On today's show, we discuss the release of a leaked manifesto from a school shooter in Nashville, Tennessee, and how it ties into the ongoing Trump vs. Hillary Clinton campaign. Plus, a new poll shows that if the election were held today, Donald Trump would win in 5 of 6 swing states that he needs to win in order to take the White House.
00:00:43.000Plus, we got a bunch of other really big news.
00:00:45.000Trump testified today, and he apparently roasted the judge and the prosecutor.
00:00:51.000Oh, I should say the attorney for New York calling them frauds or insinuating... That may have been his lawyer, actually, but basically breaking down all of his legitimate business practices.
00:01:01.000They're definitely trying to run him over the coals of this one.
00:01:07.000The New York Times is basically saying that if the election is held today, Donald Trump wins handily.
00:01:11.000He is ahead in five of six swing states needed to win.
00:01:15.000Now just a warning to everybody, that doesn't mean you can sit around and do nothing, because they want to lull you into a false sense of security.
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00:02:26.000I started watching you, Tim, back in 2020 after the election because you were the only guy doing three posts a day with updates on the news, and that's how I got into you.
00:03:09.000Nashville school shooter Audrey Hale's manifesto leaked.
00:03:12.000Trans murderer vowed to kill privileged white kids at Covenant School.
00:03:16.000Steven Crowder leaked photos of the manifesto on Twitter and his podcast.
00:03:20.000Nashville PD has refused to release the information despite media requests.
00:03:23.000Hale, 28, shot and killed six people, including three young kids.
00:03:27.000I believe they were all under the age of nine.
00:03:28.000On March 23rd, She was shot dead by police within 14 minutes of launching the attack.
00:03:32.000Now the big story with this release is information about the motivations.
00:03:37.000It would seem that from what we have so far, the motivation was anti-white hatred.
00:03:41.000There are some reports that the full manifesto, the full notebook, it actually contains way more!
00:03:48.000And some people are saying actually the full thing shows this individual hated everybody.
00:03:53.000But if that were true they would need to release this to the public and I don't know that's going to happen but perhaps for whatever reason this got leaked it was to try and force the release of the rest of it which I kind of don't know if that makes sense because whoever leaked it could have just leaked the rest.
00:04:08.000We don't know exactly why only these select pages were released and I gotta be honest I'm also not convinced there is any more.
00:04:15.000That may be an excuse where someone's trying to downplay what this individual had actually been motivated by.
00:04:22.000We have this from the Post Millennial.
00:04:23.000Local media outlet confirms Nashville trans school shooters anti-white manifesto pages are authentic.
00:04:29.000And then we have, of course, an investigation is currently underway after release of alleged Covenant shooters writings, Nashville mayor says.
00:04:39.000I believe we have multiple reporters confirming this, that the individual was motivated by anti-white hatred.
00:04:44.000And now all of a sudden we're starting to see these videos pop up.
00:04:47.000People are basically, and they've been doing this for a while, but they're making montages of all of the insane college professor and university rhetoric around violence targeting white people.
00:05:00.000And there was one that I saw on Twitter that's so shocking and insane, it's no wonder people are being radicalized by this.
00:05:06.000People are also calling out Joe Biden.
00:05:08.000Who has made numerous speeches about the problems and dangers of white supremacy.
00:05:12.000Now you can certainly argue that people are allowed to criticize and condemn white supremacy.
00:05:17.000But when these universities and media outlets claim that simply having a family is white supremacy, you can see how the rhetoric starts getting crazy.
00:05:25.000Now I guess the questions are, was the FBI and were the police withholding this intentionally because of what it contained?
00:05:43.000I almost got caught, and I believe it's, they say, the summer of 2021.
00:05:45.000And so we have to wonder, why does this person feel that way?
00:05:50.000There was reporting that Audrey Hale had been, you know, under her parents' care to a certain level, that there were emotional and psychological issues already known to at least Her family.
00:06:02.000But this to me implies something bigger than just, you know, people were concerned about my behavior.
00:06:08.000Which implies that there's more to the writings than just the three pages.
00:06:11.000I mean, if she'd been planning this thing for a couple years or had issues for a couple years and she wrote about how excited for the past two weeks that she's been.
00:06:33.000No, the thing is, if there had been a- I wouldn't be surprised if there's a video, I mean, especially with younger millennial attackers, they're more versed in social media now than ever, and so it makes sense that that would be the case.
00:06:47.000I know Audrey Hale was contacting people through Instagram right before going into the school.
00:06:54.000Reaching out and also being extremely destructive to their fellow human beings.
00:06:58.000One of the pages, if I'm remembering correctly, was dated I think February of 2023.
00:07:04.000And so we know that this, you know, manifesto, diary, whatever you want to call it, has been documenting a developing motivational pattern.
00:07:13.000I don't think this was withheld because it was implicating the left in their radical rhetoric.
00:07:23.000I think when you look at this, you see two things.
00:07:24.000As you mentioned, the shooter said, I almost got caught.
00:07:29.000And also says, I'm going to be checking security.
00:08:12.000We should definitely call out the weird, creepy, racist, leftist, whatever, but also consider this is hugely damaging to the narrative of gun-free zones, to local politicians.
00:08:24.000If the narrative came out that gun-free zones, and this is true, everyone knows this, that gun-free zones are creating risk, but it was like the headline story manifesto reveals Lack of security, gun-free zones, and lack of FBI integrity resulted in this happening.
00:08:40.000You're going to have people going to their politicians and be like, why did you do this?
00:08:43.000So when you look at how the FBI has, you know, what's the meme now?
00:08:56.000Every time, there's always an opportunity, but what happens is you get gun control activists coming out and saying, aha, we must blame the guns, which is a complete distraction.
00:09:05.000I don't think it is always about gun control.
00:09:10.000People are going to get mad at us because we're the ones who created this system and made it this way.
00:09:14.000Right now, what you've got happening is Democrats arguing that we should have politicians do a thing, when in reality, it's politicians, mainly Democrats, doing the thing which resulted in the crisis in the first place, and they don't want anyone to realize that.
00:09:28.000I think the other aspect that jumped out of me was that there's a very serious anti-elitist messaging throughout this.
00:09:35.000There's a specific line where Hale writes, you know, those kids are awful at their private school with their parents' expensive cars or whatever it is, you know.
00:09:43.000And from what I know, reporting I saw from local outlets said that Hale had attended this school.
00:09:49.000And so this Behavior is bizarre in a lot of fronts, and I think now it's just a rush to spin it as fast as possible.
00:09:57.000I think that's why the anti-gun narrative is going to be so easily introduced here, but it's also important to acknowledge that this person was deeply psychologically disturbed, and if people knew this, FBI, local law enforcement, whatever, they failed the community around them.
00:10:11.000It's weird to me that the manifesto hadn't been digitized by the perpetrator.
00:10:15.000Because so often when we see events like this, part of the motive is to get it out as fast as possible.
00:10:20.000But obviously it had never been digitized because there's spelling errors and stuff in it.
00:10:23.000I mean, this is something that was not on the internet at all, I don't think, and was just written for personal use.
00:10:28.000So I wonder what Hale was seeking to accomplish by writing this down.
00:10:31.000Well, I'll tell you what the scary thing, I think, is.
00:10:33.000When we talk about civil conflict in the United States, I often mention that I view the right as what I would call, like, the acute threat, whereas the left is the blunt or obtuse threat.
00:10:57.000Um, acute meaning it's extreme and it hits you hard, whereas blunt is it, you know, the left you get hundreds of thousands of far left extremists, they go around punching and threatening people.
00:11:08.000None of these rise to a national level news story, but it's happening all the time to the point where you're getting shoplifting, you're getting, you're getting these protests and occupations and they bubble up sometimes and make the news, but it's never the most shocking story.
00:11:22.000With the right, you get some deranged lunatic going into a church.
00:11:25.000I shouldn't say the right, but what they would say is the right.
00:11:29.000What I should say is anti-left or anti-government, whatever you want to call it.
00:11:35.000And then as for the left, I think we're speaking in generalities.
00:11:39.000We should probably, I don't know if the simplification of left and right is helping for anybody because this person's clearly not a leftist.
00:11:52.000What is typically stated by the media as the right, it's like, rarely, one guy, a lone wolf, does some crazy thing, killing a lot of people, makes international headlines, and everyone says, we must stop the right, they're so dangerous.
00:12:10.000On the left, you have the Chazz Chop protests, you have the Autonomous Zone in Minneapolis, you have the Summer of Love protests, you have the 529 insurrection.
00:12:17.000All of these things result in severe injuries, and sometimes death, Bye!
00:12:23.000In the Summer of Love, you have mass riots across the entire country, 30 people die, but you don't have one person killing 30 people.
