Based Camp - April 28, 2026


Trump Assassin Implicated the Secret Service In Writing & Nobody’s Talking About It


Episode Stats


Length

56 minutes

Words per minute

176.0205

Word count

10,030

Sentence count

73

Harmful content

Misogyny

3

sentences flagged

Toxicity

37

sentences flagged

Hate speech

30

sentences flagged


Summary

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

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Toxicity classifications generated with s-nlp/roberta_toxicity_classifier .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 Hello, Simone. Today we are going to go into something crazy that as far as I know is in like
00:00:05.520 our intellectual conservative talking space. We're going to be the first channel covering
00:00:08.960 and I am shocked that no one is talking about this. Have you heard anything about the PS section
00:00:15.480 of the shooter's manifesto? All I thought was that there were some papers found in his hotel room
00:00:21.500 that expressed displeasure with some of the Trump administration's policies. That's it. I don't
00:00:27.200 know any i didn't know there was a manifesto i didn't know how to ps section and i love that
00:00:30.940 there was one but tell me it makes me believe that somebody in the secret service is trying
00:00:36.640 to get trump killed what and we and and and on top of that if iran had not been an incompetent
00:00:45.060 country at war with itself they very easily could have assassinated almost the entire 0.70
00:00:51.380 administration at that event so oh wow yeah people have been mocking the secret service for
00:00:59.460 letting the guy naruto run right past them but people haven't been mocking the secret service
00:01:04.740 the guy that's what the ps section is about it's him going let's go into it ps okay now that all
00:01:12.840 the sappy stuff is done what the hell is the secret service doing sorry gonna rant a bit here
00:01:18.120 and drop the formal tone like i expected security cameras at every bend bugged hotel rooms armed
00:01:24.720 agents every 10 feet metal detectors out the wazoo what i got who knows maybe they're pranking me
00:01:30.500 exclamation mark is nothing no damn security not in transport not in the hotel not in the event
00:01:36.740 sorry i'm not even gonna keep going now this is this is his opposition he is annoyed at how bad 0.62
00:01:43.700 the opposition to what he is attempting to do is by the way if you're a bit confused as to what
00:01:52.320 this guy did he got some guns got on amtrak so on transportation into dc he took public transport
00:02:02.760 into dc into dc he walks to the hotel that the event's going to happen at he checks in
00:02:09.960 not like a week before or a month before the day before the event whoa we're all on a budget here
00:02:19.340 look hard economic times he can't just zero security just chills out in his room with the
00:02:27.120 guns while all the security lines are set up outside the event watching office reruns
00:02:33.720 walks down to the event when we're going to go because his rant isn't over yet by the way people
00:02:40.160 he is like actually perplexed at the incompetence of secret security and you know a lot of leftists
00:02:48.720 have been like oh this was staged because one person said there's going to be some shots fired
00:02:54.420 at this event you know like which was a hilarious but wasn't that caroline levitt i think that was
00:02:59.700 her yeah yeah one that's a normal turn of phrase in english and if she did know that this was going
00:03:04.260 to happen that's the very last thing she would have said right like come on people or they're
00:03:09.240 like noting that like kennedy is just sort of standing there looking sort of dazed like people
00:03:13.920 are like the kennedys the worst survival instincts ever bullets start flying i really sort of it was
00:03:20.460 like him and trump like not really caring as the bullets trump's sort of looking at the person next
00:03:24.640 Sam as the bullets are going who's horrified first time okay you know I would have been the
00:03:31.960 dude who just kept eating his dinner that was like the first time look on Trump's face
00:03:36.180 yes again but but no it's it's I I do not think that this was staged this guy has a long history
00:03:46.600 of being anti-Trump of wanting to do something like this I the thing that we're going to talk
00:03:52.320 about when i get done with the manifesto is i want to talk about how prevalent the conspiracy
00:03:57.760 theories have become on the left to an extent that has really sort of transformed the nature
00:04:01.940 of the left almost completely with this assassination attempt versus the others
00:04:05.940 where there were some conspiracy theories but this one's like a complete other reality right
00:04:11.160 but to keep going here he goes like the one thing that i immediately noticed walking into the hotel
00:04:18.400 is a sense of arrogance i walk in with multiple weapons and not a single person considers a
00:04:24.360 possibility that i could be a threat the security at the event is all outside focused on protesters
00:04:32.520 current arrivals because apparently no one thought about what happens if someone checks in the day
00:04:36.920 before like this level of incompetence is insane and i very sincerely hope it's corrected by the
00:04:42.660 time this country gets an actually competent leadership again this is the assassin people
00:04:48.080 who said you're like oh it's bad oh man get your acting gear 0.97
00:04:54.120 like if i was an iranian agent instead of an american citizen i could have brought a damn 0.99
00:05:01.060 ma deuce in here and no one would have noticed shi t actually insane oh and if anyone 0.97
00:05:08.680 and so i think that's how this feels it's awful so you can't really say he recommends doing
00:05:13.800 something like this stay in school kids but yeah by the amount of juice for people are wondering
00:05:18.700 is a browning m2 50 caliber heavy machine gun so now now that i've read that do you think it's
00:05:26.860 kind of weird that no one else is talking about this
00:05:29.980 so simone had you seen this anywhere in your feeds i i all i knew was that they found some
00:05:40.920 documents in this hotel room i didn't i've not seen this anywhere i'm shocked that we hadn't
00:05:46.740 been told like anything or that i hadn't seen it takes a while though for people to start
00:05:51.540 commenting on stuff so so i i want to explain how insane this is that this is the case right
00:06:00.820 this means that if i ran had wanted to right what this guy did he ran past the layer one of security
00:06:09.160 and was caught just outside the doors that would have entered the main room right i thought he was
00:06:16.460 one floor above that was what i heard that he was in the floor above the main ballroom
00:06:20.780 i had this in my notes right here so let's see what they say not inside the ballroom he was
00:06:25.260 stopped in an entelier foyer area just past the checkpoint before reaching the ballroom doors
00:06:30.220 the incident happened at the terrace level the main ballroom is large and subterranean one floor
00:06:35.920 below in some descriptions so if you watch what an estimates place the breach dozens of feet to
00:06:43.740 100 yards from the ballroom entrance so you know he was he was basically he was right by the door
00:06:49.340 we'll just say he was right by the door right by the door yeah and if you watch the video of it a
00:06:53.140 lot of guards are like oh look at that guy running by us is basically what you see i mean obviously
