00:00:09.000Very excited, very excited to be back with you here tonight on Wednesday, in spite of continued glitches and technical problems with this platform, which we experienced a moment ago and which we've been experiencing for the past few weeks.
00:00:28.000We've got a great show for you tonight.
00:00:30.000In spite of that, we've got a lot to talk about, lots to get into.
00:00:34.000Tonight, we will be talking about the coronavirus once again.
00:00:42.000Because there was a time this year when coronavirus was every night for four months, five months, probably more like four months.
00:00:50.000But we're revisiting the issue, and the pandemic is back in the headlines today because we're seeing a record amount of new cases in the past few weeks.
00:01:01.000And I haven't been following the numbers as closely as I was earlier this year, but the United States has now surpassed.
00:01:09.0002 million active cases, which is a pretty big number.
00:01:14.000And I don't think anybody expected we would get up to this point maybe a few months ago when everything started to open up again.
00:01:22.000We've now surpassed 100,000 dead, which is basically in line with some expectations early on in spring.
00:01:30.000So we'll be talking about the numbers, we'll be talking about what that's going to mean for reopening the different states.
00:01:40.000And some states are still in the process, some further along than others, in gradually, incrementally reopening.
00:01:46.000And this has put the brakes on several states that are trying to reopen, in particular Oregon and a few others.
00:01:53.000So we'll talk about the virus and these numbers and what that means for us.
00:01:57.000And I got to tell you, it's kind of vindicating everything I said about the virus from the start, which is this.
00:02:04.000You know, if there was one message that was consistent or the most consistent on the virus from this show, it was this.
00:02:11.000Whether the virus is going to kill a lot of people or a small amount of people, it's here.
00:02:18.000And whatever it is, whether you believe it's a real virus or you don't believe it's a real virus, if you believe the death rate is high or if it's low, if they're influencing it in deceptive ways, the virus is here.
00:02:31.000And there's nothing we could do about it except for wait for a vaccine to be developed, if that's even possible, or wait for a therapy that's going to make it so that people die at a lower rate.
00:02:43.000But Whatever we do, we either have to pick between people dying from the virus and everybody stays inside and we ruin the economy, or people are going to die from the virus and we go on with our lives.
00:02:58.000And I think that became clear after maybe four to six weeks after the lockdown.
00:03:04.000That became clear pretty quickly after we took the most drastic action, which was a total national blanket quarantine.
00:03:13.000It became clear that whatever the outcome would be, whatever the numbers would be in the end, That it was really something that is inescapable.
00:03:22.000And so we can choose what we do with policy.
00:03:24.000We can't really choose what happens with our immune systems.
00:03:28.000So that's what we're going to talk about tonight.
00:03:42.000Certainly I've seen it in my circles because I'm political.
00:03:46.000But if you're not very political, if you're not on top of things, maybe you haven't seen this.
00:03:50.000But there was a shock and surprise upset in a Republican primary for Congress in North Carolina where a 24 year old guy named Madison, what is his name?
00:04:16.000Won in an upset victory in a North Carolina primary.
00:04:19.000Like I said, if elected, he would be the youngest member of Congress currently and the youngest member of Congress to serve in 50 years.
00:04:27.000And this was, like I said, in the GOP primary, the candidate that he beat was endorsed by the president and was endorsed by the former congressman from that district, Mark Meadows.
00:04:39.000So it was a big upset within the GOP against the White House.
00:04:42.000You know, if it's Meadows and the president, it was a big upset against the White House within the GOP.
00:05:47.000You know, I'm reserving a total or a complete judgment.
00:05:51.000But from what I've seen, I think it's something that probably is the same with the rest of the GOP, which is we still got a lot of work to do.
00:06:01.000You know, I look at this guy and I look at him the same way that I look at Matt Gaetz or Josh Hawley, a lot of these people, where maybe they're promising and maybe in some ways they're better than what came before, but we're really not there yet.
00:06:15.000We're really not where we need to be as far as creating a real nationalist, populist, American right wing movement.
00:06:23.000In this country, I don't think we're there yet.
00:06:54.000And right before the show starts, This stream cut off.
00:06:57.000And I hope it doesn't cut off for the rest of the show, because it cut off right before I went live.
00:07:03.000And you probably saw, if you've been watching from the beginning, the intro music played, and then the stream shut down.
00:07:09.000You know, and I thought at first, like, oh, my computer's just buffering or something, but no, the stream turned off, and then I tried to restart it.
00:09:13.000I was streaming last night with Jaden and Beardson and Shalit, and I got so pissed off.
00:09:17.000Because they were being bad pirates and Sea of Thieves that I logged off, and I just crashed right here in the studio, just crashed, fell asleep.
00:09:27.000And, you know, I woke up in the morning, hard at work all day, and so not much to report.
00:09:32.000Not much to report, not much else going on.
00:09:36.000I will say, I've seen something interesting lately on the timeline.
00:09:39.000Before we jump in, there is one thing I noticed, and I tweeted about this shortly before going live tonight.
00:09:46.000I don't know what is bringing this on, but there seems to be this renewed.
00:09:51.000Conversation online about pornography all of a sudden.
00:09:57.000I remember back in the beginning of this year, towards the end of last year, there was a big debate online about the extent to which the government should be regulating pornography.
00:10:07.000And that was because of a letter that was written by, I think it was Jim Banks and a few other congressmen.
00:10:13.000And they wrote to the Justice Department asking to regulate porn based on decency laws.
00:10:46.000I think she's name dropped in that song.
00:10:48.000In any case, she put out a post on Instagram, and this got a lot of attention.
00:10:54.000And put out a post on Twitter, which at first a lot of people assumed was anti pornography.
00:10:59.000She said, you know, I she was complaining on TikTok, I think, about how what did she say?
00:11:06.000She said something to the effect of, you know, I made a dumb decision when I was 18, I made three videos, and that's all I'm known for my whole life.
00:11:16.000And a lot of people are sympathetic about this.
00:11:18.000I saw this screenshot going around, it had like 50,000 likes or something, and it was sympathetic about how she messed up or something.
00:11:27.000And then she puts out a tweet today, and what she essentially says is that the only problem that she has with pornography is that she didn't make enough money.
00:11:36.000Because she puts out a TikTok the other day saying, Oh, I feel so bad.
00:11:50.000I don't know how far clemency goes when it comes to something like that, but you might be sympathetic on that level.
00:11:57.000But then she comes out with the tweet today and she says, Well, you know, actually, the real problem is porn conglomerates.
00:12:05.000The real problem is not that it's immoral, it's not that it's.
00:12:09.000Unchristian, that it's a sin, that it's degrading, that it's undignified, it's commodifying something that's intimate and private and deeply personal.
