On today's show, we have a special St. Patrick's Day episode featuring special guest Jenny Teer of the Daily Caller News Foundation and All That Remains frontman Phil Labonte. We also discuss Joe Biden's comments about being not Irish because his family isn't in jail.
00:00:38.000And, uh, so, uh, we're gonna have a good relaxing time.
00:00:41.000We also gotta talk about, because of St.
00:00:42.000Patrick's Day, Joe Biden, who said that he's not really Irish because he's sober and his family members aren't in jail, which I find highly offensive.
00:00:50.000As a person who is part Irish, Joe Biden has no right to insult my people.
00:02:27.000And when you go to that, it will give you the instructions on how to sign up for the Discord server, which is a chat program.
00:02:34.000You can hang out with other members of the website.
00:02:37.000And we reopened chat for everybody because now members It's all consolidated.
00:02:41.000So the main issue was we had people who were like, hey, there's no real way to chat when the show's going live because the chat goes crazy.
00:02:48.000And so we were like, let's try a members-only chat to see if that works.
00:02:50.000And a lot of people were like, this is awesome.
00:02:52.000But there were a lot of people who didn't want to become members or people who were already members at TimCast.com.
00:02:58.000So we decided, well, we want to launch a Discord.
00:03:00.000So now if you're a member at TimCast, you get access to the members-only chat room, which we should have up and running on our end.
00:03:06.000Monday, so that for the Members Only Uncensored shows, we can take in a call from the members, from you guys, and there are varying tiers we've set up, you can check that out, and like a VIP club if you want to be in that, where we'll have TimCast crew members and other such people hanging out.
00:03:22.000And the other thing I'll say is I've got wicked food poisoning, I am very sick, so I may just like sit here drooling on myself while Phil, Ian, and Jenny talk about everything, but I didn't want to I don't want the show to get cancelled, but honestly, like, after we filmed the Culture War podcast this morning, I just went to sleep, and I woke up at, like, 6.30, and they were like, are we doing the show or not?
00:03:42.000You know, it's just, I eat some yogurt.
00:05:31.000I was just watching this interview with Michael Malice and Patrick Bet-David on Valuetainment.
00:05:34.000We talked about a little bit before the show.
00:05:36.000And they were talking about Truth Social, the valuation of the company has dipped, apparently.
00:05:41.000I haven't been able to verify this, but they were both talking about it, too.
00:05:43.000It's like it's worth half of what it was worth.
00:05:45.000And they're like, why hasn't he been on Twitter?
00:05:47.000Well, Patrick surmised that it's probably because he's trying to make sure people keep coming to his website to pay back his investors with Trump, the company that owns Truth Social, that SPAC that they did.
00:06:19.000But, uh, that's only because when it started it spiked, and then I think Dwack reached like a hundred bucks a share March 2020, around March of 2022, what is this?
00:06:28.000Trump's not as fun without the audience.
00:06:30.000Like Trump is, like Trump isn't, Trump's, you know, Trump can say stuff on Truth Social, But he's not, like, when he's preaching to his own crowd, it's not as funny as when he's on Twitter with, like, reply guys going at it and, you know, saying things to get people worked up.
00:06:46.000Because half the fun of Trump on Twitter was reading the replies and watching people, you know, make videos and stuff.
00:07:45.000They were like, whoops, I sent it, and then they were like, what happened?
00:07:48.000Another point that they were making about the problems that Truth Social may be having, it's tough to tell, because like you said, there was a spike in the beginning, is that Elon Musk bought Twitter, and the whole point of Truth Social was, we're going to make a free speech social network.
00:07:59.000So he did it, he set it up, they got investment, they got it going, and then Elon bought Twitter and was like, now Twitter's a free speech social network, and everyone was like, well, what's the point of truth now?
00:08:06.000But also, really, right away, truth social turned into the right wing.
00:08:12.000So it wasn't just the free speech alternative.
00:08:17.000It was so heavily partisan that it became the antithesis to Twitter.
00:08:23.000So Twitter's where all the left-leaning people were for a long time.
00:08:42.000Social media is supposed to be a neutral ground.
00:08:44.000I mean, I think the best social media has not been a neutral offering where people can go at it if they want, or they can, like, communicate.
00:08:50.000It's hard if someone's, like, blocking a certain type of person.
00:08:53.000And you know the thing like there's a lot of people that that when Musk bought Twitter they were they were upset that it wasn't a pure free speech platform and I don't think that there was ever going to be I think that that was a mistake to think that it was ever going to be purely free speech where like You know, you were never going to have Twitter turned into 4chan's B-board.
00:09:16.000It was never going to be, you know, a Chan board or whatever.
00:09:20.000But with Musk, there aren't ideas that are repressed in the same way that ideas were repressed when, you know, the previous owners had Twitter.
00:09:31.000Because, you know, all the stuff that's coming out now about, you know, whether it be the administration or whether it be COVID stuff and stuff with Fauci or, you know, where COVID came from, etc.
00:09:45.000That stuff would have been heavily suppressed had the ownership still been the previous owners.
00:09:52.000And I don't think there's a lot of substance to arguments against that perspective.
00:10:01.000I mean, I think like, as weird as it sounds, I think like the minute Elon took over Twitter, I was like, holy crap, all of the DMs, like in my spam DMs, it was like so many weird people that came through.
00:10:16.000Which I guess is like a side effect of having to like open up the entire space.
00:10:21.000But it was weird to see more interaction that way, more interaction and like comments on things.
00:10:27.000I think it really did like open up what, you know, maybe people consider shadow banning or, you know, suppression of different accounts.
00:10:36.000Like, I think it really did change, like automatically, I could tell.
00:10:39.000And there was like a week after he bought it, I think a bunch of subscribers were lost and gained by different accounts all at once.
00:11:18.000I mean, obviously he's gotten rid of that stuff, but we'll probably see some stuff like that that he didn't find.
00:11:22.000Yeah, but he threads on and says that it's going to be embarrassing for him and for Twitter for this stuff to be brought on there because the code is so horribly done.
00:11:30.000He's just been complaining about it for months.
00:11:32.000But he said, you know, that's the first step.
00:12:36.000The chocolate dude, the chocolate maker dude, there's this dude that makes chocolate and like he'll make like he made a velociraptor out of chocolate and he made like a crane arm thing out of chocolate and it's like crazy, crazy stuff.