00:12:30.000So the media doesn't treat the story like a mass death incident, even though it was.
00:12:35.000And because of that, so what's scary to me is, what we're now seeing is more left ideologically aligned individuals engaging in what I would describe as acute terror and violence and extremism.
00:12:46.000And when you combine, so when you take a left ideological bent like this, Ramp the extremism up to 11, combine it with the fact that there's hundreds of thousands of these people, and they have already engaged in mass death incidents, it's like, that's starting to get much, much scarier.
00:13:12.000I mean, now you do at some of these protests, but this is sort of like a new development.
00:13:16.000In Seattle over the past probably seven years, leftists like the John Brown Gun Club and the Red Guard or whatever they call themselves, they march around with AR-15s and they've even been pointing them at vehicles and controlling traffic.
00:13:27.000Saw that happen in Austin with that guy that went to prison for defending himself when it happened to him.
00:13:31.000And so what we're starting to see over the past few years is the left has this ubiquitous fervor where they go out and smash things and destroy things, and now they're adding to their ranks serious violent extremists who are engaging in, I mean, this was earlier in the year, and the right still doesn't have, on average, any of the low-level terror, doesn't even have that much high-level terror.
00:13:55.000I think the reality is what is described as the right probably is just regular people.
00:14:00.000And what is described as the left is an activist base.
00:14:02.000It's also this person, Audrey Hale, was like on some sort of pharmaceutical.
00:14:34.000Depends on, I would, you know, you could theoretically argue that it is unfair to call an AR-15 deadly in any respect.
00:14:43.000Well, I would say that a gun is more likely to help you commit suicide, and an SSRI is more likely to help you kill a bunch of people before you commit suicide.
00:14:51.000Well, so the issue is SSRIs could result in complete generational collapse.
00:14:57.000If you have mind-altering drugs being mass-produced and mass-prescribed, it could actually destroy the fabric of a nation.
00:15:05.000Whereas a rifle, which is a weapon, it's an object intended to be destructive, could actually help protect and defend a nation, or destroy a nation, so it's actually kind of neutral in that regard.
00:15:18.000Either way, you can say it's deadly, that's the intent of it, but if the goal of the AR is to actually stabilize, that is to say, What do they say?
00:15:29.000You may actually have weapons, but everyone's like, you must respect other people because they're armed and you don't want to start a fight, and that actually simmers things down.
00:15:36.000Whereas mind-altering drugs can actually just make everything go nuclear, you know, within a few years.
00:15:42.000Yeah, especially because you don't know how people will react to them.
00:15:44.000I mean, some people can take SSRIs for a long time and see minimal side effects.
00:15:48.000Other people become more unstable because of them.
00:15:51.000It's impossible to say, and that's the gamble we take in a pharmacologically dependent society.
00:15:56.000And all the unstable people are more likely to be prescribed them, too.
00:16:22.000I mean, that's unfortunately how this works.
00:16:25.000I think it's actually a really good point.
00:16:27.000The argument that, aha, the person without SSRIs, it's the medication, is similar to the liberal argument where they're like, aha, they had a gun, it's the gun, right?
00:16:36.000And there are a lot of people, I think there's probably tens of millions.
00:17:01.000Perhaps she doesn't think of herself that way, but a female killer who attacks somewhere that they have ties to.
00:17:07.000I mean, this is unusual for both for female attackers and for school shootings.
00:17:12.000I feel like there's more of an anonymous component a lot of times when you get mass shooters.
00:17:16.000Like some sort of endocrine disruption or something?
00:17:18.000Or just generally, like this is someone who is behaving in a way that we don't see.
00:17:22.000I mean, statistically, mass shooters are male.
00:17:24.000And I guess it depends on how you classify this person.
00:17:27.000Let's refocus the conversation to the dangers of racial supremacy and not white supremacy or black supremacy or Jewish supremacy or Islamic, like Arab supremacy.
00:17:38.000It's about racial supremacy and how horrible it is.
00:17:40.000To think of that and to focus on that and to live in that state of mind where you think one race is trying to be superior.
00:17:48.000Well, you can actually extrapolate that further and just say the real issue is any ideology that would propose extremist solutions to their perceived problems.
00:17:59.000And so for this individual... How do you define extremist, though?
00:18:01.000Someone willing to kill a bunch of people to impose their political will.
00:18:17.000Yeah, when they're blung up kids overseas to enact their goals, and the American people overwhelmingly say no every single time they're asked, and consistently vote for the politician who's like, no war.
00:18:28.000That being said, Nikki Haley seems to be doing well in the polls to a certain degree.
00:18:31.000But most Americans, the overwhelming majority, are like, hey, we don't want to waste money on war.
00:18:36.000So yes, there are extremists in our government willing to kill people to get what they want.
00:20:17.000I mean, from what I understood from what he was saying during his livestream, it was someone involved in Mug Club who was like, I have a contact.
00:20:31.000But it is interesting that he has built such a relationship that someone would be willing to potentially take, and I don't know who the source was, like a professional risk to get them this information.
00:20:46.000But the citizen gave the journalism to Crowder to amplify the message.
00:20:51.000That's an aspect of modern citizen journalism.
00:20:55.000The idea that this is citizen journalism was created to discredit people like Stephen Crowder.
00:21:00.000I know this because I was at these conventions, I was at these conferences, and I was speaking at these events, And they kept saying, you're just a citizen journalist.
00:21:09.000Citizen journalism is a guy walking his dog, and then all of a sudden he sees a plane in the sky on fire, so he pulls out his phone and films it, and it crashes and he goes, whoa!
00:21:23.000The New York Times has sources all day, every day.
00:21:26.000Someone in law enforcement releases information, the New York Times publishes it.
00:21:30.000Steven Crowder is no different from the New York Times.
00:21:33.000Granted, he is a comedian on YouTube, but his news apparatus that got this information and published it is the same as WikiLeaks' system, the same as New York Times' system.
00:21:44.000You have someone who liaises with a source, the source provides information, the information is vetted and then reported.
00:21:50.000I just think it's cool that this is something he has built, right?
00:21:52.000When he was posting videos initially on YouTube, I'm sure he did not expect to be in the position he is today, which is that he decided what the news was going to be about.
00:21:59.000I mean, he came out with this on a Monday for a reason.
00:22:02.000This is going to lead the news cycle, at least for the next couple days, probably through the end of the week.
00:22:07.000This may actually force the release of the full manifesto.
00:22:10.000Which is probably the only way we would have gotten it out.
00:22:13.000So, one of the ideas that's being put out on X on social media is that these are select pages, and that in reality, while everyone's highlighting the anti-white sentiment that seems to have motivated the shooter, there's way more in there, and this person hates everybody and uses slurs for everybody, but the selective release would make it seem like it was one-sided.
00:22:37.000Yeah, I mean, I think that's reasonable.
00:22:39.000I wouldn't be surprised if it's, you know, not that I want to make predictions about such a dark document, but I wouldn't be surprised if there's a consistent anti-white theme, because I think, as far as I can tell, Audrey Hale was white, and I think a lot of people who are raised in, or who are coming up in progressive spheres are trained to hate themselves, especially if they're white.
00:22:58.000Well, if you look at what was said in it, The perpetrator says things like private schools and fancy khakis.
00:23:14.000She said things like that in the document.
00:23:16.000And that's where the market, like I posted about something critical about public schools the other day about how They're teaching Marxism to our kids.
00:23:23.000And somebody commented and said, they don't teach Marxism at public schools.
00:23:25.000I'm like, you don't explicitly have to give out a book by Marx to be teaching Marxism.
00:23:30.000It's this idea of this oppressor versus this oppressed thing, this critical theory thing.
00:23:33.000And when you just ram that down people's heads, you end up like militarizing and radicalizing an entire generation.
00:23:38.000Yeah, they indoctrinate people with Marxism.
00:23:40.000They don't, unfortunately, as far as I know, actually teach the theories of Marxism enough.
00:23:44.000They should probably teach that more so that you can realize if you were being indoctrinated.
00:23:50.000Actual Marxist theory, along with history of Marxism, the children would be crying by the end of the day and say, why would anyone ever do such a thing, those poor people?
00:24:00.000The 100 million who are- 1958, 1962, great leap forward, 100 million.
00:24:04.000It's just, it's so easy to be like, we're all in this together, let's go, all of us!
00:24:09.000And then once the revolution happens, it's like- Marxism killed more people between 1958 and 1962 than white supremacism did between 1619 and 2019.
00:24:12.000in 1962 than white supremacism did between 1619 and 2019.
00:24:19.000Estimates of 100 million during the Great Leap Forward.
