Human Events Daily with Jack Posobiec - May 25, 2024


THOUGHTCRIME Ep. 46 — Trump in the Bronx? Heretic Pope? Dead Lobster?


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 2 minutes

Words per minute

182.03934

Word count

11,324

Sentence count

6

Harmful content

Misogyny

3

sentences flagged

Hate speech

16

sentences flagged


Summary

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

On this week's episode of the podcast, producer Andrew Yang and producer andrew are joined by producer Andrey, producer Jeff Perla, producer Jake Chapman, and writer/producer Evan Handyside to discuss Donald Trump's decision to campaign in the most famous city in the world.

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 from the age of big brother if they want to get you they'll get you dnsa specifically
00:00:07.900 targets the communications of everyone they're collecting your communications
00:00:12.600 okay everybody happy thought crime thursday i am back thank you guys for filling in last week
00:00:27.040 excellent work uh today we have producer andrew we have blake neff and jack who is traveling
00:00:33.740 and a lot happening uh we are going to be concurrently streaming the uh bronx trump
00:00:39.600 rally i think it just might have ended uh and let's dive right into it so blake your reaction
00:00:46.160 and i believe that is our top story here donald trump storms the bronx yeah charlie so i remember
00:00:54.380 us we raised an eyebrow when this was announced just a few days ago uh because we've had this
00:00:59.780 discussion is it a good thing for trump to be he has a strong fixation on the new york metro area he
00:01:07.380 did that huge rally in jersey he's done this rally in the bronx there's all these stories uh we've all
00:01:13.400 heard trump he seems to genuinely be interested in like winning new york winning new jersey he thinks
00:01:19.800 he can pick up these states in the election and we sort of think to ourselves okay objectively that's
00:01:26.620 probably not going to happen but and so conventionally you'd say this is a waste of time it's a waste of
00:01:33.100 resources don't campaign where you're not going to win the election but i'm starting to change my mind
00:01:38.980 on it there's a huge amount of viral energy around it uh i think new york in particular has such a huge
00:01:46.160 amount of cultural gravity for americans that like everyone pays attention to what happens in new
00:01:53.360 york it kind of it creates a vibe it creates a lot of energy there's nothing really bad about it
00:01:59.500 happening it makes more people watch it so you know what trump's instincts are really strong and
00:02:05.100 they've been really strong ever since he became a politician and i think it makes sense that trump
00:02:09.340 trump's instincts would tell him i should campaign in the most famous city in the world that is america's
00:02:15.480 biggest city and i i should go there to campaign to people and so yeah maybe it will work maybe this
00:02:21.840 will pan out and he probably he still is not going to win new york but maybe he will improve with all
00:02:27.920 those groups that he the polls show he's improving with from this well yeah i want to just give my
00:02:33.060 thoughts here then jack i want you to to chime in really quick i let's just be very clear trump is
00:02:37.300 not going to win new york if trump wins new york then hallelujah 450 electoral votes yeah yeah exactly
00:02:44.400 he'll he will win the state of washington before he wins new york let's just put this in let's just
00:02:51.460 put this in context okay he'll win illinois before he wins new york however however i don't think trump
00:02:57.340 should open up a field office in new york but he's basically on house arrest and he's exhausted and he
00:03:01.840 has to spend time in what he calls the ice box and as someone who's constantly complaining about
00:03:07.020 temperature i laugh all the time when trump is complaining about temperature i'm like i totally get
00:03:11.380 that he's in this like super cold room they're trying to ice him out and so he's left with a few
00:03:16.540 choices he'd get on a plane he could fly to michigan and he's planning to do that obviously throughout the
00:03:21.660 summer exhaust himself come back to the ice box or he can kind of go down the street and campaign in
00:03:27.980 the very neighborhoods that he grew up in and around i mean the bronx is not exactly um trump country it
00:03:34.340 is the more dangerous neighborhood of new york here's why i love it i don't love it necessarily from
00:03:39.660 oh we're gonna get new york's electoral votes i love it for a couple reasons i love it because
00:03:44.240 it's purely ballsy it's like i'm gonna go into a dangerous democrat infested neighborhood of the
00:03:51.400 people that are trying to throw me in prison and i'm gonna do a rally and i'm gonna show you how many
00:03:55.240 people can actually show up that's number one number two um i think that if this is going to be
00:04:00.800 his energy it's very similar to what we talked about earlier on our program it's him accepting
00:04:06.200 joe biden to want to debate it's i'm going to take it to the left sure how many debates do you
00:04:11.060 want i'm not going to just sit idly by and act like i'm entitled to the presidency so i don't think
00:04:15.960 we should try to uh delude ourselves like oh trump is going to win new york that will not happen okay
00:04:21.520 let's just be very clear if it does he wins everything and america is going to enter a pox americana
00:04:26.980 uh era however he considering the circumstances the viral nature of this the amount of people
00:04:34.280 that have made this now appointment viewing trump going to the bronx trump going to the bronx
00:04:38.760 i agree blake i think it's a super smart point is that as john lennon said new york is the center of
00:04:44.120 the world it's less so that but it still kind of is people from saturday night live to 30 rock
00:04:50.800 new york has a very special place in the memory of america's cultural understanding and trump going
00:04:58.640 in that unfriendly territory and drawing a massive crowd now this is you cannot buy the advertisement
00:05:05.760 fox just took it uninterrupted for an entire hour cnn doing live hits from it millions of people
00:05:11.500 watching online of minorities that are attending um this event so i'm with blake i actually think this
00:05:18.400 is a net win not because it's going to boost our chances in new york although it could actually
00:05:22.960 help with some house seats instead it creates this trump 2016 energy we're not going to take it easy
00:05:28.880 and we're going to win jack pasobiec your thoughts yeah charlie i mean largely agree with everything
00:05:35.040 you and blake just said um john lennon of course the quote was you know if if i were alive 2 000 years
00:05:41.300 ago i would be living in rome and because i'm alive today new york is the new rome and so
00:05:48.320 that's where i'm going to live he of course was murdered there later by a crazed fan um new york
00:05:53.120 is a piece that that we touched on but we didn't really dig into this isn't new york city isn't just
00:05:58.540 where trump grew up it is the city where he became donald trump where he became a household figure where
00:06:04.780 he became the name who was a cameo in movie after movie in tv show after tv show i mean for 30 plus
00:06:11.240 years his name was synonymous with mr new york and this is a huge um you know some people have
00:06:18.160 actually kind of been uh debating this recently that because there's sort of florida trump now
00:06:23.780 and new york trump and people notice that when trump's in new york he seems to have a little bit
00:06:29.860 more swagger in his step he's his jaw is a little bit more set um his eyes are a little bit more focused
00:06:37.460 and it seems like he's drawing energy from the very streets of being there now florida of course
00:06:42.420 florida's late
00:06:43.020 did we lose jack we just lost oh no uh we just lost jack um where is he where is he i hold on i think
00:06:53.800 jack is making a really interesting point here which is like trump in uh new york is very similar
00:06:59.520 to jerry seinfeld when he visited his parents at del boca vista it's kind of like retirement
