In this episode, we discuss the recent arrest of Proudboy founder Gavin McInnes, the Trump raid at his Florida home, and much more. We also discuss the new single "Only Ever Wanted" by Tim Kastorf from the band Only Ever Wanted.
00:00:28.000so the other night while we were live I guess Gavin McInnes doing his show he's
00:00:44.000He's the founder of the Proud Boys and he runs Censored.tv for those unfamiliar.
00:00:49.000He's doing his show and then he stands up and it's like he's talking to someone and then he says he'll get a lawyer and schedule something.
00:00:56.000And then his show is just dead air for 30 minutes.
00:00:58.000And the rumor going around is that he was arrested.
00:01:01.000However, many people on the left are claiming it was a prank or a publicity stunt.
00:01:05.000Some are even claiming that behind the scenes he's in a private chat room with other Proud Boys and he's currently talking.
00:01:11.000However, an associate of his and from Censored TV is saying that he is in jail right now.
00:01:18.000It's hard to know what to make of this.
00:01:21.000Because I, I, I, you know, when I see this, him being interrupted, uh, during the live show, a lot of people are like, what are the chances that happens?
00:01:27.000And it's like, we've been interrupted several times with the police coming here because we were swatted.
00:01:31.000And there were a lot of people claiming that we were faking it, and we weren't.
00:01:34.000We had, like, you actually could see the police walk in the room the first time it happened, and I think the, not the last time because, um, to be honest, when it's happened following that, we haven't said anything.
00:01:43.000We have armed guards, you know, and other security that I'm not gonna mention, and they will, you know, intercept any, let's just say, security issues.
00:01:52.000So we just don't say anything about it.
00:02:26.000On top of that, though, we have new information coming out from the Trump raid.
00:02:29.000And, uh, look, it's my opinion, but I think right now it is, it is definitively FBI corruption.
00:02:37.000The affidavit, mostly redacted, basically said that Donald Trump cooperated by turning over 15 boxes, and within those boxes was classified materials.
00:02:46.000Therefore, they said, we now have reason to believe he's probably got more, so we should get to search his home.
00:02:54.000Then they went in and took 11 documents, or 11 packets or something, and Kash Patel said that those were Russiagate documents.
00:02:59.000Could it be that right before midterm, they were scared that Trump would release Crossfire Hurricane Russiagate?
00:03:06.000Evidence that made the government look bad.
00:03:08.000So they needed a way to justify going to his house and taking the copies or at least trying to find out what he has.
00:03:14.000I don't want to get too conspiratorial.
00:03:15.000What I do know is, it sounds like from this affidavit, if Trump did not cooperate with the feds, they would not have had means or grounds to actually go into his home.
00:05:10.000We are going to take the hill that they have abandoned.
00:05:12.000If you want to support us, And you wanna send a message, you wanna help us continually take this space, the link in the description below, 69 cents to buy the song, it's all costs.
00:05:22.000And you don't need that many to have an impact, to get on the charts.
00:05:24.000So if you guys go down there and just buy that song, put it in your libraries, it's also on Amazon Music and stuff, it would be a dream come true, it'd be tremendous.
00:05:32.000And hopefully we can generate enough from this to keep making more music.
00:05:37.000And then if there are other people who are scared, you know, here's what I'm, I wanna tell you what I'm talking about.
00:05:42.000People in the music industry who are like, I agree with all of this stuff.
00:05:46.000Oh, I voted for Donald Trump, but if I tell anybody I'll get, I'll get fired.
00:05:50.000I want there to be within a few years, a space, a parallel cultural economy where people can be like, bro, if you fire me, I'm going to go work for this other company.
00:06:23.000Being a member at TimCast.com is what's making all this possible.
00:06:25.000That's like the main engine for us to make all these shows.
00:06:28.000And you can see here that we've got Cast Castle Vlog, which is comedy.
00:06:33.000We're gonna be making, we're turning into a sitcom.
00:06:34.000Tales from the Inverted World, True Crime, Pop Culture Crisis, Pop Culture Commentary, Chicken City, family-friendly, you know, just chicken stuff.
00:06:43.000We're trying to build the cultural space and expand it and we are building more and more and more.
00:06:47.000And what's happening is, once we get a project established, and the gears start turning, we move on to the next one, and we just keep planting more seeds, whose trees, whose shade, we know we will never sit beneath.
00:09:12.000Going through all the billboard numbers, it's actually really funny.
00:09:15.000When you look at the Billboard Hot 100, the most popular songs in the country, it's all like, you know, R&B, hip-hop, you know, WAP, you know what I mean?
00:09:24.000Was it W-A-P, the thing Ben Shapiro raps?
00:09:27.000The reason that is is because people listen to that stuff.
00:09:30.000But if every fan of, like, metal or alternative actually bought the songs, then the Hot 100 would always be alternative rock.
00:09:58.000So the reason so like I'll say is if we saw John rich he hit number one on iTunes I think for like 12 days or something like that great progress a country song ragging on woke people.
00:10:08.000Yeah, because his fans actually bought it That's what that's what I'm talking about.
00:10:12.000So even if it's not like this song is totally not political We need y'all to just support your favorite artists and then all of a sudden we'll start displacing the top charts.
00:10:23.000And then if you do that, those record labels are going to be like, Hey guys, this makes more money.
00:12:15.000A lot of people are like, it's gotta be the feds, because, um, I think it was Will Carlos, this journalist, called the local police and they were like, we did not arrest him.
00:12:22.000And there's been no announcements by law enforcement or anything about a possible arrest.
00:13:01.000But I don't want to say that if he actually got arrested, because that's... I don't care who you are.
00:13:09.000Even the boy who cried wolf, in a circumstance like this, I'm not going to start by assuming you faked some kind of arrest or something.
00:13:16.000And you've got to understand, too, in this clip, He didn't even say he was getting arrested.
00:13:19.000He just left the show in the middle of the show.
00:13:21.000For all we know, when he was pulling into his driveway, he scratched his neighbor, he bumped his neighbor's car, and they called the cops, and he's doing a show, and the cop shows up, and then they said, like, you hit that car, you gotta come out, and he's like, I'll get a lawyer.
00:13:33.000Like, it could have been something as innocuous as that.
00:13:35.000And then they were like, no, you're coming out now, and then the show goes off the air because he's outside, and he's, like, arguing with people and exchanging information, and they're yelling at him.
00:14:18.000There's a part of the video where he says, I didn't let you in here.
00:14:22.000And I don't know a ton about Gavin's studio, but I think that's significant.
00:14:26.000That either means that they Felt like they had reason to entry, reason to enter, and I assume that means they were serving an arrest warrant.
00:15:30.000And then it was two months later that Aaron Danielson took two to the chest from a Black Lives Matter activist with a BLM tattoo on his neck.
00:15:39.000Someone was just insinuating that MAGA Republicans were dangerous.
00:16:32.000Unless the angle they're going with is that it's all an act, so that his enemies think he's a fumbling bumbling... You know, look, people are... I'll put it this way.
00:16:40.000Conservatives are acting like Joe Biden's not really the one making all these moves.
00:16:44.000So he's sort of getting the blame deflected off of himself by being this way.
00:16:49.000So imagine he's actually totally lucid and strong, And he's like, listen here, listen here champ.
00:17:58.000I don't necessarily agree but like in some ways I wondered if that story was to set him up for like sympathy from the American public should anyone ever try to prosecute him in the future because it's like well he wasn't he wasn't well then and he's not he's even worse now like we always just give him the excuse that he's like old and decrepit even though he was this way when we elected him.
00:18:17.000Maybe he is being controlled by somebody else and he's just a puppet.
00:18:28.000If this Gavin McGinnis thing turns out to not be a hoax, and he was actually detained for some reason, then the fact that information's been withheld and that he would be in jail is actually really, really terrifying.
00:18:41.000Which is why it's like, it'd be really awful if it was a stunt.
00:18:52.000You know, for all we know, it could be like that.
00:18:54.000But considering that the president just got his house raided and the reasoning behind it seems to be completely, like, fraudulent and corrupt, in my opinion, these are scary days.
00:19:05.000You know, like I mentioned, Scott Adams said Republicans will be hunted.
