00:01:37.000Now I'm out here in Texas where I have a fundraiser to go to this weekend, and I'll be doing a big collaboration tomorrow actually with John Doyle.
00:01:52.000And so I don't know exactly what the format of that is going to be, I think it may be a telegram stream.
00:01:58.000Maybe we'll do a stream like this, maybe an Instagram live.
00:07:00.000I'll, May have it set up tomorrow and definitely Friday.
00:07:03.000So, super chats will be back Thursday and Friday.
00:07:06.000But tonight, just going to talk a little bit about what's been going on.
00:07:11.000So, just in the first place, I want to talk a little bit about what I've been up to.
00:07:15.000So, I was out there in New York this weekend.
00:07:17.000We have a really great scene out there.
00:07:21.000And you saw some of that recently with some of their activism.
00:07:27.000I don't want to get too much into it, but maybe you know what I'm talking about.
00:07:32.000With the anti abortion rally, the guy with the AF hat.
00:07:37.000We have a few guys who are out there at that thing.
00:07:41.000So, this weekend, I went out to meet with some of our New York crew, and it's actually kind of surprising.
00:07:46.000One of our biggest scenes in the country, you know, like a scene is what I would consider sort of broadly Groyper, like America First, like social group, social club going on.
00:10:08.000I don't want to dox, but very, very young people involved in the scene over there.
00:10:14.000Pretty good age range, lots of different people from a lot.
00:10:17.000I don't want to get too much into the particulars, but really, really proud of the scene out there.
00:10:22.000So I was visiting some people there, meeting with some, you know, potential allies.
00:10:28.000Again, don't want to get too much into the private details.
00:10:31.000And then, of course, I was on the Anthony Cumia show yesterday with Anthony Cumia, which was crazy because, you know, a lot of the new school aren't really aware of him, but he's one of the biggest.
00:10:44.000Talk radio guys in the country, one of the biggest comedians, at least in the New York scene.
00:11:09.000You know, when I was in high school back in 2014, he had been doing a show for a long time on serious.
00:11:17.000Radio, the digital radio with this guy Opie, and they did a show called The Opie and Anthony Show, and it was a comedy talk show on Sirius Radio.
00:11:27.000And so, back in the 2010s, Anthony put out all these tweets, you know, which were considered racist about black crime and this kind of stuff.
00:11:37.000And Sirius Radio came to him and said, Look, you got to delete the tweets and apologize, we're going to fire you.
00:11:43.000And he told them he's not going to apologize, not going to delete, and they fired him.
00:11:48.000And it was a big deal because it was a huge show.
00:12:00.000Everybody in New York knows Opie and Anthony.
00:12:03.000And so he was really one of the first big casualties, not really even in so much of a political context, but in the sort of burgeoning culture war, sort of like part of the original Gamergate type stuff.
00:12:16.000A lot of people forget that the Trump revolution and the sort of cultural phenomenon that came with that.
00:12:22.000It drew not just from politics, but it drew from all kinds of people.
00:12:25.000It drew from the manosphere, the pickup artists.
00:12:28.000It drew from a lot of these comedian types.
00:12:34.000You look at a guy like Gavin McGinnis as an example, who was one of the guys to join Compound Media, which is what Anthony started after he got fired from Sirius.
00:12:47.000He was doing stuff for vans, he was a comedian.
00:12:51.000He wasn't necessarily a political pundit, a political actor.
00:12:56.000And there were a lot of these different sort of loci where these people would organize, like Red Eye, and I guess everybody was reading Breitbart back then, and everybody's putting their content on YouTube.
00:13:07.000You get your academics and other types, but it was a lot of these, like, it was really a culture war.
00:13:14.000Again, for the new people that weren't really around for that, or maybe people who even are older who weren't around for that or weren't in tune to that, I remember how that came together very distinctly.
00:13:25.000There was a definite cultural sort of clash that preceded the political clash.
00:13:31.000The Trump Revolution was sort of precipitated, it was sort of prefigured by this cultural phenomenon going on on the college campuses with these like college events and this burgeoning like right wing, extremely online thing with Prager U and Shapiro and Breitbart and all that kind of stuff.
00:13:53.000And anyway, so Anthony Kumia being fired was a huge part of that.
00:13:56.000It was maybe one of the first things to happen.
