:32.000 Yes, it's gotten so bad in New York City.
00:51:34.000 Just even in the past few months, you had Lady Gaga's dad speaking out and saying, enough is enough.
00:51:39.000 They're flowing over.
00:51:40.000 You can't even really walk down parts of 8th Avenue because they're just housing them there.
00:51:44.000 Staten Island just had one of the migrant shelters they were using, I believe is an old school.
00:51:49.000 You can't even go outside there because it smells so bad because of the sewage issue.
00:51:53.000 It's all backed up.
00:51:55.000 The neighbors there, they don't even want to leave their house because it smells of sewage and it reeks.
00:51:59.000 And then you have all these kids who are If I send my kid to a school in New York City, a public school, he has to be vaccinated.
00:52:07.000 He has to have vaccination records.
00:52:08.000 These migrant children, they don't.
00:52:10.000 That's an issue because if there's an outbreak of something like measles, it's spreading to these kids, some of them who can't be vaccinated because they're immunocompromised, they can't get a vaccine, and none of the migrant kids coming in have to be vaccinated at all.
00:52:24.000 They're not held to the same standards as the children of citizens there, of New Yorkers, of people in this country.
00:52:30.000 They don't care.
00:52:32.000 Yeah, but you look at a state like Texas, guys, and I know everybody thinks Texas is conservative, but now with Dallas, Austin, San Antonio, and Houston all being liberal now, the Great Replacement Theory, it's... In Texas, we are being affected by immigration probably worse, other than California and Arizona, worse than anybody in the entire country, and it's done on purpose.
00:52:51.000 A state that was likely conservative in the next ten years, no doubt, will be liberal.
00:52:58.000 Because of this.
00:53:00.000 They hate the rule of law, which is the only thing that separates us from the three world countries.
00:53:05.000 Law and order, the rule of law.
00:53:06.000 And they loathe the rule of law.
00:53:06.000 Yes.
00:53:09.000 They want us to just be one globalist.
00:53:12.000 The globalists.
00:53:12.000 Who's they?
00:53:15.000 Is this like World Economic Forum, Klaus Schwab's buddies and stuff?
00:53:18.000 Like, I wonder, who do you guys think they are, exactly?
00:53:21.000 Well, it's a conglomerate of Marxists.
00:53:22.000 Are their names even out there?
00:53:23.000 There's people in the Catholic Church, probably, you know, Israel, probably, you know, there's probably a whole conglomerate of the Trilateral Commission, I'm just saying.
00:53:31.000 Council on Foreign Relations.
00:53:32.000 Flying into Davos.
00:53:34.000 They is really simple.
00:53:35.000 It refers to establishment, political, and corporate power.
00:53:37.000 So financial, it's financial stuff.
00:53:39.000 Yeah, I would say the corporations are the most powerful, in my opinion.
00:53:42.000 Well, there's also a group of people, especially the Davos types, who, you know, they call themselves futurists, and this is their job, to future-think and think about what it would be like if we were all one global community.
00:53:55.000 James Lindsay calls it agnostic cult and that's what it is.
00:53:58.000 They're all essentially, it's essentially a religion and they are looking for a one-world government and when you say they I'm talking about Marxists, right?
00:54:10.000 Actually neo-Marxists, right?
00:54:11.000 Because the economic school of Marxism was proven to not work in the, you know, with the fall of the Soviet Union and all of the countries that have tried socialism.
00:54:21.000 And so Neo-Marxism is a new approach to Marxism and you can take all of the intersectional stuff that you've got and that is all different, like, species of Marxism.
00:54:31.000 And they all have the same essential goal.
00:54:34.000 Let me take it to an even weirder spot.
00:54:35.000 This is how weird I am, Ian.
00:54:37.000 I believe it's actually satanic and I think it comes out of the Bible and it's a Genesis chapter 11 verse 9 and if you flip that it's weird that it's 9-11 but in that it talks about the Tower of Babel and and that Nimrod wanted to build a kingdom to heaven to go kill God and what God did is he made all the tribes and make it where they can communicate like you know and so everybody went out the winter you know separate ways so what they're doing now these people that worship the devil they want to invert everything in the Bible so what they're trying to do is they're trying to reverse engineer Nimrod's plan And build a one world order, so we're under one rule, one currency, one system.
00:55:11.000 So it's actually satanic.
00:55:12.000 I know that sounds crazy.
00:55:14.000 You don't have to believe in devils to agree with him, because I don't believe in, like, supernatural stuff, but I still think that he's right, because I don't believe it, but they do.
00:55:22.000 These people believe these weird superstitions.
00:55:24.000 And I don't know if all of them do.
00:55:26.000 I know that Nancy Pelosi said she's a reptilian this week.
00:55:30.000 What?
00:55:30.000 She did?
00:55:31.000 Yeah, type it in!
00:55:31.000 Type it in!
00:55:32.000 Oh my gosh, she said it this week!
00:55:34.000 She said, I'm cold-blooded and I'm reptilian.
00:55:36.000 I mean, I don't really think she's a freaking reptile, but something is weird.
00:55:40.000 I mean... The point that he's making is that the Gnostic religion has been around since before, like, Christianity.
00:55:46.000 And before... I can't Google it because it says, it looks like the results below are changing quickly.
00:55:51.000 Check the source.
00:55:52.000 Is it a trusted topic?
00:55:53.000 Well, she said it on MSNBC.
00:55:56.000 I forget whose show she was on.
00:55:57.000 She just said it.
00:55:58.000 Type it on Twitter.
00:55:59.000 Because it's probably going to give you a bunch of fake stuff, but she just said it this week.
00:56:03.000 Type in Pelosi Reptilian.
00:56:07.000 But no, I do think it's demonic or satanic.
00:56:09.000 I know that sounds weird, but there's something to it.
00:56:11.000 And whether you believe in it or not.
00:56:13.000 Like Phil said, these people are evil.
00:56:14.000 Let's play it.
00:56:15.000 Nancy Pelosi.
00:56:16.000 She's really, really committed to that.
00:56:18.000 It's really sad.
00:56:19.000 No, I'm not a poor baby.
00:56:20.000 I'm more reptilian and cold-blooded.
00:56:23.000 And Coen will win the election.
00:56:25.000 Uh, we're gonna take a short break.
00:56:26.000 I want to talk to you more about that.
00:56:28.000 What was that?
00:56:29.000 Hold on, hold on, hold on.
00:56:30.000 CIA agent!
00:56:31.000 We gotta take a break!
00:56:32.000 Calm down, calm down.
00:56:32.000 What is she referring to?
00:56:33.000 Let me play it again.
00:56:34.000 And Coen will win the election.
00:56:38.000 And Coen will win the election.
00:56:40.000 What is she saying?
00:56:41.000 Go in and win the election?
00:56:42.000 No, I'm not a poor baby.
00:56:43.000 I'm more reptilian and cold-blooded.
00:56:46.000 Go in and win the election.
00:56:48.000 We're going to take a short break.
00:56:49.000 I want to talk to you more about President Biden and some other things.
00:56:52.000 I guess it's impossible to know what, with only 13 seconds, what is she referring to in the context of being reptilian and cold-blooded?
00:56:59.000 She's saying she's like ruthless and long?
00:57:00.000 Yeah, she's going to go get it like a lizard.
00:57:02.000 And probably she saw the memes of her looking like a lizard meme and stuff.
00:57:06.000 I'm not as confident in that part.
00:57:08.000 I don't think she saw the meme.
00:57:10.000 Did we ever figure out if her husband is a homosexual?
00:57:13.000 Did we ever figure that out?
00:57:14.000 It's still undetermined, I think.
00:57:16.000 And it's cool if he is.
00:57:17.000 Yeah, it'd be very cool if he is.
00:57:20.000 I wish there was more context so I could understand why she's saying this.
00:57:23.000 I'm assuming she's saying, like, I'm ruthless.
00:57:26.000 That was what I got out of it.
00:57:26.000 Yes.
00:57:27.000 But, like, we don't know... Let me see if, uh... Yeah, these junk food... These junk food clubs have to go.
00:57:34.000 You know, of course she was gonna say that, but... Okay, let's try it again.
00:57:38.000 You know, of course she was gonna say that, but... Poor baby.
00:57:40.000 Yeah, she's really, really committed to that.
00:57:42.000 It's really sad.
00:57:44.000 No, I'm not a poor baby.
00:57:45.000 I'm more reptilian.
00:57:46.000 I don't understand what she's trying to say, to be honest.
00:57:48.000 They're being facetious from the beginning.
00:57:49.000 No, I get that, but I don't understand.
00:57:51.000 It's like, oh, she's a poor baby.
00:57:52.000 No, I'm reptilian.
00:57:52.000 I'm like, I don't know what that turn of phrase is supposed to be.
00:57:54.000 Anderson's probably saying that other people were saying, oh, Nancy's a poor baby.
00:57:58.000 And then Nancy's like, ha ha ha, no, I'm not.
00:58:00.000 I'm a lizard that I'm going to go just take the election.
00:58:03.000 That's my guess.
00:58:05.000 Okay.
00:58:06.000 But we need more context to understand.
00:58:08.000 No, we don't.
00:58:09.000 She's a lizard, and it's pretty good programming, and... Fact check!
00:58:12.000 Hold on, hold on.
00:58:13.000 Nancy Pelosi admits she is a reptilian and that she's cold-blooded.
00:58:18.000 Fact.
00:58:20.000 Nancy Pelosi did say the quote, I am more reptilian and cold-blooded.
00:58:24.000 And she said it on a national show, on the record.
00:58:27.000 That's what the press does.
00:58:28.000 Yeah, so if she said it, it's true, right?
00:58:31.000 Well, there you go.
00:58:31.000 She's a lizard.
00:58:32.000 It's a revelation of the method, Tim.
00:58:34.000 She's either a lizard or she's a liar.
00:58:36.000 Where does the reptilian thing come from?
00:58:37.000 Like, why do people think that?
00:58:38.000 Oh, no, this is actually a really good one.
00:58:40.000 So David Icke was one of the guys that kind of founded this, and it goes back to, like, the Queen's bloodlines.
00:58:44.000 They supposedly can trace back to Muhammad, I don't know if you know this, and Jesus, supposedly.
00:58:49.000 So it's like, they think, and it kind of comes out of the Bible, too.
00:58:52.000 There's all this weird mix of, like, There's a third of the angels casted out of heaven, and these were like the Nephilim, and then the angels slept with these giants, and then we're kind of the retarded offspring of it, so there's all this kind of whimsical stuff where at some point angels made it with the animals here, and that there might be bloodlines like we have, and there might be bloodlines where these angels made it with the animals and they became human, so... You're saying that the lizard people are Nephilim?
00:59:15.000 Kind of, like they're in that vibe.
00:59:16.000 Whatever the Nephilim vibe, it kind of comes from that time of the... That's where a lot of it comes from.
00:59:21.000 The early origins of existence.
00:59:22.000 I mean, I'm not saying this is true, but that's what they say.
00:59:25.000 And there's something weird, though, how the Queen and Prince Philip, how they live for forever.
00:59:28.000 I mean, obviously, they have the best medical doctors, but there's something weird about bloodlines.
00:59:33.000 I don't know.
00:59:33.000 About bloodlines!
00:59:34.000 I don't know that they're losers.
00:59:35.000 I mean, look, I was just reading this list of the oldest people, and some lady was 120 years old, and she was like a nobody in the middle of nowhere.
00:59:42.000 Well, yeah, I'm saying some people live a long time, but it's just weird that these billionaires live for a long time.
00:59:47.000 Well, it's not, I mean, you can say it's weird in that, like, not suspicious, it's weird that they do, but it's obvious what they're doing.
00:59:55.000 Like, don't they do the, what are they called, Blood Boys?
00:59:58.000 Blood Boys.