00:19:08.000He did say you'll be dead by this time next year or something like that.
00:19:13.000But a couple of months later, dude was shot and killed for just being a Trump supporter.
00:19:16.000So it's like he was right for somebody.
00:19:18.000And if you mean it in like the unpersonal way, like if you ban people from platforms that are mainstream and you cut them off from society, you're not literally dead, but you are.
00:19:28.000Your influence is over, if that makes sense.
00:19:30.000That's what I think more people the attempt is with most people who have like MAGA ideology.
00:19:35.000They don't want them to have any sort of influence over politics.
00:19:37.000So if they can shuffle them as far into the dark parts of the Internet as they can and be like, oh, they're extremists.
00:20:51.000And now we got the story in the New York Times about these people selling the diary, actually Biden's diary, to James.
00:20:56.000And it sounds like they're going to try and go after Veritas.
00:20:58.000We may be winning, but of course, no one in the culture war is going to just give up, right?
00:21:04.000So if freedom, liberty, moderation, libertarianism, conservative values, American values, all of these things, which don't completely agree with each other, but have this coalition start winning.
00:21:14.000Are we about to see a dramatic escalation in corrupt law enforcement and political, you know, authoritarianism?
00:21:22.000Well, surely they're going to be held accountable after the next couple of months.
00:21:28.000I mean, when a cornered animal lashes out, you know, in its last desperate move, that's when the Republicans have the advantage of typically they are the party of inaction, I would say.
00:21:40.000And in this case, inaction is probably the best thing to do.
00:22:00.000And then hopefully the representatives who are elected are going to be able to clean up instead of trying to seize the ring of power for themselves and then the corruption spreads, but it comes from the right now.
00:22:12.000I gotta give an amazing white pill moment for everybody.
00:22:15.000I was laughing with such joy earlier today.
00:22:19.000So I tweeted out that YouTube changed their rules.
00:22:23.000I do this big long thing because YouTube removed the rule saying you you can't claim that that masks cause lung cancer and that masks You know a whole bunch of claims the most absurd of which was that YouTube now allows people to claim that masks cause lung cancer which is Weird.
00:23:31.000They're scraping at the bottom of the barrel so hard, they've started pulling up wood chips.
00:23:35.000Yeah, and the timing is right after she's been swatted, what, twice?
00:23:38.000So they're like, no sympathy points for her.
00:23:41.000She thinks masks make you have lung cancer.
00:23:43.000Stay away from Marjorie Taylor Greene.
00:23:45.000Like, it's so desperate what they're doing.
00:23:46.000There's another fake meme where they're like, Marjorie Taylor Greene was talking about solar energy and claimed that you would lose electricity at night.
00:23:54.000And she said, I don't know about you, but I like having the lights on at night.
00:23:58.000And then all these leftists are mocking her.
00:24:19.000But they snip out one weird sounding thing.
00:24:23.000Anyway, the reason I bring that up as a white pill thing, when we're talking about winning in November, G-Prime, you know, he just mentioned, George, he said, get your family, go vote.
00:24:31.000You know, Marjorie— Everybody you know.
00:24:33.000When Marjorie Taylor Greene is winning, and she's, like, raising more money than anybody else, and then we see a whole bunch of MAGA Republicans that they hate so much winning, Carrie Lake sweeping every district in Arizona.
00:24:47.000Arizona's been slowly turning blue because of California, people fleeing California.
00:24:50.000Carrie Lake still swept every district.
00:25:19.000So come November, everybody, you got to get everybody you know.
00:25:22.000And then finally, if we can get enough of these actual American value politicians in, maybe get some accountability and some investigations.
00:25:48.000In sports terms, it's sort of like... Conservatives in general, strategically, are hold your ground and play defense.
00:25:56.000It's hard to go on offense with your shield up.
00:25:58.000You're stepping forward, stepping forward, holding your ground.
00:26:01.000But now it's time to, you have the ball, go towards the end zone.
00:26:06.000I guess my problem is that I worry that, I mean, we grew up, we're all about the age where we remember when the Republicans pushed a little too hard in the early 2000s and stuff.
00:26:16.000We've seen them go on offense and then make so many mistakes that they make themselves look foolish and then they get replaced by the left because the left says we want change from these bad policies, these, I always talk about the Patriot Act and all that stuff, I hate that stuff.
00:26:32.000And pushing wars and let's go invade everybody.
00:26:35.000It's like, no, how about we just focus on America for a little while?
00:26:37.000And that's what this new form of red team is doing.
00:26:42.000I want to see what happens when they have control of the ball.
00:26:46.000We've never seen what happens before, have we?
00:26:49.000Well, how do you see America fitting in with a new world order?
00:26:54.000It depends who's in control of America, right?
00:26:55.000I mean, if in the next two and a half years, Biden's still in control of the executive branch, let's say, or his handlers are still in control.
00:27:08.000So I'm guessing it's going to be lame duckish for the next couple years, maybe, policy-wise.
00:27:13.000As far as the New World Order is concerned, they might just be planning to do things without America's involvement.
00:27:20.000Would be my guess, because America is kind of crippled as if we have a blue executive branch who won't pass any of the legislation that they write on Red Team, let's say.
00:27:32.000We want to pass these bills and Joe Biden's like, no, I'm just not going to pass it.
00:27:37.000So then it goes to the Supreme Court, and then we have more fighting on that front.
00:27:40.000But as far as what they're trying to push, like what?
00:27:44.000I mean, what new thing is going to happen in the next two years that the Liberal World Order or whatever, the World Economic Forum, what are they going to try to push in the next couple of years aside from Cryptocurrency is the new digital currency, like dispensing of the dollar erosion of human rights in general.
00:27:59.000We'll just I guess we will be watching helplessly as the rest of the world loses their rights and then hoping that we're one of the last countries that can at least openly criticize this stuff.
00:28:08.000Yeah, whenever there's a revolution, honestly, I don't think there's ever been a revolution, I was reading about this, where the bottom tier of society rose up and took the top.
00:28:17.000It's always that a top and a bottom aspect of society are replaced by a smaller top and bottom segment of society.
00:28:24.000So it's like you can't, well, that maybe is a little different than the point that you can't really revolt.
00:28:51.000Or maybe we were talking about this offline, with those stupid Boston Dynamics robots patrolling down the street, trying to hold the peace in New York State or something, if there's weirdos in the woods trying to hold their ground.
00:29:05.000I guess, are there peaceful revolutions in history?
00:30:07.000So Kathy Hockels gotta go said Republican congressman and gubernatorial candidate Lee Zeldin Just jump on a bus and head down to Florida where you belong.
00:32:36.000This is part of why top-down governance is failing, or at least struggling, is because it's, like, utilitarian.
00:32:42.000Kathy doesn't know all the Republicans that she's claiming are not New Yorkers that are.
00:32:47.000Like, if she knew them personally, she probably wouldn't be saying that.
00:32:50.000Well she always says like I'm from Buffalo, I'm from upstate, I know about the rest of New Yorkers like she tries to present herself as more than just like a politician who's catering to New York City which dominates the state's politics in a lot of ways but like she is not.
00:33:04.000I bring up the economic criticism because the two major issues for New York voters right now are How could you live in New York?
00:33:44.000Maybe she's gonna start busing them down the way that Abbott's busing illegal immigrants to D.C., like she's gonna get her own system going.
00:33:50.000But you saw that story that they're not even making it, right?
00:34:02.000What Blue Team seems to be doing is forcing people to retreat.
00:34:05.000And I've always had the opinion of the more you retreat, eventually you're going to find your back to a cliff and then they're going to force you to jump.
00:34:12.000Or do a desperate move to make a mistake.
00:34:15.000I know a bunch of New Yorkers because I live really close to it and the idea of, how do I put this, they will never forget like say you had an older family member in the hospital or something like that, you weren't allowed to visit them.
00:34:28.000Or you had one, you could only have one person visiting at a time.
00:34:33.000That is how you can flip most demographics red, for sure.
00:34:37.000Nobody's going to ever forget that, at least from our generation.
00:34:39.000So not being able to visit an elderly family member, or God forbid you had someone that died, those people will never vote blue again, probably.