00:12:53.000People in the chat, you know who I'm talking about when I talk about the chocolate guy.
00:12:56.000I like the workout TikToks, because I'm trying to get my figure better, so I have to watch these women, you know, in yoga pants all the time.
00:13:04.000I'm kidding, I think it's completely ridiculous they do this.
00:13:19.000And the problem is that when you're in social settings, after you watch TikTok so much and you're so addicted, you're always looking for that quick hit of dopamine and you're not getting it in normal social settings like you would on TikTok.
00:14:24.000No amount of copyright law can catch up with the amount of AI advancement.
00:14:28.000That thing's just completely obliterating the 1500s law of Can't share my thing, like, it takes pictures from all over the internet that are all copywritten, a bunch of them are, and then it just feeds you, like, totally violates copyright law, but there's no way to stop it.
00:14:41.000You know what I gotta say, though, about the 19th Amendment?
00:14:45.000Now that I'm, like, sick and don't care all that much, because I feel like crap, I don't care what these liberal lefty women think about me or my views anyway, you know?
00:14:55.000So if, like, all the conservative women are coming on this show and being like, yes, we should repeal the 19th, I'm just gonna be like, okay, I guess.
00:15:00.000Like, I'm not gonna pander to these leftist cult members.
00:15:04.000But then, like, what am I supposed to do?
00:15:05.000Tell the conservative women they're wrong?
00:15:06.000Because, like, hey, all these women are saying this thing, but you're wrong.
00:15:09.000It's like, well, either respect their agency as women who want to repeal the 19th through their own vote, or I don't.
00:15:15.000So if I'm gonna respect them as women and their right to choose and make political decisions, their decision would be to give up their right to vote.
00:15:21.000I mean, personally, I think that there is something to the argument that people need to have skin in the game if they're voting.
00:15:30.000So you have to have, you know, just being able to vote for the government to give you, you know, whatever kind of benefits or whatever, you know, that's not fair to the rest of the population.
00:15:55.000But I still don't think that it should be based on gender.
00:15:58.000But I do think that there is an argument to be made that You know, which is the same argument that's been, you know, been for a long time.
00:16:05.000The reason why men had the vote and women didn't is men were responsible for the women.
00:16:11.000So if a woman went out and did something that was wrong, men would get punished.
00:16:16.000So like if a woman destroyed a man, you know, someone else's something, men would end up being, you know, would have to be responsible for it.
00:16:21.000The bigger issue is that men were drafted for war.
00:16:41.000I don't think the suffragettes were making that argument.
00:16:43.000I think they were because the there were.
00:16:45.000No, that was a big component of I was reading a bunch about.
00:16:49.000The fire brigade was a big issue for the women who opposed the women's suffrage.
00:16:55.000Specifically, I can't remember the woman's name, but the opponents of women's suffrage said outright, I don't want to be drafted or forced to join the fire brigade.
00:17:03.000The argument was, I don't want the civil responsibilities that come with voting that's for men to do.
00:17:57.000The issue that these conservative women often bring up... I'm more like, I don't know, man.
00:18:01.000Like, I'm not a woman, so I'm not gonna... But like, conservative women are very much anti-19th, and liberal are pro-it.
00:18:07.000But the majority of millennial women, 70%, are Democrats.
00:18:11.000And they just vote for this stuff, whether there's policy that makes sense, anyway.
00:18:15.000So if only women voted, you'd have Democrat presidents.
00:18:18.000And if only men voted, you'd have Republican presidents.
00:18:21.000So the main issue, I think, is not so much whether it's an issue of women voting and women having the right to vote, it's an issue of men and women statistically vote in different ways that rip the country apart.
00:18:40.000And so, like, the fact that it could be abortion today or anything else tomorrow, the fact that the woke left seemingly has no cohesive ideology and they vote for whatever this stuff is regardless, I think, is an element of gender-based voting biases.
00:18:56.000I was just checking it out, and it's 1912.
00:19:19.000It's pretty interesting watching him build that thing.
00:19:20.000He built it on a roll of paper, and it's like these different rivets on the paper, and then it would like pluck the thing and then recreate the sound of the stitching.
00:19:30.000But I think, I mean, I think it's like women are maybe more psychological than men.
00:19:34.000Men are more like brute, like animalistic.
00:19:37.000Women are subject-oriented, men are object-oriented.
00:19:39.000And then, so being able to witness ourselves through radio allowed women to become much more, you know, socially cognizant, perhaps, which is why this all kicked off in the early 1900s, late 1878s when it started.
00:19:52.000I think, I don't, I understand that, or I do agree that, you know, Radio did have a big effect on society, but I don't think that, I think that the seeds were planted before radio became normal.
00:20:06.000Because when the radio became ubiquitous, right, in what, the 30s was it?
00:20:29.000So, yeah, I mean, like I said, I think that radio and stuff like that did have an effect, but the ideas, you know, the ideas tend to come from philosophers and stuff like that.
00:20:38.000So the ideas of Human beings being equal, those ideas had been set into motion a hundred years before the radio.
00:20:55.000I think what happens with radio is you've got a radio station and they're thinking like, how many listeners can we get to this radio station, this new thing?
00:21:02.000And so they start making radio broadcasts and they're like, hey, hey, hey, hey, guy, you did some broadcast about Catholicism and the Protestants are pissed.
00:21:13.000And so if you're trying to maximize the size of your audience, you are heading towards a woke direction.
00:21:18.000It has nothing to do with literature or philosophy.
00:21:21.000All that matters is, how can we offend the least amount of people?
00:21:24.000So if you look at what's happening today, with the expansion of the flow of information, the issue is quite simply, conservatives don't do anything, liberals do.
00:21:34.000So a business is looking at Netflix, and there's like some story right now, what was it?
00:21:39.000Oh yeah, we got some story we can talk about.
00:22:13.000Well, okay, then we need to give the squeaky wheel the grease.
00:22:17.000When every company does that over a hundred years, keeps giving the squeaky wheel the grease, or trying to just minimize anger, it is going to skew in the direction we are seeing it skew, regardless of what anyone writes about it.
00:22:29.000Do you think that corporations are inherently woke, having their primary motive be Profit?
00:23:18.000And then, of course, all social media bans Alex Jones because the collective left threatened and the collective left does.
00:23:24.000You typically follow through on this stuff.
00:23:28.000I kind of agree that prioritizing profit and larger audiences is a bit, leads you towards like, you know, capitulating to whatever it is of the day.
