The FDA is restricting access to the J&J vaccine, and we talk about why. Plus, PayPal is under fire for censoring a bunch of independent news, and a teacher who was fired for violating the Parental Rights and Education Bill.
00:00:00.000Major news breaking just earlier today.
00:00:07.000The FDA has announced that they're going to be restricting the J&J vaccine for only certain individuals that have to be over 18 and you otherwise cannot receive other vaccines.
00:00:19.000This is because of the Um, a blood clot risk.
00:00:22.000Now, there's something really funny that's happening in this story, which we can focus quite a bit on, and that's Twitter is using old fact checks to restrict this breaking news, which is dangerous!
00:00:35.000Because if, I mean, this news is coming out, the FDA has issued a new guideline, and if they are restricting that news, people could get hurt.
00:00:45.000So we'll talk about that, but my friends, there's also Pfizer data which came out.
00:00:48.000Now, I hate to say it, but I'm fairly confident that if we actually showed the data on what the Pfizer dump was, we would get banned instantly.
00:00:59.000So what we'll do is we're going to save that for the website segment, which comes up after the show and with apologies, I suppose, because I don't know how else we'd be able to actually have these conversations because we're actually going to be showing breaking 911 on Twitter is getting restricted, censored, First, let me just say Elon Musk is expected to be the new CEO of Twitter, at least temporarily, which is huge.
00:01:35.000It is now faster, stronger, and better, more resilient against censorship.
00:01:41.000And it's just the first move we're making in supporting and implementing new infrastructure to make ourselves more resistant to censorship, but also support systems that are.
00:01:52.000This is going to put market competition and all these other services like Amazon and Google.
00:01:59.000One of the concerns we definitely had in the past was even though we were doing member segments on our own website at TimGuest.com, we could still be censored.
00:02:06.000They could come and say, oh, we don't want to host these things.
00:02:37.000Yes, I am an author of Elephants Are Not Birds, which is a book to combat a lot of the liberal transgender anecdotes going on now.
00:02:46.000And I am now the Senior Culture Contributor at The Postmillennial, so check out that stuff with a whole crew of people at thepostmillennial.com.
00:03:15.000Hey, I'm glad we're working with Rumble too, man.
00:03:17.000We've been working in the back, behind the scenes with decentralizing servers and Chris at Rumble, Chris Pavlovsky's been fantastic to work with.
00:04:20.000Tim, I think that's spreading scientific misinformation.
00:04:28.000My voice does not cure people's diarrhea.
00:04:30.000I'm very sorry, but I'm very excited to have Ashley on this evening.
00:04:33.000We're having a lot of fun talking over the show, and I think it's going to be a lot of fun.
00:04:36.000Yes, my friends, but before we get started, you must head over to surfinginternetsafe.com to get your virtual private network, VirtualShield.
00:04:46.000A virtual private network gives you a basic layer of security as you browse the web to protect you from hackers, spies, governments, corporations.
00:04:55.000VirtualShield is an excellent way to protect yourself as you browse the web.
00:04:59.000And an additional shout out because VirtualShield is our first sponsor.
00:05:02.000So in these trying times, cancel culture and the culture war, You definitely want to be supporting companies that are getting behind the work we do and are fearless in that sponsorship.
00:05:11.000Their VPN service is compatible with all devices, allowing you to browse the web safely, securely, and anonymously.
00:05:17.000It lets you browse the web so that big-name internet service providers and other third parties will not be able to monitor and sell your internet activity and browsing history.
00:05:26.000While using their VPN, your traffic is routed through secure and encrypted servers, so any restrictions, censorship, or blocks on your internet are bypassed.
00:05:49.000Business plan allows you to add as many employees as you need.
00:05:53.000Virtual Shield, as I mentioned, will encrypt your Wi-Fi, so guys, surfinginternetsafe.com, 50% off lifetime discount, and again, shoutout to Virtual Shield for being our first sponsor and sticking through all of these years despite all of these smears and all that cancel culture stuff.
00:06:08.000But don't forget, head over to timcast.com, become a member, because as much as, you know, I hate to say it, The world we live in is dreadfully censorious.
00:06:19.000The reason why this Elon Musk news is so good is because we may be taking back some ground in our ability to communicate.
00:06:25.000But there is a story coming out right now.
00:06:27.000Many people believe that the Roe v. Wade leak was to cover for the Pfizer data release.
00:06:32.000Well, our journalists started looking at the Pfizer data, and the news that's coming out is so shocking I am extremely confident that if I said even one data point from this data, we would be banned instantly.
00:06:43.000So how about we'll talk about the FDA's new announcement on the J&J vaccine and the censorship around that, and then we'll go to TimCast.com for the news that they're not going to let us talk about.
00:07:03.000So if you're not happy with the way YouTube runs things, don't worry.
00:07:06.000We have more infrastructure stuff happening as we move forward.
00:07:08.000We can't do it all at once, but I mentioned we are officially on Rumble's infrastructure for our website, so they can't take these articles down.
00:07:15.000We're working as hard and as fast as we can.
00:07:17.000As a member, you are making all that possible.
00:07:19.000So don't forget, smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, and let's take a look at this major update from the FDA.
00:07:28.000Today, we limited the authorized use of the Janssen COVID-19 vaccine to those 18 and over, for whom other authorized approved vaccines are not accessible or clinically appropriate, and to those who elect Janssen because they would otherwise not receive a COVID vaccine.
00:07:44.000So that last part's particularly interesting.
00:07:47.000But the news is that it's over the blood clot risk.
00:07:52.000restricts use of Johnson & Johnson COVID vaccine over rare blood clot risk.
00:07:56.000The FDA said the shot should be given only to those who request it or cannot receive other vaccines, and you have to be 18 and older.
00:08:04.000My understanding is that the data on this is not... I don't think it's new that we've known about the risk of blood clots for some time.
00:08:12.000It was actually taken off the market for some time.
00:08:15.000So I'm wondering if... I suppose my issue, initially, that we can jump into here, how many people should have gotten this FDA warning some time ago if we knew about the blood clot risk?
00:08:27.000Yeah, I mean, well, if this is something we knew about, everyone should have been able to know.
00:08:30.000They should have been able to make an informed decision about what they were putting in their body and the risk it posed to them.
00:08:35.000Because this information was kept from us, because we couldn't really accelerate the dialogue around the vaccines in order to get the best information about it, because anyone who contradicted the narrative was told that they were not trusting the science, There are serious consequences.
00:09:12.000So I was going to say the establishment likes to do this retroactive fact-checking thing where let's say today a man gets in a rocket ship and flies off and he screams I'm going to the moon and we're like oh wow that was crazy and then we come on this show and we say did you hear the story about that guy who got in the rocket ship and yelled he was going to the moon that crazy?
00:09:34.000A week later, the news comes out, he actually went to Mars.
00:09:38.000And what they'll do is they'll say, fact check false, we'll get flagged, and they'll write stories saying they spread disinformation about the man on the rocket ship who was actually going to Mars.
00:09:48.000So what happens is, we can come out and talk about lab leak, for instance, in COVID.
00:09:52.000And we'll say, based on the current contextual information, our best assessment is this.