00:12:19.000No, she said the real problem is that giant conglomerates own the pornography and porn stars that are involved with the big companies are like getting financially screwed over.
00:12:33.000And I saw that and it just sent me, and this is one of the biggest problems in the country today, which you wouldn't necessarily think of.
00:12:40.000And actually, you know, You know, not to dive right into the political stuff, but I'm going to get into this when I talk about this young candidate in North Carolina.
00:12:51.000This is one of these cultural issues that I think necessarily is part of reframing the conversation in America about what it means to be right wing.
00:13:02.000You know, a lot of people look at politics today and they look at the usual sort of gauntlet of issues.
00:13:15.000And, you know, a lot of these are unavoidable and a lot of these are staples and they're important.
00:13:19.000But if you look at the ways in which the left has reinvented themselves, it's because they've created a lot of these staples.
00:13:25.000The left has created and forced a lot of these issues.
00:13:29.000And a lot of issues that I think people are naturally sympathetic to those issues to left leaning causes.
00:13:36.000Things like climate change, things like homosexuals.
00:13:40.000I mean, you look at like what the Democratic Party platform is today, and a lot of the priorities and a lot of the staples.
00:13:46.000Some of them are the same, but a lot of them have been invented in the past 20 or 30 years in one generation politically.
00:13:54.000And I look at pornography, and to me, this is such a huge problem, specifically the proliferation of OnlyFans and internet pornography in particular.
00:14:04.000And this is one of these cultural issues that is, I think, of utmost importance.
00:14:08.000I think this is a massively underrated issue in politics that nobody talks about, nobody's been talking about it, but it is so salient and prevalent in most people's lives.
00:14:19.000Most people are affected by it in one way or another.
00:14:23.000And this is an issue where people naturally are sympathetic to the right wing cause on this.
00:14:28.000I think people's natural inclination, for the most part, is to say, even if they're not against pornography outright and for moral reasons, I think everyone recognizes that it's too ubiquitous, it's too widespread, or it's exposed to people at too young of an age, or it's addictive, or causes problems.
00:14:48.000I think anybody can find a reason why.
00:14:52.000There's a reason for restraint on this issue.
00:14:54.000Anybody can find a reason why we need to reel that in.
00:14:57.000And only the right can be the party of restraint on an issue like this.
00:15:02.000So, you know, and that's not really related to my initial, you know, what I was initially going to say is I see this tweet about this and it's just so sick.
00:15:10.000And it's such a, this is one of these things where it's defining for my generation in particular, maybe Zoomers more than anybody, but it also obviously affects everybody else too, millennials, Gen Xers, boomers.
00:15:24.000But internet pornography, the way that it affects women, and especially now, that now it's like flip a coin and see if your girlfriend, you know, or the girl you want to walk up to at a bar has an OnlyFans, right?
00:15:37.000So it's women, but then it's also men, many of whom are addicted to it or affected by it or something.
00:15:42.000It's one of these defining issues that is just, it's kind of in the dark.
00:15:46.000And as much as it is very much front and center, and as much as it is prevalent, like I said, for so many people, in a lot of ways, it's something that's never really discussed, it's never really scrutinized.
00:15:58.000Nobody ever really questions the order of things.
00:16:00.000And even I put out a tweet about this and I responded to Mia Khalifa and I ratioed her.
00:16:07.000Should say that Groyper King is able to ratio Mia Khalifa.
00:16:53.000And I think this is one of these cultural issues that people are equally passionate and open about their opposition to it as there are people in favor of it.
00:17:01.000But the other half of the replies, Are people that are totally addicted to this stuff.
00:17:07.000And of course, the natural response to anybody criticizing pornography, of course, from the left and from Reddit and from internet people, is this idea that, well, you know, if you're against porn, well, that's because you're an incel.
00:17:21.000You know, the only people that are against pornography are incels.
00:17:25.000Nobody wants to sleep with you, so you're against porn.
00:17:27.000The only people that are socially conservative are people that can't get laid, right?
00:17:32.000Or it's, well, you secretly love porn, right?
00:17:38.000You know, children being drag queens going to gay bars and like grown pedophiles putting singles in their underwear.
00:17:46.000Oh, well, you're only against that because you're secretly gay.
00:17:48.000You're secretly in favor of pornography.
00:17:51.000You're secretly in favor of, you know, all this degeneracy that's going on.
00:17:55.000And it's just so sickening to see that.
00:17:57.000And the reason for that is because people's minds have been basically shackled and enslaved by this system.
00:18:04.000And they feel like, you know, if they're a part of it, if they're complicit in it, When somebody takes a muscular stance against it, there's almost this impulsive, this like natural defensiveness that springs up that says, Oh, I'm not a bad person.
00:18:30.000I'm not somebody that's totally depraved.
00:18:33.000I'm not somebody that's totally, you know, addicted to whatever.
00:18:37.000You know, I'm not part of a gravely immoral and sick thing and people know it.
00:18:42.000No, it's the traditionalists that are the problem.
00:18:45.000It's the conservatives, it's the Westboro Baptist Church kids, whatever.
00:18:50.000So I saw that tweet and it's just so sickening to see that.
00:18:53.000But what is, I think, subtly white pilling as well is that most of the replies and I think most of the engagement on this conversation, you're seeing a lot of opposition from people that are like culturally or intuitively right wing when it comes to this stuff.
00:19:09.000And like I said, that's kind of a nice segue.
00:19:12.000I think this is one of these issues which.
00:19:14.000A lot of people don't even think about it as political.
00:19:17.000And a lot of people, a lot of conservatives don't even consider this to begin with.
00:19:22.000You know, I'm sure if you went up to any of these mainstream conservatives, you know, people like Charlie Kirk or Benny Johnson or Nick Videos, we talked about the other day, a lot of these like mainstream conservatives or wannabe political pundits, I'm sure that's not even in their like arsenal.
00:19:39.000That's not even in their repertoire of, you know, issues that they talk on.
00:19:44.000Most people don't consider it that way.
00:19:46.000But an issue like that, that's a creative way, but it's also a necessary issue.
00:19:51.000But it's a creative issue to bring to the table where I think a lot of people would be sympathetic.
00:19:56.000A lot of people who they themselves would not consider conventionally right wing, and maybe we would not consider them conventionally right wing, I think they'd find common cause with that.
00:20:06.000And that's just one issue among a host of others I think that are similar, that are part of redefining the political landscape, redefining maybe what it means to be conservative.
00:20:16.000I mean, that's really what it's about at the end of the day.
00:20:18.000And it's a perfect segue into the first story, you know, our first story for tonight, which is about this.
