00:28:38.000Our featured story, of course, we are talking about the Israeli Palestinian peace deal, which was released this afternoon at the White House.
00:28:48.000And this is something which has been going on for a long time.
00:28:51.000Actually, and this is what we'll get into tonight this deal has been in the works for years.
00:28:57.000And this deal was supposed to have been announced in 2019.
00:29:01.000They said that this was supposed to be announced a few months after the initial part of the agreement was announced early last year in the spring.
00:29:08.000And for some reason, out of a clear blue sky, we're hearing about it today.
00:29:12.000And we'll get into why that is, and we'll get into everything that's in the deal.
00:29:41.000The person that put this deal together was the president's son in law, Jared Kushner, in coalition with the Israeli government.
00:29:48.000So you can only imagine why the deal might be biased in the way that it is.
00:29:53.000So we'll be talking all about that tonight.
00:29:55.000We'll be getting into the specifics of the deal, the map that has been created.
00:30:00.000They published a map of what the deal would look like in practice.
00:30:03.000It's a bit deceptive, and we'll get into all of that.
00:30:05.000We'll talk about other provisions of the deal, settlements in the West Bank, things like that.
00:30:10.000It's pretty thorough, so we're probably going to spend a lot of time on that tonight.
00:30:14.000That'll be our main story, our featured story.
00:30:17.000We'll also be talking tonight about drag queens.
00:30:20.000They're back in the news, can you believe it?
00:30:23.000You know, if you thought that it couldn't get any worse when they were having children becoming drag queens or they were having drag queens come to public libraries to do story times, Well, it's gotten even better.
00:30:47.000So, for the first time in history, they will be running an advertisement for hummus, and it will feature drag queens.
00:30:55.000Super Bowl, of course, watched every year by more than 100 million people, and everybody will be watching with their undivided attention on a drag queen commercial.
00:31:05.000That is news story number one, if you could believe it.
00:31:08.000The other story regarding drag queens, why they're back in the news, is a school in Brooklyn, public elementary school in Brooklyn, is going to be bringing in drag queens to talk to first graders about gender fluidity.
00:31:22.000So we'll be talking about both of those things tonight.
00:31:25.000It's more of the same, it's more of our epic, awesome country.
00:31:29.000Totally glad we won World War II, totally glad we defeated totalitarianism country.
00:31:35.000We're going to be talking about all of that, and you know, you could probably guess my takes, my reactions on all of this, but you know, you do love to see it.
00:31:43.000This kind of stuff, it just keeps going.
00:31:46.000As much as we do this show, believe it or not, as much as I do this show, and as much as everybody hates this, most people hate this kind of stuff, it keeps going and it gets worse every day.
00:31:58.000When we talk about immigration, when we talk about multiracialism, anti white agenda, the proliferation of drag queens and homosexuality, As much as everybody hates this, it continues and gets worse every week.
00:32:14.000So that's going to be a very exciting white pilling thing to talk about tonight.
00:32:18.000We'll be talking about the Super Bowl and the first graders.
00:32:22.000And that should be our show the Drag Queen Invasion and the Israeli Palestinian Peace Agreement.
00:32:29.000So it's going to be a pretty busy and eventful show tonight.
00:32:32.000But before we dive into any of the current events, I do just want to officially announce on the show.
00:32:38.000I was actually supposed to announce this yesterday, but I forgot.
00:32:42.000It's sort of like a soft announcement.
00:32:45.000There's going to be a bigger announcement on Friday, but I posted about this on Twitter, and a lot of you probably already know what I'm talking about or have seen this, but we have been talking for a long time on this show about CPAC.
00:32:58.000I was at CPAC last year, and I was banned.
00:33:01.000For the first time, I was banned from CPAC last year, which, if you don't know, CPAC is what is it?
00:33:07.000It's the Conservative Political Action Conference, and every year they do this in Washington, D.C., late February, early March.
00:33:15.000And this is like the big conservative political convention of the year.
00:33:20.000And the president, I believe, has spoken there every year since he's been in office.
00:33:27.000Typically, a lot of prominent Republican senators, conservative internet personalities, all kinds of people show up to CPAC and give speeches.
00:33:36.000And there's an exhibition hall where they have college groups and nonprofits and things like that.
00:33:42.000Probably a lot of you already know what CPAC is.
00:33:44.000But we've been talking for a long time about doing an event of our own during CPAC because, as I said, Last year, I was banned from CPAC.
00:33:52.000Patrick Casey, a friend of mine, he was also banned from CPAC.
00:33:55.000A number of America First conservatives were disinvited, blacklisted, not allowed to go to the conference last year.
00:34:03.000So basically, since last year, we've been talking about doing our own thing on the sidelines of CPAC for 2020.
00:34:10.000And I've been telling you guys that that was going to happen, that plans were in the works.
00:34:14.000And I can finally announce to you tonight the event that we're going to have.
00:34:18.000It's going to be called America First.
00:34:24.000You know, they've got CPAC, we've got AFPAC, and the name really highlights the different priorities.
00:34:28.000You know, they are the conservative political action conference, and these days, you know, what does conservative really mean anymore?
00:34:35.000Conservatives are just as bad as the left, you know, how they blacklist, but also how they talk about the issues.
00:34:42.000You know, we just got done with this with the Groyper Wars, seeing what conservative Inc. is really all about with Charlie Kirk and all these characters.
00:34:49.000Somebody said on Twitter after I announced this, maybe they'll bring back Van Jones this year.
00:34:54.000Van Jones of CNN who spoke at CPAC last year, right?
00:34:57.000So, America First PAC is going to be happening on Friday, February 28th in Washington, D.C. It'll be happening during the same weekend CPAC is, I think it's February 27th to the 29th.
00:35:10.000It's the Thursday until Sunday, CPAC at the end of February, and that'll be at the National Harbor in Maryland.
00:35:17.000Our conference will be Friday evening, February 28th, and it'll be called AF PAC.
00:35:23.000And I also said this on Twitter there's going to be more details about this on Friday.
00:35:27.000For reasons I can't explain now, we can't drop all the information.
00:35:31.000But on Friday, I will give you a speaker's list and how you can attend, how you can show up and come see everybody.
00:35:40.000So it's sort of like a soft rollout tonight.
00:35:43.000I'm telling you, save the date if you are planning on coming out for our CPAC event.
00:35:47.000Because I have told everybody in the past that we are going to do something buy your plane tickets, buy your hotel, and everything.
00:35:53.000So I'm giving you sort of like a soft save the date if you need to make your travel accommodations or anything.
00:35:58.000That we are going to be doing something.
00:36:00.000We're doing our AF Pack on the 28th, and Friday I'll be telling you all the rest the speakers list, the details, how you can attend, how you can get an invitation, all of that.
00:36:09.000And it's going to be, I think, a really great event.
00:36:11.000You know, we did the Groyp. Leadership Summit in December, and that was taking place at the same time as the Turning Point USA Student Action Summit.
00:36:21.000And you know, we got a lot of concern trolling for that event.
00:36:25.000I'm not going to name any names, but there are some pretty high profile people on Twitter who are saying, Whoa, we shouldn't be doing events.
00:36:32.000Events are going to get people doxxed.
00:36:34.000I, people in my DMs, one person in particular, one homosexual in particular, saying, You're going to get young people's lives ruined.
00:36:59.000Number one, to remind you, I don't think I haven't seen any concern trolling like there was during the Groyper Leadership Summit yet, probably because all those people were humiliated and embarrassed when our event went off without a hitch and nobody got doxed, nobody got in any kind of trouble or anything like that.
00:37:16.000So I say that primarily to say, or on the one hand, to say, You know, we know what we're doing.
00:37:24.000But more importantly, because I feel like now that we've got the formula figured out for these events, this one's going to be really classy.
00:37:33.000You know, the Goiper Leadership Summit was great.
