Timcast IRL - Tim Pool - March 14, 2022


Timcast IRL - Netflix Hit With FOUR Felony Indictments Over 'Cuties' w-Libby Emmons & Kellie Keen


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 9 minutes

Words per Minute

201.82803

Word Count

26,056

Sentence Count

2,051

Misogynist Sentences

58

Hate Speech Sentences

57


Summary

Netflix is facing felony indictments for a film that depicts pre-pubescent girls in lewd adult activities. Libby Emmons and Kelly J. join the show to talk about the Ukraine crisis and Daylight Saving Time, and why we should all wake up an extra hour.


Transcript

00:00:03.000 Netflix has been hit with four felony indictments over the film Cuties because that film depicts children, pre-pubescent girls, in lewd adult activities.
00:00:17.000 And the strange thing is, and I suppose it's not strange to most of us, but one thing that's happening is that the establishment left and many left activists have been and are still outright defending this film as if
00:00:28.000 it should exist because they say it's a critique.
00:00:30.000 The strange thing is you can critique something without actually doing it.
00:00:33.000 Imagine someone doing drug and saying, don't look at me, I'm just critiquing heroin.
00:00:36.000 That doesn't quite make sense.
00:00:38.000 But where it gets interesting is that these felony indictments come from a grand jury,
00:00:42.000 meaning a district attorney showed the film to people and asked them if they thought it was a crime.
00:00:48.000 And these people said yes.
00:00:50.000 And now Netflix is facing four felony indictments.
00:00:52.000 So I think that's interesting as to what the media tells us versus what regular people think.
00:00:56.000 So we're gonna talk about that.
00:00:58.000 We got obviously a bunch of stories about what's going on in Ukraine, but sometimes the war talk is just, we get it, there's a war, and it's all everyone's talking about, but we will.
00:01:06.000 The View, earlier today, I think it was earlier today, called for, effectively called for the arrest of Tulsi Gabbard and Tucker Carlson for pushing Russian propaganda.
00:01:16.000 That's how insane everything's gotten, so we'll be talking about all of that.
00:01:19.000 And we have two guests joining us today.
00:01:21.000 First, we have Kelly J. Do you want to introduce yourself?
00:01:24.000 Hi, I'm Kelly J. I am a women's rights campaigner from the UK.
00:01:29.000 Right on.
00:01:29.000 Is there anything people would have known you from or anything you focus on specifically?
00:01:33.000 Yeah, I focus on the word woman specifically to keep it for women.
00:01:39.000 I got a billboard taken down in the UK in 2018 that had the dictionary definition of the word woman.
00:01:44.000 Which is?
00:01:45.000 And it was removed for an adult human female.
00:01:47.000 Who knew?
00:01:48.000 And it got removed for hate speech.
00:01:52.000 What?
00:01:53.000 Yeah.
00:01:55.000 All right.
00:01:56.000 Okay.
00:01:57.000 Well, so we have a lot to talk about.
00:01:59.000 Interestingly, we have a couple stories out of Ukraine, where one story is about a trans woman who is not allowed to leave because a trans woman is male and men aren't allowed to leave the country.
00:02:10.000 I know YouTube is going to hate the language, but I'm just trying to describe it.
00:02:13.000 And the other story is a trans man who put on feminine clothing to be able to escape the country.
00:02:20.000 So it's an interesting... So we'll get into all that stuff and then obviously it'll lead us into a lot of what's happening with Ukraine.
00:02:24.000 But we also have Libby Emmons hanging out.
00:02:26.000 Hey, glad to be here.
00:02:27.000 I'm Libby Emmons.
00:02:28.000 I'm the editor-in-chief of the Postmillennial.
00:02:30.000 Glad to be back, everybody.
00:02:32.000 Right on.
00:02:33.000 What's up, everybody?
00:02:33.000 Ian Crossland over here from iancrossland.net.
00:02:35.000 I'm actually working on my Brave browser right now and setting up my Brave search engine.
00:02:39.000 If you haven't done that yet, you can flip over away from Google or DuckDuckGo and set up your Brave search engine.
00:02:45.000 It's in beta.
00:02:46.000 I actually use that all the time.
00:02:48.000 I use Brave.
00:02:48.000 Yes.
00:02:49.000 Do you use the browser and the search engine?
00:02:51.000 Yeah.
00:02:52.000 Good.
00:02:53.000 Perfect.
00:02:54.000 And I am also here in the corner pushing buttons.
00:02:55.000 I'm wearing one of Kelly's shirts.
00:02:57.000 I don't know if you guys can see it.
00:02:58.000 It has the dictionary definition of the word woman, which is highly unpolitically correct, so I'm looking forward to wearing it in public and seeing what happens.
00:03:05.000 When did Daylight Savings Time happen?
00:03:07.000 Was that yesterday?
00:03:08.000 Sunday.
00:03:08.000 Sunday?
00:03:09.000 I'm wondering if there's a lot of people in the chat who missed that.
00:03:11.000 I think it was last Sunday.
00:03:13.000 No, it was yesterday.
00:03:14.000 It was yesterday?
00:03:15.000 Yeah, it was yesterday.
00:03:16.000 People think that it's 7 o'clock still.
00:03:18.000 Someone was like, why are they starting early?
00:03:20.000 We're so early.
00:03:21.000 And I'm like, it looks like some people, yeah.
00:03:23.000 Oh, it was yesterday.
00:03:23.000 Since the dawn of time.
00:03:24.000 Yeah, it was yesterday.
00:03:25.000 Everyone's like, are they really?
00:03:26.000 Men have been confused.
00:03:27.000 All right.
00:03:28.000 Daylight savings.
00:03:28.000 Yes, it's true.
00:03:30.000 I think it's so dumb.
00:03:31.000 We just wake up an hour early, I guess.
00:03:32.000 But whatever.
00:03:32.000 It's brighter out and it's 8 for whatever.
00:03:34.000 Yeah, it's good.
00:03:35.000 All right.
00:03:35.000 Before we get started, everybody, head over to surfinginternetsafe.com.
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00:03:43.000 Right now, I think more than ever, it's obvious why we need it.
00:03:45.000 With the January 6th committee just going to these phone companies and being like, give us the private records of these people.
00:03:50.000 And the phone companies are like, you got it.
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00:05:15.000 And also, you'll get access to members-only podcasts from this show.
00:05:19.000 We're going to have a members-only version of the show up at 11 or so p.m.
00:05:23.000 I imagine there's a lot of topics that are really sensitive that we're not going to be able to talk about, but there's going to be I think, I'll just put it mildly, tonight's members-only show might get very, it would piss off the censors, I'll put it mildly.
00:05:35.000 So, check out TimCast.com.
00:05:37.000 But let's talk about this first story about Netflix.
00:05:39.000 This is what I find to be absolutely fascinating.
00:05:41.000 Netflix takes on Texas.
00:05:43.000 Attorneys analyze the outlandish fight over cuties.
00:05:46.000 The Hollywood Reporter is basically, they're talking about a story in which This month, there was supposed to be a hearing in Texas.
00:05:54.000 Netflix was to face a criminal charge for, I think it was like child lewd behavior or something.
00:06:02.000 There was a federal ruling that overturned the statute from Texas about children and lewd activities or lewd behavior.
00:06:11.000 So the DA, who, strangely enough as the story goes, played the character Spider in the film School of Rock, his name is Lucas Babin, brought the case brought the film cuties to a grand jury and asked them if it depicted children in child adult films to put it mildly and a grand jury returned four felony indictments so now what's happening is we're seeing with this hollywood reporter story
00:06:38.000 They're bringing in these lawyers who are like, oh, it's a First Amendment thing.
00:06:41.000 You know, they're obviously critiquing the sexualization of children.
00:06:45.000 And we're now in this strange world where when a DA brings the film before a bunch of regular people and says, was a crime committed?
00:06:53.000 They say yes.
00:06:54.000 Yet the establishment media, the left, as you would call it, is defending a film in which they took four young girls I don't care if you think they're actors or actresses or whatever, actually taught these little girls to do these dance moves, had them do it in an extended scene that was like three minutes long, have scenes where there's clearly adults grooming these children, and then said, but it's a critique, it's fine.
00:07:14.000 This is the, you know, if I can broaden the conversation a little bit outside of this, clearly, we live in completely different realities with whatever the establishment on the left is, from regular people to I'm kind of thinking of George Carlin's obscenity push against obscenity.
00:07:31.000 I understand.
00:07:32.000 I'm, you know, morally, I felt like that movie was a little too sexualized.
00:07:36.000 I think you made the example earlier.
00:07:37.000 It's like, in order to explain something, you don't have to like show it necessarily, like something really vile.
00:07:43.000 You don't want to like put it in front of people.
00:07:44.000 Well, I mean, when you're doing it, you know, when, when Shakespeare wrote plays, all the violence happened off stage.
00:07:49.000 You don't need to see it to know what happened.
00:07:52.000 It's a great point.
00:07:53.000 Yeah.
00:07:54.000 I mean, those little girls actually doing those scenes in front of a whole, I would imagine mostly male, adult male crew, it's just gross.
00:08:03.000 I mean, what were the parents or anyone thinking?
00:08:05.000 Well, so I think there's one part of this story that easily proves they know they're doing something wrong.
00:08:12.000 In the Hollywood Reporter, they say, conservative circles have rallied behind criticism of the movie for sexualizing and exploiting children.
00:08:18.000 Babin's father, Texas Congressman Brian Babin, U.S.
00:08:20.000 Senator Ted Cruz, and a group of more than 30 House Republicans have called on the DOJ to prosecute Netflix.
00:08:26.000 This and other calls by conservatives to investigate the making of the movie prompted Netflix to apologize for inappropriately sexualizing actresses in marketing materials.
00:08:36.000 The marketing materials were clips from the movie.
00:08:39.000 Yeah, they were pretty nasty.
00:08:40.000 The issue is that it's not a critique because they actually did it.
00:08:43.000 They actually did these things with little girls.
00:08:46.000 As Kelly J was saying, in front of an audience of crew, they paid them for it.
00:08:52.000 They paid the children to do these things.
00:08:56.000 There was a lot of incentive to do a good job, you know, and please the people who were Asking them to do it I brought up Carlin because he in order to show the obscene thing that he was wanted to make more publicly agreeable He would just do it.
00:09:10.000 He would say it He would say the words that were horrendous and at the time and this is kind of like so the metaphor is like the child Sexuality is the dirty words of the 70s.
00:09:19.000 It would be different if it was an animation.
00:09:22.000 It would be different if it was Yeah, I guess.
00:09:25.000 Which is also disgusting and weird.
00:09:27.000 It would be different if it was adults playing children.
00:09:29.000 Right?
00:09:30.000 There's a line you can't cross.
00:09:32.000 Or they could just, like, the kids could have come out on the stage and then it could have showed the people's faces and then not actually put these little girls in that situation.
00:09:41.000 Carlin got arrested for saying the words, but he did it anyway.
00:09:44.000 He was like, I'm just gonna... Yeah, but he was saying words.
00:09:46.000 He wasn't depicting the abuse of children.
00:09:50.000 Right.
00:09:50.000 Which is different.
00:09:51.000 And even if you say things, like if he had said out loud what was being done, you know, what these girls were doing and being made to do, if you say it out loud, that's also different than actually doing it.
00:10:03.000 So it's what makes it, I think, more similar to like a pornographic situation is that just like in adult films, the acts are actually performed.
00:10:14.000 What would be crazy is if it was about child murder and the movie was all about showing kids getting killed, there wouldn't be any emotional backlash like there is about child sex.
00:10:25.000 Would the children actually be killed?
00:10:26.000 No, it would be all the acting.
00:10:27.000 Just like this is all acting.
00:10:29.000 But it's not acting once you're doing the actual thing.
00:10:29.000 No, no, no, no, no.
00:10:33.000 So like, I mean, even if you're acting like you're doing the thing, you're actually still doing the thing.
00:10:33.000 Right.
00:10:36.000 You know, it's yeah.
00:10:38.000 And it's like if those if that was a snuff film, if you're talking about a snuff film, that would be there would be a lot of backlash of that.
00:10:46.000 Well, I mean, I wouldn't call it backlash.
00:10:48.000 I would say like pitchforks and it would be illegal.
00:10:52.000 It would definitely be illegal to do this.
00:10:55.000 I see cuties.
00:10:56.000 I haven't seen it.
00:10:58.000 I wouldn't watch it.
00:10:59.000 I didn't watch it.
00:10:59.000 I've seen some of the bits.
00:11:04.000 So the issue for me was I watched enough of it to where I said I'm not interested in watching this film.
00:11:15.000 Yeah, I'll put it that way.
00:11:16.000 I did not watch the film as if to say, like, I sat through the whole thing, but I watched the relevant bits to a certain degree and was just like, this needs to be turned off.
00:11:24.000 It's disturbing.
00:11:25.000 Dude, they got a kid that looks like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
00:11:29.000 The main 12-year-old actor looks like a sexualized Cortez.
00:11:33.000 It's insane.
00:11:34.000 Talk about clown world.
00:11:35.000 Sure, but that's like a French film.
00:11:37.000 Yeah, what a weird coincidence.
00:11:38.000 Yeah, so Cuties is the reason that I canceled my Netflix subscription.
00:11:42.000 I was like, this is unacceptable.
00:11:43.000 Sorry, I'm just not having it.
00:11:45.000 I don't feel like giving money to a company that thinks that this is tolerable.
00:11:48.000 I was more angry when they pulled Star Trek, the original series.
00:11:54.000 Imagine it this way, Ian.
00:11:55.000 Let's make a film critiquing children doing drugs and we'll literally give kids crack and film it.
00:12:02.000 Like a reality show.
00:12:03.000 That's the issue.
00:12:05.000 It's more like that, I think, than what Carlin was doing.
00:12:08.000 But was it a reality?
00:12:09.000 I didn't see the movie.
00:12:10.000 Was it a reality show?
00:12:12.000 It was fake.
00:12:12.000 No, it was fake.
00:12:13.000 But I mean, look at... Wait, what do you mean?
00:12:15.000 Like, the movie wasn't... They didn't actually go into a club and get 12-year-olds dancing.
00:12:18.000 No, no, no.
00:12:19.000 They had to audition, and they probably had to sign a contract, and their parents had to agree to this grooming behavior.
00:12:26.000 But it was sexual.
00:12:26.000 So they had to... Whatever they were doing, acting or not, It was a sexualized performance.
00:12:32.000 So it doesn't really matter whether they were acting, they were still actually doing it with their real bodies.
00:12:38.000 So the funny thing is, the response from a lot of these people on the left is that the final scene in question where the little like 11 year old girls or whatever are doing the sex dancing, is that the audience is disgusted by it.
00:12:49.000 And I'm like, but you all literally watched it too.
00:12:53.000 And they actually had these little girls do that.
00:12:56.000 So what?
00:12:58.000 Show someone being grossed out by it and all of a sudden you're allowed to do it?
00:13:00.000 That doesn't make sense to me.
00:13:01.000 If you're criticizing it, you wouldn't do it, right?
00:13:03.000 Also, when we have TV shows or stuff like that in the US, usually adults do it.
00:13:13.000 90210, which is the first thing I could think of.
00:13:15.000 All those actors were in their 20s.
00:13:16.000 Right.
00:13:17.000 And they were like having sex and doing whatever.
00:13:20.000 They weren't actually having sex, but they had like all the makeout scenes and stuff.
00:13:23.000 But everyone was in their 20s.
00:13:25.000 The same with like, you know, Riverdale or any of those shows.
00:13:28.000 They're all in their 20s.
00:13:29.000 What about Superbad?
00:13:30.000 I brought this up when I was talking about this earlier today.
00:13:33.000 So Christopher Mintz-Plass I think was like 16 when they filmed the movie.
00:13:37.000 And there's a scene where he's having sex with some woman or whatever.
00:13:41.000 And apparently his parents had to be there and sign off on it.
00:13:44.000 I'm wondering, you know...
00:13:46.000 This is a 16-year-old.
00:13:48.000 We know high school kids are doing things, but does that make it better at all?
00:13:51.000 Because I'm actually wondering.
00:13:52.000 I'm wondering, yeah.
00:13:53.000 As you're saying that, I'm wondering about that as well.
00:13:56.000 I still thought it was messed up.
00:13:57.000 Realistically, a 16-year-old boy and an 11-year-old girl are worlds of different when it comes to sexuality.
00:14:03.000 That's true, too.
00:14:05.000 One has gone through puberty and is still doing it, and the other one is... Still, there's exploitative them.
00:14:09.000 Filming a 16-year-old boy That's certainly not.
00:14:13.000 I would never sign off on that for my kid.
00:14:14.000 If I had been that 16-year-old boy, I would have launched at that opportunity.
00:14:18.000 Well, sure.
00:14:19.000 Would your parents have gone for it?
00:14:21.000 Yeah, they supported whatever my choice is.
00:14:23.000 My parents did not do that.
00:14:24.000 I honestly feel like this, along with the whole Florida controversy over Don't Say Gay, it really does feel like... It's not in the bill.
00:14:33.000 Right, it's not.
00:14:34.000 But their perception of it, or what their critique is, You look at Superbad.
00:14:40.000 There's a scene where a 16-year-old kid is hooking up, and it's in the movie.
00:14:44.000 And it's not like graphic or anything, but it's clearly a scene acted out by this kid.
00:14:47.000 And they want you to be like, ah, there's 16-year-olds, you know, we know high school kids are doing stuff.
00:14:52.000 Then you end up with shows like Big Mouth, which is like 12, what's the show, like 12 and 13-year-olds?
00:14:56.000 Yeah.
00:14:56.000 That show's messed up.
00:14:57.000 It's a cartoon, though!
00:14:59.000 Everyone's like, oh, but it's Nick Kroll, it's like famous actors pretending to be kids, and it's just cartoons, and I'm like, It's still weird.
00:15:07.000 Do you guys know the show Big Mouth?
00:15:08.000 I don't know it.
00:15:08.000 You've got to watch it.
00:15:09.000 Really?
00:15:10.000 Should I write this down?
00:15:11.000 Yeah, yeah.
00:15:11.000 It's the most overly sexualized cartoon I've ever seen.
00:15:14.000 Of children.
00:15:14.000 Yeah, I'm not.
00:15:15.000 God, and you're saying I have to watch it?
00:15:18.000 It's like, you might get sick to your stomach.
00:15:22.000 And then he's got like a little sex demon on his shoulder that tells him to have sex.
00:15:25.000 No, it's not little.
00:15:26.000 It's a massive sex demon.
00:15:28.000 Yeah, I won't watch it.
00:15:29.000 I think sex demons would be large.
00:15:31.000 They'd be like, I'm overbearing.
00:15:34.000 I'm taking over.
00:15:36.000 Netflix got critiqued.
00:15:37.000 Criticized.
00:15:38.000 Critiqued is probably the wrong word for it.
00:15:39.000 Because there's an episode where it shows two little girls walking around naked.
00:15:43.000 And it shows a whole bunch of naked women.
00:15:45.000 And they said, no, no, no.
00:15:46.000 We're trying to tell little girls to be okay with their bodies.
00:15:48.000 That's why we're showing it.
00:15:50.000 And people said, look dude, it's a cartoon.
00:15:52.000 There were no actual children here.
00:15:54.000 Then what happens?
00:15:55.000 You end up with movies like Cuties, where it's like, now you have actual little girls doing it, but, oh, come on, it's a critique, just like, and I'm just like, yo, why don't you guys, like, stop?
00:16:05.000 Yeah.
00:16:05.000 Well, it's interesting, too, because this stuff is coming up in books, too, that are now, you know, available in schools.
00:16:11.000 There's this whole controversy with this book, Gender Queer, by a person called Maya Coabe, I think.
00:16:17.000 I don't know how to say her name exactly right.
00:16:21.000 But this book has been talked about by parents all over the US, that this book has child pornography in it,
00:16:29.000 and that it has depictions of all these crazy things.
00:16:33.000 So I bought the book because I had been writing about it.