00:20:27.000Now he's the Republican candidate in a congressional race.
00:20:31.000And this is the theme I want you to keep in mind as we get into this: that the conventional stack of Republican issues are issues that either aren't good for us or they're issues that we can't win on, right?
00:20:46.000What is the traditional stack when you see a Republican congressman or Republican politician running for office?
00:20:53.000Second Amendment, you know, pro-life, it's pro-business.
00:20:58.000Pro free trade, typically pro foreign wars, pro Pentagon, pro military.
00:21:03.000And sometimes it's a little bit confusing because there's outright like neocons and war hawks.
00:21:07.000Some people just favor military spending and love veterans.
00:21:10.000But that's like the conventional stack, right?
00:21:13.000And I want people to keep in mind, I want you to keep in mind as we go into this, when I'm going to kind of deflate a little the enthusiasm about this guy, that part of, well, maybe the main priority of making the American right viable in this country is swapping out a lot of these conventional issues or rearranging the priorities.
00:21:33.000And so, if the conventional stack is Second Amendment, pro life, pro taxes, or anti taxes, I guess, right, and pro muscular foreign policy, maybe the new stack, the 21st century right wing issue stack,
00:21:49.000would be anti immigration, anti war, protectionism, and a very strategic cultural conservatism, which would mean, broadly speaking, being in favor of Christianity, broadly speaking, being against promiscuity and all its.
00:22:06.000Manifestations, which would be birth control, abortion, pornography, homosexuality, things like that.
00:22:17.000It's also a stack of issues that serves our interests and really targets the ways in which our country is deteriorating that we want to see reversed.
00:22:25.000You know, even if we achieved everything on this stack, which in many ways we have, with the exception of maybe abortion, we have the biggest military ever.
00:22:34.000Largely, we still have gun rights with exceptions in major cities.
00:22:39.000And we have a pretty deregulated, pretty low tax, pro business environment in the Trump administration.
00:22:45.000And how's that going, right, with the George Floyd riots and so on?
00:22:49.000So, the extent to which we can change those priorities in the American right, that's the extent to which the American right can become viable and actually a challenge to the system.
00:22:58.000And this brings me to our congressional candidate tonight, who everybody's very excited about.
00:23:04.000And I'll admit, in some ways, it is exciting because he's a handsome young guy, he's in a wheelchair, which.
00:24:00.000He beat Linda Bennett to become the party's nominee in November's race for the state's 11th congressional district.
00:24:07.000The motivational speaker and real estate investor turns 25, the minimum age to serve in Congress in August.
00:24:14.000He will face Democratic candidate Mo Davis, who is a former U.S. Air Force colonel.
00:24:19.000Ms. Bennett has not yet conceded the race, but the North Carolina Republican Party.
00:24:26.000Congratulated Mr. Cawthorn on his victory.
00:24:29.000The district's previous representative, Mark Meadows, resigned in March to become the president's chief of staff.
00:24:34.000Mr. Cawthorn, who uses a wheelchair after being involved in a car accident in 2014, won Tuesday's vote despite high level endorsements for his opponent.
00:24:44.000He said, Please let this serve as my complete and total endorsement of a great fighter and ally in North Carolina, he wrote of Mrs. Bennett earlier this month, and that's the president, adding that she would be great to help me in D.C. Mr. Meadows had also lent his backing to Ms. Bennett, but it was this support that Mr. Cawthorn attacked during the campaign.
00:25:05.000He criticized his opponent for refusing to take part in debates, saying in one video that he would, quote, not cower behind big name endorsements.
00:25:31.000And I think I saw a picture of him hunting, and I thought he was a veteran.
00:25:34.000I thought that's the real Grand Slam, right?
00:25:36.000That's like Dan Crenshaw almost, but maybe he's based.
00:25:41.000But then, you know, it turns out no, he's a real estate investor.
00:25:43.000He got in a really bad car accident, almost died, I guess, but I guess he got paralyzed, something with his spine, so he can't walk.
00:25:52.000In any case, everybody's very excited about him because he's somewhat strong on immigration.
00:25:58.000And I have to say, I've heard this from a lot of people today.
00:26:01.000I've seen this a lot on Twitter, but I haven't seen a lot of the evidence for this.
00:26:06.000Because I went to his campaign website and I've watched a few of his interviews and a few of his speeches, and everybody's singing this guy's praises today.
00:27:28.000But I think that's basically where the similarities stop, as far as that goes.
00:27:32.000And I understand why people are excited for those reasons I just described.
00:27:36.000But you've got to think about that example, I think, in particular, to see why maybe there's some flaws here.
00:27:42.000Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was not just a very young congresswoman.
00:27:47.000She was not just a congresswoman that upset a party veteran, right?
00:27:53.000I think, who was the Democrat she unseated?
00:27:55.000I forget his name, but he was a high-ranking Democrat in Congress.
00:27:59.000He had served in that district for years.
00:28:00.000It was kind of one of these comfort-behind, upset victories.
00:28:04.000But more than that, more than just that going for her, because there's been a lot of upsets like that in the past, Eric Cantor famously got defeated.
00:28:14.000In a primary years ago when the Tea Party movement was in full swing.
00:28:22.000The reason that AOC is a mover and a shaker and disruptive is because her message is militantly left wing.
00:28:31.000You know, not only did she defeat a high ranking party official, but she did so railing against her own party because she sees the party is not ideological enough, not far left enough.
00:28:43.000She also came into Congress with these bold, Plans, bold ambitions.
00:28:51.000She had a chief of staff who was very talented and a comms team that was very talented.
00:28:56.000But she came into Congress, you know, nevertheless, with the Green New Deal, these initiatives that were big and appealed to the left wing of the party as opposed to moderates or, you know, maybe blue dog type Democrats, certainly not white people.
00:29:10.000Whereas I see this candidate, and I, like I said, I went to his website, I'd seen some of his stuff, and with the exception of him being basically the same as the president on illegal immigration, The rest of the platform looks exactly the same as any other Republican.
00:29:26.000You know, on the website, he's got some of the core issues.
00:29:29.000He's got a list, and then he's got some core ones at the bottom.
00:29:33.000And the issues that he talks about are, you know, pro life, pro Second Amendment, pro capitalism, against socialized medicine, and in favor of borders.
00:29:52.000I don't want sanctuary cities or illegal immigration, but I also have all those things in common with Charlie Kirk and Ben Shapiro and Mark Meadows and Donald Trump and Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio and like everyone else in Congress.
00:30:09.000That's, you know, maybe he's a young guy and maybe it's a new generation and a new face, but is it a new agenda?
00:30:28.000And again, he's a newcomer, so we'll see what the campaign looks like.