00:14:41.000And I watched him with Gavin and some of his stuff back in those days.
00:14:46.000And it was a pretty cool experience, honestly, humbling, because I've seen that desk and that set and that green screen for like eight years since I was a kid.
00:14:56.000I remember watching Gavin on the same set.
00:15:00.000Gavin McGinnis was a big part of red pilling me back in the day.
00:15:05.000And so to be on the set with him, it was just like totally surreal and very cool.
00:15:10.000And I thought it was a great interview, too.
00:15:12.000I thought it was, well, it wasn't really an interview, it was more like a discussion.
00:15:21.000You know, he kind of reminds me, he's sort of like Willy Wonka, you know.
00:15:24.000He gave me this sort of very magnanimous, sort of benevolent vibe, you know, because he's very complimentary, very, very nice.
00:15:35.000And he's obviously older, he's sort of like an old head boomer, you know.
00:15:39.000And so I go up there and I'm talking to the crew or whatever, and he comes out, hey man, so great to meet you.
00:15:45.000Wow, you know, because apparently he watches my show a lot.
00:15:50.000And so I just got a really good, like a very positive vibe, very warm.
00:15:56.000Like that's a real one, you know what I mean?
00:15:58.000There's been a lot of drama lately, a lot of shenanigans going on.
00:16:01.000And for him to come out there and be like, hey man, like I just love what you're doing, it was just like a very humbling, very cool moment for me.
00:16:09.000And if you missed the interview, We've been posting some clips.
00:16:13.000I posted a clip on my Telegram channel.
00:16:47.000I don't know the link, I think it's compoundmedia.com.
00:16:52.000I will say, I mean, I flew out there myself, so I feel like it's a little bit fair that I get to use the content.
00:16:58.000But in any case, we had a great time, and I think that we may be getting Anthony on to Cozy sometime because I know he does Twitch streams.
00:17:08.000It's so funny, you know, because he is an older guy and he's sort of like got this sort of Gen X boomer sensibility.
00:17:17.000And he's in New York and he's a talk radio guy.
00:17:19.000You know, he reminds me a lot of like my dad or something.
00:17:22.000And apparently, he's like a big gamer.
00:17:24.000And so I checked out his Twitch channel, and he's playing Call of Duty and all this kind of stuff, Battlefield on Twitch.
00:17:31.000And he's got the headset, and he's got his face camera in the corner.
00:17:39.000And I just get such a kick out of that because it's like you see a guy like Jimbo Zoomer, you see a guy like Veda or UX with the cartoon deal.
00:17:52.000And then to see Anthony, you know, a guy like Anthony Kumi is like this old head, like talk radio giant, you know, comedy legend.
00:18:00.000And he's on there on Twitch, just like Party Guy would be with the headset.
00:18:03.000And he's in the corner playing Call of Duty.
00:18:16.000So I think we might be getting him on this week or next week, you know, whenever he does his next stream, I think he'll be doing it on Cozy.
00:19:07.000But I want to get into some things on the show.
00:19:12.000I want to say, before we get into the news, because there's really only one news story I want to talk about, and then I'll probably just wind it down because, like, again, not feeling good.
00:19:23.000I don't know if you can hear it in my voice, but I'm like winded.
00:19:32.000I'm probably only going to cover one story tonight and give a little bit of commentary.
00:19:37.000Not really much going on in the news anyway, but before I do that, apparently there was some big drama today with this flamenco guy who's a streamer on Cozy, was a streamer, is a streamer on YouTube, and I don't really want to get into the drama.
00:19:55.000I don't know the lore there, I don't really know the whole story.
00:19:58.000I was traveling all day, but I will say it is kind of funny because.
00:20:04.000Like a couple months ago, all this drama started.
00:20:38.000I mean, it sounds like Ralph is right, but that's just me.
00:20:42.000And then it was like all bets were off.
00:20:44.000Then I'm getting attacked, then I get dragged into it.
00:20:46.000Then, next thing I know, I'm debating Medicare, and then it's a big panel, and then everybody's shitting on me, and then people are quitting.
00:22:56.000You have in the span of like two weeks, like one guy who's on the other side is like in an incestuous relationship with the sister, which Ralph covered earlier this week or last week.
00:23:13.000I've been in New York meeting with people all week and planning events and other stuff, which we'll have some announcements probably next week or the week after.
