00:00:31.000There 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.
00:00:45.000Exciting new prospect given to us by Clarence Thomas and Ted Cruz in recent weeks, talking about overturning gay marriage as well.
00:00:55.000But now it seems like perhaps that will not happen.
00:00:58.000Because our featured story today in the U.S. House of Representatives, Congress passed a bill.
00:01:05.000That 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,
00:01:20.000the 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.
00:01:36.000So, this bill passed the House of Representatives with the help of 47 Republicans.
00:01:43.000All the Democrats, 47 Republicans voted in favor of enshrining gay marriage at the federal level.
00:02:51.000We'll also be talking tonight about the Uvalde shooting.
00:02:55.000We've got some new details about the shooting itself as well as the killer.
00:03:00.000A 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.
00:03:56.000So, 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.
00:04:05.000This is what I talked about in my monologue about the shooting when it happened.
00:04:12.000Everything that I said fits a description here of the killer.
00:04:16.000He'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.
00:04:27.000People in his class called him a school shooter.
00:04:31.000And then here's the best part this is his life up until he's 17 years old.
00:04:37.000Single parent household, lives with his grandmother then, bullied in school, outsider, loner.
00:04:56.000He's sent home from school and he's there at home for a year plus in isolation.
00:05:01.000And then he comes back and shoots up everybody in fourth grade.
00:05:08.000So, I mean, like, we have all these problems.
00:05:11.000It's not actually very difficult why we have them.
00:05:13.000I 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.
00:05:30.000Everybody was already going crazy because of smartphones and social media.
00:05:35.000And ubiquitous computers and media in general.
00:05:40.000And then you add to that complete social isolation.
00:05:44.000And 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.
00:06:22.000I 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.
00:06:32.000So I have these observations and all of that, and I didn't think I would be screaming for 60 minutes.
00:06:40.000Basically, a racist tirade about black people.
00:06:45.000Sorry, sorry we didn't get to the news.
00:06:48.000We had an unanticipated 60 minute rant about blacks, a racist tirade against black people.
00:06:57.000At this point, there's nothing, like, you can't describe it in any other way.
00:07:00.000It 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.
00:07:14.000Last night, there's, you know, it just was a racist tirade.
00:07:18.000There's no other way, there's nothing else that you could call it.
00:07:22.000I 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.
00:08:05.000And 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.
00:08:14.000Unfortunately, they are always true, all the time.
00:08:19.000And that's actually just a part of life.
00:08:21.000As I grow older, I realize that is really just.
00:08:24.000Part and parcel of your life, of living your life, is you'll have these racist observations always correct.
00:08:33.000And 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.
00:08:46.000But growing up is realizing that you're right.
00:08:49.000Growing up and maturing and becoming enlightened and taking the red pill is realizing that your first racist assumption is the most correct.
00:10:33.000You know, my grandma who passed recently.
00:10:38.000Now, I don't think she would call herself racist, but she had that sort of old world mentality, and she was right.
00:10:46.000She grew up in the projects in Chicago, and she lived among these people.
00:10:50.000She 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.
00:11:03.000So, anyway, what am I even talking about?
00:11:49.000A thousand years for the woman, a hundred years for the doctor.
00:11:52.000You 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.
00:12:01.000And it's like, I was in Vegas last night and these black people weren't wearing nice enough clothes.
00:12:09.000So, 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.
00:12:20.000There were some guardrails that kind of kept the discussion within a certain.
00:12:26.000You know, arguably, is this a good thing?
00:12:31.000But 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.
00:12:50.000I mean, seriously, I was driving and I was thinking about it.
00:12:53.000I 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.
00:13:07.000We're not just going to burn your pride flag.
00:13:09.000We're going to drag your wife out of her house and burn her alive because she's a witch.
00:17:16.000Like, 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.
00:18:11.000It was some lunatic who went into an elementary school and shot a bunch of kids, I don't know how many.
00:18:17.000But 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.
00:18:24.000And then we find out that it literally has nothing to do with guns at all, actually.
00:18:30.000Because 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.