00:10:15.000We knew about, especially with women, they were having issues with their menstrual cycles, and they covered it up, and all the headlines were, it doesn't affect your period.
00:10:22.000It doesn't affect your menstrual cycle.
00:10:23.000The blood clots are For the first few months, that was the story.
00:10:27.000And then a few months later, they're like, oh, by the way, women are reporting issues with their menstrual cycles.
00:10:31.000Take a look at this from Breaking 911.
00:10:32.000They say, strange how the AP's tweet, same exact headline, isn't flagged as misleading.
00:12:40.000The people who are doing the banning, many of them aren't in this country, not on Slack channels.
00:12:44.000And I think the fact that we're looking at Twitter, this is why I'm making the point, Twitter censored Breaking 9-1-1 due to month-old information.
00:13:09.000It's not peanuts that they're going after.
00:13:11.000But that's why we need the open source algorithm.
00:13:13.000That's why it's so important and what Elon's doing is incredible.
00:13:16.000I will say to Ian's point, freeing the code, the one thing that we absolutely need to do is free the algorithm, the recommendation, all of that stuff needs to be open source.
00:13:26.000I don't think these companies should be allowed to hide that because what do they do behind the scenes?
00:13:30.000They lie to Congress about censorship, manipulation.
00:13:35.000There was a really great question from a Republican.
00:13:57.000Release the code and let us know if you're lying or not.
00:14:00.000Because it's one thing, you know, we had this discussion the other night about whether all of the code should be released.
00:14:05.000Well, the infrastructure that holds the building up, I disagree with Ian on, but in terms of how they're manipulating what we see and what we think, you shouldn't be allowed to do that.
00:14:12.000A lot of people message me about security through obfuscation, which is part of keeping your security code private, and they said that's been completely obliterated and is useless.
00:14:20.000You need to open source the security code, too, so it can be poked and prodded and then resolved and made stronger.
00:14:25.000But when you say free the code, you've got to be specific.
00:14:27.000You need to make these things become interoperable, and I agree that you need algorithm observation.
00:14:31.000I'm saying specifically for now, where I would agree on releasing the code to the public, Elon Musk says when he gets Twitter, he wants to make the algorithm open source.
00:14:58.000I had been, you know, stagnant, you know, I was still gaining, but it was stagnant for the most part, and then all of a sudden it was like the floodgates opened up for so many people.
00:15:05.000But I think they're doing cleanup, and how fast they removed that warning shows it too, that they're a little more cognizant.
00:15:28.000One problem with open sourcing the algorithm here and seeing is that it doesn't stop an errant administrator from censoring something in India if they're working remote, and they like are like, no, we're gonna we're gonna downvote that you'll you may be able to track that it happened, but you still don't know who did it and why they did it.
00:15:59.000I'd be willing to bet a large sum of money that if you took Twitter's internal Slack channels, which is their internal communication between employees... Assuming it's Slack or some other program like that.
00:16:11.000But if they're using some kind of messaging service, And you got to see the full archive.
00:16:17.000There's going to be tons of people saying, can we ban the conservatives?
00:16:20.000How do we get these people off the channels?
00:16:22.000And we know this is not opinion because Project Veritas has already released videos where you have employees of these big tech companies saying, we tried to get them banned.
00:16:34.000That was Media Matters who was bragging about getting Project Veritas and James O'Keefe ripped off.
00:16:39.000That reference I was giving was actually, I think, an employee from one of these companies saying that inside the company, we are trying to get them banned.
00:16:51.000I had never been mentioned by Media Matters that I know of.
00:16:53.000And I tweeted it out, and I was making fun of that whoever was in the video.
00:16:57.000All of a sudden, I was mentioned in a Media Matters article for nothing, for my children's book.
00:17:03.000Yeah, Media Matters is an interesting organization.
00:17:07.000We've had a couple conversations about them.
00:17:08.000And it's funny because you two are going back and forth about these different examples of the left basically being caught trying to suppress right-wing content, even though they claim that's something that isn't really happening.
00:17:17.000Isn't it interesting how the stories that conservatives promote about how our side is being maligned or unfairly treated are actually true?
00:17:25.000In literally every single instance of the left upholding its persecution narrative with the story of some kind of hate crime is completely nonsensical and turns out to be untrue when you look into it just a little bit.
00:17:35.000I just want to shout out that Gizmodo article.
00:17:57.000Then I come out and I say that it's happening, and I get called a liar or right-wing for saying it.
00:18:01.000Facebook's weird, though, because then they were giving a lot of money to Targeted Victory, right, and that was a Republican group, to make things against TikTok as a competitor.
00:19:21.000And I'm just wondering, you know, MythInformed posted that clip of the Joe Rogan podcast where I asked Vijaya Gadde, would they ban someone for vaccine misinformation?
00:19:31.000And she says, no, it's not against our policies.
00:19:33.000And I'm not sure if they went and did it.
00:19:35.000So their policies changed because the pandemic happened.
00:19:50.000So does Twitter now give up its emergency powers and stops banning people for these things because it's no longer a greater risk?
00:19:57.000No, I mean, when does any organization, government or otherwise, take power from the public because of some kind of emergency and then give it back once the emergency is over?
00:20:30.000Well, it's over till they don't want it to be over anymore.
00:20:33.000This is part of what's so frustrating about this entire thing.
00:20:35.000They can flip the narrative in a second, and then they say, oh, the science changes.
00:20:38.000And that would be all well and good if they were allowing any dissident who tried to provide the public data that didn't support their narrative of voice, right?
00:20:48.000And if the science is always changing, then that's all the more reason to allow people to speak out when they have a perspective that conflicts with the current narrative, because the current narrative could always turn out to be untrue, but they want to have it both ways.
00:21:26.000So he's gonna be able to go in with his own bare hands and start cleaning things up, firing people.
00:21:31.000It also means Parag Agrawal is out as soon as this deal is done.
00:21:34.000And by the way, when they say temporary, they're like, Elon is going to temporarily be the CEO until he kills himself or dies of mysterious circumstances.
00:21:43.000Oh, I have a feeling he wants to get in there, make some specific changes, listen to a bunch of people, and then if he sees someone he thinks is more qualified, he'll let them start executing for him.
00:21:51.000But here's where it's also interesting.
00:22:06.000Apparently, I don't know, look this up, Ian.
00:22:09.000Elon Musk was wearing a jacket at the Met Gala that said New World Order on the back, but in white embroidery on a white jacket so you couldn't really see it.
00:23:34.000But so, I don't necessarily care for the crazy idea because What he's doing is good for freedom, good for personal responsibility.
00:23:43.000You're never going to agree with someone 100%.
00:23:45.000And the thing about Elon is he, when you hear him talk, especially about AI and stuff, he seems genuinely concerned about the fate of humanity and where we're going.
00:24:09.000You know, I'm not like a giant Elon fan, but I have liked what he's been saying, and I'm gonna take the evil I don't know over the evil I know, because the people currently running that website are absolutely terrible.
00:24:20.000So, I want to give the guy the benefit of the doubt here, but who knows?
00:24:23.000He, I mean, We should consider all possibilities.
00:24:26.000Elon Musk flanks the Liberty side saying everything they want to hear.
00:24:46.000Um, so some of what Tim talked about with him having plants in China, it's not just that though.
