Based Camp - November 20, 2025


You Think You Hate The Media ... You Don't Hate Them Enough


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour

Words per Minute

170.79486

Word Count

10,334

Sentence Count

12

Misogynist Sentences

13

Hate Speech Sentences

6


Summary

The mainstream media has been systemically manipulating the public for a long time, especially since the release of the epstein files, and now it s time to take a look at just how evil the mainstream media is and how they ve manipulated the American public for decades.


Transcript

00:00:00.080 hello simone i'm excited to be here with you today today we are going to be talking about
00:00:04.880 just how effing evil the media is coming up next we have an exclusive interview with hell's own
00:00:13.440 head honcho who's here to discuss her brand new passion project and i think that a lot of people
00:00:19.920 who are watch our show because we have a number of progressives who watch our show and if you're
00:00:25.040 a conservative you might have picked up some of these stories that we're going to be covering in
00:00:28.800 the show but what we're going to be covering is a lot of stories that haven't gotten as much
00:00:32.160 coverage as they probably should have and show the way that mainstream media has been systemically
00:00:37.840 manipulating the public for a long time especially recently with the biggest fallout being the fallout
00:00:45.360 of the epstein files is what we're going to start with because if you watched the drudge report or
00:00:50.400 watched a lot of mainstream news you would think that these had a bunch of damning things of trump
00:00:55.040 in them when in fact they may actually provide a smoking gun that the democrats may have killed
00:01:02.480 somebody recently what yes we'll get to this in a second but the gist being is i always asked if the
00:01:10.320 democrats actually had anything that could be used against trump in the epstein files why didn't they
00:01:15.600 release it during the election with biden right yeah right well we learned why they didn't and why
00:01:24.320 they did now the way they made it look like trump had met with somebody under age was by blacking out
00:01:31.280 a person's name but now we have the real version of this because people leaked the real version of
00:01:37.200 it congressmen did showing well they did oh i didn't know that so we know whose name was on it
00:01:42.800 we know that the person's name was on it testified both in congress and wrote in her book that trump
00:01:48.160 had done nothing wrong to her so it was that woman okay yes and that she mysteriously committed suicide
00:01:56.960 despite saying on multiple occasions she would never commit suicide only i think it was a month
00:02:04.240 before the release of the files or it might have even just been weeks before this quote unquote release
00:02:09.280 and she needed to be dead during the release otherwise she could immediately come out and say
00:02:15.200 hey i said this under oath and i said this in my book but really seriously what are you guys doing
00:02:20.720 trump has always been there for me wow okay so it's worse than it looks and why did they release this
00:02:31.280 now it appears they released it because they thought it would make trump look bad to cover up their
00:02:36.480 bungling of the shutdown which is just their base is so mad at them because their base had the
00:02:42.880 impression that they had won because they won these election cycles and in polling it was looking like
00:02:47.680 they were winning except i think they saw the wind and it was not going to last for long people were
00:02:52.960 getting mad at the democrats over the snap benefit stuff when trump rightly pointed out that this was a
00:02:59.200 fight over them trying to give medical care from american taxpayers to illegal immigrants note if you're
00:03:05.840 getting your news from the traditional media they'd say oh no the shutdown wasn't over that because
00:03:11.280 illegal immigrants couldn't get medicare anyway and couldn't get health care anyway except that we
00:03:16.880 know of tons of instances in which they did it's the same when they said oh illegal immigrants can't vote
00:03:22.960 and yet we had this sting operation that got very little coverage showing non-profit directors in new
00:03:30.160 new york leading up to the mondami election literally telling somebody who they thought was an illegal
00:03:35.680 immigrant how to vote and who to vote for sorry when do you register to vote i i didn't i i didn't sign
00:03:43.760 anything they just told me to come here to vote what i found most odd is that pedro rodriguez would
00:03:48.880 keep telling me that i did not reside at an address that he personally signed the letter saying that i
00:03:54.320 recited at he gave me a wink and a nod he told me vote for the man whose name begins with the letter m and
00:04:00.400 and it always really gets to me when they're all like oh there's been no documented evidence of
00:04:04.720 large-scale illegal immigrant voting when we know that texas for example had to remove 2700
00:04:11.360 non-citizens from its voter rolls and that in in florida even the democrats would say oh it wasn't
00:04:18.720 180 000 non-citizens who were moved it was 2625 non-citizens who were moved and this isn't coming from
00:04:25.920 some far far right group this is the aclu saying this so we know this is something that happens and
00:04:31.120 it's just like this narrative that gets repeated over and over again that it doesn't happen and
00:04:35.280 that's what the trump administration was putting their foot down on and the longer that went on
00:04:39.440 the more that would burn the democratic coalition so i will say that in the short time they were
00:04:45.600 winning on this well potentially they cheated in a few elections if you look at the mondami ballot
00:04:50.800 situation that was shocking to me when i saw that the zorhan mondani's name what's mondani ballot
00:04:57.440 situation the guy who just won in new york yeah what i thought you knew about this yes his name was on
00:05:05.840 the ballot multiple times and it was on multiple times before the only real competitor to him was on
00:05:14.400 the ballot this was like very deliberate to hide a chance to vote for the real competitor and then
00:05:21.440 there's been significant foul play in the virginia race that i might add that in post if people are
00:05:29.360 interested in that but yeah it looks really bad like when you look at the mondami race you're like
00:05:34.240 he literally couldn't have lost the race given the way the ballot was structured and that's really
00:05:40.400 horrifying to me that we live in a country where something no while i have been able to find legal
00:05:45.360 justification for having mondami's name on the ballot twice and for having cuomo's name later on
00:05:50.800 the ballot i have been able to find no legal justification for right justifying cuomo's ballot
00:05:58.160 measure and leaving these three left justified boxes that would have left his name more visible if you
00:06:03.680 just ordered it in the normal way it would have been ordered blank and i'd also point out here that
00:06:09.280 even if something is quote unquote the legal way it's done that doesn't mean that it's not also
00:06:14.960 cheating you can put laws on the book that give one party an unfair advantage in a particular area
00:06:21.920 that's exactly what some of the supreme court decisions have been about preventing that's exactly
00:06:27.760 what voting rights act stuff is about the idea that you're like oh yeah it's totally normal to have a