00:07:06.560 and everything's slower and he goes back to new york and it's very like new york energy and everything's
00:07:12.680 quicker and has more velocity and rapidity and he goes to new york and he's donald trump and he runs
00:07:18.700 the city andrew your thoughts from a pr perspective uh the just what this seems to really be as i would
00:07:27.700 say as hot as a pistol on social media i mean the it's full spectrum conversation monopoly right now
00:07:35.380 the whole nation is talking favorably well i mean to a certain extent at least looking favorably upon
00:07:41.020 this event in the bronx and by the way the aesthetics are beautiful yeah i think from a pr
00:07:46.260 standpoint it's a 10 out of 10 win um i think you know we talk about this in the same way we talk about
00:07:54.180 sometimes the house being a little bit feckless like oh these impeachments aren't going to work
00:07:58.520 these hearings aren't going to work i i am always the voice in the room saying i don't care i want
00:08:02.720 the headlines of the democrats playing defense and when you have aoc out there uh saying well this is
00:08:09.200 really dumb and he's on house arrest it makes them look at it makes them look ridiculous first of all 0.72
00:08:14.620 uh secondly when you take a look at the pictures that are coming out from this this event and you see
00:08:20.580 like you know they got the puerto ricans and the the black dudes and uh and you've got the just the 0.72
00:08:26.540 minority look you have the uh this puerto rican guy that went up on stage that in broken english uh you 0.94
00:08:33.400 had some of the rappers you you realize that uh this cross-cultural coalition uh that is ready for
00:08:41.920 change is building in momentum and those those those sound bites those pictures that are that are going
00:08:48.140 all over the internet all of that builds up and you're giving more and more uh of an opportunity
00:08:53.820 and a permission slip to people that otherwise wouldn't ever support a republican uh to to break
00:09:00.240 party lines to break the picket line and come over and join the family so i love this yeah i'm looking
00:09:05.720 on uh internet just like you are twitter uh instagram it's trump clips everywhere from the bronx and
00:09:11.420 in a speech that didn't make a lot of news on its substance made a tremendous amount of news
00:09:17.680 just by its very existence and i it's not dissimilar from the philosophy that we at turning point action
00:09:25.340 are doing with detroit and our upcoming people's convention which i want to encourage you guys
00:09:29.880 to go to tpaction.com slash peoples uh tpaction.com slash peoples and get your tickets so blake you and
00:09:37.740 i are in full harmony and agreement and you and i kind of have this running joke like okay stop saying
00:09:42.020 you're going to win new york however there is a brilliance of okay you're they're trying to take
00:09:47.540 you off the field and you're using it as an advantage i just the bad guys thought that on may 23rd
00:09:55.680 2024 if you told the democrats that donald trump would be standing trial in new york he would probably be
00:10:03.140 like defeated angry and just like complaining not doing a rather joyful uplifting rally in the bronx
00:10:12.260 blake your reaction yeah it's very funny if you look at how the most deranged trump haters frame trump
00:10:20.420 he's always framed like he's extremely angry he's always seething and you know that like they build
00:10:27.140 this whole universe where he's like lurking in his lair you know right off after he's gotten off the
00:10:32.980 fun with putin plotting his treason and it like just drives them insane how they can never actually
00:10:39.460 beat the guy he keeps you know i don't want to say he keeps getting away with it forever but they
00:10:43.760 he certainly looks like it he just keeps doing his thing it seems like they they go after his
00:10:49.840 businesses they get him banned from everything online there they do everything they can to destroy
00:10:56.080 trump and trump persists and another thing that stood out to me about the south bronx rally
00:11:01.780 it reminds me a lot of the 20 of like the 2016 vibe where there's a latent absurdity to trump like oh
00:11:08.640 this guy we've seen in movies and on this reality show he's running for president and he's got huge
00:11:14.480 crowds and it's very strange crowds it's almost like do you ever did you ever watch that movie happy
00:11:20.940 gilmore where they get like upset that there's they're all the hoi polloi are showing up at at their
00:11:26.180 golf events and i think trump rallies have a lot of that energy for for people who are very serious about
00:11:31.780 i take it all very seriously and they're just revived a lot of that i think it was it was a very
00:11:36.480 fun event and fun is a good excuse to do a political thing that otherwise might not make the most sense
00:11:43.640 in a pure get ballots in boxes in the key states sort of way so yeah it like we say it this doesn't
00:11:51.540 matter because it will help him get to 270 because he flips new york and that makes his electoral math
00:11:58.520 work and if he gets too fixated on that i think that would be a mistake and now i do think i do
00:12:04.760 think trump genuinely thinks he can do this that's just how trump operates trump thinks he can win
00:12:09.020 trump thinks he can win every state he can he could flip california he could flip dc that's just how he
00:12:13.680 thinks about things i don't think that will happen but the fact that he genuinely feels that way and it
00:12:20.180 causes him to go and just campaign with the energy others don't have campaign campaign towards
00:12:27.280 groups that other republicans don't go for that's what gives him a lot of this uh positive winner
00:12:33.260 vibe energy it's why it's why you increasingly get the feeling i don't want to say a trump win is
00:12:38.780 inevitable but no it's not democrats have that sinking feeling in their stomach like oh god well it's
00:12:45.800 happening again and and so i want to throw to jack here i think we finally have it i totally agree
00:12:50.460 at that blake and to be honest the the democrats went super hard super early and they threw a lot
00:12:57.880 of lawfare at trump and they thought it was going to be a bitter primary and they are not happy where
00:13:03.420 things are in may 2024 may 23rd 2024 but i'm going to say no no blake it is we are still the underdog
00:13:10.680 they control everything they control the apparatus they're out raising us out spending us
00:13:15.040 jack we have you back uh jack this feels 2016 energy donald trump in a open air rally
00:13:22.400 like outside in a park where it's kind of verboten to go to the bronx this is not the take it easy
00:13:32.500 2020 playbook where trump was walking around with a mask and his team told him he had to do that to win
00:13:37.780 this is a whole new energy what's going on jack so you're you're kind of trump is in his his punished
00:13:47.000 and um and his i don't want to say the word revenge i don't want to say the revenge he's punished and
00:13:56.260 it's it's the retribution era he's in for his retribution era and everyone is for their retribution
00:14:01.840 everyone people want retribution for what they've done to new york people want retribution for what
00:14:06.200 they've done to our country they want retribution for what's been done overseas they want retribution
00:14:10.840 for what's being done at the uh yes i am making a battle gear solid reference blake they want
00:14:16.500 retribution for what has been done at um at the gas station and the supermarket people want retribution
00:14:23.800 and so suddenly he goes to new york city because of course he goes to new york city he's donald trump
00:14:29.380 donald trump is culture maga is culture new york city is culture this is all part people forget
00:14:36.860 the maga movement was born on fifth avenue at trump tower when donald trump came down the golden
00:14:44.540 escalator there is a certain quintessential essence to that that you're just not going to find or get
00:14:51.740 anywhere else in the country and you're certainly not going to get it if you're walking around like 0.79
00:14:56.720 wearing masks and telling everyone to be socially distant rallies and saying oh we're going to be
