In this week's episode, the guys discuss a man who wants to build a chicken restaurant on their land, and a farmer who doesn't want to let the government take his land back. Plus, a new addition to the ghost kitchen, and more!
00:01:18.000That's the country we're supposed to live in.
00:01:20.000So is there ever a point for armed insurrection?
00:01:23.000That's something where there has to be a collective right response.
00:01:26.000But are there individual instances where we act like we are so beyond this that we no longer acknowledge human nature?
00:01:31.000If someone is coming in to take your stuff by force, why are you a radical if you defend it, if you defend what is rightfully yours with force?
00:01:42.000I'm not saying you should, and I'm certainly not saying that you should.
00:01:45.000What I'm saying is if this guy did, I would fully understand it, and I wouldn't begrudge him at all.
00:01:53.000I wouldn't think it makes him a less moral man an ounce, just to be clear.
00:03:19.000You explained to me the concept of a ghost kitchen.
00:03:21.000Oh, I had no idea where it's only for Uber Eats and DoorDash in those places.
00:03:24.000Yeah, it's where one restaurant makes something that they've already made before or a new thing, and then they tell you that it's a different restaurant making it when really it's the same guy who's making the bloomin' onions at Outback Steakhouse who's now making your previously frozen chicken tenders.
00:04:12.000Freedom itself, your rights, are the greater good.
00:04:17.000And here's where you should be really skeptical.
00:04:19.000If someone is telling you about the greater good, you know, trampling on your rights for the greater good, and they can't list for you the duties that every single citizen has in this country, then they don't have a greater good.
00:04:36.000They don't believe in any greater good.
00:05:11.000Anywhere else in the world, in business, by the way, in your relationships, there's some type of a transaction where if something is given or something is taken, there has to be an equal and opposite reaction.
00:05:24.000I pay you for this product, goods or services.
00:05:29.000I will give this to you benevolently because, hey, you're going to get back on it.
00:05:33.000In this case, only when people like AOC and Mom Dani, they step in and go, hey, it is for the greater good for you to give what you have earned against your will to this person who you do not know, who does not care about you.
00:05:46.000And in many cases, harms people like you through frequent breaking of the law.
00:05:52.000And we're going to hold them responsible for none of it.
00:05:55.000The only person who's held responsible, the only person who's punished is the creator, the contributor, the American worker.
00:07:47.000Let's not act like the people that are doing this are like, you know, road scholars that have explored every possible option and they're the best and brightest and they're absolutely going to protect your rights up until the point where they can't.
00:07:58.000I'm just saying, you have to understand they're not the best and brightest typically on these councils in these townships or these cities, wherever they happen to be.
00:08:06.000And by the way, George the Greek, do me a favor, look it up.
00:08:09.000Does Imminent Domain, if they come in and take your land, do they also have to buy your business?
00:08:21.000I can't do it because now the land is worth far less because there's probably going to be more trash being thrown over there because you have people there instead of just warehouses on the other side over there.
00:08:29.000So my business suffers greatly from this.
00:08:58.000I believe that public housing should be as Spartan and bare bones as humanly possible with a time limit when people say, we need to do a better job reforming as opposed to punishing in prison.
00:09:06.000I believe that prisons should be as uncomfortable as fucking possible.
00:09:11.000Prisons should be uncomfortable and public housing, if we even have it, should be as Spartan and as temporary as possible as a matter of policy.
00:09:20.000Because otherwise you're committing an act of evil against the innocent.
00:09:37.000Can you rewind it like 20, 30 seconds?
00:09:41.000Because that was a real-time call that she said weapons of mass destruction, right, being used to a man just make sure she's like, yeah, don't go DeLorean all the way back.
00:09:51.000They were slaughtered, gunned down, with the same kind of weapon.
00:09:55.000We sprung into action to make sure that the laws were tougher and tighter.
00:09:59.000And we're doing much more to keep people safe in the state of New York.
00:10:02.000But I don't want to be having my residents affected by someone coming from another state who could easily get their hands on this assault weapon, travel across multiple states, and do what they did just yesterday.
00:10:14.000So I want to be able to protect New Yorkers.
00:10:17.000And it's hard to do it when other states aren't stepping up.
00:10:20.000And certainly Congress has let us down.
00:10:21.000And government people who would push it.
00:10:24.000Otherwise you have to look at her crime policy.
00:10:25.000...semiotic weapons, which you're calling for now, would say that there needs to be amped up security, physical security in some of these buildings.
00:10:41.000There was very much security in that building.
00:10:44.000To have a company hire an off-duty police officer, I don't know how you get more secure than that.