00:23:56.000And, you know, we had our fun, we had our drama.
00:23:58.000I think I basically got proven right over the course of things.
00:24:01.000So, I'm just kind of like winding down my involvement in that whole area.
00:24:09.000You know, like I said, it's sort of like a harmless diversion.
00:24:12.000It's fun for a minute, but then you wake up and you realize it's like, okay, but we have a job to do it.
00:24:17.000We're trying to put America first here, we're trying to run a political movement.
00:24:20.000So, you know, Ralph can do his thing, and I'll do my thing.
00:24:24.000Ralph is sort of like this, you know, trailer park junkyard with nothing left to lose who's going out there and fighting scumbags of the internet.
00:24:54.000I'm going to take my dub and I'm cashing in my chips and I'm leaving, okay?
00:24:58.000Taking the dub, vindicated on a few things, and I'm leaving.
00:25:02.000There are some things that remain unresolved, though.
00:25:04.000You know, there are some things which are partially drama, partially business, which still we have some loose ends to tie up.
00:25:13.000So as far as that scene goes, I'm sort of bowing out, but there are some things, obviously, over the past month or so that remain unresolved.
00:25:21.000So, you know, we'll have to tie up some loose ends there, so to speak.
00:25:25.000But in any case, I just want to say that real quick because I know, you know, for the past couple months, there's been like this, oh, you know, you're involved in this e drama, you know, peripherally.
00:25:37.000And honestly, at this point, I'm like, okay, I'm good.
00:26:20.000Anyway, so I just want to touch on that for a sec.
00:26:23.000The big story that I want to talk about, it's not really a big story, but I put this out on my telegram.
00:26:30.000I guess Blake Masters is taking a lot of heat this week because he said that black people are responsible for the gun crime.
00:26:39.000And I just wanted to drop on the stream and say that Blake Masters, who is now the Republican Senate candidate in Arizona, has my complete and full endorsement.
00:26:51.000Or actually, did he win the election yet?
00:27:35.000We all know that the violence and the crime, and particularly the gun crime, is being driven by black people, specifically young black men, adolescent black men in the big cities.
00:27:50.000I talked about that on my show about the mass shooting in Uvalde.
00:27:54.000They want to talk about there's 450 school shootings this year.
00:27:59.000And how many of those school shootings?
00:28:01.000Well, really, it's like a gun is discharged at a school.
00:28:04.000How many of these are black kids in an inner city school as compared to, you know, some lone wolf is off the goop and, you know, mows down a dozen people?
00:28:41.000Any aspect of it, mass shootings, gangs, drugs, violent crime, murders, any of it.
00:28:49.000Because people will talk about, for example, crime as it pertains to guns, and they'll compare the American violent crime rate with firearms to Europe or other countries, and they'll say, well, you know, let's compare and contrast.
00:29:04.000Why is it that America has more gun crime than the other countries?
00:29:08.000And it's like, well, because France doesn't have.
00:29:12.000Like 40 million black people that are doing all of it.
00:29:19.000France doesn't have 30, 40% of the population that is black and Hispanic that's doing all of that.
00:29:27.000Because in any one of these discussions, once you control for race, it completely changes the conversation.
00:29:38.000And I know this is not a hot take, I know we're all on the same page about that.
00:29:44.000It's worth bearing in mind what an impact this has on lots of conversations.
00:29:50.000Because crime has a lot to do with housing, and crime has a lot to do with transportation, and has to do with guns and education.
00:29:58.000And so, all these, like, you look at a lot of these statistics that they'll push about how America's really failing.
00:30:04.000They'll talk about, oh, the education is so bad, and they'll talk about these sort of housing and urban development problems, and transportation being third world.
00:30:14.000Literally, how much of these problems are attributable?
00:30:19.000And again, it's not to say, hey, blacks, it's your fault, but it is to say that it's a demographic problem.
00:30:26.000When you subtract blacks and Hispanics, for example, from the standardized tests, American education's fine.
00:30:34.000American education's doing better than half of Europe if you're just looking at white students, which is an apples to apples comparison.
00:30:42.000If you're comparing white students in America to white students in Europe, it's comparable.
00:30:47.000When you're comparing American students to European or European states and their students, it's not an apples to apples comparison because you're comparing 60% white, 13% black, remainder Hispanic and Asian to 90% European.