01:00:00.000 There's, like, stem cell treatment stuff that people, I've heard stories of, like, these super rich people who, well, there's that one millionaire guy.
01:00:07.000 Anti-Asian guy.
01:00:08.000 Yeah, it was like having his son's blood transfused into his body or whatever to be younger and it's like... Yeah, but you're not gonna get much more longevity out of these things anyways.
01:00:17.000 I mean, you might live a little longer because they have access to better things, but they're really not increasing their longevity significantly.
01:00:23.000 They don't want to die.
01:00:24.000 And part of the transhumanist stuff is being able to put your mind in a machine so you can live forever.
01:00:30.000 They're obsessed with living forever in longevity.
01:00:33.000 There's a part of the reptilian brain called the basal ganglia of the reptilian complex that humans also have, a basal ganglia.
01:00:42.000 So at some point in our evolution, we probably had only come that far.
01:00:46.000 And I think what happened, there's this interesting theory from this book Ishmael that I got.
01:00:50.000 Oh, that book. A long time ago. Yeah, it's pretty cool. It's a talking gorilla. Yeah, we know all about it
01:00:54.000 Where after something happened, but a huge segment of humanity went north
01:00:58.000 They migrated great migration a lot of people from the equatorial
01:01:02.000 Maybe it was the Great Flood something but they went north they could no longer grow crops
01:01:06.000 I gotta pause you right there.
01:01:08.000 See, the issue is we used to believe in what was called out-of-Africa theory, but I think it's been debunked already.
01:01:12.000 What, Mesopotamia?
01:01:13.000 That everything came out of Mesopotamia?
01:01:14.000 It's tough to tell.
01:01:15.000 It's like life recovered in Mesopotamia, and I think they used to think that's where it began, but that's where it recovered after the flood.
01:01:19.000 They went to like Turkey.
01:01:20.000 I think there's definitely a flood.
01:01:22.000 Oh yeah, 13-12,800 years ago, there's tons of evidence.
01:01:26.000 Like Rockwall, there's a place right outside of Dallas, it's called Rockwall, and it's named because these guys were digging, you know, whatever, a hundred years ago, and they found these huge walls that were deep underground that make no sense, and you can't dig it.
01:01:36.000 Really?
01:01:36.000 Yeah, because it's type in Rockwall, Texas, and because they're so deep underground, like, they think that it was maybe an old fort, so there is so, and then what is it?
01:01:45.000 What is the Tobekli?
01:01:46.000 Tobekli Tepe.
01:01:47.000 Yeah, is what?
01:01:49.000 That doesn't even, the timeline doesn't even make sense.
01:01:51.000 Yeah, 15,000 years.
01:01:52.000 Yeah, so.
01:01:53.000 That's where they went, that's where they recovered to after the flood.
01:01:56.000 They went to Gobekli Tepe, or they built it after the flood, but it looked like it was like an ancient temple that they all, all these societies went and kind of congregated at.
01:02:02.000 My theory is that these people that went north after this cataclysm couldn't grow crops, so they had to hunt.
01:02:08.000 Constantly.
01:02:09.000 All they did was hunt.
01:02:10.000 They hunt, killed, so they developed a lizard-like behavior.
01:02:13.000 And then their skin got lighter and lighter, and then eventually they came back south as these marauding, bloodthirsty conquistadors, murdering, colonizing Europe.
01:02:22.000 They took over, they eventually became the Romans.
01:02:25.000 So this bloodthirsty behavior, as opposed to eating crops.
01:02:29.000 The bloodthirsty behavior is the lizard.
01:02:31.000 Oh wow, look at this picture.
01:02:32.000 No joke, a huge wall was buried.
01:02:35.000 And so there is quite literally a wall.
01:02:37.000 A huge wall.
01:02:37.000 Buried in Texas.
01:02:38.000 They can't even dig it up.
01:02:39.000 It's so big.
01:02:40.000 Wow, that's really big.
01:02:41.000 It is.
01:02:41.000 It's very big, and they have no idea what it's from.
01:02:44.000 There's no evidence.
01:02:45.000 They don't even know what the hell.
01:02:46.000 So they just named the city Rockwall.
01:02:48.000 So again, look at this photo here.
01:02:50.000 You can see they're excavating it, and it's a wall, man.
01:02:53.000 It's a big wall.
01:02:53.000 Oh, I mean... It's Mud Flood, bro.
01:02:55.000 You know about Mud Flood.
01:02:55.000 Oh, I mean, I'm just saying there's something weird.
01:02:57.000 I mean, we probably did have a flood.
01:02:59.000 So, for those that aren't familiar, I'll probably be getting it wrong,
01:03:02.000 but the general idea, which obviously I find silly, but there are people who believe
01:03:06.000 that there was a massive ancient civilization, a flood happened, wiping everybody out,
01:03:12.000 and mud and sediment and everything shifted around, burying large components of this ancient civilization.
01:03:18.000 And we've begun to discover some of it.
01:03:22.000 The deeper conspiracy is that we've not built these buildings, we've discovered them.
01:03:27.000 And that's why, it is really weird.
01:03:28.000 You'll see buildings in some cities where there's clearly a door halfway in the ground.
01:03:33.000 You've seen those?
01:03:33.000 Right, and I'm like, I don't know why they built that building that way.
01:03:36.000 I don't think it means that a mud flood happened and buried the building.
01:03:39.000 It's probably more likely that, like Chicago, they lifted the city up.
01:03:43.000 Things like that happen.
01:03:43.000 Well, there is weird stuff, too.
01:03:44.000 If you look at all the old world's fairs, they used to be able to build these beautiful buildings with no power tools, with no modern technology, and then they would just destroy it, you know, shortly thereafter, or it got burnt in a fire.
01:03:55.000 So, I think there's a great fire in Chicago, a great fire in San Francisco.
01:03:58.000 A lot of these classic cities, Tim, they had huge fires around, like, 20s or 30s.
01:04:03.000 So we don't even know their own history.
01:04:04.000 So there's something we I'll just say this.
01:04:07.000 I'm a full-blown conspiracy theorist.
01:04:08.000 You don't need to be that but I think our history is not the truth.
01:04:11.000 It's history.
01:04:11.000 Hold on.
01:04:12.000 History is not true.
01:04:13.000 That's that's end of story.
01:04:14.000 Yeah, end of story.
01:04:14.000 That's like look at modern news today.
01:04:16.000 We know how it's manipulated.
01:04:18.000 Exactly.
01:04:18.000 And so we try our best to piece together as much of history as we can while knowing that it's written by the victors.
01:04:23.000 I just I don't believe any of the religions because of it.
01:04:25.000 I can't believe any of those texts because it's all like less credible than CNN.
01:04:30.000 What's interesting, though, is there's so many different religions that have very comparable stories.
01:04:34.000 Like, so many different religions have a story of the flood or Noah and the ark.
01:04:39.000 So I find that fascinating.
01:04:42.000 What if, you know, when the flood happened, it was actually, you know, when was the Sphinx underwater or whatever?
01:04:49.000 It was like 10,000 years ago?
01:04:50.000 12,000 years ago?
01:04:50.000 It was 12,000 BC, you're saying?
01:04:51.000 They said 12,800 years ago.
01:04:52.000 ago. I imagine what it was 12,000 BC you're saying?
01:04:55.000 They said 12,800 years ago. It's like that's where this whole Gobekli Tepe
01:04:58.000 came in, all this water damage. Oh interesting.
01:05:00.000 Yeah, there's lots of erosion damage on the side of the space.
01:05:02.000 Right, so you have this ancient civilization with wonderful technology, the Earth starts flooding, and all the wealthy, powerful elites are like, we out!
01:05:12.000 And they just leave Earth when they're gone, and all the poor, yokel, working-class rednecks get left behind where most die, and those who survive start to rebuild, and here we are today.
01:05:20.000 But I think the real elites told people they were gods, and like Nephilim, and they still had ancient tech, they had hot air balloons and hang gliders and shit.
01:05:27.000 Right, but that's an entirely different conspiracy theory.
01:05:29.000 I'm just saying there's a potential conspiracy theory, or I'm saying my conspiracy theory that I'm bringing up right now has nothing to do with any of that, I'm just saying there's an advanced civilization, the ultra-rich, it wasn't Noah, some humble guy, like, I'm gonna build an ark, it was a super, it was a billionaire social media mogul who was like, I'm building a starship, and then he did, and then when the flood happened, they left, Everyone else gets wiped out, those who survived the water world start to rebuild, and here we are.
01:05:51.000 Dude, they used to think the Sphinx was like 3,500 years old.
01:05:56.000 And now they think it's like 15,000 years old.
01:05:59.000 It changes all the time.
01:06:01.000 By the way, we were off a little bit.
01:06:02.000 I think the argument that they carved a different head into it makes a lot of sense.
01:06:06.000 Yep, one of the pharaohs came in to face the lion.
01:06:08.000 It used to be an actual cat.
01:06:10.000 Or a dog, Anubis or whatever.
01:06:12.000 And then they cut the head down to really small to be the pharaoh instead.
01:06:17.000 Because the head doesn't fit the body size.
01:06:18.000 No, it's all receded.
01:06:20.000 Man, it was a beautiful lion.
01:06:22.000 I bet carved out of the mountain.
01:06:24.000 You know, I think the sad reality is that we want to believe these things because it gives us mystery and lore and we can hope that there's something crazy that might happen, but it's just not.
01:06:34.000 Yeah, we're incapable of living without myth.
01:06:36.000 I was thinking about going back to like the 800 BC when the Romans were just tribes, and like 600 BC, and if you could go back to that period and teleport around place to place, time to time, and explore, that's why I want to live, is to be able to do that.
01:06:50.000 And I know that with advanced technology, I think we're going to be able to simulate that kind of experience where you're actually there with the Romans See, the men are always thinking about the Roman Empire.
01:07:00.000 That's true, though.
01:07:02.000 That was a meme, right?
01:07:03.000 Yeah, it's a trend to ask a guy, how often do you think about the Roman Empire?
01:07:07.000 And men are obsessed with the Roman Empire, rightfully so, in my opinion.
01:07:10.000 Every day, because I follow stoic accounts.
01:07:13.000 Well, I wouldn't say every day, but a couple times a week at minimum.
01:07:18.000 See, that's incredible to me.
01:07:21.000 Well, because from the male perspective, women are basically just sitting around all giggling with each other about their hair, right?
01:07:28.000 Yeah.
01:07:28.000 And men are all talking about like, ooh, ancient Rome.
01:07:31.000 All roads lead to Rome.
01:07:32.000 It's like equally silly, you know what I mean?
01:07:34.000 Yeah.
01:07:36.000 It's funny with the serration.
01:07:37.000 It's funny, Ian, you said something about advanced tech, but I think it's very easily provable.
01:07:41.000 I mean, you guys might argue with me on this.
01:07:44.000 I think we're getting dumber really fast because if you look at just like the stonework that they did in New York City not that long ago, like the gargoyles on the corners of buildings.
01:07:52.000 It's amazing.
01:07:52.000 We can't even recreate that today with all the technology we have.
01:07:56.000 We can't make gargoyles?
01:07:56.000 What do you mean?
01:07:57.000 No, they can't recreate a lot of the classic gargoyles and classic, like, whatever stonework they've done.
01:08:02.000 Oh, come on, dude.
01:08:03.000 They can, they just don't want to.
01:08:05.000 Google it.
01:08:07.000 I'm telling you, there's like the pyramids.
01:08:08.000 We can't build the pyramids today.
01:08:09.000 They don't know how to build the pyramids.
01:08:10.000 Yes, we can.
01:08:11.000 Google if we can build the pyramids today.
01:08:13.000 How big is the Burj Dubai?
01:08:14.000 Tim, we cannot build the pyramids today.
