America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes - July 19, 2022


THE GAY MANDATE - Republicans Pass GAY BILL, Forcing Everyone To Become Gay | America First Ep. 1033


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 45 minutes

Words per minute

162.31

Word count

17,167

Sentence count

1,380


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

Transcript

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00:00:01.000 Good evening, everybody.
00:00:03.000 You are watching America First.
00:00:04.000 My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes.
00:00:06.000 We have a great show for you tonight.
00:00:08.000 Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Tuesday.
00:00:12.000 We have a lot to talk about tonight, lots to get into.
00:00:15.000 Our featured story, sort of a black pill, gay marriage is back.
00:00:23.000 Okay, gay marriage went away for a long time.
00:00:26.000 Well, actually, gay marriage has been with us for seven years.
00:00:30.000 But.
00:00:31.000 There was the exciting prospect recently in the aftermath of the Roe v. Wade repeal, or overturning, I should say, that gay marriage would go with it.
00:00:45.000 Exciting new prospect given to us by Clarence Thomas and Ted Cruz in recent weeks, talking about overturning gay marriage as well.
00:00:55.000 But now it seems like perhaps that will not happen.
00:00:58.000 Because our featured story today in the U.S. House of Representatives, Congress passed a bill.
00:01:05.000 That will federally recognize gay marriages, which means that even if the Supreme Court, and this is unlikely, but even if the Supreme Court were to reconsider the gay marriage decision from 2015 and overturn it,
00:01:20.000 the gay marriages in all the states, whether it's legal in the state or illegal in the state, becomes illegal in the state, those gay marriages will still be recognized by the federal government according to this new law.
00:01:36.000 So, this bill passed the House of Representatives with the help of 47 Republicans.
00:01:43.000 All the Democrats, 47 Republicans voted in favor of enshrining gay marriage at the federal level.
00:01:50.000 So, we're going to talk about that.
00:01:51.000 We'll talk about where that's going.
00:01:52.000 The good news is that probably will not become a law.
00:01:56.000 It may never even be voted on in the Senate.
00:02:00.000 So, we don't know if this will become law.
00:02:03.000 But it just goes to show, and I said this last night, we talked about it last night with Reddit.
00:02:09.000 Reddit banned the use of the word groomer.
00:02:12.000 All these Republicans like to talk about groomer this and the trans swimmer and all this.
00:02:18.000 And then they go and they hire Caitlyn Jenner on Fox News.
00:02:23.000 And they say, oh, we oppose Drag Queen Story Hour and Pride Month has gone too far.
00:02:29.000 And then Dave Rubin is promoting gay surrogacy on Daily Wire.
00:02:33.000 And they, Josh Hawley, wow, just wow, you believe that men can get pregnant?
00:02:38.000 Yeah, they've believed that for decades.
00:02:41.000 And then they'll vote to pass gay marriage recognized at the federal level.
00:02:45.000 We are not getting a real Christian nationalism.
00:02:49.000 Not yet, at least.
00:02:50.000 Not good enough.
00:02:51.000 So we'll talk about that.
00:02:51.000 We'll also be talking tonight about the Uvalde shooting.
00:02:55.000 We've got some new details about the shooting itself as well as the killer.
00:03:00.000 A very interesting new police report or investigation of the police has come out in the past week, which showed, and I introd this last night, It was 400, 400 police officers that responded to the Uvalde shooting.
00:03:18.000 400 cops in total.
00:03:20.000 State police, border patrol, local police, 400 personnel showed up to this Uvalde school and waited 90 minutes.
00:03:30.000 400 of them waiting 90 minutes while one guy, one young guy with a gun, shot and killed like over a dozen kids.
00:03:40.000 And they are 400.
00:03:41.000 Could you imagine?
00:03:42.000 400 people surrounding and inside the school waiting for an hour and a half for this guy to like complete his massacre.
00:03:52.000 How insane and ridiculous is that?
00:03:56.000 So, we'll talk about that as well as some new details which have emerged about the killer himself, and it's exactly what you would expect.
00:04:05.000 This is what I talked about in my monologue about the shooting when it happened.
00:04:12.000 Everything that I said fits a description here of the killer.
00:04:16.000 He's in a single parent household, dad is not in the picture, bullied in school, called the school shooter, failed interventions from teachers, known to law enforcement.
00:04:27.000 People in his class called him a school shooter.
00:04:31.000 And then here's the best part this is his life up until he's 17 years old.
00:04:37.000 Single parent household, lives with his grandmother then, bullied in school, outsider, loner.
00:04:43.000 They call him school shooter.
00:04:44.000 He's saving up for guns.
00:04:46.000 Then the COVID pandemic hits two years ago and the situation worsens dramatically.
00:04:53.000 It was already bad before.
00:04:54.000 Then the COVID pandemic hits.
00:04:56.000 He's sent home from school and he's there at home for a year plus in isolation.
00:05:01.000 And then he comes back and shoots up everybody in fourth grade.
00:05:08.000 So, I mean, like, we have all these problems.
00:05:11.000 It's not actually very difficult why we have them.
00:05:13.000 I think me and many other people said, and have talked about this for years, by the way, it's now been two years since the pandemic started, a little bit over two years.
00:05:24.000 And it's not just me.
00:05:25.000 Andrew Anglin said this.
00:05:26.000 I think Alex Jones said this.
00:05:27.000 Others have said this.
00:05:30.000 Everybody was already going crazy because of smartphones and social media.
00:05:35.000 And ubiquitous computers and media in general.
00:05:40.000 And then you add to that complete social isolation.
00:05:44.000 And of course, you're going to get a lot more people that are going to start to snap and go off the rails and go crazy in small ways and big ways.
00:05:51.000 This is one of those things.
00:05:54.000 So we'll talk about that.
00:05:56.000 There's a lot to discuss on Uvalde tonight.
00:05:58.000 So that'll be our show.
00:06:00.000 It's kind of a slow news day.
00:06:01.000 Again, there's just like not a whole lot going on, but obviously the gay marriage thing is important.
00:06:06.000 Uvalde is still pretty interesting.
00:06:08.000 So that'll be our news.
00:06:09.000 I'm going to get to everything tonight, I promise.
00:06:12.000 We were supposed to talk about Uvalde last night, but I just launched into this insane rant about Las Vegas.
00:06:19.000 I apologize.
00:06:22.000 I didn't think I would talk for that long about Vegas, but I was away for five days, and you get a change of scenery, and I'm out and about, and I'm looking around.
00:06:32.000 So I have these observations and all of that, and I didn't think I would be screaming for 60 minutes.
00:06:40.000 Basically, a racist tirade about black people.
00:06:45.000 Sorry, sorry we didn't get to the news.
00:06:48.000 We had an unanticipated 60 minute rant about blacks, a racist tirade against black people.
00:06:57.000 At this point, there's nothing, like, you can't describe it in any other way.
00:07:00.000 It used to be the case where I used to say things on the show that were outlandish, and it was like, no, you took that out of context.
00:07:08.000 That was a joke.
00:07:10.000 It's not really racist because.
00:07:14.000 Last night, there's, you know, it just was a racist tirade.
00:07:18.000 There's no other way, there's nothing else that you could call it.
00:07:22.000 I was ranting and raving about how white people should be able to throw black people out of businesses if they're not wearing a shirt, and how black people are mostly responsible for degrading high civilization because of their casual wear.
00:07:39.000 And so it was a racist rant.
00:07:43.000 But it's true, okay?
00:07:45.000 But it is true.
00:07:46.000 So, you know, there were some jokes in there.
00:07:50.000 There was some tongue in cheek business in there, but it was a rant.
00:07:55.000 I do stand by it.
00:07:57.000 Some may call it racist.
00:07:58.000 Some may have a problem with what I said.
00:08:01.000 It's provocative, but it's all true.
00:08:05.000 And that does tend to be the problem, actually, with some of these things you walk around and you look around at the world and you make some very racist observations.
00:08:14.000 Unfortunately, they are always true, all the time.
00:08:19.000 And that's actually just a part of life.
00:08:21.000 As I grow older, I realize that is really just.
00:08:24.000 Part and parcel of your life, of living your life, is you'll have these racist observations always correct.
00:08:33.000 And in this society where our minds have been colonized with this idea that racism is always and everywhere the worst thing ever, it creates this cognitive dissonance.
00:08:46.000 But growing up is realizing that you're right.
00:08:49.000 Growing up and maturing and becoming enlightened and taking the red pill is realizing that your first racist assumption is the most correct.
00:08:58.000 And to not let yourself be tricked.
00:09:02.000 Do not let the media trick you into not being racist.
00:09:07.000 No, kidding, kidding.
00:09:09.000 Now that part's not, now I'm joking a little bit.
00:09:11.000 But the rant was racist, but look, our grandparents were right.
00:09:17.000 Okay?
00:09:18.000 Our grandparents were right.
00:09:19.000 Our grandparents fought in World War II, and our grandparents built the skyscrapers, and our grandparents built this country.
00:09:27.000 And you know what?
00:09:28.000 They had certain attitudes, and they were right.
00:09:31.000 Okay?
00:09:32.000 And.
00:09:33.000 Our parents thought that our grandparents were crazy.
00:09:36.000 You know, our parents were like, Mom, Dad, you know, you really shouldn't treat people like that.
00:09:42.000 You know, that's really prejudiced.
00:09:45.000 And, you know, Mom, Dad, whatever I want.
00:09:48.000 And now you have shirtless black people accosting you in a very expensive resort in Las Vegas.
00:09:56.000 So clearly our grandparents were right.
00:09:59.000 Okay, they weren't politically correct, and they were in fact racist.
00:10:04.000 But they were right.
00:10:05.000 And Generation Z has got to recover the lost wisdom of our racist grandparents.
00:10:12.000 That's the real red pill.
00:10:13.000 That's the real task at hand.
00:10:15.000 It's our job.
00:10:17.000 We are called as members of Generation Z to rediscover the lost prejudice and racism of our grandparents.
00:10:25.000 Our grandparents were right.
00:10:26.000 They were funny.
00:10:28.000 Okay?
00:10:29.000 I love my grandparents.
00:10:32.000 I love my grandma.
00:10:33.000 You know, my grandma who passed recently.
00:10:38.000 Now, I don't think she would call herself racist, but she had that sort of old world mentality, and she was right.
00:10:46.000 She grew up in the projects in Chicago, and she lived among these people.
00:10:50.000 She lived among black people and had experiences with them her entire life, and that shaped a certain sort of hardened, not politically correct attitude, and it was totally correct.
00:11:03.000 So, anyway, what am I even talking about?
00:11:05.000 Last night's rant was racist.
00:11:08.000 I stand by it.
00:11:10.000 Some of it was funny.
00:11:12.000 It was also all true.
00:11:14.000 I didn't know it would be 70 minutes.
00:11:17.000 Tonight, I'll do a better job at controlling the time, and we're going to get to all of our news stories tonight.
00:11:25.000 But yeah, it was.
00:11:26.000 I was thinking about that today.
00:11:28.000 I was driving around.
00:11:29.000 I was like, yeah, yesterday was just completely racist.
00:11:33.000 It wasn't even kidding.
00:11:34.000 It wasn't even like.
00:11:35.000 I was like, man, where is the show going?
00:11:38.000 There was a time when the show was like, you know, black people cringe.
00:11:45.000 Just kidding, that was ironic.
00:11:47.000 Or, you know, guess what?
00:11:49.000 A thousand years for the woman, a hundred years for the doctor.
00:11:52.000 You know, fast forward three years later, and we're like, we're going to drag your wife out of her house and burn her alive because she's a witch and this is not a joke.
00:12:01.000 And it's like, I was in Vegas last night and these black people weren't wearing nice enough clothes.
00:12:07.000 I hate this country.
00:12:09.000 So, you know, I think being removed from social media was like the worst thing ever because at least when we were on the major platforms, there were some guardrails.
00:12:20.000 There were some guardrails that kind of kept the discussion within a certain.
00:12:26.000 You know, arguably, is this a good thing?
00:12:28.000 Is this a bad thing?
00:12:29.000 Time will tell.
00:12:31.000 But at least when we were on Twitter and we were on YouTube, there was some semblance of, okay, you know, the ball is going to stay within the lane here, within the bowling lane.
00:12:43.000 Now it's just, it's gone out of hand.
00:12:46.000 It's gone out of control.
00:12:50.000 I mean, seriously, I was driving and I was thinking about it.
00:12:53.000 I was like, You know, maybe I should rein it in a little bit because I'm watching this right wing watch clip of my show where I'm like, women shouldn't be educated and we need to.
00:13:07.000 We're not just going to burn your pride flag.
00:13:09.000 We're going to drag your wife out of her house and burn her alive because she's a witch.
00:13:14.000 This is not a joke.
00:13:18.000 And it wasn't a joke when I said it either.
00:13:23.000 And then I was thinking about the rant yesterday and I was like, geez.
00:13:30.000 I'm becoming like an old timer, becoming like somebody that lived in the early 20th century.
00:13:39.000 Think about it though.
00:13:41.000 In the absence of political correctness and censorship, my attitude has gone as just totally went back in time.
00:13:50.000 I had a much more modern sensibility, even as a reactionary, when I was still on Twitter because it was like, oh, you can't say that.
