In this episode of the podcast, the boys discuss the new Pentagon policy that prevents journalists from reporting on the military without a press badge. They also talk about the new policy and why they think it's a bad idea. Plus, a special guest joins the boys to talk about brunching with a gay guy.
00:00:26.000Maybe we could pull that Geraldo Rivera clip where he basically gave away the coordinates that put uh troops in harm's way.
00:00:32.000You know that those in the press will flagrantly disregard classified information, even if it puts you know military strategy or important information or God forbid troops in harm's way if it gives them a scoop, and then they will ignore legitimate investigative journalism if it runs counter to their narrative.
00:00:49.000Like bullet engravings uh uh on the uh assassin's gun uh for Charlie Kirk.
00:00:55.000Like the Nashville Manifesto, like Chippewa Falls for kind of Chippewa Falls, what happened there in Wisconsin that you went down?
00:01:00.000That's a bigger story than a private group chat between some Republican buddies.
00:01:29.000It's an infringement on First Amendment rights.
00:01:31.000It has the potential to criminalize acts of journalism because so much of what reporters learn about the military.
00:01:38.000Uh some of it comes from leaks, some of it comes from sources who are not technically authorized or allowed to provide the information, but they're sharing that information in the public interest.
00:01:48.000Uh this new document, this new so-called pledge, would potentially criminalize that kind of coverage and put journalists at risk of prosecution.
00:02:13.000The worst of it was when they were told to get their press badge, uh, they have to work for one week as a National Guardsman guarding an ice facility.
00:03:12.000It just seems like something a gay guy thinks straight men would say, like, hey, Nick, have you checked out the super hot bod on that lady friend?
00:04:19.000It's it's not that they can't be leaked information and be able to kind of claim some protections under the First Amendment to be able to publish that information.
00:04:26.000It's that they cannot solicit that information.
00:04:29.000And that may weigh in, you know, you can kind of look at the bottom there, and Such conduct may weigh in the consideration of whether you pose a security or safety risk.
00:04:36.000If you're encouraging people to break the law and to go out and get this.
00:04:40.000So there's a little bit of a difference.
00:04:41.000So what we do is hey, if you have information on something that's going down and you're a whistleblower or something like that, we're we're we're here, we're available.
00:04:49.000And somebody else going, hey man, you should go get me a file on this.
00:06:47.000We were talking, I think it came up because she was back on talking about the peace deal, and I'm like, they still let her have a job like she jumped in a ditch because a bomb dropped three miles away with her crew, and then she also found a Syrian prisoner.
00:09:35.000But uh yeah I think that maybe there's too many communists and uh socialists.
00:09:40.000So I prefer national socialists obviously I was gonna say yeah but uh I should be the only one in charge really what's the what's the primary difference between socialism and like national socialism because it's uh through your curve Paul it's pretty much the same just with a little more racism.
00:11:03.000I'll be like, hey, guys, do you know if we have one of these subscriptions to Vulture or something that I have to read or vice?
00:11:07.000So that's pretty common for journalistic outfits.
00:11:11.000And my understanding was that was rolled into the budget.
00:11:13.000Now, I don't disagree with the principle of it um those organizations or those should be receiving no money whatsoever but my primary gripe wasn't that they had a political subscription so that they could cover it yeah all right next chat all right next chat from why a wild man question for happy Hitler knowing what you know now what uh what would you do differently?
00:11:34.000And tell your friend Josh thank you for your service.
00:11:38.000Right yeah I know it's kind of never picks up mine calls you guys kind of have an up and um did I have any was I do anything anything different?
00:11:46.000Well yeah yeah I can think of at least one thing.
00:11:50.000I well um maybe increase the size of showers okay yeah that's a hard question so many things.
00:11:59.000Yeah there's so many things I think I know the thing maybe maybe I wouldn't have married Abraham right yeah in retrospect that's a big mistake.
00:16:09.000Presidents always have to, and I don't like this.
00:16:12.000They always have to be careful and walk that fine line because of our relationship with Saudi Arabia and the the dependency on foreign oil.
00:16:19.000So I don't think you're ever going to see someone actually address the value system and what was espoused by Muhammad.
00:16:27.000Now they have to say, like, oh, not all Muslims.
00:16:28.000Well, we all we obviously know that, but over 150 million Muslims on earth believe that violence is at least sometimes justified for apostasy, or I think for infidels.