00:34:47.000So when she says leave, she's trying to force them to retreat because she knows she's already lost them.
00:37:01.000I'm all in favor of cleaning up voter rolls, but I think it's such... What I don't like is that in 2016, they screamed for years that Russia hacked the machines and all that stuff.
00:37:11.000And then to see the right-side in that narrative, and I'm like, bro, even if it's the case, you need to talk... There's two big things you need to do.
00:37:17.000One, rally everyone you know to go and vote.
00:37:20.000And two, make sure you're paying attention to the process.
00:37:23.000Like in Wisconsin, they're saying those drop boxes are illegal.
00:37:26.000But when you come out and you say stuff like that, it's like a defeatist mentality.
00:38:10.000DeSantis just found a bunch of people who weren't eligible to vote were voting and things like that.
00:38:14.000So when people come out and they assert that the reason we lost is specifically because of criminal activity, it's like, or are you just not paying attention to the fact that the rules were adjusted in such a way that it harmed you and your ideology?
00:39:38.000That's what i'm that's what i'm saying. I would love accountability on both sides. Yeah, especially with the
00:39:43.000machines themselves Right now we've got... Paper, man, I would love it.
00:39:46.000Or at least digital machines with transparent algorithms so that we can watch the counts happen in real time, and then you can verify your vote.
00:39:53.000As opposed to what they did, and what they have been doing, is that they were tallying them in back rooms with proprietary software code, so we can't verify that the votes are even being tallied properly.
00:40:16.000I think a three-step, like a three barriers would be so you have your paper, you have your digital machine thing, and then you have a blockchain tally as well.
00:40:24.000So we're relatively young in that we understand what it means to say open source, but how do we convince people in like the legislator branches what this means and why it's important?
00:40:52.000I want to point you guys at a video of a testimony a guy gave in front of Congress, if you want to say what can we do with Congress, about building an algorithm in a voting machine that changes the vote 51-49.
00:41:04.000And that no one, unless you have the source code, you wouldn't know that it's doing it.
00:41:07.000Or unless you could run it up against the actual paper ballots, you wouldn't know that anyone's doing it.
00:41:34.000I think one of the most striking things about this is that she's so, I mean, I think we have this idea that like when people get to the, you know, she won her democratic primary, uh, that they'll start trying to court the independent vote and move to a more moderate position.
00:41:45.000But with this, Kogel is just like blatantly going farther left.
00:41:51.000She is trying to completely activate only democratic voters.
00:42:07.000The video on YouTube, if you want to watch, is called American Election Hacker Testifies.
00:42:11.000And it's from, I don't know, 10 years ago or something.
00:42:13.000But the guy's name is Clinton Eugene Curtis.
00:42:15.000He testified under oath in front of the U.S.
00:42:17.000House Judiciary members in Ohio that Tom Feeney in the year 2000 had him build a prototype software package that would secretly rig an election to sway the result 5149 to a specified side.
00:42:27.000Under oath testimony that he built that for Tom Feeney.
00:42:31.000I've gone to a whole bunch of the DEF CON conferences, and they have the Voting Hacker Village or something like that, where they have a bunch of different voting machines, and they're all just having a good time breaking into them.
00:42:43.000So open source can help solve a lot of that, because it allows the public to scrutinize how the system is being operated.
00:43:03.000But like, so with a proprietary software voting machine, you could have like a hundred people vote and the machines like, if the vote is this, then subtract 10 from side A. And so there'll be a thing, but if you don't have the code to see the math of what it's telling you what to subtract and what to add, you wouldn't know that it's moving the votes.
00:43:22.000But if you can see the code, then you'll see, oh, there's something telling The machine to subtract 10 if that's not right.
00:43:34.000Like honestly this kind of code, I'm not like an expert by any means and you know way more than me, but I'm sure like most amateur coders know how to tally things.
00:44:10.000We've talked about crypto voting, but if we just do like a hybridized system where when you vote, your ballot has a cryptographic association with your name and your registration, then you don't got to worry about them going through the machine twice or anything like that.
00:44:24.000It's like, you know, rejected already in the system.
00:44:27.000Let me talk to you about the way in which I think we are seeing dirty, underhanded tactics to try and win in these elections.
00:44:35.000From TimCast.com, Sandy Hook families ask judge to remove Alex Jones from control of his company.
00:44:42.000Now, I don't mean to say this story literally, specifically is Democratic operatives trying to cheat.
00:44:48.000What I'm saying is the things we have seen levied at Alex Jones in general are destroying his ability to run his company.
00:44:57.000And along with many other people, the censorship ramped up tremendously in 2018.
00:45:02.000And is still persistent with now the revelation that the FBI made a request to Facebook, and then Facebook was like, oh, we better censor this Hunter Biden laptop stuff.
00:45:10.000The moves made against Donald Trump, the moves made to censor stories, the destruction of Alex Jones in Infowars and all that stuff, and for all of the things you can criticize him for, I get it, I get it.
00:45:21.000The fact is, they're going after speech.
00:45:24.000This would not be necessary if they were winning.
00:45:27.000They wouldn't need to go after Alex Jones unless Alex Jones was actually a threat to the establishment.
00:45:32.000Just saying his name is giving him publicity.
00:45:36.000What's happening now is, in the lawsuit, the families are alleging that he's funneling money to Free Speech Systems, his company, is funneling money to a family member.
00:45:44.000I say, according to the motion, Free Speech Systems claims to owe a massive secure debt to an insider that was first reported when the cases against Jones began, but no records show that debt existed prior to the lawsuit.
00:45:55.000Attorneys for the families are now requesting a bankruptcy trustee assume control of his company.
00:46:00.000They have also requested the court appoint a tort claimants committee to investigate free speech systems business dealings and for the court to remove FSS as the debtor in possession.
00:46:11.000This is kind of crazy, because people talked about this when Jones lost his lawsuit, or I shouldn't say when he lost it, he was in default, but when he was sentenced to pay, you know, 45 million or whatever, 50 million.
00:46:51.000Well, look, the families are asking it, and I think that has a lot to do with they want the money that they sued him over, and if he's broke, ain't no money to get.
00:47:33.000You know what's good about, say, an Alex Jones type of person, not to speak for him or anything, but a lot of people on the right are people of faith, let's say.
00:47:42.000You get a Marjorie Taylor Greene or something like that.
00:47:44.000They are trained because of their faith to, we are, it's like we're conditioned to suffer and take it.
00:47:52.000And that's when the qualities of the right shine the most, is when you're oppressing them.
00:47:57.000And it's like, wait, why aren't you staying down?
00:48:24.000I think that the Catholic Church on purpose made people believe that they're supposed to suffer and that they're bad so that they would become servants to the church.
00:48:31.000Okay, so this is actually something that Viktor Frankl observed in his time and Fyodor Dostoevsky also observed it in his time in concentration camp in Soviet Russia.
00:48:39.000He observed that people who followed religions were impossible to stop.
00:49:14.000Paul has said something like that, where it's like, I want to have an even more, uh, even, uh, I don't know.
00:49:19.000I want to get more buff points or something when, when I level up and when I'm resurrected.
00:49:24.000No, because at the very core of what they believe is that, I mean, they don't talk about this very often, maybe I'm going on a tangent, but at the core of Christianity is you expect to be resurrected.
00:49:35.000So even if you're thrown to the lions, literally in early biblical times, tortured to death, whatever, that actually brings you closer to, it's kind of like if you're not being tortured, maybe you're doing something wrong.
00:50:05.000But talking about lukewarm Christians and that sort of thing.
00:50:08.000And even with the vaccine mandates, and you weren't allowed to go to church or any of that stuff.
00:50:15.000I would still hear stories about people going to church and meeting anyway, even though the state told them they weren't allowed to.
00:50:20.000And it's like, that's where you find where the lukewarm Christians were, is the ones who kind of just like, oh, I'll do whatever the state tells me to.
00:50:27.000It's like, no, actually, in the early church, again, we were meeting underground when you could be found and killed.
00:50:33.000You know, you remember, you know, the origin of the Jesus fish?
00:50:50.000Honestly, that's when you feel the heat of your faith really, is when you can die for it, but you still believe it anyway.
