00:01:00.000I know that's not exactly a new take or anything, but it is kind of funny to think about it.
00:01:05.000It was one year ago that they told us.
00:01:08.000Five weeks to slow the spread, and that's why we're going to close our borders and close down schools, places of work, restaurants, concerts, other public venues.
00:01:19.000Five weeks to slow down the spread of the virus that has now morphed into something like 15, 20 months to prevent the virus from spreading until we distribute 300, 600 million doses of vaccine, is what it's really like.
00:01:37.000And we don't even know, we don't even know if it'll end.
00:02:11.000Nobody in the news seems to be addressing this, but she's not the first person to die from the vaccine.
00:02:17.000There were a couple dozen deaths in Norway, which were quickly covered up.
00:02:21.000And we've also heard of some other stories where the vaccine is not administered correctly or there's bad side effects.
00:02:28.000And in some cases, people are even dying.
00:02:30.000So we'll talk about that, give you the full scoop so you can make an informed decision about whether or not you're going to get the vaccine.
00:03:21.000There was a time on Gab when I had like 80,000 because there was a glitch on the website where everybody that made a new account was following me.
00:03:30.000So, and that was back after Trump got banned from Twitter right around that time.
00:03:35.000So, overnight, I remember I made a new Gab account and I got like close to 100,000 followers.
00:03:41.000And then Andrew Torba took them all away.
00:03:43.000He said, oh, well, that only happened because of a glitch, and that's not fair.
00:04:03.000Also, and I'll probably say this one more time tomorrow, and then that'll be it.
00:04:08.000But in case you missed it, I've talked about it for the past few days on the show.
00:04:12.000Some other news and developments within the movement.
00:04:16.000Recently, we launched the America First Foundation website, America First Foundation's 501c4 nonprofit that I am the president of.
00:04:26.000This is the organization that put on the AFPAC 2 conference a couple of weeks ago.
00:04:32.000And I've been telling people about it.
00:04:34.000This is going to be the vehicle, one of many, that will help us in the future organize and arrange more America First activities and projects.
00:04:44.000We've already raised quite a bit of money.
00:04:46.000If you go to America First Foundation.org, you could find out more about the organization, what we do, and donate money as well if you'd like.
00:04:56.000And then we've also got our AFPAC website as well, AFPAC.Events.
00:05:01.000We have got a full Version, a full video of our conference up there as well, color corrected, high definition.
00:05:09.000So if you missed it, you could find it on our official website there.
00:06:47.000And prohibitively expensive, very expensive.
00:06:50.000I mean, I'm going on their app, and it's like $7 for a cheeseburger.
00:06:57.000I guess that's basically what they cost these days.
00:07:00.000But $7 for a cheeseburger, $3.50 for fries, and then like $5 for delivery.
00:07:05.000I got two burgers and fries and a drink.
00:07:08.000It wound up being about $25, maybe even a little bit more.
00:07:12.000And so we ordered them and we got them, and it was like, honestly, it was one of the worst things I've eaten all year.
00:07:18.000So if you've heard about the Mr. Beast Burger, if you've seen it on Twitter, if you've heard about it, I am making an official America First review.
00:11:25.000And I'll read you the article and react to it.
00:11:28.000It says, A 39 year old single mom in Utah with no underlying medical conditions died four days after receiving her second dose of the Moderna COVID vaccine, according to a report.
00:11:41.000Cassidy Kirill, a mother of one from Ogden, Received the vaccine due to her work as a surgical tech for several plastic surgeons.
00:11:49.000Her father, Alfred Hawley, told the outlet, She was absolutely fine with getting it.
00:11:54.000In fact, she told all of us, It's fine.
00:12:38.000Kirill's older sister, Kristen, who lives in Arizona, said she knew her sister had gone to the hospital, but the speed at which she deteriorated was so unexpected.
00:12:47.000She thought her sister would get an IV and be back home in an hour, but Holly knew they were not going home anytime soon.
00:12:54.000She died 30 hours after arriving at the hospital.
00:13:01.000Body, but the state medical examiner's office could not comment on the case due to privacy laws.
00:13:06.000Dr. Eric Christensen, Utah's chief medical examiner, told the station that proving vaccine injury as a cause of death almost never happens.
00:13:17.000I think that would be very hard to demonstrate in an autopsy.
00:13:21.000Christensen said he could think of just one instance in which a vaccine could be listed as a cause of death on an autopsy report an immediate case of anaphylaxis, a severe allergic reaction.
00:13:33.000Where a person died almost instantaneously after being inoculated.
00:13:37.000Otherwise, they can't list vaccine as the cause of death.
00:13:41.000So, this is pretty alarming, and we haven't seen a lot of this reported in the news media, so we don't know the extent to which this is happening because when it happens, they don't cover it, they don't talk about it.
00:13:55.000And even in this instance, I caught this on the timeline, somebody retweeted it, but I didn't see this story anywhere other than the New York Post.
00:14:03.000This is relevant information, and you know what's funny is.
00:14:07.000I see this article posted, New York Post, only one who carries it, like I said.
00:14:13.000And all the reaction to the article from mainstream sources and from leftists on Twitter and COVID alarmists is they say that this doesn't tell the whole story.
00:14:25.000They say that added context is needed to say that, well, this death could have been caused by anything.
00:14:56.000They expect people to be informed about pre existing conditions, comorbidities, and all of the other complicating factors when it comes to deaths as a result of the vaccine.
00:15:07.000When it comes to the COVID virus itself, which the vaccine is supposed to protect against, We don't need any such information or any such context.
00:15:17.000Somebody could get hit by a car, happen to have COVID after they examine them in the autopsy, and they call it a COVID death, and that's fine.
00:15:27.000You know, the flu has virtually disappeared, and our death rate is about the same as it has been for the past 10 years.
00:17:39.000They might as well tell you there's 0% chance that you could die or get seriously ill from it.
00:17:45.000They're trying to push this out as fast as they can, manufacture as many doses as they need, distribute them, and stick them in your arms as fast as humanly possible.
00:17:56.000For whatever reason, we don't really know, without telling you what exactly you're being stuck with and what the side effects are.
00:18:04.000In a lot of ways, we don't even really know what the side effects are because the schedule has been so rapid.
00:18:11.000The virus has only been known to us for a little bit longer than a year.
00:18:16.000China released the sequence of the virus in January.
00:18:21.000The virus first presented in China, it first came on their radar last January.
00:18:27.000So it's only been around for about a year.
00:18:30.000And in that time, we have not only developed the vaccine, tested it, gone through the regulatory bureaucracy.
00:18:38.000Manufactured it and distributed it to hundreds of millions of people in that short of an amount of time, we don't even know what the effects are.
00:18:47.000We don't know what the effects will be.
00:18:50.000We don't even know how effective it is.