00:06:58.360 i can understand the shock at the moment or something like that but the way that security
00:07:03.500 was set up if iran had been there it was 12 guys like just 12 guys they could have easily taken out
00:07:09.880 the entire security team yeah and all they needed to do was just make a reservation at your friendly
00:07:15.200 all they needed to do was make a reservation and they could have made a reservation for a lot more
00:07:18.760 than 12 guys they could have made a reservation for like 50 guys come down to that floor just
00:07:23.440 started shooting and then they are right at where the president and most of the senior administration 1.00
00:07:31.180 officials are and they could have taken them all out this requires a level of stupidity like 1.00
00:07:38.440 what i mean by this is okay just think like an intelligent person for a second here right all 1.00
00:07:43.540 so you're trying to protect the president you have near unlimited resources for this sort of thing
00:07:50.160 what you would do typically is have layered checkpoints further than someone can run right
00:07:57.660 so you would go to whatever hallways led to that particular checkpoint that he ran through
00:08:03.700 yeah and you would have a checkpoint i would expect at least three layers of checkpoints
00:08:07.600 you would not be able to make it through a door or elevator yeah like at those checkpoints
00:08:12.800 yeah yeah idea that you would like there would be a bunch like a table because that's kind of
00:08:18.040 what he ran by right like he ran through the metal detector that was the thing where he had
00:08:22.120 to start running is when he got to the metal detector okay which and they just like let him
00:08:27.360 get in line with everyone else packing heat run through a metal detector so what i mean here is
00:08:34.080 the the stage of incompetence especially after what we saw at the one rally where i pointed out
00:08:40.100 was that assassination attempt that the roof that the kid was on this was oh in butler pennsylvania 0.99
00:08:45.340 yes it's literally if you had taken like an actual idiot to that event when you're like okay it's a 0.81
00:08:54.340 video game where would you expect an assassin to be right there's literally nowhere else from that 0.99
00:09:00.220 position that is like a raised location that would have had an aim on the president the gently sloped
00:09:06.200 roof that you can easily climb to yes and when asked why no one was there they go but it was
00:09:12.120 gently sloped like an agent could roll off of it with our current safety it's a falling hazard
00:09:18.020 yeah do you know how rotund our agents are you put them on any sort of an inclined plane and
00:09:24.600 they just start rolling i mean i saw some of those dei hires from back then the point is it's like
00:09:29.320 we apparently have not corrected the situation with the secret service and this is a very very
00:09:34.980 very big deal and i'm not gonna like go further than to be like was something now people could
00:09:41.340 say well then the trump administration did it to lure an assassin or something like that
00:09:47.300 this seems unlikely for a few reasons one is i keep so like let's go over leftist conspiracy
00:09:56.640 series what is it that he was a massad agent massad basically has trump in their pockets
00:10:02.540 why on earth are they sending an agent to kill trump right also when massad wants you done
00:10:07.940 you're done i don't know how else to put it yeah but well i mean the u.s president presumably would 0.53
00:10:13.680 be harder but apparently not but even worse than that who among the white house officials is the
00:10:18.980 individual who most wants to pull out of the war with iran oh yeah the next in line to be president 0.99
00:10:24.140 jd vance killing trump is literally the stupidest thing massad could do even if they did want to do 0.97
00:10:30.540 something like that so it's clearly not Mossad but they've also been like oh it's the Trump 0.99
00:10:37.120 administration to use as justification for the new ballroom look one Trump can build the new ballroom
00:10:44.820 whatever the you guys think it's gonna happen now because that wing of the White House was
00:10:49.440 demolished right they're not gonna leave a giant thing hole in the White House oh they're trying
00:10:54.040 no there was some judge that was like well you can't keep working on the foundation they're
00:10:58.440 really trying to stop it i guess they just want the gaping hole to be there forever
00:11:03.320 but clearly it's needed like as much as okay always be closing trump i get it but
00:11:10.520 also he has a very valid point in that the the security of presidents right now is is lax
00:11:17.800 according to the don't ask me ask the would-be assassin ask the would-be assassin moldering in
00:11:24.140 his room about like you know when we get a competent president again you really better
00:11:28.720 finish that ballroom he basically said that yeah he's basically well okay now that puts me on this
00:11:34.320 he was about the ballroom again trump hired the assassin and he's like and make sure you put a
00:11:39.380 little ad for the ballroom at the end about how incompetent the hotel security is but no
00:11:46.060 no the the the i do not think i want to get into like the leftist crashing because i heard
00:11:54.980 a bunch of people are saying it's fake and i'm like that sounds crazy but okay it's not that
00:12:01.420 president trump is above staging an assassination attempt i do not think that he is
00:12:06.700 nor is it that the cia or fbi couldn't stage an assassination attempt it's that the cia and fbi
00:12:15.240 are clearly at odds with trump right now like so they're not oh absolutely they hate each other
00:12:21.460 remember during the last cycle there was the leak of the text of people was in the cia saying they
00:12:27.520 would do anything they could to prevent trump from being elected oh like when we talk about
00:12:31.780 i figure those people have been purged you know i mean those individual ones have but i've heard
00:12:38.200 that this attitude is so prevalent throughout these institutions that they now do actively like
00:12:43.900 in abs to join like as a gay latina i thought i would be welcome i thought that was biden era
00:12:50.860 stuff oh yeah but like that shouldn't be put out by the cia they hired people through that and they 0.67
00:12:59.140 haven't let them all go right like it the the the urban monoculture is very good at capturing these
00:13:05.380 types of bureaucracies even within like administration officials when i talk about the
00:13:10.600 the faction of the republican party that i find quite dangerous the deontological faction
00:13:14.480 the whatever you want to call it the romanist faction and is quite at odds with our value set
00:13:20.280 they have a very deep control of the republican side of the deep state and they hate trump as
00:13:27.740 well like they're very very anti-trump generally speaking and it was because and this is why
00:13:33.500 they're all like moldering about trump's alliance with israel and bombing of iran and stuff like
00:13:37.980 that and being like, you know, MAGA is dead and what they mean. We did a longer episode on this
00:13:43.020 that we haven't done live because timing didn't work out. But what they really meant when they
00:13:46.640 said that at CPAC is our ability to control MAGA is dead because he put people with, at least within
00:13:52.900 his administration, who don't listen to people like that, who he got through like Founders Fund
00:13:56.480 instead of the traditional Republican, captured Republican institutions. But okay. Outside of