00:38:06.000You know, not like we can't organize events, but usually when you do these kinds of events, there's always like something, you know, like a technical thing or it's something with the stream or whatever.
00:38:15.000You know, there always seems to be a snag.
00:38:17.000But for the Groyper Leadership Summit, it went off like completely smoothly.
00:38:23.000There was so much scrutiny, the stakes were so high for us to pull it off that we took like every precaution.
00:38:29.000We planned and prepared for everything.
00:38:31.000And so by the time it came through, the one problem we had was that like my shoelace broke and we had to get shoelaces.
00:38:38.000But aside from that, it was completely smooth.
00:38:39.000And so now that we figured out how to do these things, and it's really great, America First is really building up this kind of like human capital in the sense that we now know how to do these kinds of things.
00:38:51.000We now have the resources, we have the manpower, the know how, we have the experience.
00:38:57.000To really make these things happen consistently and at a serious professional level.
00:39:02.000And so, this event, I think, is going to be the best one we've done yet.
00:39:05.000You know, like I said, we did the Groyper Summit in December.
00:40:12.000Aside from that, there's really nothing else in the way of housekeeping, anything like that.
00:40:16.000Just another reminder we're using entropy on YouTube instead of the super chats.
00:40:19.000I know we've been saying that for the past week or so, but if you're just joining in on YouTube, you haven't been here in a while.
00:40:26.000Remember, super chats are done on YouTube.
00:40:28.000If you want to throw up a super chat, you can do it on DLive, or if you use the link for entropy, which is entropystream.live slash app slash America First, you can do a super chat through entropy, and that link is in the description as well.
00:40:43.000So, with that out of the way, okay, so with all of that out of the way, we can begin talking about the stuff, talking about the substance, the news.
00:40:52.000Our first story, we're talking about the drag queens.
00:40:56.000And, you know, I don't even really know what to say anymore.
00:40:58.000It just keeps getting worse, you know, when it comes to the gay stuff, the LGBT stuff, the drag queens.
00:41:18.000You know, like I said at the top of the show, our two developments today with regard to these people is now not only do you have child drag queens, you know, children becoming drag queens, not only do you have drag queens in public libraries, but as of today, you now have drag queens in Super Bowl advertisements and in public schools for first graders.
00:41:39.000Public schools, not just libraries, but schools as well.
00:41:42.000So I'll read to you, we'll talk about the Super Bowl first.
00:41:46.000It says, quote, Drag Queens from RuPaul's Drag Race will be featured in a Sabra hummus ad set to air during the Super Bowl, the first time drag queens will appear in a commercial during the football event, according to NBC News.
00:42:00.000Sabra released a 15 second teaser of the ad last week.
00:42:04.000It features RuPaul's Drag Race contestants Kim Chi and Ms. Cracker.
00:42:10.000Ms. Cracker said, quote, I hope this doesn't give me helmet hair during the Super Bowl advertisement as she tries to put a football helmet over her wig.
00:42:18.000Kim Chi is beside her, dipping a cracker into a tub of Sabra hummus.
00:42:23.000The ad also stars rapper T Payne as well as Real Housewives of New Jersey stars Teresa Guidis, I think that's how you pronounce that, and Caroline Manzel.
00:42:34.000And this is according to the chief marketing officer for Sabra, Jason Levine.
00:42:39.000He says, We're bringing a diverse group of personalities to the table and demonstrating just how incredibly versatile, relevant, and relatable hummus is today.
00:43:31.000He says, for queer audiences, it is an art form and an outsider's language.
00:43:37.000He said, reaching the Super Bowl means taking our language into every home in the nation and millions around the world.
00:43:44.000And it's interesting because you could really just read this article, and there's one way to read it, which is if you're a progressive, if you're on board with this left wing, liberal, disgusting, perverse agenda.
00:43:55.000Which is that the revolution is a good thing.
00:43:58.000And spreading this propaganda into millions of homes is a good thing.
00:44:02.000But, you know, I don't even really need to read this off for any person who is a Christian to read this and see it as completely diabolical.
00:44:09.000You know, there's almost two tones that you could read into this.
00:44:11.000You could read into Jason Levine and, you know, Diamondstein and whoever else rubbing their hands together and saying, This is incredible, this is great, it's diverse, and so on.
00:44:20.000Or you could read, This is pure evil and totally diabolical and totally deliberate.
00:44:24.000You know, rubbing their hands together saying, This is revolutionary for queer audiences.
00:45:18.000Like, if holidays, monuments, advertisements, movies, throwaway lines in the Avengers, whatever, if none of that mattered, if none of that had any significance, if that didn't carry any weight, if that didn't have impact on people's minds and their opinions, why would they bother?
00:45:36.000Why would they bother going to great lengths and spending money on specialists?
00:45:40.000And, you know, this guy, Bob Wittick from NBC, he specializes in LGBT audiences.
00:45:46.000Why would there be an industry behind this?
00:45:47.000Why would there be a deliberate push and agenda behind this if there wasn't something to it, if there wasn't a return on investment?
00:45:57.000When they say they're going to put this propaganda into millions of homes around the world, that matters.
00:46:03.000You know, the Super Bowl, that is featured in the Super Bowl.
00:46:06.000I know we've seen drag queen advertisements and everything else at this point.
00:46:10.000You know, this is not the first time we've talked about drag queens in advertisements.
00:46:14.000I think there were a bunch on Twitter during Gay Pride Month last year during June.
00:46:21.000You know, I remember there was a Chips Ahoy commercial of drag queens and things like that.
00:46:25.000But the Super Bowl in particular is a staple of American culture.
00:46:28.000You know, I was looking at the numbers today about the Super Bowl just out of curiosity, and it's staggering the audience for the Super Bowl.
00:46:36.000170 million people watched the Super Bowl in, I think, 2017, 2015.
00:46:43.000This is like the biggest television event, I don't need to tell you, of the year.
00:46:48.000And so that you have this stuff in commercials, that you have it in libraries, that you have it on TV, period, but that you have it during the Super Bowl, the biggest thing of the year.
00:46:58.000This speaks to the progress of this cultural revolution.
00:47:01.000That's how they describe it, and that's what it is a revolution.
00:47:05.000And I also find it really interesting the specific language here, not just the revolutionary part, but also about the homes.
00:47:15.000Because, of course, what is the mantra that we have heard from the left about all this stuff for the past 10 years at least when it comes to gay marriage, when it comes to drag queens, when it comes to transgender, when it comes to all this stuff?
00:47:29.000As long as it's in the privacy of your own home, that's what we've heard for years.
00:47:34.000And I don't need to tell you, we've been saying this for a long time on the show, but clearly and obviously, that is no longer the case.
00:47:40.000And they're not even pretending that that's the case anymore.
00:47:42.000No shit, it's not in the homes anymore.
00:47:44.000No shit, it's not in the privacy of their own homes anymore.
00:48:05.000And you really have to do a lot of deep reflection about media because it's so striking the way you could go back 10 years, 20 years, 30 years.
00:48:15.000You go back to the 1990s and you just take a look at what you could put on television and what you could not put on television.
00:48:23.000Just 30 years ago, just in the 1990s, not long ago at all.
00:48:26.000And even in the 1990s, you look at a lot of the media that came out during that time, movies like Natural Born Killers or other things.
00:48:34.000In the 1990s, people considered that a time of media excess.
00:48:39.000Even 30 years ago, they considered that a time of degeneracy and hyperviolence and all the rest.
00:48:45.000And by today's standards, that looks like it's 500 years ago.
00:48:48.000That looks like it was before the French Revolution.
00:48:51.000It looks like you might have had a theocratic government in the 1990s.
00:48:56.000You know, God forbid you go back 50 years ago or 60 years ago.
00:48:59.000You go back to the decency laws for television and movies, the regulations that were there during the war, you know, in the 1950s.