00:18:39.000We found out that the door was wide open for the shooter to come in.
00:19:07.000And then the cops show up and they wait 90 minutes.
00:19:09.000And so we had found all of that out, I think, the first week after the shooting happened.
00:19:14.000But now, because of that, an investigation has occurred and we've learned even more.
00:19:19.000And 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.
00:19:30.000And this is an article about this from BBC.
00:19:34.000It 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.
00:19:55.000The gunman fired approximately 142 rounds inside the building, and it is almost certain that at least 100 shots came before any officer entered.
00:20:06.000According 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.
00:20:24.000Two, no one assumed command despite scores of officers being on the scene.
00:20:29.000Three, a Uvalde Police Department officer said he heard about 911 calls that had come inside the classroom, come from inside the classroom.
00:20:38.000And that his understanding was that officers on one side of the building knew there were victims trapped inside.
00:20:44.000Still, no one tried to breach the classroom.
00:20:47.000According to the report, 376 law enforcement officers masked at the school.
00:20:52.000The overwhelming majority of those who responded were federal and state law enforcement.
00:20:57.000That included nearly 150 Border Patrol agents and 91 state police officials.
00:21:02.000Investigators said it was not their job to determine whether officers should be held accountable, saying that decisions rest with each law enforcement agency.
00:21:13.000Prior to Sunday, only one of the hundreds of officers on the scene was known to have been placed on leave.
00:21:23.000So, you know, this lunatic goes to a school, and they couldn't have made it easier for him.
00:21:30.000It's like at that point, you effectively don't have police and you don't have like walls.
00:21:37.000How can you say that this is a gun control problem if you've got a guy who gets a.
00:21:44.000Whatever weapon was used in the killing, I think it was an assault rifle or a semi automatic rifle or something like that.
00:21:52.000He shows up to the school, opens the front door, and just starts killing people.
00:21:56.000400 police officers respond, and they don't even enter the building.
00:22:00.000They don't even say, Hey, wait, we need a key.
00:23:33.000And those are the kinds of decisions, which is why we have police officers.
00:23:38.000That's why you are a police officer, is so that you can make those calculations.
00:23:43.000And that's why we say, oh, back the blue and everything.
00:23:46.000Because at the end of the day, some days it's your life instead of a six year old inside of a school.
00:23:54.000It'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.
00:24:02.000It's your life instead of the civilian.
00:24:09.000But 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.
00:24:33.000They know it's an active shooter situation.
00:24:35.000They know as much information as we know now because.
00:24:38.000They were getting calls from people inside the building while it was going on.
00:24:43.000And, 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.
00:24:54.000Ban, a shooter bought a gun and committed this attack, and people diagnosed the problem right away as people were able to buy guns.
00:25:03.000Not that the door wasn't locked, not that 400 cops couldn't intervene, it was the guns.
00:25:09.000Clearly, this was a failure of the school and it was a failure of law enforcement, obviously.
00:25:15.000It also just goes to show is this not a representation of where our country is, broadly speaking?
00:25:23.000I've been saying this for a long time on the show.
00:25:25.000I don't think that America will collapse.
00:25:27.000It will just get a lot worse in every conceivable way and also in inconceivable ways.
00:25:33.000And it will get worse all the time, inconceivable and in inconceivable ways, in both small and big ways.
00:25:42.000And 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.
00:25:48.000You'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.
00:25:55.000And, you know, it's like minor things like that sometimes.
00:25:59.000And also it's going to be major things like this.
00:26:01.000It's going to be a systematic breakdown of public services.
00:26:05.000And 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.
00:26:21.000You'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.
00:26:32.000That is what you would call a systematic failure.
00:26:47.000The 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.
00:27:08.000That's a complete failure of public service.
00:27:11.000You're also going to see it with transportation.
00:27:13.000You'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.
00:27:20.000And that's going to be licensing, and that's going to be police and the various things they do.
00:27:24.000It's going to be fire department, it's going to be sanitation.
00:27:28.000What we're seeing is a complete and total breakdown.