00:10:50.000And all the systems they had in place and the training they had in place.
00:10:53.000I'm still learning more about what those systems were.
00:10:55.000I've been in that building, and it takes an awful lot to be able to get upstairs.
00:10:59.000But how you stop somebody intent on murdering the first person they encounter who's a police officer and trying to stop them, that's almost impossible.
00:11:09.000So for people who are blaming the security system are looking at the wrong culprit here.
00:11:29.000Not soft-on crime, not catch-and-release, not cash bail where anyone can go back in the streets, not people who've committed one, two, 25 violent crimes and done no time in prison.
00:13:07.000No governor in the history of New York has invested more money and resources for our local law enforcement to stop crimes that our crime rates are dropping dramatically.
00:14:50.000And this is their single biggest losing issue because it's this easy to refute.
00:14:54.000Take someone in your family or your circle of friends who has never fired a gun, take them to the range, show them how to operate a gun, and then take them to purchase one.
00:16:33.000You want your citizens to be protected?
00:16:34.000Make sure that they can have firearms.
00:16:36.000Not just the ultra wealthy that have political connections in New York and can hire private security or maybe procure one of those, I don't know, one of the gazillion gun licenses that you give out to people.
00:16:46.000Let them defend themselves and they'll be much safer.
00:16:49.000That woman, I want to hear her story, walking out of the elevator.
00:16:53.000And that gunman is right there and he lets her walk by.
00:16:56.000What if she had a gun in her purse and could have pulled it out as she walked by, back of the head, saves a couple of lives?
00:17:08.000This guy getting into the building, how far he had to walk across that pavement to get into the building?
00:17:13.000What if five citizens saw that this guy had a gun and maybe one of them had a gun and could go up and at least inspect the situation and be like, hey, what are you doing?
00:18:19.000Tomorrow, you now know that any citizen for the first time in New York City can own in their apartment, in their townhouse, a gun of their choice like Texas or carry.
00:18:31.000Think that would change your behavior?
00:20:19.000Their PDPF is probably the best balance of their guns there.
00:20:21.000If you want something for home defense to carry, they have smaller ones that are great for concealed carry.
00:20:25.000They have bigger ones that are easier for home defense.
00:20:27.000But if you're not a gun person, and you've heard me say this for a very long time and Walther never had a problem with it, if you are not a gun person at all, if you don't want to spend a lot of time at the range, but you should train yourself up with it, you don't really want to have to take your gun, get yourself a good, reliable revolver.
00:20:42.000You have to deal with the idea that you're going to be limited in capacity and carry it, put it in your bedside, your nightstand.
00:20:51.000If you keep it relatively clean and you don't screw around with it, 40 years from now, you take it out of that drawer, it'll go bang.
00:20:57.000Get yourself a revolver, a 38 special.
00:20:59.000They're doing great things now with 32 H ⁇ R Magnum.
00:21:02.000If you want lower recoil, I don't care if it's a 22.
00:21:32.000That's not me saying that revolvers are, just to be clear, I'm just saying for people out there who aren't gun enthusiasts, I want you to carry something.
00:22:04.000But there is something to be said for a revolver, too, is, you know, if you're in a point-blank situation, someone can grab your semi-auto grab, and now your gun doesn't work, right?
00:24:36.000Plus, you do get to, to some degree, see the different effect of calibers.
00:24:39.000It's not like an FBI ballistics gelatin test, but you can tell the difference.
00:24:42.000Like if you shoot it with 22 and you see like the, you know, it springs a leak versus you hit it with, you know, a 223 and hydrostatic shock.
00:27:28.000As far as most fun to shoot, target, but as far as most fun to shoot, I will tell you, like, and I've shot, I've been fortunate enough to shoot, you know, automatic machine gun stuff like that, and some pretty heavy-duty sniper rifles, you know, that can go up to God knows how far.
00:27:42.000I still will tell you, the stuff that I just, I do enjoy like iron sights as opposed to a red dot and, you know, hitting cans or hitting bottles.
00:27:52.000I like the idea of being able to grab a gun that I will very likely use should the situation arise, going and using it in a way that's sort of meditative, precise.
00:28:02.000And I've always really liked firing revolvers or something about that.
00:28:05.000That's probably because it's the first thing I ever shot.
00:28:07.000So shooting, you know, some cans off of, you know, whatever, back at the, if I had enough land off a fence post or whatever it is.
00:28:44.000Also, I found an old Colt Woodsman in an attic that I have that is worth a lot of money.
00:28:49.000And it's a fixed barrel 22, and I was able to shoot cans at 100 yards.
00:28:53.000And I will say, the lever action, iron sights.