00:49:07.000And you look at just how quickly and how things have accelerated in such a short amount of time that you went from maybe 30 years ago, you still had the Simpsons going to church, and now here we are in 2020, you've got drag queens in Super Bowl advertisements.
00:49:24.000And you want to know the truth about all this stuff.
00:49:27.000On the one hand, it is a black pill, on the one hand, it is a very sad and sick day in our country that this kind of perversion is tolerated, that this kind of deviancy is not even tolerated anymore, but accepted, embraced, and celebrated.
00:49:42.000In front of the most mainstream audiences, on the one hand, it is a sad day that this is the case.
00:49:47.000But on the other hand, you understand that millions of people in this country feel the exact same way that I do.
00:49:54.000Most of the country feels the exact same way that I do, and probably that most of the people watching the show feel about all this.
00:50:01.000And so there is a silver lining, in my opinion, about how hard they're pushing this stuff, how extreme, how excessive it's getting, which is that they're overplaying their hand.
00:50:11.000Now, finally, you know, if we didn't have a spine as conservatives or Christians or Republicans 10 years ago when a lot of this stuff started to kick off, maybe finally we can find a backbone.
00:50:23.000Now that there is, I think, overwhelming revulsion, there is an overwhelming reaction from the heartland against this kind of stuff, that maybe now is actually a golden hour.
00:50:35.000Maybe now is the dawn of actually a real reactionary Christian conservative movement in America once again.
00:50:42.000To me, that's maybe the silver lining.
00:50:45.000Because honestly, 10 years ago, it was pretty tough to beat.
00:50:47.000And I said this before, but the propaganda was intense and it was persuasive and it was compelling.
00:50:53.000You know, 10 years ago, they weren't asking for much, really.
00:50:56.000Or at least that's what they said from the messaging from television and from politicians.
00:51:16.000We're going to put your son in a dress.
00:51:17.000We're going to take custody of your son and we're going to chemically castrate him.
00:51:21.000You know, so it's a completely different story 10 years later.
00:51:24.000And now is the decisive moment to act on this.
00:51:27.000Now, I think, is the moment, the tipping point when we can maybe put a stop to this.
00:51:32.000So I see this thing with the Super Bowl, and I know that when this is broadcast to an audience of nearly 200 million people, I would venture to guess that most of them will see that and they will look away.
00:51:44.000I would venture to guess that most people are going to see that and they are going to roll their eyes, they will scoff.
00:51:49.000They will turn at somebody else in the living room or family room and they'll say, Can you believe this?
00:51:54.000Can you believe this on the Super Bowl?
00:51:57.000And therein lies a lot of opportunity for what we're trying to do.
00:52:00.000So I'm a little bit, you know, I think there is a silver lining with that.
00:52:04.000But of course, it only gets worse when it comes to the children.
00:52:07.000You know, that was only one development I saw today.
00:52:09.000Another development, which to me, I think lacks a silver lining, which is the introduction of the drag queens now to public schools.
00:52:17.000You know, like I said, we've been talking about public libraries for a long time.
00:52:21.000And, you know, if you could even make any kind of equivocations about drag queens and public libraries, I think that is sick, and libraries that do this should be like, well, I'm not going to say what I think should be done to these libraries, but it shouldn't be tolerated.
00:52:37.000But if there's any equivocating, if there's any saving grace about that, you could say at least, at least, the only people that are going to see drag queens in public libraries are people that bring their kids to them.
00:52:53.000In the sense that it's like, at the bare minimum with that.
00:52:56.000And, you know, it's really a reach to say that there's any kind of a good thing.
00:53:01.000At the bare minimum, and it's horrible and it's disgusting and so on, but at the bare minimum, if it's in the libraries, it's like, well, at least I don't have to take my kid to it.
00:53:10.000I'll forget that because now it's come to public schools.
00:53:13.000Now it's not just in public libraries, but public schools too.
00:53:16.000And by the way, when I say that, I only mean to illustrate how bad it is that it's in schools.
00:53:20.000Not to say, like, oh, well, this is fine, just don't bring your kids there.
00:53:43.000It says a first grade class at Maurice Sendak Community School, a public school in Brooklyn, New York, will host a drag queen story hour for the students on February 24th, according to Sohrab Amari, the op ed editor for the New York Post.
00:53:57.000Which, by the way, I hate Sohrab Amari.
00:54:00.000This guy is a disgusting Zion con and a fake Christian and a fake conservative, but.
00:54:07.000It says Amari posted a screen capture on Monday of a note to parents from a first grade teacher who promoted the event as a learning experience for children.
00:54:15.000Apparently, the school has hosted a Drag Queen Story Hour in the past as well.
00:54:20.000The note says In an effort to continue to strengthen and enhance inclusiveness and diversity in our schools, the first grade will be taking part in Drag Queen Story Hour.
00:54:30.000The program is run by the Brooklyn Public Library and has been a hit at the library and other local public schools.
00:54:36.000We had Drag Queen Story Hour the past few years, and the first graders loved it.
00:54:42.000Drag Queen Story Hour, the teacher explains, is run by a drag queen who will visit our school on Monday, February 24th.
00:54:49.000Often during Drag Queen Story Hour, the drag queen reads a book to children about LGBT issues.
00:54:55.000In 2017, at a New York public library, a drag queen read Morris Micklewhite and The Tangerine Dress, a book about a boy who wears a dress.
00:55:03.000The note says, She will read to the students all while teaching into ideas of inclusiveness.
00:55:10.000Gender fluidity and gender roles, family structures, acceptance, empathy, and individuality.
00:55:19.000And the reason why I say that there's not really a silver lining with this, why there's not a white pill with this, is on the one hand, in the same way, I'm sure people are repulsed by this.
00:55:28.000I'm sure, in the same way that when people see Super Bowl advertisements, they are as repulsed or more repulsed that children are being exposed to this in library schools, whatever.
00:55:40.000But here's why it's really hard to see a silver lining.
00:55:43.000Because whether or not people get mad about it, whether or not people use this for a political agenda, the kids are exposed to this no matter what.
00:55:54.000They're doing this in libraries, other public schools.
00:55:57.000And that kind of brainwashing, that kind of programming, it doesn't end.
00:56:02.000So, whereas I can see a Super Bowl advertisement and say, maybe this will galvanize Christians.
00:56:06.000Maybe this will galvanize or embolden Christians and conservatives across the country.
00:56:11.000Maybe it'll radicalize people, make them think differently.
00:56:15.000The same thing will happen with the Drag Queen Story Hour, but to a certain extent, once you're exposing children to it, you have to ask yourself at some level, Is it already too late at that point?
00:56:25.000Not that we shouldn't fight, not that we shouldn't be trying to overturn this stuff, but at least for the children.
00:56:58.000But you look at all these children who must already be lost.
00:57:01.000And it's not just in Brooklyn, it's across the country.
00:57:04.000This is happening to an entire generation of people.
00:57:06.000And they're hearing this from first grade on, from kindergarten all the way through, all the way through to college.
00:57:12.000And how many lost souls are already out there?
00:57:15.000How much of this next generation is already completely corrupted, completely led astray, completely demoralized?
00:57:24.000You know, that to me makes it a lot harder to say, well, but the good news is.
00:57:28.000People are going to turn around, and I think they will, and I think people will turn against this because I don't think any decent person can look at this, even if you're liberal, even if you're in favor of inclusivity, whatever.
00:57:39.000I don't think anybody believes it's appropriate that sixth graders, or sixth graders, six year olds, first graders should be exposed to this stuff.
00:57:46.000So, on some level, it's like, yeah, I mean, that's great and all, but when it comes to the kids, it's like, it's really depressing.
00:57:52.000It is really sad that that is happening to children.
00:57:55.000And you see it all the time, you see it all over the place.
00:57:58.000And if you think it's not happening by you, just take a look, you know, pull out your.