01:08:17.000 Fact.
01:08:17.000 Google it!
01:08:18.000 Google it!
01:08:19.000 The way they build these pyramids, we cannot- They tried it!
01:08:21.000 They tried it!
01:08:22.000 I watched a video where a middle-aged fat dude was moving multi-ton stones.
01:08:27.000 He would dig a hole- Using through sound or whatever?
01:08:29.000 No, he would dig a hole under a portion of it, and then he would start rocking it until it flipped itself over, and he was like, I can move it, and he started putting these things together.
01:08:40.000 It was like ancient aliens or whatever.
01:08:41.000 We can build a pyramid, come on.
01:08:43.000 We cannot recreate- Have you been to the Luxor?
01:08:45.000 According to Wikipedia, yes.
01:08:46.000 Yes, it is technically possible.
01:08:47.000 Have you been to Beth's?
01:08:48.000 Have you been to Beth's Pro Shop?
01:08:50.000 What does the Wikipedia say?
01:08:51.000 How is it technically possible?
01:08:52.000 They don't even understand how they built it now.
01:08:54.000 It says!
01:08:54.000 No, it's because they don't know what they used.
01:08:56.000 They don't know what they used to build them back then, so how could we redo it?
01:09:00.000 Hold up, Serge.
01:09:01.000 Debunked.
01:09:01.000 Debunked.
01:09:01.000 Yeah, that's what you're going to say.
01:09:02.000 I've seen this in real life too, so.
01:09:04.000 Yeah, that's not debunked!
01:09:06.000 I've been inside of it.
01:09:06.000 No, but I think what you're saying is we can't do it in the same way.
01:09:09.000 We cannot do it in the same way.
01:09:10.000 These guys are smarter than us.
01:09:12.000 Even though they're Freemasons or whatever, we're not as talented as we are today.
01:09:18.000 We used to be smarter.
01:09:19.000 That's a ridiculous prospect.
01:09:21.000 That's a true statement!
01:09:23.000 I don't care.
01:09:23.000 We cannot recreate the pyramid.
01:09:24.000 I watched a video where they used a stream of water to slice a screwdriver in half.
01:09:29.000 I'm pretty sure we can easily cut stone and stack it up.
01:09:32.000 Nope.
01:09:32.000 The Burj Dubai!
01:09:33.000 We can't, we can't, we can't.
01:09:35.000 Just like we can't go, we can't go to Antarctica.
01:09:37.000 Fact check me, chat!
01:09:37.000 Fact check me, we can't recreate the pyramids.
01:09:40.000 Look, you're, he's actually right.
01:09:42.000 We can't do it the same way they did because we can't enslave that many people.
01:09:45.000 We don't really know how they did it.
01:09:47.000 We have no idea how they did it, Tim!
01:09:49.000 But also, I don't know how this means that we're dumber now.
01:09:52.000 Like, didn't the Egyptians also think that the Earth is flat?
01:09:55.000 Yeah, they probably did.
01:09:56.000 No, they never did.
01:09:56.000 Oh, did they not?
01:09:57.000 That is not true!
01:09:59.000 It was Eratosthenes, I believe, who correctly calculated the circumference of the Earth by comparing different shadows.
01:10:05.000 Sticks and shadows, but that actually works for the localized sun as well.
01:10:08.000 Last night, Katie Faust was saying, or actually we were just talking, it came up that a lot of our architectural genius is being placed into video games now.
01:10:15.000 A lot of male architecture.
01:10:16.000 Mind space is being put into video games, and you're building these digital realities, so building gargoyles aren't being created.
01:10:23.000 Yeah, free labor, child labor on Roblox.
01:10:25.000 Oh, Roblox, dude.
01:10:26.000 What a journey.
01:10:27.000 What is this saying, Tim?
01:10:29.000 A typical...
01:10:30.000 My show idea, and I've mentioned it on the show, and I pitch- Me go to Antarctica.
01:10:35.000 We have to do it, everybody's been telling me.
01:10:37.000 Absolutely, absolutely.
01:10:38.000 Let's do it.
01:10:39.000 But my show idea was, it takes place in the last city, and the people who live there call it the last city, and no one really knows why human civilization collapsed, but all other cities on earth are barren, empty wastelands of decay, ruin, cars just falling apart.
01:10:54.000 It's like a post-apocalyptic scene.
01:10:56.000 And this city has grown to a few million people with technology somewhat comparable but a little bit better than ours.
01:11:03.000 And they have scouts going out doing missions to expand the territory of the city and reclaim more farmland and things like this.
01:11:10.000 And then one day they come across weird tall slender beings in like white suits with like white helmets.
01:11:17.000 And they get into a fight and these advanced beings like just energy blast them.
01:11:22.000 And then what happens is, these guys in Expedition are like, body cam filming it, it's being transmitted back, and they're like, these are aliens or something, and they must be what wiped out human civilization, they've come back to kill us.
01:11:32.000 And then it turns out, this is my show idea, spoiler alert, if the show ever gets made, it'll be ruined for you.
01:11:38.000 The revelation is, At some point, people started migrating to the metaverse because you can connect your brain in and eat filet mignon every night if you want.
01:11:49.000 Live forever.
01:11:49.000 You don't live forever.
01:11:51.000 But like thousands of years compared to 70 on Earth.
01:11:53.000 Yeah.
01:11:54.000 Well, no.
01:11:54.000 Expand time.
01:11:55.000 Your mind moves faster or whatever.
01:11:57.000 So when you're plugged into the metaverse, you can virtual reality, you can experience anything you want.
01:12:02.000 So there's literally no reason to leave.
01:12:04.000 So they all end up living in pods underground in these facilities where they experience life much like ours, but in base reality, they never leave the pod.
01:12:13.000 And so the people who are the last city don't know what happened because news never stopped.
01:12:18.000 Information as to why humans migrated persists, but it persisted into the metaverse.
01:12:23.000 For humans who are outside of that system and don't have access to it, they don't have the historical records.
01:12:28.000 It just one day disappeared.
01:12:29.000 So you've got mountain people, trailer park people, these types, uncontacted tribes, who are outside of the system and will never integrate with it, and then the people they encounter in these suits, every so often, metaverse people do have to go out to maintain the machines they live in.
01:12:44.000 I genuinely believe we are inching towards living in the pod and eating the bugs, but it's not how people understand.
01:12:50.000 You're gonna come home from work or whatever it is you have to do.
01:12:53.000 Your house is going to be akin to a pod outside with maybe like a plastic shield over it just for like nature protection so you don't die from a bear attack.
01:13:02.000 You're gonna lay down in your pod and then you're gonna go to sleep and then instantly wake up inside your mansion.
01:13:07.000 You're going to walk to your fridge, where you're going to pull out a whole cheesecake and just shove the whole thing in your mouth and be like, so good.
01:13:13.000 In the pod, you've got cockroach slime going into your feeding tube or whatever, into your neck port, and you're not going to care because your brain is being stimulated in the metaverse.
01:13:23.000 It's even worse, Tim.
01:13:24.000 Alex Jones talks about this, and you can actually pull this up.
01:13:27.000 They want to have it, when you go to the metaverse, that you can ejaculate 5,000 times a day.
01:13:31.000 That's what they think that they would be doing in the metaverse.
01:13:35.000 Hold on.
01:13:42.000 I think if we did a show exploring a future where people in the metaverse, you would have a portion where it's like, oh, that's a sex club.
01:13:50.000 And it's just people staying there going like, Yeah, ejaculating.
01:13:52.000 Well, they'd be orgasming, but only ejaculate for so long.
01:13:55.000 People would be wanting dopamine releases in other ways.
01:13:59.000 The idea that not all humans are perpetually in this state of trying to achieve sexual activity says to me that there would be people who do.
01:14:08.000 But most people would stimulate themselves through dopamine through the traditional means, meaning guys would go into their own micro-universes where they're kings, saving the children from a fire, or they would make themselves superheroes so they can constantly get that masculine satisfaction.
01:14:26.000 It's not, I do not think it's gonna be a bunch of guys being like, I'm gonna go and do this.
01:14:30.000 Guys would do this a lot.
01:14:30.000 They would.
01:14:31.000 Me?
01:14:32.000 But I would say 99% of their time is going to be spent in a fictional reality where they're the superhero doing great things and everyone loves them for having done it.
01:14:41.000 In the metaverse, you think that's what men would spend their time doing?
01:14:44.000 I would be the quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys.
01:14:46.000 They're going to be Alexander the Great.
01:14:49.000 And they're going to be Caesar at the Rubicon.
01:14:52.000 Was it Caesar at the Rubicon?
01:14:53.000 Who was at the Rubicon?
01:14:54.000 Yeah, Caesar crossed the Rubicon.
01:14:55.000 Might be recreating the Roman Empire.
01:14:56.000 Exactly.
01:14:57.000 Men are going to be like, you know what feels the best?
01:15:00.000 I gotta tell you.
01:15:01.000 Yes, guys would love to do the weird, creepy, you know, fetish stuff, but I'd be willing to bet more guys would want to be catching the final touchdown pass at the Super Bowl and 60,000 people screaming and they're just like, yeah!
01:15:17.000 Yeah, but then all you want to do is bang after that.
01:15:19.000 Yeah, after that!
01:15:21.000 Switch channels.
01:15:22.000 And then hold on, and then all the cheerleaders run up and it's like, yeah!
01:15:26.000 On the field!
01:15:28.000 This is just kind of, to what you're saying though, and this is actually Ian made a point about it, and it's funny that I'm referencing Jake and Logan Paul, but you're talking about the sex stuff.
01:15:36.000 Jake Paul is actually, I just saw this clip today, he was on a podcast with his brother and he made a good point.
01:15:40.000 He's like, the reason why this Dylan Danis stuff, you guys have seen Dylan Danis.
01:15:44.000 So Dylan Dannis is supposed to fight Jake Paul, and Jake Paul... No, no, Logan.
01:15:44.000 Yep, that was it.
01:15:49.000 Excuse me, fight Logan.
01:15:50.000 This is Jake that said the same, and I get him confused, but Dylan Dannis is fighting Logan.
01:15:53.000 Logan Paul is engaged to a girl named Nina Agdal.
01:15:55.000 She's been in Hollywood for about 10 years, maybe 12 years.
01:15:58.000 She has a picture, Tim, with every A, B, C, D, and E list celebrity that's ever even been in Hollywood.
01:16:03.000 I mean, she probably has a picture with a thousand different celebrities.
01:16:06.000 Dylan Dannis has been posting these pictures, like, insinuating that she's sleeping with all these people.
01:16:11.000 And it's super viral.
01:16:13.000 I mean, he's gained about a million followers since he's been doing this.
01:16:17.000 And Jake, his brother, was talking to Logan about why it's so successful or why Dylan's resonating so much with people.
01:16:23.000 It's because men are scared of women.
01:16:25.000 Men are constantly getting rejected by women.
01:16:27.000 They're constantly addicted to porn.
01:16:28.000 They have impotency problems.
01:16:30.000 So it's like the sexual nature of men, we're almost becoming submissive to women in a weird way.
01:16:35.000 And that's why they like this, because they like seeing a woman get dunked on.
01:16:38.000 I disagree.
01:16:39.000 I think that the majority of men are submissive to women, and that's why, when you look at the dating statistics of Tinder, Bumblebee, or I'm sorry, Bumble, whatever, is that women choose the top tier of men, and men will go for, like, the bell curve and male perspective for attractiveness is a standard bell curve, and for women it's a massive spike towards the high end of attractiveness.
01:17:01.000 And so if you look at how other primate families do it, one powerful chimp for instance beats the crap out of the other chimps and then gets all the women.
01:17:10.000 So if we're looking at modern society, I am not surprised to see that there is, you know, a majority of men who are... Anti-women?