00:24:51.000My point isn't that I actively dislike him, it's just that I don't really know him or his agenda well enough at this point to say I'm a big fan or that I trust him.
00:26:30.000The one thing about Musk that I really do like, and I've mentioned this before, is the fact that he seems to be, at least in his rhetoric, very pro-human.
00:26:37.000And also, not just in his rhetoric, in his behavior.
00:27:23.000The annoying thing about Bill Gates is he's just such a evil person.
00:27:30.000He's the kind of guy who's sitting there, he's talking in this interview about censorship, He's the kind of guy who would be like, I don't understand why poor people have messy homes!
00:27:39.000Just have your maid clean everything for you, and your butler can bring you your scotch!
00:27:45.000The point is, he says, we shouldn't allow people to have open communication on the internet.
00:27:50.000And it's like, yeah, you're a rich dude who can do whatever you want, and you don't want the poor people to have access to their rights of speech.
00:28:58.000So he writes, in case you need to lose a boner fast, and it's Bill Gates, and then next to it is the pregnant man emoji, but can I just point out how strange it is that Bill Gates is wearing a blue shirt, like the pregnant man, with a big gut, like the pregnant man, but the haircut!
00:29:18.000The people are just mal-aligned at the moment.
00:29:20.000We have too many people in these small pockets of cities with not enough rail.
00:29:24.000It's hard to get food from the farm to the city, but if we have, like, low-orbit drone transfer, we could have, like, easily 17 billion people on this planet right now.
00:29:33.000Did you see the slingshot they made for orbit launching, where it's like, It's this tube, and they put something in it, and then it spins around like crazy and then flings- That's what I'm talking about!
00:29:43.000Okay, so you put an underground track where you have a magnet, push it, so it goes up, and then you kick on the propellers and take it the rest of the way.
00:30:59.000He's got a $500 million short position.
00:31:01.000And Elon said, I can't take your climate change activism seriously if you have a short against the company doing the most to fight climate change.
00:31:09.000I look at this meme and I'm like, it's like they made a cartoon of Bill Gates.
00:32:31.000How disturbing is it that it's refreshing to us to hear one of the most powerful people in the world say that they don't think there should be fewer humans.
00:32:41.000He's probably the only billionaire that thinks that because many of them are like futurists and they're like everything's bad.
00:32:47.000I want to make this announcement now, guys, because we're moving on from censorship.
00:33:13.000This is terrifying, and we don't know why.
00:33:15.000Russian disinformation or some other nonsense?
00:33:18.000When they come out with this disinformation governance board, Mayorkas was like, it's not gonna target Americans.
00:33:25.000No, I'll tell you what's gonna happen.
00:33:27.000They're gonna say the story about Biden is Russian disinformation.
00:33:31.000Then PayPal and other financial services will ban independent media outlets that are talking about or sharing this story.
00:33:38.000Considering we did an article deep diving into the Pfizer data that we can't talk about on YouTube, I think it's fair to say that the powers that be are gonna be not too happy with what our website is doing.
00:33:49.000However, our web services are now hosted by Rumble.
00:33:53.000While I don't think Rumble is completely invulnerable or perfect, it's way better than being on Amazon, Google, or any other, you know, host that's gonna be in Silicon Valley and gonna have all these weirdo crackpot rules.
00:35:16.000You know, a lot of people said they don't like it and they didn't want to use it.
00:35:19.000And I know, simply by talking about what PayPal has done to these independent reporters and personalities, we run the risk of putting ourselves on their radar, and they gave no justification for why they banned these people.
00:35:31.000And in one instance, I believe they said they're seizing the assets to see, like, to decide what to do with it.
00:35:36.000They've done that with bank accounts, too, though.
00:36:16.000The next thing we gotta look at is payment infrastructure, but the reason we did this first was if they take the website down, like anyone in the chain says we're not gonna service you, we're not gonna link your domain, whatever, we're not gonna provide you hosting, site's gone.
00:36:31.000Financials, we lose money, but we'll figure something out.
00:36:35.000The next step is to secure this system, and then we will be much more resilient.
00:37:15.000When we look at Rumble, we look at these other services.
00:37:17.000Is there a better way to do this eventually that we could, you know, imagine down the line where there isn't some centralized service you have to go to in order to be hosted?
00:37:26.000Yeah, you want to decentralize servers.
00:37:27.000You were talking about mesh networking, which is where all of our devices are a piece of the server.
00:37:34.000And if one goes down, the server is still up because all the other pieces are working together.
00:38:23.000uh like he would cause he caused an earthquake one time in lower manhattan did he really yeah yeah no no nikola tesla it was like in the early 1900s and they went down to his office they're like what's going on dude and they came and they eventually shut him down because it was too much they shut down his uh Yes.
00:39:03.000He was like collecting smoke detectors and then using the little radioactive bits and putting it inside like a container and then it would focus the beam and then he was like covered in radioactive like lesions.
00:39:15.000What part of that seemed like a good idea though?
00:39:18.000The part where you'd end up having a death ray?
00:42:00.000There's different studies about how the rays affect women's reproduction.
00:42:03.000Productive systems and stuff, but I don't think we're ever gonna know for a very long time Well, it's all non ionizing radiation I would carry my phone in my left pocket from the age from like 2000 to 2014 and all of a sudden one day It started getting really sore my leg right where I took what had it took it out for like three days And it was no longer sore.
00:42:21.000I've no longer carry this thing in my pocket Never never never unless I have to get it somewhere I did the Raisinville thing and I carry my cell phone in my underwear.
00:42:37.000I always actually wondered about that because when I was on the ground doing reporting I would wear it on my chest and the camera would be rolling and it'd be clipped to my chest and I'm like if I ever get cancer in my chest I'll know exactly why.
00:42:47.000I feel like we're not, we're not capable of operating as a species without all this stuff anymore.
00:42:53.000There's no way for us to disconnect now.
00:42:55.000We went to, we went to, um, uh, we, when we were coming back from Nashville, we went, we stopped and we stayed at this beautiful like place overlooking this waterfall, but there was no wifi and it was really concerned.
00:43:06.000Like I was really like upset for the night.
00:44:10.000This is why I don't get sarcastic as a rebuttal to someone I don't agree with, because they'll take you out of context and make you sound like an idiot.
00:44:44.000The First Amendment says... They said, we're choosing to decide that they can't choose whether or not to decide if you can choose.
00:44:50.000That's literally what the Constitution does.
00:44:52.000Like, it restricts the government from doing certain things.
00:44:55.000So, this is funny, when everybody got mad about the Parental Rights and Education Bill, like Cenk Uygur of the Young Turks, he's just, oh man, he's always... He's so useless.
00:45:03.000But he was like, you're opposing free speech.
00:45:05.000And it's like, yo, the government can restrict itself.
00:45:09.000Like imagine if Ian declared, I will no longer be allowed to talk about freeing the code.
00:45:14.000They'd be like, you're violating your free speech.
00:46:19.000Well, yeah, also on this point of it being a restriction of free expression to not allow teachers to spread their perverse sexual practices for students.
00:46:28.000I mean, like, okay, even if that was the case, then fine, teachers shouldn't be expressing their perverted sexuality to students.