00:24:22.000During the Great Leap Forward in China, they starved.
00:24:23.000No, I don't think it was 100 million in four years.
00:24:59.000I believe that there is a study that estimates that 100 million Chinese died specifically from the Great Leap Forward, but it might not be the most widely accepted study.
00:25:06.000But I'm almost positive that on the Wikipedia page for the Great Leap Forward.
00:25:09.000The Wikipedia says 55 is the high end and 15 is the low end.
00:25:26.000It's when he took like a bunch of the teachers and things and then he sent them out to the farms and was like, we gotta... Yeah, he wanted... No, it was the other way around.
00:25:33.000He wanted to industrialize the nation of China to make it a factory-based sort of exporter.
00:25:37.000And so he took all the agricultural people and put them in the cities so nobody was working the farms.
00:25:41.000Then everybody that wasn't responsible for the districts of the farms was too scared to report to their higher-ups they weren't meeting quotas on harvest.
00:25:48.000Because China's, you know, communism, you're scared to tell your boss you're not meeting numbers.
00:25:51.000And so they didn't realize that there was like a mass shortage of food until it was too late.
00:25:55.000Everybody starved over like four years.
00:25:57.000That's why I always feel like you can't trust any numbers that come out of China, because number one, why would they report anything accurately to the outside world anyways?
00:26:03.000And also, why would they internally report accurately?
00:26:06.000There's no there's no benefit for them.
00:26:30.000It's the journalists that keep the politicians to task, that cover the government and make sure it's honest.
00:26:35.000And that, unfortunately, the fascism involved with the digitalization of our news media has been way too easy for the government to corrupt.
00:26:42.000So I'm happy to see organizations like Mines, Rumble, and X holding the truth.
00:26:47.000Like Rumble, they tweeted out, on X, we're holding the line about Crowder's post.
00:26:52.000They're not going to block it like this, like this Facebook did.
00:26:56.000It all started with Cambridge Analytica.
00:26:57.000After they blamed the election of Donald Trump in 2016 on social media, all of a sudden all of the big tech companies got really scared and really ramped up their censorship because I think that there was this either explicit or like unstated threat.
00:27:10.000They felt like the government was going to come in and split them up if they didn't do something.
00:27:32.000The idea was that this company, Cambridge Analytica and SEL Group, had access to user data which they used to target voters.
00:27:39.000And the reason why you know that's stupid and nonsensical is that We've talked to Dr. Robert Epstein, who's pointed out that Google... I love this!
00:27:47.000We can simplify the algorithm manipulation electoral argument with a very, very simple statement.
00:27:54.000Facebook sends reminders to Democrats on Election Day and not to Republicans.
00:28:00.000That's the only thing they need to do to steal an election.
00:28:05.000So, according to Dr. Epstein, who appeared on The Culture War two weeks ago, when they were tracking their 10,000-plus user group for studying their social media experiences, they found that 59% of Republicans received a reminder, but 100% of Democrats received a reminder.
00:28:22.000Ooh, that sounds like that should be illegal.
00:28:24.000Yes, and when Ted Cruz... Donation in kind.
00:28:27.000And when Ted Cruz wrote a letter saying what you are doing, you know, we have questions about this, he said they saw instantly Google turned the bias system off in Georgia.
00:29:10.000Well, probably because there's not an equal representation, right?
00:29:13.000It's whoever is willing to support Obama can be on the front page, but anyone else does not get to be on the trending page, does not get to exist at all.
00:29:38.000I mean, we know this through our own experiences.
00:29:40.000There are certain videos that you know are performing well that do not make it to the pages or lists that they should because YouTube is intentionally diverting them elsewhere.
00:29:48.000And it's not always in the best interest of the business either.
00:29:50.000Like, when they censor people like Alex Jones from YouTube, that was... we're talking like...
00:29:55.000Hundreds of millions of views consistently and so it seems to me like almost a betrayal of the shareholders of the company when you're bringing people off the platform just for political motives.
00:30:05.000I wonder if there's a lawsuit avenue there because there's a duty to do to honor what's in the best interest of the shareholders.
00:30:11.000So the fact that there's a political motivation that seems to transcend the monetary motivation seems to me to imply that there's this Twitter files thing going on but with all these other platforms where there's just intelligence community operatives just kind of... But we do know That Nancy Pelosi's net worth, her and her husband, is around 200 million dollars, so the political is monetary.
00:30:29.000The political motivation, and let me just say, what a strange and unfortunate coincidence that the Clinton Global Initiative, or the Clinton Foundation I believe, their contributions dried up shortly after Hillary Clinton lost the election.
00:30:51.000The idea was that the expectation with Hillary becoming president, everybody's donating money to her foundation, which is a... laundering, I guess.
00:30:59.000And then the idea is if she becomes president, then those favors get paid back.
00:31:27.000But what was really funny about it was that the establishment machine of money churn and revolving doors was just shattered in an instant.
00:31:34.000And the panic was absolutely hilarious for the D.C.
00:31:37.000elites who owed millions of dollars to foreign donors and lobbyists that they weren't going to be able to pay back.
00:31:44.000Now you have Matt Gaetz doing the same thing to Kevin McCarthy, and all that money put into him becoming Speaker was just ripped away from him, and he ain't gonna be able to pay it back.
00:31:53.000I just love watching the machine get ripped to shreds.
00:32:11.000The whole ethos of the United States was to rip the machine to shreds.
00:32:14.000That machine that was stomping on the neck of George Washington and his buddies.
00:32:17.000So we do have another massive breaking story.
00:32:20.000In fact, it is so breaking, it is a Twitter thread that has not yet been written up, but this is the Censorship Industrial Complex report being released by the GOP.
00:32:30.000Jim Jordan says, bombshell report, hundreds of secret reports show how DHS, CISA, the GEC State Department, Stanford, and others worked together to censor Americans before the 2020 election, including true information, jokes, and opinions.
00:32:45.000The federal government disinformation experts at universities, big tech and others, worked together through the Election Integrity Partnership to monitor and censor American speech.
00:32:53.000Let me just pause right there and I'll give you a personal example.
00:32:56.000That election integrity project or whatever it's called, claimed that I, Tim Pool, was one of the largest spreaders, super spreaders of election misinformation.
00:33:06.000That actually was shocking to me because I have, since the election maintained, Trump lost to Joe Biden.
00:33:13.000Often saying that the issue was ballot harvesting and things that they put out the Time Magazine article.
00:33:18.000So why would they claim I was spreading misinformation when it's because they want to attack influence?
00:33:24.000And so long as I was reporting on say, Texas v. Pennsylvania or instances that needed to be adjudicated, it wasn't that I was spreading misinformation.
00:33:32.000All of my sources, News Guard certified.
00:33:35.000It was that they could not allow there to be a narrative that there were questions that needed to be answered by courts.
00:33:41.000So they lie, claim I spread misinformation, don't say what misinformation that is, therefore it makes it impossible to sue them, and when the media reports it, you can't sue the media for reporting what a university said.
00:33:55.000Jim Jordan says, according to one EIP member, it was created at the request of CISA.
00:33:59.000The head of the EIP also stated that EIP was created after working on some monitoring ideas with CISA.
00:34:05.000EIP stakeholders, including the federal government, would submit misinformation reports.
00:34:09.000The EIP would analyze the report and find similar content across platforms.
00:34:13.000It would then submit the report to Big Tech, often with a recommendation on how to censor.
00:34:17.000Ladies and gentlemen, what we are seeing...
00:34:19.000What we have long speculated and gotten various reports hinting at or confirming portions of is now the overt and direct GOP government congressional confirmation the U.S.
00:34:31.000government intelligence agencies were using third parties through universities to censor people who supported Donald Trump.
00:34:39.000Yeah, and they use the word stakeholders, too, which just immediately makes me think of Klaus Schwab, who's like, the future isn't stockholders, it's stakeholders.
00:34:46.000It's like the whole Great Reset narrative is just either intentionally or accidentally seeping into even the writing.
00:34:50.000Where did they use stakeholder in reference to what?
00:35:02.000We can see they targeted politicians, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Governor Mike Huckabee.
00:35:07.000Yeah, uh, Candace Owens, Jack Posobiec, Charlie Kirk, Benny Johnson, Tom Fitton.
00:35:12.000I always hate it when I'm not on these lists.
00:35:14.000I know, you know, they put it in my Wikipedia page that I'm a super spreader based on the EAP and Jim Jordan didn't even give me an honorable mention?
00:37:32.000You can always censor them locally, like you can blacklist them from appearing on your part of the network, but you can't make it go away.
00:37:39.000Well, the crazy thing too is, just like we were talking about earlier, a lot of the stuff that's coming out now is stuff that was already publicly known.