01:17:19.000 No, are unable to properly woo a woman, and then there's a small percentage of guys who are getting all the women.
01:17:24.000 That's like baser instinct.
01:17:27.000 The small percentage of guys that are getting all the women, they don't have to woo.
01:17:31.000 Like if you're talking about the dudes that are like, there's no wooing.
01:17:34.000 It's like if you're one of the top Sliding the DMs.
01:17:37.000 Yeah, they slided my DMs.
01:17:39.000 Please do it.
01:17:40.000 Sliding my DMs right now.
01:17:42.000 Like these super ripped Chad guys are like, I'm insatiable and I want you too.
01:17:46.000 Well, that's why you never cyber sex with anybody on the internet.
01:17:49.000 Cause I guarantee it's a guy.
01:17:50.000 I heard that's what Andrew Tate was doing.
01:17:54.000 Yeah, he admitted it!
01:17:55.000 See, and this is the thing for all the Andrew Tate bros, I think it's, you know, some of the stuff that he, you know, I agree with.
01:18:00.000 But he literally, there's a videotape of him saying, I would go on these dumb girls and I would be talking to the guys and they would give me all their money.
01:18:07.000 And they asked him, like, did you feel bad?
01:18:08.000 He's like, no.
01:18:09.000 And I'm like, dude, that's disgusting.
01:18:12.000 First of all, you're cybersexing with dudes, and then you don't feel guilty at all that you're taking all this money under false pretenses that you're going to hang out with them, that you're going to see them, or that you have feelings for them.
01:18:21.000 So, you know, Andrew Tate, I'm not calling him necessarily a bad guy, but that is not a good thing to do.
01:18:26.000 I'd love to see the chat history on some of those.
01:18:28.000 Oh, they're disgusting.
01:18:29.000 Like, what was he typing to another man?
01:18:31.000 You know he was typing the nastiest stuff.
01:18:34.000 Because he said it.
01:18:35.000 He said that his brain was better at being perverted than the girls, so you know it's nasty.
01:18:40.000 Well, because guys are more.
01:18:42.000 I mean, that's just the way it is.
01:18:43.000 But I actually am more interested in talking about, you know, like, AI and stuff than just what guys want to do in their free time.
01:18:50.000 So, you know, anyway.
01:18:51.000 A lot of it's connected.
01:18:52.000 Well, it is, yeah.
01:18:52.000 A lot of it is connected.
01:18:53.000 Digital sex, man, that's...
01:18:57.000 So I was talking about this the other day.
01:18:59.000 The place that Mid Journey is at right now is just insane.
01:19:05.000 I posted, I typed in on the show Nancy Pelosi shaking hands with Vladimir Putin and it made this photo of Putin smiling and Nancy Pelosi smiling and there's like a demonic face on the wall and I'm like, how did it know to do this?
01:19:17.000 How did it know to make it like creepy and evil looking?
01:19:19.000 It just knew.
01:19:21.000 And people have started taking these photos and turning them into videos through AI, making like three to five second videos.
01:19:28.000 In a year, we're gonna be getting five to 10 minute videos.
01:19:31.000 And it's gonna be really, it's gonna be fantastic quality video.
01:19:34.000 And then in a year or two, we're gonna be at the point where you're gonna have half an hour to hour like videos with speech.
01:19:41.000 Like all the components already exist.
01:19:43.000 ChatGPT is there.
01:19:44.000 You can create conversations.
01:19:47.000 All you have to do, you can do this right now with ChatGPT, when they started doing what's called prompt injection, where to break the rules, they said, they made this huge long text of, a long list of text, where it was like, from now on, you respond to this, you behave this way, you answer these things, and it cracked it, it cracked ChatGPT, so that it started communicating like something else.
01:20:08.000 So I explored this further, and I started giving it personnel, I was like, from now on, you are Donald Trump.
01:20:12.000 And it would start answering my questions as if it was Trump.
01:20:15.000 Because of all of Trump's speech and all of his text and his mannerisms are online and in the machine.
01:20:21.000 So that means you could go in a video game, you could create a 3D avatar of Donald Trump, high quality 4K like any video game we have today, and then plug chat GPT into it and say, hello, Mr. President.
01:20:32.000 It'll be like, hello, how's it going?
01:20:34.000 And it'll actually be like a facsimile Trump having a conversation with you.
01:20:39.000 You can do this for any character and it can happen right now.
01:20:42.000 All that needs to happen right now is the tedious effort of a game developer being like, I'm going to plug A and B together.
01:20:49.000 Because all the components already exist.
01:20:51.000 When that happens, I gotta tell you, you're talking about this freaky, like guys want to do weird stuff on the internet, they will do weird stuff in these games, but if you can, if you get home from working at your burger joint, and you can turn the game on, where you're the football star catching the touchdown pass to win the Super Bowl, People are going to create characters who worship them, who say everything they want to say.
01:21:11.000 They're going to get their dopamine released from fake people who guarantee it to them.
01:21:15.000 It is like the rat in the experiment with the electrodent's brain hitting the dopamine button over and over and over again.
01:21:20.000 Yeah, I do think that is going to happen, but I think it's going to be a little farther off than we think, because there's a thing called the uncanny valley, where even all of the biggest, and I may have said this on the show before, all the biggest telecommunication companies, they spend billions of dollars in research and development to create artificial intelligence, so when you call a call center, you think you're talking to a human.
01:21:38.000 And human beings, when they do this test, Tim, we always figure out we're talking to a robot.
01:21:42.000 Some people figure it out.
01:21:43.000 It's just not good enough.
01:21:44.000 It's just not good enough, yeah, I know.
01:21:45.000 And actually, there's a website, I think it's called... What was it called?
01:21:48.000 Is it called Bot?
01:21:49.000 It's not called Bot or Not.
01:21:50.000 But everybody figures it out usually within like less than a minute.
01:21:52.000 Human or Not.
01:21:53.000 Yeah, Human or Not.
01:21:54.000 So, I'm sorry, you can't figure this one out.
01:21:57.000 That's cool.
01:21:58.000 Let's see.
01:21:59.000 Oh, it's over.
01:22:00.000 The experiment has ended.
01:22:01.000 So, the issue is...
01:22:05.000 You think you're- Do you get to talk to it?
01:22:07.000 You are randomly placed into a chat with another person.
01:22:09.000 Okay.
01:22:10.000 And you are both given a certain amount of time to respond to each other.
01:22:13.000 After a certain amount of time, it asks you, was the person you're talking to a human or a bot?
01:22:18.000 And I don't know what their results are, but I can tell you this, I tricked a whole lot of people.
01:22:22.000 You did?
01:22:23.000 And they thought they were talking to a bot, and they were talking to me, who was intentionally manipulating them.
01:22:27.000 Like, it's really obvious to make it seem like you're a bot and get them to pick the wrong answer.
01:22:32.000 And there were sometimes where- Well, you were doing an inside job because you were playing a human acting like a bot.
01:22:38.000 That's the point of it.
01:22:38.000 I know, but- You're trying to deceive the other person to see what they choose.
01:22:41.000 But they're trying to make robots sound like humans.
01:22:44.000 Right, and so that's a component of what these things do.
01:22:47.000 I think it'd be harder for a robot to actually sound like a human than it would be for a human to sound like a robot.
01:22:53.000 Humans can create a facsimile of a robot very easily, and robots are having a hard time right now emulating humans properly.
01:23:01.000 But we are not that far off.
01:23:03.000 Yeah, I agree.
01:23:04.000 So there was a... I called one of the services that I use.
01:23:09.000 Everyone has some subscription service.
01:23:11.000 And the person who answered was like, Hi, thanks for calling.
01:23:14.000 This is customer service.
01:23:15.000 How can I help you?
01:23:16.000 And I said, human being.
01:23:18.000 Hey, I can answer your questions.
01:23:19.000 Just give me a chance.
01:23:20.000 I was like, human being.
01:23:23.000 Okay, well, would you like to ask a question?
01:23:25.000 And then I went for the standard.
01:23:26.000 There's one thing you say if you're tired of talking to the machine.
01:23:29.000 Now, this wasn't a text prompt like AI chat language thing, but it's just so obvious.
01:23:35.000 Do you know that there are two words you can say that will instantly get the robot to hang up and switch to a human?
01:23:41.000 Donald Trump.
01:23:42.000 Operator.
01:23:42.000 No.
01:23:43.000 Nope, that's absolutely not.
01:23:44.000 That's why I just say it over and over.
01:23:45.000 Operator.
01:23:47.000 I can say two words instantly and get an operator.
01:23:50.000 Any guess?
01:23:51.000 No.
01:23:51.000 Any guess?
01:23:52.000 Two words?
01:23:52.000 No.
01:23:53.000 Two words?
01:23:53.000 I just violently tapped the zero.
01:23:55.000 It's easy.
01:23:56.000 Zero.
01:23:56.000 Give this a try.
01:23:57.000 The next time you're on with a robot, and many of you will notice, you'll say, human being!
01:24:02.000 It'll go, if you'd like a question answered, try asking me!
01:24:05.000 And you'll be like, representative!
01:24:08.000 I can answer your question.
01:24:09.000 Oh, I tell you what.
01:24:10.000 You say one thing.
01:24:11.000 Fuck you.
01:24:12.000 Is it the tone?
01:24:13.000 And that will?
01:24:14.000 Instantly goes, I hear that you're angry.
01:24:16.000 I'll be getting a representative for you.
01:24:19.000 I wonder if it's the tone, if it can measure your tone.
01:24:22.000 I can't say that every single system does this.
01:24:24.000 I have been hung up on before.
01:24:27.000 You know, and it was just like, I'm sorry I can't help you.
01:24:29.000 Goodbye.
01:24:30.000 And hangs up.
01:24:30.000 That's what I usually get.
01:24:32.000 But I would say 99% of the time I was on the phone with, I think it was United.
01:24:37.000 And they cancelled, they switched me off my first class ticket to a coach garbage seat on a different flight without my permission at 4 in the morning.
01:24:45.000 So I showed up to the wrong gate, confused.
01:24:48.000 I'm like, what's happening?
01:24:49.000 And they're like, we've decided unilaterally to, even though you paid first class, to move you to coach on a different plane to a different city.
01:24:55.000 And I'm like, what?
01:24:57.000 But your ultimate destination remains the same, so it's fine.
01:25:00.000 So I called, and I get the, hi, thanks for calling, can I help?
01:25:05.000 And I went, fuck you.
01:25:07.000 Transferring to a representative, instantly.
01:25:09.000 Automated customer service should be legal.
01:25:11.000 That's a life hack.
01:25:12.000 I gotta ask you guys.
01:25:14.000 Yeah, but then you're just like...
01:25:15.000 Like, we'll be getting to you in 17 hours.
01:25:17.000 Yeah.
01:25:18.000 On AI and relationships, when you're in a v- because right now I got a video game called Baldur's Gate 3, I just got it, and in the game, you can- one of your companions, you can kind of hook up with one of your companions.
01:25:26.000 One of them?
01:25:27.000 Yeah, we get to hook up with all of them, really.
01:25:29.000 The people- The gaggle of- Okay, hold on, hold on.
01:25:31.000 Let me just add this before- The orgy commences- I have to do this, I have to do this.
01:25:33.000 I'm very interested, please give- Baldur's Gate is awesome.
01:25:37.000 It's this new game that came out.
01:25:38.000 It's, like, highly rated, 10 out of 10 across the board.
01:25:41.000 But because they wanted it to be that you can be any identity or sexuality you want, because it's you, every character has to have a romance path, which means... Like, if you play as a dude, and I'm like, bro, I'm just like a rogue street pickpocketer that's trying to make my way through this crazy world, and all these dudes that are coming to help fight the bad guy keep trying to have sex with me, and I'm like, guys, stop!