00:46:33.000But it's not as if there is such a thing as a right, A, to have secret conversations with other people's children, but B, to be part of an institution that the parents are funding with their tax money and not give the parents a say in what their children are being taught.
00:46:47.000Actually, Seamus, it's the 31st Amendment that teachers shall have the right to have secret conversations with children about sex and tell the children not to tell their parents.
00:46:55.000See, this is why I gotta study civics more, man.
00:46:58.000Oh, that's the Constitution in 20 years.
00:49:49.000But if the person didn't know who Blair was.
00:49:52.000And so what happens then is, we recognize that, you know, someone who is like a trans man or a trans woman, for ease of conversation, people might be like, oh, her, she, etc.
00:50:04.000But then it translates into a legal realm where a younger generation who's growing up with it says, then they are women.
00:51:18.000So, yeah, Dr. John Money had an infant boy given a sex change at a young age because he underwent a botched circumcision and then had the parents raise him as a girl and he forced them... And then both of them killed themselves.
00:51:28.000Yeah, he forced him and his brother, he forced him to live as a girl, and he forced him and his brother into doing, like, depraved acts on camera.
00:51:44.000This is the double-edged sword of TV, radio, internet, is that we see this crazy stuff now because people have probably been doing this for millennia, chopping people apart and doing it.
00:51:59.000But the double edge of that is that the mind virus can spread.
00:52:02.000Like if people think they're frogs and people don't feel accepted and they want to be part of a group, they go to become part of the I'm a frog group.
00:52:09.000Especially for children, too, and it's really confusing to tell them it's interchangeable at any time you want.
00:52:15.000I mean, if you tell a kid they're a rabbit, they're gonna hop around and ask for carrots.
00:52:20.000And you have, I'm in New York City, you know, you have nine-year-olds there that are saying they're transgender.
00:52:25.000And they're presenting as, you know, a little girl presenting as a boy, and their parents are okay with it, and it's like a status symbol there.
00:52:32.000It's like, oh, I'm so loving and accepting, and they're putting it on these kids.
00:53:09.000And then she went, well, I guess I have to give you an A because I did say it.
00:53:13.000It's like she's confused that when she tells a little boy, these names are not boy or girl.
00:53:17.000So he goes, I guess I'll use they, because he doesn't know the difference between a male and a female name.
00:53:22.000I mean, the ideological underpinnings of the left that have been forced on this country have actually mandated adults to become dumber than children is the moral of that story.
00:53:29.000Because they want to throw out rationalization and reasoning.
00:54:33.000We had a guest on a couple of weeks ago that said that they'd never even had to do, I think it was, um, oh gosh, it was, uh, the cowboy, the, the, um, philosophical cowboy, someone called him or something like that.
00:54:46.000He said that he never really had to have sex ed talks with his kids because they grew up on a farm.
00:55:24.000I don't blame people, I blame our society.
00:55:28.000But it's like, it's a natural process.
00:55:30.000We've come to the point where we are so pampered, where we have factory farms.
00:55:35.000I know a lot of people dispute the idea, but listen, I'm talking about the pink slime that is chicken nuggets.
00:55:41.000You used to have to go, and you raise the chickens, and you're throwing, you know, grains or whatever, or you're turning over the wood for the bugs, and then eventually you're like, time to eat this chicken!
00:56:36.000Like, imagine being a kid growing up in the year 200 A.D.
00:56:39.000Actually, did you guys see the Northmen?
00:56:41.000They mentioned, you know, something about, like, being a slave, like, because they were, like, Nordic slaves, and he's like, you'll go out working with the Silkies.
00:57:15.000We're better off with cleaner foods, but to a limit, right?
00:57:18.000I watched some documentary about how they mixed beef with ammonia to get rid of the bacteria from it, and then mix it back into other meat.
00:57:27.000Well, even the chickens we have now are like mutants.
00:57:29.000They're mutant chickens that we have now.
00:57:31.000They're nothing like... I mean, the difference between chickens now and a hundred years ago, they're flavorless, they're giant, they're mutants.
00:58:34.000You just mix some nut powder, like walnut powder, and some almond flour with the egg and then you microwave it and you get a little bun and then I put cheese and egg and bacon in it.
00:58:42.000So you make a little, you cut out a little circle in the middle and then you crack the egg and you can dip it in it and make it nice and runny.
00:58:48.000But the other thing too is, uh, we have chives in the yard all over the place.
01:00:31.000And then I'm like, man, imagine being some, just, you know, like nomadic tribal person and you're looking for food and you come across this one tree with all of these fruits and you're like, Oh, And you just take it all and you're like, look what I found and everyone's like, oh, food.
01:00:44.000Cause like food's hard to come by and they're like eating it like crazy.
01:00:47.000And they're just eating whatever they can get.
01:00:52.000I was just going to say, you can get these citrus like fruits that have like horns, like a devil, because they're so weird and kind of incestuous.
01:01:00.000And they like mix with all different kinds of citrus you can get.
01:01:03.000Like, grapefruit crossbreeds with lemons, crossbreeds with limes, you get these weird, funky things that are really good.
01:01:10.000Yeah, no, I was just gonna say, if you came across that, it's not just that you found food, it's that you found a very rare and very sweet and very delicious food.
01:01:17.000Nowadays, we've sort of been spoiled by these foods that have very intense flavors that would not occur naturally in nature, right?
01:01:25.000But you'll come across, like, Historically, if someone found an orange or a strawberry or an apple, I mean, that was really a treat for them.
01:01:33.000Like, this is delicious, and nowadays people are like, FRUIT!
01:01:58.000Danny McCormick, a Republican, introduced the Abolition of Abortion Act in March.
01:02:03.000The legislation approved in a 7-2 committee vote now moves to the state's full house.
01:02:09.000The Louisiana bill is one of a raft of proposals by lawmakers in conservative states.
01:02:13.000Such restrictions could go further than the so-called trigger laws, bans, and other regulations that will take effect in some 26 states should Roe be overturned.
01:02:31.000Is there a difference between the legal classification of homicide and the legal classification of murder?
01:02:36.000If you're to write a law that says X is homicide, does that mean it's open to being considered murder but not necessarily considered murder in every case?
01:03:51.000I mean, it's a philosophical distinction, right?
01:03:54.000But I would actually make the argument that the distinction between... So I guess you can make an argument that there are persons who aren't human, right?
01:04:03.000You can't not grant rights to a living human being.
01:04:06.000A person is the body of a human being.
01:04:11.000That's been the worst civil rights violations in our country's history is when we've tried to define personhood and who is or who is not worthy enough to be a person.
01:04:18.000So this is where I think the abortion issue is very much our second Civil War catalyst.
01:04:25.000They had actually argued in pre-Civil War that slaves didn't have personhood, that they didn't have the same rights.
01:04:32.000The Constitution didn't apply to them.
01:04:46.000Well, the argument I would make, and part of why I'm saying that there are persons who aren't human, is like, so for example, it is a little tricky definition-wise, and I appreciate you asking the question.
01:04:56.000My first thought was, well maybe it's a false distinction, but also I know that as Catholics we will use the phrase person to sometimes apply to the members of the Trinity.
01:05:05.000But that said, when you're talking about human beings specifically, and people try to create this distinction between a human and a person, to me that sort of smacks of the arbitrary distinction between gender and sex.