00:18:52.000And if you look at the different vaccines from Johnson Johnson and Moderna and Pfizer, the numbers vary rapidly, and some of the numbers are better than others.
00:19:01.000In the same way that last year we were in the dark about the virus and what the virus was and the extent of the damage and what the symptoms were and everything.
00:19:11.000We're in the same position now about the vaccine for the virus.
00:19:25.000We don't know anything about this thing other than a narrow and rosy picture that is being painted for us by the news media, which clearly has a vested interest in getting everybody vaccinated.
00:19:39.000And this vaccine is very different from other vaccines.
00:19:43.000I've talked about this on the show before.
00:19:45.000I'm not a doctor, I'm not a scientist, but this is true that this coronavirus vaccine is not like other vaccines.
00:19:54.000The key component in this vaccine is mRNA.
00:21:29.000And, you know, I know that this is pretty simple, and maybe everybody understands this, but, you know, they're injecting this stuff in your bloodstream.
00:21:37.000I don't know why people treat this so cavalierly.
00:21:40.000I mean, it's like people don't even care.
00:21:43.000We're talking about a government mandate to inject something into your bloodstream, totally experimental, created by big pharma.
00:23:28.000And you could call that irrational, you could call that skeptical, but I don't think that.
00:23:33.000Doctors know as much as they think they do.
00:23:36.000I don't think that they, I think that their confidence in themselves and their abilities and their technology is, I think that's overconfidence, to tell you the truth.
00:24:28.000And, you know, I don't say that for any other reason other than you don't know what you don't know.
00:24:34.000And we can look at the death rate for coronavirus, we could look at who it affects, who's susceptible to it, and we could make a calculated.
00:24:43.000Decision about whether or not we're willing to take our chances with the virus or the vaccine.
00:24:49.000I think if you're an able bodied young person who is not obese with no pre existing conditions, there is no reason to get the virus.
00:25:22.000If you're elderly and have a pre existing condition, if you have a compromised immune system, well, then you balance the risks.
00:25:30.000There are risks associated with an experimental vaccine, and there's a dramatic risk of contracting a severe respiratory virus, depending on your situation.
00:25:39.000And in that case, you might decide, I will go with the vaccine.
00:25:46.000Fully acknowledging that there is intrinsic risk.
00:25:49.000In both, there is risk associated with contracting or potentially contracting a respiratory virus, and there is potential risk in being inoculated with an experimental gene editing or, I should say, gene therapy vaccine.
00:26:05.000And that's all I think that people are saying.
00:26:07.000You start to talk common sense like this, and the scientific people, you know, the people that are supposed to believe in the process of free inquiry and evidence and open questions and all of that, they tell you, you know, you can't say that.
00:26:26.000It's going to kill billions if everyone doesn't get vaccinated right now.
00:26:30.000I mean, that to me is the fear mongering.
00:26:33.000I'm simply saying that you get the vaccine, you get the virus, and in both cases, you're opening yourself up to risk and different levels of risk.
00:26:41.000People have to make a decision for themselves based on their unique situation what risk they're ready to take on.
00:26:54.000I don't have a lung problem, a heart problem, diabetes, anything like that.
00:26:59.000And if I haven't had COVID already, I may have had it.
00:27:03.000If I haven't had it already, I'm willing to take my chances with it because the odds that I will die from it are slim to none.
00:27:09.000Why would I go in to a doctor's office and get a vaccine that I know nothing about, that is totally experimental, never been done before, rush through the regulatory agencies without the proper trials?
00:27:21.000Why would I get that injected into my veins?
00:27:24.000To ward off a threat that is really not all that dire for me.
00:27:28.000It doesn't make any sense for me to do that.
00:27:30.000It doesn't make sense for most people to do that.
00:27:32.000And the truth of the matter is, with this whole pandemic from the beginning, is that what should have and could have been achieved was herd immunity.
00:27:40.000If we had never closed down the economy, never closed down anything at all, the virus would have swept through the country in the same way that it has over the past year in a protracted way.
00:27:52.000It would have swept through very quickly.
00:28:55.000Why do they lie to us about the real motivation behind these lockdowns and all these different responses, government reactions to the virus?
00:29:06.000You know, and And this is something that happened last year, and this is the last thing I'll say, and then we'll talk about the stimulus package.
00:29:12.000But last year, I think it was even a little bit more than a year ago, Anthony Fauci told us that masks don't work.
00:29:21.000You shouldn't buy them, you shouldn't wear them, because they do not prevent the spread of the virus.
00:29:27.000It was later revealed that Anthony Fauci only said that because they needed to allocate the masks, which apparently do work after all, to healthcare workers and other frontline workers.
00:29:40.000And that what he told us about them not preventing the spread of the virus was a lie.
00:29:46.000He only told us that so that they could solve a problem of resource allocation, which is to say, there were not at that time enough masks for everybody to buy many of them to use in their day to day lives.
00:29:59.000There weren't enough for schools and businesses and individuals to buy on the consumer market.
00:30:04.000So he lied to us so that this scarce quantity of masks could be rapidly allocated to a certain group of people that needed them more, apparently.
00:30:15.000I look at that, and some people might say, well, that was necessary, or that made sense, or they might argue the science about how masks actually do work, or they might say that we didn't know enough information at the time.
00:30:28.000What this proves in principle is this the government, and specifically this sort of health division of the government, the CDC and Anthony Fauci and Big Pharma, they are willing and they are able to lie to the public.
00:30:49.000If they think that there is something expedient about telling the public a mistruth, or another way to say that is a flat out lie about the coronavirus, if that makes it easier for them to respond to the pandemic, then they will do that.
00:31:05.000Because they know that the public's response to government action affects the efficacy of government action.
00:31:11.000In other words, in the instance of the mask, they know that if they told people masks work, People would buy lots of masks.
00:31:19.000And then the government couldn't secure the masks for the frontline workers in the hospitals, and the hospitals would not be as effective at treating people that had COVID.
00:31:27.000They could not operate at full capacity.
00:31:29.000So they knew that what they tell the public is going to shape the efficacy of their response.
00:31:39.000And this is the case not only with what they say, but also with what they do about everything, about all of it about the lockdown, about the vaccines, about the virus itself, about masks, the whole thing.
00:31:52.000You have to look at it from the perspective that these people are calculating.
00:31:58.000When they talk to you and they're calculating what their political actions are going to be based on how the public will react, what this means, in a word, is that you cannot trust them.
00:33:10.000The experts, as I have just demonstrated with one simple example, and there are others too, the experts have been shown, and this is in black and white, I mean, it is demonstrable.
00:33:23.000They have been shown time and time again to tell you things not based on the best knowledge and the best information to date that they have.
00:33:33.000At their disposal, they have been shown to tell us things to manipulate our behavior.