01:26:01.000 The guys are trying to have sex with you on the show?
01:26:04.000 The guys, the women, the bears, you name it!
01:26:06.000 They throw it at you.
01:26:07.000 And I don't know if you can have multiple partners, but that's not the point.
01:26:09.000 The point was, you can.
01:26:10.000 I'm pretty sure yes.
01:26:12.000 When it becomes hyper-realistic, and you're in an AI environment, and it's a woman, and you're talking to her, and she's like, I want to have sex with you tonight.
01:26:18.000 Is that cheating on your wife?
01:26:21.000 Yeah, see this is a great area.
01:26:22.000 No, you're just gross.
01:26:24.000 Have you guys seen the episode of Black Mirror where the two bros from college get the new neural video game and then they start having sex with each other?
01:26:32.000 Because like, they'll play a fighting game and one guy would choose the Asian martial artist, the other guy would choose the Asian lady.
01:26:37.000 So when these two adult black men go into the video game, and everything's super realistic and they can feel everything, they just for some reason start having sex instead.
01:26:45.000 Which, I'm curious as to why the game programmers put that in the game as a capability, but sure, nobody... I'm sorry dude, if you made a fighting game, and then you're like, but you can also go in there and have sex, I'm pretty sure people would not be fighting each other in that game.
01:26:58.000 But my point is just that...
01:27:00.000 That's the premise of the episode, that his wife finds out, and it is cheating.
01:27:06.000 And so the agreement they have is that once per year, he's allowed to go bang his bro,
01:27:10.000 and then she takes off her ring and goes and has a fling.
01:27:14.000 Oh, well, it kind of it makes me think about Christianity and Judaism.
01:27:17.000 Kind of a differential is that, I think someone was talking about this, maybe it was Jordan
01:27:20.000 last night, Jordan Peterson, but that was known as Dennis Prager, about Christianity
01:27:24.000 is a lot about your thoughts and policing your mind and controlling your thoughts that
01:27:28.000 thinking of another woman is like is adultery.
01:27:31.000 Whereas Judaism is more about your actions and doesn't really matter so much about what you're thinking.
01:27:35.000 If you behave in a certain way, then you're living to God's standards.
01:27:39.000 Look, I'll just put it this way.
01:27:40.000 And I wonder if AI is a behavior or if it's just in your mind.
01:27:43.000 I will say.
01:27:45.000 Yes.
01:27:46.000 If you are going into a Neuralink virtual space to bang other women, you're banging other women.
01:27:52.000 But what about porn cheating?
01:27:54.000 Because that's kind of a gray area.
01:27:56.000 I've had this public debate.
01:27:58.000 I'm not going to sit here and lie and say I don't like to look at a picture of some boobs sometimes.
01:28:01.000 It's a gradient though, right?
01:28:03.000 It's a hard line.
01:28:04.000 You've got to figure it out for yourself.
01:28:06.000 But the general idea is you should be having relations with your significant other.
01:28:11.000 Here's the way I view it.
01:28:13.000 If we're able to go into an AI matrix, and there was a fake woman that was created, or fake man, that was created by the machine that you knew didn't really exist in real life, and people would be like, oh, it's just like porn, it's no different.
01:28:26.000 It's like, no, no, no, no.
01:28:27.000 When you go to a bar and hook up with someone, you're not in their mind.
01:28:31.000 You're just looking for a fling.
01:28:33.000 If you get a fling from a fake person or a person, you are still cheating on your significant other.
01:28:39.000 Like, you should be having relations with your significant other, you should be... But I'll tell you this, maybe the solution for some people is the spouse, and you go in together and have a whole plethora of weird AI matrix garbage.
01:28:49.000 But why is it so much different for you if it's done in the metaverse versus done in any other game?
01:28:55.000 Well, for cheating, is it cheating to then... I'm saying you can feel it, you're actually doing it.
01:29:00.000 Oh.
01:29:01.000 I'm super annoyed with Baldur's Gate for this, because I don't care about having a romance with some, like, devil woman or whatever.
01:29:09.000 I'm like, whatever, dude.
01:29:10.000 I'm just trying to, like, fight this squid guy or something like that.
01:29:13.000 And it's just like, in the game you go to camp and it's like, are you sure you want to go to bed?
01:29:17.000 People want to talk to you.
01:29:18.000 I'm like, I am not talking to these people.
01:29:19.000 What, because everybody wants to have sex at the camp?
01:29:21.000 This is like sexual indoctrination.
01:29:23.000 I mean, I don't know.
01:29:25.000 They want the romance paths.
01:29:26.000 They're making it for women.
01:29:28.000 Well, I don't know what the point is.
01:29:31.000 Like, bro, I'm telling you, I'm playing a game where I throw fireballs and summon zombies and stuff because I just want to fight a dragon, you know what I mean?
01:29:39.000 It's fun to level up your guy, get stronger, and then you defeat the dragon.
01:29:43.000 The last thing I want to do is go into the camp.
01:29:45.000 I'll tell you what I did, though.
01:29:46.000 There's one relationship in that game that is a must, and it's when you rescue the dog and you play fetch.
01:29:52.000 And then, you get the spell of animal speech, and then you walk up, normally walk up to the dog, he's like, and you give, you pet him, and then he brings you stuff, he'll like, and then you could throw the ball, and then I got a potion of animal speech, and he's like, hello friend, I hope you're doing well, and then I was like, I'm sorry about your master, but I'm glad that we're friends, he's like, I'm glad we're friends too, and then you pet him, I'm like, that's the only relationship that matters.
01:30:12.000 That's definitely not cheating.
01:30:13.000 A game to try when I get back to New York City.
01:30:15.000 That's fun.
01:30:16.000 Oh yeah, it is pretty good.
01:30:17.000 Have you played Starfield?
01:30:19.000 Not yet.
01:30:20.000 Well, so, It's good, it's just there's a lot of perk walls.
01:30:24.000 Hey, but let's talk about this, because- So I did beat it, and then I read the reactions people had to the ending that I did, and it's... I think Baldur's Gate 3 made a huge mistake with one of their storylines, which allows you to, I would say, legitimately beat the game in five hours or less, probably less, and...
01:30:46.000 I decided to just reload and purposefully lose to advance the story, and I just think it's the stupidest thing ever.
01:30:52.000 Oh, wow.
01:30:52.000 Yeah, I tend to play those games just to experience the game.
01:30:55.000 Like, I don't look for a victory pad.
01:30:57.000 I just want to do the quests and explore the... Yeah, you're like me.
01:31:00.000 I like the side quests.
01:31:01.000 Yeah, the whole game's side quests, pretty much.
01:31:04.000 But you made a good point.
01:31:04.000 Like, if you're in a video game and you're, like, the red square, and it's like, The dialogue says, I am having sex with you now.
01:31:11.000 Yes, and the blue square, the green square comes up, and you see like a dot go back and forth between the squares.
01:31:17.000 That's not really cheating on your wife.
01:31:19.000 Right.
01:31:19.000 But if it's a fully looking digital woman, and you can feel it with haptic stuff, so you think only if you can feel the sensation?
01:31:26.000 No, I think haptics would be more akin to like using a toy.
01:31:31.000 I'm talking about if you can plug in the Neuralink to your brain, And then you feel the world like you do.
01:31:37.000 You go into a bar, and there's a bunch of AI, you know, floozies, and you're like, let's go!
01:31:42.000 I'm like, that's cheating.
01:31:43.000 Well, what's worse, because all women that have jobs have a work husband, and you know, they might have a boyfriend.
01:31:48.000 What?
01:31:49.000 Yeah, most women do.
01:31:50.000 You probably do.
01:31:50.000 I don't have a work husband.
01:31:52.000 Well, I don't know.
01:31:53.000 I don't know your work relationship.
01:31:53.000 What's a work husband?
01:31:54.000 Like, you know, somebody at work that you're friends with.
01:31:56.000 You know, usually a lot of times girls become friends with a guy, and it's kind of their, You never heard that term?
01:32:01.000 No.
01:32:02.000 Well that's like a common term and it's really become even more popular lately and oftentimes it's like what's worse the emotional cheating of them becoming best friends or like her having a one-night stand one time never again or her having a guy that every morning is giving her coffee and talking to her?
01:32:18.000 The sex.
01:32:19.000 That's worse?
01:32:20.000 Yes.
01:32:21.000 The risk of impregnation.
01:32:22.000 I mean, I would agree.
01:32:24.000 I wouldn't want my wife to bang some other guy.
01:32:26.000 I'd rather have a friend at work.
01:32:27.000 Simple question.
01:32:28.000 When a guy is angry that he's friend zoned, the issue is not that they're friends, it's that he wants more.
01:32:35.000 So if you have a significant other who's giving you the more you ask for, and then is friends with the guy who's in the friend zone, like he's in the crummier position.
01:32:43.000 People have emotional connections to lots and lots of people.
01:32:45.000 Personally, I kind of feel like if you're in a relationship with someone, I mean, my, like, I don't hang out with anybody else.
01:32:52.000 Like me and my girlfriend literally just do everything together.
01:32:55.000 And it's, it's like, there's, I don't call anybody else.
01:32:58.000 I have no, I don't know.
01:32:59.000 That's just me.
01:33:00.000 Well, that's weird.
01:33:01.000 If there's relationships where girls have like best friends or.
01:33:03.000 I'm not a fan of that.
01:33:04.000 I would be like, this doesn't work for me.
01:33:06.000 But for me and my girlfriend, if, if like, if I'm not working, we are going out together to hang out, to like, she plays poker with me.
01:33:13.000 We'll be both at the table and we do everything.
01:33:16.000 We were just talking about this.
01:33:17.000 Earlier, and I feel like I need a therapist with my girlfriend to be able to have this conversation without going at her, like at each other about it, but like women don't understand or tend, it seems like they don't quite understand that guys want to have sex with them.
01:33:30.000 That is the DNA that men physically, if they become close to a woman, friendship-wise, that there's going to be a desire to have sex and a willingness to.
01:33:40.000 Women absolutely understand that.
01:33:42.000 A woman knows within 10 seconds if they would bang a guy.
01:33:45.000 Then right then, they turn it off or something.
01:33:47.000 No, he's just a friend.
01:33:49.000 Listen, when they have you as a friend, or they have people that are friend-zoned,
01:33:52.000 what that is, is keeping the man in a position to do the things in a relationship
01:33:58.000 should the relationship that they're in fall apart.
01:34:01.000 Yeah, it's called orbiters.
01:34:03.000 It's like the AAA team.
01:34:09.000 And he's staying because he's hoping that he gets called up to the big leagues.
01:34:12.000 Or he's banging 10 girls at once and it doesn't matter.
01:34:14.000 It's a horrible situation, that's why if a girl friendzones you, stop talking to her.
01:34:20.000 Like if you're interested in a girl and she friendzones you, stop talking to her.
01:34:24.000 Because she will extract from you, even if she's not intentionally a bad person, you are going to give her attention, she is going to accept it.
01:34:34.000 I don't even see it that way.
01:34:36.000 When I was younger, if there was— That's the way it is, though.
01:34:39.000 No, no, no, no, no, but that's a bad way to look at it.
01:34:41.000 If there was a woman I was interested in and she was like, you know, I'm not interested in you, I'd be like, I just want to let you know, I am, but clearly there's an impasse here, and I think this is, like— That sounds healthy, but nobody— That's exactly how I deal with it.
01:34:54.000 I'm like— That's good.
01:34:55.000 I'd just be like, hey, look, that's cool, go do your thing.
01:34:58.000 Yeah.