00:15:01.260 checking no it's it's the i'm just going to say it all right the maga movement is is the quintessential
00:15:07.180 american movement because it's two middle fingers up in the middle of the air right in the face of the
00:15:14.520 federal government the establishment the powers that be all the people who say you can't no we say
00:15:20.020 we can that's how this country was founded and that house is how this country will be restored
00:15:24.640 i think i think that's right and let's just be clear uh this is not about new york this is almost
00:15:31.320 think of it this way this was a television production and it was a masterful one this was
00:15:38.340 this was a made for tv moment where it wasn't just about it was you're going into a cultural place and if
00:15:45.880 you go on the side of the street everybody has a memory or a connection or some sort of understanding
00:15:53.200 of new york it is the center of the planet still and after covet it's lost its cachet a little bit
00:16:00.160 there and donald trump was always mr new york and i think this is important for another thing too
00:16:04.880 which is that we say often one of the ways that we disempower the bad guys is that we do not show
00:16:14.900 them that we are weak when they throw everything they can at us they are throwing everything they can
00:16:20.280 at trump and then he shows up at the bronx that is not the woke right playbook right jack and i want
00:16:27.180 to throw it back to you jack what would the woke right playbook and tell our audience what the woke
00:16:31.040 right is that is a phrase that you are popularizing is that on the deck by the way i can't see the
00:16:35.920 topics are we talking woke right today i don't know but i want you to well i want you to own it because
00:16:40.420 i think it's really great but but really quick jack just the woke right would instead they would
00:16:45.240 stay in their hotel room be afraid to go out in public because they they want to play by the old
00:16:50.300 orthodoxy compare and contrast here jack well yeah i mean the woke right would be saying that donald trump
00:16:55.860 should be huddling with his legal team and he shouldn't be out doing rallies and he should be
00:17:00.500 you know be very careful and sending out lawyers to go and make the you know strong legal arguments in
00:17:07.020 his case and they would be saying that trump should be challenging people to academic debates and they
00:17:12.800 should be putting on some kind of intellectual uh social salon over what the best uh philosophical
00:17:21.020 aspects of modern history and and the the uh you know the uh the developments thereof would be to
00:17:28.420 restore america and defeat wokeness because essentially the problem with the woke right is that they're kind
00:17:33.340 of half woke they're not like all the way actually committed to a clear vision for uh restoring america along
00:17:40.560 its original lines and which which as i said is just that huge two middle fingers up to the establishment
00:17:46.420 saying no we are going to do this our way and we don't care what you guys say about it this isn't a debate
00:17:52.480 we're not in a further discussion anymore we're not going to sit around in the library we are going
00:17:56.680 to go it is a i would say an aggressive bias towards action and when i say action of course
00:18:01.780 obviously you have to say oh no i don't mean like like uh you know sam alito and the insurrection flag
00:18:06.540 or mrs alito right you know obviously a complete hoax that they put out right now but this is this
00:18:11.840 is why the mega movement is doing so well right now is because people are actually seeing that they
00:18:19.480 stand for something rather than just talk that they can give tangible results and the woke right was
00:18:25.320 sort of the washington generals uh that you know the team that plays against the the team that plays
00:18:30.980 against the harlem globetrotters they get paid to lose every single night they show up every night 0.91
00:18:35.520 they play and they get paid to lose because the left dunks on them again again and again i remember
00:18:40.640 these are the guys saying we should never do anything we should just talk about the constitution
00:18:45.860 and how great it was and blah blah blah no donald trump isn't like that donald trump was the guy who
00:18:51.420 saw that the wallman rink which he talked about tonight which is one of this this just great you know
00:18:56.500 public goods that he did for the city of new york was totally behind and he said look i'm a private
00:19:00.860 businessman i'm going to come out of this world do something for the public because i'm sick of
00:19:05.900 looking at this and my daughter wants to go ice skating comes in fixes the entire thing in three 0.99
00:19:10.920 months so it's the site of a city that was by the way totally crime ridden in the 1970s and 80s
00:19:17.220 gets cleaned up by giuliani the broken windows theory which we've discussed many times here
00:19:21.540 gets turned you know they turn times square into like a an amusement park they transit disney world
00:19:26.360 and donald trump of course building and investing in manhattan when everybody told him not to
00:19:30.720 and then fast forward just you know a few years after that era and you have you can't talk about
00:19:36.280 new york without pointing out that it is also indelibly the site of america's greatest i would
00:19:41.580 say modern tragedy um and that of course being 9-11 and the 3 000 people who died there and in the
00:19:47.860 other spots but the loss of the twin towers this is why uh this is why the twin towers were intact
00:19:53.580 because it they were symbolic of america's greatness it's also by by the way that donald
00:19:59.320 trump back in 2011 was arguing that we should just rebuild them possibly 10 stories higher but
00:20:03.540 looking exactly the same because he understands the power of cultural symbols and the cultural
00:20:07.960 valence that they carry um you know building a new tower okay that's nice but it's not the same thing
00:20:14.400 as restoring our powerful symbols so he understands symbols because he understands branding he understands
00:20:20.180 cultural uh cultural valence and he understands the ability of those symbols to move mass movements
00:20:26.720 look uh you know and and i think we all know this and i think i think everyone understands that in the
00:20:31.560 same way that he he looked at that ice rink and saw that it needed fixing and it needed somebody who
00:20:36.960 wasn't a politician to get involved that's basically just a microcosm of what he's trying to do with the
00:20:41.720 so we have a double whammy on this one uh so it is the fourth anniversary of uh george floyd this
00:20:50.840 weekend on saturday and so we have we have two things one right here in town over at asu they have an art
00:20:59.360 exhibit depicting our new modern saint george george floyd as as jesus christ with a crown of thorns
00:21:07.500 he he died for our sins as they say and the other breaking news we have is they are going to be
00:21:15.820 making a george floyd biopic titled daddy changed the world which he did i guess did he have kids
00:21:25.100 uh he had five children i can't remember by how many different women it was a number greater than one 0.59
00:21:30.580 um and i just keep thinking i wonder how they're going to portray the scene where he like holds a
00:21:37.520 woman at gunpoint or where he you know participates in the adult film industry or you know where he
00:21:45.680 decides to rob local small businesses of you know they're you know using fake money but i'm sure they'll
00:21:52.400 figure all of that out because he did change the world uh but the do we have that show that on screen
00:21:59.120 again with uh george floyd in the uh in the crown of thorns uh it's uh let's see the art exhibit is
00:22:07.020 titled twin flames the george floyd uprising from minneapolis to phoenix and it includes imagery and
00:22:14.820 narratives that elevate floyd to a mythical status uh eliza wesley known as the gatekeeper of george
00:22:24.140 floyd square delivered a speech where she compared george floyd to jesus christ and described him as
00:22:30.240 the quote chosen one who died for each and every last one of us so i have a thought here the it's