01:05:16.000I think it's just a false distinction created so that you can do depraved things.
01:05:20.000You have right now, Ian, what you're saying is These human beings are not people because we haven't written the paperwork for them.
01:06:05.000Because the birth certificate also mentions the sex of the child.
01:06:08.000Are they ambiguous with respect to their sex prior to getting a birth certificate because of that?
01:06:13.000If you don't know what the sex is, yeah.
01:06:14.000But there was tort law for years and decades in this country that recognized the unborn as persons as regards to, you know, inheritance and different things like that.
01:06:23.000I mean, we had those laws when the 14th Amendment was ratified, identifying, tort laws identifying the unborn as persons.
01:07:13.000But when the 14th Amendment was ratified, we had these tort laws recognizing the unborn as persons and, you know, having rights to certain things.
01:07:21.000So it was just the mental gymnastics that was done in this, in the Roe decision in general, just as an abuse of discretion and constitutionality is insane.
01:07:29.000And also, when someone uses a phrase like, we found this in the penumbra of the shadow, that you can say, there could be a chance that this is mental gymnastics.
01:07:39.000We saw this was like, they said, it was enumerated rights followed by enumerated problems, right?
01:07:44.000And they just, first of all, there's not a right to privacy at all.
01:07:47.000There's no right to privacy in the constitution.
01:07:49.000You have some right to privacy as it refers to the fourth amendment and, you know, unwarranted searches and seizures, but you don't have a right to privacy at all.
01:08:01.000So, concerning the tort law you mentioned, is it so like if a woman is pregnant and the father dies, his inherit- say the mother and the father dies- You'd have to look it up because I don't want to, you know, say the wrong thing but there was Tort laws that recognize them as persons.
01:08:17.000It says prenatal tort law on the personhood of the unborn child a separate legal existence But I can't find I'm looking for documents.
01:08:22.000So I have I have a docket from the Supreme Court I just pulled it up.
01:08:26.000I got to look into it a little bit more.
01:08:27.000There's a fantastic book too called Abuse of Discretion.
01:08:29.000It says the purpose of the Supreme Court opinions from 1850 to 1880 suggests that an unborn child is a person within the meaning of the 14th amendment to the US Constitution.
01:09:13.000It's about the abortion industry profiting off of slaughtering unborn children, and it's about allowing men consequence-free access to women's bodies, like consequence-free sexual access to women's bodies.
01:09:20.000It really is, too, about keeping people that are poor from having 50 kids.
01:09:24.000It's sad, but that's a big part of it.
01:09:26.000It's very sad, I agree, because human life is only valuable if that person is born into a middle-class or upper-class family.
01:09:34.000I mean, that seems to be the dominant modern view.
01:09:36.000The challenge here with not recognizing personhood for the unborn is like a baby at eight and a half months who's not yet been born inside the womb next to a baby that is eight and a half months from the point of conception that was emergency delivered via c-section.
01:09:50.000That baby that's out of the womb can't be touched.
01:09:53.000But the baby that's still in the womb of the exact same development could be executed.
01:10:11.000I can understand an argument from the point of first trimester, nothing second or nothing third in terms of abortion.
01:10:19.000But when you're talking about a viable baby that outside the womb of its own independent life could not be harmed under penalty of law and a baby exactly the same but in the womb can be, something doesn't make sense.
01:10:32.000It seems like all these laws were written way back in the day before modern technology where you could do an ultrasound or like see the baby struggling during an abortion process trying to avoid the forceps or whatever.
01:10:42.000Like before you knew the gender before it was born because the 14th amendment specifically says after they're born.
01:10:48.000No, their standard was much different.
01:10:49.000So their standard was quickening back then for abortion.
01:10:52.000When they did have abortions, even back in the day, the standard was quickening, which was when you felt the baby.
01:10:57.000And then when they found out that, oh, this dude's actually alive a little sooner than that, they amended it to, hey, you know, we should not be doing these as soon as we know that they're there.
01:12:21.000Well, Ian, so here's why I would push back on that.
01:12:24.000So I think there are arguments that I could make against your definition of personhood and in favor of the idea that the unborn child is a person at all stages.
01:12:33.000But I believe that the burden of proof is actually strongly on the one who says it isn't a person.
01:12:37.000I think you actually have to prove that because, for example, if I'm going to detonate a building I need to know that there is no person inside of it.
01:12:52.000I think we all recognize you need to be 100% perfectly clear that the activity you're partaking in is not the killing of a person before it's permissible at all.
01:13:01.000And that hasn't been proven, and it hasn't been proven because it is a person, but I don't even hear left-wingers, I don't even hear people in favor of abortion try to advance an argument that it's not a person.
01:13:11.000They just say it isn't, or they say you haven't proven it is a person.
01:13:13.000It's like the burden of proof is on them.
01:13:21.000So you understand, I guess it, I would think that it starts to develop a personality before it leaves the female body at some point, whether or not you can interact with it or not.
01:13:29.000What does personality have to do with whether or not someone has rights?
01:13:32.000Well, personality is derived from the person.
01:13:33.000You know, it's just these vague terms.
01:13:35.000No, if there is a mute deaf child, we don't say they have no rights.
01:13:38.000Well, so like I would say it has a personality, like it might react different to different stimuli in the womb.
01:13:43.000So there's a type of personality you could argue.
01:13:56.000Let's say someone finds a naked person in a hospital, like a naked person in the forest who is completely unconscious and not responsive, but has a heartbeat.
01:14:04.000Do you just be like, that's not a person.
01:14:06.000Do they have personhood if they have no mind?
01:14:10.000Bro, if you find an unconscious woman and you do anything to that woman, you're going to prison for a long time.
01:14:15.000So if you find a body, someone like you said, I don't know if vegetable is probably an insensitive way to talk about it, but if someone has basically zero brain activity and there's just a heartbeat and a body, then is it a person?
01:14:28.000Yes, but also you will go to prison for doing something to that body, like physically harming it.
01:14:33.000And then even then there isn't really a perfect comparison there, right?
01:14:37.000Because in the case of an unborn child, we know that we are, what, 99% sure that they will end up developing all of the cognitive faculties that you're mentioning a person in a coma lacking.
01:14:49.000Yeah, this is why I brought up birth control at the beginning, if that's also plan B. Can I also mention something?
01:14:55.000I just want to say, the definition of personhood given by Google is the least helpful definition, the quality or condition of being an individual person.
01:15:23.000If you look at the Supreme Court docket, it says, according to Webster's Dictionary, a child is a, quote, person not yet of the age of majority.
01:15:30.000So we are using the word person in the definition.
01:15:32.000But the understanding is that someone who is small is just a person who hasn't reached, for example, the age of consent.
01:15:38.000This is why we understand that children cannot consent to sex, although this has gone somewhat by the wayside in the age of trans children.
01:15:45.000But this is something that they were mulling even back when they were looking at abortion in the first place.
01:16:35.000The left has to define a way when life begins, otherwise abortion... If you were to operate under the pretext of the 14th Amendment, as per Roe v. Wade, the actual ruling should be that you can't perform an abortion because it would violate the equal rights under the law of the fetus, which is a human being.