00:14:03.160 that the the these institutions do not like trump enough to coordinate with him on something like
00:14:09.620 this and trump's own team does not seem competent enough to organize something like this without it
00:14:16.820 leaking they look trump can coordinate with things like the military when they have a common aim
00:14:22.020 like venezuela or something like that but coordinating with a military filled with
00:14:27.460 individuals that don't really like trump that much on a fake assassination plot that seems
00:14:33.080 fairly implausible especially if you're converting somebody who has like signaled that they were a
00:14:40.020 leftist pretty much their entire life you know saying also if i was the administration and this
00:14:45.060 was the way i was putting this together they're like well what if the administration purposely
00:14:48.700 has made secret society secret service really bad but to sort of like bait and attack on them
00:14:53.560 it's like this attack came way too close to killing potentially a lot of people right like
00:15:00.780 if he had gotten through those doors like you're right i guess he probably would have
00:15:05.940 not just gone straight for well he said he have a long range he he explicitly said i don't i
00:15:15.080 remember exactly i know he had at least i think it was a pistol and a rifle that he wanted to
00:15:18.400 kill as many administration officials as he could and he was going to choose in order of how high 0.53
00:15:23.100 profile they were okay so oh oh so yeah no he was just going to kill like i'm just gonna get as 0.99
00:15:29.600 many of them as i can oh see i just figured he was just going for for just the president but
00:15:34.260 he was just oh he wanted to turn the place into a shooting gallery anyone he could recognize the
00:15:39.800 moment he recognized him basically that's a little delusional i mean one person what did
00:15:48.340 i mean that's one person do you really think i mean he he was a mechanical engineer he was quite
00:15:53.940 educated presumably he was able to think through the fact that there was abundance and once you
00:15:59.000 get in the room like the president is still surrounded by heavily armed men who would
00:16:03.380 immediately shoot him well i mean from his perspective the president and the administration
00:16:10.020 was constantly killing civilians is specifically what he was like the thing that he was really 0.96
00:16:16.560 upset about was the taking out the gunboats you know which remember the boats that trump was
00:16:22.560 taking drugs yeah yeah and and you know from everything i've seen about that it seems pretty
00:16:28.720 open and shut that they are definitely drug boats right like if they were fishermen as
00:16:33.760 the left keeps saying presumably you could find like their families or something to go on tv and
00:16:40.960 cry about how their fishermen husbands were killed and yet this hasn't happened like drug runners have
00:16:47.140 families too welcome right but they seem less likely to go up and on tv about it right if my
00:16:54.300 husband was actually a fisherman and the united states actually like gunned down his boat i would
00:17:01.180 try to call like cnn or msnbc and if i were cnn or msnbc i would take that call in a hot second
00:17:07.560 right like it seems completely implausible to me that these people aren't drug runners given that
00:17:12.680 i i love people are gonna like the leftists always do this they're like you don't understand 0.96
00:17:17.320 malcolm people in latin america are retarded and don't know how to use phones and don't know how to 0.98
00:17:22.640 use technology and i'm like sorry as somebody who lived like halftime just like black voters 0.99
00:17:28.160 couldn't possibly bring an id to vote yeah they don't know how to get an id latin americans are
00:17:35.840 very technologically competent well often they're often more tech forward than many americans yeah
00:17:41.140 yeah i i think what's the cell phone pronunciation is like venice wayland's out of necessity adopted
00:17:46.160 crypto way before americans oh yeah yeah their crypto stuff in peru is fantastic right they're
00:17:51.880 not even crypto bros they're just like they were born in the crypto like it's not even a thing
00:17:56.660 they're just like obviously i'm gonna pay you in like usdc i i i love this leftist perspective of
00:18:02.840 like latin americans as like half human half animal incapable the progressive left treats
00:18:10.840 pretty much any of its favored or protected groups like that like well obviously you know they're 0.99
00:18:17.360 they're very dumb i don't know yeah like the end of that song wonderful country beautiful people 0.98
00:18:23.700 yes exactly peruvians you know just yeah 1.00
00:18:27.320 I was in Africa
00:18:31.160 And I was not
00:18:32.120 I saw this woman
00:18:34.840 Malaria 1.00
00:18:35.820 And she looked at me with this vacant stare 1.00
00:18:39.940 As if to say
00:18:40.940 In spite of our differences
00:18:41.920 You and I are one
00:18:43.640 And then I just thundered everywhere
00:18:47.340 Because
00:18:49.040 That really reminds me of this time
00:18:51.420 Oh my god
00:18:51.900 I was in South America
00:18:54.880 In Parag
00:18:55.940 Pará, no, pará darling, pará, Peru, oh yeah, pará, pará, yeah, wonderful, can't do, you know, beautiful people, yeah, um, yeah, no, we were trekking in the Andes, and the sun was just rising and glinting off the snow, creating a sort of ethereal haze, and I really got a sense of the force and power of nature and the insignificance of man.
00:19:25.940 and then i just shunned it everywhere yeah there's very little inherent respect for their
00:19:33.040 you know ability to and i love the conservative like hey a lot of americans are pretty smart
00:19:37.560 they can figure this stuff out if somebody randomly murdered their family like come on man
00:19:42.360 like but anyway completely implausible but that's you know so his perspective is well i've got to do
00:19:47.320 anything because this government represents me and they're out there killing random civilians
00:19:51.900 left and right you know he's in a complete information bubble but what i think this attack
00:19:57.220 has shown is how much of the left is in a complete information bubble specifically the number of
00:20:03.660 people who said like this was obviously staged one it just seems completely implausible to me
00:20:08.820 that this was staged but two in addition to just just i'm i'm just looking at like motivations of
00:20:14.900 the people who could have staged it the most likely person to have staged it if somebody could
00:20:20.700 have staged it motive means an opportunity would have been putin but nobody wants to admit that 0.88
00:20:26.220 he's actually the person wait just walk me through the i guess dumb leftist take on this is this is 0.84
00:20:32.700 staged so this guy that the secret service and and trump and this guy could have coordinated
00:20:40.300 all in an attempt to both boost polling numbers which are low for trump right now leading into
00:20:46.220 the midterms because they're actually not particularly low for a second term president's
00:20:51.360 first cycle leading into i know they're not but i mean maybe he wants to look good to go into the
00:20:56.080 midterms or something and they're not great so that and actually they've gone up since the
00:21:00.180 beginning of the war in iran they're like simone actually this is sorry you keep repeating something
00:21:06.100 that's factually wrong but a lot of leftists keep saying yeah so for context this is what i'm