00:16:39.000I think that poll is specifically on apostasy leaving the faith.
00:16:42.000There was another number on blaspheming.
00:16:44.000Um and I think the number of people who believe that violence is often justified, it was still well into the tens of millions.
00:16:51.000Yeah, I think it was around 50 million people.
00:16:54.000It's been a while since I've looked at the number.
00:16:55.000It was a hundred something million, believe it's sometimes justified, and it was fifty-something million who believe that it's often justified.
00:17:08.000We were talking about this because of the India poop thing.
00:17:11.000And uh there's this island um right right off uh coast there in India, that's the most uh, I guess untouched, insulated people on earth, right?
00:17:21.000Like these people have not had any encounters with technology.
00:17:23.000They're kind of and and the Indian government protects them.
00:17:25.000I think there was a YouTuber who died trying to go to tape a video.
00:17:29.000No, it was uh it was a missionary who died, but the YouTuber was arrested from the Indians and forced to poop in the outside.
00:18:11.000When you look at a lot of these cultures, and this is when people talk about the Crusades.
00:18:14.000Um let me preface this too, because I was doing some research on uh Columbus.
00:18:19.000I don't know if you guys know this, Columbus Day.
00:18:20.000So I grew up in the era of every hey, everything Columbus said about cannibals was propaganda, right?
00:18:25.000They vilified them, they said, Columbus, there's no way that actually he would have encountered cannibals.
00:18:30.000They told you it was a language uh sort of miscommunication.
00:18:34.000You uh the Caribs were the tribe uh that were cannibals, but they actually never made their way to the West Indies, like you know, the Bahamas and I believe Cuba.
00:18:41.000Um so this is just propaganda at people bought.
00:18:45.000So we grew up, I grew up where we were taught Columbus was evil, it was propaganda, and he just started calling natives.
00:18:53.000But the truth is in 2020, there was a new uh or there was some new archaeological evidence that came out that said, absolutely, it is now no longer in dispute.
00:19:01.000The Caribs, who were the cannibals, did make their way up.
00:19:04.000They were part of the third wave of immigration.
00:19:06.000So now the argument is, well, sure, it happened, but and they were sometimes cannibals, but it was mostly ritualistic.
00:19:11.000It wasn't like they were farming people like Columbus said.
00:19:14.000But let me ask you, how could he have possibly known about the tribe that were cannibals?
00:19:19.000And does it let's also just walk through this logically?
00:19:21.000I think the the main group he encountered was like the Arawak, I uh I I'm pretty damn close.
00:19:27.000He said, um, a greater people I've never known.
00:19:40.000Sometimes I guess they would eat babies, but they would usually, if there were pregnant women, raise the babies, sever their sexual organs until they were men so they could eat them.
00:19:52.000And let me uh they go, oh, and it was overblown.
00:19:55.000If you're Columbus back then, and let's just say you land on the northeast side of an island, and there's a hundred cannibals.
00:20:01.000That's what you would think the island is.
00:20:03.000There are no cars, there are no trains, and you're not getting past this wall of human cannibals.
00:20:08.000But now the argument is, well, we don't want to, we don't want to focus on this because it might have negative ramifications for the uh indigenous populations.
00:20:36.000The people who are being sacrificed, the people who have their their son or their daughter's heart cut out, you know, as a ceremony, ritualistically, and thrown down a pyramid, they would be very amenable to the idea of Christianity.
00:20:48.000Just like Columbus encountered the peaceful tribes, and many of them immediately said, Wait, you you find cannibalism reviling?
00:20:56.000But the the leaders of these tribes or civilizations who had convinced the people that they themselves in fact were gods, would of course never allow Christianity to spread.
00:21:04.000So you have to kill those leaders in order to evangelize to the people.
00:21:10.000But instead, when we lie and say, Well, they weren't cannibals, so can you believe that these people came here, whether it's the pilgrims or Columbus or whichever wave and that they killed some of their leaders?
00:21:20.000Because they wanted to help the people who were enslaved.
00:21:22.000You still have to kill the leaders and convert the nations to Christianity.
00:21:26.000And that's what you see happening, for example, with the Crusades.
00:21:30.000That's what would have to happen very likely if you wanted these people who are acting like savages, an island off of India, if you wanted those people to have some kind of quality of life.