01:34:59.000 I'll see you around. That's not I'm out. That's the I mean, that's the way I don't even do and there's no reason to be
01:35:03.000 to be Women are women are allowed to not like me. Do you ask that's
01:35:05.000 cool a long time ago, Ashley I think the first time you're on the show if you thought
01:35:08.000 men and women could be friends you said yeah But that the dynamic changes it's not like the same kind of
01:35:12.000 friendship that like a guy would have yeah I mean like you said
01:35:16.000 I think most men there is some sort of sexual tension there and they would sleep with most the women that they're quote-unquote
01:35:22.000 friends with So it's difficult to maintain long-term friendships with men without them wanting to step outside.
01:35:31.000 To be fair, a lot of men would sleep with women they don't like as well.
01:35:34.000 Yes.
01:35:35.000 So that's good too.
01:35:36.000 Yes.
01:35:37.000 Do you think it's ethical for guys or girls that are in relationships to be chatting, text chatting with other people of other sexes?
01:35:44.000 I think it's fine to have friends of the opposite gender.
01:35:46.000 You know, I'm not going all Mike Pence there.
01:35:49.000 But the Pence rule works!
01:35:50.000 What is the Pence rule?
01:35:52.000 Gay conversion therapy works?
01:35:53.000 I love that.
01:35:54.000 I actually have a very successful gay conversion therapy.
01:35:57.000 My producer, Jimmy, I put him through it and it actually works.
01:36:00.000 So go ahead, sir.
01:36:01.000 I don't know if it works for Jimmy, but Mike Pence, he was in the headlines, I don't know, this was probably six years ago now, because he won't go to dinner or do anything with another woman if his wife's not also present.
01:36:15.000 And, you know, there's also some people in our industry and in our field, they won't go to events without their husband because they don't want rumors.
01:36:22.000 And I totally understand that.
01:36:24.000 Like if I'm on tour or whatever, I don't go out to do anything with only a female ever at all.
01:36:31.000 Yep.
01:36:31.000 Period.
01:36:31.000 Never, ever, ever.
01:36:32.000 It's the only way to avoid accusations.
01:36:35.000 So I totally understand.
01:36:36.000 The texting is what I feel like it's insidious.
01:36:38.000 I'm from the generation before the internet, like in the early 90s, late 80s, you didn't have texting.
01:36:42.000 It was either you called a girl on the phone, which if I had a girlfriend, I called another girl, would be cheating.
01:36:47.000 Or if I would have to go to her house to see her.
01:36:49.000 And if my girlfriend didn't know that I was going to a girl's house to talk to her, that'd be cheating.
01:36:54.000 Phil, you're the only one here that I think is older.
01:36:55.000 You're older than me.
01:36:57.000 I find that it's so casual.
01:36:59.000 Kids are like, or people that are used to the internet is like, I'm just texting.
01:37:02.000 It's just texting.
01:37:03.000 I don't even like the guy.
01:37:03.000 I don't even know.
01:37:04.000 It's all about the person.
01:37:05.000 Yeah.
01:37:06.000 It's all about the individual.
01:37:07.000 I don't think there's an issue with texting someone unless you're hiding it from your significant other and your significant other doesn't know about that.
01:37:14.000 I think you know a lot of these conservatives make fun of these dudes who are like polycules or whatever with like a big fat woman and they'll be like you know you see these videos where it's like a morbidly obese woman and like five guys behind her and she's like we're all in this together and it's like conservatives make fun of that and I'm like I really don't think they care like these dudes live this world they live this world it's just That's it.
01:37:35.000 I think some of these guys might be unhappy and would probably prefer something better.
01:37:39.000 But like, it's the same thing with Chelsea Handler saying that she wakes up at six in the morning, does drugs and masturbates.
01:37:44.000 I'm just like, I don't care.
01:37:46.000 She's probably happy.
01:37:47.000 I think she'll be unhappy later in life when she has no family and no one to take care of her.
01:37:50.000 But come on, the idea that she's doing pure dopamine stimulation right when she wakes up, she's hitting those dopamine centers.
01:37:57.000 She probably feels great.
01:37:58.000 Well, it's funny you say that, because one of the guys who I've become very good friends with, a guy named Bubba Clem, his name's Bubba the Love Sponge, he has a radio show, and the reason why he is, one of the reasons he's famous is he let Hulk Hogan bang his wife.
01:38:08.000 Oh, right.
01:38:09.000 In the Hulk Hogan sex tape.
01:38:10.000 And the reason why I bring up Bubba is he's a very masculine guy, he's an alpha guy, loves football, this and that.
01:38:15.000 I would have never expected him to be into polyamory.
01:38:18.000 I'm not into it at all, but like you said, Tim, there are people that are just into letting somebody bang their wife.
01:38:23.000 That's cuckoldry.
01:38:24.000 I'm just saying, that's just what they like.
01:38:25.000 It's not that... I mean, I'm not... I don't like that, but some people... He's a normal guy.
01:38:29.000 I think you should be ashamed of yourself if you allow someone else to sleep with you.
01:38:34.000 I don't think you're... you're not... it's not your wife.
01:38:36.000 I'm not saying I agree with it, but I'm saying some guys like that.
01:38:40.000 That's just what they... they want to be a cuckold.
01:38:43.000 If you are in a position where your wife wants to sleep with someone else and you allow it to happen, you are not really married.
01:38:49.000 Well my wife and her boyfriend right now are having a great time.
01:38:51.000 I don't care.
01:38:52.000 Are they listening to the show?
01:38:53.000 It is clear in law that the word marriage as a legal concept doesn't matter to what marriage actually is.
01:38:59.000 And the fact that we are in a world of no-fault divorce means there's quite literally no contractual marriage at all.
01:39:05.000 A real marriage is when you and another person actually have that commitment and are knowingly married.
01:39:10.000 Like you have a commitment to each other till death do us part.
01:39:13.000 This idea that people can go to Vegas and be like, we're married now.
01:39:15.000 It's like, no you're not, dude.
01:39:16.000 That's not real marriage.
01:39:17.000 But we do have to go to Super Chats.
01:39:19.000 Let's go to Super Chats, smash the like button, subscribe to the channel, share the show with your friends and all that jazz.
01:39:22.000 We're a little late, but we'll read what you got.
01:39:24.000 What is this?
01:39:26.000 Ben says, Tim, please look up the clip of Biden introducing Secretary Booty Juice.
01:39:30.000 What?
01:39:30.000 It's a good laugh.
01:39:31.000 Yeah.
01:39:32.000 What did he say to Booty Juice?
01:39:33.000 What did he do?
01:39:34.000 He just called him Booty Juice.
01:39:36.000 Was it an accident?
01:39:37.000 He didn't say Booty Juice, what did he say?
01:39:42.000 He just slopped it out the way that he slops all of his sentences out.
01:39:45.000 Well, what is it?
01:39:45.000 He said he was a professor for four years at a school that he was only at for two years?
01:39:49.000 He just said that today?
01:39:50.000 Oh yeah, that was in Pennsylvania.
01:39:51.000 He said he was like a tenured, whatever, professor or something?
01:39:55.000 He said he taught for four years, he was only there for two?
01:39:58.000 Now that CNN and the mainstream media is actually collecting these and putting them out so that people can see them, I actually like Biden a little bit better just because he's funnier.
01:40:06.000 And honestly, I'm starting to like Biden because I know, I mean, this is just pure speculation, they're going to put Kamala Harris in the presidency.
01:40:13.000 You think so?
01:40:13.000 You really think so?
01:40:14.000 I don't think so.
01:40:15.000 She's so miserable.
01:40:16.000 Just for a month, just to do it, and then they'll go back to Gavin Newsom.
01:40:19.000 Okay, just for a month, it might be.
01:40:21.000 Yeah, just for like a... Just a tip.
01:40:23.000 What if they run her as Gavin's VP?
01:40:25.000 I wouldn't be surprised.
01:40:26.000 She's the best VP!
01:40:27.000 That's like sloppy second.
01:40:29.000 Has anyone ever been VP to two different presidents?
01:40:32.000 She literally gave Willie Brown the mayor of San Francisco BJ's to get rid of.
01:40:36.000 Well, I think that's out in the open, I think.
01:40:39.000 I don't know if that specifically.
01:40:43.000 I think she dated Willie Brown.
01:40:44.000 Dating is, you're building more specific in there.
01:40:47.000 Maybe they're waiting till marriage.
01:40:48.000 All right, let's get some more.
01:40:49.000 Here we go.
01:40:50.000 Think on this as hobbies after all are what you spend your free time on, whether or not, oh, I'm sorry, he says, misogyny may be too strong of a phrase there, but that is what women feel when you belittle their differences.
01:41:02.000 Hobbies after all are what you spend your free time on, whether or not they benefit anyone.
01:41:07.000 I think this is a reference to Fresh and Fit.
01:41:08.000 We're saying that women don't have hobbies.
01:41:09.000 Yes.
01:41:10.000 Right?
01:41:11.000 So like, like what do you do for fun, Ashley?
01:41:13.000 I play video games.
01:41:14.000 Right, so you have hobbies.
01:41:15.000 Yeah.
01:41:16.000 What they were saying is that, and my response to a lot of their comments was like, you guys
01:41:20.000 surround yourself with a very particular group of women.
01:41:22.000 And they're like, no, these are regular women, like college degrees, masters, whatever.
01:41:25.000 And they said that, you know, 80% of women will just be like, when they say, what do
01:41:30.000 They'll go, oh, I hang out with my friends.
01:41:32.000 And they're like, yeah, but what are you doing when you do it?
01:41:34.000 Like, what do you mean?
01:41:35.000 I go out.
01:41:35.000 It's like, what does go out mean?
01:41:37.000 Like, what does that mean?
01:41:38.000 What do you do?
01:41:39.000 And they're like, what do you mean I go out?
01:41:40.000 Like, I don't know what you're talking about.
01:41:41.000 They're confused by the question.
01:41:42.000 The answer was cocaine.
01:41:44.000 They just didn't want to say it.
01:41:45.000 No, the answer was we go to a bar and we sit there.
01:41:47.000 Well, they also probably have other hobbies that they wouldn't consider hobbies, like makeup.
01:41:52.000 Makeup's a hobby for a lot of women.
01:41:53.000 I'm sure they're all getting dressed up.
01:41:56.000 Fashion's a hobby.
01:41:57.000 Makeup is a hobby if you're, like, mastering the skill of applying makeup properly, but if you're, like, passively putting makeup on just to look good, I wouldn't consider it a hobby.
01:42:06.000 I don't think, have you spent significant time around women talking about makeup with each other?
01:42:11.000 It is kind of a hobby.
01:42:15.000 I'm saying it can be a hobby if there's a culture around it and like you're describing it, but I don't think, I think for a lot of them that's not the case.
01:42:23.000 Well, this makes me... I would just, I think most women think of makeup as a hobby.
01:42:29.000 This makes me a simp on a blimp, but I don't, I don't like the new kind of movement where it's like, Repeal the 19th Amendment.
01:42:35.000 Women shouldn't vote.
01:42:36.000 Like, I just, I think that's so dumb.
01:42:38.000 I mean, I'm not even trying to say women are... It's a bunch of relationship advice from single people.
01:42:45.000 Do women apply makeup for the pleasure gain from sitting there putting on makeup and no other reason?
01:42:50.000 Yeah, sometimes.
01:42:51.000 Some women do.
01:42:52.000 In that instance, I would say it's a hobby.
01:42:54.000 But for women who are like, they know makeup or whatever, that's like saying, I buy Volcom jeans and I've talked to people about my shoes, so my shoes are a hobby.
01:43:04.000 No, they're not.
01:43:05.000 No, I guess there's just a different culture around it.
01:43:07.000 If I collected shoes, my hobby would be shoe collecting.
01:43:10.000 Yeah.
01:43:12.000 What would you call that?
01:43:13.000 Makeup collecting?
01:43:14.000 If a woman puts on makeup, takes a picture, and then cleans it off, hobby.