00:37:46.000Like, if you did a little bit of research, Years ago, you could find details about the Hunter Biden laptop, what was on it.
00:37:52.000There's bidenlaptopemails.com, where you can search based on keyword and find stuff.
00:37:56.000The public was able to access the information that while Joe Biden was vice president, $23.7 million went to metabiota, and Rosemont Seneca Partners was invested in metabiota, so those returns would have gone back to Joe Biden's pocket. And so that information has always already been
00:38:10.000public for years. And now we're just seeing these committees just admit that it's real,
00:38:15.000admit that the laptop's real, admit that this evidence is real. I think that it's just telling
00:38:19.000how screwed up our system is when it's not about whether or not people have access to
00:38:23.000the truth, but it's about who admits the truth is true.
00:38:25.000In March of 2021, EIP put out a report that a report by the Guardian reported on it saying
00:38:34.00015 of the top 25, 21 offenders were verified, including Eric Trump, Donald Trump, Donald
00:38:40.000Trump Jr., James O'Keefe, Tim Pool, Elijah Riott, and Sidney Powell.
00:38:44.000All 21 of the top accounts for misinformation leaned right-wing, the study showed.
00:38:48.000I never put up misinformation, and that's why, and everyone knows this, all of my sources always are certified by NewsGuard.
00:38:57.000I think they have posted incredibly wrong information about TimCast.com.
00:39:03.000They did this dirty trick where they claimed that they emailed us, and because we didn't respond, they downgraded us again, even though we checked, they didn't.
00:40:10.000If Stanford is gonna come out and accuse me of wrongdoing despite that, it shows you that it's political, it is fake, and they are simply trying to steal an election.
00:40:19.000I mean, not to bring up the student loan crisis, but all universities are basically dependent on federal funding, and so that means that they are an arm of the federal government to a certain extent.
00:40:42.000I mean, what did you say about the student loan crisis that they're buying people off by paying?
00:40:45.000Yeah, I mean, if you're a college, right, and you know that you can charge whatever you want, as long as you make the person take out student loans, which are guaranteed by the federal government because you can't declare bankruptcy on them, and they will give them to whoever they think needs them, then you are getting federal money under this idea of like, oh, we're bringing in students.
00:41:04.000Not to mention the direct funding that they just give Yeah.
00:41:06.000So you're ineligible for your funding as a university if you don't enforce our Title IX regulations, which don't allow the defendant to face his victim if he's accused of sexual assault on campus and things like that.
00:41:15.000So you see these kids getting kicked out of college and stuff for false accusations of sexual assault.
00:41:21.000It's just a college court that has to do what Title IX says.
00:41:23.000Otherwise, they're not eligible for federal funding for the university.
00:41:27.000So you see a lot of atrocities happen on college campuses related to the fact that they're So vulnerable and so dependent on the federal government's funding.
00:41:33.000I think we have the same problem at the state level.
00:41:35.000We wouldn't see a civil war from a state unless things got way more extreme than they even got in 1862, in my opinion, because all the states are so financially dependent on federal aid for things like roads and infrastructure.
00:41:46.000They give us so much money, we would never rebel against them because all of a sudden that's cut off at a state level.
00:41:50.000It'd have to be the people that would stand up.
00:41:52.000It's never going to be a state government.
00:41:53.000You know, I have to wonder, with the release of this report coming from official government sources, that has to grant every single one of us standing in a lawsuit against the government and some kind of restitution for this.
00:42:05.000I mean, they were attacking our businesses, they were attacking our character, and they were lying.
00:42:13.000Well, and especially in this business, your credibility is extremely important.
00:42:18.000And for them to say you're a super spreader of misinformation based on, what, nothing from Stanford University?
00:42:25.000That's a direct attack on your livelihood.
00:42:28.000As important as I think this report is, I think it's good, even if we all kind of knew this was happening anyways, to get the truth out there.
00:42:34.000What are the consequences that anyone involved in this faces?
00:42:38.000Realistically, what can we expect going forward?
00:42:41.000Well, one of the things I was thinking is that we no longer have public colleges and make them all private and not allowed to take government money.
00:43:06.000This broken system that put millions of Americans into debt, we are just continuing to say we're going to do, even though on the other hand, we're saying we're going to forgive student loans.
00:43:21.000What is it, Fannie Mae, Freddie, are those the- Like a FAFSA application, right?
00:43:25.000Is that what it was when you go to college and they tell you whether you're eligible or not and they give you all the cash and as long as you're a student, you don't have to start paying it back.
00:43:31.000And even if you don't pay it back, I don't think they can arrest you for it.
00:43:34.000So there's a lot of people that go and they just never make payments.
00:43:36.000It wrecks your credit, but you just refuse to pay it back.
00:43:39.000That's probably why they're just forgiving it because they know they're not going to get it anyway.
00:43:42.000And it doesn't incentivize colleges to actually do anything to make college affordable, right?
00:44:56.000If I was saying, oh, there's a nursing shortage, right, or there is, I don't know what, is specific types of someone who works with, you know, elderly people, and I said, you know, you go to college, right, boomers or us get real old.
00:45:08.000If you go to college for this thing, I will give you the money for it.
00:45:10.000You have to graduate with a degree and go into that field.
00:45:13.000That would make way more sense to me than the government saying, no worries, you may want to- English literature?
00:45:17.000Yeah, and I did get a degree in that, I'm just kidding.
00:45:21.000That's the thing, it doesn't make sense and ultimately I don't understand why the federal government logically would be supporting this unless they know ultimately they're able to pull strings and have universities back sort of nefarious schemes that they have contrived to pull off against the American people.
00:45:39.000If I had not been able to get a loan for theater or for whatever general, I did like communications and journalism and then theater, but I could have got a loan for like a math degree, I would have got a math degree because I didn't have the money.
00:45:49.000I couldn't have gone to college without a loan.
00:45:51.000Or what if they didn't give you a loan for anything and you just went and got a job?
00:45:54.000You might be working construction right now.
00:45:55.000I would have just started doing theater, local theater, went up to Cleveland, done theater in Cleveland.
00:45:58.000That's kind of what I was doing anyway.
00:46:00.000The best part of my day would be that 30 seconds between the car and your front door.
00:46:35.000Trump leads Biden in 5 out of 6 key battleground states new poll finds.
00:46:40.000The polling results for registered voters in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, and Pennsylvania show Biden losing to Trump by margins of 4 to 10 points.
00:46:50.000This is coming from the New York Times, so I think this is a different poll.
00:46:53.000Across six battlegrounds, all of which Mr. Biden carried in 2020, the president trails by an average of 48 to 44 percent of the times reported.
00:47:01.000The results show significant discontent with Biden and his policy over the past three years across both genders and all ages, races, education levels and income brackets.
00:47:09.000A majority of respondents said that Biden's policies have hurt them personally.
00:47:13.000I mean, you were just talking to us about somebody who said they voted for Biden and that he sucks.
00:47:16.000Yeah, I was at a restaurant, and the waitress asked me about my Alex Jones Was Right shirt that I'm wearing, and then we started talking about politics, and she said, I voted for Biden, but I think he's terrible.
00:47:25.000She didn't say she was gonna vote for Trump, mind you, but that's the first time in my life I've really experienced just like a stranger saying they regret who they vote for.
00:47:33.000I mean, I'm sure it's happened before, and I haven't been alive through that many presidential election cycles, but I really do think it's not just a right-wing talking point to say that the people who voted for Biden are disappointed.
00:47:42.000I think that that's actually the truth.
00:48:04.000I'm not going to blame Trump or Biden for COVID having happened, but we can certainly criticize them over their policies.
00:48:08.000But things were going really, really well under Trump, despite the fact that they strapped some heavy Russiagate weights to his legs and were trying to pin him down.
00:48:15.000Nobody got in trouble for that either, really.
00:48:31.000Massive spending happened after the pandemic, though.
00:48:33.000Making an argument that on the books things were bad is different from saying the average person was enjoying record low unemployment, their wages were going up, the economy was in full motion, people were going to the store- My business was booming.
00:49:05.000They vote for Biden, and everything gets worse, and people are longing for 2019 again.
00:49:12.000Well, we should ask Ron Paul how great the economy was in 2019 before we decide.
00:49:16.000I was going to say, the Biden campaign is aware that they're in trouble.
00:49:19.000They put out a memo last Thursday saying, we're expecting, you know, a tight race, but we'll be able to defeat whoever comes out of the, I think they said, MAGA extremist race.
00:49:28.000So they think it's going to be Trump too.
00:49:30.000But they are openly warning their own people That this is going to be close.
00:49:34.000I mean, they are not even able to fake it amongst themselves that they have this in the bag.