00:27:31.000These are the, again, society's not going to collapse, but things like this are going to start to happen all the time.
00:27:37.000In 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.
00:27:50.000So, not only is it not a gun problem, it's a cop problem.
00:27:54.000And it's not just like it's a police officer problem, this guy, it's a systematic problem with the police.
00:28:03.000There's three jurisdictions there federal, state, and local.
00:28:07.000Hundreds of guys, and not one of them at any level was able to act in a situation which demanded it the most.
00:28:15.000And then, not only does that happen, but not one of those people gets put on leave.
00:28:20.000And 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.
00:28:36.000And the police are supposed to punish themselves.
00:28:39.000And you know, none of these people are going to get punished.
00:29:39.000The society is just getting worse all the time.
00:29:42.000The 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.
00:29:59.000And like this is the world we'll inhabit.
00:30:00.000And sometimes that will be an annoyance and sometimes it will be catastrophic.
00:30:04.000This is an example of that kind of thing being catastrophic.
00:30:08.000You got a bunch of idiots in the police that clearly don't know what they're doing.
00:30:13.000And when the cops don't know how to do their job, it results in people dying.
00:30:16.000None of these people will be held accountable.
00:30:18.000So 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.
00:30:27.000They're not going to save your life, and they're not taking their oath seriously or whatever.
00:30:33.000And all those people are just going to get away with it, and that's it.
00:30:37.000And that's honestly like the real problem.
00:30:40.000So that's what we learned about the Uvalde shooting and the response.
00:30:42.000Very interesting, though, that they said, oh, well, you having guns is the problem.
00:30:47.000I think it's that these retard cops having the guns is really the problem, actually.
00:30:52.000They had all the guns, and then they didn't use them.
00:30:55.000And then some, you know, so it's like if cops have guns and criminals have guns, like we should all just become criminals.
00:31:01.000Not saying that we should become criminals, but, you know, there's something, there's a lesson in there, right?
00:31:10.000That 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.
00:31:58.000The 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.
00:32:07.000So, 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.
00:32:17.000And 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.
00:32:30.000And also, you know, some kind of sense of integrity about crime or something.
00:32:36.000You know, people like that are just getting raped to death and they're just getting laughed at.
00:32:40.000Cops are raping them to death and laughing at them.
00:33:17.000This is something that if you have a sort of broad enough mindset, you'll see the same story playing out everywhere.
00:33:23.000This is not really different than the cops letting BLM burn the city down.
00:33:29.000It's also not really different than like the military being in Iraq.
00:33:33.000And it's also not really different than the IRS losing millions of people's tax returns.
00:33:37.000And it's also not really different than shortages of baby formula at the store.
00:33:42.000And 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.
00:33:55.000A systematic breakdown of the managerial state and the bureaucracy.
00:34:01.000It's not the first time things like this have happened.
00:34:03.000Even 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.
00:34:12.000This 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.
00:34:20.000It's very delicate, it's very carefully calibrated.
00:34:23.000And 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?
00:35:27.000So, anyway, so that's my take on the 400 cops.
00:35:30.000The other thing, though, we learned a little bit more about the shooter.
00:35:33.000And this is an article from the New York Post about the shooter himself.
00:35:37.000And it validates a lot of what I said initially, too, about shootings.
00:35:42.000You 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.
00:35:52.000All these school shooters properly understood.
00:35:54.000Forget even about the cops failing and all of that.
00:35:57.000Even if the cops succeed, you're still going to have school shootings.
00:36:00.000Even 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.
00:36:09.000And 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.
00:36:34.000It'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.
00:36:51.000And it is an expression of somebody who is anti social.
00:38:20.000If 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?
00:38:44.000And 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.
00:38:56.000Not the shooter and some other person, but the shooter and society at large.
00:39:02.000Anyway, so I said that and I said, you know, where do you get all these antisocial people?
00:40:30.000Well, most people are antisocial, or most people know many people that are antisocial, and we kind of all get it.
00:40:39.000And 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.
00:40:48.000And 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.
00:40:56.000And I'm not saying necessarily to rationalize what they do or justify what they do.