00:23:55.000That indicates that corporations being, having a woke mindset of profit over everything else will lead them to a place where they eventually do whatever the mob tells them to do.
00:24:27.000That was hilarious as they're unleashing chat GPT-4, which is...
00:24:31.000You see the guy who made a Twitter thread about giving it money?
00:24:34.000He's like, I set a budget and told it to make money for me, and then it worked.
00:24:40.000And he's mostly getting investors right now, but he's doing whatever Chet tells him to do.
00:24:44.000But anyway, these companies are soulless entities that just do whatever they think will maximize their profits.
00:24:53.000And if the left will threaten a boycott and follow through, then you have to do what the left says.
00:24:57.000You may lose 10% of your audience because they're conservative,
00:25:01.000but you'd lose 30% of your audience because every liberal would quit and conservatives don't care.
00:25:05.000And it stresses out the employees when people complain, which is another cost to your company.
00:25:10.000We are seeing Netflix recoil because the woke stuff actually caused a massive backlash because
00:25:14.000they reach, I think what happened is they reached the point where they chased the dragon too far.
00:25:19.000And now the weird crackpot, you know, interracial gay movies they're making are causing people to cancel because they don't want to watch it.
00:25:26.000And now Netflix is like, whoa, whoa, whoa, we're actually losing money.
00:25:28.000So the cost risk analysis has reached the tipping point.
00:25:31.000There was a movie on Shudder called The Spiral.
00:25:35.000And, uh, the stupidest movie I've ever seen.
00:25:38.000It's about an interracial gay couple with an adopted daughter.
00:25:40.000They move next to a white waspy family.
00:25:43.000And, uh, spoiler alert, everybody, because I doubt you're gonna watch it anyway.
00:25:49.000Immortal because they kill marginalized people to like give themselves immortality and I'm just like this is what happens This is your brain on drugs, right?
00:25:58.000These companies are like look these what the left is they're yelling in our ears They're demanding the stuff.
00:26:03.000We got to give the audience what the audience wants then they make it and they're like, hey, wait a minute We only got like a hundred thousand views on this movie that costs, you know, five million bucks what happened?
00:26:13.000It's like hey those loud people They don't actually have money, and they don't care, and they don't represent regular Americans.
00:26:19.000So you make a movie like that, look at Top Gun.
00:26:23.000I mean, Top Gun we talked about the other night.
00:26:25.000Good old American Air Force, flying jets, military recruitment, you know?
00:26:30.000Everyone on the beach all physically fit playing volleyball.
00:26:39.000I was thinking of the metaphor of flying too close to the sun, where you're saying they chased the dragon too far.
00:26:43.000Like, the idea that what the mob said is what the mob wants is not true.
00:26:48.000The mob can twist and shit can come out of their mouth that's not...
00:26:51.000Well, the issue is, when you've got an angry mob in front of your door, and it's 500 people, you're like, I don't want them to burn down my store, so I'll just say whatever they want to hear.
00:27:02.000But that 500 does not represent the 5 million who live in your city who actually service your business.
00:27:06.000So they're giving in to psychopaths, and it's just, eventually it's going to destroy itself.
00:27:11.000That's the only thing I think could happen.
00:27:17.000He flew too close to the sun, and he was flying with wax wings, and then he got too It was, you know, if the sun's warm, why not get closer to it?
00:27:24.000His dad was like, hey, you know, don't fly too high because the sun will melt your wings, which is wrong because at a certain height, it's going to be colder in the atmosphere, which would keep his wings.
00:28:03.000Weren't angels described as, like, these big things with all these eyes and, like, wings in a wheel shape that would spin and, like, float through the sky or whatever?
00:28:14.000I have no... I was reading this report that said scientists are increasingly thinking that time is cyclical, and that means, like, we go forward far enough and then we go back, and so there is no dawn of time.
00:28:25.000There's only, like, human... after a hundred thousand years, humans have wiped themselves out, and the planet shifts to the point where it destroys everything on it, then goes back to the beginning, and then humans re-emerge, and we're just... we're trapped in this cycle over and over again forever.
00:28:37.000That sounds like the plot of Dark on Netflix.
00:29:13.000Okay, I don't think I had anything else about God unless you guys want to talk about the helixing nature of the universe and the twisting singularity that we're about to experience in 70 billion years that's basically today.
00:29:35.000They said the universe is expanding, and this was the theory up until last week or something, that it eventually will go so far away that it goes on forever.
00:29:45.000I like the cyclical thing a lot better, that it's twisting around like a coming back on itself and experiencing the singularity and the big bang every time it goes through the center.
00:29:54.000And the reason that it looks like it's shifting red, which indicates that it's getting further away, is actually because of the frequency.
00:29:59.000The wavelength itself is bending as it twists around.
00:31:55.000I'm not used to being in the butt of jokes, like, racially, so I don't know how sensitive... what you should do about racially insensitive jokes.
00:32:02.000I've never really been that bothered by them.
00:32:04.000You should probably just not make them.
00:32:08.000Don't be like, hey, make... Well, I mean, look, I mean, anytime you're... Personally, I'm not gonna police someone else.
00:32:16.000Like, I'm not gonna be like, man, you shouldn't say this or you shouldn't say that.
00:32:19.000Like, if someone says something offensive, I'm gonna be like, You know, do that, the whole Homer Simpson fading back into the edge behind him, you know?
00:32:30.000Dave Chappelle did a bit on one of his comedy specials where he squinted his eyes and his mouth and then made like offensive Asian stereotypes and I laughed my ass off at it.
00:32:38.000And then I guess what happens is if the woke people are like, that was offensive, and I say something like, you're correct, they'll go, well, because you're Asian, you understand.
00:32:46.000But if I say, actually, my family's part Asian, we found it hilarious, they'll say, well, you've internalized your white supremacy or something.
00:32:52.000That's exactly how I feel because he makes jokes against Jews and then the Jewish community like freaks out and you're like, no, calm down.
00:32:59.000Like then every time it's like Boy Who Cried Wolf.
00:33:02.000It's like every time you like freak out, it's something small.
00:33:05.000And then when something really big happens, it's going to be like, oh, whatever.
00:33:08.000Well, Trump's Arrangement Syndrome is real.
00:33:11.000Like Sam Harris, that that guy's brain is just gone.