00:22:41.520 very laughable obviously it's heretical and it's laughable in that sense but if you are if your
00:22:46.760 religion is the religion of anti-racism this actually makes a lot of sense because floyd was
00:22:52.840 supposed to be the moment where we entered into the anti-racist ad and prior was bc for the neocon
00:23:02.820 warmongers world war ii was kind of the the crucifixion resurrection event meaning that was like the change
00:23:10.260 of everything that the neoliberal rule rules-based order came in after world war ii and it's all we
00:23:14.840 can talk about for the anti-racists it is the death of george floyd and so they look at him as a quasi
00:23:23.520 messianic figure that allowed a new covenant to almost come forward and the the the new era that
00:23:33.860 we again they're failing because dei is now being defunded in north carolina and crt but that is how
00:23:39.220 they view him they view him as this martyr that was wrongfully accused or killed or whatever and or
00:23:47.660 overdosed however your opinion of events are that then enters us into this new covenant of anti-racism
00:23:58.060 your thoughts guys there's another quote and i know georgias there's another quote from
00:24:06.260 from the uh speech had not george floyd died we wouldn't be here god chose him he was a chosen vessel
00:24:16.200 many are called but few are chosen well wait let me ask you this though are they wrong are they really
00:24:24.480 wrong you know i'm not sure they are wrong and i think what is interesting is remarking on it as
00:24:30.780 you know this you know before and after you know uh bbg bf and ag it's uh it's interesting because i was
00:24:40.140 looking the other uh actually just yesterday i was looking you know they've been dutifully maintaining
00:24:45.660 the uh database at the washington post and on wikipedia of you know young black men shot by police
00:24:53.040 and like you know this has continued to happen since 2020 there have been cases some of them
00:24:58.260 some of them much more sympathetic than floyd to be honest of you know young black men being killed
00:25:04.260 by police and they've like occasionally had these false starts at trying to re you know build it up
00:25:10.480 again just a few days a few weeks ago you might remember that group of four kids who died in a car
00:25:16.380 wreck where they were being pursued by police and they tried to make it this huge national atrocity
00:25:20.320 and everyone pointed out well they i think it was a stolen car or they were like driving wildly too
00:25:26.140 fast something like that and it's like they failed at it like they can't actually do this anymore and
00:25:31.420 you compare this to before floyd where we had trayvon martin then michael brown and you'd get like uh
00:25:38.900 philando castile and i think he's a good example of one where they're more sympathetic but you had a new
00:25:44.160 one every few months or at least every year every couple years and it's like after floyd that's it
00:25:50.600 that's the final one they haven't been able to get another one off the ground since then
00:25:55.360 and i think it shows that what was once this building movement has has crystallized into a
00:26:02.060 cultic thing where you either believe in saint george or or you're just not a member of the religion
00:26:08.220 anymore and like there's no there's no new prophets just like you know jesus jesus was the end with
00:26:14.420 christianity there's no new prophets coming after after saint george and i think it does indicate how
00:26:20.600 2020 was was like the culmination of what they were doing and it's sort of it's lost energy after that
00:26:27.600 it's now just stuck with their one saint but but this is very important is that marxists are not shy
00:26:33.940 about appropriating christianity for their purposes i mean communism seeks to spiritually murder the
00:26:40.580 individual so he can be reborn a communist that that has been a fundamental part of marxist doctrine
00:26:47.360 that's why they're always targeting family faith and property because those are like the guardians of the
00:26:53.660 soul and so george floyd when he's saying i can't breathe the anti-racist look at that and they say
00:27:01.120 that's him saying go and make anti-racists of all nations that was like the great commission to them 0.97
00:27:07.460 and they're failing miserably because their fake pagan anti-racist religion is deeply unpopular and is
00:27:15.580 built on resentment and greed and bitterness and doesn't build anything but the the religious 0.98
00:27:23.160 undertones you look at that on face value and you should get outraged it's silly it's stupid
00:27:26.940 it's heretical it's but it's actually fitting for how the marxists view their their their role and
00:27:35.720 it's constantly trying to take the successful story motifs and symbols of christianity and
00:27:43.620 appropriate it for their causes jack your reaction well i mean charlie it's uh you know what can i say
00:27:50.320 i'm i have a book about this that uh i just finished writing it's going to drop on the 4th of july
00:27:55.880 pre-orders are up by the way if you want an early copy make sure that when you come to people's in
00:28:01.540 detroit at turning point action we're going to be doing the book launch there on humans book.com is
00:28:07.600 where you can get access to this and of course this is called unhumans the secret history of
00:28:12.080 communist revolutions and how to crush them and we talk again and again about how in many instances
00:28:18.980 uh it's not necessarily the appropriation of christianity which of course we see so much in
00:28:23.720 liberation theory but we also see the the suppression of christianity and the replacing
00:28:29.900 of christianity with a new religion you see this of course in the french revolution you see this of
00:28:35.240 course in china you see it in spain you see it in russia blake neff and i did a whole series about
00:28:41.140 this over the christmas break talking about how religion is constantly targeted not because by the
00:28:46.760 way that you know they say they're targeting it in the name of being anti-religion because they are
00:28:51.020 freeing people from the oppression of religion and the opiate of the masses however comma they are
00:28:56.240 replacing it with their own religion and so every new religion every um every conquering power always
00:29:02.200 seeks to uh subsume and destroy and obliterate the previous power and replace it with their own and we 1.00
00:29:09.180 talk about how this is done time and again it is a playbook it is a playbook that has been run all over
00:29:14.860 the world it's been run for hundreds 250 years in some instances and so we're just seeing the version
00:29:22.060 of it that's playing out now that we refer to as in a regular communist revolution because it happens in
00:29:27.140 drips and drabs but then there are also spikes you saw a flare-up of course of this in the leftist
00:29:33.560 campus protest that just you know really just kind of died down as school let out but in 2020 like we're
00:29:38.340 talking about there really was the pseudo-theological infrastructure created for a new type of religion
00:29:46.920 which of course justifies the revolution and that's that's always what they're seeking to do they must
00:29:52.400 justify the revolution they must justify the things that they are doing the horrible evil things they are
00:29:57.500 doing and they claim it is in the name of george floyd they claim it is the name of justice they claim
00:30:01.740 it is the name of equity but really all it is are petty envious cruel disgusting people trying to
00:30:09.200 destroy the world charlie we just want to brace you uh this next news jordan peterson's in shambles
00:30:16.160 red lobster is going bankrupt it's dead lob it's dead lobster now they have literally it they
00:30:25.220 infinite shrimp themselves into oblivion sit sit up straight with our shoulders back to trigger our
00:30:31.300 serotonin how will we ever be able to get adequate tryptophan without red lobster charlie you brought
00:30:36.880 up this last week you were like well what about the lobster flu that's coming it's about to sweep
00:30:41.360 through even media matters wrote it up and oh no it's great i was like oh is this the lobster