00:21:10.620 talking about here. Trump's second term approval has been hanging around 44 percent versus 40 to
00:21:16.800 41 percent during this time in his first term, which is insane to be more popular in your second
00:21:23.380 term. If you look at recent presidential numbers, Obama in his second term was around 41 percent,
00:21:29.360 so lower than Trump. Bush, 38 percent at comensurable moments. For more context right now,
00:21:35.200 the democratic party unfavorability rating is at historic highs 64 versus 33.9 see them favorably
00:21:43.680 if you look at even obama who was historically popular in his second term the republicans had a
00:21:49.720 34 favorability rating so higher than the democrats right now trump's polling numbers have gone up
00:21:56.800 since the beginning of the war in iran and they are unusually good for a president at this part
00:22:02.020 in their presidential cycle the left wants to keep like freaking out and moldering about how
00:22:06.360 bad the numbers are but when you compare his numbers to democratic favorability right now 0.98
00:22:10.640 they're unusually good not that's stupid they should be saying that instead of that his numbers
00:22:15.680 are low because yes i am just parroting what leftists are saying but two the best way to 0.96
00:22:22.140 drive turnout is to be like we seriously need to fight back they're beginning to win and if we
00:22:27.500 don't take this seriously, we'll lose big time. And they're acting like it's going to be a blood
00:22:33.500 bath in the midterms and it's a, it's a given. So that seems like a really stupid tactic, 1.00
00:22:37.700 but anyway, that's the narrative and he's trying to sell his ballroom. So in theory, 0.99
00:22:43.140 he coordinates with this guy and with the secret service. And I mean, keep in mind,
00:22:47.400 this guy did not get killed. This guy did not get hurt and he doesn't have that much of an
00:22:53.020 footprint and the secret service also nobody got hurt one guy was shot at but in a very very good
00:23:01.040 bulletproof vest so he's so let's talk about this he does have a long and and but but not
00:23:08.160 like super extensive online footprint he does have an online footprint he has been a leftist
00:23:12.680 activist for a long time two the evidence because i decided to go to an ai and see what's the like
00:23:18.000 full leftist argument as to why this was set up how a lone gunman with a manifesto got as far as
00:23:23.820 he did as a hotel guest i think that this is more an indictment that somebody was in the secret
00:23:27.960 service is trying to get trump killed than that trump would allow that because trump could have
00:23:31.740 actually gotten killed right trump's calm demeanor and quick evacuation of others the evacuation
00:23:37.220 actually seemed fairly slow given the severity of the situation and trump's calm demeanor bro this
00:23:45.120 is like his force assassination attempt at this point at this point the the pirate to the caribbean
00:23:51.100 meme of first time when he's looking to the person next to him kind of makes sense in addition when
00:23:56.620 there has been an assassination against trump in the past he has not reacted with panic i mean
00:24:02.020 famously the after he got his ear partially the fight fight fight thing if anything you think
00:24:08.220 that he would if this was pre-planned do some sort of a staged fight fight fight or something
00:24:14.060 like that like that looks more pre-planned than this like at least milk it if you're gonna pre-plan
00:24:19.200 it right yeah next pre-pre-event comments specifically here caroline levitt's phrasing
00:24:24.620 you would never do phrase it like that if you knew this was going to happen and you were trying to
00:24:28.400 hide it and then rapid pivot to political messaging instead of pure shock or grief what what time
00:24:35.180 this is the forced assassination attempt do you know like what republicans like the world we're
00:24:40.300 living in right now you democrats haven't had this happen and the thing that all the republicans
00:24:45.040 keep mentioning is the democrats who are like nobody would actually attempt to assassinate
00:24:49.100 the president or engineer for his assassination to be easy as i'm suggesting they might have done
00:24:54.460 at the same time in the next phrase they'll say and someone should assassinate the president
00:25:00.100 right like well that's because democratic presidents are really part of a bureaucratic
00:25:06.360 deep state coalition if you were to kill any president recently and sort of democratic
00:25:12.960 like if you were to kill biden not even that right because he was being puppeted by a series
00:25:18.320 of people and it would have been basically meaningless no no no no the the levels of
00:25:22.960 calls to violent from the left don't mirror anything that the right did even when they
00:25:27.720 believed that the election was unfairly stolen against biden i i have regularly on talk shows
00:25:33.460 Like, after this one, it was on, I can't remember, one of the only remaining talk shows where the guy was making a stand-up routine about how, you know, or what do we call Trump now, but a target.
00:25:46.720 Our First Lady Melania is here. Look at Melania, so beautiful.
00:25:50.260 Mrs. Trump, you have a glow like an expectant widow.
00:25:54.460 Right, like, you know.
00:25:55.940 Oh, good lord.
00:25:57.240 we're seeing destiny make a joke about he wants to see people stop quote-unquote trying to kill
00:26:04.860 the president you know mainstream figures on the left are saying like this is good this should
00:26:12.100 happen why do they keep failing and it has become mainstream on the left to say that this is fake
00:26:17.640 but what's really interesting to me is what's the second part of this which is in saying that
00:26:25.240 it's fake they often attempt to say and we know that the two other assassination attempts note
00:26:31.900 there's actually been four other assassination attempts because they're forgetting about the
00:26:34.900 two iranian attempts that were foiled earlier in their pipeline before somebody actually got to
00:26:39.660 shooting but the the oh no there was the other one on the the lawn remember when the he was at
00:26:44.640 the golf course and there was yeah so there was the the the golf course one butler pennsylvania
00:26:48.640 then this one oh yeah four four because the golf course in butler pennsylvania were not the two
00:26:54.540 iranian attempts oh okay oh so that's five that's five total yeah okay so anyway so we're trying to
00:27:03.580 figure out how many assassinate i don't remember any on biden by the way i don't remember any on
00:27:09.060 obama i don't remember any on clinton i i think we need to be honest here that there is a problem
00:27:14.600 in terms of calls to violence on the left and yet recently as the goal did a clip on this and i was
00:27:19.820 mortified a a guy was being questioned by the fbi for incel posting you know saying that like he
00:27:27.880 wanted violence against women where you regularly see women on twitter posting they want violence
00:27:32.920 against men you know like all men and stuff like that is practically a slogan on the left
00:27:36.500 it's like you have to say something extreme and rightist to have anyone investigate you
00:27:40.280 because these organizations are so deeply institutionally captured and that's why i
00:27:45.120 think if I was Trump, one of the next things I might do is just shut down and reform the
00:27:50.380 Secret Service or shut down and reform CIA, FBI.
00:27:54.180 You know, let me tell you what, the right's going to be pretty happy if you do that.
00:27:57.860 Our army is doing a pretty good job right now.