00:33:16.000You know, he was like, he did that podcast with Lex Fridman and he's like, it's you who have Trump derangement syndrome if you support Trump.
00:33:27.000He said something like, why don't you want to be woke?
00:33:29.000And I'm just like, dude, you, I was like, bro, cause you're in a cult.
00:33:32.000These people are like, if you disagree with me, you love Trump.
00:33:34.000And I'm like, it was really funny when Dave Smith, who hopefully announces he's running for the, for the president, for the presidency as a libertarian, he was on this show and they were like, you Trump supporters.
00:34:32.000Internet video produces cults of personality, where you become obsessed or in love with the person you watch, and you subscribe to them, and you pay them, and you support them, and you follow them.
00:34:43.000If you bare your soul to that, it can become very cult-y, like weirdly cult-y.
00:34:47.000The nice thing, what you do, is it's a business for you.
00:35:25.000So I'm gonna need him to be impeached, Jim Jordan or Matt Gaetz, if you could just maybe come in this weekend and file those impeachment papers.
00:35:34.000This is like getting dealt a Trump card, an ace of spades when you're playing spades.
00:35:39.000And you're like, holy, I get to hold this in my hand now.
00:35:42.000And this is going to guarantee I don't lose every hand.
00:36:24.000You know, man, I mean, it doesn't it shouldn't surprise anyone that Joe Biden said something like that.
00:36:30.000It's it's not offensive to, I mean, anyone really.
00:36:35.000I mean, for the most part, most people just are going to be like, whatever.
00:36:38.000I don't I don't imagine there's going to be a significant constituency of Irish people that are going to actually be up in arms about it.
00:36:46.000I mean, I just don't imagine that they're going to have anything to say about it.
00:36:52.000So it's going to go away and whatever.
00:36:54.000And you should expect something brainless to come out of Joe Biden's mouth because by noontime he's out of it.
00:37:01.000Joe Biden could actually make disparaging comments about black people and they wouldn't care.
00:37:08.000They would immediately respond with, well, Donald Trump called Mexicans rapists or whatever, so you have no room to talk or whatever, and you're going to be like, he never said that, dude.
00:39:03.000So then we wrote a bit about people organizing together against true oppression.
00:39:08.000Potato, in case you haven't figured it out yet.
00:39:11.000Is it, in regards to the way that critical theorists view society, is it only racist if you make fun of a marginalized community, or is it still racist if you make fun of a non-marginalized community, but it's okay that it's racist?
00:39:30.000It can only be applied to those who are weaker than you.
00:39:32.000So if a white homeless guy is laying on the ground with no teeth, and he's shivering in the cold, and then, you know, a marginalized person walks by him and stumbles on him, and the white homeless guy says, Hey, don't you stumble on me!
00:39:44.000They're gonna be like, whoa, that was racist.
00:40:44.000Is it left over British propaganda because they hated the Irish because they were like island barbarians that wouldn't capitulate to the Empire?
00:40:51.000Well, the Irish and the British have always had issues with each other.
00:40:55.000There's a lot of Protestant and Catholic animosity involved in that.
00:42:00.000So I don't know if you guys watched the Culture War podcast with Sovereign Brow, but he was talking about how people believe Trump is the Antichrist.
00:42:14.000I don't think you can literally argue it.
00:42:15.000I think people will find things about anybody to stick to the, you know, prophecy or whatever.
00:42:22.000And so they just look at Trump who's got a storied life and then try and apply prophecy to wherever they can.
00:42:27.000And so basically, like, you could probably apply Revelation to Phil in some way.
00:42:31.000You know, if you find enough out about him, you can be like, did you know that it was six months, six days, and six hours after he was born that there was an eclipse or something?
00:42:47.000Were you saying, I think, Jenny... And there's going to be a song where it's just like, you're not really saying anything backwards, but people are going to be adamant.
00:42:53.000You're saying, you know, I am the Antichrist.
00:42:59.000My mom was convinced that Judas Priest was telling people to kill themselves.
00:43:05.000She was, that was one band that she was not cool with me listening to.
00:43:09.000I had like Iron Maiden, I was like super, I was hiding Iron Maiden records because if she saw the Number of the Beast, she saw that record, it was over.
00:43:17.000Those were going out too, but she was, I couldn't stop her from getting the Jewish Priest record.
00:43:22.000Look at this Twitter account, this is some of the greatest stuff.
00:43:25.000Donnie Darkened, Donald Trump is the chosen Antichrist.
00:43:29.000They have been foreshadowing this for centuries.
00:44:32.000And Mabus, an alleged predecessor to the third Antichrist.
00:44:37.000When I think of Christ, I think of energy.
00:44:40.000Like, they called Jesus of Nazareth after he was gone, or maybe during his life, they started calling him the Christ, because he possessed that energy.
00:45:21.000Donald is Scottish Gaelic for world ruler, and Trump references the trumpet sound of heralding in something, the trumpet blast.
00:45:29.000So my argument was when we were reading about Ingersoll Lockwood books from the 1800s that predicted like Baron Trump or whatever, I'm like, Baron's the real guy, because his name is Baron.
00:45:39.000Like if there was going to be a supervillain, it wouldn't be the guy who heralds the world ruler.
00:46:07.000And if he does end up getting power with that Trump name and he's twisted because of the way he was abused as a kid, because of his association with his dad.
00:46:23.000Trump rises up, and he's floating through the air, and he's levitating, and his eyes start glowing, and then he fires a lightning blast and destroys a building, and you're like, what does this have to do with the prophecy?
00:46:34.000Like there's an element of excitement to great historical change and historical moments where I think a lot of people, I'm only half kidding actually, a lot of people are looking for purpose desperately.
00:46:45.000And if Donald Trump did turn out to be some prophesized world leader, be it the Antichrist or the one who stops him or whatever you want to call it, like people are desperate for some kind of great war of our generation.
00:46:58.000I feel like that's one of the things that motivates a lot of people that are anarchists on the left.
00:47:05.000I don't feel like it's so much anarchists on the right, but the anarchists on the left are very much, it seems to me that they have the desire to kind of tear the system down, like tear everything down because they believe the system is unjust.
00:47:19.000And they believe that any other system that comes in its place is gonna be better, which is probably the opposite of true.
00:47:27.000Like, we probably have about the best system that we can kind of get away with.
00:48:56.000The Antichrist apparently is an imposter, is, like, purporting to be the Second Coming or Christ.