00:06:34.480 candidate listed twice before his primary competitor because of these laws that we put on the book that
00:06:41.440 doesn't make it fair this point is extremely important i i hate when people and this has been a constant
00:06:47.120 thing on this podcast when people are like well what they did was legal therefore it's a non-issue
00:06:53.440 just because something is legal doesn't mean that we shouldn't be talking about it in the news
00:06:59.200 so that the laws can be changed to make our elections fair i don't think any sane thinking
00:07:05.920 person looking at this ballot would say that this election was fair basically what i'm saying is him
00:07:11.360 winning is not as much as i had thought a implication that democratic sentiment is overflowing right now
00:07:21.520 but more of a he just cheated oh wow okay i mean when you saw the ballot did you sort of like
00:07:29.120 oh yeah there's no way the other major candidate could have win it is pretty confusing yeah yeah
00:07:37.200 to be fair if you had been on the ballot twice and the only person running against you was after like
00:07:42.640 eight other candidates you wouldn't have thought you could win or you would have said oh no you would
00:07:47.280 have been like yeah i'm gonna win i don't care if anybody knows who i am i mean yeah it has also been
00:07:52.320 shown i think in various studies that your positioning on a ballot is going to mess with your odds of
00:07:57.600 winning i also remember when when i unsuccessfully ran for office how crestfallen i felt when my
00:08:08.400 my position was on the the only thing on the flip side of the ballot and a lot of people probably missed
00:08:14.480 it in filling out yeah so you see it matters where you are on the ballot and i know here this actually
00:08:20.240 gets to me because i think i only saw this on asthma gold i've literally not seen it covered by the
00:08:24.880 mainstream news at all wow which really shocked me and also interesting we recently learned that now
00:08:33.120 our highest overlapping fan base is asthma gold which made me feel really good and now we have a big
00:08:38.240 overlapping fan base with nux as well i'm like wow we're getting into the the big leagues um is and
00:08:45.360 timpool is another big overlap for us but i was surprised to see that but then the next one that i want to go
00:08:49.920 into here is the text messages because again this is another thing that i've also only seen from
00:08:55.120 streamers it's not that news hasn't covered it but i've only seen it heavily covered as somebody who
00:08:58.800 checks the drudge report every day which is an aggregator and should be showing this stuff if it's
00:09:02.320 being covered a lot is so a house of representative member okay stacy plackett now i will note she is a
00:09:09.520 and a democrat mind you this was after jeffrey epstein so in 2019 after he was convicted as a sex offender
00:09:18.400 and pleaded guilty to it right so he was known as a sex offender at this point okay so we now have
00:09:23.520 a series of texts from her where michael cohen was testifying attempting to take down trump where she
00:09:31.200 was communicating with epstein where it was clear that she was basically acting within the u.s house
00:09:39.600 as epstein's mouse piece in an attempt to take down trump because epstein saw trump as one of his core
00:09:47.120 enemies which again was made clear multiple times in the leaks now the democrats are like oh this proves
00:09:53.920 that epstein looked down on trump and epstein was a bad guy so trump must be a really bad guy and i'm
00:09:59.680 like that's not the way it works it proves that epstein for a long time has had an existential fear
00:10:05.600 of trump and they were not at all buddy buddies and that epstein likely had nothing on trump or he would
00:10:11.440 have used it given when you see what epstein was doing during this congressional hearing okay
00:10:17.520 simple take is that they were it appears to be that they were friends and they had a falling out
00:10:21.680 it's it's yes and the falling out was over epstein creeping on young girls yeah at his at mar-a-lago
00:10:28.720 it's also clear that trump knew that epstein creeped on long girls and tried to tell the public about it in
00:10:34.080 not uncertain terms there are clips of in the past where he's like yeah epstein likes them young
00:10:42.160 like in a like you should do something about this like i'm telling you i want to look into this i'm
00:10:46.720 the news like look into this like yeah anyway and you can see why epstein might have been freaked out
00:10:54.160 about trump saying that and why this may have caused the fight but we've gone over that in other
00:10:58.720 videos i want to get to this so epstein texts her cohen brought up rona keeper of secrets this is
00:11:06.160 referring to rona gaff trump's longtime executive assistant but misspelling her name and then
00:11:11.440 plankett responds rona question question mark so note here she then says quick i'm up next is this an
00:11:20.720 acronym so she had no idea who rona was rona was this guy who was on michael cohen's assistant
00:11:31.280 epstein was tweeting to a u.s congressional representative a democratic one
00:11:38.000 basically you need to ask about rona when you get on stage she then implies well not implies she
00:11:43.520 basically says it quick i'm up next is this an acronym showing she had no idea who rona was
00:11:48.480 so she's gonna go on stage and ask about rona because epstein told her to okay then epstein says
00:12:00.400 that's his assistant then epstein says he's opened the door to questions regarding who are the other
00:12:08.000 henchmen at trump org plackett goes yep very aware and waiting my turn and then after she gives her
00:12:15.200 deposition epstein text her good work
00:12:21.440 literally sitting and she's still in congress by the way she's a non-voting member because she's
00:12:27.760 from the u.s virgin islands but she is acting as a wait we we elect and pay non-voting members of
00:12:35.440 congress what in the u.s virgin islands does she receive a salary for this i'm pretty sure she well
00:12:41.920 i know she received thirty thousand dollars from epstein but yeah i'm more disturbed honestly if
00:12:47.440 taxpayers are paying for her she receives a salary of 174 000 a year no no this is this is a big deal
00:12:54.640 that this was after we knew epstein was a convicted sex offender and he had a democratic congressional
00:13:01.200 representative who was able to ask questions during hearings notably in this event in an effort to
00:13:09.520 take down trump as epstein's mouse piece and then told like good job like being patted on the head like
00:13:16.000 a dog like that is wild to me as asmigold said when he went over this oh my god is epstein her gpt
00:13:25.360 oh god okay so another thing that i wanted to go on here was the chance because this has opened the
00:13:37.840 epstein files have again opened the possibility that the clintons may have off someone to hide an
00:13:42.240 affair that hillary was having i just love this recurring theme well yeah this didn't hit me and
00:13:47.680 then i was like oh wait yeah i remember when republicans used to say that and i thought they
00:13:52.880 were crazy conspiracy theorists and now that i've realized that a lot of like conspiracy
00:13:58.720 theories are batting 10 for 10 these days i should probably revisit those particular deaths
00:14:04.880 as well as we will revisit the death of victoria the person who was holding up the release of the
00:14:11.280 epstein files because basically democrats had no reason to really release and the redacted victim in