00:49:37.000And I think that really has to speak to people's experience with Biden in office, right?
00:50:25.000And the McDouble is $3.30, and the McChicken is $3.30.
00:50:27.000There was a video I saw on Instagram this week of a guy buying groceries at Whole Foods, and he was like, when I bought this in 2019, it cost me $72.
00:50:37.000When I bought the same exact things, I don't remember how many years before, it cost me around $62.
00:50:42.000And then he went in and bought all the exact same, he was showing their seat, and it was like $115.
00:50:47.000I mean, it's just obvious how quickly things are climbing.
00:50:50.000And the thing is, the basic American voter can't say, oh, well, this policy or this bill.
00:50:55.000They can say, for the past three years, under Joe Biden, despite being promised that things would get better, despite being promised student loan debt forgiveness, despite being promised this, that, and the other, all I know is that he blames Trump, but things are worse under him.
00:51:07.000And that's what's going to speak to them when they go to the polls.
00:51:09.000Well, what we need to do is improve our fuel source and use hydrogen.
00:51:13.000Whoever wants to win the presidency should hire me and I will make that happen.
00:51:25.000Russia is shutting down the Ukrainian pipeline.
00:51:28.000That is a component of it, but mass spending and the billions of dollars going to foreign wars, what basically happens is when the US government gives your money away, they are both simultaneously taking your taxes and spending it, but also inflating the cost of goods by stripping resources away.
00:51:46.000They're ripping your buying power from your savings.
00:51:49.000Confirming customer calls out McDonald's pricing after being charged $18 for a Big Mac meal.
00:51:54.000The headline is just for the full meal.
00:51:57.000It's from Yahoo.com and I think New York Post also reported on it.
00:52:01.000$18 in Connecticut for a Big Mac meal.
00:52:05.000Ladies and gentlemen, this is the apocalypse for Joe Biden.
00:52:34.000This is what the, I can't remember his name, but the CEO of Costco sort of won a lot of fans because he said, you will not raise the price of our hot dogs.
00:52:44.000Even if it costs us money because people, number one, appreciate that.
00:52:47.000But then also there are people who legitimately want to come in there and be like, we're going to get some food after trying to save money on our groceries.
00:52:53.000It is something they are doing out of loyalty to the public.
00:52:55.000I mean, that's That is one of the stories that I remember coming out of COVID the most, which is that there were CEOs who were like, I'm going to forego my salary for the year to keep our waitresses employed.
00:53:17.000And they're going to then shop at our store.
00:53:20.000If you raise that price, you will lose customers.
00:53:21.000There are some gas stations that lose money on the gas that they sell just because they want people to come in and buy a pack of cigarettes and buy snacks and stuff like that.
00:53:28.000And I'm sure with Costco, too, if you raise the hot dogs, everyone's going to be like, well, is it even worth being a member here?
00:53:59.000You see, Biden drains the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to try and keep prices low to force a market shift, but you can't do nothing about that Big Mac.
00:54:08.000Biden can't release the Big Macs from the Strategic Reserve to keep the Big Mac prices down.
00:54:13.000And regular Americans Don't have time to cook, want to stop on the way to work, grab a Big Mac on the way home from work.
00:54:19.000Traditionally, you think about it as the cheapest fast food option too.
00:54:22.000So this is definitely targeting a blue collar sort of trying to save money.
00:54:25.000I need a study right now on the price increase across everything because I feel like Taco Bell is actually going to get the best deal.
00:54:31.000I think they are probably Well, we've been living MAS and I've not noticed, uh, let me, let me, let me, let me check out, uh, our local Taco Bell and see what our prices are.
00:54:40.000I mean, it was definitely like up compared to, cause we, you know, we didn't, I haven't eaten before this past like month.
00:54:47.000We did not eat any Taco Bell in a really long time.
00:54:48.000Tell me that it's not more than a dollar 49 for a hard taco.
00:55:05.000Well, hydrogen fuel can actually be transported through the methane system, through the natural gas system, so it's like the system's already in place to deliver it, according to James Tuer.
00:55:58.000If we can get Trump talking about it non-stop and excited, it's gonna excite a bunch of other politicians to start talking about it just to keep up.
00:56:04.000So those were delivery prices, which are way higher.
00:56:09.000No, a nacho cheese taco is $3 directly from the store, and a crunchy taco is $1.80.
00:58:22.000Donald Trump is going to come out and say that Taco Bell is too expensive and Big Macs are 18 bucks, and then the Democrats are going to get rid of Joe Biden, and this is how they do it.
00:58:38.000And it'll be like Hamas-related or Hamas-inspired as an excuse to both get us into World War III and get Joe Biden out for his border policy so they can just replace him at the last second?
00:58:46.000Based on the reporting we've seen from a very simple assessment, if you trust the government, which I don't know why you would, but assuming you did, they're telling you that there is a risk of terror happening in this next year.
00:59:01.000If you are a, I don't know, pessimistic politico, you're probably like, oh yeah.
00:59:06.000I mean, the border's been ripped to shreds.
00:59:08.000They're capturing people in the terror watch list down there, so yes, we're at great risk.
00:59:14.000Now, as for if it connects to Joe Biden in World War III, I don't know about that, but I do not see Joe Biden being the nominee for the Democratic Party.
00:59:27.000That's going to lead to a Trump victory, even if you bring in Newsom.
00:59:30.000But if Joe Biden has some kind of medical episode and Gavin Newsom runs on a stage and saves his life, now Gavin Newsom's the frontrunner and it's a clean exit for Joe Biden.
00:59:41.000I think the Kleenex is ideal for both parties.
00:59:45.000The fact that it's so much so many Hunter revelations makes me think that the Biden camp is resisting and they're going to go kicking and screaming so they have to destroy him because he won't go quietly.
00:59:55.000And so they're saying it would just be to pardon him for everything, though, then they would stop investigating because it would be moot.
00:59:59.000No, the issue is the deep state goes to... I guess the theory is the deep state would go to Joe Biden and say, hey, we'd like you to bow out, not run for second term, and we're going to bring in Newsom.
01:00:08.000And Joe Biden says, nah, I can do it, man.
01:00:57.000That'll be like the sign that you know that it's over is when you hear that Hunter's getting pardoned and then like in a week you're gonna hear that he's not running.
01:01:02.000I don't think he, I mean, he's a hundred thousand years old anyways but he couldn't run again if he pardoned his own kid.
01:01:08.000He was born like three years after the air conditioning was invented for the automobile.
01:01:12.000There was some, yeah, there was some study that was like he was born closer to the civil,
01:01:16.000I can't remember what it was, I don't want to misquote it, but like,
01:01:26.000November 20th, hey his birthday's coming up.
01:01:28.000I mean, and that, I feel like we should be honest, I, Obviously, Trump is older too, but he doesn't slur and shuffle the way Joe Biden does.
01:02:23.000Like, if you have to be at least 35, you should have to be not over 65 or 75.
01:02:27.000It was honestly one of Mitt Romney's best political moments when he announced he was going to retire rather than continue to use these terms, because he was like, if I run again, I will be in my 80s, and that's too old.
01:02:36.000And, you know, that's not a terrible point.
01:02:38.000Again, I'm not saying that Trump should run, I'm not saying that everyone who's in their 80s is in the position Joe Biden is in, but we can't say that we're like this young, spry country.
01:02:46.000There was a reason that JFK had such an influence on politics, right?
01:02:49.000That he was young, he had these kids, he had a beautiful wife, whatever else.
01:05:39.000That would be a really funny bit, actually.
01:05:41.000He takes the boots off and his feet are just gigantic triangles.
01:05:44.000Were you supporting him in any way before or at any point?
01:05:47.000I always thought that he was a good governor, but I knew that I was gonna vote for Trump as soon as they started prosecuting him.
01:05:54.000So I was sort of somebody that hadn't made a decision yet, but as soon as they really started coming down with the prosecutions, I was like, I'm gonna vote for the guy that they hate most.
01:06:13.000Everybody on the Republican side wants to be in second place because if Trump gets de-balloted, then it's like a There's got to be somebody else, right?
01:06:19.000And so I think that was kind of the original thing.
01:06:22.000But what he really seems to be pulling for for me is a campaign of awareness, but also he could be easily put in some sort of a cabinet position after.
01:06:30.000And he's been very smart in that he's been the only candidate on the right who hasn't come out and criticized Trump directly.
01:06:36.000And you never want to attack a stronger enemy head-on.
01:06:38.000I think the reason DeSantis is losing so badly is because his campaign strategy was to attack a stronger enemy head-on.
01:06:43.000Just come after Trump, see it right away.