00:28:00.400 Our Marines, our Navy, our Air Force, let's split something out of them to become a new
00:28:05.880 Secret Service arm, a new CIA arm, and just admit that the institutional NSA as well,
00:28:12.520 that these organizations are corrupt beyond redemption at this point because they have been
00:28:16.840 operating outside of the public light and like trump should have known this when people within
00:28:21.840 those organizations said that they were going to try to prevent him from being elected right like
00:28:24.940 that should have been the sign of oh this is what we're seeing on the surface of the iceberg
00:28:29.300 how deep did the iceberg go but my point here being is they keep saying that these previous
00:28:35.940 attempts were all right-wing advocates that butler was a right-wing advocate that tyler was a right
00:28:41.080 wing advocate and like if you have looked into these to any extent at this point you now know
00:28:46.120 they were both far leftist you know one was literally deeply dating a trans person which
00:28:52.260 is not something a right wing advocate is often going to do and wrote about why he wanted to do
00:28:57.480 this which again to his trans partner and the other one people have accused him of being furry
00:29:03.480 does not appear to have actually been a furry but he does appear to have been a gooner and he does
00:29:08.320 appear to have been a real weirdo and far leftist who the fbi appeared to them to cover up and like
00:29:15.820 this is what i'm talking about like fbi and the secret service when they said like we don't have
00:29:19.220 a lot of information on this guy this guy's a ghost online and literally like random people
00:29:23.820 are able to find his deviant art accounts and give them to alex jones and our who did they
00:29:27.940 get those to this was a tucker carlson i think broke this one he did oh yeah people still trusted
00:29:33.920 tucker carlson to back before massad poisoned him by the way if you don't know our conspiracy
00:29:38.320 theory drop on this i i actually might do a whole video on the plausibility of our massad poisoning
00:29:43.300 theory so it goes like this if you haven't heard it every time a mainstream figure begins to
00:29:49.940 question israel funding israel anything like that within like two to three years they start going
00:29:56.620 completely off the reservation and making random insane takes like we've seen from nick fuentes
00:30:01.880 against the iran war you know wanting the united states to lose tucker carlson uh you know you 0.94
00:30:07.920 could see our whole video on the crazy stuff he said candace owens would completely nanner
00:30:12.800 bananas when she used to be really cogent and interesting and like when i look at these three
00:30:18.140 figures the pattern i've seen in these three figures like i'm gonna be honest this isn't
00:30:22.040 like a joke conspiracy theory in my brain anymore they seem to be saying stuff that is
00:30:26.660 so off the reservation it like breaks plausibility for me I'm like because like even Nick Fuentes
00:30:35.280 somebody recently was like whoa and I mentioned this in the last episode they're like well as
00:30:39.500 Nick Gold said that he agrees with Nick Fuentes on 99% of things like what do you think of that
00:30:43.480 I was like yeah there was definitely a time when I felt that way too right like Nick Fuentes didn't
00:30:47.340 used to be this crazy he's definitely had some form of psychotic break or something that I think
00:30:53.120 has really been made apparent since the beginning of the iran war and his very anti-america stance
00:30:57.520 that he's now taking and it's like really clearly against american long-term interests
00:31:02.120 and or like the pro venezuela like tucker comments and stuff like that like oh there are 0.98
00:31:07.640 good ally in the region because they also kill gay people like any conservative cares about that
00:31:12.860 anymore like i was i've i'm like those aren't like normal sane thing but see our individual videos on
00:31:18.660 that but i guess i guess the point i'm making here is i originally threw that conspiracy theory out
00:31:23.380 as a joke but the more i think about it oh no is it happening to me the more i'm like but they do
00:31:29.500 have the technology for it and they probably could easily gain access it would be a coherent
00:31:36.600 strategy to discredit people who think that we should stop giving israel tons of money every
00:31:41.300 year and it would definitely probably be worse the cost benefit trade-off in terms of the amount
00:31:46.600 of money i mean it's it's not a ton of money as we pointed out in previous videos it's like about
00:31:50.900 the amount we give to like egypt and jordan combined right like and you don't hear people
00:31:55.420 complaining about that but it still would be like financially beneficial to keep it up i mean it's
00:31:59.980 weird that we're giving it to a first world country but like before we question that we
00:32:03.820 should probably be questioning the astronomically more that we give to nato like trump's not
00:32:08.820 insane to say we should think about pulling out of nato but that's for a second video
00:32:12.300 anyway thoughts simone
00:32:14.460 i i want to see how this unfolds with time like i want to see how the trial goes i i want to see
00:32:27.000 if this just becomes something that we just collectively forget that's my first expectation
00:32:32.520 honestly it's just that this is going to blow over and people are going to forget about it and
00:32:36.700 is this is just the normal now and no one's going to treat this like a big deal even though it is
00:32:42.880 so I'm a little worried that that's what it is but it is it is baffling how on on the one hand
00:32:54.180 people are talking about Palantir having all this really impressive tech and ability
00:32:59.820 can we replace the cia and nsa with palantir i mean well right like it's just how how can that
00:33:05.920 be a thing and yet there are people who just get extremely close to the president and the entire
00:33:16.320 leading administration with multiple guns and knives and plans to take them out it seems
00:33:23.440 been plausible to me it's just sad too though that like a society is broken down enough where
00:33:29.880 this is just normative whereas in the past you know what was it it was Andrew Jackson basically
00:33:37.040 threw a rager at the White House after he won right like people I think he jumped out a window
00:33:42.140 to get away from everyone eventually they just trashed the place hit that giant wheel of cheese
00:33:47.600 very he was the first president from the Backwoods Cultural Group which is our cultural very
00:33:52.200 backward thing to do like let's throw a rager at the white house probably not getting all the
00:33:55.860 details right but like people would just show up like it was it was a house and it was less secure
00:34:00.960 than most of the houses now with like their ring cams and everything well you know maybe maybe maybe
00:34:05.920 we as a country were we were not and i point out to people because people get this really wrong
00:34:12.120 we were not particularly more culturally homogenous than we were now the quaker backwoods
00:34:18.060 cavalier and puritan cultural groups that existed in the 13 colonies were dramatically more different
00:34:23.960 from each other than for example american culture is from latin american culture but what was the
00:34:29.380 case is that those cultural groups were all trustworthy to each other like for example if
00:34:37.580 we let in like a bunch of japanese immigrants i'm not worried about them shooting me on the street