00:41:02.000I'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.
00:41:10.000And 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.
00:41:30.000And we're confronting something that's a lot more fundamental than violence.
00:41:35.000We're confronting anti social alienation.
00:41:39.000And then you'll find that the mass shooter has a lot in common with a lot of other extreme behaviors in the society.
00:41:45.000And that's people that commit suicide.
00:41:47.000And that is people that join extreme political movements, actually.
00:41:51.000And that is people that are addicted to drugs, like opioids.
00:41:54.000And that is true of people that get hooked on all kinds of different things.
00:41:59.000There's a lot of pathological, antisocial behaviors, and the mass killer is just the most deranged, sociopathic, extreme case of that.
00:42:10.000But it's all sort of drawing from the same pool.
00:42:15.000And 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.
00:42:24.000It's happening here because this is the most dislocated society ever.
00:42:29.000And if we want to stop mass shootings, you're not going to do it at the gun store.
00:42:33.000You're not going to do it at the barrier, at the path, the port of entry of a building or school or something.
00:42:44.000You'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.
00:42:52.000That's where you're going to stop the mass shootings by preventing mass shooters from being created.
00:43:00.000What we've learned about the mass shooter basically validates all of this.
00:43:04.000This is a report about the shooter from the New York Post.
00:43:08.000It 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.
00:43:24.000And this is according to that same investigative report.
00:43:29.000So, weeks before the shooting, he was complaining about being bullied in fourth grade.
00:43:35.000And then he shoots up his fourth grade classroom.
00:45:00.000So, anyway, it says he was routinely teased by friends who called him a school shooter.
00:45:07.000And 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.
00:45:14.000The report released on Sunday also revealed that an ex girlfriend told investigators.
00:45:19.000That 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.
00:45:28.000It was no coincidence that Ramos attacked his former fourth grade classroom.
00:45:32.000Before the shooting, he told a friend about how the year had been traumatic for him.
00:45:38.000Members of his family told investigators that Ramos was bullied during that year over a speech impediment.
00:45:44.000Once, a student tied his shoelaces together and he fell on his face.
00:45:48.000Students 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.
00:45:55.000His old teacher was in the building at the time of his deadly attack in May, although in a different classroom.
00:46:01.000Ramos had a difficult home life that didn't provide much comfort as he struggled in school.
00:46:06.000His mother had a history of drug abuse and had two misdemeanors one for theft and another for a family violence assault.
00:46:14.000Ramos was born in North Dakota but moved to Uvalde with his mother and she split from his father early in his life.
00:46:54.000During this time, he took a dark path, said the report.
00:46:57.000An 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.
00:47:05.000With no driver's license or car, he was left alone and spent much of his time online playing violent video games.
00:47:12.000Ramos' girlfriend at the time said he was lonely and depressed, and that the few friends he had called him a school shooter.
00:47:19.000When she broke up with him, he harassed her and her friends.
00:47:22.000It was during this time that Ramos began to demonstrate interest in gore and violent sex.
00:47:27.000Watching and sometimes sharing gruesome videos and images of suicides, beheadings, accidents, and sending unexpected explicit messages to others online.
00:47:37.000Ramos also hungered for fame and notoriety.
00:47:40.000After receiving a few views on TikTok and YouTube videos he made, Ramos bragged about being famous.
00:47:46.000On 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.
00:47:57.000At 17, he unsuccessfully asked two people to buy him guns.
00:48:01.000And his family was aware he was trying to get his hands on weapons before he legally could.
00:48:05.000Most chillingly, he became obsessed with school shootings.
00:48:09.000On Yubo, online friends called him Yubo's school shooter.
00:48:14.000It says, Those with whom he played games taunted him with a similar nickname so often that it became a running joke.
00:48:21.000Even 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.
00:48:32.000And it's like, okay, so at this point, is anybody like surprised that these things happen?
00:48:39.000I mean, everybody likes to say, oh my gosh, why do these things happen?
00:48:43.000And it's like, how many people in this man's life clocked this guy as a school shooter?