00:58:02.000Local library catalog, you know, if they send out a mailer, go on the website, take a look at what your public school is doing.
00:58:10.000It's probably not happening everywhere, maybe not in certain rural parts or whatever, but if you live near any kind of a major city, I'm sure it's happening near you.
00:58:18.000You know, we've covered over the years these drag queen story hour events, things in the public school curriculum from everywhere, from, you know, like little rural towns in Ohio, in Wisconsin.
00:58:29.000They're happening like in my neck of the woods in Chicago, in Illinois, you know?
00:58:32.000So, On some level, you know, like I said with the Super Bowl, it's like it's great.
00:58:44.000I think that while we look at the silver lining, we should not forget the gravity of the situation.
00:58:48.000I don't think we should ever forget really the tragedy that this is.
00:58:52.000Because understand, when it comes to like school curriculum, this is one of the biggest things that influences, you know, children and teenagers and eventually adults is what they're taught in schools.
00:59:03.000In an era where parents aren't raising their kids and teachers are, and Daycares are and so on.
00:59:11.000Because here's the kicker with school not only is it coming from the teacher, which is bad enough, but if the teacher is teaching your whole class, and if all the teachers are teaching your whole school, and in all the different schools in your community, well, now it's not just your teachers, but it's your peers.
00:59:27.000And probably the parents have to be on board with it too.
00:59:30.000So you look at every aspect of a child's life, every influencer on a child's worldview, from their peers to their teachers to the internet to the media.
00:59:40.000And then ultimately to the parents, it's all being shaped by this kind of an agenda.
00:59:45.000And what really is the saving grace for somebody like that?
00:59:48.000How do you get out of this kind of stuff?
00:59:50.000Increasingly, the internet is going away in terms of opposition to this right wing, Christian, conservative, socially conservative worldview.
00:59:58.000That's all being purged from the internet.
01:00:00.000So, where do people even go to find this stuff?
01:00:01.000Even if they go to church in some cases, Protestant churches, you'll have a celebration of drag queens, LGBT, trans, whatever.
01:00:11.000So, you really have to think about the damage that's being done here.
01:00:15.000This is arguably one of our bigger priorities.
01:00:17.000You know, a lot of people during the Groyper Wars would say, can't you pick more important priorities?
01:00:22.000What could be more important than this?
01:00:24.000What could be more important than this, which is the corruption of the children?
01:00:27.000If you read the Bible, you would understand the importance of this.
01:00:30.000You know, that you've got children of God, you've got children being led to the path of hell, led into a path of sin, their lives, souls annihilated, destroyed.
01:00:51.000But on another level, we should not lose sight of what a somber and sad thing it is that's going on in the country when it comes to this.
01:00:58.000You know, and drag queens are the epitome of this LGBT revolution.
01:01:02.000I can't think of anything more repulsive.
01:01:05.000I can't think of any more disgusting fulfillment of all that that represents than a drag queen.
01:01:10.000You know, if you've ever seen any of the culture that surrounds it, there was actually a news story not too long ago about some show on Netflix where a drag queen is talking to a child and says, the child is a top, which in gay sex terms means the penetrating partner, telling a child, this isn't a Netflix show, you know, that anybody can watch.
01:01:28.000Saying that some five year old was like a top or something like that in some drag queen studio.
01:01:33.000This is all over conservative Christian news.
01:01:36.000And you see that kind of stuff, and it's just like this is the peak of disgusting, repulsive degeneracy.
01:01:43.000They didn't start with this, they started with glee and modern family, and now it's drag queens.
01:01:49.000And it's drag queens because they are offensive to any decent, any sane, any normal Christian person.
01:02:04.000And they want to put that front and center in your shows, in your advertisements, in your schools, in your libraries.
01:02:09.000And I don't know, maybe these people, in a normal time, we want to talk about, like we talked about, the grooming gangs.
01:02:16.000In a normal time, men that dressed up like women and exposed themselves to children, do you know what would be done to people like that?
01:02:22.000I don't think I have to tell you what would be done to people like that, even not too long ago, 50 years ago.
01:02:28.000Ask yourself in a normal, decent, Christian country that protects children, protects their innocence, protects their souls, which are eternal.
01:02:36.000What would be done to a grown man who goes in and dresses like a woman and does a striptease show and does these disgusting sexual acts and teaches children about homosexuality?
01:04:08.000So, in any case, that sets of drag queen stuff.
01:04:11.000It just really makes my blood boil to see that.
01:04:13.000But we're going to move on to talk about the Israeli Palestinian peace deal.
01:04:17.000We have to spend a lot of time on the deals.
01:04:20.000I could talk about this stuff all night, but we do have to move on to the Israeli Palestinian peace deal because it is quite comprehensive.
01:04:26.000Like I said at the top of the show today, we finally got to see the deal of the century.
01:04:32.000That's what it is being called by this administration.
01:04:36.000It is a deal that is being pitched by the Trump administration to the Israelis, to the Palestinians, and it's been in the works for a long time.
01:04:45.000Jared Kushner, the son in law of the president, who is a Jewish Zionist, Has been hard at work with the Israeli government working on this deal.
01:04:51.000And it's very important that that is understood that it was Kushner and the Israeli government that came up with this deal.
01:04:58.000It wasn't Donald Trump, it wasn't the Secretary of State, it wasn't anybody really in the government, it was Jared Kushner and it was the Israeli government who came up with this.
01:05:08.000And they worked on this for years and they put together two phases of an agreement.
01:05:12.000Phase one was released last year and this was like an economic leg of the deal.
01:05:17.000I don't know if you remember, it was a year ago, I think it was a little bit before the summer.
01:05:21.000They laid out basically an investment program that if Palestine agreed to an eventual, this deal, to an eventual two state solution, you know, grand deal, deal of the century, then they would get all these financial investment, economic goodies that were laid out last year, which include, I think, $50 billion in investments, and we're going to bring companies there and infrastructure and so on.
01:05:45.000So phase one was released a long time ago, and they had said that they were going to release phase two last year, and they didn't.
01:05:53.000So, they released the deal today with President Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu at a press conference, and they laid out their whole deal.
01:06:00.000I'll read to you this is from CNN, basically a summary of the deal.
01:06:04.000You know, you would not be surprised to find out that the deal is heavily, heavily biased in favor of Israel.
01:06:13.000And how is that a shocker when it was written by Jerry Kushner and Benjamin Netanyahu, right?
01:06:19.000So, I'll read you this is a report from CNN about the deal.
01:06:21.000It's pretty comprehensive, so we're going to read through this report.
01:06:25.000It says President Donald Trump on Tuesday proposed a Middle East plan that he claimed was a, quote, realistic two state solution, but caters to nearly every major Israeli demand and was immediately rejected by Palestinians.
01:06:38.000It lays the groundwork for Israel to immediately begin annexing all of its settlements in the West Bank with U.S. backing and also foresees the eventual establishment of a Palestinian state with limited sovereignty after a transition period.
01:06:51.000Palestinian negotiators have not had direct contact with the Trump administration in more than two years.
01:06:56.000So, if you didn't get that straight, the summary of the deal is that it gives Israel basically everything that it wants.
01:07:03.000It allows Israel to have a blank check in annexing as many settlements as it wants and something like 30% of the West Bank.
01:07:11.000And in exchange for that, after a transition period, Palestine might be able to get limited sovereignty.
01:07:27.000That after an indefinite transition period, I get to apply for limited sovereignty over my own eternal homeland, and all I have to give up in exchange for that is 30% of the West Bank and everything else that Israel wants, including their capital?
01:07:50.000It says, under the proposal, Trump said Jerusalem will, quote, remain Israel's undivided capital, but that a future Palestinian state would also have a capital in eastern Jerusalem.
01:08:00.000Trump did not address the question of Palestinian refugees and whether they will have a right of return to their former homes.