00:34:41.760 or something like that like they may be culturally different for me but they are from a culture that 0.97
00:34:45.800 I trust, whereas we are letting in people from cultures that I do not trust. And I think that 1.00
00:34:51.640 it's important to recognize that as an American, like not every outsider doesn't work within the
00:34:57.680 multicultural American system, but some outside cultures do not work within the multicultural
00:35:02.840 American system. And when we pretend that everyone doesn't, then we just look sort of crazy, right?
00:35:07.700 Like, obviously, there are groups that can perfectly well, you know, integrate leaflet,
00:35:13.860 for example is is ethnically japanese and has perfectly integrated into american culture
00:35:18.700 from everything i've seen like i i do not think that we benefit from just kicking out everyone
00:35:24.920 who's not one of the original cultures but we need to be aware that like we have materially 0.92
00:35:31.220 changed things by letting in groups that are you know that create these sort of externalities
00:35:36.820 i mean i've created this sort of hive the the urban monoculture also didn't exist and the urban
00:35:41.820 monoculture seems to be able to completely cook people's brains the thing that i was trying to
00:35:45.600 like synthesize that has changed between this and other assassination attempts is everybody saying
00:35:52.960 really untrue stuff but like at a really high level now like that all the previous assassination
00:35:58.380 attempts were right is is just so on its face untrue and yet i see this a ubiquitous opinion
00:36:04.240 on reddit i see it as ubiquitous opinion on x even within some like griper circles like the
00:36:11.780 infiltrated parts of like the right wing which i think more shows these are bad actors and i think
00:36:16.400 what this shows is on the left in the groups that have allied themselves with the urban monoculture
00:36:20.860 whether it's the groipers or the far leftists there is no longer an interest in even being
00:36:28.080 adjacent to truth like like it's no longer even like i want to hedge so like a reasonable person
00:36:33.520 isn't going to call me out there's now almost this sort of cachet with like blatantly being
00:36:40.220 unaware of reality and i think that or signaling that you're unaware of reality almost to attempt
00:36:46.140 to manifest this alternate world framework and there is no call out no internal like hey you 0.94
00:36:54.080 make us look stupid when you say things like every other assassin was right wing or all of the
00:36:59.140 attempts were obviously staged yeah that that that is is a change that i'm noticing and i think it's 0.97
00:37:05.580 one where we need to understand that our enemy and the force that we are collectively fighting
00:37:10.740 against has transformed into something holistically more nefarious than it was in the past
00:37:16.440 yeah it's it's dark i i i don't i don't i guess maybe it was a short-term odd period where things
00:37:30.900 were cohesive and people trusted each other and that this idea of a cohesive high trust society
00:37:36.980 was just never going to last but it still exists in places like japan i just it's it's kind of
00:37:43.360 dark to think that that's how things used to be but we don't we don't get to see that 0.96
00:37:47.480 yeah um well it's it's not in japan anymore they let in a bunch of immigrants and japanese people 0.96
00:37:54.280 are freaking out but i think in japan they're a bit more ruthless in how they ultimately deal 0.96
00:37:58.640 with things like this so you know i don't know if i want to be one of those immigrants in a 0.98
00:38:02.620 generation or so because yeah japan has a history okay and they they all have they no no no they
00:38:10.260 have a history but like they relate to it differently you go to germany and you're like
00:38:14.640 oh what do you think about like the atrocity in the war and they will bend over backwards to be
00:38:18.180 like oh it's so horrible i can't believe we did that what nightmares and you go to japan and you
00:38:24.480 go like what are you thinking they go well first of all that was a war of aggression by the united
00:38:27.780 states against japan that's the way it's taught in the japanese school system and the the and if
00:38:33.540 you're like how could they possibly teach it that way if they bombed pearl harbor first and they'll
00:38:37.820 say well the united states was blockading japan which puts them in an existential situation that
00:38:42.880 forced them to bomb pearl harbor and they then say and all that medical experimentation some of
00:38:49.000 our groups did and all the grapes they did i mean that was normal for war and yeah we still think
00:38:54.740 about it i mean i've seen the anime gate did they they plan when they go conquer some of these
00:39:00.520 countries to pick up a fu waifus along the way that's still very part of japanese culture they
00:39:06.640 may not frame it as grape but you know gate gate we don't have there is no equivalent u.s movie i'm
00:39:16.580 aware of where we go to war and whenever we kill somebody we pick up their wives in our harem
00:39:22.900 like that is a that is a very unique i i know i'm like genuinely even vietnam war where like
00:39:29.860 prostitution and marrying american soldiers was was somewhat common um i'm not aware of that many
00:39:34.540 wars where like somebody goes out war movies in the u.s that are very like gun-ho like all happy
00:39:39.940 and then end up with a big harem coming back to the united states but that's the plot of gate
00:39:45.200 by the way uh mind you are you unfamiliar with this anime it hasn't even been criticized by the
00:39:51.220 way no one in japan has been like it's a bad thing to gate especially given our history and wars
00:39:56.620 frames war this way god well back on the topic of the correspondence dinner shooting you know the
00:40:05.740 friend from college that i mentioned and i was like oh she was probably there she was at she was
00:40:10.860 not just there but i just found a video she took when she was there because she was there she was
00:40:16.140 the head table and there's video of just like what's really interesting and i sent you a link
00:40:21.600 you can look at the video that she took what's really weird is that it's super clear people
00:40:27.420 don't really know how to respond like a lot of people are crouched and acting panicked whereas
00:40:32.600 other people are just kind of like sitting there and chatting and are we allowed to post this in
00:40:38.740 the video? Where's it at? Get out, get out, get out.
00:40:50.100 it's just super clear that she people just don't know how to act and like there's there's 0.96
00:41:09.280 one guy with fancy well a couple guys with fancy goggles and like big guns pointing and like
00:41:15.040 a lot of people with cool military equipment running around, but people are very clearly just
00:41:20.780 absolutely clueless as to what to do. I really think this is in a post-societal cohesion phase
00:41:30.320 of America, that it just makes so much more sense to have an uber secure, reinforced ballroom for
00:41:37.240 parties. Yeah. Also keep in mind, when I talk about the Iranian strat that they could have used,
00:41:41.820 another one they could have used to just bring in a bunch of bomb material and just put it like a 0.72
00:41:45.320 few floors above or below this yeah because i'm looking at this room and i'm looking at all these
00:41:49.500 people here and i'm just thinking like this this really does look very not secure at all at all