00:14:15.760 the most recently released documents yep also you can say why did trump fight the release well i mean
00:14:20.640 the release has happened now and it didn't really have anything that made trump look particularly
00:14:24.400 bad our previous guess was that it was intelligence either saudi or israeli intelligence
00:14:31.120 i still think that's the case and it just wasn't in what was released though most recently he's expressed
00:14:38.640 support for releasing all the files i mean now it's a considered a relative inevitability i think
00:14:45.360 currently kelsey voting or betting odds that the epstein files just totally get released or like 96
00:14:54.880 so everyone's pretty confident that everything's going to come out anyway so then why would not trump
00:15:00.480 express support for it but yeah my guess is that the the still the biggest reason why he didn't before
00:15:07.360 was that there was too much strategically for the us to lose if we did release all that information even
00:15:14.320 though it would be satisfied might have been that he thought that this stuff would make him look bad
00:15:19.680 when it really doesn't i do think the fact that he pushed for the esteem files to be fully released
00:15:27.840 after this particular release happened about him makes me think that this was what all of the fuss was
00:15:34.000 about for him either that or as i've seen some democratic news sources wringing their hands about
00:15:40.000 that he received some sort of assurance that the files had been scrubbed of things related to him
00:15:44.960 yet that seems unlikely i'm sure we're going to get a bunch of files of things related to trump
00:15:49.520 i think that what we learned from this is it was that specific instance that he was so worried about
00:15:55.120 i don't know but anyway to continue here uh because it's actually been surprising how like nothing burger
00:16:01.280 it is with that with and we'll go into other stuff here but an interesting here once is that epstein
00:16:06.960 wrote nusenbaum white house counsel hillary doing naughties with vince implying that he had information
00:16:14.720 now note he had no proof of this information but it implied that he had information that vince foster
00:16:19.600 a long-time associate of the clintons from arkansas where he worked with hillary at rose law firm starting
00:16:25.040 in the 1970s he served as deputy white house counsel in the early days of bill clinton's presidency
00:16:30.400 on july 20th 1993 foster was found dead in fort marcy park virginia from a gunshot wound to the mouse
00:16:37.120 which was officially ruled a suicide by multiple investigations including an independent counsel
00:16:42.640 by ken star but anyway however the death has long fueled conspiracy theories due to inconsistencies
00:16:49.040 like the lack of fingerprints on the gun that's a big inconsistency a missing bullet and witness
00:16:55.760 misstatement discrepancies rumors of an affair between hillary and foster predate the epstein email
00:17:02.000 they appeared in books like ross and keller's the first family detail 2014 and christopher anderson's
00:17:08.480 bill and hillary the marriage 1999 citing anonymous sources like state troopers who claimed to see
00:17:14.800 foster visiting the clinton's home during bill's absences hillary clinton was consistently denied any
00:17:20.880 romantic involvement describing foster as a close friend and colleague the epstein allegation re uh
00:17:26.480 revives these old claims now i do i think that hillary clinton is the type of person who would
00:17:33.600 cheat on bill clinton absolutely absolutely i mean they seem to have had a near open marriage from what i
00:17:41.040 can see she didn't seem particularly mad when he was caught cheating i know but she just seems more
00:17:45.840 interested in practical maneuvering for influence and power come on they're debauched people
00:17:56.160 if if i do i do not think i i just doesn't seem like a fun person like i look at bill and he looks
00:18:02.960 like a man who could indulge in hedonic fun times hillary doesn't look like that kind of person yeah but
00:18:09.520 i can see hillary as a type of person who would love an attractive man who fawned over her and told her
00:18:15.280 how great she was and how amazing she was and how beautiful she was and i don't think that it was
00:18:21.600 about the sex for her i think it was about all the other stuff but it it seems within her character
00:18:26.720 do i think that hillary clinton is the type of person who would lie if you didn't have definitive
00:18:32.320 proof she had cheated yes absolutely like that is completely within her character so her denying it
00:18:37.520 tells us nothing so really it just seems broadly likely to me do i think she's the type of person who
00:18:44.160 would organize a hit on somebody well let's go further evidence on that okay and by the way we're
00:18:49.600 also going to get to the bbc covering things up and everything like that and all the media stuff
00:18:53.120 but i'm like it's weird that i was unaware of how plausible this stuff was also anna's cancellation my
00:18:59.120 gosh yeah to talk about that some of them right so for those of you not familiar with the red scare
00:19:05.920 podcast it is hosted by anna and dasha anna is also an actress most notably i guess like recently she
00:19:14.160 she was in succession the show the hbo show that was really popular and she most recently it hit the
00:19:22.400 news because she was dropped by her talent agency and movie that she was working on after she and dasha
00:19:30.320 had nick fuentes on the red scare podcast which is really crazy because i i think arguably they've
00:19:37.600 had much more controversial people on the podcast in the past and we've all been under under the
00:19:43.920 impression that we're past the age of cancellation especially due to what i would call like social
00:19:51.920 contagion fears like oh you talked with the bad person therefore we cancel you i mean i can
00:19:59.120 understand cancellation because you yourself espouse the wrong views capital w capital v but like the
00:20:08.480 fact that she and and dasha had nick fuentes on their podcast and again they've had very controversial
00:20:16.560 people like our friend has been on their podcast yeah well razeeb no he's not like i'm talking way more
00:20:22.400 controversial than that but it is it is really really wild to me what i think happened is that
00:20:29.840 this isn't so much a media being corrupted thing as it is that the talent agency and likely the movie
00:20:37.120 in question as well both had people possibly even the same person who are like it's me or anna like i will
00:20:45.280 walk if you do not get rid of her because of what she did because i still think in the end that's why cancellations
00:20:55.120 took place in the first place it's that businesses and individuals felt like they would lose essential
00:21:01.120 sources of income or essential audiences or essential customers if they did not bend to the whims of a different
00:21:08.480 contingent that was making demands and basically a me or them demand so i think that that's what happened
00:21:14.400 who knows because we have no insight into this we have no insider insight into this but i still think
00:21:19.280 it's really it's it's something because i didn't i didn't think this was possible post vibe shift i thought
00:21:27.680 we were beyond that and and clearly we're yeah no that upset me and that would galvanize me on the
00:21:32.960 israel thing like we need to make a move on this the right needs to make a move on this
00:21:36.320 otherwise israel thing you you're pointing to a different podcast in which you encouraged a