00:30:33.000He'll have time, obviously, and especially now that he's in the spotlight, to flesh out who is Madison Cawthorn and what does he stand for and what sets him apart.
00:30:42.000I mean, we'll have time to see what he's about.
00:30:55.000And so we still haven't seen everything there yet.
00:30:57.000But I think this is something very important to keep in mind, which is Generation Z in itself is not going to save the country.
00:31:05.000You know, when I say that Generation Z is the future or something like that, it's not to say that just having younger GOP congressmen is going to make the country great.
00:31:16.000It's not going to turn the country around.
00:31:19.000It's what about Generation Z will make them different in their interpretation of conservatism?
00:31:26.000What in their experience, which is unique, To our generation, will make them a different kind of conservative, a better kind of conservative.
00:31:34.000Because I know growing up with the recession and with Obama and with the internet and with social justice and this rabid left in media, social media, academia, my vision of what it means to be right wing is totally different because of all that than people that grew up under Ronald Reagan or people that grew up under Nixon or Jimmy Carter, you know, whoever it is, Bush or Clinton for that matter.
00:32:00.000Millennials grew up with George W. Bush with the opposition to the Iraq War and the Pentagon and the surveillance state and different experiences.
00:32:09.000The experiences of this generation, I think, lend themselves to exactly what we're after.
00:32:15.000You know, when I say America First is inevitable, that's exactly what I'm talking about.
00:32:21.000America First is made inevitable by these problems that we're having and the inevitable reaction which will be their consequence.
00:32:41.000I mean, I don't know everything about this guy.
00:32:44.000I haven't seen everything he's ever done.
00:32:46.000And yeah, he's in favor of Trump and he's against illegal immigration.
00:32:50.000But, you know, let's contrast this with maybe a different kind of a candidate.
00:32:54.000What if you had a candidate who is the same age, same district, same everything, but instead of going out there and talking about, you know, destroying the partisan divide, which I heard him say like 10 different times, which I hate.
00:33:22.000We're going to protect American jobs from legal immigration.
00:33:26.000And obviously, that maybe couldn't be said that explicitly or in those terms.
00:33:32.000But imagine if the focus, the priorities, imagine if the platform, Looked more like that, really more oriented towards the future, directionally towards the future, as opposed to the past, as opposed to the status quo.
00:33:46.000Like I said, it's perfunctory, it's good, I agree with it.
00:33:50.000He's young, he's Generation Z, he's gonna win, he's pro Trump, but socialized medicine, really?
00:33:58.000I wouldn't put that anywhere on the platform.
00:34:00.000I mean, maybe I would put that on there to win over boomers who are afraid of their Medicare being taken away, but I mean, that wouldn't be like my call to action.
00:34:09.000That wouldn't be the Sort of like I said, that lineup that defines my candidacy, or you know, for any Generation Z Republican newcomer that's trying to upset the system, what's going to make them like AOC?
00:34:23.000What's and AOC's obviously got a lot of problems, but she's famous, she's a disruptor, she's got a ton of influence for a young person, and so ideological for somebody to have that kind of effect on the right.
00:34:35.000I mean, they need to be different, they need to be something fresh, not just a fresh face, but a fresh message.
00:34:42.000You know, a fresh appeal, fresh issues, a fresh take.
00:34:47.000You know, I don't want Sean Hannity, but he's 18.
00:34:51.000I want Tucker Carlson, but he's 23 and he's in Congress.
00:35:49.000That's all it takes in Congress to start dragging the country, kicking and screaming to the right.
00:35:55.000You know, imagine if we could match these ugly and just unlikable, shrill people like.
00:36:02.000Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib, and what's the black one from Massachusetts and AOC?
00:36:08.000Imagine if we replaced that with a whole lineup like Madison Cawthorn, but talking like Tucker Carlson.
00:36:17.000I mean, they couldn't compete with something like that.
00:36:20.000That would be the kind of Bolsonaro, like right wing, cynical takeover of America in spite of our demographic decline that I think is still viable.
00:36:29.000So I see this guy, and it's like, you know, it's a start, but.
00:36:33.000We really can't afford this incrementalism anymore.
00:36:37.000It's not to say that, look, it's not to say that we're going to do this balls to the wall approach right out of the gate.
00:36:43.000It's not to say that it's not going to be incremental, but we got to accelerate the timeline a little bit here.
00:36:49.000As far as congressmen go, we've got enough people that are against socialized medicine.
00:36:53.000Where's the congressman that's going to make their big issues, big tech, porn, immigration, foreign wars, predatory H 1B visas, and things like that?
00:37:40.000We're four years into Trump's America.
00:37:43.000It's time now to see some institutional change here.
00:37:47.000And that means new congressmen, new bureaucrats shaped and molded by Trump and the same forces that got him elected and made him the leader of the nation.
00:38:00.000And like I said, you know, maybe there's something I'm not aware of with this guy, but, you know, I looked at a lot of his stuff and, you know, for all that people are talking about, you know, this is.
00:38:48.000Why not run advertisements in Ohio and Iowa and Indiana about what's going on with Drag Queen Story Hour and child drag queens and all this sick stuff, which is the most egregious?
00:40:05.000I mean, I guess moving to the center is a good election strategy sometimes, but I still want to hear a real right wing platform articulated.
00:40:30.000And I've heard a lot of people jumping for joy about this, and I'm just simply saying, well, what exactly have we seen so far that leads us to believe that this is any different than what we already have, other than that he's younger.
00:40:44.000So if he takes a hard turn to the right, or, you know, like I said, just swaps out and gets a good issue stack that's populist and nationalist and fresh, then I'll be very excited.
00:41:22.000We listened to the Alexa machine in his neighbor's house and overheard him yelling the N word, and now we're red flagging him for mental illness being racism.
00:41:31.000And we're going to put a microchip in his brain.
00:41:34.000And we're going to do brain surgery to eliminate the racist part, the anti Semitic neuron.
00:41:41.000We're going to blast that with a proton ray, and I'll come back.
00:41:47.000I'll still have my guns, but it's not going to make a difference.
00:41:52.000It doesn't matter what the healthcare is like, it doesn't matter what the gun situation is like, or if black people are getting abortions, even for that matter, the country is going to be gone.
00:42:00.000So, anyway, we're going to move on, though.
00:42:03.000We're going to get on to our featured story tonight.
00:42:57.000So everything I'm about to tell you is based on the official statements, the official numbers.
00:43:02.000And whether or not the official numbers are true or to what extent they're being manipulated, these are the numbers that are informing public policy.
00:43:09.000These are the numbers that, I mean, most people are consuming.
00:43:12.000So that's what we're working with, okay?
00:43:14.000So it's a little bit like postmodern in that way.