01:08:06.000And he said neither Palestinians nor Israelis would be uprooted from their homes under the plan, which really means that the illegal settlements will remain.
01:08:15.000When Trump says neither Palestinians nor Israelis will be uprooted, well, that's because the Palestinians already got uprooted 60 years ago, you know, or what is it now?
01:08:27.000So when you're talking about Palestinians being uprooted, it's a little late for that.
01:08:31.000It's about 70 years too late for them being uprooted.
01:08:34.000And, you know, over and over again, over the ensuing decades after Israeli independence, what they really mean when they say nobody's going to be uprooted is that the Israelis who have put down civilian settlements in the West Bank.
01:08:46.000They will be unperturbed in their illegal settlements.
01:08:49.000I mean, that's what that really means.
01:08:51.000It says the plan envisions a Palestinian capital in the Arab neighborhood of Jerusalem on the eastern side of the separation barrier, physically separated from the rest of the city.
01:09:01.000The plan allows for the Palestinians to call their capital Al Quds, using the Arabic term for Jerusalem, but includes no significant part of East Jerusalem and is well short of what the Palestinians would ever accept as their portion of the Holy City.
01:09:16.000Beyond proposing a new framework for negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians, The Trump plan gives Israel the green light to annex Israeli settlements, regardless of Palestinian support for the plan, but mandates Israel freeze any further settlement expansion for four years in exchange for U.S. recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the settlements.
01:09:35.000Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu said he will move to take the first steps in annexing West Bank settlements on Sunday.
01:09:41.000Full Israeli annexation of those territories will make it much more difficult for a future Israeli government to trade off territory with the Palestinians.
01:09:50.000Trump said the plan would double Palestinian territories.
01:09:53.000And a map tweeted out by the president also indicated that Israel is prepared to provide swaths of land in the Israeli desert for a future Palestinian state.
01:10:02.000But ultimately, the plan demands Palestinians give up on claims to nearly 30% of the West Bank.
01:10:08.000The heavy pro Israel tilt of Trump's peace proposal was evident in the optics of the unveiling.
01:10:13.000When Trump presented his administration's long anticipated proposal to resolve the Israeli Palestinian conflict at the White House, Netanyahu was at his side, and dozens of right wing supporters of Israel, including Sheldon Adelson and GOP members of Congress flanked the podium.
01:10:29.000So the deal is completely one sided, you know.
01:10:32.000And look, I got to tell you, I don't really care about Palestine and I don't really care about Israel.
01:10:39.000I don't really care about either of these places.
01:10:42.000And I'm not like some bleeding heart, you know, liberal when it comes to Palestine.
01:10:47.000I'm not under any illusions about realpolitik and how geopolitics works and all the dynamics that are at play over there.
01:10:57.000The Israeli Palestinian conflict is something that matters to the United States.
01:11:02.000And the reason it matters is because Palestine is a wedge issue for Arab countries.
01:11:08.000How we treat Palestine and how we choose to engage with Israel and Palestine determines our relationship with Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria, Iran, and the Muslim world at large.
01:11:20.000If you're looking at terrorists or if you're looking at heads of governments or heads of militias, the people that have the biggest problem with us in the Middle East.
01:11:28.000And as such, the people that cause the biggest problems for America and our interests, those people all say that one of their biggest objections to the United States is our blanket, unquestioning, unambiguous support for Israel.
01:12:00.000I don't care so much about Palestinian rights, and I don't frankly really even care about Israeli security.
01:12:06.000What I care about is that our intervention in this conflict is one that will help us and not hurt us.
01:12:13.000When we enter into this conflict on the side of the Israelis, and it's completely unconditional and unquestioning, this harms our relationships with people that should be our allies or people that we could work with, people that blow us up and bomb us, and it shouldn't be that way.
01:12:31.000We should either not engage at all, or if we do engage, we should do so in such a way that is not going to hurt us or hurt our interests.
01:12:40.000Now, that's not to say that we can't pick a side in a conflict, but it is to say that when we intervene, we should do so with our own interests in mind, not the interest of whoever we're backing.
01:13:12.000When it comes to China versus Vietnam or these competing claims in the South China Sea, I don't really care so much about Vietnam's territorial integrity.
01:13:21.000I don't really care so much about who has sovereignty over these Senpaku Islands or whatever it is, Senpaku, Senpaku.
01:13:30.000I care about intervening in a meaningful way that helps American interests.
01:13:34.000In the same way, I don't really care so much about who has a right to what plot of desert in Palestine.
01:13:40.000What I care about is when we intervene in this conflict, we are doing so with our interests in mind.
01:13:46.000Not Palestine's and not Israel's either.
01:13:48.000But that's obviously what we're doing, intervening on the side of Israel, completely on their side with the intention of helping them and no intention of doing anything that's good for us.
01:14:00.000And that is evident throughout the deal.
01:14:02.000The main issues that are covered in the deal in the Israeli Palestinian process are the West Bank borders and settlements.
01:14:46.000We say that Israel can have all their illegal settlements and they can make more settlements.
01:14:50.000And not only that, but they can occupy 30% more of the West Bank.
01:14:55.000So we're not just on the side of Israel on the West Bank, we're all the way on the side of Israel on the West Bank.
01:15:00.000When it comes to refugees, Palestinian refugees who were uprooted in 1948 and dispelled from their homes, that's not even addressed.
01:15:06.000So you could say that we're all the way on the side of the Israelis.
01:15:10.000And then lastly, when it comes to Israeli security versus Palestinian security, Sovereignty, it's all the way in favor of Israeli security, and there's almost no consideration for Palestinian sovereignty.
01:15:21.000You know, what's amazing is that in the entire deal, it basically lays out everything that Israel wants is totally covered.
01:15:28.000When it comes to Palestinian sovereignty and when it comes to refugees, that's all an afterthought, if it's even addressed at all.
01:15:35.000You know, the refugees are not addressed, and when it comes to Palestinian sovereignty, it doesn't even guarantee that Palestine would get sovereignty.
01:15:42.000It says that eventually Palestine might get sovereignty.
01:15:46.000And what would their sovereignty look like?
01:15:47.000Well, they released a map of what Netanyahu and Jared Kushner have in mind for what Israel and Palestine is going to look like.
01:15:54.000I'll read you a little bit about the map.
01:15:57.000It says the map shows a series of Palestinian cantons pockmarked with illegal Israeli settlements marked as enclave communities.
01:16:04.000One lists 15 such communities but stresses that the list is not all inclusive.
01:16:09.000Commentators already have noted that the map goes nowhere near showing the archipelago effect in reality and shows Palestinian territory to be much more coherent and contiguous than it would be.
01:16:19.000So if you look at the map, all of the West Bank is basically completely divided.
01:16:23.000You know, none of it is like, when you think of a country, you think of like, A coherent landmass, a contiguous, coherent landmass.
01:16:33.000You think of the United States and you think of, okay, from LA to New York, from Seattle to Miami, you've got America.
01:16:40.000Well, Palestine is a landlocked country.
01:16:44.000The West Bank will be completely surrounded by Israel.
01:16:47.000And even within Israel, it's not a contiguous country.
01:16:49.000You've basically got all these little bubbles, all these little separate cities and neighborhoods connected with thin roads, highways, tunnels, things like that.
01:16:58.000And even within those bubbles, you've got Israeli settlements throughout them.
01:17:03.000So it's not even within these little bubbles, these tiny enclaves connected by roads and tunnels and so on, you've got throughout all of them these Israeli settlements plopped down right in the middle.
01:17:13.000It says connecting the various communities are segregated Palestinian and Israeli roads, much like today.
01:17:19.000These Palestinian roads, however, are labeled major.
01:17:22.000So the country's connected by little more than slim roads, but well, they say they're major roads.
01:17:27.000Some Palestinian areas are linked by bridges and tunnels.