00:21:42.320 different policy among conservatives in which we financially cut off israel and stop sending
00:21:47.680 military support and instead ally in different ways because we undermine the democrats in the next
00:21:54.240 election cycle yeah but like also this very consistent conservative support of israel sort of
00:22:03.520 in a more unquestioning way it doesn't even matter because netanyahu was planning on canceling it in
00:22:07.520 2028 anyway so right why not do it now when we can claim the victory for it right yeah basically the
00:22:15.680 point being that like we need to sort of break this this flashpoint which appears to be fueling
00:22:24.240 what some people are calling a civil war on the right and this cancellation i think is independent of
00:22:30.320 that but i mean of course them them interviewing nick fuentes is is maybe part of that maybe it's just
00:22:36.640 that someone really hates nick fuentes and on having him on her podcast was enough for that but yeah i mean
00:22:45.520 and and it would really piss off ben shapiro so that i find that hilarious yeah but anyway to continue here
00:22:51.120 so uh here moving forwards what made people think that this might have been an assassination all right so a
00:22:59.440 torn resignation letter was found in foster's briefcase days after his death accusing the white
00:23:04.000 house fbi press gop and clinton of various issues it had been smudged palm print later identified as
00:23:10.960 burn on nasa bombs but no fingerprints three handwriting excites originally suggested it was a forgery
00:23:17.920 although it later did not appear to be a forgery but i think it's even worse if it's not a forgery he's
00:23:22.000 got a note in his bag being like i'm going to expose the clintons that after he is found dead in unusual
00:23:28.400 circumstances i don't know and that seems so suspicious if you write a resignation letter that
00:23:33.920 you ultimately don't plan on submitting you don't just like tear it and then put it back in your desk
00:23:40.720 wait it was in a bag yeah he was foster was holding a cult 38 special in his right hand
00:23:47.280 and his thumb through the trigger guard wait in his right hand with his thumb through the trigger guard
00:23:53.200 conspiracy theorists claim the gun was placed post-mortem the body was moved or staged and that there was no
00:23:58.160 exit wound based on a park police officer's official misstatement they said blonde hair
00:24:03.920 carpet fibers on his suit and semen in his underwear were highlighted as odd that is odd why would there
00:24:11.040 be semen in your underwear i don't know you didn't clean up after diddling yourself very well i that is not
00:24:20.320 an issue that i think men have oh okay i don't know how this works unless he had like an affair at work
00:24:28.720 oh who might he have had an affair with anyway to continue suggesting the body was transported or
00:24:34.560 involved in foul play on july 22nd 1993 whitewater related documents were removed from foster's office
00:24:41.840 and sent to the clinton's personal attorney raising questions about tampering cover-ups
00:24:46.320 then the next one that is often said to be part of the hillary body trail is mark middleton former
00:24:52.800 clinton white house aide who facilitated jeffrey epstein's visits to the white house in the 1990s
00:24:58.880 he died in may 7th 2022 at hyfer ranch in parisville arkansas authorities ruled it as suicide but the
00:25:08.800 unusual method and connections have fueled conspiracy method and the seed middleton was found hanging from a
00:25:14.480 tree with an extension cord around his neck and a shotgun wound to the chest the shotgun was located
00:25:19.920 30 feet away with a gun case in buckshot in his nearby suv he reportedly stood on a bench tied to the
00:25:28.000 cord shot himself and fell flinging the gun due to recoil no blood was visible on the body and initial
00:25:35.040 media reports eg daily mail claimed a no sign of a weapon although that was later corrected when the
00:25:41.040 weapon was found 30 feet away the tree was reportedly only 80 percent of the height needed for typical
00:25:46.400 hanging with no platform or ladder mentioned beyond the bench the dual method shooting versus hanging
00:25:52.480 seemed overly elaborate leading to claims it was a staged suicide middleton's ties to epstein further
00:25:59.040 enhanced this they say that the lack of blood was due to rapid death wait that doesn't make a lot of
00:26:05.360 sense i guess the heart wasn't pumping as fast so there was less blood that seems implausible was a
00:26:12.320 shotgun because the shotgun is not going to like remove the heart the other thing is the combination of
00:26:18.640 of things and the shotgun that far away from the body yeah from kickback i don't i don't buy that also
00:26:25.200 like just shoot yourself if that's what it comes down to you know like why the hanging that seems like so
00:26:31.440 much more work yeah and i'd note on the clinton body count thing i'm revisiting them only because
00:26:37.520 i didn't give them a fair shake the first time i heard about these stories not because i actually
00:26:42.240 think that any of these were likely assassinations even with the story that we're we'll get to in a
00:26:48.800 second the stories that i'm talking about today i still lean towards these are probably not
00:26:53.040 assassinations whereas the uh story we talked about yesterday was the trump attempted killer that that i
00:27:00.400 think was very obviously foul play on behalf of the fbi and you can watch our episode on that
00:27:05.440 with this stuff i'm still not entirely convinced but i will say that it's worth giving it a shake
00:27:11.440 when we're entering a point in the timeline where when i look back on things that were previously
00:27:15.760 labeled conspiracy theories a lot more of them than i would have suspected or bet have turned out to be
00:27:22.400 accurate or more evidence-based than i originally suspected so i think it's worth revisiting them occasionally
00:27:28.720 okay so now the thing that i talked about earlier the thing that came out that the democrats had to
00:27:33.120 wait to release until this woman had died this was november 2025 the it said i want to you to
00:27:40.880 realize that the dog that hasn't barked is trump and added that the alleged victim's name that was later
00:27:46.880 released to the public spent hours at my house with him he never once has been mentioned note here
00:27:53.120 why didn't he say what he had done or use a euphemism for what they had done if he had done more than
00:27:58.720 literally just spent time with her at the house especially given the fact that that that she had
00:28:04.800 repeatedly said that trump did nothing and i'll note here the dog didn't bark is a literary reference
00:28:09.680 to a sherlock holmes story implying significant something that didn't happen so again that also implies
00:28:17.200 that nothing happened there right like he's trying to get evidence on trump and he was unable to get
00:28:23.520 evidence on trump now multiple sources have claimed that the name was virginia graft's name let's see who
00:28:31.520 these sources are well and that specifically the reason it was redacted was not to protect the name
00:28:37.360 of any particular victim but to make it seem more incriminating than it was because she was on the record as
00:28:42.400 yeah well we know that typically you do not redact names in a situation like this if the person is
00:28:47.600 deceased so it's very sus that it was redacted it basically means it was redacted intentionally to
00:28:55.040 try to make it look like trump had done something he didn't and use a dead woman's reputation to do that