00:13:58.000 You can't say it this way.
00:14:00.000 I need to at least be perceived.
00:14:02.000 Excuse me, as not a certain way.
00:14:05.000 Because if I am perceived that way, I'll get banned.
00:14:07.000 And now I'm like, you know what?
00:14:08.000 Whatever.
00:14:10.000 We're going back to the Middle Ages.
00:14:12.000 So I was just thinking about that.
00:14:16.000 But anyway, but we are going to.
00:14:17.000 Okay, so in the spirit of what I just said, let's cut to the chase.
00:14:21.000 Let's get to the news.
00:14:22.000 But before we get into that, just a reminder follow me here on Cozy.
00:14:26.000 Smash the follow button.
00:14:28.000 Please give me a follow.
00:14:30.000 We're closing in on 100,000 subscribers here.
00:14:33.000 We have about 80,000 more to go.
00:14:36.000 We're closing in on 100,000 subscribers on Cozy.
00:14:41.000 We're just about 81,000 subscribers shy.
00:14:45.000 So just make sure to smash the follow button.
00:14:49.000 We're getting closer by the day.
00:14:51.000 I can taste it.
00:14:52.000 Closing it.
00:14:53.000 Can you believe it?
00:14:53.000 We are nearly at 100,000.
00:14:56.000 Just got about 81,000 to go.
00:15:00.000 So make sure to smash the follow button to get a push notification whenever I go live, whenever my show begins.
00:15:07.000 Also, follow me on Gavin Telegram.
00:15:09.000 Links are down below.
00:15:10.000 Follow me on Gavin Telegram.
00:15:12.000 Lots of good content being posted every day there.
00:15:16.000 Also, big announcement, brand new.
00:15:19.000 Tomorrow, I will be joining Alex Stein on his show, Conspiracy Castle, at 8 o'clock Central Time.
00:15:29.000 Super excited about it.
00:15:31.000 So, check that out.
00:15:33.000 Alex Stein, 8 o'clock Central, on his YouTube channel.
00:15:37.000 It's a show, Conspiracy Castle.
00:15:39.000 I'll be with him doing an interview for about an hour, and then I'll do the show.
00:15:44.000 So, probably an earlier show tomorrow because I'll do his show.
00:15:48.000 It should go until about 9 o'clock, and then I'll probably go live around 9 30, 10 Central Time.
00:15:54.000 So, that's the plan for this week.
00:15:57.000 What else?
00:15:58.000 I think that's everything.
00:15:59.000 I think that's all I got for you.
00:16:01.000 I'm still sick.
00:16:02.000 I still don't feel good.
00:16:05.000 I woke up today late.
00:16:08.000 I actually, I'm not too late.
00:16:09.000 I woke up at like noon.
00:16:11.000 That's not so late for me.
00:16:14.000 And, you know, I just felt like garbage.
00:16:17.000 I didn't want to get out of bed.
00:16:18.000 But I dragged myself out of bed, ran some errands, drove around.
00:16:25.000 It was hot today, it was like 90 degrees.
00:16:27.000 I was baking.
00:16:31.000 And got some portillos.
00:16:35.000 Whenever I'm out of town, I like to come back.
00:16:37.000 I get the big beef, got a big beef, got some fries.
00:16:42.000 Had my Portillo's, drove around.
00:16:44.000 It was dusk.
00:16:45.000 It was beautiful out.
00:16:46.000 Sun was setting.
00:16:47.000 I'm just driving around the city, schmooting around in the convertible.
00:16:51.000 Beautiful day out, like a breeze.
00:16:54.000 Chicago is like a utopia, man.
00:16:56.000 It really is.
00:16:57.000 Especially at dusk.
00:17:00.000 Dusk is my favorite time.
00:17:01.000 I hate the daytime.
00:17:02.000 I'm like a vampire.
00:17:04.000 I'm in Portillo's, and the sun is coming through the window in my eyes, cooking me while I'm indoors eating.
00:17:12.000 And it's like, why do people like this?
00:17:13.000 Why do people love the daytime?
00:17:16.000 Like, if I could just wake up before the sun sets, if I could wake up like an hour before the sun sets and go to bed before the sun rises, we'd be in great shape.
00:17:29.000 Anyway, so that was my day.
00:17:30.000 But I'm still sick.
00:17:32.000 I took everything.
00:17:33.000 I took vitamin C, my nasal spray, my Claritin, DayQuil, ibuprofen.
00:17:40.000 You know, I'm all drugged up, and I still feel like trash.
00:17:44.000 So.
00:17:46.000 Hope I'll recover quickly because I'm annoyed.
00:17:49.000 But anyway, let's get into the news here.
00:17:52.000 Let's dive in.
00:17:55.000 And our first story, we're going to talk about Uvalde first.
00:18:01.000 And, you know, this is that big school shooting in Texas from about a month ago that they tried to push gun control for.
00:18:10.000 Remember?
00:18:11.000 It was some lunatic who went into an elementary school and shot a bunch of kids, I don't know how many.
00:18:17.000 But right after that was the Buffalo shooting, and then it was Uvalde, and then they said, okay, now it's time to ban all the guns.
00:18:24.000 And then we find out that it literally has nothing to do with guns at all, actually.
00:18:30.000 Because then we found out that the cops had arrived before the shooting was really underway, and they waited 90 minutes for the shooting to be completed.
00:18:39.000 We found out that the door was wide open for the shooter to come in.
00:18:44.000 We found out all these details.
00:18:48.000 That proved that it really was a failure of law enforcement more than anything.
00:18:52.000 It really had nothing to do with the shooter's ability to acquire a firearm or carry out the attack.
00:18:58.000 It was really more about essentially a failure at every level of the government, of the school.
00:19:05.000 School doesn't lock the doors.
00:19:07.000 And then the cops show up and they wait 90 minutes.
00:19:09.000 And so we had found all of that out, I think, the first week after the shooting happened.
00:19:14.000 But now, because of that, an investigation has occurred and we've learned even more.
00:19:19.000 And there's a new report out that investigated the police response to the Uvalde shooting, and it found that it's far worse actually than we thought even the week after the shooting.
00:19:30.000 And this is an article about this from BBC.
00:19:34.000 It says, quote, nearly 400 law enforcement officials rushed to a mass shooting at a Uvalde elementary school, but, quote, egregiously poor decision making resulted in more than an hour of chaos before the gunman who took 21 lives was fatally confronted and killed, according to a damning investigative report released on Sunday.
00:19:55.000 The gunman fired approximately 142 rounds inside the building, and it is almost certain that at least 100 shots came before any officer entered.
00:20:06.000 According to the report, which laid out in damning detail numerous failures, among them, one, the commander of a Border Patrol tactical team waited for a bulletproof shield and working master key for the classroom, which may have not even been needed before entering the classroom.
00:20:24.000 Two, no one assumed command despite scores of officers being on the scene.
00:20:29.000 Three, a Uvalde Police Department officer said he heard about 911 calls that had come inside the classroom, come from inside the classroom.
00:20:38.000 And that his understanding was that officers on one side of the building knew there were victims trapped inside.
00:20:44.000 Still, no one tried to breach the classroom.
00:20:47.000 According to the report, 376 law enforcement officers masked at the school.
00:20:52.000 The overwhelming majority of those who responded were federal and state law enforcement.
00:20:57.000 That included nearly 150 Border Patrol agents and 91 state police officials.
00:21:02.000 Investigators said it was not their job to determine whether officers should be held accountable, saying that decisions rest with each law enforcement agency.
00:21:13.000 Prior to Sunday, only one of the hundreds of officers on the scene was known to have been placed on leave.
00:21:23.000 So, you know, this lunatic goes to a school, and they couldn't have made it easier for him.
00:21:30.000 It's like at that point, you effectively don't have police and you don't have like walls.
00:21:37.000 How can you say that this is a gun control problem if you've got a guy who gets a.
00:21:44.000 Whatever weapon was used in the killing, I think it was an assault rifle or a semi automatic rifle or something like that.
00:21:52.000 He shows up to the school, opens the front door, and just starts killing people.
00:21:56.000 400 police officers respond, and they don't even enter the building.
00:22:00.000 They don't even say, Hey, wait, we need a key.
00:22:04.000 The door is open.
00:22:05.000 You have 400 cops outside the school waiting for a key to arrive.
00:22:11.000 When the door is open, they didn't need a key.
00:22:14.000 No one tried the handle, no one tried the doorknob.
00:22:17.000 Could you imagine?
00:22:19.000 There's a guy in the school.
00:22:20.000 He's shot a hundred times.
00:22:22.000 You know, guns are loud.
00:22:23.000 You can hear that.
00:22:26.000 So, you have an elementary school full of people.
00:22:28.000 A guy saunters in there and just starts shooting.
00:22:32.000 The police arrive very quickly.
00:22:34.000 Hundreds of them arrive.
00:22:35.000 They hear this guy shoot a hundred times, and they're waiting for a key to a door that's open.
00:22:42.000 Nobody, they hear a hundred shots being fired.
00:22:45.000 Nobody tried the doorknob, nobody tried to open it.
00:22:49.000 There's 400 guys, they're waiting for a bulletproof shield.
00:22:52.000 You're the shield.
00:22:54.000 It's like, here's the thing there's a guy in there shooting defenseless children.
00:23:00.000 You're waiting for a bulletproof shield to breach there and protect those people.
00:23:05.000 If you have 400 cops, guess what?
00:23:07.000 The guy can't kill everybody.
00:23:09.000 Okay, so if five people run in the door, the shooter's gonna die.
00:23:14.000 Is one of the cops gonna die?
00:23:15.000 Maybe.
00:23:17.000 But do the math on that really quickly.
00:23:20.000 If even five police officers bum rush the door, And they get the killer and he kills one cop.
00:23:27.000 Guess what the killer's not doing?
00:23:29.000 Systematically murdering children in the meantime.
00:23:32.000 You know?
00:23:33.000 And those are the kinds of decisions, which is why we have police officers.
00:23:38.000 That's why you are a police officer, is so that you can make those calculations.
00:23:43.000 And that's why we say, oh, back the blue and everything.
00:23:46.000 Because at the end of the day, some days it's your life instead of a six year old inside of a school.
00:23:54.000 It's your life because you've got the body armor and you've got the guns and you've got the training and you're a grown man and you volunteered for this job.
00:24:02.000 It's your life instead of the civilian.
00:24:05.000 It could be a 20% chance, whatever.
00:24:09.000 But you have 400 cops waiting outside a door that's open for a key and for a bulletproof shield while they wait for a shooter to shoot 100 rounds at kids.
00:24:19.000 For 90 minutes, they wait.
00:24:23.000 There are 400 cops.
00:24:24.000 They say that nobody took a leadership role.
00:24:29.000 They say that they're getting calls from inside the classroom.
00:24:32.000 So they know what's going on.
00:24:33.000 They know it's an active shooter situation.
00:24:35.000 They know as much information as we know now because.
00:24:38.000 They were getting calls from people inside the building while it was going on.
00:24:43.000 And, you know, this is a very particular kind of situation, but it's pretty amazing that having said all that, the first thing that everybody wanted to do was ban guns.
00:24:54.000 Ban, a shooter bought a gun and committed this attack, and people diagnosed the problem right away as people were able to buy guns.
00:25:03.000 Not that the door wasn't locked, not that 400 cops couldn't intervene, it was the guns.
00:25:09.000 Clearly, this was a failure of the school and it was a failure of law enforcement, obviously.
00:25:15.000 It also just goes to show is this not a representation of where our country is, broadly speaking?
00:25:23.000 I've been saying this for a long time on the show.
00:25:25.000 I don't think that America will collapse.
00:25:27.000 It will just get a lot worse in every conceivable way and also in inconceivable ways.
00:25:33.000 And it will get worse all the time, inconceivable and in inconceivable ways, in both small and big ways.
00:25:42.000 And so it's things like you go to the store and they're not going to have the thing that you went to the store for.
00:25:48.000 You're going to go to the store and it's going to be dirty and it's going to be disorganized and it's going to be dysfunctional and the staff are going to be rude.
00:25:55.000 And, you know, it's like minor things like that sometimes.
00:25:59.000 And also it's going to be major things like this.
00:26:01.000 It's going to be a systematic breakdown of public services.
00:26:05.000 And sometimes that's extremely catastrophic when it's something like public safety and the police are 400 Mexicans that don't know their ass from a hole in the ground.
00:26:14.000 You know, this is 400 retards.
00:26:18.000 I don't care what anybody says.
00:26:20.000 This is just unacceptable.
00:26:21.000 You've got, what is it, 376 adult men, and they waited 90 minutes before one of them, or some of them, or all of them confronted a shooter in an elementary school.
00:26:32.000 That is what you would call a systematic failure.
00:26:36.000 It is a system wide failure.
00:26:39.000 It's not a particularity, okay?
00:26:41.000 It's not a personal issue.
00:26:42.000 It's not a.
00:26:43.000 It's not something small.
00:26:45.000 That is a system wide issue.
00:26:47.000 The entire state, federal, local police force for a county or a jurisdiction shows up and they're not able to stop the worst kind of crime.
00:26:57.000 That's a systematic failure.
00:27:00.000 Public safety is red, okay?