00:33:39.000That is the basis for what they tell you.
00:33:42.000That is the basis for everything that the CDC and Fauci and the news media tell you about the virus.
00:33:48.000That's why they told you that masks don't work.
00:33:51.000They didn't tell you that masks don't work because they went to the laboratory and they looked at their beakers and test tubes and they said, hmm, you know, we looked at the science and the science shows that masks don't work according to our science.
00:34:06.000They told us a fib to manipulate our behavior so that they could solve an economic problem, which is the distribution of masks.
00:34:15.000And once that was taken care of, once it became politically expedient, then they told us, after all, the masks do work, and now you need to wear them.
00:34:27.000The message, though, is that you cannot take any of that at face value.
00:34:31.000You have to listen to everything that they hear and understand that that is being filtered.
00:34:38.000How are 330 million people in America going to respond to this?
00:34:43.000How are 8 billion people on this planet going to respond to what the US government's health bureaucracy has to say about this global pandemic?
00:34:52.000And they are factoring that in to what they tell you.
00:34:56.000Their job, as they see it, and their obligation and their intention is not to tell you what they know, it's not to tell you what's true, it's to tell you things that are going to make their job easier.
00:35:11.000Tell you things to manipulate your behavior in a way that is optimal according to their schemes and their designs, which they conceal from us.
00:35:50.000They said it was because our healthcare facilities.
00:35:54.000Could not handle a major influx of patients.
00:35:58.000If we did not tell everybody to go home to dramatically halt the spread of the virus, the virus, if left to spread uncontrolled, would infect so many people that hospitals and other healthcare facilities and resources would be strained to the point where they would be overwhelmed.
00:36:15.000There would not be enough beds, there would not be enough ventilators, doctors, and nurses to treat everybody that had the virus.
00:36:42.000The hospitals will handle this first wave of the virus.
00:36:46.000We open up, more people will be infected, and they'll handle the next wave.
00:36:50.000The reason that that made sense is this there is no known therapy for coronavirus, there is no known cure or vaccine to coronavirus.
00:36:59.000So, people are going to contract it no matter what.
00:37:03.000Whether you open up the society now, later, if you never closed it down, the minute that people continue to interact with each other in society, in work, school, or in recreational places, they are going to contract and spread the virus and people will die from it.
00:37:22.000And unless and until a vaccine or a therapy or something like that is developed, this will be the case.
00:37:27.000So, it makes sense that you shut everything down, acknowledging.
00:38:00.000Once we have put in place the supply chains that allow healthcare facilities to handle a A full blown pandemic in America.
00:38:09.000But then, five weeks after that, they told us it'd be another five weeks.
00:38:12.000And then, you know, here we are a year later, and we still aren't opened up.
00:38:17.000And, you know, what you can deduce from this timeline is that, like with the masks, they lied to us.
00:38:24.000They told us five weeks to slow the spread, and they came up with this nonsense about straining healthcare facilities because they knew, they knew that if they told us a year ago that our economy would be closed down for a year, That people would panic.
00:38:41.000People would resist it and protest it from day one.
00:38:44.000People would change their economic and other behaviors.
00:38:47.000They would change their spending patterns.
00:38:49.000They would change lots of things about their lifestyle, which would be very disruptive to the agenda of the government and the CDC.
00:38:57.000So they didn't tell people that their plan all along was to shut down the economy for a year or longer until they could develop a vaccine, inoculate everybody, and then open it up one, two, three, or maybe four years into the future.
00:41:47.000But they're all going to go around and grandstand.
00:41:48.000You know, Bill Nye and Neil deGrasse Tyson and all these pop scientists are going to go around and grandstand with John Oliver and Stephen Colbert.
00:41:56.000About how these knuckle dragging hill people, hillbilly conservatives, don't just trust the scientific consensus.
00:42:04.000It's not a scientific consensus, it's a bureaucratic consensus, it's a managerial consensus.
00:42:10.000The people that are telling you these things are actors.
00:42:13.000Stephen Colbert, Bill Nye, Anthony Fauci, these people are actors.
00:42:18.000And the people that they work for are managers, designers, schemers, planners.
00:42:23.000They're not learned men of science in lab coats and anything like that.
00:42:30.000These people, their job is to influence and manipulate the masses.
00:43:43.000And they're all so smug about the mask wearing.0.99
00:43:46.000You know the type, the Karens, the Awfuls, these faggy liberals that are yelling at people in public to put on their mask and social distance and all of this.1.00
00:43:55.000We know the type that is concerned with this.0.99
00:43:57.000And you look at these people, and these are people that, I mean, they're completely ignorant.
00:44:02.000These are people who are in high school or in college.
00:44:06.000You know, and this is sort of the realm that I deal in.
00:44:09.000TikTokers, Instagram people, Zoomers, people of my generation, people that I know.
00:44:16.000There are people that are barely literate.0.98
00:44:20.000You know, they don't know the difference between there, there, you know, T H E I R, T H E R E.
00:44:26.000I mean, these are people that don't have the first clue about any scholastic subject, about anything.0.91
00:44:33.000I mean, they know nothing about nothing.
00:44:36.000But they are the ones, and am I right about this?
00:44:39.000But they are always the first ones to tell you that you're ignorant and you're anti science.
00:44:46.000Like they're reading a lot of science.
00:44:48.000You know, I look at some of these people, it's like, oh, are you reading a lot of scientific journals?
00:44:53.000You know, people that work at Sephora, people that work at fucking Chick fil A, you're looking at a lot of experiments, you're reading a lot of peer reviewed scientific journals.
00:45:03.000All these people making propaganda about trusting the science and giving you medical advice.
00:46:50.000That's when they greenlit the $1,200 checks.
00:46:54.000I think that was in April or May of 2020.
00:46:58.000And since then, there has been a vigorous debate in an election year, albeit, right, throughout the latter half of 2020 over what would be inside of the fourth coronavirus stimulus bill.
00:47:11.000What would be the conditions for a cash payment?
00:47:14.000What would be the amount of the cash payment?
00:47:17.000You know, if they were going to do checks again, would they replenish PPP and so on?
00:47:22.000And so this was a big debate that raged throughout the summer and the fall before the election.
00:47:29.000Before the election, in the lame duck period, and ultimately now with the Democratic House and with the skin of their teeth, a Democratic controlled Senate, they have finally passed a fourth coronavirus stimulus bill.
00:47:45.000It passed without any Republican votes, it was down party lines.
00:47:50.000And I want to read you this article from the Washington Examiner about what's in it.
00:47:54.000And the real kicker is in the first paragraph of this article.
00:47:59.000It says, quote, the combined $6 trillion price tag on the COVID stimulus packages, okayed by Congress, including Wednesday's $1.9 trillion Biden bill, will cost taxpayers the equivalent of $17,000 each, or $69,000 per family, according to a new analysis.