00:16:38.000 And I was like, I should really take a look at this book myself.
00:16:41.000 And it is rather disturbing, not just for the reasons that the moms that I know were complaining about it,
00:16:47.000 but also for this journey of this young girl who comes to realize, comes to decide that she's not
00:16:54.000 a girl at all, that she has these other pronouns that are like, they start with E's.
00:17:00.000 E-M-E-R.
00:17:01.000 Yeah, that's it.
00:17:01.000 E-M-E-R.
00:17:02.000 And so the book eventually is the story of this person who grows up to be a comic book artist who's 25, has never had sex, has no interest in sex, is binding their breasts and is teaching middle school and planning to come out to the middle schoolers as an asexual And this is all like very affirmed and it's all very you know couched in this language of hyper positivity.
00:17:33.000 The main character in this book hates their body, is terrified of going to the gynecologist, which if you're a woman like you got to show up at the gynecologist at a certain point at least a bunch of times in your life to make sure that you're not dying from a whole bunch of reproductive issues that can kill you.
00:17:51.000 So, you know, this person is terrified of that, terrified of being touched, all of this stuff.
00:17:56.000 And it's in the language of joy and spectacularness.
00:18:01.000 Look, I can, you know, understand adults who want to live however they want to live.
00:18:06.000 You know, someone's over 18 and they decide they want to, you know, juggle oranges all day or like dress up like a giant duck.
00:18:14.000 I'm going to be like, literally don't care what you do, man.
00:18:15.000 You can go mind your own business.
00:18:17.000 But it's the obsession with children that I find, you know, disconcerting.
00:18:21.000 Me too.
00:18:22.000 Yeah, like why do you need your middle school teacher to come out to you and tell you that they hate their body?
00:18:28.000 It's all over TikTok, right?
00:18:31.000 All of this stuff.
00:18:32.000 People actually do come out to really small children in this fashion.
00:18:36.000 But there is an overwhelming surge to break the frontier and boundaries of kids.
00:18:42.000 Just totally erode all safeguarding, not allow them to use words that are literal and mean something.
00:18:48.000 And the sexualization of kids, whether it's cuties, whether it's this cartoon.
00:18:53.000 But it's like, it's as if you're doing something remarkable if you're trying to enforce this onto kids.
00:19:01.000 It's so messed up.
00:19:02.000 It's almost like we've destroyed our culture to the point where there's no way for children to gauge when they're adults.
00:19:10.000 So we just have to decide that they're adults from the very beginning and can understand this stuff.
00:19:14.000 So kids are learning about gender identity before they know what sex is.
00:19:18.000 Well, I don't think it needs to be asked, but to the left, you know, my question is to the left in general, why they think there's an age of consent.
00:19:30.000 Now, the issue is, I honestly think the left is opposed to that idea of an age of consent.
00:19:37.000 I think many of these people are just ignoring that issue for now.
00:19:43.000 But I think if you were to actually get these people in private and ask them, they'd probably advocate for really, really messed up stuff.
00:19:49.000 I think that's correct.
00:19:50.000 And I think we've seen that.
00:19:52.000 I think what they're doing is they're eroding our culture with, you know, things like cuties and defending it.
00:19:56.000 And I'm like, could you imagine this film being made 15, 20 years ago?
00:20:00.000 Well, 15, 20 years ago, or 20 years ago anyway, like, uh, Tipper Gore would be pissed, right?
00:20:06.000 And she was the, she was the second lady or whatever, the vice president's wife, who put the explicit advisory lyrics on, you know, my Jane's Addiction album.
00:20:14.000 We see all those, uh, things on Twitter.
00:20:16.000 Have you ever seen, like, maps?
00:20:18.000 The, the, the minor attracted person stuff?
00:20:20.000 Or that's Foundation Prostasia, the Prostasia Foundation, which is all about, uh, advocating for, uh, pedophiles to be accepted in society.
00:20:31.000 You have to wonder about what these people's true goals are at the end.
00:20:34.000 And then, you know, you have to wonder about why people like Epstein kind of just disappear.
00:20:41.000 Why, why Max, Ghislaine Maxwell gets convicted, but convicted of what?
00:20:46.000 Where, where, what did she, what did she do?
00:20:48.000 I mean, we're talking about a crime that involves two people, right?
00:20:50.000 Where are her clients?
00:20:53.000 Why'd they all get away with it?
00:20:54.000 And then it's really funny how it's just like, anybody who brings that stuff up is clearly a conspiracy theorist, and you know, they must be making things up, and I'm just like, dude, the Netflix thing is really, really fascinating.
00:21:05.000 Because I don't think they're gonna be able to walk away from this one.
00:21:08.000 A grand jury.
00:21:09.000 So apparently the feds are like, we're going to have a hearing on this in June or something or July over whether or not you can, this stands.
00:21:16.000 But I have a feeling that the DA is going to say to the federal judge, we completely agree with their critique.
00:21:21.000 Yeah.
00:21:22.000 And agree, you know, you shouldn't sexualize kids.
00:21:25.000 Okay.
00:21:25.000 But they did.
00:21:26.000 It's such a shame though, don't you think, with Netflix, because they've really stood up for Dave Chappelle.
00:21:30.000 They are willing to sort of allow supposedly controversial opinions.
00:21:36.000 And I really was, you know, I totally back them for that.
00:21:39.000 I think that's brilliant.
00:21:41.000 And then they do this and you're like, oh, come on, please.
00:21:44.000 I don't know if they actually back Dave Chappelle to a certain extent.
00:21:48.000 You know, the last special that Dave did was heavily focused on trans people.
00:21:52.000 It's like a really, it's really weird.
00:21:55.000 Dave did a special.
00:21:56.000 He mentioned, he had jokes about trans people.
00:22:00.000 He got attacked heavily for it, and it seemed like it consumed him.
00:22:03.000 And so he ends up, yeah, his next special ends up being this kind of like, it was very defensive.
00:22:10.000 It was nearly a TED Talk, to be fair.
00:22:12.000 Yeah, no, seriously.
00:22:13.000 Where he was like, I guess people just don't understand the joke, so I'm going to stop doing them.
00:22:17.000 It's like they got them.
00:22:18.000 What did you think of that?
00:22:19.000 What did you think of the whole Chappelle thing?
00:22:21.000 Well, I have issues anyway, because I think he's incredible for walking away from all that money and keeping his dignity and credibility all those years ago.
00:22:31.000 But I'm not really a great big fan of his humour.
00:22:35.000 The way that he talked about Candace Irwin, I just can't really get past that.
00:22:40.000 But yeah, I think it's bizarre that comedians, Ricky Gervais is the same, they sort of tell a joke and then explain the joke.
00:22:48.000 When have you started doing that?
00:22:50.000 Just tell a joke.
00:22:51.000 If it's funny, we'll laugh.
00:22:52.000 And if it's not, we'll move on.
00:22:54.000 But you saying, oh, this is a joke because actually I'm doing a bit of wordplay and I'm doing this and please don't cancel me.
00:23:01.000 It's like, no, just have the bravery.
00:23:04.000 You know, a story that is a great overlap is this story from Newsweek about JK Rowling and YouTuber Vosh sparring over International Women's Day, mainly because one of the critiques against Vosh, one of the most common ones, is about his comments on young children and sexualization of them.
00:23:23.000 And so he is an interesting character in this in that he kind of embodies a lot of these critiques we're talking
00:23:30.000 about.
00:23:30.000 So this story is, you may have seen it, it's actually from five days ago.
00:23:34.000 J.K. Rowling called Vosch, likened him to an abusive ex-husband who used to tell me my life would be great if only I'd
00:23:44.000 comply, but you're making the same mistake he did.
00:23:46.000 Women like me can't be bullied out of resistance. There's a couple things I find interesting here that's worth talking
00:23:50.000 about.
00:23:50.000 One, I don't know if you saw this but recently, what's her name, Emma Watson? Is that her name right?
00:23:56.000 Oh yeah.
00:23:57.000 Yeah, she said, I'm here for all the witches and everyone like clapped.
00:24:01.000 Oh gosh.
00:24:02.000 I don't know what that's supposed to mean but a lot of people are assuming she was making like a trans affirming
00:24:06.000 statement or something.
00:24:08.000 She looked gutless when she said it, so I think she was.
00:24:11.000 All the witches?
00:24:12.000 Is that what she said?
00:24:12.000 She said all the witches.
00:24:14.000 Oh my gosh.
00:24:15.000 Like, what does that mean?
00:24:16.000 I'm here for all the ladies, I think.
00:24:18.000 But J.K.
00:24:19.000 Rowling's an interesting subject in this, and interestingly, Vosch is as well, because we're talking about the weird grooming of children and stuff like that.
00:24:26.000 Vosch has been heavily criticized for that.
00:24:28.000 J.K.
00:24:28.000 Rowling, you know, is an interesting story.
00:24:31.000 For those that aren't familiar, I mean, this is the gist of the story.
00:24:35.000 She said, someone please send the shadow minister for equality is a dictionary and a backbone.
00:24:39.000 Happy International Women's Day. And then Vosh said, women be quieter and start apologizing
00:24:46.000 challenge to which she responded with that you're like an abusive husband.
00:24:52.000 He said, listen, Joanne, you don't get to play the victim card when you're the advocate for taking away women's rights here.
00:24:57.000 Trans women are raped and killed in men's facilities, and you want to keep them there because if you're trauma, quit making your feelings other people's oppression.
00:25:05.000 For this, you know, my attitude is like, and I said this before, is not to be cute or Hyperbolic or facetious, I believe that Vaush is a men's rights activist.
00:25:19.000 Oh, 100%.
00:25:19.000 Yeah.
00:25:20.000 Like saying, women, shut up.
00:25:22.000 Or, you know, women, be quiet and start apologizing.
00:25:25.000 Language like that, 10 years ago, they'd call them an MRA.
00:25:28.000 And even socialists were called MRAs.
00:25:31.000 So this is like, this story and the issues around J.K.
00:25:35.000 Rowling and everything that's going on, man, I really just want to reiterate the point.
00:25:39.000 There are two different realities.
00:25:40.000 We know it.
00:25:41.000 It includes war.
00:25:42.000 It includes law.
00:25:43.000 It includes politics.
00:25:44.000 It includes culture.
00:25:45.000 And this is where the two realities just clash all the time.
00:25:48.000 Well it's sort of fascinating right because we have set up an alternate reality as a culture.
00:25:53.000 We have social media and the online realm which is an alternate reality.
00:25:57.000 Do you guys remember Second Life where you could like live in a virtual realm and now you have meta which is like You know second life part two or whatever where you can live in a virtual realm.
00:26:08.000 So as we are creating this alternative reality that we all engage in every day you know and if you're in media you engage in it constantly like I'm always on Twitter or whatever and then there's real life and when you talk to people in real life they know fully that men and women are different and that biological sex is innate and then when you talk to people online they don't know that.
00:26:30.000 So it's like this battle of which realm of reality is going to, which dimension is going to win the war of what's true.
00:26:39.000 Yeah.
00:26:41.000 And what's interesting is when you have concepts of transgender ideology, which also is backed by, you know, concepts of transhumanism, which is the intentional evolution of humanity with the help of technology, right?
00:26:55.000 So you have this, you have Zoltan Istvan, who's a transhumanist who ran for president a few years ago.
00:27:01.000 You know, he didn't have a chance, obviously, but there he was out there.
00:27:05.000 We are grappling with this.
00:27:08.000 We are grappling with the question of what is real?
00:27:10.000 What is truth?
00:27:10.000 What is reality?
00:27:12.000 And, you know, I wonder what is going to happen.
00:27:15.000 It's fascinating to watch it.
00:27:16.000 And as our culture moves further into the realm of transhumanism, where we, you know, believe that our bodies and minds are two different entities that are At certain times apparently at war with one another, in the realm of transgender ideology anyway, your body and mind are sort of at war.
00:27:33.000 What is going to happen?
00:27:35.000 It's a fascinating situation and also terrifying.
00:27:38.000 Have y'all seen the film Surrogates?
00:27:40.000 No.
00:27:41.000 It's an interesting movie, Bruce Willis.
00:27:44.000 It's a future where people have these like pods they lay in and they plug in and their consciousness is transferred to a surrogate body, a robot version of themselves.
00:27:54.000 And so you see, like, Bruce Willis is looking all, like, perfect.
00:27:57.000 You know, his hair is to the side or whatever.
00:27:59.000 You know, it's, like, combed, and he can run super fast and jump super high because it's a robot body.
00:28:03.000 Then he wakes up old and disheveled and wrinkled in his apartment.
00:28:09.000 No one goes outside anymore because it's dangerous.
00:28:11.000 You gotta send your surrogate out in your stead.
00:28:13.000 In the opening, there's a guy and a woman come out of a club, and they're hooking up.
00:28:18.000 And then someone is able to kill them through their surrogate, so it's, like, a big deal.
00:28:22.000 When the police go to the woman's apartment, they're like, ma'am, are you here?
00:28:26.000 And they find a 400 pound morbidly obese man, you know, sitting like in his chair, whatever, having died or whatever.
00:28:33.000 And so I think that's an interesting concept.
00:28:35.000 They did that.
00:28:36.000 There's something, something with when people are given the choice to project themselves as whatever they want, like they can on the internet as either a cartoon animal or identity less anonymous, they just choose what they would, what they wish they were.
00:28:51.000 Right.
00:28:51.000 And I wonder if one thing that drives identity crisis in people is living too much on the internet as opposed to living in your body.
00:28:59.000 You know what I mean?
00:29:00.000 Yeah.
00:29:01.000 I think we don't live in our bodies as much as we used to for sure.
00:29:04.000 You can even tell with like so many of our trends are about trying to make your body okay.
00:29:09.000 You know, you've been sitting for too long.
00:29:12.000 Maybe you should exercise.
00:29:13.000 You've been ordering in for too long.
00:29:14.000 People have been bringing you food for too long.
00:29:16.000 Eat this protein.
00:29:17.000 So I'm wondering if, you know, you look at the metaverse.
00:29:21.000 I don't know if you've seen the videos or like Mark Zuckerberg.
00:29:24.000 They are terrifying.
00:29:26.000 But they look like me's, like from the Nintendo Switch or whatever.
00:29:30.000 Or like from the Wii, I guess.
00:29:31.000 But they don't look like humans.
00:29:32.000 I'm wondering if people will start identifying as that.
00:29:35.000 And then, because that's what you see as a person, that's who you interact with.
00:29:39.000 I'm wondering if a lot of what we're seeing, because the identity crisis stuff isn't just trans, it's otherkin.
00:29:43.000 It's sort of everybody, yeah.
00:29:45.000 Are you familiar with otherkin, Kelly?
00:29:46.000 That's like the puppies.
00:29:46.000 Yeah, yeah.
00:29:47.000 Yeah, people who think they're like, they think they're dragons.
00:29:49.000 Or owls.
00:29:50.000 Or there's that whole, there's that whole like refuge in Colorado of a bunch of people who think they're cats.
00:29:55.000 And they go there for like cat people orgies and things.
00:29:58.000 I'm not kidding.
00:30:01.000 I think all of this stuff, I think it's a transhumanist culture war.
00:30:05.000 I'm hopeful, I'm hopeful.
00:30:07.000 I think real human connection is actually a really powerful thing and whilst we may trend away from it and people may shy away from it somewhat, I don't think we can escape it.
00:30:19.000 I can't live in a world in which we are heading towards not touching each other.
00:30:26.000 But we're already there.
00:30:27.000 The 20 year olds are having less sex than ever before.
00:30:34.000 A for asexual is part of the LGBTQ alphabet soup, right?
00:30:39.000 It's all in there.
00:30:40.000 Asexual is a sexual identity.
00:30:43.000 There's less sex, less people want to have kids, there's less touching, there's less dating.
00:30:47.000 Do you not think that we will get to a point though where this unpersonal chaos will just reach peak and then we will just revert back to... You know, maybe if there's a massive war.
00:31:01.000 Maybe if there's a reason for all of us to run screaming into the woods.
00:31:06.000 But it has to do with the internet and video games and things like that.
00:31:11.000 If we keep living in digital spaces, then they'll only get worse.
00:31:15.000 Could be that our species is splitting.
00:31:16.000 I was watching like Evolution of Humanity documentary last night.
00:31:19.000 You see the branches of trees and then like the Homo erectus, and then you've got the hominids that come out of that.
00:31:24.000 And like they appeared, you'll have like Neanderthals and Homo sapiens came together, but we were different.
00:31:31.000 So like now we've got another race of like computer zealots that are like agender-less computer hominids.
00:31:37.000 And then we've got everyone else that's still Homo sapiens.
00:31:40.000 So you're saying the next stage in human evolution is bodyless, conscious entities that exist in digital spaces?
00:31:45.000 Maybe, but the problem with that is all through history, when a species splits, they go to war with each other.
00:31:51.000 And one of the branches will end up becoming dominant.
00:31:54.000 Like X-Men.
00:31:55.000 We might see that.
00:31:56.000 And if they have brain neural plants and they can move machines with their minds, that's going to be hard to defeat in a war.
00:32:01.000 Well, yeah, that's interesting too, with Neuralink and stuff.
00:32:05.000 Like Terminator.
00:32:07.000 Well, sort of, but imagine, you know, look, it's not going to be, if you were going to break it down towards who is most likely to get Neuralink, it's going to be city, urban, liberal type.
00:32:18.000 Sure.
00:32:18.000 Not going to be conservatives.
00:32:20.000 And that is a transhumanist thing, the Neuralink.
00:32:22.000 And so what happens then when, you know, the people who live in cities are Neuralinked, so they have direct access to the summation of human knowledge.
00:32:30.000 For better or for worse and then you're going and competing against somebody who doesn't like in certain areas
00:32:36.000 They're gonna end up being better than you at certain tasks And there's also sort of a I was talking to a friend of
00:32:42.000 mine about this who has cerebral palsy, right?
00:32:44.000 and so there's a lot of things that he can't do and I was slamming all this stuff neural link and
00:32:49.000 the idea that there would be these surrogates because we had talked about that like that you could go out as
00:32:54.000 somebody else in your And he was like, that all would be awesome for me, because I can't do shit.
00:33:02.000 And he was very like, if that were happening now, I would go move my random weird arm with my neural link that I can't move now.
00:33:09.000 And it'll be communism.
00:33:10.000 Why?
00:33:10.000 Right.
00:33:10.000 You know why?
00:33:11.000 If you took every single human body and put them in pods and then plugged them into the matrix, Their limitations would be defined mathematically by the code, not by their physical bodies, which is somewhat randomized.
00:33:22.000 So you could be 6'5", 280 pounds of pure muscle in your pod.
00:33:28.000 In the digital world, you are a weak, identical to everybody else.
00:33:31.000 I was thinking that last night.
00:33:31.000 I was at my computer and I blew my nose and threw the tissue away.
00:33:34.000 I'm thinking, all this stuff I just did, I picked up the thing and I blew my nose and I took a sip and threw it.
00:33:39.000 If I was in a computer simulation, I couldn't...
00:33:43.000 be able to do the variety of calculations that I can do in this reality.
00:33:48.000 There's this, like, limitless potential of actions that you can take in base reality.