00:28:59.760 which is very bad and a very bad look note here democrats released an email of epstein that
00:29:05.920 highlighted that trump quote-unquote knew about the girls we we know that trump said that like i'm
00:29:11.040 confused about this trump tried to make it like that is why trump blew up his relationship with
00:29:16.640 epstein because epstein was creeping on younger girls right like trump has always said that from
00:29:22.080 the very beginning and it's it's been in the earliest recounted records of this so i don't see that as
00:29:28.560 particularly damning let's look at the car crash right okay so about a month before her death this is
00:29:34.480 victoria right on march 24th 2025 guffrey was involved in a suspicious bus accident in western
00:29:41.120 australia she posted about it online saying that she was hospitalized with severe injuries
00:29:46.000 and given only four days to live but miraculously recovered now obviously given the fact that she
00:29:51.280 died just months after this and it appeared that they were looking to get her dead to release these
00:29:56.160 files you know as soon as democrats had an interest in his final destination
00:29:59.680 right now also her father sky roberts publicly rejected suicide saying that there's no way she
00:30:08.080 took her own life demanding an independent probe and i i would know that was was people in my family
00:30:13.280 like some people in my family if they died i just really know that's that's not possible oh by the way
00:30:18.080 if i end up committing suicide i would never commit suicide i want that on the record okay if i commit
00:30:24.400 suicide i was offed for what i am saying well i i think that it's different if we have like great
00:30:31.840 grandchildren and we feel like we're not useful anymore oh yeah yeah if i'm an old person i'm not
00:30:35.920 useful i'm talking about like in the in the middle of my advocacy work but i'm still a public advocate
00:30:40.880 right yeah no no no like i mean again you know none of our children are grown yet like it's very obvious
00:30:47.760 that we wouldn't commit suicide i mean i think even when when we have the ability to be useful in the
00:30:53.760 form of caring for grandchildren we're not going to want to we're not going to want to do that oh
00:30:58.480 by the way i i i've noticed recently with regard to the the s word people are just cutting the sound
00:31:06.400 for that one part when they say the word oh really which seems to help with the algorithm so
00:31:12.400 something to consider also days after her death a handwritten note from giffrey was found calling
00:31:17.760 for quote-unquote justice now what's interesting further is the the this case gets weirder by the way
00:31:23.760 so how did it get weirder she claims that the bus was traveling at 68 miles per hour
00:31:30.720 and that struck her vehicle causing life-threatening injuries right remember she said you know my life is
00:31:36.240 at risk in contrast the western australian police described it as a minor crash no reported injuries
00:31:43.040 and only about two thousand dollars in damage to her car's taillight said that the cup bus clipped her
00:31:49.120 and it was being driven at 46 not 68 it said the car suddenly turned into its past and it wasn't a
00:31:55.760 major impact he didn't even notice jeffrey at the scene and only learned later from an elderly driver
00:32:01.760 about the passenger was a quote-unquote black eye this gets really weird because the driver said that he
00:32:09.440 hadn't even noticed and he didn't even report this to the next day so either she is just completely
00:32:15.520 manufacturing the story for sympathy or something or this is a hit and somebody pays some people off
00:32:23.600 in a rural police department i don't know what i think is more plausible i i guess it's more plausible
00:32:29.840 that she made this up but then again she did disappear shortly afterwards which was a little weird
00:32:35.040 anyway yeah that's the thing yeah i mean but i mean clearly someone someone is not representing the truth
00:32:41.440 very accurately i don't know who it is so next thing we're going to go over i don't know if you've
00:32:48.400 looked at the russia gate and just how much of that was like an actual case of really shady stuff that obama
00:32:55.680 did obama yeah of trump being elected by like or russian operatives playing a huge role in the 2016
00:33:06.000 election that's what you're referring to right well they didn't right the the allegations that russian
00:33:11.600 yeah so okay i'll go into this a bit more election but essentially obama did something really weird
00:33:19.760 which was go to a number of senior appointees he had was in the doj and tell them to put together
00:33:30.080 this dossier he's basically like i need you to a group of hand-picked officials which you know
00:33:35.680 wasn't the officials that you would pick if you were trying to choose the most competent or best
00:33:39.840 researchers he basically picked the collection of the five most cronyistic appointees that he had
00:33:45.680 within the doj he then appointed them directly which is not a normal thing for a president to do
00:33:51.920 to write a dossier on russia election interference on behalf of donald trump then when somebody who
00:34:02.560 rogers who was the director of national security agency the nsa came back because he was like i
00:34:09.120 forgot like on leave or on vacation he was like freaked out at what was happening and he tried to
00:34:14.560 ask to have it shut down and he wrote i've just returned from from a tdy overseas and have been
00:34:23.520 updated on the current status of the efforts to produce a joint project related to russian attribution
00:34:29.280 and intent for the dnc dcc hacks however i wanted to reach out to you directly to let you know of some
00:34:37.200 concerns i've had with what i am hearing of my folks specifically i asked my team if they had sufficient
00:34:42.880 access to underlying intelligence and sufficient time to review the intelligence on both of these
00:34:48.080 my team raised concerns and i'm not going to go further here because it's a very long email
00:34:52.480 but he basically says what like you need to stop this and my team is being blocked from accessing
00:34:59.360 specific information which is critical to make inference on this and why did you assign it to my team
00:35:06.080 the one guy who would have pushed back when i was away on vacation basically or on a
00:35:10.720 uh doj leave like researching something maybe now the longer part of the reply i'm gonna leave out
00:35:17.840 here but part of it was we may have to compromise on our quote unquote normal modalities he literally
00:35:24.400 put normal in square quotes here normal modalities since we must do this on such a compressed schedule
00:35:32.080 why did they need to do it on a compressed schedule
00:35:33.920 other than to get something out there that fits their narrative before trump comes into office
00:35:42.080 oh dear so what i'm saying is i do i was unaware because as a person who consumed liberal media at
00:35:48.400 the time of just how disproven the russia gate controversy was and in fact previous investigations that
00:35:56.400 have been done not by the the you know the people with obvious biased agendas have shown that the
00:36:03.360 reality is is that russian interference was the election was completely aimed at just making people
00:36:10.400 doubt the results of the election more broadly basically they set up traps for both democrats and
00:36:17.120 republicans to try to inflame the crazy parts of both parties at about equal rates from what they've seen