01:16:52.000Now, they'll try and use the argument that it says person's born, but then you run to the conundrum which I mentioned earlier.
01:16:57.000A baby who is born at 8 months and a baby who is still new at 8 months are identical in every way.
01:17:03.000One doesn't have rights because of the layer of flesh around it.
01:17:05.000Yeah, that's modern technology is forcing us to change the law.
01:17:08.000No, no, no, that's not modern technology.
01:17:10.000There were many circumstances in which a baby was born at 8 months and survived.
01:17:14.0008 months is viable without, you know, I mean, you might need some medical intervention.
01:17:19.000But let's say eight, let's say nine months.
01:17:21.000And one baby went a little bit longer than nine months.
01:17:24.000The law right now is a baby at nine months fully delivered and healthy and crying, and a baby that hasn't been delivered, one can legally be killed because they haven't been given birth.
01:18:52.000No, I mean, yeah, I'm not sure what the animal protection laws are, but I assume you would get in trouble for something like that.
01:18:58.000Aren't there laws on the books that prevent you from abusing animals or neglecting them?
01:19:01.000No, but I think you can have puppies outside.
01:19:02.000Well, yeah, I mean, if you leave a dog outside, right, that's an animal.
01:19:05.000But I think Tim is saying if a dog died through negligence, is that... No, no, if you take a newborn puppy and put it in your backyard, just walk away.
01:19:10.000Oh, like a newborn puppy that needs to be with its mother?
01:19:49.000The people in the 1950s said the same thing about interracial marriage.
01:19:52.000And then I was like, and you know what I'm saying the same thing about?
01:19:56.000HHS Secretary Becerra argues transgender surgeries for minors should be aided by the government.
01:20:02.000Yeah, I'm the kind of guy who's gonna be like, we should expand civil rights for people and leave kids alone, and you're telling me it's progress that the government should be funding surgeries for minor sex changes?
01:20:14.000Yeah, okay, well, dude, I'm okay with saying no to that.
01:20:16.000Please reference the fall of the Roman Empire.
01:20:18.000Notice that time can pass and you can regress.
01:20:21.000Well, this is what I want to point out.
01:20:22.000I don't know how to explain this to people, but let me try to put it succinctly.
01:20:27.000The fact that people in the past at some point opposed a good thing that ended up happening does not mean that opposing change is a bad thing in all instances.
01:20:37.000That is the dumbest possible argument you can make for your position.
01:20:55.000But now it is not socially acceptable.
01:20:57.000So when I say I'm about a humble, normal person from 2012, and they say, ha, that means you're a conservative, does that mean you're still in favor of eugenics?
01:21:05.000Does that mean if you're not, you're a conservative?
01:21:08.000Anyone on the left who opposes eugenics must be a conservative, along with every other person on the right, huh?
01:21:12.000What they are saying is you need to mindlessly accept every single social change that is pushed on you by everyone above you.
01:21:18.000And if you don't do so, you are far right.
01:22:05.000You always say this all the time, like, we can't say left, we can't say right.
01:22:08.000You compared me to Mao for saying left and right.
01:22:10.000Yeah, he talked about rightists a lot.
01:22:11.000And then no matter how many times I tell you, like, the left, being an umbrella term, describes a kind of person that are authoritarian, that
01:22:18.000believe fake news, and then no matter how many times we invite them on the
01:23:28.000And they're able to quantify that because there is a difference, and the people that are more on the left do not consume different opinions, whereas people on the right do.
01:23:37.000They're also significantly more likely to cut someone out of their life for having different political opinions.
01:23:43.000I mean, there are people that are like that.
01:23:46.000Well, this is the difference between the left and the right, okay?
01:23:49.000Left-wing people will go, you don't agree with every single part of my niche left-wing ideology, like my ideology that I discovered online two weeks ago, therefore you're anti-human and I can never talk to you again.
01:23:59.000And then people on the right are like, someone told me that they're okay with infanticide.
01:25:04.000I wouldn't argue that it's all relative, but you're right that there's an element of subjectivity that comes in there.
01:25:09.000We see a lot of left-wing people who will say things like, Oh, our political leaders on the left are actually right-winged by European standards.
01:25:18.000But even that isn't completely honest, because the stance that most of them have on abortion is far, far left compared to anything that's enshrined legally in Europe.
01:25:27.000But we need to strive for some objective standard and say, like, okay, if you support, like, You know, perverting children.
01:25:38.000If you support, like, forcing perversions onto children and killing unborn children and, you know, even other things that aren't so necessarily intrinsically bad in that way, like just left-wing economic policy, some of those are horrible, some of those there's a discussion to have.
01:25:55.000Like, you are on the left, but they will try to argue that person's actually a moderate because, from my stance, they're on the left.
01:26:00.000It's like, well, you actually have to look at the political structure to sort that out.
01:26:02.000There's a lot of assumptions to assume what they, who even they are, I don't even know what that means, that they would think this.
01:26:43.000Twitter marketing brands border the Democrat voter.
01:26:46.000I've actually done so many segments talking about all of these things.
01:26:50.000Now, I think for you, Ian, you need to look at those data maps and see they exist.
01:26:55.000It's the picture I drew of the two umbrellas pushing up against each other, where you have the right sphere of influence and the left sphere of influence.
01:27:23.000That's a crown on my head, by the way.
01:27:25.000Ian Crossland gets almost none of his news from the right.
01:27:28.000But tell me where I get most of my news.
01:27:30.000From the middle, because that is what it's all about.
01:27:33.000The left and the right combined form one large center.
01:27:35.000I think that's actually very interesting, Ian, because most of the people I'm looking at on this don't really have a wide spread in the middle.
01:27:42.000And you seem to have a very wide spread in the middle.
01:28:09.000You want to know what your enemy... I mean, obviously, any good warrior wants to understand what their enemy thinks.
01:28:15.000And if this is really a social war, a culture war, you've got to go pull from all sources.
01:28:19.000And that doesn't mean you're on the left.
01:28:20.000If I go hang out with a bunch of people that want to kill babies and transgender their six year olds, it doesn't mean that I'm a leftist.
01:28:26.000And if you put me in a box, if you say that, if I hear you say that out loud, that I'm a leftist, it's going to mess with my mind.
01:28:32.000Isn't it hilarious, though, that everyone instantly knows that murdering babies and transgendering children is like the left... How much more do you have to do to convince people that a group is evil?
01:28:42.000Liberal radicalism can become a dangerous ideology, and the liberal radicals in the French Revolution sat on the left side of the aisle, so that term gets applied to them.
01:28:50.000But it doesn't mean that people are in some box somewhere.
01:28:52.000You've even acknowledged this multiple times.
01:29:39.000That's why the left calls me right wing, because I'm not in their tribe.
01:29:42.000And the right calls you left-wing because it's all relative.
01:29:44.000Because the right knows the political arguments.
01:29:47.000And so they look at me as my political arguments, not which tribe we're in.
01:29:51.000So the way I've described it is, at some point, we had this American sphere of influence which had a left and a right that mostly agreed on American values and a constitutional republic.
01:30:00.000At some point, a multicultural democracy emerged to our left with crazy ideas.