00:50:57.000So I have family members who are so, not to say too much out of respect, but like, I know one that was facing their death, let's say, or is facing their death.
00:51:07.000And that is when they are the most themselves and everyone's like, how are you holding it together?
00:51:12.000And it's like, no, I'm going to go see Jesus soon.
00:51:16.000So again, I'm complimenting Christians in the sense of like, the more you push them, the more you force them to like, hey, we're gonna be mean to you and we're gonna dox you or we're gonna swat you.
00:51:27.000And actually, I don't know if the left understands this because maybe they don't believe anything.
00:51:32.000I think they don't really believe in Christianity because they dismiss it sort of outright.
00:51:37.000But like throughout the Christian Bible there are the reminders of like set your mind on the things above.
00:51:41.000I think there's a verse in Colossians about that where it's a constant reminder that like what's happening on earth is not your ultimate end goal.
00:51:47.000And I think if you aren't a person of faith that's very difficult to embrace because like the idea of eternity and the consequences of your actions here You know, for some people, this is all you have.
00:51:58.000And so you have to do whatever, like, whatever your ultimate ideology is, you have to pursue it intensely, whereas Christians aren't driven that way.
00:52:05.000I want to address, you know, you were mentioning about getting backed into a corner.
00:52:09.000And then, you know, what were you talking about?
00:52:21.000That made me feel like the Summer of Love, like the analogy.
00:52:24.000It's like, you're sitting there minding your own business, you're watering your lawn, and a rabid fox just runs up and attacks you for no reason.
00:52:30.000And you try and kick it off, but it keeps biting you.
00:52:33.000Then it bites onto her hand, and she's like swinging it around and then throws it, and then she's got a gash, and she's got puncture wounds, then she's got to get the rabies shot, and it's like, man, she didn't even do anything to anybody, right?
00:52:43.000That's how it felt with, like, the BLM riots.
00:52:45.000So a lot of people talk about how, you know, someone super chatted, the establishment is losing, but a cornered rat bites the hardest.
00:52:53.000You can go and water your flowers and mind your own business and the rabid fox attacks you, or you can be proactive and chase it off with the hose, because they're hydrophobic, and then it might get into a corner and freak out, but what do you choose?
00:53:04.000Do you choose to say, I'm not going to allow you to come into my house, or are you going to say, I'm just going to go over here and ignore you and then you're eventually going to bite me?
00:53:11.000I think being proactive and saying no.
00:53:19.000I do believe that faith in God or in a perception in something greater than the physical experience that we're having is important.
00:53:26.000And it gives me faith in saying what I believe, regardless of consequences, often.
00:53:30.000The feeling of being okay to be a servant is disturbing to me because I think that's church propaganda, that they want people to be subservient so that they don't rise up and overthrow corrupt governments and systems.
00:53:43.000And I don't like seeing people backed into a corner.
00:53:46.000I don't like seeing people act out of fear.
00:54:50.000Well, an interesting thing also to consider, to add to what you were saying, Ian, is at the bottom level or the top level of Christianity, I don't think a lot of them practicing understand how crazy this is.
00:55:02.000They actually think that they will be resurrected, like actually.
00:55:37.000I mean, biblically speaking, one could try to argue that those verses were added later on down the road.
00:55:43.000Like when you look at the different Manuscript translations and they have found a lot of old Manuscripts that are super super close to when the disciples had written most of the New Testament the Apostle and It's pretty much They have not changed very much.
00:55:59.000Yeah consciousness dude is gonna rise your spirit is alive and active well, maybe not alive in the sense of our bodies, but it's it's a it's a Momentous organism you could say it's not of course.
00:56:18.000Well, in that sense, too, like you could just say the Christian is embodying what Jesus did.
00:56:23.000Jesus still lives on through them, by them continuing what he said and basically promised.
00:56:30.000So when and to go back to why an American would stand their ground and why we love standing our ground culturally, we are certain that by doing that the next generations who inherit America from us are going to benefit by copying that behavior.
00:56:46.000I'm going to stand my ground and not retreat and that will probably end up preserving the country as opposed to if I keep backing away and ceding ground to enemies who keep trying to push me.
00:56:57.000they will, they don't even have to fight me and they'll win the
00:57:00.000ground. But if I stand my ground and force them to fight and
00:57:03.000engage me, it's going to get ugly. And maybe it's going to cost them more than they want to pay. And I'm sorry, I know
00:57:10.000I'm just and forcing people to take, you know, they say turn
00:57:13.000the other cheek. It's like, No, I am in fact willing to let you
00:57:16.000hit me. And I'm daring you now to hurt me even more, because
00:57:21.000eventually that will make me win by default.
00:57:27.000It became Christian because they kept... It was originally a secret religion, and you were killed for believing it, but eventually it became the religion of Rome.
00:57:36.000Because, among other reasons, they were persecuting them so hard, everybody became a Christian.
00:57:42.000So I think about this with the raid on Donald Trump, and it looks like they're trying to indict him on something.
00:58:21.000But of course, there's it's more complicated.
00:58:24.000But I think Ultimately they need Alex Jones to not become a martyr so they need a complete wipe out.
00:58:30.000They can't leave any remnants of what he's left behind because in one in a lot of ways he was a huge he was a gateway for a lot of people to become supportive of Donald Trump and they can't have that again.
00:58:41.000I think it was James Lindsay who mentioned in the show that he was on a plane with a woman, and then she said that she didn't like Trump, but this raid against him was wrong, and it was a step too far.
00:58:51.000They shocked the system hard, and I think... Let's actually just jump to the story, okay?
00:58:55.000So we have this from the Wall Street Journal.
00:58:57.000Judge orders Justice Department to release redacted affidavit leading to search of Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago home.
00:59:30.000Donald Trump's people returned those boxes.
00:59:33.000The FBI then said, when they were told by the National Archives, they believed that was probable cause, that Donald Trump still had more stuff in his house, and therefore, they should raid him.
00:59:44.000They then found 11 stacks, like packets of documents, and took them because they were classified.
00:59:50.000Kash Patel mentioned the president declassified these things, they shouldn't have taken them.
00:59:53.000It sounds like they knew Trump had crossfire hurricane, Russia gate documents, that were going to potentially implicate, or at the very least, besmirch I don't know.
01:00:03.000I mean, did Donald Trump not have copies of whatever these documents were?
01:00:07.000seize. This sounds dangerously corrupt and dirty. And, uh, I don't, I don't know. I mean,
01:00:16.000did Donald Trump not have copies of whatever these documents were as he's an old guy. So maybe, but
01:00:20.000I don't know if I believe there was any reason that would warrant what they did at Trump's house
01:00:30.000Yeah, that's like if there was a gun recall and they're like, turn in your guns and you turn in your gun and then they're like, hey, that's evidence that you might have more guns.
01:00:37.000We're going to break into your house and check.
01:00:57.000I just think it's unrealistic to think any government entity asks you to turn in something like with like blinders on, right?
01:01:04.000They're not... They never granted anyone immunity.
01:01:06.000They asked him to turn in something And it immediately gave them cause.
01:01:10.000If you turned in drug paraphernalia or guns, like, of course, then they're gonna be like, well, we know you have a history of owning drug paraphernalia or guns.
01:01:18.000Like, we're gonna continue down this road.
01:01:19.000How about that completely fake story about nuclear documents?
01:01:48.000Why didn't Trump just release them if that's the case?
01:01:50.000Perhaps Trump was preparing an October surprise when he was announcing he would be running for president and then he would say, boom, here's the story.
01:01:59.000I think it's also notable, like we talked about this a little bit before, but they didn't leak this.
01:02:03.000I mean, Trump is the one who announced to the world that they were raiding his house.
01:02:06.000This was not leaked to the press beforehand.
01:02:08.000I don't think the FBI wanted anyone to know this is what they were doing.
01:02:12.000They wanted to turn off the surveillance cameras and stuff, I remember.
01:02:14.000They wanted it to be, they wanted to have the element of surprise and, you know, have this happen clandestinely until they had decided what they had found to then tell you about it.