00:33:53.000 And, like, exactly what you were just saying.
00:33:55.000 In the Metaverse, you're bound by the code.
00:33:57.000 You can't go chop down the thing and take a sip of the... Because it isn't real.
00:34:03.000 It's just the illusion of the system.
00:34:05.000 I mean, depending on how complex the system is.
00:34:07.000 Yeah.
00:34:08.000 But when you're playing in video games online, Your character, like if you're playing like World of Warcraft, for instance, online video game, you can be stronger than another character, but everyone is given an equal starting point and everyone's given a relatively equal ending point, though some items are rare and harder to get and you gotta work harder.
00:34:24.000 For the most part, if all, you know, in the real world, some people are better than others.
00:34:29.000 Extremely limiting.
00:34:30.000 The video games are extremely, extremely limiting.
00:34:33.000 I imagine having children is like the most adventurous thing you could ever do.
00:34:38.000 Like if you want to have a mind adventure, I would imagine that that's interacting and creating a human.
00:34:44.000 And then being in a relationship where you can like...
00:34:47.000 Maybe the easiest way to break down what's happening is not authoritarian versus libertarian.
00:34:56.000 It's not multicultural democracy and constitutional republic.
00:34:59.000 It's literally transhumanist versus...
00:35:02.000 What's the word for someone who's not a transhumanist?
00:35:05.000 A human.
00:35:05.000 Ludites.
00:35:06.000 They'll call them ludites, but that's the negative connotation.
00:35:10.000 Like troglodytes?
00:35:10.000 What's the other word?
00:35:11.000 Humanisms.
00:35:12.000 No, they would call them like base human or something.
00:35:16.000 Cishuman?
00:35:17.000 Are you human plus?
00:35:19.000 You're gonna go to a bank and they're like, and are you human plus or are you base human?
00:35:23.000 Would you like the premium plan?
00:35:23.000 I'm human plus.
00:35:25.000 The premium plan.
00:35:26.000 Plug in your Neuralink and we'll give you the $50 gift card.
00:35:29.000 Like those are like homo cyberneticist.
00:35:31.000 I think that will happen.
00:35:32.000 I think I do stuff will happen Yeah, because we'll all just have little RFID chips in our hands It's gonna get brain hacked and that those people are all gonna be tracked and in them like a hive mind Yeah, I'm gonna like it dude, but they want it won't know they're in it.
00:35:45.000 They want it Chop off their legs and have like special jumpy legs.
00:35:49.000 I have total control.
00:35:50.000 What are you talking about legs and oh Shutting down.
00:35:52.000 Yeah, it'll be nuts.
00:35:53.000 Have you seen Black Mirror?
00:35:54.000 A couple episodes, yeah.
00:35:56.000 There's a really good one about all this sort of crazy just load yourself up or every time you walk past someone they sort of write you.
00:36:05.000 Right, well because they can scan like if you have an RFID chip now it can be scanned and like people can get the information off your chip.
00:36:13.000 And then someone's going to hack it and be like, they'll have a real low rating, but they'll make it look like they have a 4.8 out of 5.
00:36:18.000 It'll be like changing your report card.
00:36:19.000 I'm scandalous.
00:36:20.000 Mom will never know that I failed chemistry now.
00:36:22.000 Think about what's happening.
00:36:23.000 Think about what happened with all the vaccine mandates.
00:36:26.000 Now think about what would happen if everyone's hooked up to a two-way computer connection to your own brain.
00:36:33.000 The government's going to say, for everyone's good, you need to install this antivirus software in your Neuralink.
00:36:39.000 And everyone's going to go, OK.
00:36:41.000 And it's going to literally start sending information into your brain, which is so dangerous.
00:36:45.000 And then it's going to download.
00:36:46.000 You're not even going to know it's downloading.
00:36:48.000 Yeah, it'll be like, man, this person needs to die.
00:36:50.000 Thoughts will be downloaded.
00:36:52.000 Well, but that is what Elon Musk's Neuralink is all about.
00:36:55.000 That's part of it.
00:36:56.000 It's so that you can You know, it's like the... I'm such a dork.
00:37:00.000 It's like the binars in Star Trek, you know, they have like their whole... But it's like, once everyone is linked by these neural links, there'll be a lot more information that people have, but there also will be no individuality, no independence, no liberty, no freedom.
00:37:16.000 Wrong analogy.
00:37:18.000 You don't think it's the Bynars?
00:37:19.000 Oh, well, there's that too.
00:37:19.000 No, it's the Borg.
00:37:21.000 The Bynars, I guess, were like the innocent version.
00:37:24.000 It'll be like the Borg, but they're gonna think... Because they did have their world computer.
00:37:28.000 That's how it starts.
00:37:29.000 They're gonna think they're individual.
00:37:30.000 The Borg at least knew they are part of the collective.
00:37:32.000 These people are gonna think they're individuals, but they're gonna be being controlled.
00:37:37.000 Kind of what's happening now with TV and commercials and stuff.
00:37:40.000 We're being manipulated without realizing it.
00:37:42.000 Well, yeah, there was a recent ad.
00:37:43.000 There was a recent Adidas ad that was all about it was like women in sports, except it was all about trans women in sports.
00:37:52.000 Really?
00:37:53.000 Did it show any females?
00:37:53.000 Yeah.
00:37:54.000 It did show some, but like trans women was like a big part of it.
00:37:58.000 I want to push.
00:37:59.000 We have this interesting segue from this conversation into Ukraine, surprisingly, but you know, I guess in this day and age, We have the story from Business Insider.
00:38:07.000 How a transgender Ukrainian man escaped Russia's invasion.
00:38:12.000 I painted my nails violet and wore mom's shirt to look more girly.
00:38:17.000 We then have the story from TMZ.
00:38:19.000 Transgender woman on fighting two wars in Ukraine fears Russians and transphobic Ukrainians.
00:38:24.000 So this is interesting because in the story about the trans woman in Ukraine, because of the war, they announced if you were 16, was it 16 to 16 year old man, you could not leave the country.
00:38:35.000 Legally in Ukraine, a trans woman is a man.
00:38:38.000 Whatever your political opinion is on it, that's the view of the Ukrainian government.
00:38:42.000 I do think it's funny that the left is just like totally on board with Ukraine.
00:38:47.000 You know, the Russian invasion is a bad thing, but you got like Nazis there and it's like the government is transphobic, but whatever.
00:38:47.000 I get it.
00:38:52.000 So you have the story where this trans woman is like, you know, I'm a woman and I can't leave because of this rule.
00:38:58.000 Then you have this other story about a trans man.
00:39:00.000 So this person is born female, paints their nails, and wears feminine clothing to be able to escape the country.
00:39:07.000 To me, it's interesting.
00:39:08.000 You know, I'm wondering, there have been a lot of men, males, who fled Ukraine as well as women and children.
00:39:14.000 Just like the Titanic.
00:39:15.000 Right, I mean, and I understand if someone's like, I don't want to fight in a war and they want to get out, but this is like your country is being invaded.
00:39:22.000 The interesting thing to me is, I understand these are two unique individuals and we're not talking about a group here, but it is fascinating that two stories we get out of here are about a biological male and female, a trans man and a trans woman, both trying to flee the country and not stay and fight for it.
00:39:36.000 Yeah, I mean, the headline's interesting, isn't it?
00:39:39.000 Fighting two wars.
00:39:41.000 Actually, they're trying to not fight any.
00:39:44.000 Right.
00:39:44.000 Right, exactly.
00:39:46.000 Not the gender war, not any.
00:39:48.000 We talked about Laya Thomas, I think it sounds pronounced.
00:39:52.000 This is the biological male trans woman who's competing against females in college swimming.
00:39:58.000 At UPenn, yeah.
00:39:59.000 Yeah, at UPenn.
00:40:00.000 But there's also a trans man, so someone born female who got top surgery, and competes against Isaac Hennig at Yale.
00:40:07.000 So my issue is, I mean, obviously the Ukraine thing is a situation of war, life and death.
00:40:12.000 So I'm like, hey, anybody who wants to get out and is worried, we should help these people.
00:40:17.000 When it comes to the college swimming thing, my question to the left, which they have no answer for,
00:40:21.000 and they just insult me, is, okay, so you're saying that a trans woman is a woman
00:40:27.000 and then should be allowed to compete in the women's division because the women's division
00:40:31.000 is a social construct division, right?
00:40:33.000 You say yes.
00:40:33.000 Okay.
00:40:34.000 Well, Isaac is a man, identifying as a trans man, therefore they shouldn't be allowed.
00:40:38.000 And they say, but Isaac's not taking testosterone.
00:40:40.000 Right, that's the excuse.
00:40:41.000 So we're talking about biology or society?
00:40:44.000 They don't know.
00:40:45.000 Well, whatever suits their argument.
00:40:47.000 Well, it all flows in one direction.
00:40:49.000 Like, whether it's a trans man or a trans woman, they're both trying to find a way to leave the country.
00:40:54.000 The trans woman says, but I'm a woman, you can't say I'm a man.
00:40:57.000 The trans man says, I'm gonna paint my nails and wear women's clothing to try and get out of the country.
00:41:01.000 What I don't understand is why is the person who is female but trans as a man, why do they have to do anything?
00:41:11.000 Like, if they're a female, why wouldn't they just walk over the border?
00:41:16.000 If you're a female, right, you can have short hair and you can, I know this is crazy, but you can wear a suit, you could wear button-down shirts, you could wear men's shoes if you're a female and it doesn't change anything about being female.
00:41:30.000 I even heard that women can be gay.
00:41:31.000 You can even keep your fingernails super short.
00:41:33.000 Yeah.
00:41:34.000 and unpainted.
00:41:35.000 I don't still are female.
00:41:37.000 No, no. But I think one of the big issues in the culture war is that,
00:41:41.000 you know, whatever our faction is, we assume too much about the other
00:41:45.000 side's beliefs and understandings of things.
00:41:48.000 I think it's fair to say that they don't think that a woman can have
00:41:51.000 short hair or do these things.
00:41:53.000 Well, no, if a young girl says, I want short hair and I want
00:41:58.000 to wear blue jeans.
00:41:59.000 They ask the child if the child is trans.
00:42:01.000 They don't say.
00:42:02.000 Yeah, they don't. They don't say, well, maybe you just like short hair. It's become like, if
00:42:06.000 you act.
00:42:07.000 In fact, it's...
00:42:08.000 This is the strange thing to me about it, maybe I should understand, that if you have a child who says, a little boy says, I like dolls, then all of a sudden you have conversations about whether the child's trans, when the child doesn't have an understanding of sexuality because they're pre-pubescent.
00:42:21.000 Right, and they just like stuff.
00:42:23.000 And you don't even know why they like stuff.
00:42:23.000 Right.
00:42:25.000 Like maybe they like dolls because they like the color or the texture, you know, or being able to tell stories with dolls.
00:42:31.000 Stick it in their trucks, I don't know.
00:42:32.000 Sure, stick it in their trucks, you know, whatever it is.
00:42:35.000 But we don't ask children what it is that they like.
00:42:37.000 Yeah, sometimes the joints of the doll are what make the doll cool.
00:42:40.000 It doesn't have to do with if it has blonde hair or is a girl or a boy.
00:42:43.000 I had one where you press the button on the back and she winked at you.
00:42:47.000 It was Western Barbie.
00:42:49.000 Matt Walsh brought this up after the Dr. Phil thing he did.
00:42:54.000 He said if a little boy or his son came to him and said that he thought he was a girl, he said we'd ask him why.
00:43:00.000 And often you'll hear him say things like, I want to play with dolls.
00:43:03.000 And he was like, but boys can play with dolls too.
00:43:05.000 It's funny because hearing Matt talk about stuff like that, that's like, that used to be progressive.
00:43:10.000 That was the original, that was like much the feminist perspective, right?
00:43:13.000 If you're a woman, you can dress and behave however you want.
00:43:17.000 You can dress the way men stereotypically dress.
00:43:21.000 You can behave the way men stereotypically behave.
00:43:23.000 You can do any of that, right?
00:43:24.000 You can sleep around.
00:43:25.000 You can do whatever.
00:43:27.000 It's fine.
00:43:28.000 And now we've switched all that up.
00:43:31.000 We have taken the gender stereotypes and embedded them further.
00:43:34.000 Yeah, it seems like the modern progressive left's worldview is that there are social behaviors intrinsic to sex.
00:43:43.000 It's so bizarre.
00:43:44.000 Yeah, I'm just confused by it.
00:43:46.000 I don't understand.
00:43:47.000 There was a case discussed on the BBC and a little boy lived with his mom and she had two towels after she had a shower for her hair and her body.
00:43:59.000 And one day he said, I'd like two towels.
00:44:01.000 And she said, you don't need two towels.
00:44:04.000 He said, but I'm a girl.
00:44:06.000 And so she went to bed that night and thought deeply about him being a girl.
00:44:10.000 Not that he just wanted two damn towels.
00:44:14.000 And then he started on his road to transition at like seven.
00:44:18.000 Socially transition.
00:44:20.000 That is a mess up.
00:44:21.000 It's just so weird.
00:44:22.000 My son uses like four towels.
00:44:24.000 I don't know what he uses them for.
00:44:26.000 I come into the bathroom.
00:44:27.000 I'm like, you really needed all these towels?
00:44:29.000 Why did she say he didn't need two towels though?
00:44:32.000 He has hair, right?
00:44:35.000 I have no idea.
00:44:35.000 This is her very brave journey about discovering that her son was really a girl.
00:44:41.000 And so, I think she thought that was a good thing to say.
00:44:44.000 I think the question is, you know, what about this child saying that they were a girl is like confirmation of a trans identity?
00:44:54.000 I mean, obviously... For her.
00:44:56.000 Right.
00:44:57.000 So, like, what makes you think...
00:45:00.000 From saying I want two towels to saying that you're a girl makes the leap to their biology is wrong and they need medication or some kind of surgical treatment, right?
00:45:09.000 I mean, I'm assuming that she went to the doctor though, right?
00:45:12.000 For me, if we assume she hasn't got Something like Munchausen's by proxy.
00:45:20.000 There is a lot of social status for average people to gain by doing this brave and super wonderful mother.
00:45:29.000 And it is women, unfortunately, it's women that go along with this narrative with their kids.
00:45:34.000 It's not so much dads.
00:45:36.000 Well, it's sort of a feminist fascism, you know, where we have taken the ideas of feminism and we now impose them by force.
00:45:46.000 I don't think words, I think it's probably intentional, but words have almost no meaning at this point.
00:45:51.000 That's correct.
00:45:52.000 What does feminism even mean?
00:45:52.000 That was intentional.
00:45:53.000 We were actually, before we went on tonight, Kelly and I were looking at the definition of gender and gender identity on, well, like Wexlaw, I think, at Cornell, and they're the same.
00:46:06.000 They basically have the same definition.
00:46:08.000 Gender and gender identity are all about your perceived self and your innate internal self, which isn't anything.
00:46:18.000 It's just absurd.
00:46:19.000 We've taken and we gaze in so deeply that we think we see something, and it's not.
00:46:25.000 I just try to avoid all of that social argument stuff by just saying sex.
00:46:28.000 Well, that works out.
00:46:29.000 So I'll say male and female instead of men and women, and then I'm just like, there you go, fine, whatever.
00:46:34.000 It still doesn't work with Canadian hate speech laws.
00:46:36.000 Really?
00:46:37.000 But we're in this really bizarre sort of idea that our bodies are not connected to who we are.
00:46:44.000 I mean, I am my body.
00:46:46.000 If I was taller, I'm sure I'd be slightly different.
00:46:50.000 If I was a lot shorter, I mean, I don't know if that's possible, but if I was...
00:46:55.000 If I was load shorter I'd be a completely different person.
00:46:58.000 Of course if I was a man walking around in the world with A testosterone and B being a man and being treated like a man there's a there's a trans um there's not a trans there's a transaction Between me and the society in which I live and we both kind of find out what and who I am It's not just up to me and it's not just up to them and it's bizarre that we're deciding that gender is separate from that your internal sense of self is a social construct is the most stupid idea and it doesn't make any sense and
00:47:31.000 You know, I was just thinking about someone in prison and maybe how because people are adaptable and their sense of what I am like in prison.
00:47:37.000 They're like, what do you what do you even think I am?
00:47:40.000 What are you?
00:47:41.000 Who are you?
00:47:41.000 And then they beat the hell and like, when people are getting like sexually assaulted in prison and like over and over and over and over again by some big guy, and it's a guy and he's like, I'm not gay, but I have to Create a new reality for who I am in this situation.
00:47:57.000 And so they create like a new gender almost to to exist within that without being insane.
00:48:03.000 So I understand that that people that that's happening to people.
00:48:08.000 I think it's honestly if you zoom out I think it's happening because like there's so many people on earth misproportioned in cities and all these phenyl phthalates in the water and and pharmaceuticals like making people androgynous and making people kind of Isn't that like a conspiracy theory?
00:48:24.000 I haven't heard that.
00:48:25.000 I don't know. It just seems logical.
00:48:26.000 Isn't that true, though, that birth control is in public drinking water?
00:48:29.000 Yeah. Pharmaceuticals go into the toilet and the pee when people pee them out
00:48:33.000 after they eat the Prozac and then that gets in the water supply.
00:48:36.000 People are all really, really messed up.
00:48:38.000 And it might just be a process of the human race kind of shedding its skin.
00:48:42.000 Look at that!
00:48:45.000 Yeah, it's a... That's a fact, yep.
00:48:48.000 So we got this story from Insider.
00:48:49.000 Birth control pills could add 10 million doses of hormones to our wastewater every day.
00:48:54.000 Some of that estrogen may wind up in our taps.
00:48:57.000 Yeah, this is a story I heard about a while back.
00:48:59.000 Hormones from birth control pills can travel through showers, toilets, and washing machines to local wastewater facilities.
00:49:05.000 In his book Troubled Water, activist Seth Siegel writes that birth control pills add more than 10 million doses of synthetic estrogen to U.S.
00:49:11.000 wastewater every day.
00:49:12.000 From there, the hormones could get discharged into rivers and lakes that serve as sources of drinking water.
00:49:18.000 Only a tiny portion of the estrogen in wastewater makes its way to U.S.
00:49:20.000 taps, but Siegel still thinks we should remove it.
00:49:24.000 So I think maybe it's a bit exaggerated as if you're like turning the tap water on and there's gonna be birth control in it.
00:49:28.000 It looks like it could be an issue.
00:49:31.000 Also, aren't we having a fertility crisis?
00:49:34.000 What is that all about?
00:49:35.000 Like there's we just aren't having enough kids.
00:49:38.000 Does it mean that people aren't trying enough or that it's people?
00:49:40.000 There's a lot of trying and there's a lot of not having children.
00:49:44.000 Is that because they're late? Too late?
00:49:45.000 What? There's that. There's like being older.
00:49:48.000 Um, and then there's a being older is one of the things, but there's also been issues of fertility.
00:49:55.000 Like, I don't have enough.
00:49:56.000 There's so much junk in the food supply.
00:49:58.000 High fructose corn syrup, aspartame, we have birth control, you have how many oxycodone, how many of these pharmaceuticals that are legal are getting pissed into the water supply.
00:50:07.000 It's kind of crazy.
00:50:07.000 What are your guys' thoughts on birth control?
00:50:10.000 I have lots of thoughts on birth control.
00:50:12.000 You want to hear them?
00:50:12.000 Yes.
00:50:14.000 So I went on birth control when I was 16.