00:48:21.000So this is the most important figure in this article.
00:48:25.000The bill on Wednesday is $1.9 trillion.
00:48:29.000If you add that total to all of the other COVID stimulus bills so far, fiscal measures by the government, you get $6 trillion.
00:48:40.000Congress, since last year, has allocated $6 trillion over the course of these multiple bills, $6 trillion in COVID stimulus.
00:48:52.000If you break that down per individual or per family, that cost taxpayers $17,000 each.
00:49:04.000And of course, it doesn't work out like that directly.
00:49:06.000It's not like they're going to come to you and ask you for an additional $17,000 in taxes this year because of their stimulus spending over the past year.
00:49:16.000But ultimately, it is taxpayers that bear the cost for all of this.
00:49:20.000After all, who pays for the government's bills?
00:49:24.000Where does the government's revenue come from?
00:49:28.000So you may not be paying for it now or all at once, but you are on the hook for this money.
00:49:34.000When they spend this money, in theory, you owe this money to them eventually.
00:49:40.000They will have to extract it from you in some way at some point.
00:49:43.000So it's useful to think about it in these terms.
00:49:46.000Even though you're not going to have to cough up $17,000 right now, they are putting you on the hook for this money, in theory, at some point down the line.
00:49:56.000The reason why this number is so important, and we'll go on through the article, is that, of course, the cash payments to taxpayers have amounted to.
00:50:23.000So, you have been paid by these four, maybe five different stimulus bills, you have been paid a grand total of $2,600, and that's if you got it.
00:50:33.000That's if you make less than $100,000, right?
00:50:37.000And that's if you meet certain other criteria.
00:50:40.000You got paid $2,600, but if you pay taxes, you're on the hook for $17,000.
00:50:47.000If you have a family of four, you might have gotten a $2,600 check for yourself, $2,600 check for your spouse, $500 per kid.
00:50:57.000You're on the hook for $69,000 as a family.
00:51:06.000The article goes on it says What's more, the new package set for House approval on Wednesday sets aside billions of dollars for non COVID relief and adds to the nearly $1 trillion in unspent money approved in earlier.
00:51:22.000So they have money that they haven't even used, that they're just stacking up for a rainy day, I guess.
00:51:27.000House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, in urging the defeat of the so called Christmas tree package, said on the House floor This is the reality of the bill before us today.
00:51:37.000It showers money on special interests, but spends less than 9% on actually defeating the virus.
00:51:44.000It gives San Francisco $600 million, essentially wiping out 92% of their budget deficit.
00:51:50.000Critics have also hit the legislation because much of it won't even be spent this year.
00:51:55.000The minority staff of the House Budget Committee and Representative Jason Smith provided secrets with the highlights of the Senate past version spending in the bill, unrelated to coronavirus relief, posted below.
00:52:08.000Smith, the top Republican on the Budget Committee, told NPR today If this bill was about direct payments to people and putting shots in the arms and vaccines, you would have strong bipartisan support across this Congress and across this country.
00:52:24.000But less than 9% of the entire spending in this bill actually goes to crushing the virus.
00:52:30.000And helping distribute vaccines and putting shots in arms.
00:52:34.000And these are a few figures about the bill.
00:52:36.000It says less than 9% of the $1.9 trillion goes to combating COVID.
00:52:42.00027%, which is more than $500 billion, goes to state and local governments.
00:52:48.00021%, which is approximately $400 billion, goes to policies that reduce private sector employment.
00:52:56.000$135 million is allocated for the National Endowment for the Arts.
00:53:01.000$135 million for the National Endowment for the Humanities, $200 million for the Institute of Museum and Library Services, $12 billion for foreign aid, and then in the $1.9 trillion, 5% of the $130 billion set aside for K 12 schools will be used this year.
00:53:26.0005% of the $5 billion for emergency housing vouchers will be used this year.
00:53:31.000Only 17% of the $39 billion allocated for child care will be spent this year.
00:53:37.00023% of the $50 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency or FEMA will be spent this year.
00:53:44.000And none of the $5 billion for homeless assistance will be spent this year.
00:53:57.000And I saw every news agency when this passed the other day huge win for Biden.
00:54:02.000And he gave a 20 minute victory speech about it.
00:54:05.000Just tonight, a little bit before the show started, trotting out the bill and saying what a huge political victory this is, how far we've come, and everything.
00:54:41.000They've allocated $6 trillion to date, including this bill, which means that they had approximately $4 trillion allocated before this bill.
00:54:51.000$1 trillion of that they haven't even spent.
00:54:53.000So, fully 25% of what they have allocated before this bill, they have not spent.
00:55:00.000Allocate another $2 trillion just on account of, and they're not spending any of this money either.
00:55:07.000What's more is the money that they are spending, they're barely spending it on COVID, they're barely spending it on relief.
00:55:15.000For people, or on any kind of response to the pandemic, it's going towards bailing out city governments, bailing out government institutions, bailing out schools.
00:55:29.000It's like what we saw in 2008 or like basically every spending bill for like the past 50 years.
00:55:35.000Except, of course, this is not like a government budget.
00:55:38.000Government budgets are typically four or five trillion dollars.
00:55:41.000This is a two trillion dollar bill, and that's on top of your regular government spending.
00:55:46.000And it's just giving money away to everybody except for you.
00:55:51.000And this is kind of the point is whether it's Republicans or Democrats, Trump or Biden, Trump was fighting for us.
00:56:00.000But whether it's Kevin McCarthy or Nancy Pelosi, whether it's Mitch McConnell or Chuck Schumer, whether it's Biden or Kamala Harris or whoever, Mike Pence, you could see where the money is flowing.
00:56:14.000You pay the taxes, and then that money goes towards foreign countries, special interests.
00:56:21.000It goes towards federal contractors, federal sector employees, you know, public sector employees.
00:56:26.000It goes to entitlements, welfare, the military.
00:56:31.000You're basically just giving your money away to other people.
00:56:35.000All of these rich people, all of this government largesse for government workers and for private companies that get their contracts from the government, they're all being enriched on your dime.
00:56:46.000You work hard, you have to give the government your money, and then the government gives it to somebody else.0.99
00:56:54.000It's not always some bum, you know, poor person, which that sounds nasty, but, you know, largely I'm saying it's not going to people that are just sort of out of work, indigent types.
00:57:06.000It's going to people that are multi, multi millionaires, billionaires.
00:57:10.000It's going to people that make more money than you.
00:57:11.000It's going towards people that are going to have a great pension when they retire.
00:57:15.000It's going towards, you know, the proverbial DMV worker, public school worker who has tenure and then has a pension lined up.
00:57:31.000They take it from you and then they give it to them.
