Real Coffee with Scott Adams - August 04, 2024


Episode 2556 CWSA 08⧸04⧸24


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 18 minutes

Words per Minute

149.60149

Word Count

11,731

Sentence Count

5

Misogynist Sentences

20

Hate Speech Sentences

26


Summary

The French pole vaulter who lost by a wiener, the French pole-vaulter with the largest penis in the history of pole vaulting, and the French Pole Vaulter whose penis is so large it can actually be mistaken for a UFO.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 hard to reproduce up to levels that nobody can even understand with their tiny shiny human brains
00:00:06.440 all you need for that is a cup or mug or a glass a tankard shells or stein a canteen jug or flask
00:00:11.640 a vessel of any kind fill it with your favorite liquid i like coffee and join me now for the
00:00:17.420 unparalleled pleasure of the dopamine of the day the thing that makes everything better it's called
00:00:22.120 the simultaneous sip and happens now go
00:00:30.000 ah all right this will be a test of your social media awareness when i say better
00:00:37.620 and i pronounce it that way it's better who who talks like that who says instead of better says
00:00:46.940 better entertain entertain
00:00:51.260 it's very interesting speaking style
00:00:56.180 well i would like to give a little advice to anybody who's live streaming do we have anybody
00:01:04.480 listening who's a live streamer also i've been using the rumble studio for a number of months now
00:01:10.880 and like any new technology it's going to have you know a bugger here or there but i got to tell you
00:01:17.400 uh it just instantly increases your income for the same amount of work
00:01:22.360 so if you're only streaming on one platform instead of using rumble studio which is free by the way
00:01:29.540 doesn't cost anything it's uh just on your browser and the rumble studio lets you do what i'm doing
00:01:35.860 right now which is live stream to rumble and youtube and x and locals all at the same time
00:01:40.740 so that's pretty awesome so all i did was push a couple of buttons and it's live streaming on more
00:01:47.840 platforms and the other platforms are monetized so x is monetized in the comments you know for the
00:01:54.580 advertisements so i basically just push one button and my live stream income goes up by 40 percent
00:02:01.460 so if you're not using it because you don't want a 40 percent increase in your income
00:02:08.240 i don't know why you wouldn't use it i mean even if you think oh it's newish it might have a bug here
00:02:14.040 or there like everything in the world um but for the things which are attempting to do multiple
00:02:20.520 platforms at one time is by far the best solution there's nothing close really so go get so go get
00:02:28.100 yourself some free money my favorite story of the last day was the french pole vaulter who lost by a wiener
00:02:35.280 um he literally has a large penis there's no other way to tell this story it is so large that when he
00:02:44.080 pole vaulted uh it got stuck on the pole and knocked the pole down because he cleared the pole except for
00:02:50.780 his large penis that was hanging down now here's the fun part apparently because his uh exercise shorts
00:02:58.980 are kind of thin you can see a perfect outline of his entire wang which they captured at the moment
00:03:06.340 of contact with the bar that he was crossing so we actually got a perfectly clear image
00:03:14.500 of a pole vaulter's penis as outlined by his shorts we still don't have a clear picture of a ufo
00:03:23.140 did you see the one recently that looked like it was a clear picture a video of a ufo and i looked
00:03:33.060 at that thing and i thought it doesn't look like a ufo to me it looks like some kind of balloon or
00:03:39.140 something and then separately people showed videos that were real videos of tents like an actual camping
00:03:47.300 tent that if the wind catches it they can actually become airborne so you can watch like an actual
00:03:54.900 complete tent uh just be airborne and flying around like it's a like it's a ufo so it's easier to get a
00:04:04.740 picture of a pole vaulter's penis than it is to get a picture of a ufo whatever that means
00:04:10.420 well there's a research out of cambridge cytech daily is reporting that uh the love hormone called
00:04:20.180 oxytocin that's the chemical in your body when you're in love and you're rubbing up against people
00:04:25.140 that you love and that chemical comes out and you feel good you're like it feels good to rub against
00:04:29.620 people i love so that's oxytocin and it turns out if you give that to people certain people uh it can