00:41:55.760 i'm seeing all these doors i'm seeing some some people kind of maybe getting rushed out like this
00:42:03.260 this could have been a tram i'd like to say to this leftist assassin do you now see how incompetent
00:42:09.220 government bureaucratic structures can be and why we don't want to give them more power this is why
00:42:13.520 we need the trump administration this is why we need doge this is why we need the trump
00:42:17.920 administration anyway love you simone also like the the glasses and dinnerware there just look
00:42:23.800 like you know bad hotel conference dinnerware and you know trump would make it fancy he wouldn't do
00:42:27.860 that he wouldn't do them dirty like that i love rfk's like tweet after this is like i'm really
00:42:34.040 hungry like him just looking around sad but he's not getting his that's why that one dude just
00:42:39.020 kept eating that i'm i think a lot of people just really identify with that guy that they would be
00:42:44.560 that person like look they didn't whoever's coming didn't come for me i'm just gonna finish my dinner
00:42:50.800 that's like asmund gold when he talked about this was talking about like the two instances in which
00:42:55.860 he had had a gun pulled on him or something or a gun was in his like in the area and someone had
00:43:01.440 shown up to i think ember's stream or something or i can't remember exactly what it was but he
00:43:05.560 just like walked out and just walked away past the guy with the gun but just decided to stay like
00:43:10.940 six feet away and out of his aggro zone as he put it yeah his aggro zone like just i'm just fed up
00:43:17.620 with this like i'm not i'm just not going to participate in this just walked past him and
00:43:21.900 away from the situation and yeah that was the guy eating the food just like look just let me eat my
00:43:26.720 food i can super relate well i love you to death simone and crazy world out there somebody died
00:43:33.920 right of our house last night or the night last night last night yeah a car crash and we're on a
00:43:39.660 busy road um so you know you could die at any moment make the most of your life people yeah
00:43:45.220 guys please please be careful out there okay love you malcolm and you've made the most of my life
00:43:51.280 so thank you for that if i don't and i would say that i was satisfied with my life it was because
00:43:57.200 of simone okay don't don't say that because let's be very clear someone mentioned commented this on
00:44:03.600 on the video you ran today we are not depressed yeah we are not depressed i'm not questioning
00:44:09.800 things about israel so yeah okay we'll just end with that bye bye any fun in news today hopefully
00:44:17.220 the episode didn't cause too much of a riot no no nobody disagreed with it aside from people being
00:44:24.600 like it's not going to work so that's so my proposed solution yeah like they would never
00:44:35.680 do that i mean some people rightfully pointed out and i think this was
00:44:39.100 my whole setup went weird
00:44:50.760 some people pointed out that the way that judaism worked before was there were all these you know
00:44:59.240 isolated jewish communities and being rejected from one would be really meaningful it was like
00:45:05.660 being thrown out of your village like your livelihood your family your support network
00:45:09.120 all of it was gone now there really isn't that much pain experienced by anyone who
00:45:18.700 runs against it like even if even in the past when that practice was common and people were
00:45:26.240 thrown out for bad behavior it was too easy because jewish communities were so decentralized
00:45:31.820 for bad actors to just leave one and show up at another and not necessarily face super negative 0.97
00:45:40.000 repercussions from rejection this is not to say that this is why jews used to have such a negative
00:45:46.500 stigma against balsham because that's what they often did is they would move between communities
00:45:51.420 when they were kicked out of one i think that's the word that someone used actually yes and yeah
00:45:57.160 actually very fascinating that you do see a lot of these institutions really begin to permanently
00:46:03.660 die off with demolition talk and as i've said like historically people know my stance on this i think 0.58
00:46:09.200 he's like the negative inflection point in jewish history where things really begin to fall apart
00:46:14.420 but you can go to our other writings on that i don't want to get too into it but yeah i i think
00:46:19.120 you have a point there is this this distrust of so many things that jewish communities used to have
00:46:25.420 that they really transformed over the ages.
00:46:28.520 But I think that there are still
00:46:30.700 some inter-denominational religious rabbinic councils
00:46:34.680 within Judaism for deciding on specific rules
00:46:38.960 like what's like the Jewish take on abortion
00:46:42.020 or something like that, like right now.
00:46:43.960 And I think one of these councils
00:46:46.260 could establish a secondary council
00:46:48.880 that focuses on secular matters
00:46:50.660 for the protection of the wider Jewish community, right?
00:46:53.960 even to explicitly call out some some sects or something like that like this group is doing x
00:47:02.600 in a bad way so that there would be some inter judaism shame for action that leads to negative
00:47:11.180 externalities on sort of reputation for a sect even or an individual and it it's it's the reason
00:47:19.040 i mentioned the history of it is because at least you would have a historical reason for setting
00:47:22.920 something like that up yeah another thing that people pointed out was my utter ignorance about
00:47:30.920 the anti-defamation league i didn't i didn't know about its founding story i didn't know
00:47:37.180 why it was created and by whom i thought it was just to be against defamation i didn't i didn't
00:47:46.720 think about it i also like i figured that if there was some group that was just about like
00:47:51.260 protecting a single group's reputation it might be the like protect the jewish reputation league
00:47:57.620 i'd also note that there is i saw in the comments something that at first seemed very reasonable to
00:48:02.180 me and then i thought about it more and i was like actually that doesn't really work as a
00:48:05.120 analogy because it's putting out that almost no group seems to protect their bad actors like the
00:48:10.220 christians don't like no no group of christians i'm aware it was an issue with trans and we talked
00:48:14.680 about that more prominently yeah the trans community does where you know you get actual 0.78
00:48:19.560 like sex pass and people will defend them yeah but you don't you don't get this with most ethnic
00:48:23.280 groups it's the one example actually someone pointed out in the comments that this was actually
00:48:27.020 a really big thing that happened with the black community and with hip-hop music that a lot of
00:48:32.260 a lot of people in in the early ages of hip-hop were like this is bad we don't like this as an
00:48:37.720 influence and that actually apparently according to this person a lot of even famous hip-hop artists
00:48:42.700 now are like yeah i regret promoting certain things and or this lifestyle also i was reading
00:48:49.300 that comment while listening to this four-hour takedown of tyler perry by this one guy and he
00:48:54.580 was talking about i think how did he word it small c conservative black men especially and how like
00:49:01.640 they're not conservative like republicans they're conservatives like pull your pants up like dress