00:27:02.000 It is red.
00:27:03.000 It is frowny face.
00:27:04.000 It is thumbs down.
00:27:05.000 It is 0% approval.
00:27:07.000 It's not working.
00:27:08.000 That's a complete failure of public service.
00:27:11.000 You're also going to see it with transportation.
00:27:13.000 You're going to see it with the trains and with planes and with The infrastructure, you're going to see it with the public services.
00:27:20.000 And that's going to be licensing, and that's going to be police and the various things they do.
00:27:24.000 It's going to be fire department, it's going to be sanitation.
00:27:28.000 What we're seeing is a complete and total breakdown.
00:27:31.000 These are the, again, society's not going to collapse, but things like this are going to start to happen all the time.
00:27:37.000 In big ways, in small ways, in ways that you might think of already, like a food shortage, but also in ways that you might not think of, like your kid gets shot in elementary school because 400 cops showed up and not one of them was able to get inside the school.
00:27:50.000 So, not only is it not a gun problem, it's a cop problem.
00:27:54.000 And it's not just like it's a police officer problem, this guy, it's a systematic problem with the police.
00:28:01.000 There's three levels there.
00:28:03.000 There's three jurisdictions there federal, state, and local.
00:28:07.000 Hundreds of guys, and not one of them at any level was able to act in a situation which demanded it the most.
00:28:15.000 And then, not only does that happen, but not one of those people gets put on leave.
00:28:20.000 And then, investigators look into this, and you've got 20 kids' blood on the hands of the cops, and the investigator finds out they're culpable for this, and they say, well, but it's not our job to indict anybody.
00:28:36.000 And the police are supposed to punish themselves.
00:28:39.000 And you know, none of these people are going to get punished.
00:28:42.000 And this is just what you get.
00:28:43.000 This is just what you get now.
00:28:46.000 You get what you get in this country from the public sector, from the private sector.
00:28:51.000 You get what you get.
00:28:52.000 You go to Walmart, you fly United, okay?
00:28:56.000 You use ATT, you buy an iPhone, and everything really just sucks.
00:29:02.000 And if you have a problem with it, fuck you.
00:29:04.000 I mean, that's how it is.
00:29:05.000 You have a problem with your internet?
00:29:07.000 Okay, just call ATT.
00:29:09.000 That'll go really well.
00:29:10.000 Oh, you have a problem with your banking service.
00:29:13.000 Your card was flagged wrongly because it was a fraud alert or something's not working.
00:29:19.000 Oh, call Bank of America.
00:29:21.000 I'm sure they'll resolve that expeditiously.
00:29:24.000 You've got some problem with your utilities or with your taxes, just call up the IRS.
00:29:30.000 Call them up.
00:29:30.000 Call up the state secretary of state to resolve your issue.
00:29:34.000 Go to the DMV.
00:29:35.000 They'll resolve your problems.
00:29:37.000 It's a big middle finger.
00:29:39.000 The society is just getting worse all the time.
00:29:42.000 The people that manage the roads and the development, the businesses, the agencies, your work, the schools, people are just not going to be able to do their job efficiently or competently, or sometimes even at all, period.
00:29:59.000 And like this is the world we'll inhabit.
00:30:00.000 And sometimes that will be an annoyance and sometimes it will be catastrophic.
00:30:04.000 This is an example of that kind of thing being catastrophic.
00:30:08.000 You got a bunch of idiots in the police that clearly don't know what they're doing.
00:30:13.000 And when the cops don't know how to do their job, it results in people dying.
00:30:16.000 None of these people will be held accountable.
00:30:18.000 So they will continue pulling you over for speeding, and they will continue enforcing whatever it is that raises money for the state, and that's it.
00:30:27.000 They're not going to save your life, and they're not taking their oath seriously or whatever.
00:30:33.000 And all those people are just going to get away with it, and that's it.
00:30:37.000 And that's honestly like the real problem.
00:30:40.000 So that's what we learned about the Uvalde shooting and the response.
00:30:42.000 Very interesting, though, that they said, oh, well, you having guns is the problem.
00:30:46.000 Really?
00:30:47.000 I think it's that these retard cops having the guns is really the problem, actually.
00:30:52.000 They had all the guns, and then they didn't use them.
00:30:55.000 And then some, you know, so it's like if cops have guns and criminals have guns, like we should all just become criminals.
00:31:01.000 Not saying that we should become criminals, but, you know, there's something, there's a lesson in there, right?
00:31:10.000 That there was a mass murderer inside the school with a gun that he had killing people, and there were cops outside the school with guns waiting for that to finish.
00:31:22.000 And then they killed the guy.
00:31:23.000 And it's the people that are sort of in the middle of that that they're taking the guns away.
00:31:27.000 It was the parents that tried to enter the school when the cops wouldn't that were then arrested.
00:31:33.000 And the cops used their guns against them.
00:31:35.000 This is the definition of anarcho tyranny.
00:31:37.000 And like, this is what's happening in our country.
00:31:41.000 That's like the perfect picture of anarcho tyranny anarchy is the mass shooter inside the school killing kids.
00:31:50.000 And then the tyranny is the cops showing up to watch it.
00:31:53.000 But if you tried to intervene and stop it from happening, they would arrest.
00:31:57.000 You.
00:31:58.000 The cops weren't going to confront the shooter killing kids, but they were going to confront the parents of those kids trying to get in the school to save them.
00:32:07.000 So, in a situation where you've got anarchy and tyranny, there's only two places to be safe, and that's either being a criminal or being the tyrant.
00:32:17.000 And so, you know, we've got to sort of straddle the line in a certain sense because you could see how untenable it is to be one of these fools that's out there with a high confidence and faith in the government.
00:32:30.000 And also, you know, some kind of sense of integrity about crime or something.
00:32:36.000 You know, people like that are just getting raped to death and they're just getting laughed at.
00:32:40.000 Cops are raping them to death and laughing at them.
00:32:42.000 That's what's going on here.
00:32:46.000 So, anyway, so that's the Uvalde shooting.
00:32:48.000 It's not about guns.
00:32:50.000 And what's more, it's never been about guns.
00:32:54.000 And it's also in this particular instance, this is not just some particularity.
00:32:59.000 Okay?
00:33:00.000 Like, the mass shootings are never about guns and it wasn't.
00:33:03.000 In this specific situation, it definitely wasn't about guns.
00:33:07.000 And the thing that it definitely was about, too, which is the failure of the police, is not a particularity.
00:33:14.000 It's not particular just to this.
00:33:17.000 This is something that if you have a sort of broad enough mindset, you'll see the same story playing out everywhere.
00:33:23.000 This is not really different than the cops letting BLM burn the city down.
00:33:29.000 It's also not really different than like the military being in Iraq.
00:33:33.000 And it's also not really different than the IRS losing millions of people's tax returns.
00:33:37.000 And it's also not really different than shortages of baby formula at the store.
00:33:42.000 And it's also, if you really can kind of like zoom out and if you can parse for the commonalities here, what this really amounts to is a bureaucratic failure, is what it is.
00:33:55.000 A systematic breakdown of the managerial state and the bureaucracy.
00:34:01.000 It's not the first time things like this have happened.
00:34:03.000 Even in a state like Texas, where the energy grid broke down completely a couple years ago, if you look closely enough, you find this everywhere.
00:34:12.000 This is going to lead to a catastrophe because it's like, you know, this is a civilization where everything is kind of dependent on everything else.
00:34:20.000 It's very delicate, it's very carefully calibrated.
00:34:23.000 And what I mean by this is, you know, what happens when the cops fail and the energy grid fails and the supply chains fail all at the same time?
00:34:32.000 It's like total mayhem breaks out.
00:34:36.000 If the cops were this disorganized with a situation like this and it's getting worse, what happens when there's like riots in the streets?
00:34:43.000 What happens when there's.
00:34:45.000 A food shortage induced riot in the streets.
00:34:47.000 What happens when you get another perfect storm like we did a couple years ago, where it's BLM and COVID and election?
00:34:55.000 What happens when the intensity begins to ratchet up and there's system wide failure in public and private sector, dominoes collapsing?
00:35:04.000 It's not hard to see where this is headed, you know?
00:35:09.000 And like I said, I continue to not believe in a collapse.
00:35:11.000 I think things are just going to get very, very, very bad.
00:35:14.000 And, uh, Big problems are going to become very difficult to sort of resolve.
00:35:19.000 It's like fires are going to rage for a long time before they're put out if these are the firefighters, so to speak.
00:35:25.000 These are the cops.
00:35:27.000 So, anyway, so that's my take on the 400 cops.
00:35:30.000 The other thing, though, we learned a little bit more about the shooter.
00:35:33.000 And this is an article from the New York Post about the shooter himself.
00:35:37.000 And it validates a lot of what I said initially, too, about shootings.
00:35:42.000 You know, at the same time that everybody was saying it's about guns and we found out that the cops just didn't do anything, I was also saying at the time that.
00:35:52.000 All these school shooters properly understood.
00:35:54.000 Forget even about the cops failing and all of that.
00:35:57.000 Even if the cops succeed, you're still going to have school shootings.
00:36:00.000 Even if the cops are very good and they show up and they kill the shooter very quickly, you still have school shooters all the time.
00:36:09.000 And for the past few weeks, we've been talking about Uvalde and Buffalo, and I think there might have been a couple other major shootings.
00:36:17.000 And the question is always why here?
00:36:19.000 Why do people do such things?
00:36:20.000 Why does it happen with frequency?
00:36:23.000 And I said, well, you have to look at where these people come from and what is the nature of the act.
00:36:30.000 And I think I'm the only person saying this.
00:36:32.000 I don't hear anybody else saying this.
00:36:34.000 It's whether the shooter is an incel or it's something ideological or it's something religious, to kill large amounts of people randomly is fundamentally anti social, it's anti society.
00:36:51.000 And it is an expression of somebody who is anti social.
00:36:55.000 It's different than a murder.
00:36:56.000 It's different than killing somebody you know, which is a personal act.
00:37:00.000 It's killing strangers, which is an impersonal act.
00:37:03.000 And it can be colored by ideology or they all have specificity.
00:37:09.000 But in my opinion, those things are sort of a facade.
00:37:11.000 It's a cover.
00:37:12.000 The underlying and most essential characteristic of the mass killing is that it is an impersonal killing.
00:37:18.000 Killing is an impersonal act.
00:37:21.000 And killing is actually a very personal thing.
00:37:24.000 And they make it impersonal.
00:37:27.000 And like I said, it's antisocial.
00:37:30.000 It's not self contained within a community, a workplace, family.
00:37:35.000 It's against social.
00:37:37.000 It's against people broadly.
00:37:38.000 It's against society.
00:37:40.000 It's antisocial.
00:37:41.000 That's why these people do it.
00:37:43.000 It's because they're sort of alienated and resentful against the society.
00:37:47.000 Not necessarily against whether it's an anti black hate crime, it's not against blacks.
00:37:53.000 Even when it's like a right wing terrorist attack, they say, we're going to kill blacks.
00:37:58.000 It's like, okay, but racism and extreme right wing ideology is sort of like an extremely antisocial thing.
00:38:06.000 It's an extreme taboo.
00:38:07.000 It's something that gets people ostracized.
00:38:09.000 That people identify with the thing that happens to be the most antisocial doesn't mean that that thing in particular is causing it.
00:38:18.000 Think about the character of that.
00:38:20.000 If we lived in a different time, if we lived 100 years ago and somebody was a mass killer because they were a hippie or they were some other Satanist or something, Charles Manson, In other words, do you think Charles Manson got a swastika tattooed on his forehead because he's a national socialist or because he's an anti social nutjob?
00:38:44.000 And that's really what I'm getting at here is that the essential part is that whether it's colored by an ideology or something else, it's really about the relationship between the shooter and the society.
00:38:56.000 Not the shooter and some other person, but the shooter and society at large.
00:39:02.000 Anyway, so I said that and I said, you know, where do you get all these antisocial people?
00:39:06.000 Well, that's a different question.
00:39:08.000 The question is not why do people commit mass shootings or why do mass shootings happen here in like a sort of passive construction?
00:39:15.000 Why do these things happen?
00:39:16.000 Well, things don't happen.
00:39:18.000 People do things.
00:39:20.000 Why do people do things?
00:39:22.000 Well, what is the nature of the thing?
00:39:24.000 What is the nature of the person?
00:39:25.000 And then the question is a little bit different.
00:39:27.000 Where are we getting all these antisocial people?
00:39:30.000 Why are people doing antisocial things?
00:39:32.000 Now, this starts to ring a bell.
00:39:34.000 This starts to, I think, resonate.
00:39:37.000 This is actually a very interesting question that people will have answers for.
00:39:42.000 Why do mass shootings happen?
00:39:43.000 That's sort of a criminology question.
00:39:46.000 Why are there antisocial people?
00:39:48.000 That's something everyone can answer.
00:39:50.000 That's something that anyone and everyone living in America today has an answer for.
00:39:55.000 There's lots of answers for it, and almost all of them are valid.
00:40:00.000 And people give lots of answers for this.
00:40:02.000 It's about drugs, it's about spirituality, it's about bullying, it's about social media, it's about addiction.
00:40:10.000 And not addiction, substance addiction necessarily, but sort of these pathological habits and adaptive behaviors that.