01:07:46.000Like, if David Hogg tomorrow came out and said, In tears, that he's looking at these statistics and he can't believe how wrong he was, and he wants to dedicate his time to fighting for gun rights, would people be like, NO!
01:08:00.000A guy with a million followers is now all of a sudden... So, if Vivek did do things you don't like, but now he's saying all the right things, keep encouraging to say he's doing the right things.
01:08:08.000And he started the WFN1 because didn't they make him a young global leader?
01:08:10.000And he's like, I never gave my approval for that!
01:08:13.000If David Hogg came out and was like, I'm actually for gun rights now, I would say, please show me the gun you have recently purchased so I can believe you are actually committed to this cause.
01:08:21.000I mean, there is one thing to say I've changed my mind.
01:08:23.000There's nothing to actually prove and consistently behave as though you have changed your mind.
01:09:40.000I think there's a couple clips from it already up on youtube.com slash Timcast as well as some trailers and then we've got three different short trailers coming up.
01:09:48.000I like the way they framed it because they really highlighted the dangers of like mass shootings and gun violence and then it sounds like then they start to talk about why it's important to protect your rights and defend yourself from that stuff.
01:10:16.000At the very least, argue 80-20, right?
01:10:18.000That 20% of the security is handled by the individual and 80% by the apparatus.
01:10:22.000I'm not even saying that, I'm saying at minimum, the idea that only police will have guns means criminals will have guns because clearly they're in violation of the law.
01:10:31.000And as the saying goes, when seconds matter, police are minutes away.
01:10:35.000And this is why we experience more, this is why the study showed that in gun-free zones, People are less likely to stop a mass shooter.
01:10:46.000And everywhere else, excluding gun-free zones, 51% of shootings were stopped by a good, a person law... A lot of mass shootings happen in gun-free zones, like they happen in places like schools.
01:10:57.000I had a dream last night that a group and I went to protect these people and we got there and they were like, someone's got to stay to protect the kids, the children.
01:12:07.000And then there's like a wall of like white light.
01:12:10.000And then all of a sudden it's just me and other people were in a room and we're like, wow, I can't believe we all died in that nuclear explosion.
01:12:15.000And then just like- You were in the lobby of like heaven.
01:12:56.000And also something about because of because of the way like your brain works in dreams, you can't read either.
01:13:01.000And so when it comes to lucid dreaming, one of the techniques is to try and read.
01:13:06.000So there's a bunch of things you can do.
01:13:08.000But you can, uh, if you wanted to read about one of them is, when you read something and it's gibberish, you should, you should realize you're dreaming.
01:13:16.000There's a bunch of, there's a bunch of other, uh, other tricks too.
01:13:20.000I always notice if you're ever in a dream and you can't get out and you want to get out, close your eyes really tight, tight until you can feel it.
01:13:26.000And as soon as you feel it, when you open them, you'll be awake because it's that feeling that wakes you up.
01:13:37.000I'm like, oh wow, I was having a bad dream.
01:13:39.000I've had dreams where I think I have woken up and so I can picture my room and stuff like that, but I am actually still asleep.
01:13:45.000And I think this is often because I have to set up a lot of alarms, so you're sort of waking up and you're immediately going back to sleep.
01:13:51.000The dream where you like get up and take a shower and get dressed and you're like on your way to work and then all of a sudden you wake up and you're like, I gotta do it all again!
01:14:00.000I do think it's funny that nightmares are depicted in media as like being attacked by monsters or like chased by a killer when in reality nightmares are like you have a dream that you miss you're late for work.
01:14:11.000You know it's like my nightmares are like I woke up at 8 30 and I'm like oh crap and I'm like trying to get dressed real fast and I'm like I'm anxiety like I gotta get up there I gotta record oh man and then I wake up and it's 7 and I'm like oh Brains just like feeling stressed out.
01:14:26.000I used to have this dream that I would get to the last day or like exams when I was in college and realize that I had forgotten about a class I had signed up for for the entire semester.
01:14:41.000It's not even that I wouldn't graduate, it's just like, suddenly you realize you were supposed to be, either you would fail this class, because you had to go take the exam, but actually you had never taken the class, and you didn't realize you would be an outsider.
01:14:50.000It's funny, I had that dream like twice a year, I thought I was the only one.
01:14:52.000I would get the one where I would be on stage for the play that I never rehearsed for, and I'm like, I got all these lines and I don't know any of them!
01:15:00.000Literally, it's the most embarrassing, like, let's have 10,000 people watching or whatever, 5,000 people.
01:16:20.000I said, life must be really hard when you're an effing idiot.
01:16:23.000He says, so there's glass in this painting, and they're not using just hammers, it looks like they're using these emergency hammers that I think have special material for breaking glass.
01:16:49.000It is very basic and simple common sense that if you stop producing oil, dozens, tens of millions, millions, dozens of tens of millions, 60 million people will die in three days.
01:17:08.000In the United States, in Europe, Because oil is used to produce food, to create electricity, instantly, we talk about this all the time, the diabetics die overnight without refrigeration.
01:17:19.000Without the production of oil, he would not be wearing a hat, he would not be wearing glasses, he likely wouldn't be wearing those jeans.
01:17:53.000Electric trucks, they're already having problems with it.
01:17:55.000Because maybe we get to the point when we have ubiquitous graphene polymer batteries, and we can recharge an electric vehicle in 30 seconds like you can refill a gas tank.
01:18:49.000And it was basically making the case that Just what you said.
01:18:52.000More people would die if we actually did these green energy deals than if we did this, because the third world countries are the ones that rely on fossil fuels the most, even though they're not the greatest culprit of pollution, but they rely on it the most because it's the cheapest form of energy.
01:19:04.000So if you're gonna... When we do things internationally like force third world countries to obey our sort of green standards in exchange for funding and money and stuff, it actually could lead to a catastrophic amount of death for people that rely on things like gas for heating.
01:19:15.000It's our, I don't know if, I don't know if I, you could say it's the cheapest.
01:21:51.000They've been, what, you have those people blocking the roads?
01:21:54.000That's not gonna convince, that makes people angry.
01:21:56.000So all these, I seriously believe oil companies are like, let's indirectly fund these anti-oil NGOs to make people despise the oil protesters.
01:22:07.000I mean, when I see stuff like this, I think about these pieces of art that if someone really destroyed them, we would lose them forever, right?
01:22:13.000It's a similar argument we make with, like, the Confederate monuments, right?
01:22:15.000Those were a form of art that once destroyed can never come back.
01:22:19.000And so maybe you feel really passionate about this issue, but this is a very lame protest to me that could potentially destroy something that has nothing to do with anything else.
01:22:37.000There's hydrogen, carbon, and plutonium.
01:22:39.000Those are the only things that can function as fuel.
01:22:41.000The difference between what fuel is means it can be put into a container and moved around, carried around.
01:22:46.000Everything else like wind turbines, solar panels, they're not types of fuel.
01:22:49.000They're just types of energy generation.
01:22:51.000But you need to reuse the fuel waste, so the carbon dioxide.
01:22:55.000Or for plutonium, they've got spent nuclear fuel, is what they call it.
01:22:58.000And I'm actually interviewing a guy tomorrow on my YouTube channel, 2 o'clock p.m.
01:23:01.000Eastern, who funds companies that are investing and reusing plutonium, spent nuclear fuel, turning them into things like, I don't know if he's going deep into the diamond batteries, nuclear waste diamond batteries, where you put it inside of carbon and it can produce like 10,000 years of electrical charge.
01:24:21.000No, no, but in all seriousness, when Ian started ranting about graphene, I did buy stock in a graphene company a long time ago, and it's like one of my only stocks that's improved.
01:24:29.000I would recommend checking out UniversalMatter.com.
01:24:32.000It's one of James Tour's companies where they're flashing the graphene with electricity.
01:24:35.000They're flashing carbon with electricity and producing graphene with it.
01:24:38.000And they're mass, mass, mass producing it.
01:24:40.000So this flash jewel heating is the future.
01:24:43.000Can graphene be used to make annoying oil protesters stop smashing things and throwing paint on people?
01:25:43.000I mean, this was one of the stories that I liked from last year, which is a lot of the get out the vote efforts were young women who were on, they would set their dating app profiles to whatever city they were trying to get people to register vote in for their, you know, progressive cause.
01:25:55.000And they were just like, talk to guys like, wow, you're so cute.
01:26:04.000Wasn't it typically the men who would try and court the females by doing a weird dance, but now the women are doing the weird dance to court the males?
01:26:36.000He tells the woman, the pro-life woman, he's pretending he's pro-life, and then when she gets pregnant, he's like, Oh, you gotta get an abortion!
01:26:43.000I haven't seen that one, that's hysterical.