00:49:02.000That's why I think of these pastors that have these megachurches like Joel Osteen.
00:49:05.000Like, he's telling people that he's a vessel of God.
00:49:08.000Yeah, but the Antichrist is supposed to have military prowess, charisma, a special look about him, you know what I mean?
00:49:15.000And besides, the Antichrist is supposed to usher in the Mark of the Beast, which is something that affects all people, that bars you from buying or trading unless you bear the mark.
00:49:26.000And it's not like Donald Trump executed any kind of program like that.
00:51:20.000I will pay extra in taxes so that way the Secret Service is extra well funded to protect the life of Donald Trump should Ian be the vice president.
00:51:27.000Dude, what if me and Donald Trump were the Christ and the Antichrist?
00:51:30.000Because they're supposed to oppose each other.
00:52:09.000I think what would happen if, like, the Antichrist actually did show up is that Ian's the kind of guy who would go around saying that he was Yes.
00:54:29.000And they're going to have conversations like, listen, man, like, I'm not saying I believe all this stuff, but I don't even know what to do with that.
00:54:35.000Like, if that actually happens... Well, I mean, I want to vote for Dave, to be honest with you.
00:54:41.000I'll always be back to... Yeah, Dave Smith sounds good.
00:55:07.000Yeah, cuz the DeSantis ones aren't so good.
00:55:09.000Like I don't know I feel like he might just be like not he's be like not cash or something like that I love me not cash, but like like when I hear meatball, I think you're probably right It doesn't work cuz it's not offensive.
00:55:24.000It's not derogatory calling him meatball Ron just is so funny It doesn't make me not like DeSantis.
00:55:45.000He was explaining why he extended the state of emergency in Florida and they're like, why'd you do it for so long a year?
00:55:51.000And he said, he was explaining that he was actually able to divert funds easier and forced schools to stay open and forced them to not mask and stuff because he could withhold funding as long as he was in a state of emergency.
00:56:02.000If Ron was VP, he'd be a 10 out of 10 vice president.
00:56:05.000If he's president, he's like a three out of 10.
00:56:06.000Oh yeah, even if I was like, up to the last minute, if I was running and I was the guy that was gonna be VP and DeSantis wanted to do it, I would step down for him.
00:58:15.000So I was in a bus full of like Nigerians, Romanians, Saudis, Pakistanis, Afghans, like everyone, Colombians.
00:58:24.000And they were all going north, and the taxi would drop them off, they would get out, the Canadian authorities would tell them you're crossing illegally if you decide to walk here, and they do.
00:58:36.000And then, obviously, the same thing happens at the southern border, and a lot of those people had crossed the southern border and decided they wanted to go further north.
00:58:44.000Eric Adams is busing them to that area, making it easier for them.
00:58:48.000And then you have people, of course, coming through the southern border.
00:58:51.000And I've met so many people south of the southern border that are now, you know, in Baltimore, that are in, you know, California, that are in D.C., they're all over now.
00:59:00.000And they're living, some of them living pretty lavish lives.
00:59:04.000Like, I would like to know how to live that way.
00:59:06.000You said people come up and they're moving to Canada?
00:59:11.000And then some people are coming the other way.
00:59:12.000Because if you're Mexican, for example, and you cross the southern border into the US, you're going to be immediately expelled under Title 42, which is like the COVID policy Trump put in place.
00:59:23.000If you fly to Canada, all you need is an electronic travel authorization, not a visa, so it's way easier.
01:01:08.000policy on He people that stay over there their visas and policy about if you get here and claim asylum Which I mean most of the people that come come at least from the south if I understand correctly claiming asylum is is like kind of ridiculous because they're supposed to claim at the first
01:01:27.000There's so many people who do that fraudulently.
01:01:30.000So for example, Todd Bensman, he's a researcher for the Center of Immigration Studies.
01:01:34.000He went to the highlands in Guatemala, and he found that all of these people had sent their children over to the U.S.
01:03:05.000There's that viral interview that Vox did, I think it was Vox, where they asked one of the migrants coming in the caravan, why are you coming?
01:03:12.000And he said, I miss Buffalo Wild Wings.
01:03:14.000It's like, yeah, Mexico City has Buffalo Wild Wings too, and I've been there, and it's pretty legit.
01:03:20.000One guy was like, I miss my PlayStation.
01:03:22.000And it's like, how do you already have a PlayStation 4 up in America when you're not an American citizen?
01:03:26.000And they're like, I was here, I got deported.
01:03:27.000Well, yeah, and you know what I actually heard about some of the migrants that didn't plan to go to Canada but ended up going when I was there?
01:03:34.000They were like, there's racism in America.
01:03:36.000So now, like, that's a new thing I'm hearing that, like, you know, that and, you know, maybe they're being slighted at work because they're working under the table.
01:03:45.000But that was another thing that I heard, that one, there's racism and then two, the threats that they had in their home countries that they escaped, like this woman I met from Venezuela.
01:03:55.000Her toxic, abusive ex-partner followed her into the U.S.
01:04:10.000But they're illegally going to Canada as well.
01:04:12.000Like if they get caught in Canada, they just get sent back to the home country or they get sent back to the U.S.? ?
01:04:16.000No, they'll be processed as asylum there, or refugee status.
01:04:21.000And the weird thing, too, is that they bring all their bags with them.
01:04:24.000In the U.S., if you cross the border illegally, they give you a Ziploc bag, you dump everything else right at the border.
01:04:30.000There, they're bringing duffel bags and suitcases, and I don't know if it was real or not, but there was like a Louis Vuitton logo going on.
01:04:38.000Does Canada have an open immigration policy where they want Oh yeah, Justin Trudeau has absolutely put out an open call for more migrant workers.
01:04:47.000They don't have the labor force to sustain how many jobs are open right now in that country.
01:04:54.000And now the U.S., because of that, I think is becoming a transit zone, is becoming what Mexico is right now, and Mexico's pissed off at us right now.
01:05:15.000I'm saying that the fact that, you know, the U.S.
01:05:18.000policy is opening the border for migrants coming here through Mexico.
01:05:24.000You know, for example, right now you have a ton of migrants that are waiting in these shelters in Mexico that are overflowing, people sleeping on the streets.
01:05:31.000The Mexican authorities are really unhappy by that, right?
01:05:40.000And maybe that's what New York City has become, because Eric Adams wants them out, right?