00:40:22.000 People express because they're dislocated in the society.
00:40:26.000 This is something that everybody can relate to.
00:40:28.000 Why do we have antisocial people?
00:40:30.000 Well, most people are antisocial, or most people know many people that are antisocial, and we kind of all get it.
00:40:39.000 And so, as I was saying this when the Uvalde shooting happened, that really the question of mass shootings is a question of something that's a lot more fundamental.
00:40:48.000 And you know, we can't sort of separate ourselves from the mass shooter, we have to look at the mass shooter, and we actually have to identify with the mass shooter.
00:40:56.000 And I'm not saying necessarily to rationalize what they do or justify what they do.
00:41:02.000 I'm not even necessarily saying to have sympathy or empathy for the shooter, but to look at the shooter as a product of our society.
00:41:10.000 And if we want to understand why these people are doing these things, understanding that these people came from this society that we inhabit, we have to sort of look at them and sort of identify with them in a certain sense to understand the problem.
00:41:30.000 And we're confronting something that's a lot more fundamental than violence.
00:41:35.000 We're confronting anti social alienation.
00:41:39.000 And then you'll find that the mass shooter has a lot in common with a lot of other extreme behaviors in the society.
00:41:45.000 And that's people that commit suicide.
00:41:47.000 And that is people that join extreme political movements, actually.
00:41:51.000 And that is people that are addicted to drugs, like opioids.
00:41:54.000 And that is true of people that get hooked on all kinds of different things.
00:41:59.000 There's a lot of pathological, antisocial behaviors, and the mass killer is just the most deranged, sociopathic, extreme case of that.
00:42:10.000 But it's all sort of drawing from the same pool.
00:42:15.000 And I said that a couple months ago that if we want to get to the bottom of the mass killer, we have to get to the bottom of spiritual, social crisis in the country.
00:42:24.000 It's happening here because this is the most dislocated society ever.
00:42:29.000 And if we want to stop mass shootings, you're not going to do it at the gun store.
00:42:33.000 You're not going to do it at the barrier, at the path, the port of entry of a building or school or something.
00:42:42.000 You're going to do it in the home.
00:42:44.000 You're going to do it where the shooters are born and where they're made, where they're educated, where they go to school, in their bedrooms.
00:42:52.000 That's where you're going to stop the mass shootings by preventing mass shooters from being created.
00:42:58.000 And they are being created.
00:43:00.000 What we've learned about the mass shooter basically validates all of this.
00:43:04.000 This is a report about the shooter from the New York Post.
00:43:08.000 It says, The Uvalde teen school shooter griped about being bullied in fourth grade at Robb Elementary just weeks before slaughtering 19 fourth graders and two teachers in his old classroom there.
00:43:24.000 And this is according to that same investigative report.
00:43:29.000 So, weeks before the shooting, he was complaining about being bullied in fourth grade.
00:43:35.000 And then he shoots up his fourth grade classroom.
00:43:38.000 You think there's a connection there?
00:43:41.000 And people were quick to say, he's a tranny.
00:43:44.000 Do you remember that?
00:43:45.000 She's trans.
00:43:46.000 He's a Democrat.
00:43:47.000 He's a Republican.
00:43:49.000 None of these people are Democrats or Republicans.
00:43:51.000 They're all deeply wounded and sick people.
00:43:56.000 That's what they are.
00:43:57.000 That's what all the mass shooters have in common there's something wrong with them, and they're deeply hurt, isolated people.
00:44:05.000 That's every single one of them.
00:44:07.000 Oh, they're a Democrat.
00:44:08.000 Really?
00:44:10.000 No, I don't think that people are thinking about like Joe Biden.
00:44:14.000 I don't think any 18 year old that goes and shoots a bunch of fourth graders was thinking about like Joe Biden before they did it.
00:44:23.000 They were like, they were watching now this videos on Facebook about climate change, and then they're like, you know what?
00:44:29.000 I'm going to go kill a bunch of fourth graders.
00:44:31.000 I don't think that's actually construction.
00:44:33.000 What leads up to that moment, it's again, isolation is a key thing.
00:44:39.000 And what is isolation?
00:44:41.000 It's cut off from the society.
00:44:43.000 What is isolation?
00:44:45.000 It's cultivation of resentment against what?
00:44:50.000 The loner against the society.
00:44:52.000 Cultivation of alienation, one individual being an alien in the society.
00:44:59.000 That's what it is.
00:45:00.000 So, anyway, it says he was routinely teased by friends who called him a school shooter.
00:45:07.000 And customers of the gun store where he went to buy his weapons a week before the massacre told the FBI he looked like a school shooter.
00:45:14.000 The report released on Sunday also revealed that an ex girlfriend told investigators.
00:45:19.000 That Ramos once confided in her that one of his mom's former boyfriends molested him at an early age, but his mother didn't believe him.
00:45:28.000 It was no coincidence that Ramos attacked his former fourth grade classroom.
00:45:32.000 Before the shooting, he told a friend about how the year had been traumatic for him.
00:45:38.000 Members of his family told investigators that Ramos was bullied during that year over a speech impediment.
00:45:44.000 Once, a student tied his shoelaces together and he fell on his face.
00:45:48.000 Students also mocked him for his short haircut and for wearing the same clothes day after day, which he did because his Family couldn't afford new ones.
00:45:55.000 His old teacher was in the building at the time of his deadly attack in May, although in a different classroom.
00:46:01.000 Ramos had a difficult home life that didn't provide much comfort as he struggled in school.
00:46:06.000 His mother had a history of drug abuse and had two misdemeanors one for theft and another for a family violence assault.
00:46:14.000 Ramos was born in North Dakota but moved to Uvalde with his mother and she split from his father early in his life.
00:46:20.000 His father was largely absent.
00:46:22.000 He was raised in large part by his grandmother.
00:46:26.000 Celia Gonzalez, who he shot in the face before carrying out his rampage.
00:46:30.000 He had moved in with her in early 2022 after a fight with his mother.
00:46:34.000 Gonzalez was only released from the hospital last week.
00:46:38.000 That's the grandmother.
00:46:40.000 As students returned to in person learning after the COVID lockdown, Ramos dropped out of school.
00:46:45.000 By age 17, he had only completed freshman year of high school and suffered poor grades.
00:46:52.000 He also had an eating disorder.
00:46:54.000 During this time, he took a dark path, said the report.
00:46:57.000 An ex boyfriend of his mother described the attacker to an investigating Texas Ranger as a loner who punched holes in the walls of his room after arguments with her.
00:47:05.000 With no driver's license or car, he was left alone and spent much of his time online playing violent video games.
00:47:12.000 Ramos' girlfriend at the time said he was lonely and depressed, and that the few friends he had called him a school shooter.
00:47:19.000 When she broke up with him, he harassed her and her friends.
00:47:22.000 It was during this time that Ramos began to demonstrate interest in gore and violent sex.
00:47:27.000 Watching and sometimes sharing gruesome videos and images of suicides, beheadings, accidents, and sending unexpected explicit messages to others online.
00:47:37.000 Ramos also hungered for fame and notoriety.
00:47:40.000 After receiving a few views on TikTok and YouTube videos he made, Ramos bragged about being famous.
00:47:46.000 On the French streaming platform Yubo, the attacker spoke enviously of publicity given to a murderer and an animal abuser whose story became widely known after a Netflix documentary.
00:47:57.000 At 17, he unsuccessfully asked two people to buy him guns.
00:48:01.000 And his family was aware he was trying to get his hands on weapons before he legally could.
00:48:05.000 Most chillingly, he became obsessed with school shootings.
00:48:09.000 On Yubo, online friends called him Yubo's school shooter.
00:48:14.000 It says, Those with whom he played games taunted him with a similar nickname so often that it became a running joke.
00:48:21.000 Even those he personally knew in his local chat group began calling him the school shooter after he shared pictures of himself wearing the plate carrier he had bought and posing with the BB gun.
00:48:32.000 And it's like, okay, so at this point, is anybody like surprised that these things happen?
00:48:39.000 I mean, everybody likes to say, oh my gosh, why do these things happen?
00:48:43.000 And it's like, how many people in this man's life clocked this guy as a school shooter?
00:48:50.000 And then this thing happens.
00:48:53.000 Because what you could glean from the report, the guy is a nutcase.
00:48:58.000 He's molested by his dad, perhaps.
00:49:02.000 He's uprooted from the town that he grew up in.
00:49:06.000 His mom's on drugs, raised by a single mom.
00:49:09.000 There's domestic violence going on.
00:49:11.000 The mom's a criminal, apparently.
00:49:14.000 He's bullied in school.
00:49:15.000 He's poor.
00:49:16.000 He has an eating disorder.
00:49:18.000 He drops out of school, clearly, he may have some kind of a learning disability, if not so dysfunctional.
00:49:24.000 He's getting held back for years in high school.
00:49:28.000 He's telling people, friends, family, that he wants to buy guns at an early age.
00:49:34.000 His friends in school and online call him a school shooter.
00:49:37.000 His girlfriend.
00:49:39.000 Says that he's interested in violent sex and gore and wants to kill people.
00:49:43.000 It's like, so the guy is totally deranged.
00:49:47.000 That's one.
00:49:48.000 And then two, everybody knows he's deranged.
00:49:50.000 That's two.
00:49:51.000 Three, he's encountered dozens of people that all clock him with all this information together as a potential school shooter.
00:50:00.000 And then, surprisingly, this deranged maniac who dropped out of school to stay in his room.
00:50:10.000 Who got molested and has nobody in his life goes and buys the guns that he said he would buy and shoots up the school the way everybody said he would, like the people that he idolized before he did it.
00:50:26.000 And this gets back to how could you have prevented the shooting?
00:50:30.000 Well, you couldn't have prevented the shooting at the point of sale of the firearm.
00:50:35.000 Why?
00:50:35.000 Because this man was determined to get a gun.
00:50:41.000 And the guy's not even that smart.
00:50:43.000 Clearly, he's got a ninth grade education.
00:50:46.000 He's poor.
00:50:48.000 Yet somehow he saved up enough money and he wasn't clocked by a mental health professional or by law enforcement somehow.
00:50:59.000 So he gets a gun.
00:51:00.000 You're not going to stop this mass shooter at the point of sale of the firearm.
00:51:04.000 He was asking other people to try to buy the gun.
00:51:06.000 He saved up all his money.
00:51:08.000 Eventually, he just went in and bought it.
00:51:11.000 What common sense gun law is going to prevent a lunatic like this?
00:51:15.000 If it wasn't a gun, you know what he'd do?
00:51:17.000 He'd get in a car and drive through a crowd.
00:51:18.000 If it wasn't a gun, he'd bring a knife.
00:51:20.000 If it wasn't an assault rifle, he'd bring a handgun.
00:51:23.000 This is a person determined to carry out an infamous act of violence.
00:51:29.000 The time to stop it is not at the point of sale, it's not at the door to the school.
00:51:36.000 Because guess what?
00:51:37.000 He got into school and within minutes the cops showed up and they couldn't do anything about it.
00:51:42.000 You think that you could have stopped this killing from happening if this person had like one person looking out for him?
00:51:51.000 If there was any semblance of a social fabric that could catch an individual like this, maybe not even catch him in the sense of take care of him in hospitality, but even just flag this individual to law enforcement or something like this.
00:52:11.000 This is a person who, for 18 years, 17, however old he was before the shooting, has been systematically failed by every person in his life, by his father, by his mother.
00:52:23.000 By his grandmother, by his peers, by his teachers.
00:52:28.000 This is a person who is crashing through the society, a kid.
00:52:34.000 And again, this is not to exculpate him.
00:52:36.000 It's not to say that he's not responsible.
00:52:40.000 It's not to say he's a kid, he didn't know what he did.
00:52:43.000 But this is a person who clearly has had problems his entire life and is not even an adult and commits a shooting as an adolescent.
00:52:51.000 On some level, yeah, of course the shooting bears responsibility, most of it.
00:52:55.000 But on some level, If the society is churning out adolescents that go out and kill people, something is wrong with the society too.
00:53:03.000 The society bears responsibility as well.
00:53:06.000 It is one thing if a 40 year old man does something.
00:53:09.000 Certainly, society bears some responsibility for any individual that it produces on some level.
00:53:15.000 A totally crazy adult person, significantly less.
00:53:19.000 But if you've got many adolescents, you've got 18 year olds going out and killing people, I'm sorry, but that's on the parents.
00:53:28.000 Some of it, not all of it.
00:53:30.000 But that's on the parents.
00:53:32.000 That's on the school.
00:53:33.000 That's on the peers.
00:53:34.000 That's on the society.
00:53:35.000 More than anybody, it's on the killer, obviously.
00:53:38.000 More than any of those people, the person that pulls the trigger is culpable.
00:53:42.000 That goes without saying.
00:53:43.000 But people want to blame the gun manufacturer before they blame the kid's parents, before they blame the community, before they blame every person that this individual had a run in with.
00:53:55.000 And you know what?
00:53:56.000 Some people are malicious and some people are insane.
00:54:00.000 And it's not always a person's responsibility to.
00:54:04.000 Get involved with a crazy person.