00:49:51.000Three, he's encountered dozens of people that all clock him with all this information together as a potential school shooter.
00:50:00.000And then, surprisingly, this deranged maniac who dropped out of school to stay in his room.
00:50:10.000Who 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.
00:50:26.000And this gets back to how could you have prevented the shooting?
00:50:30.000Well, you couldn't have prevented the shooting at the point of sale of the firearm.
00:51:37.000He got into school and within minutes the cops showed up and they couldn't do anything about it.
00:51:42.000You think that you could have stopped this killing from happening if this person had like one person looking out for him?
00:51:51.000If 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.
00:52:11.000This 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.
00:52:23.000By his grandmother, by his peers, by his teachers.
00:52:28.000This is a person who is crashing through the society, a kid.
00:52:34.000And again, this is not to exculpate him.
00:52:36.000It's not to say that he's not responsible.
00:52:40.000It's not to say he's a kid, he didn't know what he did.
00:52:43.000But 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.
00:52:51.000On some level, yeah, of course the shooting bears responsibility, most of it.
00:52:55.000But on some level, If the society is churning out adolescents that go out and kill people, something is wrong with the society too.
00:53:03.000The society bears responsibility as well.
00:53:06.000It is one thing if a 40 year old man does something.
00:53:09.000Certainly, society bears some responsibility for any individual that it produces on some level.
00:53:43.000But 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.
00:54:08.000But 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.
00:54:22.000You 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.
00:54:56.000And 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.
00:55:06.000I'm not saying, hey, you all made him do this because you're mean to him.
00:55:10.000You know, there are some people who get bullied, and not all of them go and kill people.
00:55:14.000It takes a special evil to go and do something like that.
00:55:18.000But it is to say, society is producing a lot of these people.
00:55:24.000And it is those individuals' fault, but the society is definitely creating a culture which is sensational.
00:55:31.000And when I say sensational, it's like sensing.
00:55:34.000It's not just a sensational, but it's also a sensual society.
00:55:50.000You 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?
00:56:58.000Nobody could see the sort of redirect or the alternative course.
00:57:04.000Everybody sees where something like that is going.
00:57:09.000And for a person like that to not be set on that path, we all know what that takes.
00:57:15.000There'd be less shooters if there were less single moms, there'd be less shooters if there was more church, there'd be.
00:57:21.000I 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.
00:57:34.000Are we really surprised that public schools are creating school shooters?
00:57:38.000Is that like a surprise to anybody that went to a public school?
00:57:42.000That 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.
00:57:54.000Public school teachers and with their peers, like, and they do that for their entire life in their formative years.
00:58:00.000And people are like, wow, why did these people become cold, calculating killers?
00:58:04.000Why did these people become cold, sociopathic, mass murderers?
00:58:08.000It'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.
00:58:26.000Media, which is about sex and drugs and killing, and then they turn 18 and they drop off the face of the earth.
00:58:33.000They drop out of school or they leave high school and they're in their room all day.
00:58:38.000And then sometimes one of those people comes out of the room with a gun and kills everybody.
00:58:42.000It's like that's the society that's creating these people.
00:58:47.000That's exactly what I said months ago.
00:59:45.000Even 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.
00:59:54.000And there's probably a lot more people just like him, but that just wouldn't kill kids.
01:01:19.000It is a nightmare, and for some people, it never ends.
01:01:23.000For 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.
01:01:37.000And that's why the only answer is to turn that around and to make life worth living again.
01:01:41.000You know, as a Catholic, We don't completely reject the world.
01:01:45.000We say that there is truth and good and beauty in the world.
01:01:50.000We're not, you know, we're not sort of like rejecting the world in itself.
01:01:56.000We can make the world a pleasant place to live.
01:02:00.000We can't make it utopia, but we can make it a better place to live.
01:02:05.000And 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.
01:02:15.000Sort of a sensual, sensational society with a rational society, a rational and a good society.
01:02:24.000Got to replace single parent households with households where you have two parents and the mother's raising their kids.
01:02:29.000There's not a lot of school shooters out there that say that their mother loved them.