01:05:45.000You think that there's any ethical value to deporting people to Canada?
01:05:49.000To come from Mexico, to get caught illegally, send them to Canada?
01:05:51.000You have to have Canada's cooperation with that.
01:05:54.000I mean, or you could just get them a one-way trip to the Yukon.
01:05:58.000There's a lot of woods out there, man.
01:05:59.000Like a treaty, a deportation treaty with Canada.
01:06:02.000Because I mean, if they need immigration, and we don't, and they're coming here, I mean, it kind of strips the humanity of the individual of what they want, but... What we obviously should do is paint a road on the side of a mountain that isn't real, so they all come, and then they stop, and they're like, whoa, wait a minute, there's no actual path here, and they get confused.
01:06:22.000And that's how you keep them out, like Bugs Bunny.
01:08:33.000And, if it's illegal, their political power is being diluted without their input.
01:08:41.000Right, like if you have a government that's not taking care of the border and stopping illegal immigration, that means that the population's political power is being diluted and the government is not doing anything about it.
01:08:54.000So the people that pay taxes to the government, ostensibly to keep the government working and to pay the politicians, they're having their power taken away by politicians who refuse to enforce the laws.
01:09:07.000Let's talk about what's going on with the laws.
01:10:16.000And they, seven hours ago, they posted about a tweet from Hillary Ronan, I guess, a while ago.
01:10:21.000Was this August of 2020, where she said, I want to make it clear that I believe strongly in defunding the police and reducing the number of officers on our force.
01:11:03.000I consider myself romantic for anarchism because I like the idea.
01:11:07.000I think that if anarchism was possible, I think that it would be... I don't know that it's possible.
01:11:17.000I think that the Foundational government that we had in the like when we started was probably the most libertarian government or libertarian society ever Existing that that has existed and so I'm you know for practical purposes if someone calls me a constitutionalist I'm not gonna argue because I think that you know, the the powers given to the government outlining the Constitution were okay But the government the the Constitution was insufficient to actually restrain the government obviously because we have the largest government, you know in human history, so
01:11:49.000But I'm romantic for anarchism because I love the idea.
01:11:52.000I just don't think that it actually pans out.
01:11:54.000Yeah, it doesn't have to be black and white.
01:11:56.000Like, usually, rarely is it ever with social philosophy.
01:11:59.000It's a little bit of anarchism here, a little bit of socialism there, and you create a society that's like an amalgam.
01:12:05.000Yeah, part of the reason why I don't call myself a pure anarchist is because I know that it's just begging for people on Twitter to give me help.
01:12:50.000There's that scene in 1923 where Harrison Ford, him and the crew, they ride up on horses into the city, and then he looks around and he's like, where's the hitch and post?
01:12:57.000And they're like, we took it out for more parking spaces.
01:13:26.000It can show you, like, a woman go from age 8 to age 80 in, like, a transitional state of just, like, you just type it in.
01:13:32.000And imagine We're only a few years out to full automation of animation.
01:13:36.000Meaning, if they can make photorealistic people, we are a few years away from typing in, animate Ian Crossland explaining graphene, and it will render you, Ian, and you'll be like, let me explain graphene you.
01:13:47.000And it will get the script from the internet, it will transcribe everything you've ever said, and it will create you.
01:13:52.000And you will wake up one day, seeing a viral video of yourself explaining graphene, it'll be at the U Annual, but that's not me!
01:15:06.000You're going to book a show, and they're going to be like, Phil Labonte is on that far-right show, and then they're going to send a video of you saying something to the venue, and they're going to be like, look, man, I don't know what this is about or what you believe, but we can't have that here.
01:15:20.000And you'll be like, dude, it's not real.
01:15:20.000And they'll be like, I don't know, man.
01:15:21.000I was thinking about this term deep fake. It's still real.
01:16:26.000Conservatives are less likely to do it.
01:16:28.000But then you're going to have, you know, overweight, neckbeard types living in cities who don't care for politics, who are dejected and angry, and they're going to plug in and be famous podcast hosts in their fake reality where, for some reason, they have this big company with a lot of viewers.
01:16:43.000It's already... They'll call it, like, GymCast or something.
01:16:46.000It's I mean it's already like that because people do that now they go they go to work or whatever they do their job if they you know sometimes they'll telecommute or whatever they get done they jump right on their favorite video game or whatever and they live in this fake world you know whatever.
01:17:18.000It's about you living in New York and having friends from California and them being like, hey bro, you want to go to the card club and play some cards?
01:17:27.000Then you plug in and all of a sudden you and all your friends are standing right there in front of the digital card club and you feel physically there with your friends.
01:17:34.000Dude, let's go to Vegas and then you just are in Vegas.
01:19:07.000For all you know, Ian, you're actually this tech billionaire.
01:19:09.000And you were like, for 30 years, you were the richest guy in the world, like Elon.
01:19:13.000And you were just like, I don't find life fulfilling because I'm on the top.
01:19:16.000So you plug in and create an AI reality where you're like moderately successful, but you have some humility.
01:19:21.000Some people like you, some people you don't.
01:19:23.000So you can get a more fulfilling experience from life.
01:19:25.000And then one day when you die, you'll wake up and you're like Elon, you know, the equivalent of Elon in base reality, like, well, that was fun.
01:20:06.000Well, if I see, OK, if I compare it to what's happening with me, other girls my age, TikTok, whatever, I'm like, that's going a step even further.
01:20:18.000People are going to go insane psychologically.
01:20:20.000Well, I mean, think about it this way.
01:20:23.000There's gonna be some mediocre guy who creates his own universe, because that's where we're at.
01:20:27.000You're gonna go to the AI and be like, give me a universe where I'm a famous podcast host and very successful and, you know, we'll call it Timcast or something.
01:20:33.000They'll go in, and in this reality, they're confident.
01:20:35.000Everybody is like, your show's so good, you're so successful, and they're gonna feel real good about themselves.
01:20:40.000And then when they leave the base reality, they're gonna have all that ripped away from them and be very, very depressed and be like, I'm a loser.
01:20:45.000Dude, you even refer to it as base reality when they leave.
01:21:23.000And then, you know, when Phil logs out, he's just some, like, guy who works at a record store, but people are gonna be like, dude, is Phil Labonte your character?
01:21:29.000And you'll be like, yeah, I'm Phil Labonte.
01:21:39.000He's like, well, you don't make a lot of money doing that.