01:02:25.000And again, Donald Trump kind of interrupted that narrative by being like, no, they're at my house, like, let's all pay attention to this.
01:02:32.000I mean, I don't think anyone had a clear explanation.
01:02:35.000I think on the left, there was a lot of scrambling to come up with like a good reason why they would have done this.
01:02:40.000Especially when they knew he wasn't there.
01:02:42.000That was one of the things that bothered me.
01:02:44.000It was known that he was in New Jersey because of a golf tournament at the time.
01:02:46.000They specifically picked a time when he wouldn't be there to do this.
01:02:50.000The same FBI team that oversaw the Russia investigation raids his house to take documents that people are saying was from the Russia investigation.
01:03:03.000Yeah, like they've been on the track to start this to transition to a new world order, like, you know, reduce, I don't know what they're doing with the American military bases, but just like from the liberal world order to the new world order, and Donald Trump was slowing it down.
01:03:16.000And then so so behind the scenes, they're like, we just don't want him slowing us down.
01:03:20.000But in public, they're like, he's a villain.
01:03:22.000So hate him so that you don't elect him again.
01:03:25.000I mean, he said he was going to dismantle a lot of that stuff anyway in a second term if he ever got one or something like that.
01:03:34.000We were saying that desperation leads to mistakes, and there's no way we can look at this aside from, this was a mistake.
01:03:41.000They're making moves that suggest that if they didn't do it, they would get dismantled.
01:03:46.000So we may as well do something really crazy to try to save ourselves.
01:03:51.000Because if we don't, we're going to lose anyway.
01:03:53.000So now they're losing reputation by doing things like this.
01:03:57.000I think if there if we start being honest with ourselves and each other that like, yeah, it's inevitable, man, we're globalizing this world is coming together in a new way.
01:04:05.000It's we're not going to be the king of the hill.
01:04:07.000American is we're never supposed to be like the top leader ever.
01:04:14.000I mean, I'm ignorant, so when I say this, take it with a grain of salt.
01:04:17.000I'm okay with America just kind of cooling it off a little bit.
01:04:20.000Let's focus on ourselves, getting it together here for a little while before, like, it's like that verse, not to quote too many things, of like, before you tell your friend, hey, you've got a plank in your eye, or no, you've got a speck of dust.
01:04:34.000How about America cleans its own act up before telling the rest of the world how to, you know, operate themselves?
01:04:40.000And if the rest of the world wants to drive themselves into a hole in a socialist nightmare, whatever, the downside to that is that we lose access to resources and, you know, our advantage across the planet.
01:04:51.000But maybe we need to focus on ourselves for a little while to clean up.
01:04:54.000America's been acting like, you know, it's this dude who's got a bunch of credit card debt.
01:04:59.000Can't pay it off keeps taking out more loans Instead and then going around and just yelling at the neighbors about how they got to pay up and give them money Yeah, it's like me going to your house and saying I don't like where your furniture is Let me start moving things around but my house is a mess Well, I think, you know, just to be a little bit more specific, the US is just like riddled with debt and then basically just printing money behind the scenes to satiate its addictions while criticizing, you know, it's just a completely broken system.
01:05:30.000So they're going to pass on that debt to the next generation.
01:05:32.000So maybe they're assuming that the next generation is going to do really good and we'll be able to, our kids will be able to pay that bill.
01:05:38.000That's the optimistic way to look at it.
01:05:40.000That's modern monetary theory, is that you print enough, go into deficit, and that you are able to build enough industry and infrastructure that the product starts to outweigh the debt, and eventually you bypass the investiture.
01:05:52.000The problem is that we haven't been investing in industry properly in the last 10 years.
01:07:49.000It's what's happening is they're getting it from the Federal Reserve and then so they'll borrow a buck from the Federal Reserve but then we owe a dollar and one cent back.
01:08:28.000Now, I'm in favor of getting rid of the interest rates and trying to alleviate the student debt problem for sure, but taking money from the working class to pay for the laptop class does not sound like, you know, good policy.
01:08:40.000It's they the more steps that you have it obscures what you're doing and it just confuses people like if I read a headline I'll just read the headline.
01:08:48.000I'm not going to really look into it deeply.
01:08:50.000Most people are very low resolution when it comes to reading the news or even understanding the news.
01:08:57.000That's why I watch the news in the first place.
01:08:59.000I want the quick story so I can quickly understand what's going on.
01:09:06.000And the more steps, they're doing it on purpose, the more steps are involved.
01:09:11.000John Doe, you know, going to work every day, nine to five, he's exhausted, he's got his kids, he's got his hobbies, he's tired all the time, he doesn't need to be thinking about all this.
01:09:18.000And some of them, they package it in such a way that I'm happy, oh, minimum wage is now $15.
01:10:01.000It, like, takes $20 from every paycheck so that I can buy myself a house.
01:10:05.000Like, just really egregiously awful things.
01:10:08.000It'd be like, the bill just basically says, Tim Pool gets $20 of every American's paycheck and will be rich, but it's called, like, the Save the Dying Children Act.
01:10:28.000Well, I call it low resolution versus high resolution.
01:10:31.000Most people, I mean, I'm stealing this from Peterson, sort of, but most people don't have time to, in graphics terms, a high resolution image takes more time to render.
01:10:53.000Well, and when you see this with articles, it'll have the big headline that's flashy, it'll have the first couple lines that have information, but any...
01:11:00.000Any information that sort of sways or gives partisan, like if a publication wants you to have a certain view on an issue, they put it in the top third of the article because that's as bad as far as you're going to read and all the nuanced details are in the bottom two-thirds.
01:11:12.000Anything that may contradict their claims and that's because they know that people won't read that far.
01:11:18.000They just, I mean, there's so much media and so much information coming out at all times right now It's actually very difficult to stay well informed on everything, so I can't really fault the general public for that, but it is the easiest way to sway someone.
01:11:32.000But they're playing the game in such a way that, like Democrats, I'll give them credit for this, most people don't have time to think about things this deeply.
01:11:40.000The average person, you can call them stupid, but actually they're just busy probably.
01:11:44.000That's why, with, I mean, not to toot my own horn too much, but that's why comics work so well, is because they say, like, you know, a picture's worth a thousand words, let's say.
01:12:03.000It's cross-referencing with like hyperlinks that you already made.
01:12:07.000You might have read a story about this.
01:12:09.000Now you're seeing four images that are related to that story.
01:12:12.000But now you're thinking about other things that these images are now recalling memories from your memory and you're now filling in the blanks.
01:12:20.000So my four images are now giving you a full essay in the span of five seconds, maybe less.
01:12:28.000That's why images are so powerful, and that's why headlines are powerful, and that's why Twitter, I've said this forever, Twitter is comics.
01:12:34.000It's just every tweet is like a panel, you're scrolling, you're scrolling, you're getting maybe an image.
01:12:40.000That's why I will often attach an image to my tweets, because it makes you stop scrolling, what's this image?
01:13:35.000What he meant was, He said, what he meant to say was, it is estimated that by the time I finish this talk, there will be... No, you're right.
01:13:43.000He was going to say, by the time I finish this talk, X amount of people will have died.
01:13:47.000But it was like only 200,000 or something.
01:13:49.000It was a lower number, but he said 200 million.
01:15:03.000This is what regular people associate with.
01:15:05.000This is what I was explaining earlier on one of my segments when I was shouting out the song we did.
01:15:09.000When I used to do nonprofit fundraising, If you saw somebody like Ian in the street, and you walked up to him and went, excuse me, sir, just a moment of your time, and shook his hand and said, now I got a proposal for you.
01:15:18.000Right now, he'd be like, bro, what are you talking about?
01:15:21.000You gotta walk up to someone like Ian and go, bro!
01:15:24.000High five him and be like, listen here, bro, you wanna save the trees, right?
01:15:44.000You have to meet people where they are.
01:15:48.000If you go to someone with a MAGA hat on and a Trump flag and start saying, listen, you need to understand, Donald Trump and Joe Biden, they're gonna be like, I have no idea who you are, I don't know what you're on about, and this is confusing to me.
01:16:01.000But if you approach them from where they are, you know, you notice that they've got, like, a Cubs hat.