00:57:34.000And that happens whether it's Democrats or Republicans.
00:57:37.000That happens whether it's so called small government conservatives or so called socialist Democrats.
00:57:44.000They're all in on the corrupt, crony capitalistic scheme.
00:57:48.000And with Republicans, they want to cut the entitlements, they want to cut the welfare benefits, but they want to expand the largesse for defense contractors.
00:57:58.000And for big agriculture, and you know, I guess mass immigration is one way that they do it for their corporate donors.
00:58:06.000And Democrats, who are not small government, they're going to give it to the entitlements, they're going to give it to welfare recipients, and they're going to give it to everybody else on top of that, too.
01:00:07.000In a way, we are more like slaves than anybody else.
01:00:11.000Because, of course, the people at the bottom, who everybody talks about, the poor, they get something for nothing.
01:00:18.000They get something and they don't work.
01:00:21.000You know, they could get their disability or their welfare or their unemployment or, you know, whatever, however they want to game the system.
01:00:28.000Or they work a minimum wage job and they have public housing and food stamps and everything.
01:00:34.000So they either don't work at all or they work very little, but they get something.
01:00:38.000And they don't have all the freedom in the world, but on net, they are benefiting more from the system than they're putting in.
01:00:45.000The rich, of course, on the other end of the spectrum, they are taking with both hands.
01:00:50.000They're enriching themselves in the private sector and then they're Utilizing and wielding the state to enrich themselves through the public sector.
01:00:58.000You know, Google is ubiquitous, obviously, and they make a lot of money in the private sector.
01:01:04.000But they also make a lot of money through contracts with the federal government.
01:01:08.000Google works very closely with the national security apparatus.
01:01:11.000And Google, in a lot of ways, wouldn't exist without protections from the federal government, without regulatory capture.
01:01:18.000So, where then is all of this money coming from?
01:01:20.000Where then is the money coming from for these multi, multi billionaires?
01:01:25.000Where's the money coming from for the poor who don't work?
01:01:29.000It's coming from the people in the middle.0.87
01:01:31.000It's the people in the middle that are putting in more than we're getting out.
01:01:35.000It's the people in the middle who go to work and they work for wages that are stagnant or decreasing and they put more money into the government than they're getting out of in value and in services.
01:01:47.000Their expenses are getting higher and their quality of life is getting lower.
01:01:53.000Their wages are stagnating and going down and their taxes are going up.
01:01:57.000And so what's happening is you're doing the same amount of work, toiling away.
01:02:01.000More work than the people at the bottom, you're paying into the system more than the people at the top, and you have an ever decreasing share of the economic pie, ever decreasing share of income and of wealth.
01:02:13.000And so all of this largesse that you're seeing on both sides is being expropriated from the value that is held by the middle class from your home equity value, from your wages, from your savings, because there's no interest rates, from your ability to invest, from your pensions, from your public benefits.
01:02:32.000All of that value is being looted by the rich and by the poor.
01:02:37.000The rich get together and they team up with the poor to take from the middle class.
01:02:57.000Because, you know, newsflash if you're making zero dollars, you get the checks.
01:03:03.000And if you're not a taxpayer, you don't owe $17,000 to the government.
01:03:08.000If I'm some bum on the street living in public housing, if I'm some bum that doesn't work and gets welfare and unemployment and all these benefits, and my income is zero, I get the full amount.
01:03:19.000I get the $1,200 last year, the $1,400 this year.
01:03:23.000If I have a lot of kids, I get $500 per head.
01:03:27.000And I get the unemployment bonus, right?
01:03:30.000And if I'm not a taxpayer because I make no money, how much do I owe the government?
01:04:29.000All this beneficence from the government, all of their benevolence, all their charity that they've done for us over the past year, they're still calling to collect on April 15th like they always do.
01:04:40.000And the taxes aren't getting any lower for anybody.
01:04:43.000Trump talked about a payroll tax elimination, and he talked about You know, $2,000 checks and everything.
01:05:04.000For all that they said about Trump's tax cut in 2017, that probably amounted to the same amount of net savings as this COVID stimulus did.
01:05:15.000In other words, the Trump tax cut, which was targeted at corporations in 2017, You probably save just as much in taxes then as you're getting as a discount on your taxes through the stimulus now.
01:05:27.000You know, you knock $2,600 off your taxes.
01:05:54.000Coming into your employer, your house, your equity, your interest rate on your savings account, coming into even your investment portfolio and looting the wealth from it.
01:07:56.000And yeah, I mean, you may not have a great quality of life, but at least you don't work for anybody, you know.
01:08:07.000In this country, you start a business, you produce something, you generate income, and they just come up with endless ways to take it from you.
01:11:50.000This country is, I mean, we are trying to turn it around, but in order to turn it around, we have to acknowledge how far things have fallen.
01:11:59.000This is not where the future is happening.1.00
01:12:03.000There is nowhere you can go in this country where it looks and feels like the future, where it feels like this is the place to be in the whole world.
01:12:11.000This is the forward thinking place where the future is being created.
01:12:15.000There's nowhere in America where it feels like that.
01:12:17.000Not in New York City, not in LA, nowhere.
01:16:48.000For whatever reason, you know, it's more terrifying to think of the end than it is to think of your end.
01:16:57.000For whatever reason, because, you know, you wouldn't think that it's more comforting to think that, you know, you die and the world kind of goes on, because what difference does it make to you?
01:17:06.000But for whatever reason, it's far more terrifying to think about.
01:20:24.000And that is sort of like the formation of your lips, the posture of your lips to produce a crisp and a good sound.
01:20:31.000And so, if you don't play for a long time, and I haven't played for years, I mean, maybe five years, then obviously your muscles, you know, you lose that and it hurts.
01:20:45.000And you can't do it, you can't even buzz.
01:20:47.000So, you have to kind of build it back up gradually.
01:20:49.000You have to buzz just with your lips, then you got to practice with the mouthpiece, then you can put the mouthpiece in the instrument and then you can play.
01:20:57.000But it's been a long, long time since I played the Euphonium.
01:21:00.000So I don't know if you'll ever, ever see me play it.
01:21:07.000You know, if I get to the point where my day to day isn't so hectic, I mean, it feels like every day for the past two years has just been like, you know, a long day.
01:21:19.000I'm busier than ever, and I've been busier than ever for years.
01:21:22.000Like, every time I think it's going to slow down, it speeds up, you know, from stop the steal after the Capitol, then AFPAC, and now everything that's happening after AFPAC.
01:21:32.000It's like all the time it's speeding up, it's crescendoing, and it's more work, it's more stress.
01:21:37.000And one day we'll get to the scale where I can bring on enough people that my workload will be sufficiently low that I could have more of a normal work schedule.