00:50:17.000 My doctor said that I had polycystic ovarian syndrome and that I should go on birth control to regulate my cycle.
00:50:25.000 So I did.
00:50:26.000 I did go on birth control.
00:50:29.000 And then I was on it for a very long time.
00:50:31.000 I was on it until I was 32.
00:50:35.000 33?
00:50:36.000 Something like that.
00:50:37.000 And then I went off it because I wanted to have a child.
00:50:40.000 And I had for that whole period of time I thought I was depressed.
00:50:43.000 I thought I was maladjusted.
00:50:45.000 I thought I was awkward.
00:50:47.000 I thought I was socially weird.
00:50:50.000 I thought all of these things about myself, that I was morose, miserable.
00:50:54.000 And then I went off birth control.
00:50:55.000 And it literally felt like a dam broke in my entire body and in my brain also, where it was like suddenly I
00:51:04.000 could see everything in color.
00:51:06.000 And I just felt like an entirely different person.
00:51:12.000 And I suddenly really was more outgoing.
00:51:14.000 I liked being around people more.
00:51:15.000 I wasn't really depressed.
00:51:17.000 I mean I was still miserable because I'm still me but I wasn't like depressed about everything.
00:51:22.000 It was shocking.
00:51:23.000 It was so shocking that I had to go back on it within a month and I had to like wait a little bit to go off it.
00:51:29.000 Yeah.
00:51:31.000 And then it turned out that I didn't have polycystic ovarian syndrome.
00:51:35.000 I wasn't infertile.
00:51:37.000 There was no reason for me to be on the pill that entire time.
00:51:39.000 And I had suffered from like, for a while I was on this pill where if I went into the sun I would pass out.
00:51:46.000 And I was in L.A.
00:51:48.000 I was like, this is not working.
00:51:51.000 I do not recommend birth control.
00:51:52.000 There's two big issues.
00:51:53.000 One is the feminist view that birth control has empowered women because now they're free to function, you know, without fear of pregnancy, which could potentially hold them back or whatever.
00:52:01.000 But then there's also the fact that our society has mass medicated young women.
00:52:05.000 That's correct.
00:52:05.000 And I'm wondering, have we tracked for the psychological impacts of mass medicating young women?
00:52:11.000 Well, I've gone through, like, I've done a little study of other, you know, essentially upper middle class girls in my age group.
00:52:20.000 All of us were put on birth control when we were about 16.
00:52:23.000 Like, every one of us.
00:52:25.000 And I was like, did you have a reason?
00:52:27.000 Well, my doctor said my periods were weird.
00:52:29.000 And the reason that they say stuff, they give you a reason, is so that your insurance covers it.
00:52:34.000 Right.
00:52:35.000 So my insurance covered it for the entire time.
00:52:37.000 The doctor just wanted you on it?
00:52:39.000 Yeah, the doctors want 16 year old upper middle class girls in the US on birth control so that they don't have teen pregnancies.
00:52:47.000 Huh.
00:52:48.000 I mean, I guess teen pregnancy is a bad thing.
00:52:51.000 But like, you know, that's yes, it's it.
00:52:55.000 Now I sound crazy, but in looking at all of the women I know of that age, this has happened to all of us.
00:53:02.000 Birth control makes it harder to have kids and they're peeing it into the water supply and it's harder for people to have
00:53:08.000 kids Have you heard of the mice utopia
00:53:16.000 a YouTube video.
00:53:17.000 We talk about it all the time.
00:53:20.000 When they give mice a lovely place to live and enough bedding and enough food and enough everything and eventually the mice go a bit crazy and turn on each other and stop having sex.
00:53:32.000 Oh that's like America!
00:53:34.000 You just wonder.
00:53:36.000 We do talk about the utopia experiment quite a bit.
00:53:39.000 I think the guy did it with mice and rats, like he did one and the other.
00:53:43.000 And a finite amount of space, but unlimited food and water, and then the rats, just to see what they do.
00:53:48.000 And they would have what's called behavioral sync, where their rat society would break down and they would start eating each other and killing each other.
00:53:55.000 I was thinking about that because we're effectively running a chicken utopia experiment.
00:53:59.000 And I'm half kidding, but we launched a YouTube show called Chicken City, which is just live-streaming the chickens, where they have a large amount of space, unlimited food and water, and, like, we have no intention of, like, harvesting the chickens.
00:54:11.000 I'm wondering if we'll see something break down, or if chickens will just, you know, not be, like, they're different, you know, different species.
00:54:18.000 I wonder if it's different from, you know, mammals, the birds.
00:54:20.000 Do they have a limited space?
00:54:22.000 They do, yeah.
00:54:24.000 It's big, though.
00:54:25.000 It's a big space.
00:54:26.000 But the rats and the mice had limited space, but it was a decent amount.
00:54:31.000 What was interesting is that in those experiments, they would all cluster in one bunch in one area and not utilize the full space they were given.
00:54:39.000 I just wonder if we lack purpose.
00:54:42.000 You know, I just look at, you know, if my kids ever talk about millionaires.
00:54:47.000 sort of Kardashian-style millionaires and I'm like... Aren't they billionaires?
00:54:50.000 They're billionaires, right?
00:54:51.000 Well, billionaires, millionaires, billionaires, just a lot more than me.
00:54:55.000 But I'd sort of look at them and I'd think, what's the purpose of their day?
00:54:59.000 Like, what are they striving for?
00:55:01.000 And do we as human beings need something to strive for?
00:55:04.000 Because if you've got nothing to aim for, to go for, to move forward for, then don't you just stay still and then just become unhappy?
00:55:12.000 Yes, so I had a friend who became a millionaire when he was like 16 and he said that he had an existential crisis because all of a sudden, it's not just the fact that he was rich and could buy anything he wanted, it was that all of a sudden he was like the lord of everyone, the way people treated him.
00:55:29.000 He no longer had teachers who would tell him he was wrong.
00:55:33.000 All of a sudden it was like, hey, let me get that for you.
00:55:35.000 Oh, you're so smart.
00:55:36.000 Wow, look what you've done.
00:55:38.000 And he said that it happens to all of these guys in tech who become millionaires rather quickly because they write a code, write a program, and then overnight it sells, and now they're worth three million bucks.
00:55:48.000 And they're sitting at this massive bank account thinking, what do I do now?
00:55:52.000 You wrote the code, you wrote the program, you solved the problem, and now you're rich.
00:55:56.000 But they never did this work because they were trying to get money.
00:55:59.000 They were trying to accomplish something.
00:56:01.000 And they become listless, depressed.
00:56:03.000 They sleep all day.
00:56:04.000 He told me that eventually most of them, they'll go like six months to a year and then finally normalize and then their happiness stabilizes and they try and find their next mission or whatever.
00:56:15.000 But I think that, you know, hearing that story and then think about the fact that I think most people in the United States today are living like kings.
00:56:23.000 Maybe why we're dealing with this collapse, this behavioral sink.
00:56:27.000 I definitely think the U.S.
00:56:28.000 is dealing with behavioral sink, like much like the right utopia.
00:56:31.000 I think, you know, I've seen it with like Occupy Wall Street.
00:56:35.000 All of these people protesting, this is, you know, now almost 11 years ago or 10 years ago.
00:56:39.000 When I went to, when I was in Brazil, and many who listen to this show probably heard me tell this story, but forgive me because I haven't told it to Kelly.
00:56:45.000 When I went to Brazil, I was in the favelas, and I met, you know, the favelas are shantytowns.
00:56:51.000 They fall apart in the rain.
00:56:53.000 And one of the, the woman asked me in Portuguese a question, and it was translated, why are the rich people protesting in the United States?
00:57:00.000 And I said, I don't understand, they're not.
00:57:05.000 And then she asked and he was like, oh, she's asking about like Occupy Wall Street.
00:57:10.000 And I was like, oh, those were like college kids, kids with debt, people living in cities.
00:57:13.000 And she laughed, she was like, Americans are all rich.
00:57:17.000 Her question was like, I think it was probably like mistranslated.
00:57:19.000 She wasn't saying, why are specifically the American rich people protesting?
00:57:23.000 She was saying something like, why would Americans who are rich protest about this stuff?
00:57:28.000 And it's really interesting because I'm like, hey, you're preaching to the choir, man.
00:57:31.000 I'm like, if you got air conditioning in a refrigerator, You're living better than Rockefeller did a hundred years ago, so we're all basically taken care of.
00:57:40.000 What do we do with our lives?
00:57:42.000 Create problems?
00:57:43.000 You know, complain about stuff?
00:57:44.000 I sometimes think you get to the top of Maslow's hierarchy of needs and then it inverts.
00:57:49.000 Yeah.
00:57:49.000 And then we're just heading for...
00:57:52.000 I'm just doomed.
00:57:52.000 So Kim Kardashian came under a lot of fire that I didn't think she deserved because recently she said something along the lines of, you need to work hard.
00:57:59.000 And everyone's like, oh, you're rich.
00:58:01.000 You don't know what it's like.
00:58:01.000 But she keeps herself busy.
00:58:03.000 Didn't she go to law school?
00:58:04.000 Like, she didn't just linger around.
00:58:05.000 She didn't go to law school, but she has been reading law.
00:58:07.000 Doing this other different way to get a law degree.
00:58:10.000 She has a company, right?
00:58:11.000 And she's doing all this different stuff.
00:58:12.000 I completely agree.
00:58:13.000 Like, you should be staying busy no matter how much money you make.
00:58:16.000 And especially if you get richer.
00:58:18.000 It's like the Matrix, you know?
00:58:20.000 In the first Matrix, Agent Smith tells Morpheus, he's like, the first world we designed was perfect, but the human mind rejected it because it craves conflict and struggle.
00:58:29.000 It's like, yeah.
00:58:31.000 Without it, people become almost deranged.
00:58:35.000 Well, also we have a lack of, so I'm what you call a gold star atheist.
00:58:39.000 I've never believed in God.
00:58:40.000 Um, but I think the organized religion and the mutual purpose of people and collective purpose of heading towards an afterlife of actually trying to do good, uh, for something that you can never touch.
00:58:55.000 I think that also has left us wanting.
00:58:59.000 And I think that where we've looked is within our narcissistic little bodies.
00:59:04.000 Yeah, I think that's right.
00:59:05.000 We have turned in and we worship the self where we used to worship God and now we do.
00:59:10.000 We do worship the self and we have removed the soul.
00:59:13.000 We've extricated the soul and replaced it with gender.
00:59:17.000 Ah, it's so beautiful.
00:59:19.000 I do think it's interesting that the culture war has made a lot of people, like, theist or whatever.
00:59:24.000 I've got a theology degree, so I have a vested interest in promoting... You're an atheist with a theology degree?
00:59:30.000 Yeah.
00:59:31.000 I love this.
00:59:32.000 That sounds right.
00:59:33.000 I want to hear everything more about this.
00:59:34.000 Are you going to be an atheologist?
00:59:35.000 Yeah, tell me about it.
00:59:35.000 Atheologist.
00:59:36.000 That's wonderful.
00:59:38.000 No, I think that makes sense.
00:59:40.000 If you're going to be an atheist, know what you're talking about.
00:59:42.000 Well I thought I'd find some, so for a start I thought University, because I'm an idiot, was going to be like Kids from Fame, which is probably way too old a reference for any of you.
00:59:53.000 I liked it.
00:59:54.000 I liked the show.
00:59:55.000 So you'd just sit in an individual chair and you'd all sort of discuss these really meaty topics.
00:59:59.000 It wasn't quite like that, but I just thought there may be universal truths.
01:00:05.000 And if I studied theology, I may find universal truths and then I may examine my own belief system, but that didn't actually happen.
01:00:12.000 However, I do think the universal truth of human beings absolutely needing something above and beyond themselves is something that now we're finding out to our peril.
01:00:23.000 Yeah.
01:00:23.000 Do you think above and beyond like a partner?
01:00:26.000 I think anything that makes you put yourself a little bit last.
01:00:32.000 Whether that be family, community.
01:00:34.000 Whilst we've lost our organised religions, in the UK probably more than in the US, and it's no mistake that in poor countries they still are very religious.
01:00:45.000 So whilst we've lost our religions, we've also lost our sort of touch your parents because they're just next door kind of culture.
01:00:52.000 We don't have communities.
01:00:54.000 We've all moved away from each other.
01:00:55.000 Many people live tens of miles, if not hundreds or thousands of miles away from their parents.
01:01:01.000 And I just think these real things that you can reach out and touch are things that we desperately need.
01:01:07.000 Doesn't it feel almost like it's intentional?
01:01:10.000 I mean, think about it.
01:01:11.000 The idea that you turn 18, move out, move away from your parents, separate from your family, go off to college.
01:01:16.000 You go to college, what happens?
01:01:17.000 You get a bunch of strangers indoctrinating you in these institutionalized learning facilities.
01:01:21.000 It just seems like a lot of things that have happened over the past 60-70 years have effectively orchestrated the downfall of the family and our society.
01:01:28.000 I'm not saying it is intentional.
01:01:30.000 I'm saying it's just like you've got people who heavily advocate for separating yourself from your community, from your family.
01:01:36.000 I just think that's interesting.
01:01:38.000 When I was looking at college and stuff, my mom wanted me to go to college very far away.
01:01:42.000 We lived in Philadelphia.
01:01:43.000 I had only lived with my mom for two years.
01:01:45.000 I didn't know her that well.
01:01:47.000 I didn't really grow up with her.
01:01:49.000 And she was like, you should go to California.
01:01:51.000 You should go somewhere far away for college.
01:01:53.000 And I was like, I'll go to New York.
01:01:56.000 Like, you know, but I'm not – how far do you really want me to go?
01:01:59.000 I barely know you.
01:02:01.000 I don't have a home anywhere.
01:02:02.000 I was totally rootless and so I landed in New York and it's still a situation where I feel like I have no roots anywhere.
01:02:11.000 When I look around, you guys know I've had this struggle of should I stay?
01:02:14.000 Should I go to New York?
01:02:15.000 And it's like, I don't know where I'd go.
01:02:17.000 If there was a place where I could go home, if it was like, oh, I could just go back home, I would do that.
01:02:23.000 But I don't have, I don't have any like, Place that is the home that I know other than New York City.
01:02:30.000 It's weird.
01:02:30.000 I had that growing up We would go my dad's mom my grandma.
01:02:34.000 We lived like eight blocks away So we would go there every four days a week three days a week two days a week, whatever And then I moved in college.
01:02:42.000 I left the state and I now I haven't seen my parents I see him once every two years or something.
01:02:46.000 It doesn't feel right.
01:02:48.000 I was just talking to my mom yesterday about that just It's only a six hour drive, but it doesn't have that feeling of we're going to pop over to my grandma's house on the weekend.
01:02:56.000 We can sort of bring up the don't say gay lie, the hoax from the Democrats.
01:03:03.000 The bill in Florida's true intent was to make sure parents are informed about what's happening with their kids.
01:03:07.000 The left lied and claimed it was don't say gay.
01:03:10.000 I know we've mentioned it several times, but I think this is relevant to what we're talking about.
01:03:14.000 If they're using these manipulations to try and stop transparency, One of the things in the bill is that teachers can't discourage children from talking to their parents.
01:03:24.000 That's correct.
01:03:25.000 Because one of the things these teachers are doing is telling the kids not to talk to their parents.
01:03:30.000 It just seems like there's a lot of external pressures on people to sever themselves from community, family, religion, etc.
01:03:37.000 Ultimately, you add in the transhumanist factor or the neural link and the metaverse, and what you end up with is, it feels like in order for there to be a metaverse, you would need these things beforehand.
01:03:49.000 Yeah.
01:03:50.000 In order to get your hands on kids, you need to break up the family, and the strongest connection Pardon me for saying is mothers and children and surrogacy is a massive thing that totally separates the idea that mothers carry children and have children and raise and nurture infants and so all of it is there's not much that we're doing that actually reinforces the family
01:04:17.000 I know the family in America's got the weird connotations of family traditional like homophobic if you mention family values all of a sudden you're saying something anti-gay but it's it's just really interesting if I was a predator if I was a nasty predator predatory pedophile I would absolutely love the segregation of of children from families and mothers from children and disempowering
01:04:43.000 mothers and there's no greater way to disempower mothers than
01:04:46.000 actually rob women of all of their rights and power and vocabulary. Of all of their rights as a
01:04:51.000 mother, yeah, to even call yourself a mother.
01:04:53.000 Yeah. It's shockingly horrifying to see how this is going on and then you have school districts,
01:04:59.000 like in Florida there's a couple of cases. I was talking to a woman, January Littlejohn,
01:05:05.000 the other day who is suing her school district because they started their her daughter on the
01:05:11.000 road to gender transition and didn't tell the family. So another family in Florida
01:05:16.000 where they didn't know that their child was exploring gender identity at school
01:05:21.000 until the child tried to kill herself in the bathroom at the school.
01:05:24.000 And then it turned out that they were keeping, they were having like secret gender identity meetings.
01:05:28.000 And the idea...
01:05:28.000 That was Florida, right?
01:05:29.000 That was Florida.
01:05:30.000 Which precipitated the parental rights bill.
01:05:32.000 Right. Where they clearly need it.
01:05:35.000 You know, so you have a situation where educators and administrators think that it's their job to help children keep secrets from their parents because all parents are going to be abusers.
01:05:45.000 And they even said in that one case in Florida, well, the family is Catholic, so they're automatically going to be abusive and non-understanding.
01:05:52.000 And the father was like, what our religion teaches us to love our children.
01:05:57.000 I kind of just feel like, you know, whether it's intentional or not, over the past several decades, there's been a major push for the precursor of transhumanism.
01:06:06.000 I think it's for sure intentional.
01:06:08.000 I find that if we're divided into subsects of classes in this species that we have, we have the elite and the plebeians, which is everyone else.
01:06:16.000 And it's really a class of elite, whatever you want to call them, where they, they are family tight.
01:06:21.000 They are knit units where they like the children run the business that the dad ran.
01:06:25.000 And they're always in contact and they're flying on their jets to see each other and their, their kids know their parents.
01:06:30.000 And then you've got everybody else, man.
01:06:31.000 And they're just letting the wild animals graze right now.
01:06:34.000 I just kind of realized something.
01:06:36.000 I used to make the joke that the future is going to be everybody with shaved heads wearing jumpsuits or giant cones over their bodies so that no one can tell.
01:06:45.000 Like Kurt Vonnegut.
01:06:45.000 Harrison Bergeron, is that what it's called?
01:06:47.000 Harrison Bergeron.
01:06:52.000 And then I just realized why that's wrong.
01:06:56.000 Because people are going to plug themselves into the neural-linked metaverse, where you are just a gray blob.
01:07:02.000 And everyone will then just be the same generic avatar.