00:31:06.000And if the average IQs are different, standardized tests will be different, and that's not really reflective of the education system or anything like that.
00:31:24.000Like, think about it in terms of housing.
00:31:27.000Why is it that housing is so unaffordable in the city?
00:31:30.000Housing is actually very affordable in the city if you don't mind living among black people.
00:31:36.000But if you do mind living among black people, then it's going to cost you property tax and it's going to be expensive because they have to essentially price violent blacks out of the neighborhood for it to be livable.
00:31:54.000And it's not that they're poor, it's that they're violent.
00:31:57.000You know, the reason that people don't want to live in the south side of Chicago is not because they don't want to live among poor people, it's because they don't want to live around violent people, violent black people.
00:32:06.000If you want to live in Chicago very affordably, okay, live in the south or the west side.
00:32:53.000New York, I don't know the percentage, but it's higher than 13%.
00:32:58.000Do you have a third of the population churning out these super predators, for lack of a better word, and they all live in the same neighborhood?
00:33:07.000And these are the people that constitute the bums?
00:33:10.000And they constitute the carjackers and the muggers and the gang members and organized crime, the organized violence.
00:33:31.000And again, this is why public transit's not really an option.
00:33:35.000This is why housing isn't really affordable.
00:33:37.000This is why nobody wants to send their kids to school in the city because.
00:33:41.000Violent black people are going to be there.
00:33:45.000And then, at the end of the day, they're going to use the crime statistics about black people and use them to disarm white people because the conservative base that supports the Second Amendment and the gun rights are all white.
00:34:00.000They're all people that are not in the big cities, for the most part, obviously.
00:34:06.000Who are the people that own the 400 million guns?
00:34:09.000Who are the people that own the semi automatic assault rifles and so on?
00:34:14.000It is the almost totally white people that don't live in the cities.
00:34:19.000That's what constitutes the basis of support of NRA, 2A groups, whatever, and that have the gun ownership.
00:34:28.000And so it's not enough that the black violence problem is going to basically torpedo the prospect of having a great, successful city that's walkable, livable, affordable, public transit, and so on.
00:34:42.000But also, then they're going to take these statistics of black, violent city blacks.
00:34:48.000And their gun crime and use it to bully peaceful rural and suburban whites who actually own the guns legally, purchase them and own them legally and peacefully.
00:35:00.000And so it's so, and the point being is it's so refreshing to hear, honestly, from any mainstream figure, but especially from a guy like Blake Masters.
00:35:09.000So he's asked about the gun crime problem.
00:35:12.000If you don't know, Blake Masters is this Teal funded candidate.
00:35:16.000He was a friend of Peter Teal's business partner.
00:35:18.000I think he got $10, $15 million from Peter Teal.
00:35:22.000For a super PAC, he's running for the Republican nomination for the Arizona Senate.
00:35:34.000And so I guess he was asked about gun crime, and he said, Well, what Democrats don't want to say is that it's an inner city problem, it's a gang problem.
00:37:33.000Statewide office means tens of millions of dollars pouring in.
00:37:36.000Statewide office means, obviously, Much bigger electorate, much bigger constituency.
00:37:42.000And so, if you get a senator in there that's saying, Yeah, the gun crime's coming from black people, you have just destroyed the Overton window.
00:37:51.000We're not talking about congressmen saying that.
00:37:54.000We're not talking about, you know, and it's not to knock congressmen, but it is to say it matters that someone with that stature, and he's not there yet, he's running, but if someone like that gets into a position like that, having said, Look, it's the black people doing the crime, it's a big deal.
00:38:17.000And this is something that really matters because, you know, we have to talk about race.
00:38:23.000And the problem that I've had with some of these teal guys, not all of them, but some of them, people like Joe Kent, Joe Kent takes a very different track.
00:38:31.000He's up there in Washington State saying, we need to not talk about race.
00:38:51.000It doesn't mean that you have to talk about it in a particular way or whatever, but it is a part of the conversation.
00:38:58.000It's salient, it's relevant, it's almost this sort of immovable part of the conversation to sort of hand wave that away because it's a difficult thing and say, oh, well, it's not race is a big distraction.
00:40:26.000There's not just intrinsic meaning there, but there's also sort of a constructed meaning there in the sense that, you know, Indians and Englishmen are biologically different.