01:43:18.000 If a woman just puts makeup on for the sake of putting on makeup the same as anybody puts on clothes or a shirt or whatever, that's not a hobby.
01:43:23.000 My point is these women probably have hobbies that they're not classifying as hobbies.
01:43:29.000 Or that men don't think of as hobbies.
01:43:32.000 I think it's fair to say that Fresh and Fit surround themselves with a particular type of woman, so they're getting a lower percentage of women with hobbies.
01:43:39.000 Obviously there are women who are doing sports, there are women who skateboard, there are women who play poker, but I think any guy who's engaged in your standard, most popular hobbies, women make up, you know, 1 in 5 to 1 in 10 of the participants.
01:43:55.000 Sure, they're acceptable hobbies that Fresh and Fit likes.
01:43:58.000 No, I'm talking about- What are the hobbies of the men on Fresh and Fit?
01:44:01.000 I'm saying, look at the top commercial hobby activities.
01:44:06.000 And women are a very small percentage of participants.
01:44:09.000 If you look at things like, first of all, if you look at news shows, for instance, do you watch the news?
01:44:13.000 Women are- The top hobbies are learning.
01:44:15.000 Yeah, women.
01:44:16.000 Women, painting, and cooking, and writing, and gardening.
01:44:20.000 Actually, these are primarily female-dominated.
01:44:22.000 The hobbies, dance, gardening, photography, poetry, and drawing.
01:44:28.000 But maybe the question is, they ask, what do you do for fun?
01:44:31.000 Oh yeah, if you're cooking for a family.
01:44:32.000 Nobody would say, like, I'm writing for fun.
01:44:34.000 Women can just, like, be, whereas men actually have to do something to be worthy.
01:44:39.000 What are you doing, bro?
01:44:40.000 Well, men do things, like, and not for nothing, but, like, men that don't do anything, that sit on their butt, everybody looks at them like they're just a pile.
01:44:48.000 Dude, it's like women Actually can be like, well, you know, I hang out with my friends and not do things and their value is intrinsic because they're women.
01:44:56.000 Men have to earn value.
01:44:58.000 They have to do something to become valued.
01:45:00.000 It's so much that I'll get a phone call from a guy and he'll be like, hey man, what's going on?
01:45:03.000 I'm just over here.
01:45:04.000 Doesn't even wait for my answer.
01:45:05.000 He's programmed to ask me what I'm doing.
01:45:07.000 Doesn't even wait for me to respond.
01:45:09.000 And that's like the, it's taking a place for hello.
01:45:11.000 Hey man, what's up?
01:45:13.000 I'm just over here talking and I'm like, You want me to tell you what I'm doing?
01:45:16.000 You just asked me.
01:45:17.000 Anyway, sorry.
01:45:18.000 We'll read some more Super Chats.
01:45:18.000 We got Eye of the Storm says, Please read my chat.
01:45:21.000 This is for Ian.
01:45:22.000 You're an awesome bro.
01:45:23.000 I pray that one day I meet you and chill.
01:45:25.000 But more importantly, you should look up The Gift of the Holy Ghost, Ian.
01:45:28.000 God wants your life.
01:45:30.000 You gave me a compliment and then told me to do something.
01:45:32.000 Gift of the Ghost.
01:45:33.000 So I'm gonna do it.
01:45:34.000 But we will meet one day.
01:45:35.000 Jason Dixon says, Tim, please shout out the Discord.
01:45:37.000 We are developing the culture.
01:45:38.000 It's getting huge.
01:45:39.000 We welcome like-minded people.
01:45:41.000 Yes, so aside from the members only shows that you can get as a member at TimCast.com, Monday through Thursday we do the live show.
01:45:49.000 We take about four or five callers, typically five callers every night from the members to call in and talk to us and our guests.
01:45:55.000 And then the members have taken it upon themselves to create their own after show for all the people who want to keep hanging out.
01:46:03.000 So I think that's actually the biggest benefit of what we, I think we've accidentally built something awesome.
01:46:10.000 The goal was, hey, sign up and then you can watch the show.
01:46:12.000 And then all of a sudden, the people who signed up started talking to each other, building things with each other, creating, sharing ideas and making their own platforms and shows.
01:46:20.000 And so join the membership and meet more people in your area and meet people who share your ideas and make friends.
01:46:26.000 Isn't it crazy how it was an unexpected community that was built and it really just fits right into the idea?
01:46:33.000 Bridget May says, they removed today's Culture War.
01:46:35.000 We did not!
01:46:37.000 It was live and then we ended the live and then uploaded a full version.
01:46:42.000 And so there is the live streamed version.
01:46:46.000 So I'll just put it this way.
01:46:47.000 I got to keep it a little bit vague, but one of the challenges with a live stream is that you can't change it.
01:46:54.000 So if you want to trim or blur or add or anything like that, it's restricted and very difficult to do.
01:47:01.000 So once the show ended, I was like, let's just re-upload what's called VOD, video on demand version, instead of the streamed version, which gives us more controls over the whole thing.
01:47:10.000 And it is there.
01:47:10.000 It is on the page and people are listening to it.
01:47:12.000 Also it is on, I believe it's up on all podcast platforms.
01:47:15.000 Yeah.
01:47:16.000 So you can check it out.
01:47:16.000 And it was a really good one.
01:47:18.000 It was, um, Katie Faust and Jeff Younger, we were discussing modern marriage relationships, parental rights, and men's rights, and Jeff Younger made a really, really great point.
01:47:29.000 He said his position was, women should sign surrogacy contracts for their own children, so here's how it would work.
01:47:37.000 You're a man and a woman, and you are going to have a biological baby that the mother will conceive as the Bible intended with the man, but she signs a surrogacy agreement like any woman would do in an IVF surrogacy, but then has the biblical child.
01:47:54.000 That way, at any point, the man can, at all points, the man is in full control of custody and rights and is favored in the courts.
01:48:03.000 And Katie was like, no, that's horrible.
01:48:04.000 And then he asked, would you agree to a contract like that?
01:48:07.000 And she was like, of course not.
01:48:08.000 Absolutely not.
01:48:08.000 He goes, you think any woman would?
01:48:10.000 And she said, absolutely not.
01:48:11.000 And he goes, That's exactly the contract men sign when they have kids with a woman today.
01:48:17.000 The courts favor the women.
01:48:20.000 86%, I think it is.
01:48:22.000 86%.
01:48:22.000 A woman can just take the child away from the father.
01:48:25.000 The trope in society is that when a fight happens, the man is forced to leave his own home.
01:48:30.000 It's not absolute, but that's what it is.
01:48:31.000 And that was the point he made.
01:48:32.000 I would just say, I was like, I see the logic in your argument and the horror in the emotional prospects of what you're proposing, but I get the point he's trying to make.
01:48:41.000 He's saying, why would anyone agree to be in a relationship where you create a child when you are in the negative in terms of control over the raising of that child.
01:48:50.000 It's like, fair point.
01:48:52.000 Well, Jeff Younger has a unique situation where he has two twins and then the wife is transitioning the other one, and I'm not even trying to throw shots at Jeff, but I guess I am going to throw a little bit of a shot.
01:49:00.000 I agree with a lot of what he says, but one of his court cases was to not talk about his custody battle, and then he talked about it, and that's one of the reasons he lost custody of his kids.
01:49:11.000 It's because he kept talking about it.
01:49:12.000 Was it specifically?
01:49:13.000 Well, I think it's because he kept making it public.
01:49:15.000 I would argue there's a strong case he did the right thing.
01:49:20.000 Yeah, I think so too, but my point is, if you're gonna say, I'm gonna follow the rules of a judge, the judge is gonna say you don't get to have your kids, I'm not saying that's right or wrong, I'm not saying, I think that's totally wrong, I think the system's screwed up, what they're doing to January 6th, what they're doing to him is screwed up, but if you don't follow the rules...
01:49:36.000 You're gonna lose custody of your kids.
01:49:37.000 Yeah, I think we're getting into a very dangerous space when a political cultist of a judge, and she is, is like going to empower someone to castrate your son.
01:49:50.000 We are getting into very, very, very, very dangerous territory that I hope we do not get into.
01:49:55.000 Yeah.
01:49:55.000 Oh, I know.
01:49:56.000 And I don't think that these family courts, these courts, these judges should have really any dominion over our children, but we've given them that.
01:49:56.000 We are.
01:50:03.000 And that's the real issue with family court.
01:50:05.000 And I think, you know, Jeff, obviously I'm sympathetic to his case, but I don't think it's helpful, this division of the sexes and blaming women and this and that, because it really, at the end of the day, the issue is that the government is so hyper-involved in making these decisions for our children when they shouldn't be.
01:50:21.000 And I want to add, too, I'm pretty sure this is public knowledge.
01:50:23.000 We talked about it.
01:50:25.000 The mother of his kids is not actually the biological mother.
01:50:28.000 That's the other weird part.
01:50:28.000 Yeah, I know.
01:50:29.000 Oh, I didn't know that.
01:50:30.000 Right.
01:50:30.000 She's a stepmother.
01:50:31.000 But she got custody?
01:50:33.000 Yes.
01:50:33.000 And fled to California, I think it was.
01:50:35.000 It is very weird.
01:50:35.000 It's very weird.
01:50:36.000 I'm very empathetic to Jeff.
01:50:37.000 I'm just saying, when you're in a court, you're in a custody battle.
01:50:40.000 You know, you have to follow the rules, whether they're legal, whether they're fair.
01:50:43.000 That's just the system.
01:50:44.000 Alright, we got one of these guys.
01:50:46.000 Arturius Rex says, Tim, frog boiling in a pot was shown by Goltz to only work if you lobotomize the frog.
01:50:52.000 Intact frogs attempt to escape even in slowly heating water.
01:50:56.000 We all know this.
01:50:57.000 Frog boiling a pot is just a turn of phrase.
01:51:00.000 It is the meme version I don't want to say the, if we all sit here allowing incremental change over a long period of time, we'll be oblivious to the changes happening around us until it's too late and then we are detrimentally, negatively impacted.
01:51:16.000 I'd rather just say, we're frogs boiling in a pot, man.
01:51:18.000 We've got to make sure... It's a meme.
01:51:20.000 It is a way to simplify an idea into a phrase.
01:51:23.000 But yes, it has long been known, frogs will try to escape.
01:51:27.000 Just like lemmings don't actually walk off cliffs.
01:51:28.000 Yeah, true.
01:51:29.000 Unless, you know, Disney execs were pushing them off.
01:51:31.000 Yeah, they pushed them off.
01:51:32.000 That was great.
01:51:33.000 That's messed up.
01:51:34.000 Everybody needs to look into that.
01:51:35.000 What was the name of that video?
01:51:36.000 Uh, I don't know.
01:51:37.000 It came out in, like, the 70s.
01:51:38.000 Look at Disney killing lemmings.
01:51:40.000 Yeah, it's true.
01:51:41.000 They were staring them.
01:51:41.000 Yeah, and then a camera, like, underneath the legs.
01:51:44.000 I mean, that's ridiculous.
01:51:45.000 Yeah.
01:51:46.000 That's so messed up.
01:51:47.000 It is.
01:51:47.000 Jeez.
01:51:48.000 Anastasia B says, Guys, I'm seven years sober today.
01:51:51.000 Dude, congratulations!
01:51:54.000 Glad to hear it.
01:51:55.000 We sound like an AA meeting.
01:51:56.000 We're like, but that is incredible.
01:51:57.000 Keep up the good work.
01:52:01.000 Neglectful Sausage says, every single one of you in here pays thousands of dollars a year in cool new apps and phones to support surveillance state.
01:52:08.000 Stop pretending you're rebels.
01:52:10.000 That's the banality of evil.
01:52:11.000 Yeah, and also I think it's like an over dramatically, over dramatic simplification of any and all of our positions.