01:07:06.000 I don't think they will be the same avatar.
01:07:08.000 I think you get to pick your avatar.
01:07:09.000 No, no, no.
01:07:09.000 To start.
01:07:10.000 Oh, to start, yeah.
01:07:10.000 To start, everyone's going to be the same.
01:07:11.000 For sure.
01:07:12.000 So it'll be the blank slate ideology.
01:07:13.000 And then you have to grind for your outfits and your stuff.
01:07:16.000 Here's the interesting thing about it, though.
01:07:18.000 If you take every single human being and erase their minds, or if you do this, if you take one million babies and you put them in the metaverse where they all start off as genderless, you know, jumpsuit wearing little humans and they grow and develop and then, you know, around the time that they're 10 or whatever, it's like, now choose your gender and they can just pick.
01:07:38.000 I'll tell you this, you would find a massive correlation between biological sex and internal digital world gender.
01:07:46.000 So if you take a kid and raise them in the metaverse, I would be willing to bet there's like a 98% chance that kid would be like, I'm a boy or I'm a girl.
01:07:55.000 They would decide it, or they would be it.
01:07:57.000 What I'm saying is, if you ask, if you take a child, a baby, and put them in the metaverse, where they never experience the real world, and they have no gender, then at 12 years old, they go to school, you ask them, which gender would you choose?
01:08:11.000 They would likely choose their biological sex.
01:08:12.000 The one they actually are.
01:08:13.000 Right.
01:08:14.000 Yeah.
01:08:14.000 So even in the metaverse... They'd also really need to stretch out.
01:08:17.000 They'd be like, this feels uncomfortable.
01:08:19.000 Well, their brain is neural-linked.
01:08:20.000 They wouldn't know that they're trapped in a pod.
01:08:22.000 So they wouldn't even know that they have a body?
01:08:24.000 No.
01:08:25.000 And so, I mean, they probably would.
01:08:27.000 I think if we enter this transhumanist reality where everyone is a blank slate and everyone's born this way, you're going to have a million babies, they're going to grow up, and then you're going to see a 98% correlation with biological sex of the physical world body and the chosen gender in the metaverse.
01:08:43.000 Is it?
01:08:43.000 Oh, go ahead.
01:08:44.000 Well, I was just going to say, look, because I'm far too hopeful to think this is the future for human beings.
01:08:51.000 But also, even if you're right, there's only going to be a certain number of people that can afford to join the, you don't think, the metaverse?
01:09:00.000 Everybody's got a cell phone.
01:09:02.000 It's only a matter of time.
01:09:03.000 It'll start with the rich people, but then give it 10 years and it's going to be a $20 metaverse pass.
01:09:07.000 And what about the people that are religious and are family connected in countries like India?
01:09:12.000 See, I actually, I'm working on a TV show.
01:09:16.000 Yeah, so I can't say too much, but it basically explores the idea that there are a lot of people who will not take the Neuralink and a lot of people who want it.
01:09:23.000 And what Ian mentioned is there's kind of divergence happening within human evolution right now where you're going to have, what you said, homo cyberneticist or whatever?
01:09:30.000 Yeah, something like that.
01:09:32.000 Homo cybernetic versus homo sapien.
01:09:34.000 And you're going to have a lot of people who are like, this is the real world.
01:09:37.000 We love our family.
01:09:37.000 We believe in God.
01:09:39.000 It's interesting because we're now facing the real prospect of a divergence between the human species by choice almost, by ideology.
01:09:47.000 Did you read E.M.
01:09:48.000 Forrester's The Machine Stops?
01:09:51.000 So basically that's what happens in that it's like a little novella and I think he wrote it in like 1914 or something ridiculous like that and basically there's people in pods and All of their information comes to them through this view
01:10:04.000 screen and there's a machine that they can ask to bring them food and whatever it is that
01:10:08.000 they need.
01:10:09.000 But this one guy reaches out to his mom and the way that he has a mother is that the machine
01:10:13.000 set her up with this guy and they had a child and then the child was taken to like a nursery
01:10:18.000 pod where it was raised.
01:10:20.000 But anyway he reaches out to his mom and he's like, I would really like to breathe some
01:10:23.000 They live underground in this thing.
01:10:25.000 Oh, yeah.
01:10:26.000 I saw a movie that was basically this.
01:10:28.000 Yeah.
01:10:29.000 But it's interesting because in the book there is this one guy who's like, no, I'm not doing this.
01:10:35.000 He was raised in that environment and he comes to it on his own that he doesn't want to live like this.
01:10:43.000 And he eventually makes it to the surface of the earth where he dies from the poison air.
01:10:50.000 He tries.
01:10:52.000 I mean, it is kind of a happy ending because he's like, I made it.
01:10:56.000 I see the sun.
01:10:57.000 I see, you know.
01:10:59.000 So for everybody listening, maybe you can, you guys, the audience is always really good at helping me out with this.
01:11:03.000 There's a show, it might be Electric Dream, was it Electric Dreams?
01:11:06.000 Is that what the show was called?
01:11:08.000 But I watch all these different sci-fi anthology shows.
01:11:10.000 It's a kid who lives in this, you know, pod where he plays video games all day and he interacts with his mom over text chat.
01:11:17.000 And they just play platform video games and food is automatic.
01:11:19.000 And then one day his pod breaks.
01:11:21.000 He has no choice but to go outside where he thinks the air is toxic, but it's not.
01:11:25.000 And then he goes to his mom and he knocks on the door and she's freaking out like, what is going on?
01:11:29.000 Why is there a person here?
01:11:30.000 It sounds very similar to what you were describing, but it's, you know.
01:11:33.000 Yeah, I mean, it sounds similar.
01:11:35.000 I think it's a similar theme in literature.
01:11:38.000 I wonder if you're gonna have, like, humans on Mars that are neural-linked, humans on Mars that aren't, humans on Earth that are neural-linked, humans on Earth that aren't, and you'll have, like, four different species, and then they'll all go to war and one of them will become the predominant species.
01:11:52.000 Would you do it?
01:11:52.000 Would you Neuralink Ian?
01:11:54.000 Yeah.
01:11:54.000 You would do it?
01:11:54.000 Yeah.
01:11:55.000 Some people are saying it was electric dreams.
01:11:57.000 I've been clearing my mind.
01:11:58.000 I was practicing meditation where you have no thought for like, ow, I can have like no thought for an hour.
01:12:03.000 And the metaverse can be real important because they're going to be trying to read your thoughts.
01:12:07.000 So you got to like, the end of Ghostbusters were like, don't think of anything.
01:12:09.000 And he thinks of the marshmallow man.
01:12:11.000 Right.
01:12:11.000 He sure does.
01:12:11.000 Don't think of anything.
01:12:13.000 You need a clear thought or they're going to be controlling them.
01:12:15.000 So do you think then in this happy future that we're all looking at, that those in maybe authoritarian religious countries, will they be less likely to hook up?
01:12:31.000 I don't know about that.
01:12:32.000 It's a great way to control the population.
01:12:34.000 Yeah.
01:12:35.000 So they might just say, we'll create our own isolated introverse where everyone can, you know, it depends on whether you think the people who run, do you think the people who lead Iran are actually religious or they just want power and control?
01:12:48.000 Well, I think they're both.
01:12:50.000 Because then if it's just about power and control, they'll say whatever they have to and absolutely would adopt a metaverse like system.
01:12:55.000 If they're actually religious, they probably would resist.
01:12:59.000 Depends on how religious or how they interpret their religion.
01:13:01.000 Oh, yeah, there'll be religions in the metaverse and stuff where it's like, it becomes a religion.
01:13:06.000 You know, the funniest thing is, you know, it'd be hilarious if we're actually in it right now.
01:13:13.000 What I think will happen is some people will start, they'll start metaversing government, military, and then they'll see it's so powerful to be able to control the machines with your thoughts that even the most religious zealous will start doing it because it's either that or die.
01:13:26.000 Like, don't fall behind on the technology.
01:13:28.000 It's a weapon.
01:13:29.000 It can be used as a weapon for sure.
01:13:31.000 If we were in it right now, I don't think my children would be so rude.
01:13:37.000 You might not know, you know.
01:13:40.000 Maybe we're the remnants of a post-apocalyptic civilization that destroyed the planet and purposefully chose to put ourselves in a matrix so that we can live... Oh, that's such a road to hell.
01:13:52.000 That whole thought process is, yeah, that's a spiral into a void.
01:13:58.000 I don't think we are.
01:13:59.000 Just only because I have no evidence.
01:14:01.000 I don't think we're not.
01:14:02.000 I just don't think we are.
01:14:03.000 No, I agree with that.
01:14:04.000 But I do think it really does feel like that's the direction we're going in.
01:14:08.000 You've got people who jump from one cause to another.
01:14:11.000 You see what Elon Musk tweeted?
01:14:13.000 I support current thing.
01:14:14.000 It's the NPC meme holding Ukrainian flag with all the other flags around it.
01:14:18.000 And I'm like, that's a great point.
01:14:21.000 I'm wondering what it is that has created this large group of millions of people who are mindless drones.
01:14:29.000 Makes me wonder.
01:14:30.000 What if?
01:14:31.000 Well, I'll put it this way.
01:14:32.000 I think those people are absolutely going to Neuralink and go into the metaverse and just live and march in lockstep.
01:14:38.000 I also wonder if it's true that we are living in some kind of simulation.
01:14:42.000 Maybe we're the people who are actually in the pods and they actually are NPCs, you know.
01:14:47.000 Oh, the whole NPC thing?
01:14:48.000 I watched that show Free Guy the other day, that movie, with my son.
01:14:52.000 He was like, we should watch this.
01:14:54.000 Because I was telling him that I thought the whole NPC concept was really wild.
01:15:02.000 And I was like, what if there's NPCs in real life?
01:15:04.000 And he was like, yeah, I've been thinking about that.
01:15:06.000 We should watch this movie.
01:15:08.000 And I'm like, you're 11.
01:15:09.000 You came up with this already.
01:15:12.000 Yeah.
01:15:13.000 I think people can like go into NPC mode and then snap back out of it and all of a sudden they have sentience again.
01:15:18.000 They're like, oh my gosh, what have I done?
01:15:19.000 Sometimes I'll even wake up and be like, wow, what was I doing yesterday?
01:15:23.000 I was in like a weird fog yesterday and today.
01:15:26.000 I don't know.
01:15:26.000 I had this weird thing during COVID where like it took me a little while to realize that this was going on.
01:15:32.000 But, you know, we were, like, locked down and you couldn't go anywhere and everything was closed.
01:15:37.000 And I started to, like, just not want to move.
01:15:40.000 I just didn't want to move at all.
01:15:41.000 And then I realized, like, oh, you have this weird idea that if you just stop moving, this whole thing will be over sooner.
01:15:48.000 Oh, we have a correction.
01:15:49.000 Kyle Billing says, the movie I was referring to was 2149 The Aftermath.
01:15:53.000 And I remember, no, that's... Oh, I'm going to write that down.
01:15:55.000 Yeah.
01:15:56.000 It sounds basically like what you talked about.
01:15:57.000 The air was poisonous and he was in a pod or whatever.
01:16:00.000 2149, The Aftermath?
01:16:02.000 Yeah.
01:16:02.000 You know what movie's also cool?
01:16:03.000 Totally, totally irrelevant.
01:16:05.000 It's Time Trap.
01:16:06.000 I don't know that.
01:16:07.000 That movie's great.
01:16:08.000 Cool name.
01:16:08.000 Yeah.
01:16:09.000 You think people are in such a state of panic right now that they're just kind of like head down, wait for this all to end, wait for the whole war in Iraq to end, wait for the COVID to end, wait for all the pain, all the things I'm afraid of, yeah, wait for the alien invasion that hasn't been false flagged on us yet to end.
01:16:24.000 Well, we really want things to end.
01:16:27.000 Like as a culture it seems like I don't really some people know I don't want things to end either But like I feel like our culture is really gearing up for just being like and that's it.
01:16:35.000 We burned ourselves out.
01:16:37.000 That's it enough gravity gravity Was it I think Seamus came up with the joke we're talking about what the future would be like and he was like wouldn't it be funny if It's like 200 years in the future and everything's just the same and some guy like gets in a time machine and goes to the future and he comes out and everything was normal like it was when he left and And he's like, he asked someone what year it was and they're like, oh, it's 2222.
01:16:57.000 And he's like, but everything's the same.
01:16:58.000 And they're like, that was it.
01:17:00.000 Like, that was, that was all our ideas.
01:17:02.000 We ran out.
01:17:02.000 That was it.
01:17:04.000 Nothing else after that.
01:17:05.000 We kind of just, you know, just there's, there's a bunch of more McDonald's, but you know, other than that, nothing real beyond the kiosk.
01:17:11.000 Right.
01:17:11.000 It's like a Mike Judge movie.
01:17:14.000 For sure.
01:17:15.000 They've talked about the end of the world for the millennia, since the beginning of humanity.
01:17:19.000 Someone's out there like, it's all coming to an end.
01:17:20.000 This is it.
01:17:21.000 We're constantly obsessed with the end.
01:17:23.000 There's this play.
01:17:24.000 I think it's called American Dream.
01:17:27.000 Maybe it's not, but it's by this playwright, Len Jenkin, who's this New York playwright.
01:17:32.000 And at the end of this sort of wild romp, all of these characters just start saying, I don't care about philosophy.
01:17:40.000 Just tell me how it ends.
01:17:41.000 I don't care about philosophy.
01:17:43.000 I gotta be honest, I'm at the point where I'm like, I feel like we've reached a certain number of seasons of Humanity to where they're doing reruns, you know.
01:17:53.000 Kinda sucks.
01:17:54.000 Yeah, it's just a repeat and then it's just like, okay.
01:17:58.000 It's like, I went and saw The Batman this past weekend.
01:18:01.000 They call it THE Batman.
01:18:03.000 That's like what the movie is called, THE Batman.
01:18:05.000 But The Batman is a common thing.
01:18:07.000 That phrase has been around for a long time.
01:18:11.000 There's a cartoon called The Batman.
01:18:13.000 There's comics of The Batman.
01:18:15.000 If I could have any superpowers it would be Batman's because he's just rich.
01:18:20.000 Actually, his superpower is defined as peak human because he's trained on the mountaintops and he's a master of ninjutsu and he's also rich.
01:18:27.000 I would just really go with the, once we get the rich part, I'd be okay.
01:18:31.000 I digress.
01:18:32.000 Sorry.
01:18:33.000 That was a movie where I was, you know, it starts off like pretty good and then slowly gets worse, but never ends.
01:18:40.000 It just doesn't stop.
01:18:41.000 It's like, we've caught the bad guy.
01:18:42.000 And I'm like, well, it's finally over.
01:18:43.000 And there's an act four.
01:18:44.000 And I'm like, okay.
01:18:46.000 And then they introduced a whole bunch of random plot elements.
01:18:48.000 And I'm like, okay, at this point, and I feel like that was a great, that movie was a great way to understand life in the past decade.
01:18:56.000 Oh, you think it's over and it just keeps going.
01:18:59.000 Yeah.
01:18:59.000 Yeah.
01:19:00.000 But more and more absurd.
01:19:02.000 Yeah.
01:19:02.000 Like, you know, we went from we've got a pandemic with then we got a pandemic started.
01:19:08.000 Let's recount the past couple of years.
01:19:08.000 Get this.
01:19:10.000 A pandemic starts.
01:19:12.000 All right.
01:19:13.000 Everyone's like, we're shutting down.
01:19:15.000 The president, who's Donald Trump, by the way, gets on TV and says, we're going to be banning travel with Europe.
01:19:21.000 And I'm sitting there with my friends and we're like, whoa, it's getting serious.
01:19:24.000 And then two months later, the biggest riots we've seen in five decades.
01:19:28.000 Billions of dollars in damage, 30 plus dead.
01:19:30.000 And I'm like, is it a pandemic happening?
01:19:33.000 And then we're like, whoa, whoa, whoa, back to the pandemic.
01:19:35.000 And then I'm like, okay, that didn't end.
01:19:37.000 Now, intermittent and all of that is like escalation of civil war, people being killed in the streets.
01:19:43.000 And it's like, man, the more we see this stuff, the more it feels like the country is going to collapse.
01:19:46.000 And then all of a sudden, World War III starts.
01:19:48.000 Right.
01:19:49.000 And you have the new president.
01:19:50.000 Just go ahead.
01:19:51.000 I'm sorry.
01:19:51.000 someone you know.
01:19:52.000 And you have the new president, just go ahead, I'm sorry.
01:19:54.000 Oh, I know, the president's Joe Biden now.
01:19:57.000 It's like, we thought it was funny that Donald Trump was the president because he's like
01:20:00.000 a TV reality star, and now we have Joe Biden who is essentially a Mr. Magoo.
01:20:07.000 Yeah, he is Mr. Magoo.
01:20:09.000 He also, he sits up there, he hardly says, he like, looks at you with his little slinty eyes, and then he whispers, you know, he's like, it's not gonna be World War III, we're not sending troops into Ukraine.
01:20:20.000 Have you guys seen the South Park episode where it turns out Earth is a reality show, and the aliens are just like, we're done with the show, so they're gonna blow the Earth up.
01:20:29.000 It's like, you know, 3,000 seasons, and we're just done.
01:20:32.000 That's a fun thing in sci-fi where the earth is actually just totally irrelevant and they're going to pave it over for a highway like in Hitchhikers and stuff.
01:20:41.000 What do you think is going to be the next thing then when normal people get peaked into understanding that they're being massively lied to?
01:20:50.000 I don't know if that'll happen.
01:20:54.000 See, because of what I do and I defend women's rights, then I'm used to the media peddling what I call lies about really important... What you call?
01:21:05.000 What are?
01:21:06.000 What are lies.
01:21:07.000 Factually lies.
01:21:09.000 And I'm kind of used to that.
01:21:10.000 I'm used to our politicians going along with telling absolute silly lies about biological sex and what words mean.
01:21:19.000 But then we had the pandemic in which that sort of really propelled more lies and narratives and really obvious, overt, kind of dishonest narratives.
01:21:30.000 And now we've got the war in Ukraine, which because of all these, these lies, I think people are finding it really difficult to believe anything that's being told by the mainstream media.
01:21:43.000 And so where, where the hell next?
01:21:44.000 Well, on Thursday, I don't know if you saw this, the White House invited 30 TikTok stars to give them the propagandist lines about the war in Ukraine.
01:21:56.000 Is that like when Biden got Cardi B?
01:21:59.000 Oh my goodness.
01:22:00.000 Yeah.
01:22:01.000 So they, you know, what, what could be next?
01:22:04.000 What could be next?
01:22:05.000 I think actually we have a lot of stuff going on with, uh, voting rights.
01:22:10.000 I wonder if that could be part of it.
01:22:11.000 Like the, there's like, Oh, I don't know.
01:22:14.000 I'm going to get into all that.
01:22:15.000 That's a mess though.
01:22:16.000 I don't think that's big enough.
01:22:17.000 Like, you know, COVID was huge and engulfed everyone.
01:22:21.000 Black Lives Matter was huge and engulfed everyone.
01:22:23.000 Now World War III or whatever you want to call it.
01:22:25.000 That'll engulf everyone.
01:22:26.000 Well, that will be the third thing, right?
01:22:28.000 That was my first thought was aliens, but I think it's too obvious now.
01:22:30.000 You think it's too obvious?
01:22:32.000 That's just not going to be the plot point.
01:22:33.000 Because we don't talk in class. Yeah Yeah, but not
01:22:39.000 it feels like You know, we live in a reality where someone is trying to
01:22:44.000 keep people entertained, you know And it's just like okay regular human human civilization
01:22:50.000 wasn't working Let's ramp things up.
01:22:51.000 The elite are trying to keep the plebs entertained.
01:22:53.000 Or, or it's, you know, in 2016, the Large Hadron Collider fired up for the first time.