00:43:16.000We're not even so much commenting on what's happening, so much as we're commenting on what other people are saying about what's happening and how that will then in turn affect what happens next.
00:43:27.000So what they're telling us, what they're telling us is that coronavirus is now spreading rapidly.
00:43:34.000They're telling us that it's not just that the numbers of infections are not just going up to record highs because of widespread testing.
00:43:43.000But they're going up in spite of that.
00:43:45.000I mean, they're going up in addition to that effect as well.
00:43:49.000And as a result of this, they're now going to start maybe locking down states again or slowing down the reopening of states.
00:43:57.000And this is an article from the Wall Street Journal about this.
00:43:59.000It says, quote, coronavirus, the spread of the coronavirus is picking up steam in a larger swath of the U.S. as cases have increased at a faster rate nationwide for nearly two weeks, an acceleration that isn't attributable solely to increased testing, according to a Analysis and analysis by the Wall Street Journal.
00:44:21.00033 states from Oklahoma to South Carolina and Washington had a seven day average of new cases on Tuesday that was higher than their average during the past two weeks, according to a journal analysis of Johns Hopkins University data.
00:44:36.000That was the situation in 21 states at the start of the month, so the data reflect recent increases in new cases.
00:44:44.000The seven day average of new cases nationwide has been growing faster than the 14 day average since June 13th.
00:44:51.000After lagging behind it since late April, comparing the one and two week averages of new cases helps smooth out anomalies in the data, such as states not reporting cases during a weekend.
00:45:02.000New York and nearby states, such as New Jersey, were early pandemic hotspots, but cases and deaths in those states continue to fall.
00:45:10.000Now, public health officials are expressing concerns about rising case counts, the positive percentage of tests, and hospitalizations in southern and western states.
00:45:20.000The recent increases have already started to delay some plans to reopen economies.
00:45:25.000Oregon Governor Kate Brown earlier this month paused the relaxation of coronavirus restrictions.
00:45:31.000In Louisiana, Governor John Bell Edwards on Monday postponed moving the state into phase three of its reopening for an additional 28 days.
00:45:39.000Public health officials say that the new coronavirus that causes COVID 19 will likely continue to spread across the U.S. in rolling, uneven waves as municipalities adopt disparate approaches to business closures, testing strategies, tracing close contacts of infected people, and mitigation measures such as mask wearing.
00:45:59.000Stephen Parati, the national infectious disease leader, said, We have been doing a natural history experiment in the U.S. where we are lifting a bunch of the non pharmaceutical interventions, and some of the lifting has been more phased and some has been less phased.
00:46:14.000The U.S. has so far logged more than 2.3 million cases, and more than 120,000 people have died from it, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
00:46:25.000So this is where we're at, and the numbers are pretty high.
00:46:28.000These numbers are higher than what was anticipated a few months ago.
00:46:32.000And if you remember, the projected number of cases, the projected number of dead, slowly declined since the country went into lockdown in mid March.
00:46:43.000It went from an expected death count of a quarter million down to 150,000, down to at one point they were saying that we could expect 60,000 to 70,000 dead by August.
00:46:55.000But it's late June, and we have 120,000 people dead from coronavirus.
00:47:01.000Again, This is the data they're telling us, and there are arguments on both sides for why it's being overcounted or being undercounted.
00:47:09.000They say that the data might be an overestimate because they're counting people that didn't actually have coronavirus, that the way that they log dead in a lot of hospitals is if people have coronavirus like symptoms, even if they're not tested, even if they don't do an autopsy and determine the cause of death to be coronavirus, they'll say that it was coronavirus and they'll tack that on.
00:47:33.000So, we really don't know the extent to which this data is true or not.
00:47:37.000I'm going to assume, just because we don't have any counter data that takes this kind of stuff into account, that 120,000 is basically accurate and that 2.3 million is about where we're at in terms of cases.
00:47:49.000And if this is the case, then it's pretty catastrophic.
00:47:53.000That's a lot of new dead people from a new risk factor.
00:48:43.000We need to stay in our houses and not go to businesses and not go to public events so we don't get coronavirus.
00:48:50.000But what we're seeing is that between March and now, we have not become less likely to get the virus.
00:48:59.000There's not a vaccine, there's not a treatment, there's nothing that we're doing that has changed between then and now that makes us any less likely to contract or spread the virus.
00:49:13.000If we waited for another three months, we'd still have to leave our houses at the end of the next three month lockdown, right?
00:49:21.000If we were still in lockdown now, and if we decided to reopen in three months, or in six months, or nine months, or 12 months, whenever it is that we emerge from lockdown, we're still going to emerge just as susceptible to the coronavirus as we did when we went into lockdown.
00:49:43.000This urgency about the virus, which, by the way, it's also worth mentioning yet again that none of this urgency was here when it was Black Lives Matter.
00:49:55.000We put it on hold for three weeks that nobody was concerned about social distancing or masks or contact tracing or anything like that, quarantines, lockdowns.
00:50:06.000Nobody was concerned about that for three weeks when it was black people rioting in the streets, right?
00:50:10.000Now, all of a sudden, so I think it's worth pointing out.
00:50:13.000But nevertheless, Are we supposed to just live like this indefinitely?
00:50:20.000If the virus spreads slowly or quickly, does it really matter at that point if everybody's going to get it?
00:50:26.000Or if 50 or 60 or 70% of the population is going to get it?
00:50:30.000My position basically remains the same, which is this people are going to get it, people are going to die from it.
00:50:38.000A vaccine is elusive, and there has been some progress shown on some of these accelerated vaccine trials and research.
00:50:47.000But a vaccine is not a guarantee, a treatment, a therapy is not a guarantee.
00:50:52.000So, for the time being, we have to work with what we have, which is nothing, which is masks, which is common sense, washing your hands, just being mindful.
00:51:03.000And as far as that goes, People are going to get sick and people are going to get, they're going to die.
00:51:08.000And there's nothing we can really do about that.
00:51:10.000But what we can do is decide are we going to live our lives and, you know, not destroy the economy and not destroy our country and get the virus and die from the virus?
00:51:20.000Or are we going to bring down the country, bring down the economy, bring down the society and also get the virus and die from the virus?
00:51:35.000At this point, the media, the National Institute of Allergies, whatever Fauci runs, the CDC, the White House, all the institutions have lost their credibility on this issue as far as I'm concerned.
00:51:49.000I look at these numbers and frankly, I don't believe them.
00:51:53.000You know, initially when this outbreak started, I was very cautious.
00:51:56.000I was putting on my mask, I was opening doors with a handkerchief, washing my hands, I had hand sanitizer, and now I don't because I don't believe them anymore because they have lied about this every step of the way.