00:04:38.020 fix their obesity and their behavioral problems and their postnatal depression you know what else
00:04:43.220 it can help on again here's some research you could have saved some time and just ask me
00:04:51.860 if you give people oxytocin it solves basically all of their problems
00:04:56.820 oxytocin is literally the drug that makes you feel everything's okay even if it isn't
00:05:01.700 so yes if you give that drug to people it will solve most of their problems and am i surprised
00:05:09.700 that it helps with obesity or behavior problems no because i've long had the theory that i call the
00:05:19.140 pleasure unit principle which is humans have to have a certain amount of pleasure or else they'll just go
00:05:26.580 crazy and that's why if they don't have access to any other kind of pleasure they'll do drugs
00:05:32.740 or they'll have you know casual sex with people they barely know because people need pleasure it's
00:05:38.660 not optional we just have to have it a little bit or we'll do anything to get it we'll break laws we'll
00:05:45.300 kill people we'll do whatever we have to do to get a little bit of pleasure we're just built so we need
00:05:49.860 it so yeah you give somebody this pleasure drug and it should make them need less pleasure in other domains
00:05:57.300 because they are a little bit satisfied makes sense to me here's another one that seems like
00:06:04.900 maybe it's a big deal so you know the biggest indicator in the world of how everything's going
00:06:10.820 to be in the future is energy energy prices and energy availability especially battery storage that's
00:06:17.620 why i talk about it so much so here's another battery storage kind of device made from bricks
00:06:24.420 it turns out if you just heat a brick until it's super hot and then you put it in in an insulated
00:06:33.060 container it will just stay hot so you can essentially store heat
00:06:40.500 heat for when you need it later and apparently it's pretty efficient you just heat up a bunch of
00:06:47.620 bricks and keep them insulated and they'll be almost just as warm when you check on them the next day
00:06:53.220 and then you can use it to heat things and do whatever you do with heat so apparently there's
00:06:58.900 a stanford-led study on these uh fire bricks they call them and it's really promising it looks like
00:07:05.220 there'd be no new technology that needs to be invented it's more of an engineering thing right you just
00:07:11.780 take this idea and you engineer it and you're good to go
00:07:15.460 um you know the truth social platform that president ex-president trump is on uh they're introducing a
00:07:26.820 new feature for streaming uh i didn't quite know from the uh the news on it whether it means live
00:07:36.340 streaming or does it just mean a streaming tv of tv shows that they think you you should want to see
00:07:44.340 that maybe are not so available in other places so we'll wait and see what that means but could be
00:07:49.780 kind of a big deal if they create a streaming service for content that you wouldn't see in other places
00:07:57.060 there is this is another big deal we'll get to the politics next but there's a shuttered up uh
00:08:03.780 nuclear power plant in michigan and as you know a number of nuclear power plants have been closed in
00:08:10.340 the past but it's going to be reopened fairly soon and uh the plants owner whole tech international
00:08:18.500 they're going to open it in late 2025 so next year it will be reopened which is a big big deal
00:08:27.140 if you can reopen existing plants you don't just get the nuclear plant and i guess the government it was
00:08:34.260 helpful with some loans and stuff but you don't just get the electricity um this one is going to
00:08:40.500 add small modular units so here the big play is not that you reopen an old one that's cool and it's
00:08:49.700 stepping the right direction but the big play is that once it's opened you've got an approved nuclear
00:08:56.340 site so you can add small nuclear small modular nuclear units to it to vastly improve the energy
00:09:06.900 and the safety really um and you can just keep growing that way so this is a big big deal in terms
00:09:14.100 of a model for how to get nuclear as fast as possible so we'll keep an eye on this the small modular
00:09:22.740 nuclear units which have not really been invented yet but are pretty close that's that's the bigger
00:09:28.420 story so if you're following this uh trump assassination attempted assassination sniper story
00:09:38.180 is it my imagination or is everything we learn about it make it sound worse than the day before