00:21:39.000When you remove context historically, you make it seem as though Christians are responsible for the original evil when in fact they were responding to it.
00:21:49.000And there has been historically a response to Islam, but in the instances where this has not happened, where leaders have not been killed.
00:21:57.000Well, the people can't be evangelized to.
00:22:03.000They'll imprison you if you're a missionary.
00:22:05.000They'll imprison you if you try and evangelize.
00:22:07.000So short of killing the corrupt, awful leaders of Islamic nations that oppress their own people, you're not going to be able to convert any of them.
00:22:16.000And so we allow the evil to continue to flourish, where women can't drive, people get thrown off of rooftops, Christians get burned alive in cages.
00:22:26.000It will continue unless the leaders are killed, taken out, so that the people who would be amenable to a better way would be free to convert if they want to.
00:23:39.000Maybe we have to actually done that, but they've but that has historically happened in South American Indian tribes and stuff like that, and people have gone over and over and over and evangelized to these people and have had some success.
00:23:48.000But either way, I think your point is actually broader than that.
00:23:51.000It's like, well, these people are pressing these people, and we're like, hey, don't.
00:24:15.000We went, we know we started off with okay, Native Americans were savages.
00:24:18.000And then the left over corrected said, well, they weren't all savages, and actually they're a peaceful nation that was horseback culture, and none of that was true.
00:24:24.000And now the pendulum is swinging back from like, you know what?
00:24:28.000And I'm glad that we're not still in a perpetual state of warring tribes in this country.
00:24:33.000And when you understand the context that Columbus came over, had a heart for the peaceful tribes who were oppressed and farmed as human meat.
00:24:40.000You go, oh, maybe he wasn't that evil if he kind of reached his limit with the cannibals.
00:29:47.000He actually had like a he had a spinal injury, so he couldn't move his left leg.
00:29:51.000And uh I lived in an apartment that was being renovated above him.
00:29:54.000And I'll say this when a lot of conservatives and people from the church that we used to attend had no place for me to stay, and I was sleeping out of my car.
00:30:00.000I stayed with him and we were constantly insulting each other.
00:30:17.000Unless other people in the chat are horrified, and someone's saying, hey, stop, I don't want to be a part of this, and someone is pursuing them, and uh and even men, it's just like hash it out like men, but that's not what happened.
00:31:48.000So I was on with Alegja Schaefer the other night and we were talking about this because Glenn got that question about you know, is he America first or is he uh Israel first?
00:31:56.000It's an easy question from somebody yelling over somebody else.
00:32:00.000And they played this clip for me to show me it was like a letter that I I guess he had written or he was talking about a letter he had written, something like that.
00:32:07.000I I need to get more context for it, but saying I want citizenship in Israel.
00:32:14.000And I was like, no more American citizenship.
00:32:16.000I was about to say if if that's the case, that's fine.
00:32:31.000And that that is what I I think is under attack more so.
00:32:34.000I mean, um no whataboutism to play here.
00:32:37.000But just think of the hypocrisy of the left and some of the things that they say and defend and speech that they're totally fine with, and then how they cover this.
00:32:46.000Now go look at the number of views that this has gotten and then look at the Jay Johnson views and the coverage that it's gotten on media.
00:32:54.000I think it was like sixty-eight or eighty seconds of coverage that the Jay Johnson tweets had gotten on the main networks, yeah, the you know, CNN and MSNBC and all that stuff.
00:33:04.000He's actively saying, I want these people to die.
00:33:08.000I want them to be shot in front of their children.
00:33:10.000With someone saying, Hey, I really don't like this.
00:33:12.000I told you I don't like this talk, I'm uncomfortable with it.
00:33:14.000And it's like, no, I need you to know this.
00:33:22.000None of none of us have any hatred toward Jews in our hearts because most people, when we go out and we start posting on X, they'll be like, ah, is that another 7,000 for you?
00:33:37.000Mine apologies, but uh what is Israel?
00:33:41.000Yeah, that's kind of you know what that if you haven't really done some um some research uh after your time, uh, it would be a little bit confusing.
00:33:48.000But uh they uh they were given a safe haven uh internationally uh after uh what you pulled and uh they have their own uh they have their own country.
00:35:01.000What I've all often I've only ever had one true in fight, and people obviously know that, uh, with someone who was never my friend.