01:21:48.000And then maybe I could pick up a hobby like that.
01:22:14.000Fat Florida PaleoCon says, Hey, Nick, have you heard that the young environmental activist Greta Thunberg is pen pals with the Unabomber based?
01:22:22.000I don't think that's true, but yeah, I guess that's funny.
01:22:27.000Zoomer guy says, Hey, Nicky, I have a question.
01:22:30.000How many hot dogs did Jake have at the eve of AFPAC?
01:22:33.000I've been watching from a distance, and it looked as if he ate 50 bar S hot dogs.
01:26:17.000Well, I was one of the first ones to call it out.
01:26:20.000Torba replied to him, and Torba sent it to me, and I was one of the first people to quote tweet it.
01:26:26.000And yeah, I think we did raise the red flag.
01:26:29.000I think we did sound the alarm, and it rippled across conservative media, and it really blew up.
01:26:34.000National File reported on it, breaking 911.
01:26:36.000Disclosed TV, I think, tweeted about it.1.00
01:26:40.000And, you know, even if you look at a lot of these younger people, and even like A lot of things that have been developed over the past couple of years, I can't help but feel like they were catalyzed or motivated or influenced by the Groeper War.0.98
01:26:56.000Because you're seeing more and more, the things that I say on this show are becoming mainstream.0.98
01:27:01.000You'd be hard pressed to find too much that I say on the show that isn't said now by mainstream conservatives.
01:27:19.000I mean, that is now like the message of the sort of thought leaders, this like rising insurgent coalition in the GOP, so much so that we're talking about them co opting it because that's like the new wave in the Republican Party.
01:27:50.000You know, I don't know to what extent you could attribute that to me personally or to this show or to this movement, but I think we're doing a lot more than people think.
01:28:00.000I think that we're having a much more profound influence because we're influencing the influencers.
01:28:05.000This isn't the biggest show in the world, it's very big.
01:28:09.000As far as right wing political streams go, it's one of the biggest.
01:28:13.000You know, we're not punching into the stratosphere.
01:28:15.000I mean, maybe Steven Crowder's a couple times bigger or something, but I mean, we're on a pretty high level.
01:28:21.000We're on a pretty high tier as far as.
01:28:23.000Right wing political content, especially given all the censoring as a live stream.
01:28:29.000But the people that are watching the show and the people that I know, the people that the show influences, excuse me, they're the people that are making things happen.
01:28:39.000I mean, there are a lot of high profile people I know that watch this show and they don't admit it and they never tell you that and they're not public about it, but there are a lot of people that watch this show.
01:28:49.000And, you know, this show may have like thousands and thousands of viewers, but it's not all just.
01:28:56.000You know, regular people going to work day to day, it's a lot of high powered people with influence that maybe they don't watch it every night, but they are following what we're up to.
01:29:06.000So, and that is a big white pill because it shows that what we're doing is working.
01:29:11.000And that proof of concept is so powerful because the most demoralizing thing, I think, in this space is the idea that what we're doing has no impact.
01:30:25.000Smiley the Fed says Mr. Beast would rather donate tens of thousands of dollars to an e girl Twitch streamer than super chat on the greatest show, America First.0.95
01:31:55.000I mean, there's no way to know if that's true or not true.
01:31:59.000Save the West says, I was a bit skeptical of the theory at first, but I'm starting to believe the vaccine is probably the mark of the beast, or at least some kind of precursor to it.
01:32:08.000Tell everyone you love not to inject this Globo Homo poison into their bloodstream.0.62
01:32:17.000And certainly, there's some similarities when they talk about not being able to buy and sell and being ostracized from society if you don't have it, the immunity passport.
01:33:09.000Xander Stone says, came across your clubhouse chat on YouTube, some of your best stuff.
01:33:14.000Live hearing a real message about what's happening in America.
01:33:18.000Also, if one must absolutely take the vaccine, I believe the new Johnson Johnson vaccine is a more traditional vaccine, not the new mRNA gene editing tech.
01:33:28.000Well, I don't know if that's true, but I mean, if you have to get it, it's worth looking into because the vaccines are different.
01:33:33.000Josh, the remover says, All I will say in my defense is that I've been watching every single night since 2018, and if I was more loyal to Pat than you, I wouldn't have gone to AFPAC.
01:33:43.000I'm 100% loyal to AF, but I just like his content.
01:34:38.000I mean, I get like a guilty pleasure or something, but something that's so directly averse or adverse to what we're doing and this thing personally, I just don't get it.
01:35:12.000I'm not going to police everybody, but I am going to call it out because I don't think it's right.
01:35:16.000Hercules of Gaines says By any chance, did you catch the interview with Jordan Peterson where he cries over a conversation of Jesus Christ?
01:35:27.000That would be something if he converted to Christianity because he was always, in my opinion, problematic because he was basically pushing Gnosticism.
01:35:52.000You know, and he was trying to get people onto this Christian train by convincing them that it was all this big, you know, psychological thing.0.76
01:35:59.000It was this archetypal thing, this union, you know, new age kind of thing.0.97
01:36:06.000And I always thought that was very pernicious.
01:36:08.000I'm Christian not because I think Christ was like a great guy.
01:36:12.000Or a great myth or a great story, a myth that has more value than other myths.
01:36:16.000I mean, I believe in God and Jesus Christ because I think Jesus Christ lived in the real world 2,000 years ago.
01:36:27.000He was crucified and died and was buried, and then he rose from the dead and he proved that he was the Son of God.
01:36:34.000And our salvation is bound up in his sacrifice on the cross that really happened.
01:36:41.000Not in a story, not in an archetype, but him up on that cross.
01:36:48.000In the Middle East 2,000 years ago, that was real and that happened, and that's the foundation of faith, of faith in the real and living God.
01:36:59.000And for Jordan Peterson to say, oh, well, you know, that's like an archetype, that's like, you know, he just has something to teach us, it's so wrong.
01:37:06.000That's no different than any other false religion, fake religion.
01:37:10.000You might as well believe in Osiris or Baal, or you might as well be Muslim or pagan or whatever.0.99
01:37:16.000I mean, you might as well believe in Marvel superheroes.
01:37:18.000You know, I think Tony Stark sacrificed when he did the snap at the end of Avengers Endgame.
01:37:25.000I mean, if you believe that Jesus is nothing more than a myth, if you believe that that's nothing more than an archetypal story, what's the difference between that and any other archetypal story?
01:37:36.000It's older, it's more intricate, it's got more history.
01:37:51.000It's about God became man to suffer perfectly and to demonstrate what that's like to us and was born to die on the cross, a sacrifice for all of our sins.
01:39:09.000But here's somebody who is not saved, in a word, is here's somebody who is intelligent as he is and he knows all about psychology and archetypes and all of that.