01:17:30.000The most prominent being one between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
01:17:34.000South of Gaza is a high tech manufacturing industrial area and a residential and agricultural zone.
01:17:40.000It is not clear if this is intended to be sovereign Israel or part of a future Palestinian state.
01:17:45.000So even when they say, well, we'll double the size of Palestine, well, they don't really show that.
01:17:49.000And the part that they do show, south of Gaza, they don't really even demonstrate whether that's going to be Israel or Palestine.
01:17:57.000It says all routes between Palestinian communities are thin corridors and easily severed.
01:18:02.000Four triangles in the map mark strategic sites, presumably Israeli military bases, and they are all either within or adjacent to Palestinian territory.
01:18:12.000So, their idea of a two state solution is that Israel gets most of the land, and within the land are going to be these tiny neighborhoods, tiny bubbles connected by thin roads of Palestine, and within these tiny bubbles are Israeli military bases and illegal Israeli settlements.
01:18:29.000Surrounding these bubbles are walls, segregated roads.
01:18:34.000And by the way, even better in this deal, is that the Palestinian state would not be entitled ever to have either a military or a paramilitary.
01:18:44.000And also, at any time, Israel can regain control of Palestine in terms of controlling it through security.
01:18:52.000So, right now, Israel basically occupies Palestine as a security force and says that they might withdraw, but if they do, they could come back at any point.
01:19:14.000On the one hand, the timing is very suspect.
01:19:16.000And I said this at the top of the show, and I said this earlier.
01:19:20.000It's convenient that it came out today.
01:19:22.000It was supposed to come out a long time ago, but it came out today when a formal indictment was issued against Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel.
01:19:30.000So, right as Netanyahu is accused of bribery and corruption by the Knesset, we announced this big deal, and Netanyahu's in the United States for a big press conference and photo op and all that.
01:19:41.000Also, it's one month out before another Israeli election where he'll be up, his prime ministership will be up for grabs, and if he loses, he'll go to jail.
01:19:49.000So, number one, the reason that it was announced today was to help Benjamin Netanyahu, of course.
01:19:54.000And then, number two, much more than that, what is the strategy with a deal like this?
01:19:59.000This deal, there is no intention of this deal being passed.
01:20:02.000The purpose of this deal is to slow walk the Palestinians.
01:20:05.000They offer up something that is completely unworkable, it's a complete non starter for Palestinians.
01:20:11.000And then, when the Palestinians reject it, well, the Israelis can say, See, told you so, we want peace, and they don't.
01:20:19.000We put together a deal, and they rejected it.
01:20:22.000So, therefore, we're going to keep expanding without any regard for the law or with Palestinians, anything like that.
01:20:29.000It will continue to get worse until either the Palestinians submit to whatever is happening, they stop their resistance, or in a couple of decades, Palestine just won't exist.
01:20:40.000You know, that is ultimately the long game.
01:20:42.000This is a deal that has no intention of being signed, no intention of gaining Palestinian support, and it has none.
01:20:49.000The purpose is to buy time and to create sort of a moral argument for the continued expansion of.
01:20:54.000The Israeli settlements and ultimately the creation of one single Jewish state in Palestine.
01:21:00.000And you know, like I said, to me, I'm not like a bleeding heart supporter of Palestinian rights.
01:21:06.000Do I really care that Palestinians are being cucked out of their land?
01:21:11.000Like, on some level, I'm like, oh, that's not right.
01:21:28.000That's not to say that it doesn't matter.
01:21:30.000It's not to say that there is not a right and a wrong.
01:21:34.000It's simply to say, as an American, it's really not my concern.
01:21:37.000You know, there is a balance maybe to be struck.
01:21:40.000On some level, the Israelis are outsiders.
01:21:43.000You know, if you go back to 1900, in the year 1900, 99% of what is currently Israel and Palestine was either Muslim or Christian in terms of the population.
01:22:16.000That 99% of the population was not Jewish, in other words, and 95% of the land was owned by people that were not Jews.
01:22:23.000And within 50 years, because of this extremely aggressive and unethical and unscrupulous campaign by the Zionists to fill up Palestine with Jewish people from Eastern Europe and from the Middle East, You know, basically lobbying the US government to back this in the United Nations, lobbying the British government to wrest this out of the control of the Ottoman Empire.
01:22:46.000After all of this really crooked political stuff in the intervening 50 years between 1900, when it was almost totally not Jewish, to 1948, when they declared independence, you know, that was the process.
01:23:00.000And so, on some level, the Israelis are outsiders, and they did displace the Palestinians.
01:23:05.000When they came there, this was Muslim and Christian land.
01:23:17.000Now, on another level, I understand that the Israelis and the Jews do want their own states.
01:23:23.000You know, the Jews are a diaspora people.
01:23:25.000They don't have a homeland of their own.
01:23:27.000They haven't had a homeland of their own for a long time.
01:23:29.000And so I understand the need to create a Jewish state.
01:23:32.000I'm not necessarily opposed to the idea that Jewish people would have a state.
01:23:36.000I also don't think it's our prerogative to support it.
01:23:38.000I also don't think it's our obligation to support something like that.
01:23:42.000You know, if Jews want to go down and put a country in the Middle East or in Africa or South America, wherever for that matter, You know, that's really up to them.
01:23:50.000And I don't really have strong feelings about it one way or the other.
01:23:55.000My strong feeling is that whatever it is, the United States probably shouldn't support it.
01:23:59.000You know, we should support whatever comes of it, whatever's best for us geopolitically.
01:24:06.000You know, for example, if the Israelis put down, as they did, their country in the Middle East, this obviously created a lot of conflict between us and the Arabs.
01:24:16.000Do they deserve our unconditional support?
01:24:18.000No, I don't think that's the case, right?
01:24:20.000So, there's a lot of different, what I mean to say is there's a lot of different competing interests.
01:24:24.000On the one hand, you've got the Palestinians who are displaced and they have some kind of rightful claim to the land and so on, and they're upset that the Jews are there.
01:24:32.000And on some level, the Jews, you know, if they wanted to create a state, I understand that.
01:24:37.000I understand that they want to create a homeland of their own and they regard the Palestinians as a security threat.
01:24:43.000And so they want to have one full state.
01:24:45.000They want to have all of Palestine and probably beyond that.
01:24:48.000You know, they probably want to go even beyond Palestine.
01:25:09.000You know, I think on some level, there's truth on both sides.
01:25:12.000You know, it's when it comes to these kinds of like tribal conflicts, you know, it really just does come down to competition between two tribes and what really is right or wrong.
01:25:22.000The Palestinians are fighting for their homeland, and the Jews are fighting for theirs.
01:25:27.000I'm not concerned about the homeland of the Jews.
01:25:29.000I'm not concerned about the homeland of the Palestinians.
01:25:33.000And so, when we put out a deal like this that is completely one sided in favor of Israel, one that is clearly going to erase Palestine, this is going to permanently engender bad blood between the United States and Muslims, between the United States and the Arab world.
01:25:47.000And I don't say that is a problem because I care about their feelings and, oh, you're going to get their feelings hurt and that's going to be this human rights debacle, but because we have to do diplomacy with these countries.
01:25:58.000And we have Muslims in our country, and we have Muslims in Europe that want to do harm to us.
01:26:02.000And the question is do we want to make things worse between our country and these other people in the Middle East, or do we want to make things better?
01:26:09.000This is not a way to make things better.
01:26:12.000I also would add I really have a problem to begin with the idea that our foreign policy can just be hijacked by a foreign country, because that's what it is.
01:26:22.000Israel hijacked our foreign policy on this and many other matters.
01:26:26.000Jared Kushner wrote this bill with Benjamin Netanyahu.
01:26:30.000Would it make sense, for example, if we had a president who had a Russian son in law and our Russian son in law, our president's Russian son in law, worked with Vladimir Putin to write a peace agreement between the Baltic states, Ukraine, and Russia?