00:36:24.560 or just wherever they thought they could get crazier stuff and so by publishing this obama was
00:36:30.560 literally assisting the very stated efforts of the russian misinformation campaign
00:36:40.560 wow so if you were watching mainstream media at the time and didn't hear about this one of the iras
00:36:47.920 this was the russia election interference wings primary operations was a blacktivist page
00:36:54.160 that focused on things like racial injustice police brutality trying to create the narrative of black
00:37:01.520 people being disproportionately victimized to get them politically radicalized e.g this was the
00:37:07.840 predecessor russiagate was the predecessor to what ended up becoming black lives mattered in fact if you
00:37:15.040 look at the this is an npr that i'm reading from here right npr i'm reading from a report titled senate
00:37:21.360 report russians use social media mostly to target race in 2016 quote and using ads was location
00:37:28.000 targeting quote principally aimed at african americans in key metropolitan areas in quote the russian
00:37:34.720 information operations focused on page like blacktivist which garnered 11.2 million engagements
00:37:40.160 on with facebook users as a side note this is why i get so frustrated with the republicans who act like
00:37:45.920 it's like our ally or something they saw democrats make this claim i.e that russia supported the
00:37:52.400 republican party and they just unironically believed it and went along with it when it was media
00:37:59.280 misinformation if you have a problem with the black lives matter movement then you have a problem with
00:38:06.560 it's russian election interference they are your enemy so yes there there was definitely instances
00:38:14.240 in which russia tried to radicalize republican voters but there were equal instances in which
00:38:21.440 they tried to radicalize democratic voters as a great example of this may 27th 2016 in houston
00:38:28.880 one russia back page heart of texas was posting right-wing successionist anti-islamic protest
00:38:35.520 stopped the islamic civilization of texas meanwhile a separate democratic page that they ran
00:38:42.320 titled united muslims of america organized the counter-protest to the protest that their
00:38:49.040 right-wing protest was organizing and we even see early in 2016 ira documents instructed trolls
00:38:56.480 to support bernie sanders to any extent that trump was this actually is the key to understanding
00:39:03.920 why it appears in some looks at the data that russia was supporting trump more than hillary it wasn't
00:39:10.800 that they were supporting the republicans more than the democrats it's that they thought trump
00:39:14.960 was a spoiler candidate like bernie that's why they supported him okay that's a blast from the past but
00:39:23.040 that's pretty bad oh and i'm sure you've been seeing this but it is uniquely bad for any of
00:39:29.440 our fans who haven't there have been two instances in which bbc has been found to very deceptively
00:39:37.360 edit a tape to make it look like trump is calling for a violent insurrection on the capitol when we know
00:39:43.840 for january 6th yeah yeah on january 6th basically well i'll play the tape and we fight we fight like
00:39:54.880 hell and if you don't fight like hell you're not going to have a country anymore we're going to walk
00:39:59.440 down to the capitol and we're going to cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women and we're
00:40:11.360 probably not going to be cheering so much for some of them but when you look at the real tape it's
00:40:19.040 very clear that there was nothing of the sort like somebody sat down and was like i am going to
00:40:24.160 deceptively edit this but it gets worse because since then further leaks have come out that people
00:40:30.560 in the room when it was happening like when the tapes were being reviewed for air said we can't air
00:40:37.200 this this is intentionally deceptive um and they were dismissed and then after it went to air
00:40:44.800 a guy who was it at least someone has a very satisfying i told you so this week must feel so
00:40:50.720 good for them so smug yeah delicious well no it was actually every batch had a republican and a
00:40:59.040 democrat who was supposed to like tell them if they weren't allowed to do stuff or if they were
00:41:03.040 doing something egregious and it was the republican who was supposed to do that who said this a wager
00:41:08.400 tory i mean or they just ignored him but anyway then there was a a separate whistleblower so the
00:41:15.440 whistleblower michael prescott a former independent advisor to the bbc's editorial guidelines and
00:41:20.240 standards committee repeatedly went to high-level people at the bbc he claimed his warnings were dismissed
00:41:27.440 and ignored and he attempted multiple times to reach out to bbc executives he even described
00:41:34.240 jonas munro as being defensive when asked about this so they knew they were lying they knew that
00:41:39.360 they had lied and somebody went to them repeatedly saying you guys need to stop this was a 19 page
00:41:45.920 dossier that he completed to be like you guys need to address this you guys need to address this you
00:41:50.560 guys need to address this they did address the first instance but with some resignations but they
00:41:55.360 haven't done anything further to address the second instance which was a completely separate team
00:42:01.120 oh goodness showing that this is endemic and no this was during a period where the us aid was
00:42:08.240 funding bbc media action to a tune of 2.6 million a year to i think it was 2.4 million usd it was 2.6
00:42:16.960 million pounds were the british taxpayers not paying them enough i mean don't aren't there those
00:42:22.000 cars that drive around the uk i love it how they're like oh that wasn't to the bbc that wasn't
00:42:27.680 important then we cut it off and all of a sudden the bbc is doing this big cry me a river campaign
00:42:32.320 about how they're not getting enough money to do anti-us lying propaganda the bbc needs to be shut
00:42:38.640 down and i think that this is something the republican administration should lean on more as a major issue
00:42:45.120 be like the bbc is an active threat to the american alliance with the uk given that it is publishing
00:42:51.760 anti-american hate speech other terrorist organizations like hope not hate need to be
00:42:56.400 labeled as terrorist organizations because they can't be funded by the british government anymore
00:42:59.760 they've done hit pieces on us before and had undercover operatives in our organizations before
00:43:04.080 so you should see our piece on the the connections that prove that they are struggle with this because
00:43:08.000 the bbc has produced some of my you know like amazing a long time ago they have not produced
00:43:14.400 anything good in a long time now it's raw modern doctor who well yeah okay but that implies though
00:43:21.840 that it could course correct you know it can it can theoretically it cannot the licensing fee
00:43:27.760 needs to be shut down and the government support needs to be shut down the bbc has become i think we
00:43:33.040 have an episode on how evil the bbc did we ever air that episode air what episode the episode on how
00:43:39.600 evil the bbc is i don't think so and well i should look into our backlog because i know i fully edited
00:43:46.160 it hmm it's a good episode the bbc is very evil they're basically like a weird scam on the british
00:43:54.160 public that like targets the british poor it's it's weird and then no we also had things like this