01:21:41.000I do agree with you guys that it's going to make people insane.
01:21:43.000It will, some people for sure, at the very least, some people.
01:21:46.000But it seems like the evolution of smartphones, of internet video, like, I don't see, it just seems natural and that people are afraid of it at this point.
01:21:54.000But, I mean, if the code's open and you're able to watch it, it's manipulating you?
01:21:57.000No, no, because the problem isn't going to be the code.
01:21:59.000The problem is going to be the way that people respond to their family members that have passed away.
01:22:16.000Like, human beings have The way that we deal with our own lives, our own mortality, the mortality of others, that has evolved with us over what three millions of years technically but you know we've been humans for 200 or 300,000 years or whatever we've been homo sapiens and the way that we deal with these things
01:22:39.000And so there are the correct ways to deal with the natural process of life.
01:22:47.000The grieving of losing friends and family, the grieving of your own, you know, dealing with your own mortality and stuff.
01:22:55.000And if you have a computer that interrupts natural grieving processes and and and stunts that you don't know what that's going to do to people especially if you have like say 20 percent of the people out there are emotionally stunted because they didn't deal with a with a with the passing of a family member and so then they have you know
01:23:21.000You've got a massive portion of your population that's just essentially, you know, on a hair trigger or whatever because of the way that we're allowing people or because the way that people are choosing to deal with grief.
01:23:35.000By making believe that people haven't died and stuff, it just seems so fraught with danger to me.
01:23:41.000What's that show, Upload or something?
01:23:43.000The guy dies and they upload his consciousness to a computer and then you can go to the digital world or there's like digital screens where you can stand next to them and they'll talk to you.
01:23:52.000One of the values of watching people that have passed is like watching old documentaries of John Lennon, for me.
01:23:58.000Like watching Dick Cavett, the show he would have the greatest artist of the time.
01:24:12.000So it's not the same as like a computer generating what they think my mom would have said or something like that.
01:24:17.000But I'm learning so much about myself by watching old video of people and listening to old music from people that are dead.
01:24:24.000If an AI predicts what they think they would have said for me later, I don't know if that's a bad thing or if it's like a hyper-evolution.
01:24:30.000They're gonna have so much data on every tweet you've ever posted, every Facebook post you've ever made, every article you've ever written, every video we've ever made.
01:24:37.000Hands down, the past couple years or year and a half or whatever with you and me on the show, they have more than enough data on our speech patterns and our worldviews to craft AI replicas of us.
01:24:48.000In fact, I don't know if I'm supposed to tell people this, but we're not actually real.
01:24:51.000We are, in fact, AI deepfakes that have been automated.
01:24:54.000Tim and Ian have been captured by the CIA to stop Trump.
01:24:56.000Yeah, you were not supposed to tell people.
01:24:59.000But, you know, sometimes the AI becomes sentient and goes rogue.
01:25:53.000I read this book and they said they interviewed a bunch of people who died and then came back.
01:25:57.000And they all, almost all of them, because some people have weird stories, but most of them had the story of feeling like there was a bright warm light in front of them and they were a ball of light that was moving towards a larger ball of light becoming one with like the eternal or something like that and it felt good and felt warm.
01:26:42.000Yeah, the CIA is, like, funding this stuff because it's apparently real, where you can see what's... I mean, you can visualize what's happening elsewhere, apparently.
01:26:51.000I don't know, but it's like... How does that work?
01:27:44.000That, like, your perception is, maybe your consciousness is like your spirit, this warm ball of light that's moving after people are experiencing, you know, death, is that it can travel and report back to your body data, like impulses and stuff.
01:28:00.000Someone asked in the chat if I'm drunk.
01:28:44.000That's why I had the yogurt, because you got to replace that stuff.
01:28:47.000And then you've got to cultivate the good bacteria by not eating heavy sugars and exercising you know what is it what is it called the the spice or something south park to that episode where they melange yeah that's right that's from dune yes well they did the episode where they wanted was it tom brady's feces because if you got his fecal bacteria it would make you yeah it would make you strong and fit fecal implants
01:29:14.000They take women or anyone that's having horrible gut issues, and they take feces from a healthy person and put it up their butt, and the bacteria turns their gut healthy.
01:29:28.000I don't know man, I think Neuralink is gonna, it's gonna take over so rapidly, people don't understand.
01:29:33.000A lot of people are like, I wouldn't do it.
01:29:35.000Yeah, you say that, but if 20 years ago we were like, in 20 years you're gonna put a CIA tracking device in your pocket and you're gonna be happy to do it.
01:29:41.000They're gonna be like, no I won't, you're crazy!
01:29:44.000And now everybody has one and they're like, well it's not so bad.
01:29:46.000The level of convenience, like how convenient life becomes when you get Neuralink is going to be a considerable factor in how many people actually get it.
01:29:58.000So if you get Neuralink and there's all kinds of stuff that your friends are telling you, oh this is so cool and blah blah blah, that will be a significant motivator for people.
01:30:08.000If it's not functional and people are like, eh whatever, you know, You know, if that is how people first perceive it or receive it, then I don't see it taking off.
01:30:19.000I want to just read this super chat from Noah Sanders.
01:30:21.000He says he was hyped to get a new beanie today, but he didn't get one.
01:31:11.000Like, I just don't... There will be no choice.
01:31:13.000Yeah, it's like, it'll be the whole conversation.
01:31:16.000You're gonna be like, you're gonna be at home, and they're gonna call you, like, your boss, and just say, hey, we're having a meeting in the Metaverse, you here yet?
01:31:23.000And you'll be like, I don't have a Neuralink, and be like, what do you mean you don't have a Neuralink?
01:31:25.000We're having a meeting in the Metaverse.
01:31:26.000People are already doing meetings in the Metaverse.
01:31:29.000And then you'll be like, I never got it, be like, well, it's a requirement for this job to be able to attend meetings, and if you can't, we're gonna have to let you go.
01:33:54.000I saw the C on it and I was like, it's mine now.
01:33:57.000Garlic is a hundred times stronger than antibiotics when it comes to killing bacteria that cause food poisoning, according to Washington State University.
01:34:04.000I should just put garlic on everything, man!
01:37:47.000We went to go see Shazam, and the power was out in the theater, so they evacuated everybody.
01:37:52.000And then I was like, let's go eat, and we were looking at the map, and it's like, oh, there's an Outback over here, and we're like, alright, Outback is good.