01:22:58.000 Is that what happened right before Trump got elected?
01:22:59.000 That was wild.
01:23:01.000 Now we're just in this crazy multiverse of madness.
01:23:04.000 Dr. Strange is, you know... That's sort of an interesting... A clone?
01:23:09.000 Oh my goodness.
01:23:10.000 Like Dolly the Sheep in the UK, that didn't go well.
01:23:13.000 There's like 10 different Bidens, there's all just different clones of them.
01:23:17.000 Probably this war thing is going to keep ramping up, right?
01:23:20.000 What is?
01:23:21.000 Probably the war is going to keep ramping up.
01:23:23.000 The Ukraine thing?
01:23:24.000 I think we are headed towards hot war between NATO and Russia, for sure.
01:23:29.000 Yeah, I think that's what we're looking at.
01:23:32.000 Well, so let me give you guys a direct reference.
01:23:35.000 I don't know if I actually, I'm pretty sure I pulled it up.
01:23:38.000 Maybe we can send the TikToks.
01:23:39.000 Here we go.
01:23:40.000 So this is just a general update from Daily Mail.
01:23:42.000 It's not going to be World War III.
01:23:44.000 This is all a bluff.
01:23:45.000 Democrats and Republicans ramp up demands to Biden to send Polish MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine because Putin is escalating every day.
01:23:52.000 We also have Estonia, the first NATO country formally through parliament calling for a no-fly zone over Ukraine.
01:23:59.000 Every day, we're inching closer and closer to some reason the US or NATO has to be involved in this.
01:24:05.000 And now we're getting these stories.
01:24:06.000 On March 11th, ABC News reported that Russia was moving in with biochem suits.
01:24:12.000 Why would they say that?
01:24:13.000 Because they don't just come out outright and say, Russia fired a biological weapon.
01:24:17.000 They say, remember last week when we saw the Russians wearing those bio suits?
01:24:21.000 This is why!
01:24:22.000 And now already NATO, some US official has said it's effectively, you know, a red line, you know, it's crossing the line.
01:24:29.000 It's a red line for NATO if Vladimir Putin uses chemical weapons.
01:24:32.000 Well, Biden said that last week.
01:24:33.000 He said he was asked by reporters when he gave his little speech on Friday.
01:24:37.000 I think it was Friday.
01:24:39.000 About what if Putin uses biochemical weapons and Biden said there would be a severe price
01:24:44.000 but you also have the White House saying that a biochemical weapons attack from Russia would be a false
01:24:51.000 flag They also talked about that already. Yeah, they're talking
01:24:55.000 about all kinds of stuff It's very hard to... I mean, I cover the news every day.
01:25:01.000 We don't cover a lot of, like, what's going on on the ground in Ukraine at Post Millennial.
01:25:07.000 We're not foreign policy experts, so we don't cover that.
01:25:11.000 We cover what's going on in the U.S.
01:25:13.000 about it.
01:25:13.000 We cover what's going on in Canada about it.
01:25:15.000 But, like, we're reading all of this stuff every day.
01:25:17.000 We're trying to figure out what's going on.
01:25:18.000 We're trying to understand it.
01:25:20.000 And it gets more and more confusing all the time.
01:25:23.000 It's like it's hard to know what's going on.
01:25:25.000 We don't speak the language.
01:25:26.000 It's very clear that you have two sides there that are very well-versed in how to create propaganda wars.
01:25:31.000 And they're doing it.
01:25:32.000 And we don't know what's what.
01:25:34.000 It's all lies, man.
01:25:35.000 Both parties, every party to this, whether it's China, whether it's Russia or the U.S., has a reason to lie.
01:25:39.000 And it's just impossible to know what's going on.
01:25:43.000 You've got these people on Twitter, you've got these people in media, even people on Fox News.
01:25:49.000 It feels like the personalities on Fox News are trying to remain as close to the populist American message of, we don't like war, as possible, while still crop dusting.
01:25:58.000 Vladimir Putin is crossing that line and something needs to be done.
01:26:02.000 But I think Fox News knows their audience would be like, no war.
01:26:06.000 Like, you know, we're not gonna play that game.
01:26:08.000 But Fox News is one of the outlets that keeps sort of talking about how there should be a no-fly zone.
01:26:13.000 No, that's what I mean.
01:26:14.000 It's like, you know, I was watching The Five and I was watching Jesse Watters and Bret Baier.
01:26:18.000 Jesse Watters is like out there being smug, like, hey, we should have a no-fly zone.
01:26:22.000 That's Jesse.
01:26:23.000 I mean, that's Jesse.
01:26:24.000 Yeah, I don't like that.
01:26:27.000 No, for sure.
01:26:28.000 But it does feel like, you know, even Greg Gutfeld's, you know, somewhat like, I don't know what's going on or what they're saying.
01:26:34.000 You turn on like MSNBC and Rachel Maddow is just like, do as the cult says!
01:26:38.000 I mean, she's not really on TV anymore, but you get the point.
01:26:40.000 I mean, I discussed before we came on that a guy on the BBC stood and gave a piece to camera with dead Russian soldiers by his feet.
01:26:49.000 Wow.
01:26:50.000 I mean, we're just in really nasty realms of Dehumanizing soldiers, which I'm I'm guessing didn't have much of a say in whether or not Russia Went into Ukraine.
01:27:00.000 I don't I don't it's remarkable to me how we keep hearing this narrative that Russia's losing But then like when you actually look at the details, it's like a Russian Russia's expanding, you know Like the media keeps showing these small stories of victories for Ukraine, you know, there's one video going viral It's like Russian convoy ambushed and one tank gets hit and then you see all those little stories but then the big picture is Russia gains more ground, Russia takes over a city.
01:27:24.000 I was in South Korea a couple years ago, and forgive me my South Korean family and friends.
01:27:29.000 I went to this museum about a great South Korean general, and it was funny to me because it was like this was a great naval leader who led South, you know, Korea, because it was like, you know, ancient time battles, so it was all of Korea, in great war against Japan or something.
01:27:44.000 And I noticed something interesting.
01:27:45.000 It was like, in the first battle, a great, you know, 500 ships confronted each other, and then it was like, you go to the next historical slide, and it's like, the great general leading 50 ships against the 300, what a decisive victory!
01:27:58.000 Then you go to the next one, and it's like, his 12 ships led a decisive victory against the, you know, the 300 or whatever, and I'm like, okay, so, so hold on.
01:28:06.000 Like, you're omitting the 9 out of 10 times he lost and only showing me the 1 out of 10 times he won.
01:28:12.000 It's, you know, that's kind of what it feels like is happening here with Ukraine.
01:28:16.000 Right.
01:28:16.000 They show all these little victories, but the bigger picture is Russia is slow rolling and moving in and taking over.
01:28:23.000 But what's the aim with those lies?
01:28:25.000 Is it to make Putin really angry that we're talking about him being a loser?
01:28:31.000 Demoralize the Russian troops so that they fight worse.
01:28:34.000 Maybe, but I don't think they're watching this stuff.
01:28:36.000 I think it's more so to convince the American people that we can and will win.
01:28:41.000 Yeah, that does that too.
01:28:42.000 And then when there's a chemical attack, they can be like, oh no, look, guys, you know we're winning, but we got to end it now because of what Russia just did.
01:28:50.000 And then all of a sudden, you know, Russia is winning, then all of a sudden NATO comes in, flattens Russia.
01:28:58.000 So you think NATO is going to just go in?
01:29:00.000 What would they do?
01:29:01.000 What would they like?
01:29:02.000 NATO has 30,000 troops right now in Norway doing war games.
01:29:06.000 And 50 warships moved into the region, which is, it's the Baltic Sea, it borders Russia.
01:29:11.000 And it's kind of like, is that a coincidence?
01:29:14.000 You know, they want to cancel this ICBM test to deescalate things, but then send 30,000 troops for a war game, you know, with 50 warships.
01:29:23.000 Yeah.
01:29:23.000 I don't think they're up there for war games.
01:29:25.000 I think they needed a reason to send all of those troops and get them ready.
01:29:29.000 And just leave them there.
01:29:30.000 Yeah.
01:29:31.000 Yeah.
01:29:32.000 Because Russia's been amassing troops.
01:29:33.000 We know that.
01:29:34.000 Right.
01:29:35.000 We know that.
01:29:36.000 That's for a long time.
01:29:37.000 I was in a cab actually recently with a friend of mine and it was an Uber and the Uber driver
01:29:41.000 was like really, we were like, hey, how you doing?
01:29:43.000 And he was like, I actually just got word today that I'm shipping out in a couple days.
01:29:49.000 I put in for my retirement in August, and now instead they're shipping me to Germany.
01:29:53.000 Wow.
01:29:55.000 Yeah.
01:29:55.000 Geez.
01:29:56.000 To Germany?
01:29:57.000 Yeah.
01:29:58.000 Interesting.
01:29:59.000 I'm really curious what you guys think of Trevor Noah coming out and saying, basically, if Trump were in charge, this would not be happening.
01:30:06.000 And he thinks that Biden probably wishes he could bring Trump in as president wildcard.
01:30:10.000 Did he?
01:30:10.000 Wait, Trevor Noah said that?
01:30:12.000 Yeah, he sure did.
01:30:13.000 It was pretty amazing.
01:30:14.000 We covered that.
01:30:15.000 Bill Maher said something similar.
01:30:17.000 Yeah.
01:30:18.000 Yeah.
01:30:18.000 Well, Trump said to, I think, Sean Hannity the other night that he said something to Putin that made Putin clear that he should not invade Ukraine.
01:30:26.000 It was probably something like, I'm a crazy man and I might just nuke ya!
01:30:30.000 He said he would nuke Moscow.
01:30:32.000 So this is the craziest thing because I think it's insane and it's one of the things that worries me about Trump, but if it works, I guess.
01:30:38.000 The official reporting was that New York Post ran a story saying Trump reportedly told Xi and Putin.
01:30:43.000 He told Putin, if you go into Ukraine, I will hit Moscow.
01:30:46.000 He told Xi, if you go into Taiwan, I will hit Beijing.
01:30:49.000 And both leaders were like shocked.
01:30:51.000 But hold on.
01:30:51.000 Trump then came out and bragged.
01:30:54.000 I told him I would nuke Moscow!
01:30:56.000 And he knew I meant it.
01:30:57.000 And I'm like, he believes it may be like 5 percent, but that's all you need.
01:31:00.000 Is that what he said?
01:31:01.000 Yeah.
01:31:02.000 The thing, too, though, is like the the benefit of having Trump as president, like he was essentially an antiwar president.
01:31:10.000 The benefit of having him as president was that he was so unpredictable and crazy that no one knew what he was going to do.
01:31:17.000 He was like the homeless guy on a corner with a knife and crazy crack guys, you know.
01:31:21.000 So America was like this crazy, unpredictable, Nation with nukes run by... No, it's like someone handed him an AR and everyone's like, whoa.
01:31:32.000 I think he was a predictable man.
01:31:35.000 I think he was a predictable, large-shouldered, kind of bullish bloke.
01:31:39.000 I think you knew exactly what he was gonna do.
01:31:41.000 Which is like a crazy thing.
01:31:43.000 Well, I think he'd...
01:31:47.000 I'm trying not to swear.
01:31:51.000 If it was a urinating contest, he would always be the guy to win.
01:31:56.000 Yes, that's correct.
01:31:58.000 I think Americans should have felt safer in his hands than ever in Biden's.
01:32:04.000 I felt safer with a crazy man at the helm than somebody who's imminently reasonable.
01:32:08.000 Well, a crazy guy that wants to win.
01:32:09.000 But Biden's not.
01:32:10.000 Biden's sleepy.
01:32:10.000 He kind of created like a crazy persona, Trump did, and it worked in cases like with Putin, thought maybe he would hit Moscow with a nuke, but the American people believed it.
01:32:19.000 They bought into it as well.
01:32:20.000 So they thought he was crazy.
01:32:21.000 Half of them thought he was really crazy.
01:32:23.000 It turned out he was one of the more stable presidents militarily.
01:32:26.000 I feel like Trump was the kind of guy to where you could brag about doing something that's kind of like, Amoral or... Well, he did.
01:32:35.000 No, no, no, not Trump.
01:32:36.000 I'm saying if you said something like, Trump could never beat me in a pissing contest, Trump would be like, when I take a leak, I spray it so far.
01:32:44.000 So far.
01:32:44.000 So far.
01:32:45.000 Everybody knows it.
01:32:46.000 Everybody knows.
01:32:47.000 I can, I can write my name in cursive.
01:32:49.000 You'd be like, I throw a ball faster than Trump.
01:32:53.000 No, I throw the best balls, the furthest balls.
01:32:56.000 I throw them all.
01:32:57.000 I throw my balls.
01:32:57.000 No, but only weird things.
01:32:59.000 Like if you said, you know, I'm a pro bowler and I could beat Trump at bowling, he'd probably be like, well, he's a great bowler.
01:33:04.000 He's very good.
01:33:05.000 Everybody respects him.
01:33:06.000 But it was like, it was weird things he would lie about where you're like, why is he so adamant about like, That being the thing... But that's a reliable guy, right?
01:33:15.000 Because you know that he's going to say that when people challenge him.
01:33:21.000 So someone like Putin or China, when they're sort of coming up and saying, We're going to be the world superpower.
01:33:28.000 He's like, no way.
01:33:29.000 I'm the superest superpower that ever walked the earth.
01:33:33.000 That 5% thing is actually a really great point because everybody knows that Joe Biden's got a 0% chance of launching any nukes or taking any hard military action.
01:33:41.000 He's not going to do a thing.
01:33:42.000 And everybody probably says, you know, even Putin and Xi would be like, Trump probably won't do it.
01:33:47.000 And then their advisors go, probably?
01:33:50.000 And it's like, hmm.
01:33:51.000 They're like, Biden's asleep.
01:33:52.000 He's never going to do anything.
01:33:54.000 Well, Biden is never going to do anything.
01:33:56.000 No, he's a useless, doddering old man.
01:33:58.000 He'll, you know, he'll yell, come on, man, to Putin.
01:34:01.000 Right.
01:34:02.000 Come on, man.
01:34:02.000 And then maybe he'll whisper and, like, sniff some little girl's hair.
01:34:06.000 Yeah, he's reliable in sniffing women.
01:34:08.000 He's great at that.
01:34:09.000 So we have Chicken City, which is our new live stream, where it's just the chickens doing their thing.
01:34:13.000 And, you know, chickens are animals, so they do animal behaviors.
01:34:16.000 But people calling whatever, you know, Roberto the rooster is getting feisty.
01:34:21.000 People saying, you know, Roberto giving the old Biden sniff to the girls and stuff like that.
01:34:25.000 A good old bite and sniff.
01:34:27.000 And I'm like, that's that's one way to put it.
01:34:29.000 It's funny because it's a rather family friendly show.
01:34:32.000 It's just chickens and we make jokes and I threw blueberries to them and stuff like that.
01:34:36.000 But the comments are hilarious when people like make jokes about chickens.
01:34:39.000 One of our people on our social media team.
01:34:42.000 They fight for it.
01:34:42.000 Oh, I thought they didn't.
01:34:43.000 Those are the young ones.
01:34:44.000 They don't eat them because they don't know their food yet.
01:34:45.000 Oh, little ones were confused.
01:34:46.000 They didn't like the blueberries?
01:34:47.000 One of the people on our social media team, Beth Bache, she's a reporter of ours.
01:34:50.000 She was in Ottawa covering the truckers and everything.
01:34:54.000 She's terrific.
01:34:55.000 Every time Biden does a sniffy thing, she's like, I'm getting this clip.
01:34:59.000 Just wait.
01:35:00.000 He's sniffing people again.
01:35:01.000 He's sniffing the girls again.
01:35:02.000 It's wonderful.
01:35:04.000 This is our reporter, John.
01:35:06.000 His beat is Biden sniffing little girls.
01:35:08.000 He's like, yeah, basically I just watch all of his presentations and I just pull the clips of him sniffing women.
01:35:13.000 Is he getting nutrition from people when he does that?
01:35:15.000 Because I know when you smell something, you get particles of the thing go into your body when you're smelling it.
01:35:21.000 It's getting grosser and grosser.
01:35:22.000 Like when you're in the bathroom and it's stinking.
01:35:24.000 Biden can't help it.
01:35:25.000 He sustains himself.
01:35:27.000 I require nutrients.
01:35:28.000 Yeah, he's a smellitarian.
01:35:30.000 I have to smell them.
01:35:31.000 I need some energy.
01:35:33.000 Yeah, he smells.
01:35:35.000 He latches on and all right.
01:35:37.000 I mean that's gross because a good smell will wake you up and that's really gross if that's what he's doing.
01:35:41.000 That's nasty.
01:35:43.000 Let's go to Super Chats.
01:35:44.000 If you have not already, smash that like button, subscribe to the channel, share the show, take the URL, post it wherever you want if you really do want to help out.
01:35:51.000 Go to tipcast.com.
01:35:52.000 We're gonna have a members only show coming up around 11 or so p.m.
01:35:55.000 We record and then we publish it live.
01:35:57.000 We publish it recorded.
01:35:59.000 At 11 or so p.m.
01:36:00.000 So check it out and support the show at TimCast.com, but let's read some here superchats we got Ossie Trutler says, hello there from Chicken City.
01:36:09.000 You know, I think Chicken City is our fastest growing new show.
01:36:13.000 We got 11,300 subscribers in one week.
01:36:16.000 Reliable cast, yeah.
01:36:17.000 One week, absolutely.
01:36:19.000 All right, let's see.
01:36:20.000 We got Silver Bear says, hello Tim and crew.
01:36:24.000 I sent my resume and portfolio to pitches at Timcast.
01:36:26.000 I wasn't sure where else to send it.
01:36:28.000 I love writing.
01:36:28.000 I want to try doing it for a living.
01:36:30.000 We will look out for it right now.
01:36:32.000 I'll tell you this, guys.
01:36:33.000 We're looking for I don't know how to describe it.
01:36:38.000 We need people who skate and want to film vlog stuff every day because we essentially need like an executive producer for the vlog.
01:36:47.000 There's a bunch of ideas we have.
01:36:50.000 We want it to be fun with cool activities like we launched the race cars over the garage roof.
01:36:55.000 But we also want to do just like gags with the crew.
01:36:58.000 So like we did the thing where Seamus tortured people, pretended to.
01:37:01.000 So just fun stuff like that, but we need someone whose job it is to basically focus on that.
01:37:05.000 So if you're interested.
01:37:06.000 Yeah, if you could do lighting and sound design as well, that'd be huge.
01:37:10.000 Lighting and sound design?
01:37:11.000 Yeah, if we could, yeah, I think if we, if it looks like cinema quality.
01:37:15.000 No, I don't know about that.
01:37:16.000 It'll get like a magnitude more followers.
01:37:19.000 That'd have to be a different person.
01:37:21.000 Maybe.
01:37:22.000 I'm talking about someone who's like a charismatic personality and writer, not a production person.
01:37:27.000 Yeah, I'd be down to have a good tech on board.
01:37:28.000 But, you know, we'll take it all, so, you know, I'll hire- It's always good to have a good tech person.
01:37:32.000 Oh, sound is everything.
01:37:33.000 We can hire ten people if they're like, we're gonna put together a show and have a good time.
01:37:36.000 But, you know, ultimately, we got so much stuff going on here, we just need someone who wants to organize it.
01:37:40.000 We've got the airbag launch thing, we built a new patio, we're building new skate ramps, we've got Fredamistan, and we got chickens, and we're gonna get goats.
01:37:49.000 So we just need someone whose job it is to, like, wrap those ideas up, and so, you know, put into the vlog, do jokes and things like that.
01:37:56.000 All right, let's see.
01:37:58.000 Memotype says, Shoe One Head did a great video about cuties.
01:38:01.000 She does a giant breakdown of just how messed up it all is.
01:38:04.000 Shoe watched it, so you don't have to.
01:38:06.000 Yeah, you know, here's the challenge, right?
01:38:08.000 You know, how are you going to criticize something you haven't seen?
01:38:10.000 And I'm like, well, the issue is I've seen the trailers and I've seen relevant clips from, you know, critique.
01:38:16.000 And it's like, maybe I didn't see the scene where the little girl talks to her mom about baking cookies, but I don't want to watch the movie and watch it.
01:38:22.000 Like, I wouldn't want to watch the three minute dance routine, but it is a challenge.
01:38:26.000 It is.
01:38:26.000 Because, like, I guess shoe watch it so I don't have to, you know what I mean?