01:16:25.000Here's a story that maybe you wouldn't have been open to the message of the story, but I have told it in such a way that now you're, oh yeah, I do relate to those characters.
01:16:37.000I do feel bad for them, or I do feel what they're feeling, and now I'm starting to think the way they are.
01:16:42.000I relate to Joe Biden here wanting to use force lightning to vaporize 200 million people.
01:17:11.000They like things that are more accessible to them.
01:17:13.000So I think you're totally right that having something, if I were to send someone a CNN headline or a Fox News headline, you know, they might already have their guard up.
01:17:21.000Whereas art or something that they're interested in on a medium that they're already scrolling through, Twitter, is much more accessible and also more enjoyable because they don't feel like they're going to be immediately sorted into some sort of category.
01:17:32.000Well, the news a lot of the time is very dry, and I just don't want to download all this information.
01:17:37.000But if I'm online scrolling, maybe I'm on the toilet or something, I'm on the bus, I just want to be entertained.
01:17:42.000I want to laugh, I want to smile, I want to see something interesting.
01:17:45.000I want to be entertained when I'm on the toilet.
01:17:46.000You know, I used to have these things called bathroom readers, like at my house, and they're just books full of random trivia that you're supposed to read when you're taking a dump.
01:17:54.000Yeah, I got one in my bathroom that says, what is your poo telling you, is the name of the book.
01:19:13.000There was one more thing I wanted to add on that subject too, is the fact that the left has annexed all of the arts, it was not an accident.
01:19:20.000They know that people are bored of news.
01:19:23.000The only way to, it's like Inception, to give you the thoughts that I want to give you, I'm going to tell you a story or a parable.
01:19:31.000So they will spend millions and bazillions of dollars Uh, creating movies, writing stories, songs, anything related to the arts, and that's why they've taken over all of the arts.
01:19:41.000I'm not joking, they've taken over all of the arts because that's how you can persuade people without even... they don't even know it.
01:19:49.000And they know that it's much harder to convince someone who does know To invest in those spaces.
01:19:55.000What do you see across the board among those who are aware of what's going on?
01:21:25.000But when they have access to entertainment, that is, let's say, let's say there's an agenda to push certain subjects on young people, especially because when they grow up, they will be more permissive towards these subjects.
01:21:40.000The parents don't even know what these kids have access to.
01:21:43.000I also think the art used to be a polite way like in polite culture you wouldn't discuss politics or anything too controversial so you talk about art you talk about what's going on and that was an easy way for certain ideologies to route into daily conversation.
01:21:58.000Jumped around it and because things are more blurred and because we have so many You know, I'm thinking like celebrities who come out with these big public statements about their political beliefs It's actually not the perfect escape route it once was and I think it's waking Conservatives up to the fact that like they abandoned this space before they even know they could use I mean they say in what's that?
01:22:19.000What was the number one song right now?
01:22:45.000Do you wonder why it is that when you look at the top tracks so often, the songs are not appropriate for kids?
01:22:53.000Or that you actually have some artists that gloat and laugh at the idea that your kids listen to the horrible things they're talking about in this music?
01:23:01.000Dude, don't ask me why, but the right abandoned this space a long time ago, and it probably has something to do with telling kids, like, you don't want to be a musician.
01:23:11.000Like, you need to grow up and be a doctor or run a business.
01:23:13.000They don't think that the arts, and I've been trying to convince them for the longest time, the arts are not a good investment, they might say.
01:23:21.000But there's that saying of politics are downstream from culture.
01:23:25.000When most young people who have more time than anybody else to consume media or anything like that, watch movies, anything, music, they have access to anything that you want to put into their brains without any supervision whatsoever.
01:23:43.000Yeah, I think Conservators Ensemble 2 rewards seriousness, or what they perceive as seriousness.
01:23:48.000And so often when you're interested in creative activities, it's like, well, unless you can prove to me that you can make money off this right away, you know.
01:23:55.000It's something you do on the side and you're enjoying the fun, whereas like...
01:24:00.000You know, a credit to my friends who grew up in really liberal households, their parents, when they were passionate about something, did take basically everything seriously.
01:24:08.000And, you know, there are pros and cons to both approaches, but I think that leaves the door open to people feeling like your art is incredibly important, you have to pursue it, to the point where it becomes influential, whereas, you know, often the other approach is to say, like, wait until you have the funds to finance your life as an art student.
01:24:26.000When I was younger, the liberals, where I grew up, were basically saying, you can do whatever you want to do, dream, dream big, you want to be an actor, you want to play video games, whatever it is you want to do.
01:24:38.000The conservatives in my life were much more like, just work hard, get a good job, and make money.
01:24:46.000But you get a lot of people, so I know, there are people that I knew that were very much into the arts when they were younger.
01:24:51.000But they had very conservative parents, you know, I went to Catholic school for a little bit, and where are they now?
01:24:56.000They have family, they have some kids, and really, they're very happy, good for them, I'm glad that they're leading a good life, and they're doing right by their kids.
01:25:05.000But this also means that many of these kids did not pursue the arts that they were involved in, and thus, the people who did, and why is it they all do drugs all the time?
01:25:13.000Where is it, you know, that where the rock stars who are just like, oh man, I'm sober.
01:25:41.000And a lot of them talk about, there's one in particular who talks about like being on tour all the time and like partying and the culture that comes with that and he's like but the thing is like when you have kids like you may be up until 4 a.m.
01:25:53.000doing drugs doing whatever but like your baby's gonna be up at 6 and you you have to get up with it and so it's a shift in mindset and I think that It is one of the challenges of being an artist or you know a lot of careers have this but like you have to sacrifice when you have other demands in your life and I think a lot of especially popular left-leaning artists now don't have those kind of responsibilities because they defer becoming parents and so they can continue to pursue this path and push the ideology.
01:26:23.000I want to say the right is learning, but I don't know if that's really what's happening.
01:26:27.000I think what's happening is there are liberals who are joining the right.
01:26:31.000That people who used to be into the arts and fairly left-leaning who are either forced out or who saw how crazy the left was getting and moved out.
01:26:40.000So there's this movie coming out, My Son Hunter.
01:26:58.000So I'm thinking what's happening is that there are people who had the skills and know how to make this content Start realizing how crazy things are getting and are bringing that art and culture to the right and the right needs to support and embrace it.
01:27:13.000They've repeatedly said that we're not making political stuff, we're just making shows and movies and they're buying movies because they get it.
01:27:19.000I think Jeremy, all those guys, man, Mike, Michael, Jeremy, they're an example of like, Perceptive tolerance, uh, I'm not on the left.
01:27:29.000I mean, I was like, I guess you'd say a leftist.
01:27:31.000I was a liberal, like, wacky zany artist my whole life.
01:27:34.000And I just left because it was like, don't tell me I have white privilege.
01:27:37.000You know, you got to use better words than that if you want to communicate with me, but I'm not going to be sitting told that I'm a, I'm an evil, I'm a demon.
01:27:59.000That's seriously taken over the space and taken it away from them, so I hope they can continue to grow and expand, because the Daily Wire really needs those smart TV apps.
01:28:08.000I know we do too, but I can just say, like, with the amount of resources they have, You know, they're going to get there before we do, but we've been having a bunch of meetings about getting our mobile apps and our TV apps so that you can watch what shows we have as soon as possible, you know, on your TVs.
01:28:21.000I'm glad you brought up drugs earlier.
01:28:23.000I think that that's an important part of art and culture and has been since the dawn of humanity.
01:28:27.000And part of why there's a stagnancy in the industry right now is from all the pharmaceutical drugs that have taken the place of THC, which has been illegal for 100 years for stupid You know, Anslinger made it illegal with that, what was that, William Randolph Hearst printing all his propaganda to make weed illegal because he owned all the paper mills and he didn't want hemp newspapers anymore.
01:29:10.000I mean, I'm speaking as an artist, in air quotes, I don't drink, I don't do drugs or anything like that, but I'm still very much...
01:29:18.000I understand that the whole point of Drugs To These People is to expand your mind, make the world more interesting, like see the truth behind, you know, people talk about DMT and all that stuff.
01:29:29.000And I hear, I'm interested in the stories, I'm not going to do it myself.