00:35:08.000There, uh Jeremy Boring at Daily Wire.
00:35:10.000I've not had this with with Shapiro or Knowles or Cleveland or anyone, and people know why, because that for me met the threshold where Toolman knows this.
00:35:19.000There are plenty of people in this office.
00:35:20.000There are people who like Ben Shapiro, and there are people who do not.
00:35:22.000And there have been people who've said, Hey, yeah, I want to do this segment, you know, because Ben said this and it and I go, you know what, I agree that he misspoke, that's ridiculous.
00:35:28.000I think that the country is better off with a Ben Shapiro in that spot than another whatever young Turks.
00:35:35.000I go, well, the overall it's net good.
00:35:37.000For me, it has to meet the threshold of is this movement and is this country worse off for someone putting on our team jersey and acting that way.
00:35:47.000And that threshold was met when it was a company doing the bidding of YouTube and big tech and punishing conservatives and locking them down, their name, image, and likeness forever with penalties on behalf of big tech.
00:35:59.000I thought something has to be done because my God, people are going to sign these contracts.
00:37:14.000Uh they had a list of like uh most controversial, you know, most liked, where the algorithms were they were really based on organic reaction to content.
00:37:25.000There's someone who's picking and choosing, as we've seen with the Facebook expose with the Twitter files being released with what happened at YouTube.
00:37:31.000So yeah, it's uh it's exacerbated by bad actors uh for sure.
00:37:35.000And I think sometimes you get some people who are new and they're overzealous and they make their niche the entire meaning of the movement, and anyone who doesn't go along with them must be lying to them.
00:38:45.000There are some people out there though who just exist.
00:38:47.000For example, if you don't follow lockstep with their view, they SWAT you, they dox you, um, they tell everyone that you're bought and paid for.
00:39:21.000Yeah, so really quickly, just something that's coming out right now.
00:39:24.000It looks like Milo uh might have gotten an affidavit, like a sworn affidavit signed by Michael Bartles, who is claiming to be the victim of Gavin Wax's blackmail op to get information on.
00:39:36.000So it seems to be like this is uh so he said points four through seven, uh maybe give me those in the chat if you guys will.
00:39:42.000So uh point number four, I was demanded to provide a full log of restore YR chat, the logs by Gavin Wax over dispute about related matters on August 16th, the demand was made via telephone, and to my knowledge was not recorded.
00:39:55.000Uh when I attempted, so point five, when I attempted to resist that demand after providing some of the requested information, Wax threatened my professional standing, raised the possibility of potential legal action related to an alleged breach of non-disclosure, my position within the New York Republican young Republican club was directly threatened.
00:40:09.000Uh point six after this conversation when I did not provide the logs, I was removed from access to most um NYYRC communications channels, leadership chats, and my NYYRC email.
00:40:21.000Uh mutual contacts also began to receive alleged details of my personal life from Wax.
00:40:27.000I don't have point number seven, guys, so if you can say that.
00:40:29.000After these Events took place, I provided Gavin Wax's associate, Nathan Berger with the archived logs of the group text.
00:40:38.000Yeah, that's that that sounds about right.
00:40:40.000That doesn't if all of that that's that's an affidavit by this guy, so we can you know say that, but listen, this is if in a scenario like this, somebody who's supposed to be on your side is jockeying for position or power within an organization and takes this information and goes, ah, you know, the best way to use this is I'm gonna give it to politico or I'm gonna give it to somebody who can give it to political or however this does in this hypothetical situation.
00:41:10.000That person should never be anywhere near our party ever again, ever, in any way, shape, or form.
00:41:15.000And I think Republicans need to be aware right now, they're not winning on ideas.
00:41:19.000They can win on infiltration and trying to miscast what you're saying and what you're doing, and trying to infiltrate and push people's ideas that maybe wouldn't otherwise be pushed.
00:41:30.000I think that's something we have to be careful of as a party.
00:41:32.000We've got to get rid of the old guard to a large degree right now.
00:41:35.000The people, all the people who responded the wrong way.
00:41:56.000You think it all happen all was happenstance the same day that former employees talking to New York Post about seeing my balls and and edited video tapes from ring camera and and people making claims that were denied outright from the opposing party in court and a judge allowing a suit regarding extortion could to go on, which was dropped as part of a settlement.
00:42:14.000People don't know that I was met with a financial offer the night before the smear campaign started.