01:31:12.000When I say Joe Biden did illicit dealings in Ukraine, and that's a fact, there are people who don't care that he did, like that he did, Or will just tell me I'm a liar, but every person on that
01:31:25.000side will say, well, I don't know if that's true, but you must be right
01:33:59.000I was not allowed into a mom's group using my name because of my right-leaning politics in a very liberal city.
01:34:07.000I get the... I have problems when people use past actions to define future.
01:34:13.000Like, say, I think there was a... Lydia, you might have even... I think that's the best... That is actually the best indicator... No, you gotta be careful because... Okay, in the past, there was like... I think it was black violence statistics.
01:34:22.000There was a bunch... In the past, a lot of like... It was like some random number.
01:34:27.00020% of all these crimes were committed by this kind of person, this black people.
01:34:31.000Black people are 20% or 5 times more likely to do this than white people, but you're assuming the future based on what they did in the past.
01:34:39.000But they were just taking it out of context because it was black-on-black crime.
01:34:44.000But I don't think this argument works because you're saying that there have been unfair generalizations in the past, therefore we should dispense with the idea of generalizing altogether.
01:34:51.000No, I'm saying if someone made some decisions in the past, it doesn't mean that in the future they're a part of a tribe.
01:34:55.000Sure, but like if there has been a consistent thread throughout the entire history of a group, such as the left, where basically anytime they've come to power, they have oppressed people.
01:35:04.000Every time they've majorly seized power on the extreme left, they've slaughtered people.
01:35:09.000No, I'm not saying that the right hasn't, but when we talk about the left, there are certain threads that we can see through.
01:35:38.000Okay, that's fair, but I think that when you look at left-wing ideology, it breaks down social structures in a way that you need the imposition of authoritarian rules with their specific ideology to shift the social structure.
01:35:50.000We saw that in revolutionary France when the left was incepted, when they first came to be.
01:35:54.000We saw it everywhere that there was a revolution where the left took power afterwards.
01:36:26.000And the right is typically for tradition.
01:36:28.000Yes, but the issue right now is the right has a spattering of moderates within it who have rejected the authoritarianism of the current left, and thus you end up with a more libertarian right and a more authoritarian left.
01:36:41.000And part of me wonders if that's just a consequence of the fact that one group happens to not be ascendant.
01:36:47.000So when the right is not in power, it's going to attract more moderates and people who feel they're being persecuted by the left.
01:37:09.000If the law of the land was that certain political advocacy was not allowed, moderates would start moving away saying, we don't like the idea of the government imposing its ideology on us.
01:37:21.000If you haven't already, smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, and remember, if at any point you don't agree with anyone on this show, you put a 1 in the chat and smash the like button.
01:43:48.000There is a question that is asked by many left-wingers.
01:43:50.000Is it the case that the corporations that forward our causes actually care about left-wing causes?
01:43:55.000Or are they just obeying us because they're scared?
01:43:58.000And the answer to that question is kind of doesn't matter.
01:44:01.000They're still forwarding their causes.
01:44:03.000And they won't forward their causes when it's not popular for them, but I would say the fact that Elon wants to make Twitter a space which is more open and friendly to conservative thought is a very good thing, even if he isn't necessarily doing it for the right reasons.
01:44:17.000Though, as I said, cautiously optimistic.
01:44:42.000A lot of people might be surprised to hear how this UFO thing came to happen.
01:44:47.000So, I was taking a dump one day, and I was scrolling through Instagram, and as I was scrolling through Instagram, I got an ad for a floating UFO lamp.
01:44:56.000And I clicked buy now, and it auto-filled, and then I forgot about it.
01:44:59.000And then a couple of weeks later, a UFO appeared, and I was like, oh yeah, that thing.
01:45:03.000And then we had a keyboard cleaner, and I was like, oh, I bet I could spin it.
01:45:07.000Hold on, what's especially creepy is that Tim was muttering to himself on the toilet about how bad he wanted a UFO spinning lamp, and then immediately the ad came up on Instagram.
01:45:15.000They heard him talking about the space slingshot.
01:46:06.000So head over to Timcast.com to become a member.
01:46:08.000Because, you know, I regret not setting up the website sooner.
01:46:14.000But you can only learn when you learn.
01:46:16.000And we set it up over a year ago, and we should have done it in 2020 because it was an election year.
01:46:20.000But we are building up our fortification.
01:46:24.000So in the event we get booted from YouTube or whatever, the company still exists, the show still exists, we're on multiple platforms, we actually get tons of views on other platforms.
01:46:41.000Because then you're going to be able to go on your TV, download the app, and then it's going to have a bunch of shows.
01:46:46.000Now, of course, the app stores have their rules, too, so we're doing what we can with what we can.
01:46:50.000I want to point out Adam Kregler, because people in the chat are pointing out Adam Kregler may have been the inventor of the Let's Spin the UFO.
01:48:42.000I was talking to my brother and he was mentioning how some people were like, abortions need to be legal because what if I'm in a bad relationship?
01:50:24.000And everyone's response is like, yo, we cultivated the banana over thousands of years.
01:50:28.000The actual wild bananas are starchy and hard to eat.
01:50:30.000Yeah, it's not necessarily the argument.
01:50:31.000Yeah, the banana argument was made by Ray Comfort and Kirk Cameron sometime in the 2000s.
01:50:36.000And then there was another thing where he was arguing against evolution, and he showed a picture of like a duck with an alligator head or something.
01:51:52.000I'm like, I mean, not in the way you think, like the existence of life and the universe, perhaps, but the fact the banana fits in your hand, I don't know about that.
01:51:59.000It's like, it's like Peter Griffin watching the plastic bag circling in the wind.
01:52:03.000And God's like, what are you looking at?
01:52:04.000Look at all this cool stuff over here.
01:52:33.000Well, no, I've got some documentaries.
01:52:34.000Well, wait, what are these misrepresented spaces?
01:52:35.000If you're talking about, like, Bali or, like, under the water off the coast of Indonesia, I'm down to go rectify the perception of that area.
01:52:42.000I think we should send people to... Would you do it?
01:52:52.000It was, like, there's crime, but it's also not so bad in certain areas, and, you know, there's a lot of, like... I think it was great when he went there and he just made videos about it.
01:52:59.000I want to do documentaries with Lauren Southern off the coast, literally off the coast of Indonesia.
01:53:03.000There's all these temples under the water since the last flood, and she was like, yo, we should do it.
01:53:56.000At the beginning of the sentence, it was like he could be talking about any Shamus, but then by the time he got to the end, it knew it was me, so it had to change it.
01:54:04.000I got a correction on the Bimini Road.
01:54:05.000It's off the coast of the Bahamas, and it's this underwater, like, rectangular, sub-rectangular limestone blocks that stretch for 0.8 kilometers.
01:54:13.000And you need to remove yourself from this documentary immediately.
01:54:15.000Let's read some more of these superchats.
01:54:17.000Richard Knight says, quote, If the Civil War was the price the United States paid for slavery, then God help us when it comes to paying the price for legalized abortion.
01:54:50.000I'm saying, can you bring up an example of when something went to the courts and they said, this person no longer has any constitutional rights.
01:54:59.000So I think an argument that would be made would be just slavery in general.
01:55:05.000So when you're talking, you're saying like the court actually saying you're not a person.