00:54:08.000 But it is to say that the society is quite literally bankrupt if it's churning out adolescents that rather than wanting to participate in society or contribute to society, want to burn society.
00:54:22.000 You know, I mean, if that doesn't tell you there's a problem, and I think there's some sort of like avoidant behavior in people that people want to look at school shooters and look away.
00:54:34.000 Or distance themselves from that.
00:54:36.000 But it's like the school shooters are very much a direct product of the society that we're all in.
00:54:42.000 They came from it.
00:54:43.000 They were born of parents.
00:54:45.000 They went to school.
00:54:46.000 In some cases, they went to your school or they went to your work.
00:54:50.000 Okay?
00:54:51.000 And it's like people like to sort of separate themselves out and say, oh, what a monster.
00:54:54.000 How could a person do that?
00:54:56.000 And it is, I'm not trying to make it too relatable, obviously, because of course, it takes a lot more than having a difficult life for a person to want to go and kill people.
00:55:06.000 I'm not saying, hey, you all made him do this because you're mean to him.
00:55:10.000 You know, there are some people who get bullied, and not all of them go and kill people.
00:55:14.000 It takes a special evil to go and do something like that.
00:55:18.000 But it is to say, society is producing a lot of these people.
00:55:24.000 And it is those individuals' fault, but the society is definitely creating a culture which is sensational.
00:55:31.000 And when I say sensational, it's like sensing.
00:55:34.000 It's not just a sensational, but it's also a sensual society.
00:55:39.000 And it's also a society that is.
00:55:42.000 Devoid of any kind of grounding in meaning.
00:55:44.000 It's a very impersonal, cold society.
00:55:48.000 Where's the warmth?
00:55:50.000 You know, where's the warmth anymore in the society that might get a person to turn away from that, that might coddle a person who has problems?
00:55:59.000 Where's Christmas?
00:56:00.000 Where is the church?
00:56:02.000 Where is the affection?
00:56:04.000 Where is the community?
00:56:07.000 It's a cold, it's a sensual and a sensational society, but it's also cold and cruel and impersonal and bureaucratic.
00:56:15.000 And so here's a guy who's subject to cruelty, like some people are in grade school.
00:56:22.000 And there's an intervention from the teacher, from the principal.
00:56:25.000 We all know how that goes.
00:56:28.000 It's cruel society.
00:56:30.000 And a person with a disastrous home life, broken family, broken home.
00:56:37.000 And it's like, so you get a person like this, and it's almost an inevitability that they will carry out an act like this.
00:56:45.000 They call them a school shooter.
00:56:46.000 People call these types of people time bombs.
00:56:49.000 That is because without an intervention, everybody can see where that is heading.
00:56:53.000 Everybody can see the negative feedback loop.
00:56:56.000 Nobody could see the intervention.
00:56:58.000 Nobody could see the sort of redirect or the alternative course.
00:57:04.000 Everybody sees where something like that is going.
00:57:09.000 And for a person like that to not be set on that path, we all know what that takes.
00:57:15.000 There'd be less shooters if there were less single moms, there'd be less shooters if there was more church, there'd be.
00:57:21.000 I should say fewer, fewer shooters if there was a real community, if people, if children weren't being given to an impersonal bureaucratic public school system.
00:57:33.000 Like, how horrible is that?
00:57:34.000 Are we really surprised that public schools are creating school shooters?
00:57:38.000 Is that like a surprise to anybody that went to a public school?
00:57:42.000 That children, they'll be three or four, and they're being interned in a public school from morning and if they're in some kind of after school program until late at night.
00:57:54.000 Public school teachers and with their peers, like, and they do that for their entire life in their formative years.
00:58:00.000 And people are like, wow, why did these people become cold, calculating killers?
00:58:04.000 Why did these people become cold, sociopathic, mass murderers?
00:58:08.000 It's like, well, you know, kids are being born without moms and dads, and then they're being turned over to the jungle of public school, and they're being exposed to sensual, sensational mass media, and none of them believe in God, none of them are receiving a moral instruction, and then they're consuming.
00:58:26.000 Media, which is about sex and drugs and killing, and then they turn 18 and they drop off the face of the earth.
00:58:33.000 They drop out of school or they leave high school and they're in their room all day.
00:58:38.000 And then sometimes one of those people comes out of the room with a gun and kills everybody.
00:58:42.000 It's like that's the society that's creating these people.
00:58:47.000 That's exactly what I said months ago.
00:58:49.000 It's not about the gun, obviously.
00:58:51.000 It's about where are all these people coming from?
00:58:54.000 Where are all these adolescents coming from that want to mass murder their teachers?
00:59:00.000 And children.
00:59:03.000 They're coming from your school.
00:59:05.000 They're coming from a place that we all are very familiar with.
00:59:08.000 It's there.
00:59:10.000 It's familiar.
00:59:12.000 It's in close proximity.
00:59:12.000 It's there.
00:59:14.000 People, that's something that happens over there.
00:59:17.000 There's weird people doing these things.
00:59:19.000 It's just if we get the guns out of their hands, take the guns out of their hands.
00:59:25.000 How about talk to those people?
00:59:28.000 How about, and I'm saying, you know, sort of like metaphorically, look at this person's life.
00:59:33.000 If we just took the gun away from this person, everything would have been fine.
00:59:37.000 Does anyone believe that?
00:59:38.000 If we just took the gun away from this individual, then we would have been fine.
00:59:43.000 No, we wouldn't!
00:59:45.000 Even if you took the gun away from this person and he didn't get behind the wheel of a car or get a knife, this person would still be in the world being a miserable maniac.
00:59:54.000 And there's probably a lot more people just like him, but that just wouldn't kill kids.
00:59:58.000 Instead, they're killing themselves.
01:00:00.000 That's another antisocial act putting a shotgun to your head and pulling the trigger.
01:00:05.000 That's another antisocial, violent, dramatic, sensational act.
01:00:10.000 Infamous.
01:00:12.000 So is people that are going out there and getting addicted to drugs.
01:00:15.000 And so are so many other behaviors like this.
01:00:19.000 Taking the gun away from the people that want them has nothing to do with the problem.
01:00:26.000 And this proves it.
01:00:28.000 Take the gun away and the problem remains.
01:00:31.000 Not the problem of kids getting killed.
01:00:33.000 I guess that would be good, although you can't take the guns away.
01:00:37.000 But you still have a problem.
01:00:41.000 So that's the Ramos Uvalde shooter.
01:00:46.000 It's a horrible situation, but this is our failing, dying society.
01:00:51.000 It's what it is.
01:00:52.000 Very sadly.
01:00:53.000 And we've got to replace it with a cult of love and a cult of life.
01:01:00.000 We live in a deaf cult right now.
01:01:02.000 And I know that sounds like a deaf cult.
01:01:04.000 Yeah.
01:01:05.000 Yeah.
01:01:05.000 When public schools create people that go back to school and kill kids, Yeah, we live in a death cult.
01:01:11.000 It's a horror show.
01:01:12.000 Society is a nightmare.
01:01:14.000 Let's just be plain about it.
01:01:15.000 Society is a freaking nightmare.
01:01:19.000 It is a nightmare, and for some people, it never ends.
01:01:23.000 For people like this, and for many others that live their quiet lives of desperation, society is an absolute nightmare without redemption, the way that it currently is.
01:01:37.000 And that's why the only answer is to turn that around and to make life worth living again.
01:01:41.000 You know, as a Catholic, We don't completely reject the world.
01:01:45.000 We say that there is truth and good and beauty in the world.
01:01:49.000 We're not Puritans.
01:01:50.000 We're not, you know, we're not sort of like rejecting the world in itself.
01:01:56.000 We can make the world a pleasant place to live.
01:02:00.000 We can't make it utopia, but we can make it a better place to live.
01:02:05.000 And that's the only way to turn this around is to replace all of these things and impersonal bureaucracy with a very personal community and replace.
01:02:15.000 Sort of a sensual, sensational society with a rational society, a rational and a good society.
01:02:24.000 Got to replace single parent households with households where you have two parents and the mother's raising their kids.
01:02:29.000 There's not a lot of school shooters out there that say that their mother loved them.
01:02:33.000 You know?
01:02:34.000 Not a lot of school shooters out there that say that their father was there for them.
01:02:38.000 Right?
01:02:40.000 Go figure.
01:02:43.000 So that's what needs to be done.
01:02:45.000 But taking away the guns, I mean, that's not going to fix the problem.
01:02:48.000 And even if it did, it wouldn't fix the real problem.
01:02:52.000 But I want to move on.
01:02:52.000 So anyway, that's that.
01:02:53.000 I want to get into.
01:02:57.000 I want to get into this gay marriage story.
01:03:00.000 And then we got to move on to our super chats.
01:03:03.000 But I want to talk about this gay marriage story.
01:03:07.000 They're making everybody gay.
01:03:09.000 That's what the bill says.
01:03:10.000 There's this new bill in Congress which just passed, which says that everyone has to become a homosexual.
01:03:15.000 And I don't know how I feel about that.
01:03:18.000 But no, kidding.
01:03:20.000 The bill is about gay marriage.
01:03:23.000 And so we were very white pilled about this.
01:03:28.000 Back when the abortion decision was made back in June, Justice Clarence Thomas, in his concurring opinion, repealing Roe v. Wade, overturning Roe v. Wade, said that it would also be warranted with the same premise to overturn the decision that allowed gay marriage as well as even sodomy.
01:03:51.000 And I think contraceptives was the other one.
01:03:55.000 And then recently, Ted Cruz said that he thinks that gay marriage should be overturned.
01:03:59.000 It's bad.
01:04:00.000 Constitutional precedent that gay marriage should be in place.
01:04:03.000 And so, in response to this, the Congress has gone ahead with the aid of 47 Republicans and passed a bill which will enshrine gay marriage into federal law.
01:04:16.000 And so, this is the story.
01:04:17.000 It says The House on Tuesday passed a bill that would recognize same sex marriages at the federal level with a bipartisan coalition supporting a measure that addresses growing concerns that the Supreme Court could nullify marriage equality.
01:04:33.000 Marriage equality, they call it, which is like the dumbest.
01:04:37.000 Marriage equality.
01:04:39.000 What does that even mean?
01:04:40.000 Marriage equality?
01:04:41.000 What does that even mean?
01:04:44.000 They'll just attach equality to everything.
01:04:46.000 I like cupcake equality.
01:04:48.000 I want a cupcake right now.
01:04:50.000 I want hot dog equality.
01:04:52.000 I want a hot dog now.
01:04:54.000 What does that even mean?
01:04:56.000 Marriage equality equals marriages?
01:05:01.000 There's only one kind of marriage.
01:05:04.000 That's like saying, I want that.
01:05:06.000 That'd be like if a woman said, I want penis equality.
01:05:09.000 I want a penis too.
01:05:10.000 It's like you can't have one.
01:05:12.000 You're a girl.
01:05:13.000 You like marriage equality.
01:05:15.000 Well, we want to have a marriage too.
01:05:17.000 By definition, you can't.
01:05:21.000 You can't have that.
01:05:23.000 A marriage is between a man and a woman.
01:05:27.000 Two guys can say, like, we're going to have sex exclusively and we're going to live together.
01:05:34.000 And, you know, on all that, but that doesn't make it a marriage.
01:05:38.000 Like, you're just sort of like, you know, insofar as a gay man does that, you're acting like a married person, but that doesn't make it so.
01:05:50.000 You know, it's something that cannot be.
01:05:54.000 Anyway, but we'll get into that in a minute.
01:05:56.000 But you use marriage equality, it's like, what does that even mean?
01:05:59.000 These things don't even make any sense.
01:06:02.000 It says 47 Republicans join Democrats in backing the bill.
01:06:05.000 The Respect for Marriage Act, which would codify the federal protections for same sex couples that were put in place in 2015, when the Supreme Court ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges established same sex marriage as a right under the 14th Amendment.
01:06:24.000 Still, more than three quarters of the party opposed the bill, which passed in a vote of 267 to 157.
01:06:33.000 The measures face an uncertain path in the evenly divided Senate, where it was not clear if it could draw the Support of 10 Republicans needed to advance the bill.
01:06:42.000 House Democratic leaders opted to move forward with the bill after the Supreme Court's decision overturning abortion rights raised worries about the prospect that the justices might revisit cases that affirm same sex marriage rights and the right to contraceptives.
01:06:55.000 In the Senate, Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York and the majority leader, did not commit to bringing up the measure, but he said he was going to look at everything that we can do to deal with these issues following the court's decision overturning abortion rights in Dobbs versus Jackson, Women's Health Organization.
01:07:12.000 Over the weekend, Senator Ted Cruz said he agreed, asserting in an interview for his podcast that Obergefell and Roe v. Wade had been wrongly decided and that both had ignored two centuries of our nation's history, but added that overturning same sex marriage, which he called clearly wrong, could be disruptive and would be unlikely.
01:07:33.000 He said, You've got a ton of people who have entered into gay marriages, and it would be more than a little chaotic for the court to do something that somehow disrupted those marriages that had been entered into in accordance with the law.
01:07:46.000 Which You know, so there's so much here.
01:07:50.000 And in the first place, just on the issue about gay marriage, gay marriage is another sort of ancillary here.
01:07:59.000 Gay marriage is very similar to transgender bathroom, transgender girl sports, drag queen story hour.