01:29:32.000But the whole idea is creating, you could say there's that personality trait openness and all that stuff.
01:29:38.000openness to new experiences and generally the right is not super open to new experiences because their position is
01:29:46.000that Life is good enough. Why change things but by our nature
01:29:50.000artists are explorers and we need to be able to go to Places that are forbidden
01:29:56.000Even if it's like illegal if I'm gonna smoke some whatever because I want to see what happens
01:30:02.000Because I don't want to be stagnant That's where you get that term rolling stone, which is ironic because now the left is now the stagnant side of things, and the rolling stone which gathers no moss is now the right.
01:30:14.000We're looking for a new way to move into the next century.
01:30:18.000The problem with artists and why a lot of artists fail is because of the over-exploration and the obsessiveness with drugs, like they don't know where to put it down.
01:30:25.000You need balance, and you have to be able to set it aside to create business if you want to be a successful artist.
01:30:31.000You mentioned illegality, and there's a few very important things about this.
01:30:36.000The law doesn't matter as much as the culture does.
01:30:38.000There are many things that are overtly illegal that our culture permits and completely to- like, is in movies, is totally- it's considered totally fine.
01:30:48.000I- because I never actually watched it, I've only watched parts of it.
01:30:51.000And it's funny how in the first season, Walter White, who has- he's- the main character's got lung cancer, so he's like- he claims to be smoking pot and they're all shocked by it.
01:30:57.000It's like, that's so weird because you go to any major city, even before decriminalization and legalization, everybody It was like movies talked about it.
01:31:06.000Look at the movie Half Baked with Dave Chappelle.
01:31:09.000A movie outright about a bunch of stoners.
01:31:12.000Like that movie is literally a cultural icon and it's about a bunch of dudes
01:31:45.000I just want to say, like, I'm only on, like, episode 7, and a lot of people probably know more, but he outright says to her, I will not spend the rest of my days lying there listlessly gagging.
01:32:51.000Again, I'm only on like episode seven, but it's like, Uh, right away, before he's even doing the drug dealing, he's talking about how good he feels breaking the law.
01:33:02.000And then he bangs his wife outside of a school meeting and she's like, why was it so good?
01:33:13.000We're being told that if he gets the treatment, then it will be cured is what we're being told.
01:33:18.000Walter White is two characters though.
01:33:19.000He's not just Walter White, he's also Heisenberg.
01:33:21.000So you're looking at the Carl Jung thing of the man versus his shadow and who eventually takes over.
01:33:28.000I don't want to spoil anything, but it's really, you've got the milk toast, whatever.
01:33:34.000The Walter White is you know fairly timid and then the Heisenberg comes out of him in the later seasons as he becomes more aggressive and he finds people who test him.
01:33:45.000He essentially has to put Walter White away and become this other person in order to survive because now in the first season he's fighting cancer but in the future seasons he's fighting people who are not only threatening his life but But people around him.
01:33:59.000So I'm, again, like I'm only in the beginning seasons, but it's very obvious from the very first episodes that what's driving him is the exhilaration he gets from being put in these, like he's in an adrenaline rush.
01:34:09.000That's the Heisenberg character starting to emerge.
01:35:36.000I watched about seven or eight episodes of it.
01:35:37.000Because I literally watched, I'm watching it last night, and correct me if I'm wrong guys, but he goes to his partner's house and he says, I will pay for everything and Walter says, no.
01:35:48.000And then he tells his family in the next scene... Well, that's Heisenberg talking.
01:35:51.000But then in the next scene he says, I'm not going to live this way.
01:35:55.000He doesn't need to sell meth to pay for the treatment.
01:35:58.000The point was he was choosing to be... He was exhilarated by being this bad guy.
01:36:17.000I'm pretty sure the entire reason he started collecting money was not for the treatment, was to give his family money.
01:36:23.000So like yeah that's what I've never seen I've only seen a couple episodes but that's what I thought it was I thought he wanted to be able to like he didn't want to go out like you know chemo is really demanding on the body he didn't want to be suffering and like kind of undignified and he I could be totally wrong I don't remember how many kids he has but like he wanted to leave them with something and that is goes into the like well If I know that I'm ultimately gonna die, like, what do I
01:37:35.000So the reason the whole show is popular anyway, why do people love the anti-hero archetype so much?
01:37:42.000The idea of becoming... There are things that we can do, all of us, that are dark and cruel and wrong that would benefit us in the short term, but why don't we do it?
01:38:22.000We're gonna go to Super Chats, if you haven't already, instead of debating Breaking Bad.
01:38:26.000If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, and share the show with your friends.
01:38:30.000Head over to TimCast.com, become a member, but also, it would be a great help to us if you would click the link in the description below and purchase the song Only Ever Wanted.
01:39:54.000Ready 2 Rumble says, Tim literally paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to get people to play with him in a band.
01:39:59.000I did not nearly spend that much money, but we're investing heavily.
01:40:04.000Maybe I should do an announcement like Daily Wire did and be like, we're dedicating X amount of dollars towards... For the record, I played music with Tim before he ever paid me any money.
01:40:12.000And it's the company that pays us both.
01:40:14.000And we're actually... We are paying a lot of money to get people to play music, but we're going to be producing other people's music at our cost.
01:40:24.000So it's like, you know, Ian's got songs he's going to record that are his own thing that we're paying for him to do.
01:42:06.000Preferrumble says, when we live in a time where definitions are changed and truth is ignored in order to steer the narrative, how do we present the truth in ways to bust the narrative?
01:43:06.000Once you have a rapport with people, now they're willing to listen because they feel that you're operating in good faith.
01:43:12.000So there are a lot of people I know who are, like, on the left, and they might say nasty things to me, but I only respond with nice things and support for their work, and it opens the door, and then we can have that conversation.
01:43:23.000And I can't change their minds and convince them overnight that some of these ideas are crazy, but I can show them news articles which will show them, you know, maybe I was wrong about that.
01:43:32.000Yeah, I get the whenever someone says something that I'm relating to, like, say we have dinner and we're talking about it, they say something I don't agree with, rather than say, No, I won't.
01:43:43.000I'll say interesting, and then maybe offer some other idea.
01:43:47.000The other thing is like if people start saying like don't stay quiet you don't have to argue but like if someone is like oh I really believe this you can ask them more about it and be honest about how you feel about it.
01:43:58.000I think so often people are afraid of conflict that they just don't say like well I don't I don't see it that way.
01:44:03.000Yeah, a lot of conversation is, I mean, if you think of two cities trying to interact with each other, if you come at someone with your shield up and they put their shield up, there's not going to be a lot of exchange of, hey, let's shake hands now.
01:44:16.000They're going to be, they're going to have their firewalls up.
01:44:18.000So let's say you got two cities that are trading a little bit, you get to know each other, you trust each other.
01:44:24.000So when you make friends, you're really just trying to... Like, I don't know you guys ultra well, but the more time I spend with you, the more I like you, the more maybe I'll open up.
01:44:33.000Initially, when I first met you guys, my defenses were up.
01:45:35.000I will add, singing this song, it was extremely difficult, because the way I wrote it was more singer-songwriter folk, and then Carter produced and engineered it in a way that I had not initially written it, which required me to sing in a way I don't normally do.
01:45:51.000But I really love when people are like, I can't, that's not really Tim singing this, it's literally me.
01:45:56.000And for a lot of people who are like, how did he pull that off?
01:46:02.000I had to go into the studio with Carter like 30 times and keep trying it and trying it and missing and missing because it is just not my normal range.
01:46:17.000I am not practiced in this style of falsetto, switching, breathy, higher.
01:46:23.000So, uh, I don't think I would normally ever sound like Chester Bennington when I'm singing my other songs, but listen to Will of the People and maybe, I don't know, tell me what you think.
01:46:32.000I think what they're experiencing when they hear you saying the haters it's like an uncanny valley thing like you're the news guy but wait he also it's like when you see your teacher at the grocery store yeah wait you have other hobbies that's weird I don't like it I'm scared you know what's really funny is uh So I use vidIQ, and it shows me on a YouTube video whenever something is posted to Reddit.