00:28:56.000I just went recently and I did hit, I mean, I hit the steel plate at 183 yards, which is about as much as you can ask for for an iron sight lever.
00:29:22.000Rumble Forskin asks, do you think defending yourself with a small caliber round like a 22 brings additional grievous heart charges, like firing into a crowd would, given the low likelihood of being fatal?
00:29:40.000I think it's like feeling, they're saying, you know, a grieving heart for the victim.
00:29:45.000The perpetrator now becomes the victim.
00:29:47.000I think it depends on what state you're in.
00:29:49.000Yeah, I think what depends on the jury, too.
00:29:51.000So that's always why I say, too, like, you do want to have a gun that you can defend in front of a jury.
00:29:56.000So 22 is less likely, but not that much less likely to kill somebody, to be clear.
00:30:03.000It is less likely to stop them to a significant degree with one shot in the moment, meaning there isn't the same central nervous system shock or blood loss, but you can pierce an organ.
00:30:14.000They can die in the hospital hours later.
00:30:16.000Your defensive firearm should be used with the purpose of stopping the threat.
00:30:22.000And so I still think, here's a problem.
00:30:25.000So if that's a 22, but it's what you fire, it's the only thing you fire, well, then I would say carry a 22, but you're going to likely have to use more shots.
00:30:31.000And so then you get into the argument, is it better to shoot someone with one 357 Magnum or 145 ACP?
00:30:36.000Or is a jury going to look at eight, 10 shots like the finale to Gran Torino and think, why'd you have to fire so many?
00:30:42.000Because they don't know anything about guns.
00:31:15.000And there's something to be said for that, too, where people are like, I want the biggest caliber, but then they're like, and they can't control it.
00:31:21.000A big reason we went with 45 ACP with the 1911 in the military is because, again, with the military, NATO requires that we use full metal jackets, right?
00:31:28.000You're not allowed to use hollow points, expanding rounds.
00:31:31.000Where when you use a 9mm, it's pretty smaller, medium-sized caliber, it's pretty comparable because they expand.
00:31:37.000But when all you can do is poke a hole, well, 45 is better than a 9mm, which what's the exact measurement?
00:31:43.000It's like 0.35, pretty damn close to 38 special and 357 magnum.
00:31:47.000So that was a logic behind going to the 45 ACP because it was just punching a hole.
00:31:52.000Now you have, you know, these expanding bullets that are, ammunition has come such a long way that are far more effective.
00:31:59.000So you don't necessarily need a huge, crazy caliber.
00:32:02.000And honestly, I don't really know that it makes that big of a difference until you get to legitimate magnum speed.
00:32:09.000For example, revolvers had that Hillary hole, the Hillary lock that Smith and Wesson put in there, which some people said would just be enabled and their gun was basically locked and became a brick.
00:32:19.000Now Smith and Wesson is doing away with them.
00:32:21.000But it's very easy to disable and fill in that little lock hole.
00:32:24.000But you have lawyers who say you'll be before a jury and they go, and wasn't there a safety mechanism that you disabled?
00:32:30.000It's literally a lock that requires one key that you go in and say, okay, revolver can work, revolver can never work.
00:33:52.000Do you think the person more likely to abuse that authority is someone who has lived their life, let's say, as an athlete, as a successful business person, as someone who has had to wield a respectable authority over people throughout their life and now has said, okay, I'm going to serve my fellow citizen, whether it's in war, whether it's part of the local police.
00:34:10.000Do you think they're more likely to abuse that authority or the person who is a tiny worm who was bullied their whole life and the only way out for them was a gun and a badge?
00:34:24.000Now imagine you lived your entire life where really all of human history, where you have been beholden to the only people who can enforce rights, because you only have rights if you can enforce them, right?
00:34:56.000You also tend to see, this is something that's very, very disconcerting.
00:34:59.000A lot of people don't know, far more both emotional and physical abuse in single mother households than single father households.
00:35:05.000But the courts don't really take that into account.
00:35:09.000You see far more domestic abuse in lesbian couples than you see not only in heterosexual couples, but lower than heterosexual couples are gay couples.
00:35:18.000And again, my theory, and I don't know that anyone has studied this, I've talked about this, is because two men, right, there isn't that differential of power where someone's going to smack the other dude and he's going to go, ah, it's going to be a fight, right?
00:35:29.000Because you both have some degree of authority or capability of force, and so you have to measure it.
00:35:59.000And so that to me is someone who is already prone to abusing authority because they believe it's the job of daddy government, mommy government to tell you what's best for you.
00:36:08.000So yeah, I think that's why, because it's a power trip.