01:08:08.000 It's one of these things which is really downstream from the fundamentals.
01:08:13.000 It's not really a question of whether you support so called marriage equality or not, it's do you believe in.
01:08:19.000 What do you think homosexuality is?
01:08:23.000 Because if you think that homosexuality is comparable to so called heterosexuality, then you will support gay marriage.
01:08:34.000 And you will support so called gay marriages, married couples, having the same benefits, government benefits, as heterosexual married couples.
01:08:47.000 If that is what you believe about homosexuality.
01:08:50.000 If you believe that homosexuality is pathological, antisocial behavior and morally wrong and a corrupt, sort of filthy thing, then obviously there is no such thing as a gay marriage.
01:09:03.000 You know, gay people can like kiss each other and they can like live together and they can have some degree of exclusivity in sodomizing each other, but that doesn't make it a marriage.
01:09:17.000 You know, what is a marriage?
01:09:19.000 Well, men and women get married.
01:09:21.000 Married, meaning they become one.
01:09:24.000 That's what a marriage is.
01:09:26.000 Two people becoming one.
01:09:28.000 Well, they've got to be two different pieces of the same whole.
01:09:28.000 How?
01:09:33.000 Biologically, temperamentally, psychologically, spiritually.
01:09:37.000 That is how a man and a woman become married.
01:09:41.000 They're not like becoming friends.
01:09:43.000 They're not becoming partners.
01:09:45.000 They're not becoming like a tag team where they live together.
01:09:48.000 They're becoming one, a marriage.
01:09:52.000 When we say we marry things together, it means that they're becoming inseparably bound together.
01:09:58.000 Now, if two gay guys agree that they're only going to have anal sex with each other and not have anal sex with other gay men, they're not becoming one.
01:10:09.000 They're not being bound together.
01:10:12.000 Again, this is just sort of like an agreement.
01:10:15.000 It's just sort of like a contract, I guess.
01:10:18.000 That's just sort of like a personal dynamic.
01:10:20.000 But marriage is unique because of the complementarity of men and women at every level.
01:10:26.000 And that's why only a man and a woman can get married.
01:10:30.000 And by the way, that would be true, even if to some extent you weren't religious, because it's biological.
01:10:41.000 Everyone must admit, straight people, gay people, religious people, not religious people, that the relationship between a man and a woman is unique.
01:10:51.000 It is unique, it is not the same as the relationships, friendly or homosexual, between men.
01:11:00.000 And the relationship between a man and a woman as husband and wife, which creates children, that's the purpose of the marriage.
01:11:08.000 By becoming married and becoming one flesh, become this union of a man and a woman, they then become parents.
01:11:17.000 They have kids.
01:11:18.000 They're that child's mother and father.
01:11:20.000 That's sort of a product of their unity.
01:11:23.000 That is something that lesbians or gay men cannot do.
01:11:26.000 That's the purpose of a marriage.
01:11:29.000 It is to sanction.
01:11:30.000 And it is to moderate the sexuality of men and women.
01:11:36.000 And so, you know, gay people can sort of act out what a marriage looks like externally, but they can't get married.
01:11:45.000 It's not the same.
01:11:48.000 You know, I could tape wheels to my hands and feet, and I could try and like skate down the street like I'm a car, but that, you know, I'm acting like a car.
01:11:58.000 Look at me, guys, I'm acting like a car.
01:12:01.000 You could cut a hole in my side and pour gasoline inside me, and I could skate down the road with wheels on my hands and feet, and I could put like a piece of glass on my face, like a windshield, and say, Look at me, I'm acting like a car.
01:12:14.000 It's like, Yeah, but you're not like in the essential ways you're not a car.
01:12:19.000 And same thing, a man can put his penis in another man's butthole and say, Look, we're doing it like married men and women do it.
01:12:29.000 It's like, But that's not the same.
01:12:31.000 That's literally not the same, you know?
01:12:36.000 Because a man's butthole is not a woman's vagina.
01:12:39.000 Okay?
01:12:40.000 And inside of a man's butthole is poop, not eggs.
01:12:45.000 So, you know, men can do that.
01:12:48.000 They shouldn't, but they could do that.
01:12:50.000 But you can't say, oh, we're doing it just like these guys.
01:12:53.000 No, you're not.
01:12:54.000 That's not the same at all.
01:12:57.000 And, you know, two guys could, like, dress up in tuxedos and put rings on each other's fingers.
01:13:03.000 But that's not a wedding.
01:13:05.000 A wedding happens in a Catholic church, those are the only weddings that happen.
01:13:09.000 It was the only real marriages that happened in church with a priest.
01:13:17.000 It's not the same.
01:13:18.000 It's a farce.
01:13:19.000 It's like a big farce, like a big joke.
01:13:23.000 You know?
01:13:25.000 So, anyway, so like all the other issues, it's really not about, like, there's not a lot of gray area here.
01:13:33.000 People say it's like this very difficult issue.
01:13:35.000 It so isn't.
01:13:37.000 Because, again, it all goes back to what do you think about homosexuality?
01:13:40.000 If you think that homosexuality.
01:13:43.000 Is not different in fundamental ways than so called heterosexuality.
01:13:48.000 And I'm saying that in quotes because it's like that's just sexuality.
01:13:51.000 There's sexuality and then there is sort of deviant homosexuality.
01:13:56.000 Human sexuality is men and women, okay?
01:13:59.000 That's why, you know, when people say heterosexuality, it's almost like a way to otherize normality.
01:14:06.000 In the same way that people say cisgender, like there's transgender and cisgender.
01:14:10.000 It's like, no, there's fucking real people and crazy people, okay?
01:14:14.000 And it's like homosexuals and heterosexuals, it's like, no, there's like normal people and then there's like faggots, okay?
01:14:22.000 And I don't mean to be like super mean about it, but it's like that's just what it is.
01:14:26.000 There's like people that are like normal, and then there's people where there's like something wrong with them.
01:14:32.000 It's not normal for like men and men and women and women to want to do that, at least exclusively in the way that they do that.
01:14:46.000 There's nothing normal about that.
01:14:48.000 So there's sexuality, and then there's sort of deviancy.
01:14:52.000 So that's why I'm putting that in quotes.
01:14:53.000 But the point being is if you think that.
01:14:56.000 Homosexuality and so called heterosexuality are comparable, then you will say that there is nothing unique about the so called marriage of a man and a woman that cannot be the same of two guys or two girls.
01:15:10.000 Again, but if you have our view of it, then you would say it's a farce, it's a contradiction in terms.
01:15:16.000 And so then, as far as how is this applied legally, well, you might say something like, you know, can gay people form a contract?
01:15:26.000 I mean, I don't know.
01:15:27.000 In terms of like civil law, Can two people agree that they would have like visitation rights or so?
01:15:33.000 I know that's like one of the issues.
01:15:35.000 You know, I don't know.
01:15:37.000 I don't think that that should be encouraged, but you know, people can draw up contracts for all kinds of things.
01:15:43.000 I mean, you could do that with a friend, you could do that with anybody.
01:15:43.000 I don't see why that.
01:15:46.000 But to say that it's a marriage, it shouldn't be called that.
01:15:50.000 It shouldn't be given the same benefits.
01:15:53.000 It shouldn't be imposed on churches.
01:15:55.000 It shouldn't be imposed on people in the wedding industry.
01:16:00.000 And probably.
01:16:02.000 People should be precluded from doing those kinds of things.
01:16:05.000 It should be restricted in some form.
01:16:07.000 But anyway, so that's the issue at hand, though.
01:16:09.000 It's really more about the fundamentals.
01:16:11.000 The same thing with trans issues, it's all downstream from fundamentals.
01:16:18.000 Do you think that men can become women?
01:16:20.000 Because if you do, then saying that men can become pregnant is not an outlandish statement.
01:16:24.000 If you don't, then it's crazy.
01:16:27.000 And the same thing is true about gay marriage.
01:16:29.000 Now, on this in particular, there's more to the story, of course, because you've got this bill and it's a Supreme Court issue.
01:16:36.000 And what the bill seeks to do is that if gay marriage is overturned by the Supreme Court, then lots of states have laws on the books that ban gay marriage.
01:16:47.000 So all the gay people that got married in those states, their marriages will become nullified by the existing state laws on the books.
01:16:54.000 And so what this bill does is it recognizes those marriages at the federal level so that if gay marriage is overturned and the laws on the books nullify those gay marriages at the federal level, they will still be valid.
01:17:08.000 That's what the law does.
01:17:10.000 And it was supported by 47 Republicans.
01:17:14.000 This is what I mean.
01:17:15.000 I said this the other night Republicans can talk about grooming and they can talk about the trans swimmer and all that.
01:17:21.000 But it's like, if you support gay marriage, don't tell me your opinion about groomers because you basically agree with homosexuality and you agree with transgenderism.
01:17:32.000 You're just playing on these sort of touchstone battles about those things for votes because you really don't disagree with them in principle.
01:17:41.000 You sort of disagree with them in Effectively in practice because it has its political benefit.
01:17:46.000 So, Josh Hawley could act like a total asshole and say, Duh, you think that men could get pregnant?
01:17:53.000 And it's like, you could say that all you want, but you also probably will say that transgender people are real.
01:18:01.000 So, if you say that transgender people are real, then logically, you know, men can get pregnant.
01:18:06.000 It proceeds from that.
01:18:08.000 So, you really believe that ultimately.
01:18:10.000 Don't tell me, that's crazy.
01:18:12.000 You think that men could get pregnant?
01:18:13.000 You're the idiot that thinks men can become women.
01:18:16.000 So, how is that black professor any crazier than you?
01:18:21.000 She's just taking it to its logical conclusion.
01:18:24.000 You're ignoring that for politics.
01:18:26.000 And same thing with these Republicans 47 Republicans.
01:18:29.000 How many of them have talked about the don't say gay bill or those kinds of things?
01:18:34.000 Again, you know, I don't want to hear them say, oh, groomer this and groomer that.
01:18:38.000 It's like you still support homosexuality.
01:18:41.000 You probably support people being taught about homosexuality after the fourth grade.
01:18:47.000 So what's a disagreement?
01:18:48.000 You disagree with the left about at what age it's appropriate for children to learn that adolescence is okay?
01:18:55.000 You're the same.
01:18:56.000 You're the same.
01:18:58.000 So I don't want to hear that.
01:19:01.000 Let's get back to basics.
01:19:03.000 You know, what is moral human sexuality?
01:19:06.000 What is licit moral human sexuality?
01:19:10.000 It is men and women within marriage for the purpose of procreation.
01:19:15.000 That's it.
01:19:16.000 It's not contraceptives.
01:19:18.000 It's not pornography.
01:19:19.000 It's not masturbation.
01:19:21.000 It's not adultery.
01:19:23.000 It's not casual sex.
01:19:24.000 It's certainly not homosexuality or transgenderism.
01:19:30.000 And it's really not any more complicated than that.
01:19:32.000 It doesn't need to be.
01:19:33.000 And then all these other issues downstream from that make a lot more sense because otherwise you can't make sense of it.
01:19:39.000 What do you do with the transgender athlete?
01:19:42.000 Do you let the transgender athlete compete with the girls?
01:19:45.000 No, because she'll beat them all because she's still kind of a guy.
01:19:48.000 She's, she, whatever.
01:19:49.000 The transgender person is still kind of a guy.
01:19:52.000 So do you make that person compete with the guys?
01:19:54.000 Well, no, because that person identifies as a girl.
01:19:57.000 So what do you do with them?
01:19:59.000 Stick them in the trans league?
01:20:00.000 Well, they're like 0.1% of the population.
01:20:03.000 There's not enough players.
01:20:07.000 So it's like the problem there is there's no such thing as transgender people.
01:20:14.000 It's a very complicated issue because it's like we created this whole new category of people and they're not really men.
01:20:21.000 Well, they are men in fundamental ways, but they say they're not, but they're also not women.
01:20:26.000 So it's like, well, what do we do with them?
01:20:28.000 Well, there's not really a lot of good answers other than if there's no genders or if genders can just sort of swap, then let's just combine the men and women playing sports.
01:20:36.000 Can't do that.
01:20:38.000 Why do we even keep them segregated?
01:20:40.000 Nobody knows anymore.
01:20:41.000 We don't know why anything is the way it is anymore.
01:20:45.000 We have to remake the entire society with the goal of abolishing the concept of gender.
01:20:49.000 If we concede that men can just become women, there's nothing essential about maleness or femaleness.
01:20:55.000 You have to abolish the whole thing.
01:20:56.000 You have to rewrite society.
01:20:58.000 And that happens at the level of where these people go to the bathroom, where they play soccer, et cetera.
01:21:03.000 And eventually it gets into okay, now we've achieved a society where gender is not essential.
01:21:10.000 But it becomes very simple if you rewind it and say, men can't become women.
01:21:15.000 Okay, now guess what?
01:21:17.000 Transgender girl in sports, there's no such thing as transgender.
01:21:21.000 Go play with the boys.
01:21:23.000 Transgender bathroom, oh, some guy in a wig trying to go to the girls' bathroom, get the fuck out of there.
01:21:27.000 You're a guy.
01:21:28.000 Go piss in the urinal.