00:41:02.000The Indians have their fine black hair and no body hair, and they've got the high cheekbones, right?
00:41:08.000Like Elizabeth Warren says, and they're prone to alcoholism, and they were on the American continent for thousands of years, and so they developed slightly differently than we did, just like Charles Darwin discovered that birds evolved a little bit differently on one island than on the other.
00:41:37.000And then, of course, we construct identities based on these differences nationalities and, you know, in group identity, those kinds of things.
00:41:48.000The point being is there's levels to it.
00:41:58.000Are visible in things like skin color, but they also go far deeper than that in things like temperament and attitudes and sense of humor, all kinds of culturally ingrained things that are transmitted by way of actually ancestry.
00:42:14.000You might say, well, it's culture and not race, but culture and race are like this.
00:42:21.000And the point being is 300, 400 years ago, when Indians and colonists were cutting each other's heads off and burning each other alive, There was no CNN that was telling them to hate each other to rake in the dough because that's what we always hear.
00:42:37.000It's like, oh, well, everyone would just get along, but the rich have created this diversion to distract us from our real enemy.
00:42:47.000The real thing that they don't want is for white and black people to tag team the rich or something.
00:42:52.000And that's why they introduce these unnecessary divisions.
00:43:06.000You know, apparently, all these scheming billionaires trying to divide us up when you had people living in teepees and people living in, you know, these little wooden towns when they started the first colonies.
00:43:40.000I'm saying that insofar as people are social, insofar as people look for similarity and likeness to create groups for security, for protection, for family, and insofar as people are violent, people are collectively violent.
00:44:39.000You're taking the easy approach, you're saying something that's non controversial.
00:44:45.000And you're saying that basically because it's easy, but then they try to dress it up like, I'm saying it because it's true.
00:44:54.000You know, they're not just going to go out there and say it's not about race, it's about class, because talking about race is bad for business.
00:45:01.000They say, well, the real esoteric truth is that it's about class, you know.
00:45:06.000Thinking it's about race isn't the full story, which really, if you're really red pilled, and it's like, no, it definitely is about race.
00:45:46.000How are you going to fix the fact that we've got this affirmative action problem without talking about race?
00:45:51.000How are you going to explain away the disparities?
00:45:53.000You look at white people, you look at black people, you have these disparities that have persisted for generations income, wealth, education, IQ, social status, home ownership, debt, all of it.
00:46:07.000How do you explain these persistent disparities between the races without saying that they're just different?
00:46:15.000Why are blacks not getting into these highly selective schools?
00:46:20.000Because they have a lower IQ, they have a lower average IQ.
00:46:23.000That's why they score lower on standardized tests.
00:46:26.000And if we determine everything by standardized tests, there'd be very few black people getting into Harvard.
00:46:31.000There'd be very few black people getting into Yale.
00:46:33.000You would have them, but you'd have fewer of them than whites because of how the IQs are distributed across the people belonging to that racial category.
00:46:47.000And so it's like, how do you, like I said, how do you explain those disparities?
00:47:02.000That's where, you know, in this affirmative action stuff, I use that as an example because that's a big problem.
00:47:09.000We can't be sending all these black and Hispanic people to Harvard who are a standard deviation too dumb to be there.
00:47:19.000And then those people are going to go on to be engineers and doctors because guess what?
00:47:23.000Then the bridges are going to collapse and the surgeries are going to fail.
00:47:27.000Like we're going to have a completely, you know, failing society because we've got subpar people.
00:47:32.000We Did away with the standards because we told ourselves that all things being equal, caterus paribus, right?
00:47:43.000Blacks and Hispanics should have the same distribution as white people.
00:47:47.000They should have the same opportunities and, well, not opportunities, but the same outcome, the same share of the wealth, the same share of the income, the same number of seats, proportional representation.
00:48:00.000And you would only think that if, again, if everybody was equal, but we're not equal.
00:49:41.000And that person's going to have an easy life because people like to look at that person as that person is going to get jobs and all that kind of stuff.
00:49:50.000And by the way, that goes for men and women.
00:49:51.000That goes for good looking men and good looking women who will dominate the app.
00:49:55.000You'll see now because of social media, it's like the highest status males on a global scale are just going to get rich and famous just right because they're genetically superior specimens.
00:50:08.000Again, not to say like I don't want to sound like Hitler here, I don't want to sound like eugenicists, but you know what I'm saying?