00:30:46.260 did it did it just hit red lobster is that what happened tiny violin for media matters by the way they
00:30:51.220 had to lay off like a dozen staffers tiny violin tiny tiny violin where will we get our free marketing
00:30:56.540 that's our pr department basically let me under so let me understand i i am a midwesterner so i'm
00:31:03.020 kind of very well versed in mediocre like multi-purpose chains so every like i know them all very
00:31:10.580 intimately because that's what's your favorite one chili's applebee's chili's good answer chili's is
00:31:16.880 great chili's is great but outback i'm an olive garden guys over the best culvers of course culvers
00:31:22.500 culvers is not culvers is a fast food place it is not a medium tier restaurant again that's a
00:31:28.240 different category that is like western i do is this upper plains i'm talking about a place where
00:31:33.640 you sit down and you get asked okay what are you going to eat you get served okay so outback
00:31:38.940 chili's tgi fridays olive garden red lobster us midwesterners are experts in such things
00:31:46.660 when i go to like i travel to scottsdale all of a sudden they're like yeah we're gonna go to like
00:31:50.040 a local restaurant like what's wrong with you you're going to a restaurant that isn't chili's
00:31:53.660 anyway so um okay hold on hold on charlie erica erica just said she's totally with me on olive
00:32:01.660 garden i just everybody bottomless you get all the uh the soup you could you couldn't eat all the soup
00:32:08.140 endless breadsticks charlie serious question death sentence charlie have you eaten at the olive
00:32:15.140 garden in times square no but i uh is it still open i don't even know fridays i have eaten at the
00:32:22.100 tgi fridays in times square because there's nothing more american than going to new york and eating at
00:32:28.840 tgi fridays heck yeah all those choices so first of all so applebee's is a step down though let's just
00:32:36.000 be clear so there's like a there's a there's a hierarchy here applebee's is a step below it goes
00:32:41.960 applebee's tgi friday's chili's outback there's a hierarchy what the chat is saying what is the
00:32:48.140 chat saying the chat agrees that culver's is amazing and they're correct culver's is the nectar
00:32:54.020 of the gods or the ambrosia of the gods whatever the greek gods were eating and cheese obviously
00:33:00.340 obviously obviously it's great they come in both white and yellow cheese you gotta have both
00:33:04.920 um but i was gonna make a point let me so just out of all of our six different choices that we had
00:33:13.500 in the midwest and blake knows exactly what i'm talking about being from the midwest like going
00:33:16.960 out going to chili's right it's just like a very midwest thing okay is that we would never dare to go
00:33:25.160 to red lobster let's just it's just it's just you take your life in your own hands this whole idea of
00:33:30.320 mass producing mollusks and acting as if that there's no downside to that it's just
00:33:37.740 that's all i got mass producing mollusks i just want to make sure you hear this story charlie because
00:33:45.360 it's a funny story and our our viewers should also hear this story which is that we don't know this is
00:33:51.480 true this is a hypothesis it's probably false but you know how it is if a story is funny enough
00:33:57.740 it is more likely to be true so everyone's debating why red lobster is going under why is
00:34:04.480 it going bankrupt but a big part of it is they offered this bottomless unlimited shrimp deal and
00:34:10.740 it used to be a time limited deal but they just made it permanent they were like permanent you can
00:34:14.780 get endless shrimp for twenty dollars and they lost their butts on this because it turns out shrimp
00:34:21.020 is expensive you can learn this if you go to the grocery store and so if you offer unlimited shrimp
00:34:25.860 you bring in customers who want to eat unlimited amounts of shrimp and when they're allowed to eat
00:34:32.000 unlimited shrimp they eat an unlimited amount of shrimp this is a problem so what's going on here
00:34:39.680 a theory that has been propounded it turns out one of the major owners of red lobster they might even be
00:34:47.380 the only owner is tie union and tie union along with being an investor in red lobster is i believe
00:34:56.500 also their shrimp supplier and so the thesis that is going around is they already they run the numbers
00:35:04.760 and they said red lobster is not going to make it it's going to go bankrupt and when it goes bankrupt
00:35:09.380 we're going to lose out to you know the creditors they're going to get the first call on assets and all
00:35:13.800 of that so how do we get value out of red lobster shrimp we make red lobster buy as much shrimp as
00:35:21.560 possible from us and so it is it is possible it is possible that the bottomless shrimp deal was red
00:35:29.300 lobster's owner going we need to get as much value as we can out of this dying corpse shrimp just nothing
00:35:35.420 we're going to market shrimp we're going to commission songs about shrimp we're going to sell
00:35:39.400 unlimited shrimp to everyone we're going to buy the shrimp from ourselves and then we just go until
00:35:45.740 this ship go hits the iceberg and sinks and if that was their plan it apparently succeeded because they
00:35:51.960 lost tens of millions of dollars on shrimp the numbers used to work and i want to just first say
00:35:58.100 i admire that idea of red lobster which was we are going to bring a luxury item that is largely regional
00:36:07.680 in maine and massachusetts and we want the everyday person to be able to have lobster because in the
00:36:14.660 country that i grew up and you guys know this and still it's the case like like lobster is a big deal
00:36:19.260 and to be able to afford it and cook it i don't know if you guys have ever actually had to eat a
00:36:24.900 lobster with your hands it is disgusting it's gross you need to like take two showers afterwards it's like
00:36:29.540 a lot of time oh no you know what i'm talking about right jack it is it's not for the faint of heart
00:36:33.840 like afterwards like what am i eating and it destroys your gut it's like not fun lobsters are
00:36:38.260 actually insects i thought they were mollusks i didn't know that it is it is a form of insect i
00:36:45.720 think a common ancestor if you accept a controversial theory that we won't we won't get into here
00:36:50.760 and so so what i'm saying is that the the idea of red lobster which economically worked for a while
00:36:57.880 which was we're going to bring the the i the unreachable insect to the everyday american
00:37:06.300 just turns out those numbers don't work and i can't imagine inflation crushed them i mean i have
00:37:12.400 to think that it did i mean i would say oh you can go no they have 719 locations i mean this is not a
00:37:18.480 small closure 55 000 employees go ahead blake well i i think i would take the optimistic view which is i
00:37:24.680 think you're correct these are the midwest staples of you know you if you're in a town of 15 000 20
00:37:31.720 000 even like 100 000 people for a lot of people the nice restaurant in town is red lobster or applebee's
00:37:39.200 or chili's but i think that's changing and i don't think it's because accessible restaurants are
00:37:44.800 becoming inaccessible i think it's actually probably the opposite as we've heard from every liberal the
00:37:49.900 the only reason to have immigration is so you have unlimited ethnic food but i think i would say
00:37:55.080 in the last 20 years i think restaurant food in america has gotten better and so what i think is
00:38:00.940 actually happening is a lot of these the most generic restaurants are getting just out competed
00:38:06.440 by restaurants that specialize more or are just more interesting um more distinctive in how they
00:38:14.040 prepare their food so like lobster so yeah we're losing red lobster but if you drive literally half
00:38:20.860 a mile down the road just away from where we are there's a place angie's lobster and you can buy a
00:38:26.520 lobster roll for like nine dollars and that's even more affordable than red lobster and it's pretty good