01:26:51.000If our president had a Chinese son in law and the Chinese son in law put together a deal that worked out some kind of completely one sided trade deal with China, would anybody think that's okay?
01:27:02.000Our foreign policy should not be for sale.
01:27:04.000It should not be hijacked by foreign countries.
01:27:06.000So, for starters, whether you think it's a good idea or a bad idea, you care about the Palestinians, you care about the Jews, no matter what, our foreign policy should be written by us and with us in mind.
01:27:22.000It was written by Zionist Jews to help Zionist Jews.
01:27:26.000It was written by the Israeli government to help the Israeli government with the help of Israelis in our own country and with the help of Israeli Jewish donors.
01:29:00.000The definition of a parasitic relationship is in the nature, in the environment, in nature, when one organism attaches itself to another and benefits itself at the expense of the host.
01:29:13.000You know, you could have a symbiotic relationship where there's a mutual benefit or.
01:29:18.000You know, something that's more equal or whatever, but it's completely one sided.
01:29:22.000We give and we give and we give and we continue to give and all they do is take.
01:29:40.000I have this big problem with Israel because I have a problem with this.
01:29:43.000How can anyone not have a problem with this?
01:29:46.000Like I said, if it were any other country, if it were any other deal, any other son in law, This would be a national scandal and it would be unambiguous and it would be uncontroversial that you would have a problem with something like this.
01:29:58.000But of course, because it's Jews, that's what it is, because it's Israel, you can't say anything about it.
01:30:04.000And if you do, oh, you're obsessed with it.
01:31:39.000And like I said, and anybody who says anything like that, anybody who has a problem with it, oh, well, they must necessarily hate Jews, right?
01:31:46.000They must necessarily have an unusually high bar.
01:31:50.000Whenever you criticize Israel, well, your standard for Israel is much higher than other countries, and that's anti Semitic, told them to a higher standard.
01:31:59.000Because as far as I know, the Palestinians don't have the president's son in law writing their peace deal, and neither do the Iranians, and neither do the Chinese, or the Russians, or the Ukrainians, or the French.
01:32:09.000Or the English, or the Mexicans, or anybody for that matter, right?
01:32:53.000And that's the whole intention to have a one state solution, to have Israel be completely solidified, and the Palestinians are this afterthought.
01:33:02.000And then they're going to go further than that.
01:33:15.000They will march on unopposed by the United Nations, by the United States, by the Palestinians, by anybody.
01:33:21.000They will control all of the mandate of Palestine, everything west of the Jordan River, and they'll keep going.
01:33:28.000And everybody thinks that a one state solution is like, oh, that would be the height of irresponsibility and carelessness and one sidedness.
01:33:38.000If the Jews control all of Palestine, oh, that would be a game changer.
01:33:42.000Well, you'd think they're going to stop there?
01:34:05.000Do you think this bloodthirsty Benjamin Netanyahu, do you think he'll stop at the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, or do you think that these settlements will continue to expand outward?
01:34:14.000And this holy land, this one great democracy in the Middle East, will march on.
01:34:20.000And then it'll be a big problem for everybody.
01:35:15.000So they're like second class citizens, and they continue to get screwed over.
01:35:20.000I was going to say something else, but they continue to get screwed over, over and over again.
01:35:24.000They riot because this deal says, Yeah, we're paving the way for Israel to take over 30% of the West Bank, and they start on Sunday and they start rioting.
01:35:33.000And what's amazing is then all the conservatives I see on Twitter say, Oh, look, the Palestinians are rioting.
01:35:40.000Yeah, serves them right that their lands be.
01:35:49.000Even though I don't really, you know, again, I don't oppose all this stuff because Palestine matters so much.
01:35:54.000You know, this kind of shit happens all the time, you know, with the Kurds and with all kinds of other ethnic minorities around the world, the Uyghurs.
01:36:01.000Ah, you know, there's too much suffering in the world to really care, right?
01:36:06.000But it is just disgusting, these people, how.
01:36:09.000And you know, all these people are pocketing money from the Zionists, and that's why they talk like that.
01:36:13.000You know, I think, oh, look at the Palestinians, they're burning stuff.
01:36:17.000You know, Ben Shapiro, all the usual suspects peddling the same decades old lies about, look, the Israelis are trying to propose a peace solution, but Palestinians rejected it because they're violent and irrational, and on and on.
01:39:31.000So you've got like five decently good songs.
01:39:35.000I would say God is in there as well, but it's not really like a conventional Kanye song compared to Yandi, where they just blow it out of the park on every track.
01:45:08.000When I was in high school, I fought endlessly with my teachers, and I could not wait to get out of school and just laugh at them and just look down on them.
01:46:15.000It's like, did you forget that you're working with children?
01:46:19.000You know, people, and I think that's what it is.
01:46:21.000I think some teachers, they deal with kids all day, and because they're mediocrities, they think like, you know, they think that they're something.
01:46:31.000When you're dealing with children all day and you're the teacher, and hey, everybody, look at me and raise your hand and ask to go to the bathroom, then all of a sudden you start to believe your own press, so to speak.
01:47:19.000You know, part of the fun is you get snacks and you get ready, you go on the bus, whatever, you drive down there with all your friends, like a road trip, and then we would stay there for a few days and we would do our songs.
01:47:32.000We would march in the parade in, I think, like Magic Kingdom.
01:47:37.000You know, they have these parades pretty frequently in Disney World, and so our marching band would march in the parade.
01:48:02.000And it was me and a few of my friends.
01:48:05.000We were all in our hotel room and we ordered a pizza.
01:48:08.000Now, the rule was you can't order food past a certain time because you had to go down to the lobby to get it and that violates curfew and da da da.
01:48:17.000And we were like starving because we got in late.
01:50:57.000When I say assimilation is impossible, you know, I'm not talking about an individual who might intermarry with a white person and down the line, that's what happened to me.
01:51:06.000You know, my ancestors came from Mexico, I think, before 1900, and throughout four or five generations, you know, is me.
01:52:14.000You know, some people in the community will merge with the American culture and the American culture will slightly move to accommodate them, but you don't ever get rid of these like.
01:53:11.000Clearly, it's wrong because these disparities have persisted in spite of systemic disadvantages and in spite of systemic advantages as well.
01:53:20.000And you can also find examples of groups that have succeeded in spite of these so called systemic disadvantages.
01:53:43.000What it comes down to is the people themselves.
01:53:46.000And I'd also say that if it really just came down to oppression, well, then why do these disparities persist not just in America, but everywhere in the world?
01:53:54.000You know, Haiti, Jamaica, Sub Saharan Africa, even these small contingents of refugees in China, of Africans.
01:54:01.000Why is it the same conditions everywhere in the world?
01:54:28.000You know, you can sort of sort for all these different things, sort for all these different causes, and you narrow it down to what is the common denominator?
01:54:53.000The common denominator for the conditions that prevail in Latin America or that prevail in Africa or that prevail in the Middle East are Latin Americans and Africans and Middle Easterners.
01:55:04.000In spite of systems, all kinds of things, you know, even when they have like resources, you look at Africa, why are they not a rich nation?
01:55:12.000They've got all the rare earth minerals, they've got oil, they've got.
01:55:17.000Lumber, they've got more land than the United States and Europe combined, and what do they do with it?
01:55:28.000Well, it's the same reason why they weren't developed when we got there.
01:55:31.000They're not developed now for the same reason that they didn't have written language or two story buildings or the wheel when we penetrated the interior of Africa in the 1880s.
01:55:53.000Yeah, that's when they were saying, like, oh, well, what is the big deal that Michael Knowles was with Lady Mogg or Charlie Kirk was with them or that Charlie Kirk's with Rob Smith because they're promoting this stuff?
01:56:03.000They're promoting it when they do that.
01:56:56.000I would literally read the line and then I'd be and then I would read it wrong the next take and be like, okay, it's this way.