00:09:46.420 and the fact that it just dribbles out is just hilarious at this point
00:09:50.020 you know it started out with there might have been some kind of communication problem
00:09:57.700 and then it turned into well you know we think the police maybe didn't communicate so well with the
00:10:05.060 secret service and then we're like well maybe maybe it was a management problem you know they knew there
00:10:11.780 was somebody there but somebody gave a you know stand down order there's no evidence of that but
00:10:17.860 maybe so we all we thought it was bad right from the moment the first bullet hit the president's ear
00:10:25.220 everybody knew that something bad had happened and you know there was some let's say uh let's say uh
00:10:32.820 some capability was not quite satisfied there so they they weren't quite doing the job so we all knew that
00:10:40.580 but as of today it just keeps getting funnier so apparently we just learned and why did it take us
00:10:48.420 this long to learn this that i think yesterday we found out that it was the first time they'd had
00:10:55.460 counter snipers at a trump rally now how why did it take so long to learn that didn't you didn't you just
00:11:03.940 normally assume that it was normal and that they probably had a crack team who was used to working
00:11:10.580 together and so they would have you know their situation would be all worked out they'd know how
00:11:15.140 to operate together nope it's the first time they'd ever put uh counter snipers on a trump rally while
00:11:22.500 he's a candidate not while he was president but while he's a candidate and and then we also learned
00:11:31.220 that instead of having radios where the local police which were part of the operation could
00:11:36.820 easily talk to the snipers and the secret service they were told to just use their cell phones and text
00:11:45.940 and you know how easy it is to send a text when there's an emergency have you ever tried to text
00:11:52.660 somebody really really fast because it's an emergency i don't know about you but my thumbs do all the wrong
00:11:58.740 stuff then like damn it no no stop autocorrecting no damn it no that's not the word autocorrect
00:12:06.900 yeah the autocorrect alone would want to make me shoot the phone instead of the bad guys
00:12:12.180 but uh yeah this story just keeps getting worse and i continue to say that the dilber filter is the
00:12:19.540 most predictive the dilber filter which is just bad management and and employees acting like regular
00:12:27.300 employees like everybody everybody does everywhere and maybe the people who were most wrong were the
00:12:35.300 professional snipers who weighed in right after the thing they said oh let me tell you how there's no
00:12:42.340 way this could have happened on its own this had to be some kind of an inside plot because there's no way
00:12:50.100 these professional snipers could be operating so poorly and so unprofessionally to which i said
00:12:57.780 have you spent five minutes in the real world have you ever been part of an organization of high-level
00:13:07.060 professionals not as good as you'd think nope there's no place you can go with all the
00:13:15.220 high-level professionals who've been highly trained and have years of experience and it's not stupid
00:13:20.820 every organization is stupid that's why dilbert exists i don't know if you know the origin story for the
00:13:29.860 dilbert comic i was working at a bank and everything was you know crazy and ridiculous
00:13:36.820 and i just thought well i have some bad luck here i got a job at the craziest most ridiculous
00:13:44.100 business in the whole world i can solve this by moving to a different company
00:13:51.540 you can laugh at me it's okay i was young i didn't know any better so here was my brilliant idea
00:13:58.020 i would move from the bank to the local phone company at the time pacific bell
00:14:02.740 and i wouldn't have any more of these big company problems pretty pretty good plan wasn't it
00:14:12.900 it's so dumb when i think about it like i literally the problem was i was young
00:14:16.900 and when you're young you sort of believe what people tell you because you haven't you haven't
00:14:23.060 seen it falsified yet so i thought well all these big corporate professional places you know if i go to
00:14:31.380 a good one i'm not going to see any management problems they obviously have the best management
00:14:36.580 the best employees so you know it's a high paid job i mean it's going to be some really efficient