01:38:29.000 Is it still on there?
01:38:30.000 Is Cutie still on Netflix?
01:38:31.000 I'm pretty sure it is.
01:38:32.000 I think so, yeah.
01:38:33.000 Yeah.
01:38:34.000 Yeah, someone rec... So we have two chickens with no names because they were adopted, and someone wanted us to name them, at least one of them, Shoe on Egg.
01:38:41.000 Oh, that's really cute.
01:38:43.000 So we did.
01:38:44.000 Yeah.
01:38:44.000 And I guess the other one is Hensacky because... I like that too.
01:38:47.000 Because...
01:38:49.000 It's like, it's like a goldish, like, it's like a, it's like a, it's a light brownish, like a burnt, it's almost red, it's not quite, but there's someone there, like, Hensaki, and I was like, that's a really good one, you know, Hensaki.
01:38:59.000 Someone else said Hen Shapiro.
01:39:00.000 Yeah, I like that too.
01:39:01.000 But I'm like, no, but we would need a little rooster, you know what I mean?
01:39:04.000 Yeah, that would have to be a rooster, a little black rooster.
01:39:08.000 We have one.
01:39:09.000 A bossy little black rooster.
01:39:10.000 With like, you know, little tuft of, little tuft of feathers.
01:39:14.000 It'd be cute.
01:39:14.000 It'd be adorable.
01:39:16.000 TheMadMachina says, Ian, Carlin did it, the seven words, because he believed censorship of those words was wrong.
01:39:22.000 Your logic in this analogy would mean the creators believed this behavior should be acceptable.
01:39:26.000 Yeah, I think they did.
01:39:27.000 That's why they did it.
01:39:28.000 It's like a social statement of, like, look in the darkness.
01:39:32.000 Look at the darkness.
01:39:32.000 But, like, looking at something that's horrific so that you can say, hey, I saw it, isn't necessarily good for you.
01:39:40.000 Michael McCarthy says, Wow, is that Kelly Jay on Tim Pool?
01:39:43.000 Well done.
01:39:44.000 I think this might finally be the sign that I really am in a simulation.
01:39:47.000 This is a great part of the simulation, though.
01:39:50.000 Well, then definitely check out our Members Only segment coming up at 11 p.m.
01:39:53.000 This will be a lot of fun.
01:39:55.000 All right.
01:39:57.000 Leguma Thigayan, I'm probably always pronouncing that wrong, says, Dear Kelly slash Posey, I admire your courage in the face of the irrational crusading mob of woke progressive fanatics on both sides of the ocean.
01:40:08.000 We need far more people like you.
01:40:09.000 I know you'll never give up your fight.
01:40:11.000 Be well from Florida.
01:40:12.000 Aw, thanks.
01:40:13.000 There you go.
01:40:16.000 All right.
01:40:17.000 Darun Albain says, Tim, the released maps for the Russian strikes in lab locations.
01:40:21.000 The maps are distorted, impossible to line up.
01:40:23.000 Interesting.
01:40:24.000 Did you guys see The View called for the arrest of Tulsi and Tucker Carlson?
01:40:28.000 Wild.
01:40:29.000 Yes.
01:40:30.000 They actually called for the Department of Justice to do it, just like the Department of Justice is going to investigate parents for being upset about mask mandates in schools.
01:40:40.000 And they said, people used to get arrested for this kind of stuff.
01:40:42.000 The DOJ needs to investigate this.
01:40:44.000 It's like...
01:40:44.000 It's called McCarthyism.
01:40:46.000 You call it whatever.
01:40:47.000 I mean, it's just, you know, people are like, we went from Civil War to World War III.
01:40:52.000 And I'm like, no, we didn't.
01:40:53.000 We went from Civil War and, you know, added in World War III.
01:40:58.000 Layering it on top.
01:40:59.000 Yeah.
01:41:00.000 It's like the seven layer dip.
01:41:01.000 We just all need some chips.
01:41:04.000 Sir Bancelot says, hey Tim, this is concerning student loans.
01:41:07.000 In Australia, we have something called the HECS system, where you have your taxpayer-backed student loans you can't default on with no interest.
01:41:15.000 What stops Americans from having this?
01:41:18.000 Ineptitude?
01:41:19.000 We do have federal student loans.
01:41:22.000 Yeah, but they have interest rates.
01:41:24.000 Yeah, they do have interest rates. Yeah, he's saying they don't. Oh. Because my thing is,
01:41:28.000 I don't think we should just forgive everyone's student loan debt, but we should eliminate the
01:41:31.000 interest rates. So it's like, pay back what you borrowed, and you know, maybe with inflation or
01:41:37.000 something. So it's like, you got to pay back the money you borrowed, you know what I mean?
01:41:41.000 I think you probably shouldn't be allowed to get federal student loans for degrees in gender identity.
01:41:47.000 Yes.
01:41:48.000 I think we should not give out student loans at all.
01:41:51.000 It's like if you want to go to college, get a job, save up money, two years later, you know, go to college.
01:41:57.000 Or maybe the college would pay for it.
01:41:58.000 But the problem with your thing is then only rich people would go to college, which was what the student loan program was trying to fix anyway.
01:42:04.000 And all it did was made everyone's lives worse.
01:42:06.000 And it made college way more expensive.
01:42:08.000 Right.
01:42:08.000 It didn't solve anything.
01:42:09.000 Yeah.
01:42:09.000 Because now all these schools have giant endowments.
01:42:12.000 But you could also work your way through college.
01:42:14.000 People do that.
01:42:15.000 That used to be a thing as well.
01:42:16.000 When like a state school was $12,000 a year, you could do that.
01:42:19.000 Now you can't.
01:42:19.000 Yep.
01:42:20.000 Because it's like 65.
01:42:22.000 If you link it to inflation by now, maybe by next year, it'll be about 400%.
01:42:25.000 Yeah.
01:42:27.000 Wow.
01:42:28.000 You'll pay back so much.
01:42:29.000 And so much of what universities are, are administrative departments.
01:42:33.000 I mean, it's so peculiar.
01:42:34.000 Like in the UK, you could do a degree in golf.
01:42:38.000 In golf?
01:42:39.000 Yeah.
01:42:39.000 What?
01:42:41.000 Yeah, all right.
01:42:42.000 Folklore mythology is always interesting, right?
01:42:43.000 All right, we got Mike Hillier.
01:42:45.000 He says, Tim, you are wrong at what a MRA is.
01:42:48.000 You are repeating MSM narrative.
01:42:50.000 Vosch is acting like a feminist.
01:42:51.000 Talk to Karen Straw or is it Strawn?
01:42:54.000 Strawn?
01:42:55.000 About MRAs.
01:42:56.000 And then we have another one saying, Tim, please stop calling Vosch an MRA.
01:42:59.000 Then we have Zerank saying Vosch is not an MRA.
01:43:02.000 No, no, my friends, you all don't understand.
01:43:05.000 You're looking at the phrase MRA as though it's a proper noun.
01:43:08.000 I'm referring to Vaush as the non-proper noun.
01:43:12.000 He is an advocate.
01:43:13.000 He is advocating for the rights of men.
01:43:16.000 I didn't say all rights.
01:43:17.000 I didn't say he was in line with your proper noun view of the acronym MRA.
01:43:23.000 If a human being says that they're going to go online and advocate for the rights of men, they're a men's rights advocate or activist.
01:43:31.000 You know, there's not one, there's not one group of, you know, like feminists have a bunch of different branches.
01:43:36.000 MRAs can have a bunch of different branches.
01:43:37.000 He's a leftist MRA.
01:43:39.000 He's definitely not a feminist of any stripe, including the many terrible feminists that walk the earth.
01:43:45.000 Yeah.
01:43:46.000 All right.
01:43:47.000 The Wrong Writer says, playing World of Warcraft while watching this.
01:43:50.000 Scary.
01:43:51.000 Also, have a look at Norman Dodd on Tax-Exempt Foundations.
01:43:54.000 Very eye-opening discussion.
01:43:56.000 World of Warcraft was scary, man.
01:43:57.000 I was addicted to it, like 2006, for like a good month, month or two.
01:44:01.000 I would do nothing but wake up, play.
01:44:03.000 And I always tell people, South Park did that episode where they gained all that weight and got really fat from playing Warcraft.
01:44:09.000 That's not true.
01:44:11.000 You become extremely malnourished.
01:44:13.000 Oh, because you just don't eat?
01:44:14.000 It's called a bio when you're raiding with your friends, and it's like a bio meaning you gotta eat, drink, or go to the bathroom.
01:44:20.000 Typically, it's a bathroom thing, but people would be like, no.
01:44:24.000 It's like, hey, we're gonna go, you know, we're gonna go raid, you know, whatever.
01:44:28.000 And then people are like, I gotta take a break, man.
01:44:29.000 I gotta get some food or something.
01:44:30.000 You'd be like, oh, come on, dude.
01:44:31.000 Are you kidding?
01:44:32.000 We're like, we wanna start.
01:44:33.000 We gotta wait for you.
01:44:33.000 We have 40 people.
01:44:34.000 And you'd be like, oh, okay, whatever.
01:44:37.000 So I think I dropped like 20 pounds and I was like super thin because you'll drink water and all I was doing was ordering a calzone.
01:44:44.000 So what did you say?
01:44:45.000 World of... Warcraft.
01:44:47.000 World of Warcraft.
01:44:47.000 Just write that down.
01:44:49.000 I was thinking that too.
01:44:51.000 This is like when I was in middle school and I saw the Karen Carpenter documentary and it talked about how she was anorexic and like she lost all this weight and I was like, that's a killer idea.
01:45:00.000 That's a great idea, right?
01:45:02.000 That's actually a killer idea.
01:45:03.000 Yeah.
01:45:04.000 I ended up so hungry, it was like half a day.
01:45:09.000 All right, we got Caltox Reaper says, Tim and Ian, you both need to watch the anime Ghost in the Shell Standalone Complex.
01:45:15.000 It covers a lot of what is being talked about.
01:45:17.000 Good sir, I have seen it.
01:45:19.000 I've seen the movie and I know absolutely about Ghost in the Shell.
01:45:22.000 Yeah, it's great.
01:45:24.000 The laughing man thing's fantastic.
01:45:25.000 I love the graphic.
01:45:27.000 It's a guy, he basically can hack people's brains so they can see what he wants them to see.
01:45:31.000 And so when they try and look at him on cameras and the surveillance footage, he hacks the system.
01:45:35.000 So you only see this Salinger quote.
01:45:38.000 I thought what I would do is I would pretend I was one of those deaf mutes just like spinning around a smiley face.
01:45:43.000 So they're like – they ask people, like, what do you look like?
01:45:46.000 He's like, I can't remember.
01:45:48.000 So when your brains are cyberized or in the network, powerful people or hackers are going to decide what you can
01:45:55.000 think or remember.
01:45:57.000 That's the future, man.
01:45:57.000 That's yucky.
01:45:58.000 I think they call it cyberdized.
01:46:01.000 Cyberdized?
01:46:02.000 Yeah, like hybrid, but with cyber.
01:46:03.000 Cyberized, maybe?
01:46:04.000 I don't know.
01:46:05.000 Yep, cyberized.
01:46:06.000 All right.
01:46:07.000 Caitlin says, I was a tomboy as a kid in the 80s and very feminine now.
01:46:10.000 I'm so thankful my parents didn't just think I really wanted to be a boy.
01:46:13.000 Girl, me too.
01:46:15.000 Same.
01:46:16.000 I mean, I'll tell you something right now that's probably offensive to a bunch of people.
01:46:20.000 The first 1080 done on a skateboard was done by, I think, a 12-year-old boy.
01:46:24.000 Yeah.
01:46:25.000 There's no 12-year-old girl who is also, you know, hitting the first 1080.
01:46:29.000 I mean, it's a massive spin.
01:46:31.000 And so I've brought this up to people because there's a lot of people who argue like, oh, puberty is a defining point at which a male gains the advantage in sports.
01:46:40.000 And I'm like, then why are there like 10 and 12-year-old boys competing at the national level in skateboarding, but no girls?
01:46:45.000 I want to just shout out all you girls out there, from a guy's perspective, women are the coolest thing on earth.
01:46:51.000 So please cherish it.
01:46:53.000 It's amazing.
01:46:53.000 Go with it.
01:46:54.000 I like that.
01:46:56.000 I think that's very true for women as well, though, to be honest.
01:46:59.000 Not like equally, you know, because men are just obviously obsessed with women.
01:47:03.000 But the gag, the joke people always say is, on the cover of a men's magazine, is it a man or a woman?
01:47:08.000 It's a woman.
01:47:09.000 On the cover of a woman's magazine, is it a man or a woman?
01:47:11.000 It's a woman.
01:47:11.000 Oh, yeah, the woman.
01:47:12.000 Yeah.
01:47:14.000 But that's because men don't look as good in women's clothes and those magazines are about selling clothes.
01:47:18.000 Speak for yourself, lady.
01:47:21.000 It's interesting you talk about the puberty thing because when advocates in the UK to try and stop women's sports being invaded by men, they will talk about puberty.
01:47:32.000 Well actually the advantages that men have over women is is not just puberty, it's bone density, it's muscle fiber, it's cardiovascular system, it's muscle memory even, of remembering how strong you were before a little bit of testosterone suppressant, which never suppresses the testosterone to a point the same as a woman.
01:47:54.000 It's impossible to suppress prenatal testosterone when you're already born.
01:47:58.000 And so that impacts muscle fiber and bone density and all that stuff.
01:48:02.000 The average of women's testosterone that women naturally have in their bodies, I think, is like – the highest is like 2.4, I think.
01:48:09.000 It's very low.
01:48:10.000 It's like nanomules or whatever per liter.
01:48:12.000 And for the IOC, their regulation for biological males who want to compete in women's sports is that your testosterone has to be 10.
01:48:22.000 Nanomules per liter, which is still multitudes and multitudes higher than what the highest average women's testosterone in their bodies would be.
01:48:33.000 If a woman had that level of testosterone, she'd be accused of doping and cheating.
01:48:37.000 Yes.
01:48:38.000 Oh, she'd have a beard.
01:48:39.000 Yeah, at least.
01:48:41.000 A lot of stuff.
01:48:41.000 So we got, Tara says, low fertility is a result of poor diet.
01:48:45.000 Eating low protein diets, low animal fats, and high vegetable and seed oils completely ruins your hormones.
01:48:51.000 I'll mention this, we talked a little bit to Ryan Long and Danny Polischuk about NAD.
01:48:57.000 You guys familiar with that?
01:48:57.000 Yeah.
01:48:58.000 Something, I think Joe Rogan talks about it quite a bit.
01:49:00.000 Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide.
01:49:03.000 And I've been getting that, but part of that means I get my, I get like a basically a physical every time they check my blood pressure.
01:49:10.000 Since I started doing a higher protein diet and a lower sugar diet, my health has massively improved.
01:49:16.000 Massively.
01:49:17.000 Higher protein, less sugar?
01:49:18.000 Yeah.
01:49:19.000 I mean, I think it's fairly obvious, right?
01:49:21.000 Everybody says cut the carbs and eat better protein, so I've been eating way more protein.
01:49:26.000 Instead of a snack being sugar-based, my snacks are protein-based.
01:49:29.000 That was the big change.
01:49:30.000 For one, I snack a lot less now, which is probably why I lost weight.
01:49:34.000 When I do snack, we have bacon.
01:49:36.000 We have little individually wrapped bacons.
01:49:38.000 You just rip them open.
01:49:39.000 I mostly just eat fruit when I snack.
01:49:41.000 High sugar.
01:49:42.000 Yeah.
01:49:42.000 Delicious.
01:49:43.000 And liver intensive too.
01:49:45.000 Apples?
01:49:46.000 Yeah.
01:49:46.000 Apples are hurting my liver.
01:49:48.000 I just drink wine.
01:49:50.000 Well, I'm not a nutritionist, so don't take my advice, but I was reading about how fructose, you know, fruit sugar, has to be processed in the liver, so it's... Yeah, minus the fiber.
01:49:58.000 If you do just apple juice, it's gonna go right to your liver and then convert into sugar.
01:50:01.000 If you eat it with the fiber, which is... No, I just eat actual... I eat bacon and fruit.
01:50:07.000 I gave up meat for Lent.
01:50:09.000 Interesting.
01:50:10.000 Yeah.
01:50:10.000 So what do you get your protein from?
01:50:12.000 I've been eating a lot of fish.
01:50:14.000 That's meat.
01:50:17.000 You gave up like red meat or something?
01:50:18.000 I gave up like, yeah, not fish.
01:50:21.000 I gave up not fish for Lent.
01:50:23.000 Well, that works.
01:50:24.000 I mean, fish is actually way better for you.
01:50:25.000 Yeah.
01:50:26.000 So my son, like, I've been making all of this, like, Shrimp dishes.
01:50:32.000 I'm learning to cook Chinese fried shrimp.
01:50:34.000 Spectacular.
01:50:36.000 There's a bunch of salmon and crab cakes in my freezer right now.
01:50:38.000 This is interesting.
01:50:39.000 Vic says my girlfriend has been off birth control for a year and she feels like a different person.
01:50:44.000 She's happier, better appetite, more sexual, less emotional.
01:50:47.000 They're turning the frogs gay.
01:50:49.000 Well, I don't know about birth control going to frogs, but that was a pesticide, wasn't it?
01:50:54.000 Atrazine?
01:50:55.000 Yeah, and I think later on they said that they were wrong.
01:50:57.000 Or like, it was limited.
01:50:59.000 Oh, it wasn't making them gay.
01:51:00.000 Well, hermaphroditic is, I think, the story.
01:51:01.000 Well, no, no, but the whole study said that they weren't sure it was atrazine in the first place.
01:51:05.000 It was a hypothesis or something.
01:51:07.000 But yeah, that was a pesticide leaking into groundwater was mutating the endocrine systems of frogs.
01:51:15.000 Yeah, we didn't really touch on pesticides, herbicides, fungicides getting into the food supply.
01:51:19.000 Oh, you know what we got?
01:51:19.000 We went and bought silky chickens.
01:51:22.000 Oh, those little cute ones?
01:51:24.000 Yeah, they look like llamas.
01:51:25.000 They're so cute.
01:51:26.000 And the woman who sold them to us also sold us some honey that she found in an abandoned house.
01:51:31.000 Oh, that's that's weird.
01:51:32.000 Yeah, I was super excited.
01:51:34.000 It's it's the best honey I've ever tasted.
01:51:35.000 Did you end up like tripping your face off?
01:51:38.000 No, honey is antimicrobial.
01:51:40.000 So it's like you could put it on your wounds to clean it.
01:51:43.000 So long as it's done by a proper beekeeper, it's probably fine.
01:51:46.000 Now, do you trust the beekeeper?
01:51:48.000 What beekeeper?
01:51:49.000 It was found in an abandoned house and you don't know anything about it?
01:51:52.000 No, the lady was a beekeeper.
01:51:54.000 So she also has like legit farm honey, but she said, I found this one in an abandoned house.
01:51:59.000 If you want it, you know, you can buy it too.
01:52:01.000 And I was like, yeah.
01:52:02.000 Well, actually I wasn't paying attention.
01:52:04.000 It was everyone else who heard it.
01:52:05.000 And I was like, I'll just take it all.
01:52:06.000 And then I was tasting it and they're like, oh, that's the one from the abandoned house.
01:52:08.000 And I was like, tastes great.
01:52:10.000 So, what they say is, if the bees are in an abandoned house, then the older parts of the honeycomb are going to have mold and garbage on it, but the newer parts are probably clean and safe, and honey is antimicrobial.
01:52:21.000 Oh, she didn't find a jar of honey in the abandoned house.
01:52:25.000 Oh, she found a beehive!
01:52:27.000 Okay, that's different.
01:52:28.000 I'm picturing this jar, and I'm like, you really just dug into the...
01:52:33.000 Have you guys ever eaten the psychedelic honey?
01:52:35.000 No.
01:52:36.000 Which one is it?
01:52:36.000 It's like the Himalayans will climb the mountain and they'll go get the honey and they'll eat it and they'll trip their balls off.
01:52:41.000 Manuka?
01:52:41.000 No, no, it's not manuka honey.
01:52:43.000 I'm looking into it.
01:52:44.000 Gray anatoxin is maybe the chemical.
01:52:46.000 They call it mad honey.
01:52:47.000 There was this crazy thing that happened in Brooklyn where all of these bees like got into some sort of
01:52:55.000 Industrial facility and that ended up in all the honey and all the honey was like weird red color
01:53:02.000 Yeah No, it was uh, it was a candy factory candy factory waste runoff.
01:53:05.000 Yeah, these were drinking the sugar And so they made red candy honey, where do you get the trippy honey though?
01:53:12.000 What's the deal?
01:53:12.000 Where do you find it?
01:53:13.000 Well, I know the mountains of the Himalayas They don't like climb long distances to get to it.
01:53:17.000 I don't know though I hadn't ever heard of this mad honey before I'm looking into it interesting.
01:53:21.000 Oh Eddie Jones says I'm 21 years old and you're helping me learn about a lot of things I was blind of as a noob in the world.
01:53:28.000 Thanks for the solid info and the sources to back it all.
01:53:30.000 Thanks for the 20s, Ian.
01:53:31.000 Chicken City is life.
01:53:33.000 Dude, thank you so much, man.