01:39:17.000He's not saved, he is not in communion with God.
01:39:22.000And so to see that interview, hopefully he comes to God and becomes an evangelist.
01:39:26.000I have to say, it's been really remarkable.
01:39:29.000I don't know that you could, you know, take this 100% the way that I'm describing it, but some of these miraculous conversions, they fortify my faith.
01:39:40.000You know, I see all around me people are converting.
01:39:52.000You know, and we'll see the extent to which some of these conversions may be more authentic than others.
01:39:57.000I mean, it's really not for us to judge.
01:39:58.000I mean, we look at it and it's in the public eye.
01:40:00.000And, You could privately decide for yourself whether you believe it's sincere or not.
01:40:04.000But you've seen a lot of these dramatic conversions, a lot of people that I know, a lot of people that I follow.
01:40:11.000And, you know, in a lot of these things, you have to almost challenge yourself because the devil's advocate in me says, oh, well, you know, maybe people could convert to something else, you know, whatever.
01:40:24.000You could say, is that necessarily evidence that something exists or is real because people start believing in it?
01:40:31.000But if you do believe in God, I think that's something that bolsters your faith.
01:40:35.000And so to see a lot of people, it seems like a lot of people are on that journey.
01:40:39.000A lot of people that have sort of exhausted the material explanations for our world and what's wrong with it, they all seem to arrive at the same destination.
01:40:48.000You know, Kanye West going through fame and fortune and loss and sex and degeneracy and art and everything.
01:41:02.000He arrives at being an evangelist for Jesus.
01:41:07.000And somebody like Milo, another one, fame and fortune and.
01:41:11.000And influence, and somebody who was at the top of the world and then had his lowest lows.
01:41:15.000And again, somebody engaged in degeneracy, but somebody always believed, you know, final destination is God.
01:41:25.000Rouche V, another guy lived through all this degeneracy, wrote books, international fame, persecution, all this kind of stuff ecstasy and agony, lines up with God.
01:41:35.000And you see the story again and again and again.
01:41:39.000And we all know what we're going through personally.
01:41:42.000I mean, we're all in this world and we're all affected by it.
01:41:45.000And we all know we're all going through the spiritual trial together, this sort of spiritual crisis together.
01:41:52.000And you understand that we're all sort of connected in that way.
01:41:59.000And to see other people arrive at the same destination, going through a similar experience for the same reasons, it's like, you know, at the very least, it shows you there's something to it.
01:42:10.000It shows you there's something to that.
01:42:12.000And if Jordan Peterson's like another domino to fall, I think that's like pretty compelling evidence.
01:42:51.000If he would have me on his show, I would absolutely debate him.
01:42:54.000Super Lionheart says, Did you see breaking 911's Twitter this afternoon?0.80
01:42:58.000They posted the story about how an unauthorized guy was able to sneak into a military base and enter an aircraft five minutes after posting the video of a senior leader bragging about how pregnant women in the military is a good thing.0.99
01:43:17.000The military is degraded, it's not what it used to be.
01:43:21.000The people that run the military now are totally incompetent.
01:43:23.000I mean, it's a goofball organization that is not serious.
01:43:27.000And I don't mean that to insult anybody who has had a tradition in the military or served in the military or anything, but I'm sure they could tell you better than I can.
01:43:36.000And I hear it from people that I know that are in the military.
01:45:45.000You know, I will tell you, be extremely calculated because if you're not willing to go all in, it's very easy to slip up and, you know, ruin what you have going, whatever that is.
01:46:34.000Go to school, study, start a business, you know, develop a skill, pursue a career, make a living, support your family, and do what you can on the sidelines of this stuff.
01:47:18.000I stress nothing but caution on this show.
01:47:21.000I tell people, take stock of what you've got and preserve it because not everybody can make a living doing this.
01:47:27.000The vast majority of people cannot and will not, and they will suffer and struggle unnecessarily and for no good reason trying to do what I'm doing.
01:47:35.000So I tell people, instead, go and do a conventional track.
01:47:40.000Make some money to support a family, get a family, have kids.
01:47:44.000That's got to be the most fulfilling thing you can do.
01:47:47.000Have a family, support them, love them, you know, all of that.
01:50:18.000George Groypington says, You're going to get shit for that reparations joke, but Dave Chappelle made almost the exact same joke 20 years ago and it was one of his funniest skits ever.
01:50:27.000I haven't seen that, but yeah, I mean, why should I get in trouble?0.94
01:50:29.000It's pretty standard racial comedy.0.95
01:51:26.000I'm not going to make any financial advice or recommendations, but yeah, something stable, something that's going to give you reliable, annualized growth.
01:51:35.000What I hate to see is all this trading that people are doing now, this hashtag finance stuff, because a lot of people don't get it.
01:51:43.000A lot of people think it's get rich quick.
01:51:45.000If I put more money in, I'll make more money.
01:51:48.000It's like, that's really not how investing works.
01:51:50.000You know, I mean, the extent to which you gain will be a function of how much you invest, yes, but you are not investing as a get rich quick.
01:52:01.000And there's no evidence that suggests you could do that reliably, that you could do that as an amateur, that you could do that without really knowing what you're doing, and then even getting a little bit lucky on top of that.
01:52:12.000And a lot of young kids, I see them getting swept up into this where they're researching options trading and stock trading and day trading and swing trading and all of this.
01:52:22.000People that have no background in that, people that don't know what they're doing, they get sort of a cursory knowledge.
01:52:27.000They read a glossary of financial terms.
01:52:30.000They get in a group chat and they start buying individual stocks and penny stocks and messing around with like after hours trading and options and these sort of complicated trades.
01:52:40.000And it's like, look, if you know what you're doing, that's great.
01:52:42.000But a lot of these people that are getting involved are teenagers, early 20 somethings, people with not a lot of disposable income that are just blowing it on bets, basically.
01:52:53.000And if you recognize that it's gambling, then sure, you know.
01:52:57.000And, you know, don't put in more than you can afford to lose.
01:52:59.000I guess that's, you know, that's what you do with gambling.
01:53:02.000But, People thinking that's like an investing strategy, I don't think that's a good idea for them.
01:53:40.000But you should be investing to beat inflation because if you don't do anything with your money, you're going to lose all the value of your money, it will be depleted rapidly over time, especially now.
01:54:08.000You're not protecting the value of your money.
01:54:10.000So, you got to put it in something that's hyper conservative.
01:54:13.000So, I mean, like that should be the first thing you do.
01:54:16.000So, at least you're hedging against inflation.
01:54:19.000Put it in something extremely conservative so that at least you're getting a small return.
01:54:23.000You're not, you're not, don't quit your job over it, but you're protecting the value of your money.
01:54:29.000And then, if you want to get more crazy, you get more experienced, you learn the ropes a little bit, then you can, you know, try other things out.