01:46:54.000You can just click it, and it shows you all the Reddit posts.
01:46:56.000So I can see, and I'm commenting on people on Reddit, they're smack-talking, and they're saying, like, bald move, Tim, writing a song like this, and it's funny jokes and whatever.
01:47:05.000And I'm just like, I don't care, you can rag on me.
01:47:08.000But it's funny how we got half a million views on the song in a day.
01:47:15.000We're getting hit up by a ton of people.
01:47:17.000We've been getting up by like major label affiliated companies and artists that are like, this is really good stuff.
01:47:23.000And what people got to understand that releasing a song and getting half a million hits right away is kind of a big deal.
01:47:29.000It's not like you're going to be like one of these big artists or whatever, but the left is attacking it.
01:47:34.000And it really does show how isolated they are.
01:47:37.000Because it's like, listen, dude, if you come out and start laughing and pointing and saying, ha, look how dumb it is, and they're all sitting there being like, actually, we kind of like it.
01:47:44.000It kind of shows the emperor has no clothes.
01:47:46.000Honestly, if I hear a song I don't like, I don't say anything about it.
01:49:09.000I think the World Economic Forum wants to control the world and BRICS formed because of it, partly because of it, to resist the, the accesses of, of, you know, NATO or whatever.
01:49:36.000FleetingFloatingFeather says, have Amazon Prime, but purchased the mp3 of Only Ever Wanted for 69 cents to show my support.
01:49:42.000Great song, waiting patiently for Bright Eyes to drop.
01:49:45.000There's actually a small snippet of Bright Eyes on my Instagram, and it's like a lot, and that was from months and months ago, because the song's been done for a while, but we're just plotting out our release dates.
01:49:54.000The next song that's being released is going to be right before the midterms, I believe, and it's an overtly political song, more rock.
01:50:02.000Kind of punky in a certain sense, but not really.
01:50:26.000Maybe no and I'm like it doesn't need to be called that because the song is about institutions That's just what we the working title of it.
01:50:34.000So maybe we'll think of something else All right Let's grab some super chips Nobody Special says, I'm getting used to Ian commenting on a subject he knows almost nothing about and finding some way of making a conspiracy of elite corruption.
01:50:58.000Yeah, those are the two big ones tonight.
01:51:00.000I want to see like a web of all of Ian's like conspiracy theories.
01:51:02.000My brother just submitted this YouTube video.
01:51:04.000It's like nine hours of like all the conspiracy theories ever.
01:51:07.000It's like reminds me of... We are going to be launching a conspiracy show.
01:51:11.000So, Tales from the Inverted World, initially we wanted it to be like a weekly exploration but it turned into something bigger.
01:51:17.000But Shane is going to be launching a call-in show and like weekly paranormal but skeptics, you know, podcast.
01:51:26.000Do the graphic where it shows the conspiracies connected to each other on the board but then it's an airplane that flies from conspiracy to conspiracy and when it lands it like that's when the show begins about that one.
01:54:59.000Well, I feel like they're like that little bit, why 2K fashion is like such a big deal with Zoomers right now.
01:55:05.000And so I feel like, why wouldn't the music just come back with it?
01:55:07.000And it sort of is a little out of order, but I think 90s and 2000s in some way are like an idealistic time for like, These current era teens, they're like, wasn't it so great?
01:56:56.000If it doesn't make money, we'll do what we can, but it'll be a small operation to just try and produce culture, and because we enjoy doing it.
01:57:02.000If these songs actually start taking off and we do a good job, then we're gonna start... I mean, that's the goal.
01:57:07.000The goal, ultimately, is to create a space where people... You don't gotta be anti-woke.
01:59:17.000Really do appreciate it, and actually, that's a really good idea.
01:59:20.000So we have two of the biggest billboards in Times Square right now, but because it's Friday and the run ends in the next two days, there's nothing I can do to get a Save Assange message up.
01:59:29.000But actually, that's a really good idea.
01:59:31.000They wouldn't let me do the Twitter groomer thing, because they were like, nope.
01:59:34.000But I'd be willing to bet that I can get up a billboard in Times Square saying, free Julian Assange.
01:59:38.000And I will absolutely be down to do that and explore how we get that done.
01:59:41.000Because I think we might be able to even launch something first thing Monday.
01:59:46.000Julian Assange is, look, there are things to criticize him for, but what the government is doing is effectively an assassination, an execution.
01:59:54.000For 10 years they tried to stop him because he was a powerful voice challenging the establishment.
01:59:59.000He was a journalist, that's what he was doing, and now you look at what they're trying to do to Project Veritas.
02:00:12.000You're a journalist, and you're like, hey, if you want to leak something to me, like, you know, talk to the lawyer, and we'll figure out how to do it the right way.
02:00:17.000Then they go, he was instructing them on how to actually transmit stolen goods.
02:01:03.000Like, if the fruit's sick, then the tree's probably sick?
02:01:05.000Yeah, it's not a parable, but Jesus was doing, there was an example of, he was trying to eat from a tree and basically it didn't give him good fruit.
02:01:13.000So he says, may you never bear fruit again.
02:01:16.000And then he basically clarified, you can tell a tree by its fruit.
02:01:20.000So the idea is that if you look at a person's actions throughout their life, if they serve people, If they display what later would be described as fruits of the spirit later on by Paul wrote that stuff but the idea is that you can tell if a person's really following
02:01:38.000The way, let's say, by the the fruits of their life, like if they're exercising things like mercy, goodness, hospitality, and there's a million different things, but like you could tell when someone's just full of it and they're just saying things like you'll find fake Christians all the time because they say things, but they don't actually live it out or they don't understand it.
02:02:01.000So I always say like COVID and the vaccine stuff and lockdown stuff showed a lot of people who is who in terms of you saw words versus actions playing out.
02:02:10.000I gotta read this one from Waffle Sensei.
02:02:12.000say he says, my favorite part of today, Tim was when some Twitter dude said, what's next?
02:02:15.000You're going to cover sublime songs or something.
02:02:19.000Anyways, if you made a do-in-time cover of Sublime, I personally think you'd break the charts.
02:02:24.000I just want to point out to everybody that some of the best memories I have are being like 18 or 19, and you're at a party, and some random dude grabs the guitar, and then he starts playing Bad Fish, and then everyone in the house is drunk singing Bad Fish.
02:02:37.000Those were some of the best times ever.
02:02:39.000Now, I'm sure not everybody experienced something like that, but I'm sure people down in Long Beach and Southern California know what I'm talking about.
02:02:45.000People in Chicago know what I'm talking about.
02:03:31.000What's that line when he feels the break?
02:03:33.000Feel the break, feel the break, feel the break and I can't live it all.
02:03:39.000When you're out in LA and you surf for the first time and you go out past the break and you start to understand the calm, the stillness of being past the break and then actually feeling the break.
02:04:46.000And I learned how to play that, because that was the one that everybody was always playing, and it was easy enough for me to play the opening riff.
02:05:31.000But we had the internet so we would download songs and it would take like three hours to get one mp3 and then if someone called you the download would collapse.
02:05:52.000I watched the Frieza saga on Real Player at like 144p and it was like it would play for five seconds then buffer for like 50 seconds and then play five seconds but it was like Goku he's going Super Saiyan!
02:06:09.000If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, and click that link in the description below if you would kindly purchase our new single, Only Ever Wanted.
02:06:20.000If everybody who watched this song bought it, we would be, like, chart-topping.
02:06:24.000But if you like the song, if you want to support our work, if you buy the song and the song ends up becoming successful, then we're going to be expanding as fast as we can, as rapidly as possible, in launching new music.
02:06:35.000If it turns out that it's just more of a hobby project because it doesn't do as well as we think and well then we'll just make music that we like and we'll do it in-house just to have the music and stuff like that but I really do think we've got good songs and we're gonna we're gonna be able to make something really fantastic here so with your support we will continue to grow.
02:06:51.000You can follow the show at Timcast IRL.
02:07:13.000You can see that on Twitter and next month I'm releasing a children's book Yeah, we made a little children's book and and we're actually going to be Like selling children's cute children stuff that actually has nothing to do with me, but I'll be announcing that stuff soon It's very cute.