01:26:46.000Yeah, it's one of those super old ones from like 20 years ago.
01:26:48.000But this is the thing, I feel like men should just be more like, no, I don't like that, and girls would eventually, it might not happen as fast, but they would change their minds and listen to you.
01:26:58.000They're targeting weak, pathetic men like this.
01:27:02.000I mean, yeah, this guy, like, he, look, I'll try and be as nice as possible.
01:27:08.000If you're willing to get a hammer and smash the glass on a painting and then scream in a room of people without ONE TIME googling what you are saying...
01:27:18.000You are not a high-functioning individual.
01:27:21.000He must not be having an easy time of meeting ladies.
01:27:24.000And so when this woman says, why don't you come with me and do this thing?
01:28:57.000And it's, um, Kiernan Shipka and she plays, uh, teen- like, I think she's a teenager who goes back in time to the 80s because there's like a serial killer in the 80s.
01:29:06.000But it's really funny how they make fun of wokeness because all the kids in the 80s are just like...
01:29:10.000They're just being kids and doing what they want, and she's, like, getting offended.
01:29:14.000Someone makes a crude comment, and she's like, whoa, that- or- there's a guy wearing a shirt that says, like, Federal Booty Inspector, and she's like, that is problematic.
01:29:56.000But what we're building is we're gonna have a bunch of vinyl It's not really a 90s room, but I have almost every Life Magazine ever from its inception.
01:30:05.000I actually have the first copy of Life Magazine.
01:30:08.000It was called something else before it got bought and changed, but it's really amazing when I was reading a pre-D-Day Life Magazine, and it was talking about how the US was stockpiling arms in the UK as a defensive precaution.
01:30:21.000And then, sure enough, like, we know it happened, you know, a couple weeks later.
01:30:27.000The Americans stormed the beaches of Normandy.
01:30:29.000At the time, they lied and reported, we are helping the UK sharpen its defenses as, you know, Hitler advances, blah, blah, blah.
01:30:36.000So it's really fascinating to read a news article from when, like- That's disinformation.
01:30:42.000During the Watergate scandal, or just a lack of information, or today's disinformation!
01:30:48.000You could read a story and it's like, this politician said these things, and then later on they'll go, actually, he said something different.
01:32:14.000Best year ever was 3380, year of our Lord.
01:32:16.000Before the show started, how the 90s were the last decade, and it's like kind of tongue-in-cheek, but so much technology changed in the 90s, and the internet became so prevalent, where like, it wasn't about, be there at 8 o'clock to watch the show, and then maybe you'll see, maybe you can tape it on your recorder.
01:32:35.000What that means is the 20s, the 10s, the 1900s, the 10s, the 20s, the 30s, the 40s, the 50s, the 60s, the 70s, the 80s, the 90s, each of those has a distinction to them for something specific.
01:33:28.000Kids are still buying Nightmare Before Christmas, it hasn't changed.
01:33:31.000If in the 80s they're wearing leopard print, hot pink, you know, hot pants, and they're rollerblading around in circles, and they've got mullets, and then in the 90s, they all have long hair with baggy jeans, with ripped knees, and flannel shirts, there's a clear distinction.
01:33:46.000The style of music in the 80s was very, like, synth-y, and the 90s was very rock and grungy.
01:34:01.000Have you ever gone back, though, and, like, watched something, like, a show produced in the early 2000s?
01:34:05.000Like, if you watch Lost, some of their choice of attire is very—you can tell it's from a different era.
01:34:11.000What were you going to say here, Claire?
01:34:12.000Well, I was going to say, I feel like a lot of it is the dominance of the internet.
01:34:14.000There's a lack of creativity and a lack of community building.
01:34:18.000Parts of the things that we're referencing with the 80s, you know, with the 80s neon or whatever else, with the hippies in the 70s, you get the more pattern, the feathered hair, whatever else.
01:34:26.000Those were things that people were doing in their social groups that were more widely adopted as they spread by the end of that decade.
01:34:33.000And then now that we have put everyone online, and maybe that's why you feel like the 2000 is sort of the end of this, like you can feel distinction there because at that point, the internet really took off.
01:34:42.000It became not only something everyone had in their home, but in their pocket.
01:34:45.000All right, we're gonna go to super chats.
01:34:47.000So if you haven't already, would you kindly smash the like button, subscribe to the channel, share the show with your friends.
01:35:17.000well there you go that's what we do it yet I would say if we're going to base the best year off of Super Chats, and I scroll all the way back up through all the Super Chats, the year 1999 is the best, whether anyone wanted it to be or not, because that's just a generic number you can Super Chat.
01:35:31.000It was digital fidelity hit 1080p, and since then the human brain can't comprehend more, I mean it can, but it's like that's, it's just become hyper-realistic now, and it's never, like the office may as well have been made yesterday, it looks the same.
01:35:43.000I think we see the changes a lot more gradually too.
01:35:45.000Cause before it was like every month there was a magazine that came out, but today we're on TikTok every day.
01:35:49.000So like different trends, you like, it's almost like the frog metaphor where if you warm the water up slowly, you don't feel it.
01:35:54.000Well, what happens is there used to be a handful of channels and a handful of radio stations, and it was a top-down broadcast.
01:36:00.000So they don't want to invest in 800,000 songs.
01:36:02.000They just want to find the one good song people like.
01:36:31.000I know, uh, I believe Clint Torres got the first Super Chat, but YouTube appears to have, uh, removed your Super Chat and a few others in the beginning.
01:36:37.000But, uh, shout out to Clint Torres for once again saying howdy, people, and getting the first Super Chat of the day.
01:36:43.000He said that he died, but he is back, and then the rest I don't know, because it was removed.
01:37:24.000Hopefully you got married somewhere with foliage, because it has been really beautiful this year.
01:37:28.000Buster Ruckus says, with the way they hid this manifesto, I'm convinced they are still hiding something about the Vegas shooter targeting a conservative country concert.
01:37:39.000He was a gambling... The latest story is that he was a high-stakes gambler who was angry that he was being mistreated even though that he was like high status or whatever.
01:37:48.000I kind of don't believe that at all because... I don't think it was a gun deal.
01:38:00.000Some people think that it was government-related and that's why they're not going to release anything.
01:38:03.000They had to kill him and they wanted to cover up that it was a gun deal and so they did a mass shooting so it looked like him as a patsy.
01:38:07.000They, this guy came in to do a gun deal, and maybe he wasn't even with government, I don't know, and then the guys who came in, the deal went sour, and they started shooting, and they're unloading, who knows, who knows.
01:38:17.000I'm just saying, the explanation that he was like a high status player, as someone who is a low status player at these casinos, like I don't have the elite tier or anything, they still treat you very well.
01:39:13.000But, yeah, so, little known fact is that they have secret gambling rooms.
01:39:19.000And, uh, you can look them up and try and find them, because it's not that they're so secret, but they are secret.
01:39:24.000If you are somebody who's worth, like, a hundred million dollars- You wanna hide their identity?
01:39:28.000Yeah, and you wanna gamble, like, five hundred thousand dollars in one night, they're gonna bring you to a private room with private security guards, and they're gonna- and then you're gonna play with a bunch of other billionaires and whatever, and no one will know you're even there.
01:39:41.000Yeah, they, uh, I know for a fact, I think most people, anybody, anybody who plays poker knows this, too.
01:39:47.000They have secret poker rooms where, like, Hong Kong and Macau billionaires show up and play with, like, people for, like, a two million dollar buy-in.
01:39:54.000It's like, it's like James Bond-esque.
01:39:56.000I was talking to a dealer and he's like, yeah, yeah, we had, uh, you know, we had a pro, I'm not gonna say the pros name, but a pro came down with a bunch of Chinese billionaires in there playing like a million dollar buying game.
01:40:05.000That's just like another reality, man.
01:40:08.000So the strata of humanity existing, some people live on their yachts and want it all to.
01:40:13.000He was saying the ultra-wealthy Chinese, like Hong Kong and Macau billionaires, didn't care that they were losing to this poker pro because... Because they wanted to be playing with the poker pro.
01:40:22.000They wanted to be playing with the poker pro, they wanted to play poker because it was fun, and the million dollars meant nothing to them.
01:40:25.000Because they're worth so much money, they were just like, oh, I don't care.
01:40:28.000And the poker pro, who is worth millions, makes his millions by playing against people who want to play with a pro.
01:40:38.000The crazy thing about the world in terms of class, and I say this a lot, people don't like hearing this, is that a lot of the class distinction is a choice.
01:40:49.000There are people I know who are very, very dumb and come from humble upbringing, but just started selling Gucci products, figuratively, to ultra-wealthy people.