01:03:23.000And so we were very white pilled about this.
01:03:28.000Back 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.
01:03:51.000And I think contraceptives was the other one.
01:03:55.000And then recently, Ted Cruz said that he thinks that gay marriage should be overturned.
01:04:00.000Constitutional precedent that gay marriage should be in place.
01:04:03.000And 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.
01:04:17.000It 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.
01:04:33.000Marriage equality, they call it, which is like the dumbest.
01:05:23.000A marriage is between a man and a woman.
01:05:27.000Two guys can say, like, we're going to have sex exclusively and we're going to live together.
01:05:34.000And, you know, on all that, but that doesn't make it a marriage.
01:05:38.000Like, 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.
01:05:50.000You know, it's something that cannot be.
01:05:54.000Anyway, but we'll get into that in a minute.
01:05:56.000But you use marriage equality, it's like, what does that even mean?
01:05:59.000These things don't even make any sense.
01:06:02.000It says 47 Republicans join Democrats in backing the bill.
01:06:05.000The 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.
01:06:24.000Still, more than three quarters of the party opposed the bill, which passed in a vote of 267 to 157.
01:06:33.000The 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.
01:06:42.000House 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.
01:06:55.000In 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.
01:07:12.000Over 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.
01:07:33.000He 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.
01:07:46.000Which You know, so there's so much here.
01:07:50.000And in the first place, just on the issue about gay marriage, gay marriage is another sort of ancillary here.
01:07:59.000Gay marriage is very similar to transgender bathroom, transgender girl sports, drag queen story hour.
01:08:08.000It's one of these things which is really downstream from the fundamentals.
01:08:13.000It's not really a question of whether you support so called marriage equality or not, it's do you believe in.
01:08:23.000Because if you think that homosexuality is comparable to so called heterosexuality, then you will support gay marriage.
01:08:34.000And you will support so called gay marriages, married couples, having the same benefits, government benefits, as heterosexual married couples.
01:08:47.000If that is what you believe about homosexuality.
01:08:50.000If 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.
01:09:03.000You 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.
01:09:52.000When we say we marry things together, it means that they're becoming inseparably bound together.
01:09:58.000Now, 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.
01:10:12.000Again, this is just sort of like an agreement.
01:10:15.000It's just sort of like a contract, I guess.
01:10:18.000That's just sort of like a personal dynamic.
01:10:20.000But marriage is unique because of the complementarity of men and women at every level.
01:10:26.000And that's why only a man and a woman can get married.
01:10:30.000And by the way, that would be true, even if to some extent you weren't religious, because it's biological.
01:10:41.000Everyone must admit, straight people, gay people, religious people, not religious people, that the relationship between a man and a woman is unique.
01:10:51.000It is unique, it is not the same as the relationships, friendly or homosexual, between men.
01:11:00.000And the relationship between a man and a woman as husband and wife, which creates children, that's the purpose of the marriage.
01:11:08.000By becoming married and becoming one flesh, become this union of a man and a woman, they then become parents.
01:11:48.000You 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.
01:11:58.000Look at me, guys, I'm acting like a car.
01:12:01.000You 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.
01:12:14.000It's like, Yeah, but you're not like in the essential ways you're not a car.
01:12:19.000And 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.
01:14:48.000So there's sexuality, and then there's sort of deviancy.
01:14:52.000So that's why I'm putting that in quotes.
01:14:53.000But the point being is if you think that.
01:14:56.000Homosexuality 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.
01:15:10.000Again, but if you have our view of it, then you would say it's a farce, it's a contradiction in terms.
01:15:16.000And so then, as far as how is this applied legally, well, you might say something like, you know, can gay people form a contract?
01:16:27.000And the same thing is true about gay marriage.
01:16:29.000Now, 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.
01:16:36.000And 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.
01:16:47.000So all the gay people that got married in those states, their marriages will become nullified by the existing state laws on the books.
01:16:54.000And 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.
01:17:15.000I said this the other night Republicans can talk about grooming and they can talk about the trans swimmer and all that.
01:17:21.000But 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.