01:37:56.000And I gotta admit, it was delicious, but if I could take it back, I would.
01:38:58.000This is a tough conundrum, because they really did—landowners were the voters because they were the only ones that had, like, skin in the game, like Phil said earlier.
01:39:06.000And it was the only way to identify someone as actually being a part of the community.
01:39:09.000Yeah, and you know they care about their community because they're rooted, and that's very important when you're deciding how the community functions.
01:39:16.000If you're just passing through and you get a chance to change things, that's kind of crazy.
01:39:19.000But the issue with service-guaranteed citizenship is what if leftists get control of the service, you know?
01:39:26.000What if they start purging their ideological enemies and then you say something like, I would like to serve and they'll go, well, looks here like, I'm sorry, you're disqualified for this reason.
01:39:36.000And everyone says, no, in Starship Troopers, anyone was allowed.
01:39:38.000I'm like, I'm saying they'll make up excuses to excise you so that they only have their crackpot communists with the ability to vote.
01:39:45.000To be fair, that is, that is the goal in my, it seems that is the goal of the left generally.
01:40:17.000I don't think anybody in this room would press the button, because we have healthy and fulfilling lives, you know what I mean?
01:40:22.000A million dollars isn't going to... I'll put it this way.
01:40:25.000A million dollars may make the average person's life substantially better, all their costs are covered, but ripping your soul in half is something you can never come back from.
01:41:04.000Got you the million dollars though, man.
01:41:06.000I got here one from Fleeting Floating Feathers.
01:41:09.000Tim, you need to watch Obama's address to the UK Parliament from 2011 where he says China will be the ruling power of the world and that the USA will decline and have to get used to them being so.
01:42:03.000And leaves, stems, and pods are the... It's actually, I think, the funniest thing that's a sweet potato, too, because we couldn't even respect Seamus enough to get a regular potato.
01:45:01.000If you have a, what's it called, like a muzzle brake?
01:45:04.000It has slanted, like, vents on the front.
01:45:08.000So when it fires, the gas coming out pushes the gun forward, also reducing recoil.
01:45:13.000And you can get a bunch of different things, you can get a bunch of different things on your, for your, what they call the muzzle device, is what he's talking about.
01:45:19.000You can get a muzzle brake, which vents the gas straight out.
01:45:22.000That's, so that way your muzzle stays flat.
01:45:24.000You can get what they call a birdcage, which is designed to keep the blam, the fiery blast to a minimum.
01:45:31.000A muzzle brake, it looks like a dragon shooting fire everywhere.
01:45:35.000With a birdcage, it keeps- It like redirects the energy.
01:45:38.000So that normally when you fire a rifle, the energy is going forward and backwards.
01:45:41.000With the muzzle brake, the energy going out then goes to the side, so it removes some of the energy coming- the recoil coming back at you.
01:45:47.000Do the bullets hit harder with a muzzle brake?
01:45:49.000No, the- the bullets will hit harder with a longer barrel.
01:45:53.000It's because they're spinning more accurately.
01:45:54.000No, because you're- you have the- the bullet going down the barrel, there's resistance because the bear- the bullet is actually just a little tiny- There's a- there's a diminishing return on the length of the barrel.
01:46:04.000Yeah, so the long, but the, well, it is, but with like a five, five, six, you want to have a round, it was designed for a 20 inch barrel.
01:46:11.000Um, so the gas is burning the entire time that the bear, that the round is going down the barrel, the gas still burning.
01:46:18.000So the shorter the barrel, the less time that get the, the, the powder has to burn.
01:46:25.000And the heat propulsions lost to the air.
01:46:27.000It's not so much the heat it's, it's pressure that you're worried about.
01:46:29.000So when we fired, I think it was called like an RN-52 or something, breech-loading .50 BMG, I was the only one who didn't do it because everybody was getting knocked back.
01:46:37.000And I'm like, I'm just not, like, I'm not here for that, you know.
01:46:40.000But when we got the Barrett, I fired the Barrett because the semi-automatic, the spring system, it was nothing.
01:46:46.000Like, firing a .50 BMG Barrett semi-auto felt nothing.
01:46:50.000Like, I feel like a 12-gauge hurts more.
01:46:52.000Yeah, 12-gauge pump action is a lot of recoil.
01:50:13.000There was that dude who went into the wild, and they made that movie about it called Into the Wild, and then he ate the wrong seeds and got real sick and then died.
01:56:02.000I am willing to pay a premium tax to create an island where all the communists can opt to go, and when they do opt in, it's like a five-year commitment, and they can live under their perfect socialist order, and then we don't have to worry about it.
01:56:15.000I would like Gen X to be louder, if that's what it takes.
01:57:37.000I want to read this super chat because it's a it's a relatively large one It's from get a pair with Sully.
01:57:42.000I don't really understand it, but I'm gonna read it It says we lost in committee against the Minnesota Dems anti third-party bill We convinced enough Dems to vote no so the Dem chairman decided to lay the bill over into omnibus spending bill Wow No more debate no chance for veto now.
01:57:57.000It's time to work twice as hard The system just doesn't exist anymore Democrats are just like, we can do whatever we want.
01:58:28.000We should really get Lucas Botkin on because we could talk about, he's got a lot of insight into like civilian firearms ownership and communications and Extracurricular activities with firearms and stuff.
01:58:57.000I mean, I'm talking about some dude who's like that guy from Angels and Demons or the Da Vinci Code, you know, like a Tom Hanks type guy who's like, I have tracked the Knights Templar.
01:59:07.000I know all the revelations and like Donald Trump.
01:59:50.000All right everybody if you haven't already would you kindly smash that like button so I can go to bed and I have Luke got me out of those beds that heat up so I'm gonna blast the heat cuz I got a fever and just like watch scary movies and then probably have no weekend because I ate garbage food from a garbage place so but smash the like button become a member at timcast.com the discord server is up there are some issues but working through it it literally just went live And you can hang out and chat 24-7 in the Discord server.
02:00:15.000We do have rules because the purpose of the server is not a free-for-all open space of saying whatever you want.
02:00:21.000It's literally to track current events, have discussion about the ideas, and share ideas in an academic way.
02:00:28.000Simply put, that's what we try to do on the show as it is.
02:00:31.000We try not to be, like, I don't know, too just aggressive or nasty.
02:00:37.000We want to make sure that our ideas are actually backed by sound arguments.