01:41:02.000Someone can buy a bunch of beads and make a necklace and sit on the street and sell it for a dollar, or you can make five of them, find a big party, buy a thrift store dress, go in there and say they're $3,000 a piece, and you sell them.
01:41:16.000That's a lot easier to sell one thing for $1,000 than 1,000 things for $1.
01:41:20.000I know people who do one deal a year and they make 300 grand, and then they don't work for the year.
01:41:28.000If you can convince a rich person to buy something off you, Then that's it.
01:41:33.000And I'm not saying everyone can do that.
01:41:34.000I'm saying there are people I know who are like, I don't like working at a cafe anymore.
01:41:39.000And they went and sought out like Beverly Hills parties, went to bars, met people and got connected.
01:41:44.000And then all of a sudden they're just rich.
01:41:46.000But if you like have this philosophy that it's all the oppressive versus the oppressed, that it comes with like a certain hopelessness, I feel like that keeps people from taking chances or doing entrepreneurship things because they feel like the system will never render any success for them.
01:41:59.000But I have a feeling if any of those people made a couple million, they would quickly change their tune about Oppressor vs. Oppressed.
01:42:27.000Um, yes, it'll be very, very interesting.
01:42:29.000And I also want to stress, uh, in Lauren Southern's infringed documentary, Lauren Southern and John DuTois, their documentary is coming out tomorrow on TimCast.com.
01:42:37.000And we're actually going to have, uh, we're going to put up clips as well.
01:42:40.000So, uh, we'll have like 10 minute clips up on the main YouTube channel.
01:42:43.000But if you want to watch the full thing, it's going to be a members only documentary experience at TimCast.com.
01:42:47.000And, uh, we're also going to be heavily investing in an ad campaign promoting it.
01:42:54.000When you become a member at TimCast.com, the money that we get from you as a member basically supports the infrastructure of the website, all the digital stuff, the streaming, it helps cover the costs of the building, the employees, that's what it's all going to.
01:43:07.000And then we take the extra and we Go to people like Lawrence Southern and John and we say, like, how would you like to make this documentary about this issue?
01:43:15.000Then we say, now we're going to take even more money and we're going to buy massive ads across Facebook and X and YouTube promoting what we want to win, which is the right to keep and bear arms.
01:43:31.000When you're watching the Uncensored member show and you're having a good time, that money you give us isn't just so you can watch the show and we go buy cheeseburgers with it.
01:43:38.000It's literally now funding commercials promoting gun rights.
01:43:41.000So it's not that we're doing it as an activist organization.
01:43:43.000We're hoping to make money by doing it.
01:43:45.000But this is the cultural expansion, so I really do appreciate everybody who becomes a member, because that's what we're doing.
01:43:52.000We buy Taco Bell for everybody, yeah, yeah.
01:43:54.000But just understand that the things we invest in are cultural victory.
01:43:58.000And I hope that the large, large amounts of money we invest in marketing this, the ads in and of themselves are a cultural victory in expanding.
01:44:09.000It's not only about that we're literally promoting the right to keep and bear arms, it's that by putting money into this, what happens is you get other channels being like, wait, wait, wait, You're gonna pay me how much to sponsor X amount of dollars to promote gun rights?
01:44:28.000A lot of channels will then say, I will absolutely accept a gun rights promotion ad if it makes me money, and they may be apolitical, they may not even care.
01:44:37.000And now you have a bunch of channels that are like maybe video games talking about the right to keep and bear arms, and that's how you reach people in other spaces.
01:44:44.000So, we're doing the work, we're doing the work.
01:45:01.000Glad to hear that that's working out for you, and I think it's fair to say, yeah, I don't want to demonize everybody who takes SSRIs either.
01:45:05.000We, you got people on the right who don't want to be gunned, so they say, hey, it's the drugs, and it's like, how many people are taking the drugs, and how many mass shooters do you have?
01:45:16.000Let's just blame people who are unwell and figure out how we can stop them and actually help them before it gets to that point.
01:45:23.000Yeah, and I think the point about SSRIs is good because there are people who benefit from it.
01:45:27.000I'm not trying to say all modern medicine is awful just on its face, but you know, I'm sure this person could also say that it wasn't necessary.
01:45:34.000It would be unusual to hear that it was just you were prescribed something the first time and it worked immediately.
01:45:39.000Unfortunately, there's a lot of trial and error and that comes with serious risks.
01:45:43.000It's not a perfect system, but hopefully something works.
01:46:35.000Then they all play millions of dollars, and they lose it only to each other.
01:46:38.000So they could be laundering through each other, fair point.
01:46:40.000The two Chinese millionaires could be like, oh no, I lost a million dollars to this guy, and that's a way to make a political contribution or something.
01:47:55.000Last name, first name says apparently an older gentleman got attacked by a Palestinian protester in L.A.
01:48:00.000and died from a head wound on the way to the hospital.
01:48:02.000Ollie and Jack posted on Twitter, I did see this.
01:48:05.000We do have some stories from local Jewish outlets and I don't know if we had enough information to actually report it tonight, but there's photos and there's video.
01:48:16.000An old man, reportedly, was hit in the face by a pro-Palestinian protester with a megaphone, fell down, and hit his head and died.
01:48:23.000So, I don't know to what degree we have confirmation yet, because we haven't been tracking the stories we've been doing the show, but I recommend fact-checking that one.
01:51:39.000And so, if someone is very directly partisan, staunchly conservative or whatever, it's very easy for the establishment to call them an other.
01:51:47.000But it's much, much harder when you have this room.
01:51:51.000When Hasan Piker calls Ian a conservative, everybody laughs at him.
01:51:59.000Right, it's like, this is not a representation of a conservative.
01:52:02.000So, Hasan struggles to criticize Ian as an other, but Ian has ideas that contradict the establishment narrative.
01:52:10.000How do you constrain something like that?
01:52:13.000It's easy to point to Jack Pasobic wearing a suit and be like, ha ha, look at that suit-wearing guy, he's not like us, we're cool in our leather jackets, and then you get green velvet Ian, and they're like, eh, he's conservative?
01:52:22.000This is inspired by Chase Geyser, by the way, with his badass blazer over there.
01:54:56.000Then you give him the 50 bucks, and then he walks across the street to his house, and goes into his house that he lives in, because he doesn't own that property.
01:56:18.000It breaks it into sugar, your body does.
01:56:20.000I've had no problem with potatoes, and I had a nice dark chocolate with some carbs in it, and some maple honey mustard with beef, but no bread, and a million bucks.
01:57:01.000And I think it was bread specifically, because now we went out to eat and I had like a soup and I had Brussels sprouts and like a small amount of potatoes.
01:57:12.000I did it for six months, but I lost too much weight.
01:57:34.000The 6'2 guy is so comfortable with his height, he jokes about how he's actually short because he doesn't care, whereas the short guy is nervous and lies that he's 5'11 because he's embarrassed about his height.
01:57:45.000If you're actually 5'11, you just say you're 6 feet.
01:58:11.000What the Costco CEO actually said, we can't say on YouTube, and it's so amazing, we will say it as the first line on the members-only show.
01:59:08.000Remember the scene where she's, uh, when V takes her to his underground lair and she's eating the toasty and she's like, is that real butter?
01:59:21.000She's gonna be sitting in the room and she's gonna bite into it and go, is this real butter?
01:59:24.000And then he's gonna be like, it is real virtual butter.
01:59:28.000And then she's gonna toggle her VR headset and then be sitting in her pod and she's gonna reach with almost no room to a cockroach and eat it and go, wow, real butter.
01:59:58.000I think any man should eat bugs just so they're prepared for if they have to eat bugs.
02:00:06.000I'm just saying like this, I view learning how to use a firearm similarly to understanding what bugs you can and can't eat, what leaves you can and can't eat, You should know these things not because the world is going to end or because you're a prep or anything.
02:00:19.000It's because maybe one day you're out on a hike and there's like a road closure or a flood happens and then you're with some people and you need to survive for like 16 hours and you need to know where you are.
02:00:30.000It's going to take longer than 16 hours before I start eating bugs though.
02:00:49.000I understand that purpose, but it's the slowly they'll stop putting out meat in the grocery store and instead they'll be putting out your grasshopper patties and all that stuff.
02:00:58.000I'm not ready to commit to that lifestyle.
02:01:01.000I don't want it to be this subtle change that people say, oh, it's an alternative, it's an alternative, and all of a sudden it's the main source of protein.
02:01:07.000Alright everybody, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show if you do like it, and go to TimCast.com, click Join Us, become a member.
02:01:16.000The members-only show is starting in a couple minutes, you don't want to miss it.
02:01:18.000We're going to read that very famous Costco line, which we can't read on YouTube.