00:43:59.280 in the us was like the msnbc reordering re-editing joe rogan to say she's the hero she's the one that
00:44:05.840 everybody was waiting for i forgot that right yeah but wait was that the bbc no that was the
00:44:12.400 msnbc in the united states oh okay what i'm making here is the media is selective remixing is not
00:44:19.200 unheard of an active manipulation campaign on the american public at this point
00:44:24.480 i think we need to be more aggressive about holding them to account the fact that people freaked out that
00:44:29.840 jimmy kimmel would you know late night has replaced a lot of the media was being held to account for
00:44:35.520 lying okay lying not getting something wrong or telling a joke that attacked trump lying about an
00:44:44.000 assassin of a dead guy right like it wasn't like a small thing and people freaked out and he got his
00:44:49.440 job back like we need to be more aggressive about misrepresentations in media and media does need to
00:44:56.160 be either head to account or need to have any ties to governments removed and i think that that it's very
00:45:02.800 important in the united states that we do cut off npr in the uk in the bbc licensing program where
00:45:10.240 everyone has to pay for a tv
00:45:14.720 it is pretty wild people especially all the hilarious ways that people try to avoid those fees
00:45:21.280 very entertaining you never paid yours i think i have heard but most of the time i was there i didn't
00:45:28.240 see yeah i think a lot of people try to avoid that hide their tvs in closets etc but you know
00:45:37.840 literally i cannot believe they go around with like a vans to like scan your house
00:45:44.400 that's crazy i mean now britain is a dystopia britain is a dystopia the we need to retake that country
00:45:50.640 we seriously do though it's we we can we can save it we i had a call with um was it the times like
00:46:00.400 times london today because they're doing a piece on us and yeah it's like you guys live in a dystopia
00:46:05.760 you know that right like what a what a miserable hellscape uh you didn't push back
00:46:13.920 i was like you know people get i mean i knew it was bad when i went to the johannesburg subreddits
00:46:21.600 and came across all these people in the uk who were like johannesburg's looking really good right
00:46:26.720 now we had that within our show is the aristocratic utensils saying oh yeah i'm thinking of moving from
00:46:31.840 the uk to johannesburg you know at least i don't get arrested for memes no but later he said he was always
00:46:36.480 there and he didn't know what we were talking about so i'm so confused wait he said he was always in
00:46:39.920 johannesburg yeah so i don't know what's going on no he definitely said that on our podcast
00:46:44.880 i know both of us were very much under the impression that he was in the uk so i don't know
00:46:49.600 don't don't ask me but anyway yeah i i i actually am under the impression that people do
00:46:58.880 understand the extent to which the media has become
00:47:02.160 extremely biased i think that one of the reasons why figures like nick fuentes are rising so much
00:47:11.520 is that people are over over indexing on authenticity of just like complete unfilteredness
00:47:21.120 and nick fuentes does that even when he goes too far so they like that and they just can't they can't
00:47:28.640 stand any sign of inauthentic what's the word like cond condescension yeah i i don't know i i
00:47:39.920 actually think that these institutions have seen but i think you would be actually without you know
00:47:48.000 being mean and i think that that's where like asthma gold does a great job um and that's why i was so
00:47:53.040 glad to see that he's our number one over overlap channel we can be wholesome asthma gold i mean
00:47:58.080 asthma gold is wholesome as wholesome as asthma gold but married and like if in an alternate reality
00:48:03.600 where he gets married and has kids i i hope that i still hope that for him well you know he said
00:48:10.720 i can't keep a tree like a house plant alive i how am i supposed to keep a kid alive and i'm like
00:48:15.280 it's way easier you'll figure it out but it's not it wouldn't even it wouldn't even be him because
00:48:20.320 he is more of a traditional guy like he wants a wife who would just be a stay-at-home
00:48:28.480 wife and or mother so she would just do it all she would manage the house i i can't imagine what a
00:48:35.200 wholesome dad asthma gold would be he'd be the best dad yeah and i know i know if he had kids he'd
00:48:41.520 probably like start cleaning up and clean a lot of the stuff out of his house no he would his if he if
00:48:48.000 he were to marry a woman i'm sure she would almost certainly insist to live in a different house he
00:48:54.400 might keep his childhood home and still like film in the attic honestly like you know you have like
00:49:00.160 your bedroom and stuff and like it's your yeah my bedroom is super dirty terrifying outside of this
00:49:06.080 small window that you guys see a rat nest and like i almost feel like he might just maintain his home as
00:49:11.680 that possibly even like sleep there for a certain number you don't need to sleep in the same house
00:49:16.000 as your wife let her raise the kid right but like i think yeah i think she'd have a clean house that
00:49:20.560 she maintains and like she would take care of their kids and you know he would have that life but but he
00:49:27.360 would maintain a space for his asthma gold ways and streaming but that's how i see it working for him
00:49:33.920 and if he could find a woman who and there are lots of women who would i'm sure be super down for that
00:49:38.400 you know that that that would be sustainable i i really hope i hope he has i hope he has that it
00:49:45.760 would be great if he can because you have that right like you get to live your life like you have
00:49:49.840 your room the way you want it you have i've been thinking maybe you can give me a feel of this because
00:49:54.000 we were looking recently at overlap channels and we have things like nux taku asthma gold and then
00:49:59.440 temple and temple actually the higher overlap with us than nux and i realized in my head that like
00:50:04.480 nux and asthma gold fall into a totally different brain category than temple where temple feels very
00:50:10.320 inauthentic compared to them and more like maybe that's because he came from vice like he came from
00:50:16.560 means well well i mean really if i says mainstream media but like yeah you know what i mean like he came
00:50:21.680 from the media world professionally first and i yeah but i wonder where we come off to people are we more
00:50:28.000 nux asthma gold or are we more temple
00:50:35.520 anyway um who knows by the way fun thing from the episode that we ran today on ssris sterilizing people
00:50:43.200 yeah a lot of people in the comments were talking because i had talked about opioid agonists about
00:50:49.760 using opioid agonists and then it curing things like depression or anxiety for them like permanently
00:50:54.080 afterwards that's wild and i just think opium and agonists are like a hugely underrated
00:50:59.520 super underrated yeah it's it's literally an anti-drug it removes your brain from being
00:51:04.560 able to create the types of chemicals that drugs use to addict you to things so now facebook can't
00:51:09.200 addict you and and masturbation can't addict you and like gambling can't addict you which is fantastic
00:51:14.880 right anyway the final thing is what i'm having for dinner tonight i assume we don't have any do we
00:51:21.600 have any onions left we do have onions but what i was going to suggest is that we just go pick up a