00:14:43.300 operations nope so when i got to the second big company that had nothing to do with the first
00:14:49.220 company and the problems were exactly the same the names were different you know there were different
00:14:56.820 acronyms for projects and stuff but it was all the same and that's how dilbert was born
00:15:02.900 once i realized that two completely unrelated companies would have all the same dynamics
00:15:08.900 that was the birth of the dilbert comic because i presumed that it was universal i didn't know
00:15:18.580 so it wasn't until the comic got out there and other people kept saying you must have a spy at my
00:15:23.860 company that's when i realized oh yeah it really is universal those so i was right i just guessed
00:15:30.740 that there was more of it than the two companies that i had experienced so no if you thought that
00:15:37.220 these uh snipers were crack teams of professionals who would never make an easy mistake you haven't
00:15:44.420 spent much time in the real world i'm sorry all right we got the drunks coming in with the all capital letters
00:15:53.940 all right uh you know everything's easier on social media when you realize that the people
00:16:03.780 who write in all caps are drunk watch so the the trolls will come in because they always do
00:16:11.700 and and they'll be in all caps and they'll be yelling and they'll never they'll never stop
00:16:16.900 they'll do it all the way through the show they're just drunk that's exactly what it is
00:16:23.940 somebody's writing in all caps check my youtube stream
00:16:35.540 i don't think i will all right um
00:16:42.260 so
00:16:44.980 uh the heritage foundation economist um ej and tony i guess he told breitbart news that most of the job
00:16:52.900 growth has been foreign-born workers he says we've lost 1.2 million jobs among native-born americans
00:17:00.740 so all of the job gains 1.3 million have gone to foreign-born workers
00:17:07.940 really now i don't know if foreign-born includes if that includes people who are legal citizens or here
00:17:17.540 legally on green cards or whatever i don't have a problem with that that would suggest that there
00:17:23.300 were jobs that were hard to fill and skilled people are coming into the country that's good news
00:17:28.500 it's good news if we're bringing in skilled people from other countries uh but if they are non-citizens
00:17:36.100 and they're not here legally and they're taking the jobs that would be bad so i guess i have
00:17:42.020 uh an additional question about this um we want high quality hard-working immigrants that's basically
00:17:52.980 the power of this country it came from exactly that so we just don't want to do it the stupid way where
00:17:58.900 you open the border and let everybody stream in all right abc um was going to do a debate with harris and
00:18:08.020 trump but trump said no on abc doesn't like them but he wants to do it on fox news fox news says yes
00:18:16.580 but harris says no so now they have this weird situation where they both say yes to a debate
00:18:22.260 but no to a debate because they only want to do it with their preferred network
00:18:26.580 um i would think i agree with anthony scaramucci who said this is probably just negotiating and
00:18:33.700 probably they'll end up with some kind of debate that's neither abc nor fox news or maybe it's just
00:18:40.020 both both wouldn't be bad um so i think there'll be a debate i think that neither of them can say no to
00:18:48.660 the debate
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00:19:05.380 richer than you think
00:19:08.660 all right um it's been 13 days i think jd vance said this 13 days since kamala harris did an interview
00:19:17.140 uh well 13 days since she became the presumptive uh nominee without doing an interview now can you
00:19:25.780 really imagine anybody running for president and two weeks go by and they haven't sat down for an
00:19:33.380 interview and there's no other candidate on their side how do you explain that there's only one
00:19:40.340 explanation it's exactly what it looks like her team the democrats managed to find the only two
00:19:49.620 candidates in the world first biden and then harris who can't do what every other candidate in the world
00:19:55.620 can do which is talk to the press the only time there was somebody else who couldn't do that was
00:20:03.780 fetterman when he had major medical problems but even fetterman now can certainly talk to the press
00:20:12.420 anytime he wants to because he's recovered but how in the world did the democrats land on the only two
00:20:21.780 people who can't have a conversation with a reporter the most basic thing that a politician needs to do