00:52:30.000Either you're too stupid and you don't know what you're talking about, so I'm not listening to you, or you're actively trying to deceive me, in which case, why would I let that happen?
00:52:49.000I comply with the regulations to wear a mask and so on.
00:52:52.000But at this stage in the game, I think that whether you're going out and living your life because you don't believe them or you do believe them, it doesn't matter.
00:53:01.000I mean, we've narrowed it down to one option, which is we have to return to society.
00:53:07.000Forget returning to tradition for a moment.
00:54:27.000And I think they know that if Trump brings the economy back, he'll win the election.
00:54:31.000So this is a form of election interference.
00:54:33.000I don't see what other angle there would be.
00:54:36.000Because what they're not saying, and here's the number that's critical, is that while the number of cases is going up, even the death rate that they will admit is going down.
00:54:50.000That all the headlines are talking about cases are surging, case numbers are through the roof, record numbers of cases.
00:54:57.000But they're conveniently leaving out their own number, which is that the death rate is dropping precipitously.
00:55:03.000So, if nobody's even dying from this virus, what's the big deal?
00:55:08.000If people are just getting sick and maybe the healthcare system is being burdened, if it's not a major threat to people's lives, if the death rate is going down, why is that not the headline?
00:55:17.000Shouldn't we breathe a sigh of relief and say, well, maybe this is a new virus, but it's not deadly?
00:55:22.000That was H1N1 in 2008, that was SARS and MERS.
00:55:27.000I mean, a lot of these viruses didn't transmit very far, but if they did, they didn't have a super high death rate.
00:55:35.000So, I don't, I just, at the end of all this coronavirus stuff, we are still nowhere closer to enlightenment on this issue than when we started back in January, honestly.
00:55:48.000We've been talking about coronavirus since January, and I still know nothing about this virus because the media tells us one thing one day and something else the other day.
00:55:57.000One day it's a huge deal, the next day it's not, the next day it is, the next day it isn't, then it's George Floyd, then it's not.
00:56:03.000So, I don't know what to believe with this anymore.
00:56:06.000And as a result of that, I'm just going to trust my gut.
00:56:09.000I'm going to trust my instinct, which is I got good genes.
00:56:31.000The lockdown is for the purpose of, you know, we're trying to flatten the curve so that the healthcare system isn't overwhelmed.
00:56:38.000Now, the purpose of the lockdown is to wait for a vaccine.
00:56:41.000Now, the purpose of the lockdown is what?
00:56:45.000So, fuck your doctors, fuck the White House, and the media, and the specialists and epidemiologists.
00:56:54.000I'm going to Culver's, I'm going to McDonald's, I'm getting on a plane, I'm flying to Florida.
00:56:59.000I don't care about any of this stuff anymore.
00:57:01.000You know, we have to get back to where we were.
00:57:03.000And if all these people are so concerned about masks and everything else, if that was real, then they would have been saying that.
00:57:10.000For all the precious black lives that they care about when they were in the streets robbing Macy's and robbing Verizon and Target and all the other stores.
00:57:19.000So, something tells me that when it really counts, they don't seem to be anywhere near that issue.
00:57:55.000So, regardless of how you feel about it, you're going to get some six foot five mulatto Walmart greeter trying to knock you out because you walked through the door without a face mask, if they even let you in at all.
00:58:09.000And it means that when we vote in November, when it comes time for the election, it's going to be up to the Democrats to decide, you know, how many ballots they get for Joe Biden.
00:58:18.000Because I'm sure, I'm sure that there's going to be massive voter fraud in the event that there's widespread mail in voting.
00:58:25.000So that's the reason why it matters ultimately that it's going to transform the country in ways for our lives that are going to make us unemployed and make us poorer and make us miserable.
00:58:36.000And it's also going to fuck up the election.
00:59:47.000It doesn't look like it's glitching today, so I'll just use our Zoomer developed app.
00:59:52.000We've got Delco Groyper who says, Shout out to Madison Cawthorn for becoming the first Zoomer congressman.
01:00:00.000While he doesn't agree with us on everything, he seems solid on religion, immigration, and culture.
01:00:05.000Our guys should support and influence his campaign cabinet however you can.
01:00:11.000Yeah, I mean, we should try to influence him, but this kind of stuff about, well, he doesn't agree with us on everything, well, I'm sure he would disavow us if he knew who we were.
01:03:39.000And Jaden McNeil marrying into the family, well, I don't know.
01:03:43.000That's kind of an odd question, but I don't know if I'd mind that.
01:03:47.000I think Jaden's a fine young man, you know, and I will say if he were to marry into the family, I would probably be much tougher on him than I already am.
01:03:59.000I kind of give him the blues a little bit, I bust his balls a little bit, but it's only because I care.
01:04:05.000Like a father, it's because I wanted to be the best he could be.
01:04:09.000But, you know, if he married into the family, then my standards would just.
01:05:01.000My family could use some help in that department.
01:05:03.000You know, my Italian side, I really got, you know, the Italian side is really that double edged sword because you get high verbal IQ, creative intelligence, you're a genius, you're charming, you're charismatic, like you got everything going for you.
01:06:13.000Where I see this on TikTok and Twitter, and you have these men, and they'll film themselves, and it's like a POV, it's like a point of view, and they're like, You're beautiful.
01:06:27.000And it's like POV, like you're my girlfriend or something.
01:06:30.000And the guys are like, There's one famous one where it's like, POV, we're about to get married, and the guy's like crying and he's like red in the face and he's like looking her up and down.
01:08:23.000You know, maybe one kid is going to come out with an arm missing, you know, the one arm Groyper, you know, one arm Groyper, nugget Groyper, no limbs.
01:08:34.000He comes out a nugget, nugget Groyper.
01:08:38.000And then one of them's going to be six foot five, beautiful, and going to have all the talent.
01:08:43.000So that's what I'm trying to achieve here.
01:09:24.000I only have, like, well, I don't want to dox all my family, but I don't really have a lot of, like, family that could even be married into.
01:09:30.000Maybe a cousin, a second cousin, something like that.
01:10:53.000But there used to be a line of WWE action figures called microaggression, and they were called microaggression because they were very small.
01:11:02.000They're wrestlers, so they're aggressive.
01:11:04.000We used to collect these microaggression action figures.
01:11:07.000They came in a pack of three, and they came with a foreign object.
01:11:10.000They came with a sledgehammer, a trash can, a steel chair, a ladder, a table, or a TV, or whatever.
01:11:26.000Very satisfying to my autism because you could collect them all, you get them in different outfits, you get all these items, you get a ring.
01:11:34.000You could store them in the ring, and then I had the Elimination Chamber.