01:17:32.000You're just playing on these sort of touchstone battles about those things for votes because you really don't disagree with them in principle.
01:17:41.000You sort of disagree with them in Effectively in practice because it has its political benefit.
01:17:46.000So, Josh Hawley could act like a total asshole and say, Duh, you think that men could get pregnant?
01:17:53.000And it's like, you could say that all you want, but you also probably will say that transgender people are real.
01:18:01.000So, if you say that transgender people are real, then logically, you know, men can get pregnant.
01:20:07.000So it's like the problem there is there's no such thing as transgender people.
01:20:14.000It's a very complicated issue because it's like we created this whole new category of people and they're not really men.
01:20:21.000Well, they are men in fundamental ways, but they say they're not, but they're also not women.
01:20:26.000So it's like, well, what do we do with them?
01:20:28.000Well, 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.
01:22:14.000Now, 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.
01:22:25.000Ted 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.
01:22:36.000And Ted Cruz is a constitutional lawyer who went to Harvard, and he's argued cases before the Supreme Court.
01:22:41.000So when Ted Cruz says that the constitutional precedent for gay marriage is weak, yeah, that's a very sound like legal argument.
01:22:49.000But then he goes and says, Well, but that'd be very disruptive.
01:23:21.000Is it not disruptive to say that men and women aren't real anymore?
01:23:24.000Is 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?
01:23:34.000You know, it's actually time to be a little bit disruptive.
01:23:36.000It's time to be disruptive to this degenerate agenda.
01:25:04.000If 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.
01:25:14.000And you're still going to have homosexuals.
01:25:17.000And you're still going to have probably fornication and all those things.
01:25:22.000But here, just like in every society, you've got sin and vice and these things go on, you know.
01:25:29.000But the difference is it is going to be kept out.
01:25:56.000At least people would think it's wrong, and you get a lot less of it.
01:26:00.000And when you did get it, it would be shamed and discouraged, and people be embarrassed, and there would be discretion.
01:26:07.000And that's really all that you can ask for.
01:26:09.000You can't ask for everybody to be perfect.
01:26:11.000You can't have a society that kills people for doing the wrong thing.
01:26:15.000But you can have a society where bad things are treated as bad and good things are treated as good.
01:26:23.000And certain steps are taken to control that environment.
01:26:27.000That's all that is really necessary here.
01:26:30.000We lived in a society like this 20 years ago.
01:26:33.000It's still rapidly changing, but something like that 20 years ago.
01:26:36.000And now it's just totally off the rails.
01:26:38.000And people say, you know, abortion's good.
01:26:41.000And people say, you know, now it's gotten so far.
01:26:46.000I 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.
01:26:56.000So it's like literally they want to enforce you being into trannies or being gay.
01:27:04.000And 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?
01:27:13.000Go back to the society where it's as plain as this good is good and bad is bad.
01:27:17.000And 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.
01:30:34.000All they could do is be negative towards us, not positive towards anything on their own.
01:30:39.000And that describes all of them, by the way.
01:30:41.000I at least respect people like Ben Shapiro more than my other enemies because at least Ben Shapiro is a guy that built something.
01:30:50.000Same with Charlie Kirk, same with a lot of these people.
01:30:53.000At least, and so I have some respect for them because I know how hard it is.
01:30:58.000And it's probably way harder for them because it's bigger.
01:31:01.000You know, Daily Wire is a $100 million company.
01:31:05.000And Turning Point USA, $40 million a year, right?
01:31:10.000So 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.
01:36:35.000If 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?
01:36:46.000Do 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?
01:36:52.000No, it's going to require like intense personal dedication on the part of lots of people and great personal sacrifice.
01:37:02.000And most people just that that's not in the conversation for most people.
01:37:09.000Most people it's unfathomable actually.
01:37:18.000But But, point being, is that I am competent and I am intense and I do take it seriously.
01:37:24.000I'm not just some guy that's like, ah, whatever, who the fuck cares?
01:37:27.000You 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.
01:37:37.000And they're like, you know, who the fuck is this guy?