01:53:34.000 If I could have been 21 years old and had access to a show like this that I could interact with, I would have loved it.
01:53:39.000 So thank you for putting me in perspective like that.
01:53:42.000 All right, Josh Froman says, Hey Tim, Ohio just passed constitutional carry.
01:53:46.000 What are your thoughts?
01:53:47.000 Man, Indiana is going to pass constitutional carry.
01:53:50.000 Alabama just signed constitutional carry.
01:53:52.000 I think it was constitutional carry right in Alabama.
01:53:54.000 Was it?
01:53:54.000 What does that mean?
01:53:55.000 You can just carry a weapon.
01:53:56.000 You can carry your gun.
01:53:57.000 Yeah.
01:53:58.000 And there's no... No permits, whatever, you can... You just get to have it.
01:54:02.000 Yeah.
01:54:02.000 You're totally pro that.
01:54:04.000 Oh, yes.
01:54:04.000 Yeah.
01:54:05.000 Yeah, absolutely.
01:54:06.000 In West Virginia, you can just pick up a gun and walk around outside and...
01:54:09.000 What's the argument for it?
01:54:10.000 No one cares. Yeah, it's like you'll see a guy with a with a with a gun on his hip and you just like
01:54:14.000 How many states have that versus how many don't I mean now I think it's like 15 or 16, maybe
01:54:19.000 What's the argument for it that we have the Second Amendment yeah the Constitution I
01:54:26.000 Mean, I mean the fact that it's getting passed now. Oh, yeah, like what?
01:54:31.000 Why are they suddenly doing it?
01:54:34.000 The Constitution, Second Amendment, the right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
01:54:39.000 Yet, throughout most of history, we didn't actually uphold our own constitutional rights.
01:54:44.000 And so, in the 80s even, it was difficult to get concealed carry permits.
01:54:48.000 So they were like, no, no, no, if you want to have a gun, you better show everybody.
01:54:51.000 And people were like, the Constitution is clear, right?
01:54:54.000 So, recently, I think it's because, uh, I think the populist libertarian wave has been winning very much in the United States over the past decade.
01:55:02.000 And so now we're seeing states basically say, the law on guns is the Constitution.
01:55:07.000 Of course, you still have the feds.
01:55:08.000 The federal government bans a ton of weapons, and it's absurd, and there's nothing you can do about it.
01:55:13.000 But in Texas, for instance, they've passed a law, I'm pretty sure, saying that if you make and use
01:55:19.000 a suppressor in Texas, the feds can't do anything. Like, the state allows it.
01:55:23.000 The feds are only in charge if you cross state lines.
01:55:27.000 But the feds are still arguing, you know, it's illegal, you can't do it.
01:55:30.000 Part of it, too, is that Biden is so gun control crazy.
01:55:34.000 He has all of these ideas about preventing people from having guns and was recently in New York talking to Mayor Adams after two police officers were murdered by a career criminal who shot them with his gun.
01:55:50.000 Actually, New York just launched their new criminal division.
01:55:54.000 NYPD has actually deployed a bunch of criminals.
01:55:58.000 The anti-gun unit.
01:56:02.000 So New York City is, in my opinion, in violation of the Constitution because they make it impossible to get a gun.
01:56:10.000 New York City is in violation of the Constitution all over the place.
01:56:13.000 Yeah, good point.
01:56:14.000 In several very key places.
01:56:17.000 Consistently and always.
01:56:19.000 But I guess the people who live there tolerate it, so.
01:56:21.000 But they created a new anti-gun unit.
01:56:22.000 These are cops who basically go out to take away, to arrest people who are, you know, constitutionally carrying weapons because statutorily in the state, in the city, they don't let you do it.
01:56:32.000 I think that's wrong.
01:56:33.000 I think if you want to make an argument about whether or not you should be allowed to have guns, you've got to change the Constitution first.
01:56:38.000 So.
01:56:39.000 I got a list of the open carry numbers.
01:56:42.000 It's from the Wikipedia open carry.
01:56:43.000 It's better to look at it visually.
01:56:44.000 Open carry is different from constitutional carry.
01:56:46.000 Open carry means that you're allowed to carry your gun so long as other people can see it.
01:56:50.000 Constitutional carry means you can conceal it if you want to, you don't need a permit.
01:56:54.000 So if you're in a state that doesn't have that, and they require you to get a permit, And the cop finds you have a gun, you get in trouble.
01:57:00.000 The moment they enact, they sign into law, constitutional carry, you can take your gun, put it in your waistband, cover it up and walk outside.
01:57:07.000 So I think we have 23 states that are constitutional carry.
01:57:10.000 23!
01:57:11.000 Wow.
01:57:11.000 Wow.
01:57:12.000 According to Wikipedia.
01:57:14.000 That's fantastic.
01:57:15.000 Glad to hear it.
01:57:16.000 A well-armed population is a polite and hard to oppress population.
01:57:21.000 And then three more states that have a limited form of permitless concealed carry.
01:57:25.000 Illinois, New Mexico and Washington.
01:57:28.000 Yeah, I'm wary of anyone who wants to strip power away from the people to give to themselves.
01:57:32.000 And when the argument about gun control is almost always that the government should have the right to... Right now, agents of the government can have select fire rifles.
01:57:39.000 It means full auto or, you know, burst or semi-auto.
01:57:43.000 And they say the regular people can't.
01:57:44.000 Politicians can have guns.
01:57:46.000 Right.
01:57:46.000 So celebrities can have bodyguards who are armed.
01:57:49.000 And the way it works in New York and New Jersey and Maryland is basically if you're wealthy and famous enough, you can have a gun.
01:57:57.000 So they say you have to give a legitimate reason why you need the gun.
01:58:01.000 And if you say, like, for my safety or my constitutional rights, they kick you out.
01:58:04.000 But if you say, I'm rich and famous, they'll say, we got you.
01:58:08.000 Don't worry about it.
01:58:09.000 In New York, you have to have an interview to explain why you want the gun.
01:58:13.000 And you can't just be like, I just want it because I want it.
01:58:18.000 That's not part of the jam.
01:58:21.000 I was told New York ultimately just won't give it to you, but in New Jersey, Maryland, and New York, the most likely way to actually get one is to show deposit slips for cash in excess of $5,000.
01:58:31.000 Oh, that's interesting.
01:58:33.000 Because then the argument is, I carry large sums of cash for my job doing deposits, and I need to be able to defend myself because people who find out will rob me.
01:58:40.000 What if you just carry large sums of cash so you can have a receipt so you can buy a gun?
01:58:44.000 Well, I don't think the cops are going to look into your business practices.
01:58:46.000 They're not going to check it out.
01:58:47.000 If you just take it out and put it back in, have a receipt.
01:58:50.000 When it comes to constitutional carry, all the states are pretty much uniform except for California is all fragmented.
01:58:54.000 All over California, you have different rules and all over New York State.
01:58:56.000 California is not a constitutional carry state.
01:58:58.000 California is a, you go to jail for having a gun state.
01:59:00.000 They have a May issue, concealed permit in a lot of areas in California.
01:59:04.000 California, oof.
01:59:05.000 Would there be a correlation between states who don't have constitutional carry with other sort of infringements of the Constitution?
01:59:15.000 So California, for example, I would say it was anti-constitutional to put men in women's prisons.
01:59:21.000 Which they, of course, do.
01:59:23.000 But so does Washington.
01:59:25.000 But Biden's put forward a defense of it, right?
01:59:27.000 Yes, Biden is pro-putting men in women's prisons, as is the unelected governor of New York State.
01:59:33.000 It's a potential 14th Amendment argument, but that's it, and it doesn't clearly define what the violation is, so that's a harder question, to be honest.
01:59:40.000 Right.
01:59:40.000 So I probably don't really understand your constitution.
01:59:43.000 But I'm just wondering if there is a correlation between not carrying, not having a constitutional carry and other things, maybe like free speech?
01:59:53.000 So the first cover is freedom of speech.
01:59:55.000 Second is guns.
01:59:56.000 Third is to be free from the government quartering soldiers in your home or providing your home as, you know, providing your home to soldiers.
02:00:05.000 The fourth is unreasonable search and seizure.
02:00:07.000 But the 14th is equality under the law.
02:00:10.000 So you see a lot of arguments about the 14th Amendment.
02:00:14.000 And so there's interesting Supreme Court rulings.
02:00:16.000 I believe what you're describing would be a constitutional violation of the 14th because the way we as the United States have decided equality can work is that so long as there is, you can separate groups so long as they have equal of something.
02:00:31.000 So it's really funny because like you can't when it comes to race, but you can when it comes to gender.
02:00:34.000 Don't ask me why I'm on a Supreme Court justice.
02:00:37.000 But it used to be that you could have a white and a black bathroom, so long as both groups got a bathroom.
02:00:42.000 We ended that because now it's like separate but equal was wrong.
02:00:46.000 Now you can't do that.
02:00:47.000 But under the exact same law, the 1964 Civil Rights Act, you can do that for men and women.
02:00:54.000 I think this is what's ultimately going to poke a hole and shatter gender segregation, which ultimately means males and females will share all the same spaces no matter what in the future.
02:01:04.000 Because the argument is The argument back in the day was, if there's two different bathrooms that both work the same way, then we're allowed to have race-differentiated bathrooms because it's equal, right?
02:01:18.000 We said no to that.
02:01:19.000 Okay, well, we do that now for men and women.
02:01:21.000 So now we're starting to see the left argue, okay, well then how can you have gender separate but equal?
02:01:26.000 Nope, there should be one bathroom for everybody.
02:01:28.000 But this is happening in New York, where instead of doing a men's room and a women's room, they're doing five individual bathrooms with doors you just lock.
02:01:35.000 And so now they're just all genderless single stalls.
02:01:37.000 Yeah, but are they those weird doors that you have over here that we don't have in the UK, which leave... No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
02:01:44.000 These are a room.
02:01:44.000 These are right the way down to the floor.
02:01:46.000 This would be like walking into a broom closet.
02:01:48.000 Like, you walk into an actual room and close the door and lock it.
02:01:50.000 It would be walking into your own WC with nobody else in it.
02:01:54.000 Right, but it still doesn't stop men urinating on the seat.
02:01:57.000 That's an issue.
02:01:57.000 That's an issue.
02:01:58.000 Yep, all that stuff.
02:02:01.000 But that's one of the things we're starting to see from it is instead of doing a men's room and a women's room with like, you know, urinals, they'll just make four individual rooms.
02:02:10.000 The Romans would all sit in a big room together.
02:02:12.000 Have you ever looked at Roman bathrooms?
02:02:14.000 Have you been to a sports bar yet?
02:02:15.000 Just toilet, toilet, toilet, toilet, toilet, and they're all sitting there looking at each other.
02:02:18.000 They'd all just sit there like... I don't know if they had... they might have wooden dividers.
02:02:21.000 I don't know.
02:02:21.000 I don't know what they did.
02:02:22.000 I don't know what they did.
02:02:23.000 They just ate too much meat.
02:02:24.000 But I don't know if they had men and women together.
02:02:26.000 I don't know.
02:02:27.000 Did they have the room at the baths?
02:02:28.000 I don't know.
02:02:31.000 eating while they poop. Let's grab one more super chat because we're going to do this member
02:02:35.000 segment. We have Colton Rader says, what is your thoughts on Donald Trump going on a podcast and
02:02:39.000 YouTube removing it within 24 hours, over 5 million views?
02:02:42.000 That was the Nelk Boys full send podcast.
02:02:45.000 And the issue is you've got to be really savvy on YouTube's rules to be able to pull off a show
02:02:51.000 like this. So.
02:02:52.000 So, my friends, you may notice that many of your favorite creators often get strikes, and we don't.
02:02:58.000 We've gotten one warning from Alex Jones when he was on the show, and I think it was BS, and I think it's proof that YouTube enforces their rules arbitrarily.
02:03:07.000 But there's also many things that we're cognizant of and we dance through the landmine field.
02:03:13.000 There are a lot of people that either are unwilling to or just don't know how YouTube has aligned their landmines everywhere.
02:03:21.000 And so you'll see people who, like the Nelk Boys, talk to Trump, Trump said things, and they were like, okay, oh, YouTube gets them.
02:03:28.000 Or we talked with Kim Iverson.
02:03:32.000 Interesting.
02:03:32.000 hills rising, I think it was rising, they got suspended from YouTube because they aired
02:03:36.000 a clip of Donald Trump speaking on an interview and Trump said something that YouTube, that
02:03:41.000 was it.
02:03:42.000 And because, because YouTube has a very specific rule for how you can address certain conversations.
02:03:47.000 That is to say, if, or I should say when we get Donald Trump on the show, we will not
02:03:53.000 be taken down.
02:03:54.000 Maybe, because YouTube's rule enforcement is arbitrary.
02:03:58.000 But I know YouTube's rules well enough to where I think we could allow Donald Trump his space to make his points, and we could say what needs to be said to make sure it doesn't get booted off the internet.
02:04:10.000 That would be cool if you had Trump on the show.
02:04:12.000 I mean, we've talked with some of his people.
02:04:15.000 It's just kind of like, I don't know.
02:04:18.000 You know, if Trump came on the show, we'd have to go to Florida.
02:04:21.000 Well, it'd be bigly.
02:04:22.000 Yeah, very bigly.
02:04:23.000 I would definitely do it.
02:04:24.000 It would be fantastic.
02:04:25.000 And, you know, we'll reach out to some of the people.
02:04:28.000 We've had a bunch of people.
02:04:29.000 We've had Ben and Peter Navarro and stuff.
02:04:31.000 I really like Peter Navarro, man.
02:04:32.000 That guy's awesome.
02:04:33.000 He's a cool dude.
02:04:33.000 Yeah.
02:04:34.000 I think it would be great to sit down with Trump for a couple hours.
02:04:37.000 But, you know, what we were told is like, he'd probably do a half an hour maybe.
02:04:40.000 You got to come down.
02:04:41.000 And I was like, OK, well, we'll figure it out when we figure it out.
02:04:44.000 So maybe we'll reach out and see if we can, you know, sit down with Donald Trump and talk to him.
02:04:47.000 I don't think it would get taken down from the internet though.
02:04:50.000 I think we'd be able to get that.
02:04:51.000 I take your point about dancing around certain topics and not saying certain phrases or certain words in order to stay on.
02:04:57.000 But the fact that social media, that these corporate kind of faceless corporations are preventing people from talking, I think is despicable.
02:05:07.000 And when he was cancelled from Twitter, I mean, I just think that was a bit of a game changer when everyone realized that actually these globalists, these sort of technocrats, They have way too much power on what we can hear.
02:05:21.000 Well, so here's what we try to do.
02:05:22.000 I think, you know, we can get like 99% of everything we want to say on the show because we mostly talk about current events.
02:05:29.000 So we're talking about like up-to-date news.
02:05:31.000 That's one of the reasons we don't get hit a lot.
02:05:32.000 When people have candid conversations on a wide range of topics that span several years is where YouTube gets you.
02:05:38.000 We pull up news articles from this week.
02:05:40.000 It's like hard for them to enforce what's on Newsweek or the New York Times or CNN.
02:05:44.000 But for the greater conversations that we think, you know, let's not get banned, we go to TimCast.com, member segments.
02:05:51.000 If you become a member there and support us, then it allows us to have this more, you know, open... Granted, I'll tell you this, we've had the corporations, like big powerful players, mad at us, really mad at us over our members-only segments.
02:06:04.000 So I hope people realize that.
02:06:05.000 Probably like the one we're about to have.
02:06:07.000 Oh, it's gonna get... I imagine this one's gonna trigger a bunch of, you know, corporate entities.
02:06:13.000 But people need to understand that too because when we say we're going to do things at TimCast.com, we mostly get to say whatever we want to say on this show because we're talking about current events.
02:06:22.000 If there's something where we think it's going to cross that line where YouTube would take advantage of it to ban us, they still know we're doing it and these big corporate entities still know we're doing it.
02:06:33.000 They're trying to figure out how to punish us for our own website and that's a challenge we're working towards.
02:06:38.000 I don't want to say too much because we're signing on with some new companies that are really going to solidify and fortify our ability to have conversations on whatever we want.
02:06:46.000 But, look man, it ain't easy.
02:06:50.000 I tell people, do you want to sacrifice 99 conversations for that one?
02:06:54.000 I certainly understand not wanting to give up that one conversation, and if there was something so insanely important you'd risk getting banned for it, I say we have to have it.
02:07:02.000 If there's something that's not, you know, apocalyptic and, you know, whatever, we'll do a members-only speakeasy kind of show where we'll go in the back room and get away from the prying eyes of the establishment.
02:07:12.000 But, you know, there are certain things that I'm like, let's go for it.
02:07:15.000 Like the Epstein stuff.
02:07:17.000 Luke was like, how do we deal with this?
02:07:18.000 Because we're talking about suicide, we're talking about... I'm like, no, we're going!
02:07:23.000 Like, no way, dude.
02:07:24.000 Something like that has to be... We're talking about Epstein all day, all week.
02:07:27.000 So anyway, my friends, go to TimCast.com, become a member.
02:07:29.000 We're gonna have that members-only segment coming up.
02:07:31.000 It'll be published around 11 or so p.m.
02:07:32.000 You can follow the show at TimCast IRL.
02:07:35.000 You can follow me at TimCast.
02:07:36.000 Kelly, do you want to shout anything out?
02:07:38.000 Do you have social media or anything?
02:07:40.000 I do.
02:07:40.000 If you want to purchase and support what we do, there's a US store, which is adulthumanfemale.us.
02:07:48.000 If you're in the UK or Europe, or you don't mind high postage costs, it's adulthumanfemale.store.
02:07:55.000 And you can also support what we do at standingforwomen.com.
02:07:59.000 Oh, and Kelly J Keane on YouTube.
02:08:01.000 Right on.
02:08:02.000 Libby, do you want to say anything else?
02:08:04.000 Sure.
02:08:04.000 Libby Emmons.
02:08:05.000 I'm at Libby Emmons on Twitter.
02:08:07.000 I'm at The Post Millennial every day.
02:08:09.000 And if you want to help us out, we get targeted by Antifa all the time.
02:08:13.000 If you want to help us out, thepostmillennial.com slash contribute.
02:08:17.000 And you can subscribe to our newsletters and to our site.
02:08:22.000 And, uh, yeah.
02:08:23.000 Right.
02:08:24.000 Yeah.
02:08:24.000 Also, Kelly J gave me this pin.
02:08:27.000 What is it?
02:08:27.000 And it says, um, it says, mother is a female parent.
02:08:32.000 Oh, that's nice.
02:08:33.000 Is that the actual definition of the word?
02:08:34.000 Very happy about it.
02:08:35.000 It's abbreviated to get on a pin, to be fair.
02:08:38.000 I mean, it is, you know.
02:08:39.000 So that's what we're going to talk about the members.
02:08:41.000 Shorter than Twitter, but still.
02:08:42.000 We're going to talk about definitions, dictionary definitions.
02:08:45.000 Good.
02:08:45.000 My favorite topic.
02:08:48.000 Liturgy.
02:08:49.000 Hey, I'm Ian Crossland.
02:08:50.000 Follow me, iancrossland.net.
02:08:51.000 I'll see you guys later.
02:08:52.000 Yeah, I'm very excited for this conversation.
02:08:54.000 We'll be discussing the definition of woman, which is an adult human female, I'm told.
02:08:58.000 I'm stoked I get to wear my shirt tonight.
02:09:00.000 You guys may follow me on Twitter and mines.com at SourPatchLens.
02:09:04.000 We will see you all at TimCast.com.