00:43:43.000So you have men going, wait a second, I don't want anything to do with this because feminism has permeated um put it this way the red pill sphere, uh, of which I'm not a part, and by the way, Andrew Wilson isn't a part, like there are there are traditional conservative Christian men who also are pushing back against feminism.
00:43:59.000But even take the worst, the red pill sphere has nowhere near the influence that a generation of professors and media and entertainment propaganda have had in indoctrinating uh women to become all feminist by default, to be clear.
00:44:16.000So I'm much more worried about that than the pushback.
00:44:19.000Uh you guys have to push back against it.
00:44:21.000You guys have to be less worried about uh the ostracization from your social circles than you are, you know, having to at the end of your life face the accountability of what you did, what decisions you made, what stands you took.
00:44:36.000Women need to be able to police their own.
00:44:38.000And that's why I've also said, like, men, we'll we'll check out of the uh biological men and women's sports.
00:45:41.000This was actually uh when Charlie Kirk had been assassinated, and she said, I can't believe it and what I see, and you know, the state of the country, and hopefully we're gonna go the right direction.
00:45:51.000She said, I'm just so scared if, you know, like we swing back and we have like another Obama or a Biden, because after this, I don't I don't know that the country would be able to handle it.
00:46:00.000Said, what if I could wave a magic wand?
00:46:04.000And I could tell you that I could guarantee you, guarantee you that there would never be another Democrat, let alone a Biden or Obama or Clinton elected ever again.
00:47:07.000Let me give you a startling uh uh fact.
00:47:10.000And she goes, actually, you know what, though, I just lost a friend because she was saying Charlie Kirk kind of deserved one, and she was kind of going off.
00:47:17.000But I'm gonna tell you that's actually not all too uncommon.
00:47:21.000Most of your friends or a good portion of your friends who say they're Christian conservatives, a lot of them still don't vote the same values you do.
00:47:37.000And understand that a statistical reality is more of those women in that church that you are looking at right that moment will vote Democrat than atheist men.
00:48:01.000She said, Well, then I guess yeah, we got into the history of women's suffrage.
00:48:04.000And we got into the history of the fact that not all men had the right to vote, right?
00:48:07.000If you weren't a landowner, if you didn't pay taxes, if you weren't uh enlisted in selective service.
00:48:13.000Yeah, if you uh if you uh didn't perform uh bucket duty, which was mandatory, voluntary firefighter service.
00:48:19.000And then there was a period of time where still not all men had the vote because of these responsibilities, they had to be met, but women did without having to meet those responsibilities, and then they got corrected.
00:48:29.000And that's why most women opposed the vote.
00:48:31.000A, because they didn't like the socialist influence.
00:48:34.000They also thought that women could have more influence in the household without getting into the dirty game of politics.
00:48:39.000And they didn't want to have to, for example, be eligible for the draft until some socialists, and by the way, corporate fat cats who wanted to double the labor force so they could enjoy the benefits of cheap labor, and they convinced you that you'd have your own allowance and a dual-income household was better.
00:48:53.000When that happens, by the way, you're not gonna have to have any of these responsibilities.
00:48:56.000It was the first time that votes were purchased.
00:48:59.000It was the first time that votes were purchased, meaning the votes were purchased off of people who had to fulfill responsibilities, who had a dog in the fight, who had skin in the game.
00:49:08.000They were used, right, as political clout to give people the vote who weren't.
00:49:14.000Now, I'm not saying that women shouldn't have the voice.
00:49:15.000I think I've I've laid out the plan as far as what you should have for voting.
00:49:18.000It's you should have to meet not only voter ID, but you should have to meet certain thresholds as far as paying taxes, being gainfully employed, right?
00:49:24.000Showing that you are a net uh contributor as opposed to a net taker.
00:49:30.000This all this is this idea that everyone gets a vote in this country is still it's a very new thing.
00:49:36.000People who did not contribute who took from the country, they were never included in voting historically.
00:49:42.000I don't know why we live in a country where someone can perpetually be unemployed and cost the taxpayers, let's say a net forty something thousand dollars a year in EBT, snap welfare benefits, do it for over a decade.
00:49:55.000And they get to vote where your taxes go.
00:49:58.000And if it's a woman, get to vote where you are sent to war if the draft comes back, which by the way is a very real possibility in our lifetime.