00:38:33.060 it's well prepared and i think you can find that in a lot of things so i think what we're actually seeing
00:38:39.060 is it's gotten so competitive that really genuinely really nice restaurants you can go to them for
00:38:45.580 about the same price point that you would get at red lobster so why go to red lobster so i i take an
00:38:52.640 optimistic view of this thing i think i think food is i restaurants are always going to be here
00:38:58.380 we're a rich country still no i agree i look at i look at red lobster so i actually went to red lobster
00:39:05.380 growing up and i was always so so excited to go to red lobster because they had pizza at the at the
00:39:11.640 buffet like the bar the the salad bar actually had hot food and like endless pasta so i would just eat
00:39:16.720 pizza and pasta the whole time but like i look at red lobster like i look at malls you know like that
00:39:23.480 we're always hearing about the death of malls it's just like a shifting purchasing power and it's like
00:39:28.420 you know when these things sprung onto the scene back in like probably the what the 80s
00:39:33.340 it it was new is novel it was this this sort of elevated cuisine that that had some kind of catch
00:39:39.580 to it whether it be like you know endless food you know all you can eat or whatever and it's just kind
00:39:45.640 of outlived its usefulness like we're that's not the eating habits of americans anymore we're talking
00:39:50.020 about health food we're talking about uh you know getting stuff locally seed to table even poor people
00:39:56.300 still think about this stuff uh they hear about it at least but the point is you know it's just out
00:40:02.140 used outlived its usefulness now there's probably inflation hit it some other things hit it but
00:40:06.740 it's just tacky now i mean that's i think what we all think about when we think of something like
00:40:11.920 red lobster do you really want to get your seafood from a mass chain i i don't i don't know a single
00:40:18.500 person who would be like yay let's do that yeah so then i suppose there's some silly racial angle
00:40:24.780 to this too is that right msnbc says why red lobster's downfall hits differently for black
00:40:31.000 communities i i i'm sorry someone else else has got to take this i i of all the of all the restaurant
00:40:37.680 chains where i think of that's where black america spends a lot of their time is is that is red
00:40:44.280 lobster very popular i don't even know how you i i'm like trying to i'm going through like my woke
00:40:48.640 olympics you know iterations in my head i'm like how do you even get to no there's other fast food
00:40:54.900 chains that i would totally i'm not going to say them but you guys can uh guess i want to read the
00:40:59.540 subhead here because it's hard to read restaurateur bill darden's decision to treat all diners the same
00:41:04.580 should not have been a radical proposition but it was and it mattered greatly to black people eating
00:41:10.120 it i guess i guess they might be referring to like the founder of it so maybe it was a place that
00:41:14.940 integrated before others but the implication of it is also that like red lobster was like holding the
00:41:21.140 line against segregation or something but i guess if you if he genuinely was a pioneer in desegregation
00:41:27.460 in the 60s it says bill darden opened the first red lobster in just south of orlando in 1968 shortly
00:41:34.500 before mlk jr's assassination so okay if he was a pioneer that good for him good for him um i don't
00:41:41.220 want to degrade that but i suspect the actual reason it hit harder is apparently i guess uh
00:41:47.320 black people like shrimp black people like crab maybe red lobster was a place they were likely to 1.00
00:41:52.600 get it i think they'll still be able to get it in other places i i can see that in the south for sure
00:41:58.080 that if that's you know that seafood gumbo culture you know louisiana mississippi alabama i i just i
00:42:05.460 struggled to think when i think of red lobster i think of like white midwestern family celebrates
00:42:12.220 graduation in northern iowa and they drive 35 minutes and wait 20 minutes for a table and giddily
00:42:19.060 get served lobster i'm not even accusing them like that's what i think of red lobster i don't think of
00:42:23.280 the hood so closing thoughts on this yeah yeah no i so so i think this is really like obnoxious for a
00:42:30.980 lot of reasons i i i think there's two things i do think actually as communities have shifted and
00:42:36.700 neighborhoods have shifted i i just randomly in like my memory i'm remembering three or four red
00:42:42.060 lobsters one being where i grew up was kind of in an okay part of town but it's like the town has
00:42:47.760 shifted it's now in kind of like the hood like it's just not as nice in that area now so maybe there's
00:42:53.520 more minorities there i guess i'm imagining that trend has probably taken place at a macro scale where
00:43:01.480 red lobster locations have not not aged well okay so i'm i i have to according to uh our resident um urban
00:43:11.880 expert uh when he this is beyonce's song when he f me good i take his to red lobster because i slay
00:43:23.160 apparently that's a thing apparently okay you know when it when it really goes well for beyonce
00:43:32.620 she takes him to red lobster so what you're saying is beyonce hasn't been to red lobster in a long long
00:43:37.900 time oh oh this is pre-country phase yeah yeah just uh just saying so apparently it's a thing i just i
00:43:50.920 learned i learned something learned something new from if we want one final angle to this
00:43:56.020 i have noticed this apparently just a huge number of restaurants are they're basically just going to
00:44:04.220 like app delivery only because people don't like to go out to restaurants if you're like a neurotic
00:44:10.380 taylor lorenz type person and can't eat out and then also like the decline like the rise of crime in
00:44:17.820 america means there's more likely to be like fights in restaurants i don't know but that would
00:44:23.000 be the last possible angle on it but hold on i think it's really yeah no this is this is my last
00:44:27.440 thing i'll say this is why i find it obnoxious i didn't get to my point bill maher actually what was
00:44:32.640 he on he was on uh gutfeld and he said something along the lines of when he was remarking on joe biden's
00:44:40.500 commencement speech at morehouse and he was like basically you know black men have to be 10 times 0.99
00:44:46.760 better at their job in order to to get noticed and and they were asked well bill what did you
00:44:51.360 think of this he's like well listen i don't think it's good to be talking about your country in the
00:44:56.860 in a way like 50 years ago might have been appropriate we're not we're not there anymore
00:45:01.540 and bill bill maher actually even said nowadays being black can actually help you get a job can
00:45:06.260 we just be honest about that i i thought that was great i mean bill maher is a raging liberal he
00:45:10.800 hates trump whatever that's a good point i still think when you see articles like this though
00:45:16.460 they are all channeling this like america's still this like dystopian racial you know nightmare and
00:45:23.300 black people can't get a seat at a restaurant that's obnoxious absurd it's just it's dishonest it's just 1.00
00:45:28.880 phony so it's like okay you don't got the local red lobster it became this like classy sort of like
00:45:35.900 you know but maybe black people reclaimed it as their their little their restaurant or something
00:45:40.620 in the last 10 years i don't care don't act like they can't get a damn seat somewhere that's just 0.63
00:45:45.120 a silly thing to write down on and put put ink to paper uh blake can you navigate us through this
00:45:50.320 final topic i i know it roughly but not for sure for sure and i just sent the the video clip so
00:45:55.640 hopefully we'll get it soon but i'm just going to narrate what it was so uh eric prince uh founder of
00:46:01.080 blackwater former navy seal who we also just talked with recently uh he was also on uh tucker's show
00:46:07.080 and tucker they start talking about unmanned drones which have become far more prominent in the ukraine