01:54:39.000A lot of people think they're so smart, and sometimes they get lucky, and maybe sometimes they are smart, but people think they're way smarter than they are, and they blow all their money.
01:54:50.000And it's very sad to see because it's young guys that do this.
01:55:11.000There is a once in a lifetime investment opportunity.
01:55:14.000You have a little bit of money saved up and you give it a go.
01:55:18.000But people that are scouring the internet, watching these videos of all these financial gurus, here's how you're going to make a million dollars in 10 minutes.
01:55:29.000If it were that easy, everybody would do it.
01:55:30.000If it were that easy, everybody would do it.
01:57:57.000Well, as far as lesbians are concerned, I know this is not a groundbreaking take, but that is a lot less legitimate, I think, than gay men because I think it's a lot bigger of a leap for a man to want to have sex with a man than for a woman to want to have sex with a woman.0.98
01:58:15.000I think that women just kind of don't care.0.98
01:58:33.000But I mean just on the psychology of it, I think that there's there's a little bit less to that.0.99
01:58:38.000There are, like you know, you see, certain lesbians that are like butch, and there's something going on there.0.99
01:58:44.000There's, and there's issues there.1.00
01:58:45.000Right, there's something going on and they, they're like militant.1.00
01:58:49.000All bull dykes are militant, you know that right, I mean, they all are, they're all hardcore, they're mean they.1.00
01:58:56.000They got a bone to pick, they got a chip on their shoulder.1.00
01:59:00.000Something went wrong years ago, you know, and they've dedicated their lives to being Same sex attracted lesbians because of, you know, I don't know, some kind of unresolved whatever.
01:59:11.000But with gay men, or with other lesbians, I should say, with other lesbians, it seems like it's more of a casual thing.0.53
01:59:43.000It's kind of like something went wrong.
01:59:47.000You veered off the trajectory, off the rails, and now you're kind of this freak where you've got these feminine attributes and perverse sexual desires, or you're just like a normal guy, or you're just like a normal dude.
02:00:02.000It seems like those are kind of like the two tracks.
02:00:05.000So it does seem to be qualitatively different.
02:02:47.000Modern monarchist says, life does not seem to slow down once you reach a certain age, especially with work and an ever increasing amount of responsibilities, but you seem to handle the world pretty well.
02:03:01.000You know, I think you can only really get through life if you have kind of a fatalistic outlook.
02:03:07.000I mean, I probably have a darker outlook on things than most people, and that's why I have a pretty positive attitude because I've, you know, I think all the time about, you know, life and like what our ultimate destination is and what goes on in the world.
02:03:27.000I mean, the world is a horror show, it really is.
02:03:30.000We are fortunate enough to live in a nicer country, and you probably live in a nicer situation.
02:03:36.000But I'm sure there's a lot of people that watch the show that their lives are a horror show.
02:03:40.000And their families and their neighborhood and their living situation is absolutely horrifying and a nightmare, a waking nightmare.
02:03:48.000And, you know, I know that because my parents both went through something like that when they were growing up.
02:03:54.000You know, my parents grew up in like a nightmare scenario, both of them individually and separately when they grew up.
02:04:01.000And, you know, if you're perceptive and if you're observant, You'll find that there's a lot of that.
02:04:07.000There's a lot of horrifying things that go on.
02:04:10.000And in some ways, that's, you know, that's just sort of part of life.
02:04:17.000And anyway, so you see enough of that, and I don't know, maybe it gives you more of an appreciation for things that are just simply not horrifying.
02:04:26.000You know, then suddenly life doesn't seem so mundane and monotonous.
02:04:30.000It actually seems kind of nice, you know, to have something simple.
02:04:35.000Like having a clean house, a clean, well ordered house, and a roof over your head, and a family, and all of that.
02:04:42.000Suddenly, then that seems like actually extremely pleasant and nice.
02:04:49.000Anyway, I don't know if that's really related to what you're saying.
02:04:51.000I mean, I guess it is about mortality.
02:06:42.000You would think that a tourist destination would have better food.
02:06:45.000You know, like Las Vegas, I hear, has good food because everybody's coming through there, you know.
02:06:49.000And when you have lots of people and you have like, you know, a built in industry like that with, with, People from all over the world, then obviously some high class people, then a lot of like middle class people.
02:07:02.000You'd expect that you'd have some nice restaurants, you know.
02:07:08.000You know, I looked up Best Pizza, and not only did I get Giordano's and Pizzeria Uno, but I got like Mod Pizza, which is like just another chain.
02:09:27.000I mean, South Park is from that same era, and it's like sort of that same brand of faux shock comedy, sort of like controlled opposition dissent.
02:10:18.000You know, I think back to those movies.
02:10:20.000And I think those were made for a medium before the internet, before YouTube in particular, when you were only going to get a parody of Lindsey Lohan and Kanye West and Britney Spears by going to the movies or watching TV.
02:10:35.000And, you know, that's where people would go and get their sort of lowbrow, topical comedy.
02:10:41.000Now, obviously, you can watch it on YouTube, Twitter, you know, Facebook, whatever.
02:17:16.000Not that I don't love Asian features, just not on my son.0.99
02:17:20.000The based femoid says if we, here we go, if we want to catch fraud, we should be infiltrating the groups that do the ballot counting, pretend to be a Dem or whatever we have to do.1.00
02:17:28.000We need the ballots in our hands, not 20 feet away watching.0.83
02:20:28.000And people are like, well, what if we wanted to live in a society where people are like Christians and it's like a Christian society, but I don't actually believe in Jesus?
02:20:36.000It's like, well, welcome to where we live right now.
02:20:38.000Welcome to this is what we're living through, right?
02:20:42.000You have to believe that Jesus is the Son of God.
02:20:44.000Otherwise, you don't really get it.0.90
02:20:47.000Based Femoids has found a podcast Bible in a year on Spotify in a Catholic.
02:20:52.000Priest covers a Bible from beginning to end with analysis.
02:20:55.000I'm not Catholic, but it's helped me understand the Bible more.
02:22:48.000Jackson says the NIST review nearly 200 facial recognition systems and had found most of them misidentified images of black and East Asians 10 to 100 times more often than they did those of whites.
02:25:30.000George Groypington says the studies have shown that straight guys have a psychological reaction to seeing gay men kiss that is almost identical to when we see maggots.0.88
02:28:35.000And I know even in like adulthood, some people do that.
02:28:38.000Fortunately, now I'm in a situation where I can associate with pretty much whoever I want and disassociate with people who I don't want to hang around.
02:28:46.000So I can hang out with people that I like, you know, as opposed to people that are insufferable.
02:28:51.000So, because I can't handle people like that.
02:28:54.000Diligence says, sorry for the late super chat.