01:21:29.000 Same thing with gay marriage.
01:21:30.000 It's like if you understand that homosexuality is wrong, it's like don't they have the freedom to love who they want?
01:21:35.000 No, they don't, because sodomy isn't love, and what that is is a pathological behavior.
01:21:40.000 It's not the same thing as marriage.
01:21:42.000 So, no, they can't get married.
01:21:44.000 Even if they tried, even if they wanted to, even if they performed something that looked like a marriage, it wouldn't be so.
01:21:49.000 You know, so these things become very, they clarify these things when you have a foundational worldview.
01:21:57.000 And if your worldview is founded in Catholicism and in Christianity, there's very easy, simple answers to these things.
01:22:04.000 It's not that complicated.
01:22:06.000 Anyway, so I'm just making the same point twice.
01:22:11.000 So that's what the bill does.
01:22:14.000 Now, then you get Ted Cruz, who goes out there and says, I'm in favor of overturning gay marriage, but never mind, because it's never going to happen, and that would be a really difficult process.
01:22:25.000 Ted Cruz gets a lot of credit this week for saying that he supports the gay marriage decision being overturned, which is an easy take because it's constitutionally correct.
01:22:36.000 And Ted Cruz is a constitutional lawyer who went to Harvard, and he's argued cases before the Supreme Court.
01:22:41.000 So when Ted Cruz says that the constitutional precedent for gay marriage is weak, yeah, that's a very sound like legal argument.
01:22:49.000 But then he goes and says, Well, but that'd be very disruptive.
01:22:52.000 And he probably supports it morally.
01:22:55.000 He has a transgender daughter, go figure.
01:22:59.000 And so, in any case, so what if that was disruptive to the lives of people?
01:23:05.000 You know, if we wanted to ban gay marriage, we could.
01:23:07.000 We could figure it out.
01:23:08.000 Worst case scenario, you grandfather the existing gay people in.
01:23:12.000 Best case scenario, you say, You know what?
01:23:14.000 You can keep the civil contract or whatever and grandfather that, but we're not going to call it a marriage.
01:23:20.000 Why could we not?
01:23:21.000 Is it not disruptive to say that men and women aren't real anymore?
01:23:24.000 Is it not disruptive to say that, you know, it's all just a big free for all and everyone could get divorced and we're going to introduce pornography on the internet?
01:23:34.000 You know, it's actually time to be a little bit disruptive.
01:23:36.000 It's time to be disruptive to this degenerate agenda.
01:23:43.000 You don't want to disrupt this?
01:23:44.000 I want to disrupt this and replace it with something else, obviously.
01:23:49.000 So Ted Cruz comes out and he gets all this credit.
01:23:52.000 Everybody's like, yo, based?
01:23:54.000 Because he said he supports the decision being overturned.
01:23:57.000 Yeah, because that's just good constitutional law.
01:24:00.000 But he says, actually, it would just be far too disruptive.
01:24:04.000 We need to disrupt these things.
01:24:05.000 It's time.
01:24:07.000 And I'm just disappointed that you had 47 Republicans voting in favor.
01:24:12.000 And so many Republicans are just weak on this stuff.
01:24:15.000 I saw Steven Crowder the other day say the problem isn't pronouns, it's that you're forcing us to use them.
01:24:21.000 Really?
01:24:25.000 You know, I want to live in a nice, I don't want to live in a theocracy.
01:24:30.000 I don't want to live in a country where you have like a religious police up your ass.
01:24:34.000 Okay?
01:24:36.000 In all seriousness.
01:24:38.000 But I want to live in a basically decent society.
01:24:41.000 And, you know, saying that you're against homosexuality is not radical.
01:24:46.000 This was common sense like 15 years ago.
01:24:49.000 I go on my show and say homosexuality is wrong and all this, and people go, what?
01:24:54.000 This is like the Middle Ages.
01:24:55.000 It's more like 2009.
01:24:57.000 Okay?
01:24:58.000 It's like 2009.
01:24:59.000 I grew up in that society.
01:25:01.000 It's not radical.
01:25:02.000 It's not crazy.
01:25:03.000 And you know what?
01:25:04.000 If we have it our way in the society, you know, you're still going to have men that think they're women and women that think they're men and transvestites.
01:25:14.000 And you're still going to have homosexuals.
01:25:17.000 And you're still going to have probably fornication and all those things.
01:25:22.000 But here, just like in every society, you've got sin and vice and these things go on, you know.
01:25:29.000 But the difference is it is going to be kept out.
01:25:35.000 Of the public.
01:25:36.000 It's going to be kept out of the sort of bank of virtue of the country because it doesn't belong there.
01:25:46.000 You know, you've always had degeneracy existing in the society somewhere on the sidelines out there, but it was never accepted as okay.
01:25:55.000 That's the difference.
01:25:56.000 At least people would think it's wrong, and you get a lot less of it.
01:26:00.000 And when you did get it, it would be shamed and discouraged, and people be embarrassed, and there would be discretion.
01:26:07.000 And that's really all that you can ask for.
01:26:09.000 You can't ask for everybody to be perfect.
01:26:11.000 You can't have a society that kills people for doing the wrong thing.
01:26:15.000 But you can have a society where bad things are treated as bad and good things are treated as good.
01:26:23.000 And certain steps are taken to control that environment.
01:26:27.000 That's all that is really necessary here.
01:26:30.000 We lived in a society like this 20 years ago.
01:26:33.000 It's still rapidly changing, but something like that 20 years ago.
01:26:36.000 And now it's just totally off the rails.
01:26:38.000 And people say, you know, abortion's good.
01:26:41.000 And people say, you know, now it's gotten so far.
01:26:46.000 I was in like the DGG Twitter, and people were bullying the Destiny people because they were saying that if you're not attracted to trans people, you hate trans people.
01:26:56.000 So it's like literally they want to enforce you being into trannies or being gay.
01:27:04.000 And it's like, how far did that go from like, don't beat us up to like, if you're not gay, we're going to kill you?
01:27:13.000 Go back to the society where it's as plain as this good is good and bad is bad.
01:27:17.000 And yeah, the law is going to play a part and the media is going to play a part and society will play a part and we'll have a clean, virtuous, decent society as best that we can on this side of heaven.
01:27:28.000 That's all that anybody wants.
01:27:34.000 So, and it's not hateful, it's not about hate, it's not about cruelty.
01:27:38.000 It's about we want to live in a good, just, virtuous, decent society.
01:27:44.000 That's it.
01:27:46.000 You know, we don't hate people that do bad things or do bad behaviors.
01:27:51.000 We just don't want bad behavior.
01:27:54.000 We don't want bad behavior to become the norm or considered good, obviously.
01:27:58.000 So, anyway, that's the gay marriage bill.
01:28:02.000 So, I told you not to get your hopes up on this one when the abortion decision happened.
01:28:06.000 It's just too far gone as far as that stuff goes.
01:28:10.000 But we're going to move on.
01:28:11.000 We're going to take a look at our super chatters.
01:28:13.000 We'll see what you guys have to say about all this.
01:28:15.000 Let me get my headset on here.
01:28:18.000 Let me get my water.
01:28:35.000 Okay, let's see.
01:28:39.000 Let me pull this up.
01:28:44.000 Yeah, I'm not feeling so hot.
01:28:54.000 All right, let's take a look.
01:28:55.000 Let's see what we got in our super chats.
01:28:57.000 Whoops.
01:28:59.000 Okay.
01:29:03.000 Pretty underscore fly underscore white underscore guy sent $3.65.
01:29:08.000 Hey friend.
01:29:09.000 What would a Nick Fuentes video game be like?
01:29:11.000 Oh, that's a good question.
01:29:13.000 It would probably be a lot like Grand Theft Auto, I think.
01:29:17.000 If I were to make a.
01:29:18.000 Because when I think about what I want to do in a video game, it would be a lot like Grand Theft Auto, I guess.
01:29:24.000 Um.
01:29:25.000 I guess I'm not very imaginative, but it'd be something like that.
01:29:28.000 Or you mean a video game about my life?
01:29:31.000 That would be pretty boring.
01:29:33.000 A Nick Fuentes video game, yeah, I don't know.
01:29:37.000 Cyberjar sent $3.
01:29:39.000 The irony of all our enemies teaming up together is that they end up debasing each other.
01:29:43.000 It's like a box of venomous animals poisoning each other.
01:29:47.000 Yeah, true.
01:29:48.000 Well, because there's nothing positive there.
01:29:52.000 You know, if you get a bunch of like dishonest vulture.
01:29:55.000 Like desperate, resentful type people.
01:29:57.000 It's like, of course, you can't create anything out of that.
01:30:00.000 People like that can destroy, they can attack, and they can lash out.
01:30:04.000 But people that are vile like that and destructive, of course, it's all going to turn into a circular firing squad.
01:30:16.000 There's no semblance of anybody trying to do anything constructive, there's no originality, inspiration, any of that.
01:30:25.000 So, yeah, all the people that attack us are sort of spiteful, resentful, dishonest, hateful.
01:30:31.000 Is it any surprise they don't go out and build something?
01:30:33.000 All they could do is attack.
01:30:34.000 All they could do is be negative towards us, not positive towards anything on their own.
01:30:39.000 And that describes all of them, by the way.
01:30:41.000 I at least respect people like Ben Shapiro more than my other enemies because at least Ben Shapiro is a guy that built something.
01:30:50.000 Same with Charlie Kirk, same with a lot of these people.
01:30:53.000 At least, and so I have some respect for them because I know how hard it is.
01:30:58.000 And it's probably way harder for them because it's bigger.
01:31:01.000 You know, Daily Wire is a $100 million company.
01:31:05.000 And Turning Point USA, $40 million a year, right?
01:31:10.000 So I do actually have respect for the work ethic and for the competence and all of that, you know, even to the extent that it is not necessarily what they say it is.
01:31:22.000 You know, they're insincere.
01:31:25.000 But that's a lot more than could be said about these kind of like ankle biting vultures that exist.
01:31:32.000 You know, all different kinds of people.
01:31:34.000 People I didn't like their super chat, so they dedicate their life to hating me.
01:31:40.000 You know, people that didn't get invited to the white boy summer party, they fly out to try and confront me.
01:31:48.000 You know, it's just sad.
01:31:52.000 McMahon sent $3.
01:31:53.000 Did you see old comrade Stump simping for Isabella Riley after her account got banned?
01:31:58.000 Feel like his timeline doesn't qualify for him in.
01:32:01.000 Sure, it'd totally smash, but it'd never be caught simping in public.
01:32:05.000 Yeah, he's not the only one simping for Isabella Riley.
01:32:07.000 It's a tale often told, unfortunately.
01:32:09.000 I've seen the screenshots.
01:32:13.000 I mean, Isabella Riley, she's a good looking girl, but you can't simp, man.
01:32:18.000 I just.
01:32:20.000 That's bad.
01:32:21.000 So, yeah, Comrade Stump, I mean, I like the guy, but he was talking trash about me earlier this year.
01:32:27.000 And, yeah, the simping is just so embarrassing.
01:32:31.000 At the end of the day, a lot of these old heads are just simps.
01:32:34.000 Like in every generation, like, you know, a lot of these old heads are just tried and true, they're just simps.
01:32:41.000 And he was always one of them.
01:32:44.000 Good content creator, but he was always a simp.
01:32:47.000 A lot of them are like that.
01:32:50.000 And it's bad, man.
01:32:51.000 It's just like there's nothing more cringe than that, in my opinion.
01:32:55.000 So, yeah.
01:32:57.000 Like.1 cent $3.
01:32:59.000 Before the show started, people in chat were talking about how good the pre show music is.
01:33:04.000 We need an America First record label.
01:33:06.000 You'd probably get a lot of submissions.
01:33:08.000 Mostly garbage, but a few gems.
01:33:10.000 I mean, we get a lot of shit in there, honestly.
01:33:13.000 We get a lot of shit in there.
01:33:16.000 Maybe, I don't know.
01:33:20.000 You know, I wish we had more musical people, but.
01:33:23.000 Because I think music would be a very profound way to influence the culture, but I don't think you could set out to do that.
01:33:30.000 You just need a person who's genuinely creative.
01:33:35.000 And we had a guy like that, he got chased out.
01:33:37.000 Remember Little Jesus?
01:33:38.000 He was pretty good, but then he got chased out.
01:33:41.000 Not for a bad reason, but still.
01:33:46.000 So we got Bryson, and you got Negative XP, and there's some others.
01:33:54.000 Like.1 Cent, $3.
01:33:56.000 How involved are you with technical aspects of Cozy?
01:34:01.000 Ever written any code?
01:34:08.000 Kyle sent $5.
01:34:09.000 The reason they hate you is not even because you said the n word a few times.
01:34:13.000 It's because of all political leaders right now, you possess an intensity that literally makes even me nervous sometimes.
01:34:20.000 Literally shaking.
01:34:24.000 Kyle sent $30.
01:34:25.000 But I was thinking about it and what it would take to bring this country back, and I'm like, yay.
01:34:30.000 I mean, This is exactly what's necessary to even have a chance.
01:34:33.000 Why would it be easy?
01:34:35.000 They're trying to steal an entire country from us?
01:34:37.000 It's going to require a certain level of personal commitment.