01:12:08.000But, you know, when we were playing Yu Gi Oh!, I would just look at the number on top, and that was like we just play like War.
01:12:14.000But, yeah, I never had, I always wanted one of those things where you put it on your arm and you pull out the card like this with your index and middle finger.
01:13:13.000Anyway, I never understood the show either.
01:13:17.000What was the deal with the show where there was like Yugi that was a kid, and then there was Yu Gi Oh that was like a grown man, but the same, and in like the Shadow Realm?
01:13:46.000You know, I never understood the lore behind that.
01:13:47.000I just always assumed that he was like a kid, and then when he got in the duel, he became like, I don't know, like an idealized version of himself, like older or something.
01:13:58.000I thought, you know, is his name Yu Gi Oh?
01:14:43.000Hater Times says, any plans for a separate but equal America First platform for other shows?
01:14:49.000You know, I've been working on that, but it's becoming clear that it's.
01:14:52.000Going to be very difficult, and the main hurdle at this point is bandwidth.
01:14:57.000You know, a lot of the components we have put in place, but the main problem I'm running into is that the bandwidth is going to be very expensive.
01:15:08.000I'll just give you a little insight on the math here to broadcast in 720p for one hour, that's 0.9 gigabytes of data, which I have to pay for, right?
01:15:22.000If I'm running the streaming service, and that is per viewer.
01:15:26.000So it's 0.9 gigabytes per hour per viewer.
01:16:16.000I mean, the show would barely be profitable, if at all, at that point.
01:16:20.000So I'm trying to find a way to get around that.
01:16:23.000Those are the rates that I've seen, those are the numbers I've seen.
01:16:26.000So building an alternative streaming platform.
01:16:28.000You know, I would either just have to have like half my audience on there or some of my audience on there, but it would be very expensive no matter what.
01:16:36.000And, you know, so I just have to find a way to make that work.
01:16:41.000Zero Groyper says, We're under attack.
01:19:52.000So if people are calling you Wignat, you probably are one.
01:19:56.000For Amanda Laura says, For every grifter conservative who switches sides due to negative publicity, Lauren Southern should make dinner for one Groyper.
01:20:31.000I was really thoroughly thinking about it.
01:20:34.000I was eating some Italian sausage and peppers.
01:20:37.000And I was like, yeah, it is completely and unironically true that she would be doing more for America if she was making me dinner than if she was making videos.
01:22:44.000We should just call that atavism, you know?
01:22:48.000The white race is a spaceship, and atavism says, I don't think, you know, I'm being too optical, or somebody's trying to be unoptical, I should say.
01:22:56.000You know, Panther Den is about to post the N word, and atavism hacks his computer and says, I don't think, I don't, what is the quote from 2001 A Space Odyssey?
01:28:32.000I mean, we'd all like to take the easy road and just become, you know, giant estrogen babies.
01:28:37.000I don't mean like I want that, but you know what I mean.
01:28:40.000And we would all like to be infantilized and drink like meal drinks and like go go goo goo gaga and, you know, give up the white race and collect Funko Pops and, you know, just sit in our dirty diapers as a people.
01:30:44.000Frequently, and I go to the symptom checker or whatever, and I enter in my symptoms, and I go to the head symptom, and it's like, Do you have a craving to eat dirt or glass?
01:31:02.000I think I'm going to go with the glass.
01:31:05.000Anyway, I see some of these super chats, and I think I'm going for the glass.
01:31:09.000Anyway, New England Puritan says, Is traditional Catholicism unoptical at all?
01:31:15.000Can somebody put a noose in the studio for me?
01:31:19.000You've brought more people closer to Christ than some missionaries while making your image focused on satire and politics, and not by going full trad.
01:32:01.000It's not to say that you're going to be tolerant or permissive of sin, but it is to say that you've got to meet people where they are, which is to say that people these days are so used to being coddled, and a lot of people are so far away from a real religious disposition.
01:32:18.000They don't even know what that feels like, they don't even know what that looks like.
01:32:22.000They don't even know what a proper religious orientation looks like.
01:32:26.000What they know, what a lot of people know about religion comes from TV and like bad and harmful tropes about religion that they get from TV.
01:32:36.000Like, what you see on TV about religion is that Christians are stupid and they're mean and they're evil and they're simple and they're zealots and they're freaks and they're irrational and in all that.
01:32:50.000And that's a lot of people's only experience with religion.
01:32:53.000Because, especially with Generation Z, and this is my experience living in the North, I think it's a little different in the South.
01:33:00.000But, you know, generally speaking, in most of the country, a lot of Gen Z people grow up in a non religious household.
01:33:06.000They get a non religious education, and they just don't know.
01:33:10.000And so you have to explain these things in ways that resonate with people.
01:33:14.000And I think putting it in plain terms, in terms that are easily digestible, in ways that are compelling, I mean, that's what a good Christian should do.
01:33:23.000I don't think there's any virtue in being an over the top, you know, little bitch about this kind of stuff, which is a lot of what you see online.
01:33:31.000A lot of Catholics have criticized me.
01:33:33.000They're like, oh, you know, he's not a perfect Catholic.
01:33:36.000And I never said I was a perfect Catholic.
01:33:38.000I'm a lapsed Catholic that very recently came around, and I still have a lot of room to grow as a Catholic.
01:33:45.000People say that because I preach Catholicism, I tell everyone to be Catholic.
01:33:54.000But I think actually that's why my message resonates because it's a message of humility, it's a message that's relatable.
01:34:02.000It's not preachy, it's not, I'm not on my high horse.
01:34:09.000I'm just telling you how it is, you know, as somebody that hates evil and, you know, strives to be, you know, like Jesus Christ and living like God wants us to live.
01:34:19.000And I think people can relate to that more easily than people that are like LARPers or over the top, you know, and they do get on their high horse and all that.
01:34:31.000So, like, for example, I largely came back to Catholicism just by watching, like, Catholic answers on YouTube.
01:34:38.000And a lot of people sneer at that, they look down on that.
01:34:41.000A lot of these, like, rad trad calves.
01:34:44.000They look down on Catholic Answers or C.S. Lewis or a lot of this stuff.
01:34:49.000I got back into it by reading Chesterton and Lewis and Catholic Answers and just YouTube content.
01:35:58.000And you give money to people like that, and it's like they're just going to blow it on cigarettes, you know?
01:36:03.000So I think that charity really begins at home.
01:36:08.000You know, I think a lot of people think about charity and think about charities or charitable organizations or, you know, poor people in the streets.
01:36:16.000But I think charity starts with your family and your friends.
01:36:21.000And in your community, people that you know that might be struggling.
01:36:24.000And then, you know, it's like these concentric circles, so to speak.