00:20:29.620 the only two i mean have you have you heard of anybody else who was not qualified to talk to the
00:20:34.740 press and i think the real problem is going to be when she talks about anything that's has to do with
00:20:41.220 energy or the economy because i don't think she's good at explaining things
00:20:48.740 have you ever met somebody who was very smart but they couldn't explain things does anybody have
00:20:54.340 that experience because i think you know i think kamala harris's native intelligence is probably you
00:21:01.460 know average-ish a little bit above average maybe um but there are people who have who are smart
00:21:08.980 sort of in a general way but absolutely cannot explain even the simplest thing you know those people
00:21:15.220 right she seems to be one of them because i can't tell if it's a lack of knowledge or that she's
00:21:23.220 freezing up when she's in some kind of a tense situation or what but i'm starting to think she's
00:21:30.820 one of these people who can't explain anything and it wouldn't matter what it was because have you
00:21:36.740 noticed that every time you see her talking word salad it's always in the context of trying to explain
00:21:43.380 something it's not even in her opinion when she's just talking about her opinion she does okay
00:21:50.260 i would like this i would we shouldn't do this i like that but when she's trying to explain to you
00:21:55.220 why her opinion makes sense or like to give you a lay of the land you know here's our situation
00:22:01.620 here's how inflation works off the rails immediately
00:22:05.380 so if you're a reporter and you want to send her off the rails ask her not just her opinion
00:22:13.780 which would be easy just say can you explain how the debt works for this country and then explain how
00:22:22.260 your policies would pay down the debt that would be the end of her could trump do that yeah it could
00:22:29.300 because he would bullshit and he would change the you change the topic if he needed to but he also
00:22:36.500 knows enough that he would say stuff like we got to cut expenses and we're going to boost you know
00:22:41.780 we're going to boost gdp and stuff like that now i don't think that's enough so trump would be full of
00:22:47.860 shit because he doesn't have any plan for the debt either nobody does it's just way too big but at least
00:22:52.980 he could bluff his way through it and when he was done you'd say oh well okay he handled the question
00:22:58.580 well even though it's not a solution for the debt but can you imagine kamala harris even trying to
00:23:04.820 handle that just even trying to handle that i don't think she can do it so the big issue with
00:23:12.980 her is not what today's polls look like the big issue is how in the world is she going to
00:23:19.060 do normal campaigning i don't think she can do it
00:23:23.940 so there's a another clip going around and where kamala harris is trying to explain to an audience
00:23:30.900 about cloud storage and people are laughing because she sort of acts like the cloud is in the sky
00:23:40.740 and so the story that people are telling when they're passing around this video of her doing
00:23:45.060 a bad job of explaining what cloud computing is how are you missing the bigger story
00:23:52.980 she's drunk in that clip you don't see that so people are sending it around like she's bad at
00:24:01.460 explaining cloud storage no that's not what you're seeing you're seeing a drunk
00:24:06.260 trying to explain something if you tell me that's not drunk or high or something yeah i mean i'll just
00:24:13.700 say drunk but watch the clip again if you've seen the clip once because it's all over social media
00:24:20.660 just watch it a second time and say to yourself does she look like she's inebriated and your answer is
00:24:28.660 going to be yes very yes hard yes it's just if you're not thinking in those terms you think maybe
00:24:35.620 it's just a bad explanation of a technology it's not that she's clearly and obviously inebriated
00:24:44.740 how in the world are we not talking about that every day all right are we just going to ignore
00:24:49.940 it like fucking joe biden's dementia that we could see for four years we're just going to do the same
00:24:55.860 fucking thing with the fact that she's clearly drunk in public a lot just gonna ignore it
00:25:04.100 now i think the problem is that your traditional news um maybe they don't have you know evidence so
00:25:12.900 they don't want to accuse her of something that they can't back up which would be fine you know if