00:51:28.880 bunch more peppers for you tomorrow if you want to do more of the whatever that's what i was thinking
00:51:37.440 of instead of doing the pepper beef we could do a mongolian beef tonight because that just uses chives
00:51:43.440 we can if you want to unless you really don't want to well you've just been doing the same thing
00:51:51.440 for like five nights in a row i even like seven nights in a row really you don't want bulldog you
00:51:59.680 don't want burmese mint chicken you don't want crap peck cow or whatever it is you don't want oh
00:52:07.440 bulldog might be good bulldog's really good curry sorry like what is it pumpkin coconut soup or
00:52:17.920 i liked it so much last night after i ate it last night i just kept thinking i want to eat this until
00:52:23.200 my stomach hurts and so i so you want mongolian beef mongolian beef was lighter on the dark soy sauce
00:52:31.520 recipe this time and just less of that and more of the chives so basically the the sauce it should
00:52:39.840 be very very light yeah yeah and you can always go heavier with oyster sauce or hoisin sauce if you
00:52:46.240 want okay i will do that i will do that because that that's fine like that's no salt the problem is
00:52:52.240 just the salt from last time okay then i shall do that and i think it's just about volume i do a lower
00:52:58.640 volume of sauce of sauce and cook it down before you put the well because it's coming from frozen
00:53:05.760 we should probably do it together oh i can just let the beef sit at room temperature so it's it's
00:53:12.400 thawed out by the time i put it in the wok to cook it with the vegetables at the very end because you don't
00:53:20.480 want you don't want it to be covered in the sauce too much do you you just want it to kind of be like
00:53:24.480 singed at the very end no yes yeah yeah no it's fine it was covered with a sauce but i don't want it
00:53:34.160 to be as boiled in the sauce yeah you don't yeah you don't want it sagified and it is good to be
00:53:40.240 pressed against hot pan side because then you can get the the searing effect okay so sear it i will
00:53:46.720 we'll attempt to well i don't know if i really can at that stage i don't know
00:53:54.000 well i'll see what i can do my friend and i'll make some fresh rice so it'll smell nice and racy
00:54:00.480 and delicious downstairs i love the fresh cooked i'm wondering if you should put in onion i mean you
00:54:04.960 want me to saute onion no no just fresh chives and we'll pick up more peppers tomorrow yeah yeah chives
00:54:14.640 mongolian beef this is so good thank you simon for making these amazing dishes it's absolutely my
00:54:20.560 pleasure thank you for choosing dishes that you like you came up with a new way to mass batch
00:54:26.720 fried beef for these that works really well i didn't you did and it it's a cumbersome process i
00:54:34.320 don't know if we'll do it again i just don't like deep frying i don't like the smell it makes i don't like
00:54:40.160 the all the oil it's lame you're right so what i think is if i do this again i can deep fry it
00:54:50.000 myself in the deep fryer um and just do like a very large like five batches or something one
00:54:55.920 i did it was four pounds of meat that we did yeah and i'll do even more because it creates blanks that
00:55:04.240 we can use with multiple dishes yeah that's true anyway love you i love you too gorgeous
00:55:14.720 god no i don't want to move because he's asleep
00:55:18.800 it's like having have you ever had a cat fall asleep on your lap and you're like i can't get up now
00:55:24.640 no but he'll have a great time when you wake up you can't have him sleep for too long
00:55:30.240 otherwise he'll stay up all night he wakes up all night anyway because he's hungry he needs to
00:55:37.840 wait tomorrow i'm thinking of doing the israel one okay while we're at the tail end of nick
00:55:42.880 fuentes stuff because i think it's been interesting i think i think it's an interesting episode
00:55:49.200 yeah i i haven't heard that take anywhere before so i i'm i'm a fan i mean not that i like listen to a
00:55:56.560 ton of israel commentary but it makes sense to me and now i just want it and i was from a more
00:56:05.600 because just before coming into this i was listening to a matt bernstein podcast on
00:56:11.360 some donny and israel and anti-jewish sentiment and like everything's just like are you pro-jew or
00:56:17.920 anti-jew or like people i mean they're they're actually anti-zionist jews mostly on that podcast if
00:56:25.200 i'm reading it right but like everything's just so politicized around zionism as a concept but
00:56:34.160 zionism from the perspective of like the jewish people have a right to israel as like a thing you
00:56:42.000 know like we need to give them like jerusalem because of their like religious birthright and
00:56:48.560 and you and i don't as much as we support them running things in israel because they do a good
00:56:56.000 job and they you took it and you're doing well with it so it's yours like by all means that doesn't
00:57:02.080 mean we have this same weird sentiment around like oh yes it is your religious prerogative to
00:57:08.240 hold this land yeah yeah that is actually yeah well i mean as i say our form of conservatism is very
00:57:15.680 nichian in nature which is to say if they can hold the land then then it's theirs yes you are
00:57:22.880 entitled to that which you can take which which also makes it you know make more sense to say we'll
00:57:29.200 cut off military aid to them if they can't keep the land without our military aid after 70 years then
00:57:35.200 they shouldn't have it anymore yeah but i i think more broadly it would just make our ties
00:57:41.440 with them much stronger if we just removed that that's well and i would like to align ourselves
00:57:48.240 with them in a way that leans us both into the future instead of reactively entrenches both of
00:57:56.240 us in conflict with adversaries because to a certain point feeling these conflicts keeps them going in the
00:58:02.640 the first place so i'm not for it all right love you i love you too bye bye
00:58:13.040 octavian explain what happened
00:58:21.200 you saw six seven kid you said
00:58:22.800 how did the how did the the six seven kid come in your room at night did he come in because you
00:58:30.960 were watching bad youtube videos
00:58:36.800 so don't order a happy meal a six seven happy meal at three a.m at night or the six seven kid will come
00:59:01.280 after you yeah but i thought he what does he do behind trees he spawns behind them yeah so
00:59:16.080 so he could be like in the woods yeah well what are you going to tell our subscribers
00:59:21.520 how do they keep their kids safe um stay inside yeah and what about liking and subscribing did that
00:59:33.680 help yeah that will help yeah we don't know if it actually will don't like unsubscribe from us and even
00:59:40.880 like unsubscribe for us to be safe and you to be safe so they won't be safe from six seven unless
00:59:47.760 they like and subscribe that's what you're saying the car eater video i'm a car eater didn't attack
00:59:55.280 the drone one time and i think that's because they give us a lot of subscribers so we're gonna like
01:00:01.760 try to buy a drone like that and please give us like and describe him to one thousand please so i can
01:00:11.040 so like tiny drones that should get a tad that makes a lot of sense that we buy from this store
01:00:18.080 why don't we show you the video with our phones and everything and we're gonna go and defeat
01:00:26.160 try to defeat the six seven kids and let them boom boom okay okay