00:49:06.260 neatly etc okay who's tyler perry tyler he's like a prolific director and actor and writer is he
00:49:14.600 black he's the one yeah he's black he's the one who like makes all those comedies where he dresses 0.62
00:49:18.880 i'm so sorry dresses like a fat woman like medina anyway what was the point of your comment on this 0.99
00:49:24.500 the point was the black there's there's a really established history of black americans being like 0.96
00:49:29.520 we need to show um our best example and actually attacking blood i'm sorry bad actors within their 0.95
00:49:36.420 community and being like the other but the one community i'm aware of that does actively do this 0.70
00:49:40.820 other than trans and jews are romani romani are famous for doing this protecting bad actors and 0.56
00:49:46.980 obviously they've earned you know an equal stigma to jewish people right like oh protecting not 0.58
00:49:52.480 attacking but protecting protecting bad act known bad actors within their community that victimize
00:49:57.540 outsiders the the one counter example that somebody mentioned and it doesn't work really
00:50:03.220 and i'll explain why it doesn't work is they're like well like conservatives do this right like
00:50:07.880 political parties do this like the the the conservative movement will sometimes protect
00:50:12.680 people when they're acting like bad actors. This would be an example like Donald Trump doing things
00:50:17.800 like, it could be seen as like scams or like sexually predatory. This is actually a very
00:50:22.680 different phenomenon. This is when a group protects the bad actions of the group's institutional
00:50:28.920 leadership. And you actually see this across almost every group. So a good example would be
00:50:34.360 like Mormons. I'm not aware of any examples of Mormons protecting bad actors who were low-level
00:50:39.060 people but they absolutely went to bat for joseph smith when he was obviously a bad actor they
00:50:44.760 absolutely went to bat for brigham young when he did things that were obviously bad actor things
00:50:50.100 you you see this in the catholic community for example when there were institutional higher ups
00:50:57.120 who were graping people they institutionally went to bat to cover it up people can say well why do
00:51:02.760 why do institutions so often protect higher up bad actors rather than regular bad actors and it's
00:51:08.580 because they lose institutional power and momentum if they allow their higher-ups to be swept out of
00:51:14.220 power. So if you demand moral purity from your higher-ups and you don't put some effort into
00:51:20.940 protecting them, like imagine if like we as a conservative movement wiped out every leader as
00:51:26.040 soon as a scandal was found on them, right? Like you wouldn't be able to build up a movement really
00:51:30.660 easily or stay in power very easily. And no, you see this in Jewish history as well. A lot of the
00:51:36.420 Jewish leaders during the periods when Jews did punish bad actors, like if you go back to some
00:51:43.300 of the leaders from biblical period, were demonstrably bad actors, be they King David, 0.61
00:51:49.660 for example, right? And I don't think that that's not what I'm talking about. I'm not talking about
00:51:55.320 Jews ignoring when their kings did bad things. Everybody ignores when their kings do bad things. 0.81
00:52:00.540 I'm talking about Jews going to help people who are, you know, regular members or low-level communities who have been caught doing something bad.
00:52:11.020 That's actually incredibly unique to the only three communities I'm aware of that do it are Jews, Romanis, and trans.
00:52:16.820 yeah and that's like the case that people pointed out with the the sort of founding case of the
00:52:22.640 anti-defamation league in 1913 was a case of this man who allegedly attacked sexed a female worker
00:52:30.920 i think and and then killed her and then they went back to try to save him was was lynched by a mob
00:52:37.080 so and then i think there's some following right legal case and i think he had tried
00:52:41.900 sorry i like read this really quickly while trying to respond to comments he had tried to blame it on
00:52:47.860 a black man like he was like wasn't me it was this black dude and then extra bad the adl was
00:52:55.020 like i think founded as part of some legal case too because the court case surrounding it i think
00:53:01.940 drew a lot of like anti-semitic hate or sorry just sorry that's a misnomer it drew a lot of
00:53:10.160 anti-semitism or fomented a lot of it i feel like the adl's actions around it probably would make
00:53:15.740 that worse would make the anti-semitism worse then trying to clear this man's name instead of
00:53:21.680 just being like dude i mean unless they were insistent that he was innocent but even then
00:53:27.060 it's like probably like let's just let this go this doesn't seem you know whatever but anyway
00:53:31.820 like whether or not he was innocent that that is apparently the founding of the adl like their
00:53:37.380 first big case and i had no idea i was like oh my god and that's a really good example of like
00:53:41.680 this wasn't a leader as far as we know you know it was just a factory supervisor so for context
00:53:48.160 historians would disagree with simone here obviously historians may have some bias that
00:53:53.300 the black guy was the actual grapist in this situation however the fact that as racist as
00:54:00.040 that region was during that period that the mob said no no no it wasn't the black guy it was this
00:54:06.240 other guy does make me doubt that a little bit but yeah so to your point people were like you
00:54:14.200 gotta look into circumcision and how the practice was brought to the united states and how one man
00:54:19.620 tried to expose it and stop it and then was was effectively like cast away and thrown out so it
00:54:27.080 can be done but it was only done by someone questioning the practice of circumcision as
00:54:32.720 practiced in the u.s so i kind of want to look into that because it's one of those hot button
00:54:36.440 issues among new parents as you know base campers who are having kids who you know may or may not be
00:54:44.040 circumcised and have written to us and been like hey why don't we talk about this i mean i'm very 0.88
00:54:48.440 against banning super circumcision by the way it is you you cannot be jewish without being
00:54:54.480 circumcised the bible is incredibly clear on this it's it's like not even a vague thing it's not
00:54:59.940 something where there's multiple interpretations what's questionable is when and how it happens
00:55:06.020 right no it's supposed to be done to infants it is yeah yeah the case with moses makes that
00:55:14.080 incredibly clear when i don't want to go into the whole story but you know it's moses's kid
00:55:19.100 and blah blah blah almost killed on the spot for not circumcising very bad to not circumcise
00:55:25.220 we we actually go over it in our in our tract the the question that breaks judaism so it's
00:55:29.940 It's something that we have gone over.
00:55:31.960 I know.
00:55:32.680 I'm so sorry.
00:55:35.680 Oh, my God.
00:55:37.020 But, yeah, that's a fun one.
00:55:39.640 But, yeah, that was a very interesting episode to film and do.
00:55:43.240 All right.
00:55:43.640 I'll get started here.
00:55:52.080 Yeah, you're very strong, Octavian. 0.61
00:55:57.240 Very strong.
00:55:59.940 Good job.
00:56:04.940 All right, there's Daddy and Professor.
00:56:14.940 Thank you.
00:56:19.940 Good teamwork.
00:56:21.940 Thank you, Titan.
00:56:23.940 There you go.
00:56:28.940 Thank you.