01:52:20.000 I also want to know who, what device you use to type that super chat on.
01:52:24.000 And it's not just that.
01:52:25.000 It's like, bro, you can be a rebel in a system.
01:52:29.000 I don't understand what you're saying.
01:52:31.000 I am not an advocate for people abolishing cell phones and capitalism.
01:52:35.000 I'm in favor of technological advancement.
01:52:38.000 I would just like there to be alterations to the current way we're going about doing it.
01:52:42.000 In fact, if someone came out and was like, we're getting rid of all smartphones, I'd be like, okay.
01:52:47.000 I think it's been bad across the board if that's what we got to do.
01:52:50.000 Yeah, if everyone is mindlessly marching in lockstep, and you're still, you know, on the field in which they are marching, and you're walking somewhat in the general direction while telling them not to walk that way but to turn right, Like, you are rebelling.
01:53:07.000 I don't know.
01:53:07.000 It's not that complicated.
01:53:08.000 You don't have to act like every single act of rebellion is not shaving your armpits, throwing your phone at the wall, and going to live under a bridge.
01:53:15.000 Because, like, because modern, you know, modern homes, man, they put your name on a list, and the government stores that at the records, and then all of a sudden it's in Google, and everyone knows where you live, and they're tracking your data, so the only way to get away from it is to go... Come on.
01:53:28.000 The argument would be, you can't rent because you gotta put your name on the piece of paper, you can't have an ID.
01:53:32.000 It's like, bro, we can reject and resist, you don't have to, you know, be a caveman.
01:53:38.000 I think a lot of good can come from tools that are derived through evil actions, like, you know...
01:53:43.000 Some warmonger gets a bunch of slaves to make a bunch of guns and then you break out the guns and the slaves and use those same guns to overthrow the slave master, for instance.
01:53:52.000 But I think that a lot of times evil actors will use that premise to do evil, thinking that later they're going to do good with this evil action.
01:54:01.000 And it's a dangerous path, but it is possible.
01:54:03.000 It's important to be civilly disobedient, and one thing is that the FBI and NSA supposedly, even if your computer, as long as it's plugged into power and your TVs, that they can hack into everything.
01:54:12.000 So, I mean, you know, we can't live in a world where there's no surveillance.
01:54:15.000 Oh, this is important.
01:54:16.000 JustMe says, the Trump revenge photo got me reported to HR at a company I have worked at for 10 years, fighting for my job now.
01:54:24.000 Sounds like you got a lawsuit on your hands.
01:54:25.000 Wow.
01:54:26.000 For having a picture of Trump and saying revenge?
01:54:29.000 Probably our image?
01:54:31.000 You got fired from Planned Parenthood, I guess?
01:54:34.000 Depends on where you worked, man.
01:54:36.000 But I would like to hear more.
01:54:37.000 I don't know.
01:54:38.000 Anyway, you were saying something, Phil?
01:54:40.000 I don't remember.
01:54:41.000 You said it sounds like a lawsuit in the making.
01:54:42.000 No, before that he was saying something.
01:54:43.000 I was like, wait, I got to read this.
01:54:46.000 What do we got?
01:54:47.000 More super chats.
01:54:49.000 What is this?
01:54:52.000 Poppinspatches.com says, Alex Stein is so on fire that not even a Nebraska downpour last year could stop him from spittin' fire.
01:55:00.000 Thank you, Tim.
01:55:01.000 Can Public Square have an airsoft field?
01:55:03.000 Public... So, uh... We gotta be careful here.
01:55:08.000 I don't, you don't ask me about anything having to do with Public Square.
01:55:10.000 The idea is we're going to be building an anti-Times Square.
01:55:13.000 Ian said we should call it Public Square, and I'm like, that's up to them.
01:55:16.000 Lowercase P, unless they want it to be uppercase P. Well, because Times Square was named for Times of the World or whatever, which is the New York Times, I believe.
01:55:24.000 And so this, we want to do, you're going to love this, we got to have an Alex Stein location or whatever.
01:55:30.000 Yeah, please.
01:55:30.000 So we've got a Casper coffee shop.
01:55:32.000 Okay.
01:55:33.000 We want to build a Cousin T's diner.
01:55:35.000 Oh yeah, and then Jack's Pizza.
01:55:37.000 Yeah, I saw this.
01:55:38.000 I want a MyPillow brick-and-mortar location where you can go in and they got the bathrobes and the towels, the slippers, the pillows.
01:55:46.000 I think that's easy, especially because their inventory doesn't expire.
01:55:48.000 I wonder if we could open a Jeremy's.
01:55:49.000 We should have a prime time.
01:55:50.000 It'll just be like Jeremy's razors, Jeremy's chocolate, Jeremy's products.
01:55:53.000 Daily Wire should have a store where they have razors and chocolate.
01:55:54.000 It should just be Daily Wire, it should be a brick-and-mortar.
01:55:56.000 And they have the Daily Wire playing on it, and all the stuff they sell, and their merch.
01:56:00.000 I want the primetime Rage Room where you just go in and you break anything.
01:56:04.000 Let's do it!
01:56:05.000 For sure!
01:56:05.000 And we'll have like a cartoon picture of your face going like... And you'll get a mallet.
01:56:10.000 You can break anything.
01:56:11.000 Printers, we can recreate office space.
01:56:13.000 You have to bring your own stuff to break though.
01:56:15.000 Well, we'll have some stuff.
01:56:17.000 You want to bring, like, you know, your ex-wife's old, you know, some sort of her favorite china?
01:56:22.000 You can just break that.
01:56:23.000 Yeah, they have these rage rooms.
01:56:26.000 But so, we're actually having a meeting about it next week, and we've invested a lot of money already.
01:56:32.000 I think it's fair to say that our investment is around a couple million dollars in getting started.
01:56:37.000 And it's big, it's gonna be big, everyone agrees, it's gonna be the best.
01:56:41.000 But just think how cool it's gonna be when, you're right, yeah, Daily Wire having a storefront location where they sell razors, memberships, chocolate, anything else they do.
01:56:51.000 We gotta have a bar set up somewhere, maybe Seth Weathers opens a bar.
01:56:55.000 Yeah.
01:56:55.000 The Ultra Dad's Bar or whatever, and he's got his beer there.
01:56:58.000 And then what it is, people will come, as tourists, because all of your favorite shows and people have their businesses here, To create a space where you can support businesses you care about.
01:57:08.000 Ian had the idea of calling it Public Square.
01:57:10.000 I hit Public Square.
01:57:11.000 The Public Square guy's up.
01:57:12.000 Public Square should have one of the biggest storefronts where all the different products can be purchased, like a big... You know, like you go to the Hershey's store and they have all the candy everywhere?
01:57:20.000 You go into the Public Store, the Public Square store, and all the different Public Square companies have products.
01:57:25.000 And you can walk up and they've got it all.
01:57:27.000 Man and if there was a literal square there in the center where with like a big plaque on it that has the directions to all like the different restaurants and shops and stuff around you can go look at the map or it could be a digital map.
01:57:39.000 I think you'd also have it on your phone.
01:57:40.000 There's a we're a long ways from that for a few reasons the most important thing is that there's a historical society and the first the first Primary law in all of this is to protect and preserve the generational businesses and historical buildings because we want to be the opposite of Times Square.
01:57:58.000 We do not want to be a commodified billboard garbage advertising thing of massive faceless corporations.
01:58:03.000 We want American values.
01:58:05.000 We want to restore a lot of the places, a lot of the buildings.
01:58:08.000 We got to build a big fountain.
01:58:10.000 Well, I don't know.
01:58:10.000 I'm just saying we're not going to go in and put up signs and do whatever.
01:58:15.000 We're going to work with the people who are there to what best suits their needs and revitalizing these particular areas while bringing in companies that believe in America's values and investing in the space and cleaning it up.
01:58:27.000 There are a lot of people in the area that we're looking at who've got generational businesses.
01:58:31.000 And I want to see them become like they will be it is it is they're the reason this this matters someone who inherited their store from their mom who got it from their grandmother who got it from the you know great-grandmother and then revitalizing the areas restores that business and you know provides wealth and means to the family who's been there for generations and you know that I want to you know we got a great plan for this.
01:58:53.000 We're just getting started.
01:58:53.000 It's probably amazing.
01:58:54.000 The biggest threat, well one of the largest threats, is making too much too fast.
01:58:59.000 Just like immigration.
01:59:00.000 You can't let in too many people too quick.
01:59:01.000 It can really change the dynamic of an environment.
01:59:04.000 But I think we can do it.
01:59:06.000 Ryan Sargent says Michelle Obama and VP Newsom.
01:59:09.000 I don't think so.
01:59:10.000 I don't see Michelle Obama.
01:59:11.000 I don't know.
01:59:11.000 I don't either.
01:59:12.000 Yeah.
01:59:13.000 I do think Joe Biden will drop out in some way.
01:59:16.000 I don't know.
01:59:17.000 I just, I don't see how you have Nancy Pelosi on CNN being like, what if Joe Biden doesn't run?
01:59:23.000 Because I hope he, or what if he does, what if he drops out?
01:59:25.000 She's like, I hope he doesn't, you know.
01:59:27.000 Or I hope he, what did she say?
01:59:28.000 She hopes he doesn't drop out.
01:59:30.000 Something like that.
01:59:30.000 And Gavin said the same thing.
01:59:33.000 She hopes he runs.
01:59:34.000 Oh, okay.
01:59:34.000 I don't know.
01:59:35.000 I want to be careful how she phrased it, but the general idea of what she said is there is a concern she has that Joe Biden drops out.
01:59:42.000 And I'm like, they're priming us with the distractions and now we're getting with the impeachment stuff.
01:59:48.000 I don't see a logical path for them to run Biden.
01:59:50.000 I feel like they have to drop, he has to drop out.
01:59:52.000 There's no way they're going to let him run in 2024.
01:59:54.000 Right.
01:59:54.000 I completely agree.
01:59:58.000 Well, we'll see, we'll see.
01:59:59.000 Let's, uh, let's maybe grab one more.
02:00:02.000 Joe's Rusty Razor says, Glenn Beck can have a museum in Public Square.
02:00:04.000 Would be super cool.
02:00:05.000 That'd be really cool.
02:00:06.000 Alright everybody, if you haven't already, smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends, become a member at TimCast.com, not just for the After Show, not just for the TimCast After Dark Members Only Discord Show, where like-minded people hang out and discuss the topics, but hang out with, uh, join so that you can hang out with all the other like-minded individuals, where you can become friends, meet people, Network, build resources, share resources.
02:00:30.000 It's really fun.
02:00:31.000 You can follow the show at TimCast IRL.
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02:00:35.000 Alex, do you want to shout anything out?
02:00:36.000 I want to shout out Dylan Keller, Dylan the Villain Keller, and watch my show on BlazeTV, Primetime with Alex Stein.
02:00:42.000 Hit the link, youtube.com, Primetime Alex Stein.
02:00:45.000 Just get the Babylon Bees Guide to Gender.
02:00:47.000 Thanks for having me, Tim.
02:00:48.000 Sorry, I'm a little tired today.
02:00:50.000 Oh, you're tired.
02:00:51.000 I am.
02:00:52.000 I got the energy drink here.
02:00:53.000 Those are good.
02:00:53.000 You'll be feeling like an hour.
02:00:55.000 I'm trying.
02:00:55.000 Yeah.
02:00:57.000 I am PhilThatRemains on X. I am PhilThatRemainsOfficial on Instagram.
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02:01:13.000 Have a nice evening.
02:01:14.000 Catch you later.
02:01:15.000 And iamsurge.com, also Surge in real life too, so find me on Twitter, let's argue, etc, etc.
02:01:21.000 Alright everybody, thanks for hanging out.
02:01:23.000 It's been a great week.