01:34:42.000 Kyle sent $3.
01:34:44.000 I'm not just now realizing that, but sometimes you forget, just sitting back watching Crowder, or The Daily Wire.
01:34:51.000 It doesn't have the same feel of wanting ID as bad as AF.
01:34:54.000 Good show.
01:34:55.000 Yeah, um.
01:34:58.000 Yeah, that's all true.
01:35:00.000 Um.
01:35:01.000 I am a lot more intense because the thing is, like, I don't think there's one other person in politics that's even intense.
01:35:09.000 You know, most of these guys are just very casual.
01:35:11.000 They're just sort of casual, la, la, la.
01:35:14.000 They kind of do it at their own pace, at their own leisure, and in a comfortable way.
01:35:18.000 And it's just sort of a passive engagement with it.
01:35:21.000 And it's like my life, you know what I mean?
01:35:27.000 I'm an intense individual.
01:35:29.000 I'm not off on the weekend like, Oh, but you know, you got to have a couple beers.
01:35:34.000 You got to come on.
01:35:35.000 I'm going to hang with my girl this weekend and knock back some beers because you got to take care of yourself.
01:35:40.000 You know, it's like, I'm not doing that.
01:35:45.000 I'm just doing this.
01:35:46.000 Okay.
01:35:47.000 I am obsessed with this.
01:35:49.000 I only think about these things for the most part.
01:35:53.000 And it's not because I'm like a hard on or whatever, it's just because I don't care about anything else.
01:36:00.000 I can't attach my attention to sports.
01:36:04.000 And this other kind of bullshit.
01:36:07.000 You know, I'm an obsessive, intense person.
01:36:14.000 And that's just who I am.
01:36:15.000 And, you know, I meet these other people in politics and they're just like, you know, they just don't really give a shit.
01:36:21.000 Alex Jones is another one who's super intense.
01:36:23.000 Anglin is super intense.
01:36:27.000 Milo is actually pretty intense too, I'll say.
01:36:31.000 And, yeah, there's intensity that's required.
01:36:35.000 If you want to do something ambitious like this, because we all say we want to make change, but do we think about, like you said, do we always have on our mind what that will entail or what you might think that will entail?
01:36:46.000 Do you think that we're going to sort of like it's going to be a two day a week job to like change America?
01:36:52.000 No, it's going to require like intense personal dedication on the part of lots of people and great personal sacrifice.
01:37:02.000 And most people just that that's not in the conversation for most people.
01:37:09.000 Most people it's unfathomable actually.
01:37:12.000 So it's true.
01:37:13.000 Yeah, and they don't like that because I am an intent.
01:37:15.000 I'm not just some goofball.
01:37:17.000 I mean, I am kind of a goofball.
01:37:18.000 But But, point being, is that I am competent and I am intense and I do take it seriously.
01:37:24.000 I'm not just some guy that's like, ah, whatever, who the fuck cares?
01:37:27.000 You know, I'm up here doing it intensely, seriously, thinking about it and, you know, making a compelling case night after night for this worldview in spite of all obstacles.
01:37:37.000 And they're like, you know, who the fuck is this guy?
01:37:40.000 Pure will.
01:37:41.000 Pure will.
01:37:43.000 So it's true.
01:37:46.000 But thanks, buddy.
01:37:47.000 I appreciate it.
01:37:48.000 Big shout out.
01:37:49.000 Thanks for the super chats.
01:37:51.000 Yeah, we want it.
01:37:52.000 We want it badly.
01:37:55.000 Russell Hoglin sent $4.
01:37:57.000 I heard Ali is a keynote speaker for FPAC 4, he's set to give a speech about following your dreams.
01:38:02.000 I don't know what that's a reference to, but thanks.
01:38:07.000 DR DAT sent $5.
01:38:09.000 Burn the GOP and Nix America first, we'll rise from the ashes.
01:38:12.000 Real, that's what we have to do, destroy the GOP.
01:38:16.000 Inquisition Grow Hyper sent $3.
01:38:19.000 Thank you, Ethan Ralph, for turning Kino Casino then into Chemo Casino and then into Life's.
01:38:23.000 Port casino soon to be six feet under casino and then later decomposed casino and finally burning in hell casino.
01:38:29.000 All true, yeah, very funny.
01:38:32.000 On return, Groy percent $10.
01:38:34.000 Recent mass shooter that was gunned down today had a Daniel Defense R, which is a very top of the line, expensive gun, $2,000, minimum.
01:38:43.000 Four grip still in the factory configuration, exact same story with Uvalde shooter.
01:38:48.000 Yeah, that's possible, possible that it's all a big fake.
01:38:51.000 I mean, I can't rule that out.
01:38:53.000 Inquisition Groy percent $3.
01:38:56.000 I hope the ADL clipped last night's clip.
01:38:58.000 Like you said in Vegas, who's listening to them?
01:39:01.000 Right Wing Watch is literally a Twitter slash YouTube approved clips channel at this point.
01:39:07.000 Don't tell them that though.
01:39:08.000 Don't tell them that.
01:39:10.000 Okay, we got a pretty good deal going on, so just.
01:39:14.000 Oh no, I hope they don't clip that.
01:39:16.000 Yeah, that would be the end of me if they made another clip go viral.
01:39:19.000 J Poll sent $3.
01:39:21.000 I agree, son.
01:39:22.000 It's time for you to settle down and get serious.
01:39:25.000 Thank you.
01:39:27.000 Pragmatic Culture sent $5.
01:39:29.000 We love off the rails, Nick, don't we, folks?
01:39:32.000 Yes, we do.
01:39:34.000 Inquisition Grow I% $3.
01:39:37.000 Lauren Sheckelson is pregnant by a black man, by the way.
01:39:40.000 That's true.
01:39:41.000 That's true.
01:39:41.000 Not only is she pregnant by a man other than her husband, so we've heard, and that's probably true, and it's probably a black guy.
01:39:49.000 She's probably pregnant with black twins.
01:39:51.000 I think that's all real.
01:39:53.000 I think that's probably true that she's pregnant with black twins, and they're going to be sort of half black, half white.
01:40:01.000 Half Jewish, half black, half Jewish.
01:40:05.000 And yes, that's going to be something when that comes out.
01:40:09.000 Pragmatic Culture sent $5.
01:40:11.000 You also mentioned potentially doing a rally in Joe Kent's district later this month.
01:40:16.000 Is that still on?
01:40:17.000 I answered this yesterday.
01:40:18.000 No, we just don't have enough time.
01:40:20.000 We were going to do it this weekend, but we were in Vegas last week.
01:40:25.000 I didn't even announce it.
01:40:26.000 I was planning on announcing it yesterday, but I said we got four days to promote this.
01:40:31.000 So probably not.
01:40:34.000 The Roanian sent $5.
01:40:37.000 Here's Destiny lecturing you on how your views will change over time.
01:40:40.000 Nah, you said what we were all thinking the whole time.
01:40:44.000 Thanks, Nick.
01:40:44.000 Thanks.
01:40:46.000 Yeah, you know, I mean, I get it.
01:40:49.000 I'm a young guy.
01:40:50.000 He's older.
01:40:51.000 And there's some truth in that.
01:40:52.000 There are things I've learned after getting older, but like learning that Jewish power isn't real is not one of them.
01:40:58.000 Learning that race isn't essential is not one of them, you know?
01:41:01.000 So there are some things that you learn over time and maybe some positions you moderate, but the facts are the facts.
01:41:07.000 The world is the way it is.
01:41:09.000 You're never going to convince me that Jewish power isn't real because it is.
01:41:12.000 You're never going to convince me that race isn't essential because it is.
01:41:15.000 I see it all the time, it's everywhere.
01:41:17.000 So.
01:41:20.000 You know, so there's some truth in that, but a lot of that is just sort of, you know, libtard cope.
01:41:27.000 Trapacolib sent $75.
01:41:30.000 Hey, Nick, finally got super chats to work for me.
01:41:33.000 Here's the gas money I would have spent to come and see you for the anti Joe Kent rally.
01:41:37.000 Gotta come and meet you at the next of PAC.
01:41:40.000 Love you, man.
01:41:41.000 God bless you and your family.
01:41:43.000 Hey, thank you very much, man.
01:41:45.000 God bless.
01:41:46.000 Yeah, well, we'll also be doing an event, I believe, in September as well.
01:41:50.000 We'll be doing a little get together.
01:41:53.000 I haven't announced that one yet.
01:41:55.000 Maybe next week.
01:41:58.000 But we'll be doing at least one, maybe two more events before AFPAC.
01:42:02.000 So just keep it on your radar.
01:42:03.000 I mean, we were going to do this screening.
01:42:05.000 We were going to do this Joe Ken thing, but it just ran too close together.
01:42:08.000 We're still doing more events, though.
01:42:10.000 But I appreciate it, man.
01:42:12.000 God bless you.
01:42:13.000 Love you.
01:42:14.000 Big shout out.
01:42:15.000 I appreciate it.
01:42:17.000 Bob sent $3.
01:42:19.000 Do you think two homosexuals could become one if they had enough lube?
01:42:22.000 Gross.
01:42:24.000 Bob sent $3.
01:42:26.000 I think if we focus on politics at the federal and the local level, we should be okay.
01:42:31.000 Okay, and he sent this super chat 18 times.
01:42:37.000 He sent the same super chat 18 times.
01:42:44.000 Bob sent $3.
01:42:46.000 I think if we focus on political change at the federal and local level, we should be okay.
01:42:56.000 Yeah, so if you, uh, you know, if you click the button 18 times, like, you should probably just, like, click it once and see if it works.
01:43:05.000 Like, I would get sending a duplicate, like, three times, like, two or three times, but how do you click it 18 times?
01:43:11.000 And you're like, it's not working.
01:43:12.000 Let me just click it 18 times.
01:43:15.000 Let me just click some of it 18 times.
01:43:17.000 Okay.
01:43:17.000 Yeah, good idea.
01:43:20.000 Bob sent $3.
01:43:22.000 I started taking trash about you to my mom.
01:43:24.000 What?
01:43:25.000 She stopped liking you.
01:43:26.000 I am sorry.
01:43:27.000 I will start talking you up next week when she is over her current hatred.
01:43:35.000 Eddie sent $3.
01:43:36.000 Real and it's so real, stay real, King.
01:43:39.000 Thank you, I really appreciate that.
01:43:41.000 G Figu sent $3.
01:43:43.000 Why that kinda look wrong, do you?
01:43:45.000 Hey, hey, hey, hey.
01:43:48.000 McCoy sent $3.
01:43:50.000 Hi, Nick.
01:43:51.000 You're a pretty cool guy.
01:43:52.000 Looking good.
01:43:53.000 Thanks, man, I appreciate it.
01:43:56.000 Lamar sent $3.
01:43:57.000 Imagine there's no heaven, it's easy if you try, no hell below us, above us, only sky.
01:44:02.000 Imagine there's no countries it isn't hard to do nothing to kill or die for, and no religion, too.
01:44:08.000 Yeah, that would suck.
01:44:09.000 All right, that's our last super chat.
01:44:11.000 Sheesh.
01:44:14.000 They just get better and better.
01:44:15.000 You know, it's like the same number.
01:44:16.000 It's like 45 super chats in here.
01:44:20.000 But they're just all like, they just get worse over time.
01:44:23.000 It's like, that wasn't fewer super chats than I do on any other night.
01:44:28.000 But they're just like, they're all just garbage.
01:44:32.000 We love off the rails, Nick, don't we, folks?
01:44:36.000 Time for you to settle down, okay?
01:44:40.000 So, discussing the thing about lube, we should focus on local politics.
01:44:44.000 Like, okay.
01:44:46.000 So, yeah, that's great.
01:44:47.000 All right.
01:44:48.000 Well, that's, hey, easier for me.
01:44:51.000 Here, we got one more.
01:44:54.000 Chunga's Appreciator sent $3.
01:44:56.000 Hey, man.
01:44:57.000 Just watched your show.
01:44:59.000 Good stuff.
01:45:00.000 I think I could mentor you on some stuff, though.
01:45:02.000 You can kind of look at me as a role model.
01:45:04.000 Oh, wow.
01:45:05.000 Collab soon.
01:45:06.000 Thanks.
01:45:06.000 Yeah, I'll definitely take you up on that.
01:45:08.000 Thanks a lot.
01:45:09.000 Okay, all right, and that's our last super tip.
01:45:12.000 That's going to do it for me tonight.
01:45:15.000 That was kind of harmless.
01:45:17.000 Remember to check me out.
01:45:18.000 Well, follow me here on Cozy to get a push notification whenever I go live.
01:45:22.000 Follow me on Gavin Telegram.
01:45:24.000 Links are down below.
01:45:25.000 I will be on Alex Stein tomorrow, 8 o'clock central.
01:45:29.000 Remember, I'm on the air Monday through Friday, 9 o'clock central, 10 o'clock eastern time.
01:45:34.000 As always, thanks for watching.
01:45:35.000 Thanks to our super chatters, in particular, Trappocalypse.
01:45:39.000 Thanks a lot.
01:45:40.000 Thanks to everybody that watches the show.
01:45:42.000 We love you.
01:45:43.000 I will see you tomorrow.
01:45:44.000 Until then, have a great rest of your evening.