01:36:28.000So I wouldn't give money to somebody I don't know.
01:36:30.000I wouldn't give money to someone I don't know their situation.
01:36:33.000Because I feel like that's just like wasteful.
01:37:33.000Inferno says, I'm sure there's a huge amount of young politically interested people wanting to get involved in politics, but who have no idea where to start or what to do.
01:38:00.000You know, that's how I got involved, I was in Massachusetts, I was in Boston.
01:38:06.000And I went to the Trump website and I signed up to be a volunteer, and they reached out to me.
01:38:10.000I might have even reached out to the campaign and I said, Look, I've got a team of volunteers that I got together from all the CRs and all the different colleges in the Boston area, and I want to go campaign in Manchester, New Hampshire.
01:38:23.000And they said, Okay, well, we're going to send a truck down to get you, and we'll pick you up, and you guys can come here and do door knocking and do phone banking.
01:38:32.000And I made a lot of connections in the GOP that way.
01:39:18.000You're not going to know where to stand or what to do with your hands, or like, you know, you're not going to know maybe where to find the room, right?
01:40:06.000You know, most people are just showing up and they've been showing up for 50 years and that's why they're running things.
01:40:11.000So if you're just young and have a little bit of motivation or enthusiasm, You'd be surprised how far that'll get you in a short amount of time on a campaign, in your county GOP, anywhere.
01:40:55.000And like from then on, and I was in this like youth council for Jim Durkin, the state speaker.
01:41:03.000And I remember the guy that was running that thing was telling us, like, dude, politics is a joke.
01:41:08.000He was saying, all politics is local and just show up.
01:41:11.000And if you just have a little bit of enthusiasm, show up every time, I mean, you're going to, you're going to, Piggyback, or not piggyback, you're going to leapfrog everybody in the GOP.
01:44:31.000Freaking John says, I wonder if in the near future the only white people who can live in peace will have to pay to live in a gated community with armed guards and wire topped walls within their local politician.
01:44:47.000Red Pill says, My normie friends are astounded that I predicted a Marxist funded civil war on my Snapchat story since Epstein was arrested.
01:49:22.000So, and not to say that Sam Hyde's not a nice guy, but I mean, he's kind of, you know, well, he's older and he's, you know, he's a little volatile.
01:49:32.000Jaden McNeil is volatile, but he's a little volatile.
01:52:16.000I can drive a big Car, I drive a big car, right?
01:52:20.000He could go to all these different high schools maybe and he could be a motivational speaker and say, you know, look, there's hope, there's a future for you.
01:52:29.000I think that'd be a really nice thing.
01:52:31.000That'd be a way for him to give back, right?
01:52:34.000Maybe a way to give back to our people after being a total disaster for the white race by being a Wignat, right?
01:52:42.000So that might be a nice thing that he could do.
01:52:45.000Anyway, Groibchak says, Gotta go, Professor Utonium mode when picking a wife.
01:55:48.000A clone gunship and it had a string attached to the base and it detached from the base on this string and you could move it forward and shoot the guys with it.
01:56:00.000Anyway, Base Pizza says you can actually get surgery to make you taller.
01:56:04.000I wouldn't do that, I would be way too tall.
01:56:08.000Repeat Recon says, God bless, have some more money.
01:56:45.000You just got to mentally prepare yourself for what you're going to face and be prepared for that.
01:56:49.000Mentally prepare, you know, visualize it.
01:56:52.000And say to yourself, you know, when they say this, I'm not going to get mad.
01:56:55.000You know, when they respond, I'm just going to keep my cool.
01:56:58.000I'm going to, with great effort, keep my cool, right?
01:57:03.000So, Gen Z Philosophy says, LOL, so funny hearing you talk about WWE because I'm playing a wrestling game on Xbox right now where I made my own character.
01:57:14.000I designed his whole aesthetic and it's very old.
01:59:04.000I discovered it because there was this picture of Patrick at an AIM rally.
01:59:12.000And he's in this puffy jacket and these gloves, and he's holding up a flare, and his posterior is just jutting out from the rest of his frame.
01:59:22.000It is, you know, and like you said, no homo.
02:02:22.000So on body, definitely average, maybe a little bit below average, maybe a five or a four on body.
02:02:30.000And personality, you know, I got to say, the personality is kind of the appealing part.
02:02:36.000Only because, you know, there's that tension that is, I don't know.
02:02:44.000I don't want to get too weird on the show.
02:02:46.000But there's something about that, this sort of like give and take, this sort of like, there's this tension where, you know, she is like psycho.
02:02:55.000And I know maybe guys can relate to this, but there's something that's like, and I would never go for that to like marry anybody.
02:03:04.000But there is an appealing aspect about these sort of, Hot and cold roller coaster, kind of psycho.
02:03:11.000It's not practical, and it's certainly not something that I would ever pursue, but there's definitely an appeal to it.
02:03:20.000Even this idea of like, she's all over me, then she hates me, there's this rivalry now, she's like trying to go after me.
02:03:28.000There's something about that where it's like, anyway.
02:03:33.000Anyway, so the personality, you know, could she be a little nicer, whatever?
02:03:40.000The personality is going to be pretty up there just because, you know, it's about that kind of cat and mouse to sort of like, you know, anyway.
02:03:50.000So, on the composite, I think I probably go, you know, seven to an eight on face, you know, probably four to a five on body, but this is not the end of the world to me.
02:05:19.000I bet you're really tortured smoking cigs.
02:05:24.000Sillis says the McMichaels and their friend being indicted for murder today was an intimidation tactic to remind white people that they're not allowed to defend their community.
02:05:57.000Delco Groyper says, Internet trad's really out here, like, into my heart and air that kills from yon far country blows, or some gay shit like that.
02:06:06.000It's like, Jesse, what the fuck are you talking about?
02:09:52.000When he got outside his suit, I am like Darth Vader because the lore on Darth Vader is that his suit keeps him in a constant state of pain, and that was by design.
02:10:02.000Because if he was in a constant state of physical agony, then he would be full of rage, and then he could, like, you know, kill rebels, you know, and subdue planets.
02:10:14.000And only when he was in the Bacta tank or only when he was in his sanctuary was he free from that physical pain from the suit.
02:12:08.000Bob Sacamano says, Do you think it's possible that an overt America firster, if not entirely in the way we think about it, at least in a Tucker type of way, would just get committee blacklisted by the GOP like Steve King?
02:14:22.000So, but when I do, I would have to lay low so that the British government doesn't see what I'm up to.
02:14:30.000Nate Smokes says if people can't see the coronavirus is political at this point, just look up Black Lives Matter COVID and compare it to Trump rally COVID.