00:36:12.000It's a power trip that occurs nowhere else in nature.
00:36:15.000Again, not all, but who is more likely to abuse authority?
00:36:19.000Someone who worked the system and now has authority in a position that occurs nowhere else in nature throughout human history?
00:36:24.000Or someone who's had to learn their way to said authority?
00:36:28.000If, yeah, women ruled the world, there would be no wars, but nobody would have guns and everybody would be oppressed.
00:37:29.000Well, yeah, but it doesn't make sense with that.
00:37:31.000Nonetheless, citizens hold back because they don't want to be involved in a court case where they are the bad guy, or has that changed?
00:37:37.000No, I absolutely think that's the case.
00:37:39.000And to be clear, look, if you're just carrying like a pocket pistol or a revolver, it is not expected of you and certainly not a requirement to take out someone with an AR-15 or an AK-47.
00:37:54.000But if a bunch of you have it, it gives you a fighting chance.
00:37:56.000And by the way, don't underestimate the element of surprise.
00:37:59.000I think that somebody who is a law-abiding, caring citizen is more likely to be cautious.
00:38:09.000There's a whole paradigm theory where it's like, okay, well, if one guy has a, if two guys have a gun and then a good guy with a gun shows up and he wants to take care of it, how does he know which one's the good guy with the gun?
00:38:23.000If a good guy with a gun shows up to stop a bad guy with a gun, but another good guy with a gun sees a good guy with a gun, thinks he's a bad guy with a gun, he shoots that guy.
00:38:29.000Then that just keeps happening over and over and over.
00:38:31.000So I think that people that are law-by-citizens are more cautious and maybe hold back a second to see, to assess the situation, make sure they don't make a mistake.
00:38:43.000Like if you go on the gun forums and the gun sort of, you know, interest groups, like you will see entire discussions and debates from people like, well, you should use this because it's likely to stop the threat, but not have overpenetration.
00:38:53.000You're responsible for every single bullet that exits the barrel of your gun.
00:38:57.000And people going, yeah, but that's not enough penetration.
00:38:59.000So how do we Balance being able to take out the threat without putting other people at risk.
00:39:03.000And then, of course, it becomes autistic and this crazy circle jerk.
00:39:06.000But the spirit of it is they're very responsible and very thoughtful in relation to the point of getting nerdy and lost in the weeds.
00:39:13.000Where it's like, look, get a good, reputable gun in a caliber that you can handle, get a good, reputable form of ammo.
00:40:21.000The one time I ever got like a serious ticket, I was not a serious, but I was driving and I found out that my license had been suspended in Michigan because I had an unpaid ticket.
00:40:29.000Now, the ticket, and I ended up having it wiped, was I was visiting family, so it was in a car that wasn't mine.
00:40:34.000It was a speeding trap, and it was posted to an address that I had never been.
00:40:38.000There must have been some clerical error.
00:40:41.000And so when I went before the judge, I had to go to this specific district that I hadn't been to since I got that ticket because I said, hey, your license was suspended X months ago because I didn't pay this ticket.
00:40:49.000So I go before the judge and they go, okay, and you were driving.
00:41:47.000And so you need to get those people out because if they have the final say, then you're still going to have a culture of people afraid to rightfully use their firearms.
00:42:28.000Why they don't always register, if you're on a concealed carry permit, doesn't mean that they know how many guns you have.
00:42:34.000You just have a permit to conceal carry a weapon.
00:42:37.000Yeah, it's not the same thing as a register.
00:42:38.000Whereas in Michigan, when I lived there, you had to register each firearm with your local police department, which really rubbed me the wrong way.
00:42:44.000In Washington, you have to do it when you purchase it.
00:42:49.000A lot of states are like, I don't want to say most, but a lot of states you have to register.
00:42:52.000I do support the idea of constitutional carry.
00:42:54.000I think that it is, just like no one gets to infringe on your First Amendment right, whether it's Utah or whether it's New York, the same should apply to Amendment Number Two.
00:43:02.000If you're a law-abiding citizen, you should be allowed to keep and bear, meaning carry, have on you arms.
00:43:30.000He, man, I wish I could remember where it was so I could help research pull it up.
00:43:33.000But this guy got into an altercation with security.
00:43:36.000He had a gun, pulled out a gun, and then tried to run away.
00:43:40.000I think he fired around, tried to run away, and then another security guard who was behind him at a different – I think this is the Alaska video you're talking about.
00:44:42.000I don't think that you should have to get a permit to carry.
00:44:45.000I understand why, but I also wouldn't equate a concealed carry permit with a registry because like Josh has said, I have a permit because it's required in Texas, but it doesn't mean they know how many guns I have.