00:46:13.400 russia war and tucker asks him in 10 years what will unmanned drones be able to do and what eric prince
00:46:20.500 says is as an example of what they can do is you could load a face into a drone's network just like
00:46:29.280 a person's face using facial recognition and it could use network surveillance uh other forms of
00:46:36.020 available data to just find a person and it just flies into their brain and kills them or you know
00:46:42.020 pops them in the head with like one little bullet out of a little thing like it can you can have a
00:46:45.660 drone you know the size of a cell phone and do this and that's basically the future is you can just
00:46:50.560 have a drone they can all hover wherever they have a lot of battery life they can fly a long time
00:46:54.740 and you can basically just have robots fly around and pop people in the head and the ramifications
00:47:00.220 for this are actually insane to think about let's just list a few of them like one if you can do this
00:47:08.800 you can just have you can build a drone for the price of an iphone and use that to kill an enemy
00:47:15.380 soldier in the front line and you can just send thousands of these out thousands and thousands of
00:47:19.960 drones and so you make it you could just win a war with nothing but machines you make it so if you're
00:47:26.640 a neocon who wants to do interventions it's way easier to justify sweeping interventions if you're
00:47:33.520 basically just sending a bunch of guys playing a video game in real life to pilot some drones to go
00:47:39.100 blow people up it makes various forms of horrifying tyranny a lot easier your china style government can just 0.99
00:47:46.060 have their drones patrolling everywhere and they're run by ai and they use visual surveillance to track
00:47:52.100 people and for that matter it's probably way easier to imagine a criminal use of this so let's imagine
00:47:58.720 someone who hates donald trump and they make their little cell phone size drone and it just zooms past
00:48:04.180 the secret service pops trump in the head easy to imagine and that is the technological reality we are
00:48:11.840 hurtling towards as quickly as possible yeah i mean so i guess what is the deterrent there and let's
00:48:17.660 just first let's play the clip let's let's play cut one for 145 to do do you think going in 10 years
00:48:25.940 what will that look like you could load a face and between network surveillance and the the facial
00:48:35.340 recognition on that drone find one person and fly into that person's head that fast seriously yeah so
00:48:42.420 identity management privacy will become even more uh essential you think about how many cameras how much
00:48:51.460 data is being constantly collected everywhere from street cameras from door knock from doorbell cameras
00:48:57.400 from facial recognition at the airport um privacy is really under attack but yeah well i've noticed
00:49:06.980 so jack your thoughts on this you're you're a military man yeah so there's there's another part pretty
00:49:16.380 early on in that same podcast which i just listened to all the way through i listened to um a couple of
00:49:22.640 his recent um a couple of his recent podcasts and they've just been fantastic he switched now to a
00:49:27.720 long form format which i think is fantastic um it might be may have been that uh that uh vladimir putin
00:49:33.740 kind of pushed him in that direction uh given his uh his uh 30 minute uh spiel there but what prince says
00:49:41.280 is that in history of warfare you have step changes uh you have changes from the stick and the rock
00:49:48.740 to uh melee weapons to uh melee weapons to projectile weapons bow and arrow etc um which leads up to mortars
00:49:56.180 then obviously you go from the sword to the firearm and the firearm and then we just have more and more
00:50:02.360 advanced firearms a tank is essentially just a mobile firearm um a lot of what aircraft do are essentially
00:50:09.080 just airborne firearms but what a drone does is significantly different because it is a
00:50:16.740 a he essentially compares it to an ied so what's what was the enemy's most effective weapon
00:50:22.000 in the war on terror it was the ied now you have ieds which are airborne they are they can be uh
00:50:30.820 directly directly flown through these fpv drones so that's first person view that's not the gimbal
00:50:36.480 uh camera that's usually on the bottom of the drones this is a you know you're as kind of like
00:50:41.080 saying it's like you're playing a video game they actually use xbox controllers and people can
00:50:44.940 make flying ieds that fly up to some of them going 90 miles an hour they've got they've calculated and
00:50:52.240 these are things where you've got a charge now uh an explosive that's the size of a of a can of soda
00:50:58.780 and that's enough to kill somebody or that's enough to severely mess up a tank because most tanks are not
00:51:05.380 designed to actually protect against aerial attack it's just not something that's ever really been done
00:51:11.320 before so the armor on the tank this is a huge issue that people are doing um uh in the war right
00:51:18.300 now so they're putting up netting and they're putting up these like this like caging on the
00:51:21.860 on the tanks because most actually all of the tanks on both sides were not designed for this type of
00:51:28.420 drone attack but the bigger question then is if the tanks aren't effective anymore now we're just
00:51:32.940 back to trench warfare like world war one which everybody realizes totally sucks and it was chemical
00:51:37.240 weapons that um were unleashed and that just absolute hellscape of the great war uh on the on
00:51:43.580 the western front and this became this became a huge game changer of world war one in the same way
00:51:49.980 that drones will effectively lead to the point where and as blake is saying imagine it's it's not just
00:51:55.360 warfare right imagine when criminals get this imagine what assassins get this imagine when terrorists get
00:52:01.440 a hold of this which and the technology is so cheap it's so readily available it's so easy to use this
00:52:08.360 is going to change the way the way we do everything in the world it's gonna change everything
00:52:12.040 like your thoughts yeah i think he it's he's right another thought i've had is it's almost like
00:52:20.880 upsetting to think about this we had our first run like you said in you know you go back to world war
00:52:26.640 one when you think of the traditional like traditional masculine military virtues you know being
00:52:32.980 like just like physical strength and steadfastness and leadership like all these things that used to
00:52:39.200 make a soldier effective they were hurt a lot when it just suddenly warfare was like oh a giant
00:52:44.900 artillery shell drops on you and you just all get blown up by it ied blow goes off it just blows you
00:52:49.980 up it doesn't matter how brave you were it doesn't matter how strong you were it doesn't matter how
00:52:53.700 tough you were or how well trained you were you just got randomly blown up by a bomb on the side
00:52:57.360 of the road and this is like a creepier even more extreme version of this where it's like no matter
00:53:03.820 how hard you've trade or trained or for that matter like how quality of uh of a person and soldier you are
00:53:10.700 uh a robot run by ai or just piloted by someone who's essentially a video game player can just be
00:53:18.380 vastly superior to you and i suppose it's just interesting to think about the ramifications
00:53:23.560 for that like we talk about the decline of the u.s military because the u.s military just loves having
00:53:29.420 trannies now and they talk about their feelings and all the all the old values of the military that
00:53:36.700 won world war ii are just getting totally blotted out but maybe it won't matter because it turns out
00:53:41.600 that trannies are really good at playing video games and what we actually just need is a bunch of people 1.00
00:53:45.340 who can fly a robot at someone's head and blow it up so what you're pinpointing here blake is very
00:53:51.260 important and it's very similar to churchill in one of his books and i think it was the darvishes
00:53:57.160 i never pronounced this correctly blake will correct me um like a whirling like a dervish like the islamic 1.00