00:50:15.000You're going to get the genetically tallest, most beautiful men and women.
00:50:22.000They're the ones who are going to thrive on these apps in a global marketplace.
00:50:27.000You know, before you're in a village of like 100 people, and you have like, you know, naturally there's the ugliest person in the village and the best looking person in the village, but you're only competing within like 100 people.
00:50:38.000Now on TikTok, you got 800 million people on there.
00:50:42.000So you're going to get the best looking people in a pool of 800 million.
00:50:46.000You know, the most charming, the best looking, the best genetics, et cetera.
00:50:51.000And conversely, so you'll be scrolling through the For You page and you'll see.
00:50:57.000Okay, there's some buff, rip, Chad guy.
00:51:01.000And then you'll scroll and then you'll see someone that goes viral because they're like a paraplegic.
00:51:06.000Then you'll scroll and you'll see someone that goes viral because they're literally a fucking retard.
00:51:11.000You'll scroll and you'll see that guy who sang Empire State of Mind in New York, that guy with autism who goes in Times Square and goes, New York, there's nothing you can't do.
00:51:26.000Or you'll scroll up and you'll see some guy with like some horror of like, A burn victim, someone with like a disfigured face, you know, some guy will go viral because they're like 500 pounds.
00:51:37.000They have like literally cockroaches crawling on their wall in the background.
00:51:42.000And like TikTok is this, excuse me, it's like this brutal, absolutely brutal, merciless representation of human inequality.
00:51:53.000I'm not even representation, but you know what I'm saying?
00:51:56.000It's like now more than ever with social media, it's so stark and it's so in your face and it's so apparent.
00:52:03.000We were not born equal, not individually, not in groups.
00:55:19.000The Southern strategy means that the parties flipped and then, you know, the races became.
00:55:27.000And these are the hoops you have to jump through to evade the reality, which is race.
00:55:32.000And sooner or later, it has to be a part of the conversation if we're going to right the ship.
00:55:37.000Otherwise, we're literally going to burn our entire country, raise the country, because we literally don't want to offend non white people by talking candidly about those things, because that is what is required to preserve what we have.
00:55:53.000So, Blake Masters saying that is a big deal.
00:55:55.000I don't know how, you know, if he's going to go and defend that comment or anything, but he's right.
00:55:59.000And when he says, frankly, it's black people, it's like, yeah, how about some frankness?
00:56:07.000And if we want to redirect the conversation on, you know, here's why we need to take all the white people's guns, it'd be helpful to say, well, it's not us, it's black people.
00:56:20.000We all know where it's coming from, it's unassailable.
00:56:24.000And while we're on the subject of gun crime, if you want to solve it, let's do something about that instead.
00:56:30.000So I hope he sticks to his guns on that.
00:56:32.000He's been out there, I saw on Twitter fighting.
00:56:34.000Some journalist attacked him, and he retweeted all the journalists.
00:56:39.000Like this journalist tweeted a bunch of bad stuff like 10 years ago, so it looks like he's kind of going on the attack on the attack and uh on the offensive and not backing down, which is good to see.
00:56:55.000Um, but yeah, like I said, I like him, good comment, and that's the direction we need to be going in.
00:57:01.000And this is why you should never settle, okay, because you have a sort of a tale of two teal candidates, you've got Joe Kent.
00:57:10.000Who's running for Congress up there in Washington's third?
00:57:13.000And he could do really well because this is a district where you got a Trump impeachment incumbent, meaning that the incumbent voted for the Trump impeachment as a Republican.
00:58:56.000If Trump was here, you know, in terms of if John McCain's here and Trump moved all the way to the right over here, you're like walking it back.
00:59:06.000You know, all these people are walking it back closer to the middle, which is closer to the left.
00:59:12.000We need to be pushing further to the right.
00:59:14.000People need to be saying things more extreme than Trump.
00:59:17.000Maybe not in as a provocative way because not everyone can do that style.
00:59:56.000So, just because Joe Kent gets up there and says some of the right things, you know, or any number of these guys for that matter, it doesn't mean that we need them.
01:00:08.000Not necessarily me in particular, but they need the support of the Trump people.
01:00:13.000And we should be so quick to throw the hat in the ring for anybody that says, you know, they have a Trump endorsement or they're pro Trump or whatever.