01:57:01.000And I'm like, I don't know why I keep forgetting it.
01:57:04.000I was trying to like memorize it on the spot, you know, I memorize a paragraph and then do it on the spot, and it was a little shaky sometimes, so that's why.
01:57:11.000But kind of funny, kind of funny behind the scenes story.
01:57:16.000Polish American says Israel is pretty much hearts of iron for border gore.
01:57:35.000But the thing is, you have to think about the 1%.
01:57:38.000People talk about income tax, and there should be a higher income tax for the 1%, but we have to take into account how people make their money, which is to say that when you think about it, taxes on investments are a lot lower effectively than taxes on income.
01:57:56.000If you're a W 2 employee, There's really like, you know, you pay what you pay.
01:58:27.000But, um, You know, you make so much money on your W 2, you subtract in your $12,000 for your standard deduction, or if you can itemize more than that, then you take that off of your taxable income and you pay your rate.
01:59:29.000Look, I'm not a tax expert, but you can break that down.
01:59:32.000There's all kinds of different ways when you own businesses, when you have stocks, when you have property that you can hide your income, you can hide the way that you make your money.
01:59:40.000It's not the same way as it is with a working person.
01:59:43.000And so, when people talk about we need to tax the 1% more, we need to tax the top income earners at a 90% marginal income tax rate, it's like you're not getting it.
01:59:52.000What you need to do is get rid of a lot of these loopholes.
01:59:55.000What you need to do is, and look, I'm not a tax expert, I'm not a policy guy, but people talk about the carried interest provision.
02:00:03.000They talk about all kinds of measures that we can do to cut loopholes, that we can do to prevent people from leaving, prevent people from storing money overseas, whatever, things like that.
02:00:14.000If they're pulling out money or reinvesting money, whatever, we're going to get a cut of that.
02:00:18.000And that's what needs to be done because it's not fair that somebody in the middle class goes to work and they lose a quarter of their income.
02:00:25.000And then you've got millionaires and billionaires who pay 10% or a zero in some cases.
02:00:30.000Amazon famously paid nothing in taxes last year.
02:00:49.000So, I'm not an eat the rich person, but on the other hand, people are not paying their fair share.
02:00:54.000In some cases, they're not paying anything at all.
02:00:55.000And how is that fair that the tax burden is on the middle class?
02:01:00.000So, now on the other hand, I will say that if you look at it, if you break it down by numbers, the top income earners already do pay all the taxes.
02:01:10.000Even if middle class people pay taxes, I forget the study, but this is kind of dated actually.
02:01:17.000But there was a study that was done, I think, by the Congressional Budget Office that broke down.
02:01:22.000How much of tax revenue was collected by income quintile?
02:01:27.000So, in other words, if you're at the bottom 20% of income earners, what percentage of the tax revenue did you pay in terms of dollar amounts, not percentages, versus the top 20% and everyone in the middle?
02:01:43.000And it found that I think it was like the top 40% paid all the taxes.
02:02:24.000I think we need to make sure that the effective tax rate is.
02:02:26.000It's at least the same for rich people as it is for working class and middle class people.
02:02:31.000But we should also be mindful of the idea of capital going overseas.
02:02:35.000So I have sort of a moderate approach on that.
02:02:38.000They definitely, we definitely need it.
02:02:40.000They're not paying what they need to pay, but I'd also caution about this idea of we just need all the rich people's money because as much as rich people have, it's not enough to pay for anything, right?
02:02:50.000It's enough to pay for a lot, but it's not enough to pay for, you know, national health care, national education, whatever, right?
02:02:57.000So that's the way that I think about it.
02:05:02.000You know, maybe I thought about killing myself, maybe Ghost Town, maybe no mistakes, maybe Fourth Dimension from Kids See Ghosts, but let's get real.
02:05:29.000You know, I want a complete project with complete songs, fully fleshed out.
02:05:35.000You know, I feel like Yandi was on its way to being that.
02:05:38.000You know, you had some real good concepts on there, but the lyrics weren't finished, you know, and the production wasn't cleaned up because it was never released.
02:05:47.000So, would I have preferred a complete, full, finished, polished, fleshed out album?
02:07:03.000I have it sorted by book title, author, publisher.
02:07:06.000Year published, ISBN number, the number of pages, the kind of binding, if I've read it or not, the number of copies I have, and other notes.
02:07:15.000And I can tell you how many books I have right now.
02:07:40.000I don't know what it is, but I have to tell you, it was maybe the best two to three days of my life when I was sitting there and going through stacks and stacks of books and looking through and finding all the information, typing in titles, authors, checking the ISBN number to make sure that I got it right and all the information for three days.
02:08:01.000And I spent like hours and hours and hours on it every day for three days, and I was like the best ever.
02:08:07.000These kinds of tasks, I don't know what it is.
02:08:09.000Things like this, I just really enjoy.
02:08:11.000It really engages my autism, really engages my OCD.
02:09:01.000But as a measure of success, it is satisfying to see all the people that gave me a hard time and when they had the ability to, gave me a hard time because they could.
02:09:12.000It is satisfying to be doing better than those people.
02:10:16.000When people do this arbitrary exercise, I think they're so big, you know, because they have the whistle, you know, or they have the ruler, whatever it is when you're a teacher.
02:15:12.000Based says Eminem said at BET Hip Hop Awards, quote, racism and support for the Klansmen is the only thing that Donald Trump is fantastic for.
02:15:22.000F.N.E. fan of mine who's a supporter of his.
02:15:41.000And it's actually grounded in metaphysical truth.
02:15:45.000Scripture says, If you cause one of these little ones who trusted me to fall into sin, it would be better for you to have a millstone tied around your neck and drown in the depths of the sea.
02:15:53.000Yeah, yeah, we've said that one a trillion times on the show.
02:15:58.000Joe says, Today in my English class, my teacher, who is also a mother, by the way, defended Drag Queen Story Hour and was shocked that people were protesting it.
02:16:07.000I sure do love being in a liberal public school.
02:16:09.000I assume you're being sarcastic there.
02:16:53.000I don't know if it's just because whenever I go to Phoenix, I'm in a suburb where my friends live, which happens to be different demographically or what, but.
02:17:18.000So every student in my school, their sophomore year, took one semester of English and then a semester of a public speaking class.
02:17:28.000You know, you were required, I think, to take English every year, but your sophomore year, it was one semester of English and one semester of this public speaking class.
02:17:36.000And my public speaking teacher was the worst.
02:17:39.000She was this hyper liberal, you know, crazy like cat lady.
02:17:44.000And we would just fight endlessly in that class.
02:17:48.000I don't remember exactly any particular episode, but I do remember we got into it a lot of times.
02:17:54.000And she gave me like a B or a C in that class, I think.
02:17:58.000Me, in a public speaking class, I think I got a B because she didn't agree with my politics.
02:18:04.000And also, I didn't do like a lot of the homework.
02:20:32.000It's like, yeah, when I'm talking with the bros, when I'm schmooting, when I'm joking around with the fellas, yeah, the first thing I think is, well, what would my mom think about this?
02:20:42.000What would my sister think about this?
02:21:22.000But people are, people want to show you what a good person they are.
02:21:26.000I always want to show everybody what a good person I am.
02:21:30.000And it's very unconscious, but that's what it is.
02:21:33.000That's the subconscious intention of that, which is to say, I need dopamine, I need attention, or I need approval, or I need to have this perception.
02:27:29.000I'm waiting to move into my new studio.
02:27:31.000I'm going to, this year, well, I'm potentially going to move into a new studio and I'll probably move them then.
02:27:37.000You know, whenever I get out of here, whenever I move into a new studio, I'm probably going to maybe spill the beans a little bit there.
02:27:43.000Nothing in the works yet, but, you know, at some point we're probably going to get into a new studio and then I'll have enough room for all my stuff.