00:54:03.480 warriors yes so he witnessed and he wrote in one of his 50 books the how brave and courageous they were
00:54:12.220 and they were pumping themselves up and the british army basically had machine guns and they would just
00:54:17.580 mow them down and the casualty uh ratio was like 200 dead dervishes to one from britain and churchill
00:54:27.400 wrote he's like this is huge this is a big problem he's like valor courage training preparation matters
00:54:34.280 less and technology matters more i think we're now living through another sea change of that where
00:54:41.680 you're exactly right blake it doesn't matter if you're this like super alpha navy seal
00:54:46.240 as much anymore that has sophisticated training there'll always be a place for that it takes
00:54:52.340 valor out of war and combat which then asks the question we're probably going to get more war
00:54:58.680 if we can now declare war with just machines and robotics and the human cost can be minimal
00:55:07.140 the neocons are going to go crazy right andrew now it's basically a glorified call of duty game
00:55:13.940 where you're just watching a screen and you're so disconnected from the price of war wouldn't we get
00:55:21.260 more war and i guess the provocative question for the panel is this a good thing for humanity or a
00:55:26.100 bad thing you can make an argument either way you'll get more war and potentially even more civilian
00:55:30.920 death if they so choose or you make the argument it's actually a better thing because you'll get less
00:55:34.960 people actually dying in a theater of war andrew i actually think if you lower the price of war
00:55:40.760 both from a technological standpoint and from a human cost standpoint yeah you probably will get
00:55:46.220 more war simply because at least in the short term because this is going to be a disruptive
00:55:51.340 technology certainly but then defenses will get more sophisticated on how to detect these drones how
00:55:58.260 to defend against them how to neutralize them before they get to you so you know and and that's
00:56:03.600 happened in every single new technology of war except for possibly you know nuclear power right
00:56:10.500 because how do you how do you neutralize that exactly but uh so there will be a countermeasure
00:56:15.380 to this but i but i'm less thinking about neocons and i'm thinking about i'm thinking about you know
00:56:20.980 some random you know tribe uh tribal dispute uh you know in africa and then you know the iranians fly
00:56:27.960 in some drones just to cause a skirmish and that next thing you know you've got massive casualties
00:56:33.120 uh at an unprecedented scale because they they can just fly a drone into some you know some village
00:56:38.420 but maybe you're right charlie maybe what the neocons are they're going to say and say
00:56:42.220 look we we need even more war making powers we need even more uh weapons uh to now defend against
00:56:50.160 these defenseless groups all over the all over the world as the iranians and the russians are 0.93
00:56:55.800 are flying in uh drone technology i don't know so you so maybe it justifies the neocons uh spending
00:57:01.900 more in their mind and and we will get more war but but i just think about the short term eventually
00:57:06.860 this will be neutralized by some sort of countermeasure but in the short term you're going to
00:57:10.580 get a lot more war i would think human humans humans want to wage war that is his time that's a
00:57:15.220 that's a that's his oldest time final thoughts guys well we definitely have to answer
00:57:22.840 oh sorry i was just gonna say i think we were going to do the same thing but uh someone has
00:57:29.000 someone has an important question for you jack and it's got to be answered all right let's do it
00:57:33.860 what is it well you hear you guys to ask me the question and i'll and i'll answer all right i will
00:57:37.780 ask this on behalf of it looks like some sort of bizarre polish word that i can't pronounce so i'm
00:57:44.920 going to intentionally say it wrong cursa jewels for djt asks jack hey poso are you coming to nascar
00:57:53.340 oh boy are you coming to nascar with president trump on sunday and they've got uh a checkered flag
00:58:01.700 is president is jack going to nascar with president trump on sunday and is that why i am in charlotte
00:58:09.840 north carolina right now let me just tell you something guys yes i am i will be there i'm in
00:58:20.020 charlotte now we were already planning to be here and i'm here right now with my dad for his 70th
00:58:25.820 and uh we've just been going around we were going around today meeting meeting people and i mean this
00:58:31.480 is mega country every single person we've run out to and we were going by the campers and the rvs
00:58:37.100 and we went to michael walter's tap room for dinner and there was a huge meet and greet going on there
00:58:42.920 and people just keep saying uh they want trump to win they want trump back they want to know how to
00:58:47.980 get involved and it's it's a huge cultural i've been going to nascar since i was 10 years old and
00:58:54.340 this is a really really cool event it's amazing the president's gonna be here i never took you to be a
00:58:59.140 guy who would love uh swerving to the left though you see you drive to the left so you can crash the
00:59:07.380 people to your left okay that's fair that's fair all right that's a good answer and it's an
00:59:12.540 acceptable answer there will be another left turn
00:59:15.680 is it like eventually turn left so many times you go right hey um isn't nascar woke now i thought
00:59:26.320 let that nascar went woke yeah did they finally get rid of all the nooses everywhere
00:59:31.500 yeah nascar itself um as an organization definitely needs to be um needs to be taken over and re uh
00:59:41.540 reconquisted nascar need to reconquista because they did this thing too where not only do they go woke 0.99
00:59:48.020 they started telling people like certain flags you're not allowed to bring they started telling
00:59:52.700 people that oh we're gonna have um they have mandatory break periods now at like certain
00:59:57.320 labs whereas before a lot of what it comes down to is this and yeah i know the knock on it was like
01:00:02.140 oh you're just turning left and but something that i got by actually going to the nascar races is that
01:00:08.000 back in the day it used to be about the strategy of okay what tires do you use and when you change
01:00:12.720 your tires how much gas do you have left and then all of these different little um these different
01:00:17.940 requirements that you have to dig into then okay when do you make your pit how aggressively do you
01:00:22.100 race this guy right here dale earnhardt was probably the most aggressive racer ever in mainstream nascar
01:00:26.680 and so you and and obviously the greatest champion of all time and uh number three baby number three
01:00:32.440 and the idea that they're gonna just you know lay all these restrictions on that and lay
01:00:38.280 restrictions on the audience it's ridiculous it's awful absolutely awful but have a fun time jack
01:00:44.240 and i think the fans by and large are are we're gonna make sure they vote
01:00:48.440 yeah and uh that that i'm real at president trump going uh is a very smart move and uh you're gonna
01:00:57.040 have what how many people attend jack hundred thousand plus is that right minimum easily easily
01:01:01.720 yeah and and that is mega country yeah and it's it's it's a no-brainer it's just like entering into
01:01:07.740 another rally north carolina matters and charlotte let's not let's not fool ourselves there'll be a lot
01:01:12.640 a lot of georgians there too a lot of georgians making the road trip um to charlotte north carolina
01:01:18.280 so all right guys uh thank you for watching today make sure you subscribe on rumble and watch our
01:01:23.600 respective shows jack basobiec every day on human events daily our program at 12 noon eastern daily
01:01:29.700 till next week keep on committing thought crimes
01:01:32.460 thought crime is death
01:01:35.640 is death
01:01:36.540 is death
01:01:37.420 is death
01:01:38.300 is death
01:01:39.380 is death
01:01:40.380 is death
01:01:41.380 is death
01:01:42.640 is death