01:55:08.000So personhood was revoked, is what you're kind of saying.
01:55:12.000Right, like someone had it and it was taken away and amassed like a Supreme Court ruling.
01:55:16.000The reason I push back on the slavery thing is that actually slavery existed before the inception of this country and then it started with this country and then eventually the courts ruled to grant personhood.
01:55:27.000Has there been a circumstance where they're like, this group of people hereby is revoked of their constitutional rights?
01:55:37.000I think you could argue... No, that's due process.
01:55:39.000Also, I think you could argue that the Three-Fifths Compromise was a revoking of personhood.
01:55:44.000Because they actually ruled that this is not a full person.
01:55:47.000Well, that's interesting because the South argued slaves had full personhood for voting, but not other rights, so they didn't actually have personhood.
01:56:35.000Plessy versus Ferguson was an instance where they were like, hey, we're not going to enshrine absolute rights because, you know, it's basically like separate but equal.
01:56:42.000But eventually, that gets done away with.
01:56:45.000So there was a ruling where it was like, we will enshrine the existing infrastructure But eventually it gets dissolved.
01:56:51.000I wonder then if the only possible outcome in the abortion argument is that personhood will be granted to unborn babies, and a layer one on top of that, India is going to grant elephants personhood.
01:57:03.000It's kind of funny, but if we as a civilization, as a species, are coming to the point where we're recognizing the personhood of animals, then certainly unborn humans will likely be granted the same personhood rights.
01:57:14.000Yeah, when they start neural netting babies in the womb and the mom wants to communicate with the kid when it's four months developing and they're gonna have like mind melds with it, then for sure they'll have personhood.
01:57:23.000And the program will default that all babies have Patrick Stewart's voice.
01:57:27.000That'd be awesome, you can ask them what they want to eat.
01:58:49.000Yeah, but that's not everywhere, is it though?
01:58:51.000I think probably most places, I could be wrong.
01:58:54.000If someone kicks your door in and comes in your house and says, I'm living here now, you call the police, they'll remove that person.
01:59:00.000Now, that's not a good, a perfect analogy for, you know, a baby in a womb.
01:59:05.000But I understand the argument that if a woman invites a life into her womb, you can't then be like, I'm gonna kill it.
01:59:11.000Yeah, well I mean the problem is none of the analogies really work because ultimately we're looking at the relationship between a parent and a child.
01:59:16.000And parents do owe children the means to support them.
02:00:08.000If someone is living in a house for 30 days, they can make a legal argument and not be a victim.
02:00:13.000So there's an issue of whether or not they gain rights over the property to own Undersquadra's rights, or are they tenants?
02:00:19.000Is it how long you've known that they're in the house or how long they've been in the house?
02:00:22.000Because if the mom doesn't know she's pregnant till 20 or 30 days, what's plan B, that birth control, would it actually, it causes a fertilized egg to get passed out of the body.
02:00:38.000I'm just saying, dude, if I was responsible in every single way and someone forced something into me and then the state said, and now you have to provide your body to it.
02:01:05.000We're talking about someone forcefully putting something into your body to consume your blood.
02:01:11.000Yeah, but I don't think that's an analogy that can really... I don't think that that works as an analogy to pregnancy.
02:01:16.000Bro, I gotta tell you, man, I don't know if it matters what you think in terms of the analogy.
02:01:20.000What matters is women would kill themselves before allowing the state to do that.
02:01:24.000That's actually one of the issues we have.
02:01:26.000Like, I understand the argument about elective abortion for no reason.
02:01:31.000But there is a serious problem when a woman gets raped, and then the state says, and now you have no choice, and then they slit their throats.
02:01:36.000I don't... I mean, do you have any statistics to verify that that is an occurrence in places where abortion is illegal?
02:01:42.000And I understand what you're saying, but I- That's not an argument to what I just said.
02:01:45.000But no, you're saying that if we don't allow people to kill their babies, they're gonna slit their throats?
02:01:50.000I'm saying- I understand what you're saying.
02:01:52.000That there are absolutely people who, if they were forced to have another life form attached to their body, and they did everything responsibly, abided by the law, and someone else pins them down and puts a baby in them, and they say, I did not choose this, and I will not give my body, I was responsible, and the state says you have no choice, If it was me, I'd be like either no, the state has no right to force this position on me because this crazy person did this to me, or I'd probably just say off with my own.
02:02:23.000That's such an extreme example though because it's such a small percentage of abortions that I feel like it's exaggerated to be this, well, you know, what are you going to do if they're raped?
02:03:00.000If somebody commits a crime against me, and puts me in a negative position, and then the state seeks to impose something on me because I was victimized, you ain't playing that game.
02:03:08.000But then what are your limitations on that?
02:03:27.000It is an imposition, but it's called compromise.
02:03:30.000It's called, like, if someone kicks your door and lives in your house for 30 days, the government's like, well, you could have kicked them out, but you chose not to.
02:03:35.000But what if they're raped and they don't know they're pregnant until second or third trimester of that house?
02:03:42.000And there's a problem of, if you want to make the argument that someone made a choice to have a baby in them, If you want to make the argument that the baby should not be killed, agreed.
02:03:52.000But if you want to make the argument that a person who was forced into a position by a criminal now has to provide their body to someone else, I won't do it.
02:05:19.000It stops when you're like, if it's a violent assault.
02:05:21.000If it's only forcible, violent rape from someone you don't know.
02:05:25.000Because rape still happens with people you know or you're in a relationship with.
02:05:29.000The issue is if we're talking about someone being personally responsible, I do not agree the state has a right to impose responsibility on you in terms of your bodily autonomy.
02:05:42.000I don't think the- like, let's say you have a son, right?
02:06:02.000It's a question of personal responsibility.
02:06:04.000If a person does everything and they're personally responsible, then it's unfortunate, but you can't force someone to give up their body to someone else.
02:06:14.000If you're raped and you go to the hospital, they will give you emergency contraceptives.
02:07:28.000The state isn't victimizing you, it's preventing you from victimizing innocent life.
02:07:32.000Aside, rap is such a small percentage of abortion, rape is such a small percentage of abortions, it's disingenuous to make a policy off of it.
02:07:42.000That's why I mostly disagree with abortion.
02:07:45.000But, you know, we've, I think we've talked about it to a bit ad nauseum.
02:07:48.000So instead of just dragging on, let's do the member segment.
02:07:51.000If you haven't already, smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, head over to TimCast.com, become a member because we're talking about Pfizer's data.
02:07:59.000And, um, I don't think YouTube would allow it.
02:08:46.000But we need to know that it's going to be okay beforehand because Tim is cautious in these regards, and that is why he is successful in many ways.
02:08:53.000Also, Bear Kennedy, in the comments yesterday, said that every time I roll the 100-sided die, he checks the wild magic surge table in Dungeons & Dragons.
02:09:02.000When you're a wild mage, sometimes things go wrong when you're trying to cast spells and some random thing happens, so I'm gonna do that for you tonight.
02:09:31.000I was going to say, too, that we don't talk about it on YouTube so that we can continue to talk to you guys here, although I'm very excited to get over onto Rumble.
02:09:38.000Hopefully, maybe someday we could livestream from Rumble in the future.