00:44:57.000And I don't think you have to give when you're.
00:44:59.000I don't think there's any state where you get a concealed carry license and you have to give the registration of any of your firearms.
00:45:09.000They know, like, it's unlikely that you're going to go through the process of getting a concealed carry permit if you don't have a firearm.
00:45:16.000Yeah, but making a list of where firearms are, like, which houses have firearms, which houses don't, for the government to come and seize.
00:45:23.000But again, that's way down the road of kind of revolution stuff.
00:45:26.000I think you pass a very thorough criminal background check, meaning you haven't incriminated any crimes, or if it would show up on your record, if you have been proven adjudicated mentally defective when you purchase your firearms, and then you have the right to carry them, concealed, or open.
00:45:40.000That's what I think should be the case.
00:46:13.000When you talk about credit, it's like someone who literally carries debt and won't be able to pay it off can have better credit than the person who uses it like a debit card, but they had to sign up for internet and a utility.
00:46:23.000Remember, like when we moved to the house, they're like, oh, you don't want to do this anymore because it's going to be a hard credit pull.
00:46:26.000I'm like, well, how do I turn on my electricity?
00:50:49.000She did sue her city with the NAACP, accusing the mayor's sons of being racist, and create an anti-Trump website and a doxing website up until and including 2016, and then sue her landlord for not taking care of her apartment, not paying rent, and then claimed racism when he wanted to evict her.
00:52:38.000Isn't that kind of always funny, though?
00:52:39.000Like, whenever you see heroes, they're invariably usually like a Stephen Williford or somebody who's more conservative, someone who would vote for fewer laws, but does seem to have deeply held convictions about their civic duties.
00:53:04.000You have a good Samaritan law, but don't you also have a law of someone, if they use their firearm, they can actually be sued?
00:53:11.000And don't you also have a law that, by the way, says you can sue the mom-and-pop gun shops, or at least they did for a long time, for selling the firearm, even if they sold it to someone who used it lawfully to stop a conflict?
00:53:22.000That's why Bernie Sanders didn't get a full-on F from the NRA.
00:53:27.000He got a D-, and they all attacked him for it because he said you shouldn't be able to sue mom-and-pop gunshops, but you should be able to sue Smith and Wesson if someone uses the gun for a mass shooting, both of which are asinine, by the way.
00:53:37.000So they create these laws, but then they have a society where everyone is terrified because the left can't say, hey, step in when there's a gang beating, regardless of race, because it's the right thing to do.
00:53:49.000No, you have the chief who came out and you didn't see both sides of the story.
00:53:54.000Well, let me ask, you think that maybe is ringing through the head of Cincinnati fucking citizens when they see a gang beating going on?
00:54:01.000And instead, they're going, like, maybe I should step in.
00:54:03.000Oh, wait, I remember that Karen police chief who said, you need to see both sides, which means that there is a world in which she thinks this is justified, therefore I'm not.
00:54:43.000But that's me, a conservative who believes that there's an actual moral right and a moral wrong and a requirement from you as a human being.
00:54:52.000I also understand why you'd be scared.
00:54:54.000If, hey, if you live in New York, if you live in New York City and you see that happening and the person who is the perpetrator is the wrong race and you're the wrong race and you step in and you do the right thing and you get the wrong prosecutor, you absolutely see it all the time.
00:55:11.000You could be punished more harshly than the person who started the crime in the first place.
00:55:15.000So yeah, I think that at this point, it's completely irrelevant, the idea of a good Samaritan law.
00:55:20.000I think it made sense when we had a country where people had some sense of a civic duty.
00:55:25.000I think today it's really nothing more than the opportunity to lay a trap from leftist lawmakers who care about every single marginalized group or minority group or currently a whatever, insert whatever here, except for you.
00:55:40.000If you are a middle class, upper middle class, white contributing, taxpaying, law-abiding American, you are more at risk of being punished if you use your gun legally.
00:55:56.000You are more at risk of being punished or sued.
00:55:59.000If you intervene legally, you are more at risk or to be punished if you say the right thing legally to the wrong person.
00:56:08.000Meanwhile, you can be someone of the right race, someone who's insert whatever useful minority here today, commit a crime, harm your fellow citizen, and you will bear less risk.
00:56:24.000I'm not making it only about race, but let's call this what it is at this point.
00:56:27.000If you're a white upper middle class male in this country who is legally carrying a firearm, you are a cornucopia of litigation to those on the left.
00:56:38.000And it's all designed to intimidate everyone else into silence, into stopping them from doing the right thing.