00:25:18.180 you're fox news i don't think you can report it as news that she's drunk because there's no no
00:25:24.740 verifiable news but that was hard to do with biden too right but we could all see it we're all looking
00:25:32.420 at it with her you know with our educated eyes if you can't tell she's drunk in those videos you need
00:25:39.700 to talk to a drunk ask somebody who drinks a lot they'll they'll fill you in there's something going
00:25:46.820 on maybe you know maybe not alcohol but there's inebriation of some kind
00:25:53.700 well there's let's get into the story about her husband doug emhoff uh allegedly i guess he admitted
00:26:00.660 it so he did a statement where he he admitted that this happened that in his first marriage when the
00:26:07.140 marriage maybe wasn't going so well he had an affair with was it his nanny or something
00:26:11.940 and she got pregnant and did not keep the baby as far as we know now people are asking did he
00:26:21.540 pressure a woman to get an abortion because if he did that would sort of be bad for him but i'm gonna say
00:26:31.380 i don't care i don't care i feel like it would be hypocritical to go after the you know the first
00:26:41.700 husband or whatever the hell he is for some past you know marriage and discretion when trump is the
00:26:49.220 candidate on the other side now i get the i get the argument that if you're going for a character kind
00:26:56.260 of an argument you need to look at character on both sides but even then he's not the candidate
00:27:03.940 so i'm going to say that i don't i don't really want to see any traction on this it's just not where
00:27:11.700 we need to be as a country because if you start eliminating people for stuff like that you end up with
00:27:19.540 no politicians uh i don't think that you quite understand how many high-end politicians are having
00:27:29.300 affairs if you knew the actual percentage of let's say elected federal officials who are in these
00:27:42.100 basically the highest sex city in the world washington dc and uh surrounded all the time
00:27:49.140 by people who might want to get with you to improve their their careers
00:27:56.660 i just assume if you if you start looking at their sex lives it's all going to be bad so i'd
00:28:02.980 rather just say can you do the job and you know whatever you're doing on your own time just go do that
00:28:08.340 in your own time i i can't i just can't get excited about that element of any of this so doug good luck to
00:28:16.020 you i hope you do okay on this well let's talk about trump's strategy uh some smart consultants who
00:28:27.860 are republicans say that trump should be just talking about economics that's pretty solid advice meaning that
00:28:36.660 the only people who matter are independents you know the the hardcore democrats have decided and
00:28:42.580 the hardcore republicans have decided and they're not going to change their minds so you got some
00:28:46.980 independence independence do do get influenced by the better economic argument and trump has the better
00:28:54.580 argument um so do you think it's true that he made a mistake this is what some would say when he
00:29:05.380 he questioned the uh the identity of harris is she black woman or is she uh indian american
00:29:14.180 and uh that business that he did at the uh black journalist event well here's my take i think it was
00:29:21.780 the right play and it worked so trump never has to go back there again he never has to bring it up again he
00:29:28.660 could but he doesn't have to and if you've seen interviews with people you've probably seen some
00:29:34.820 women who said oh my god look at him disrespecting those women on that stage he's so mean to women
00:29:42.340 bringing up all this racist stuff right uh and then you see black men have you seen any of the interviews
00:29:50.660 with black men do you know what the black men say well you know he's got a point she's not really black
00:29:59.780 now of course there there are great differences in both the black and the white or both the black
00:30:05.300 male and female opinions so their opinions of course are all over the place they're not they're not
00:30:11.060 hardened in one direction or the other but i think you're going to see a pretty big difference between
00:30:17.780 the male and female opinion of what happened at the black uh journalist event i think the women
00:30:24.740 saw something like a bully and so they're just going to react in purely negative ways and i think the men
00:30:31.300 saw somebody talking back to that bitch that they wish they had said something to and i think that
00:30:36.900 they're also saying you know you have a good point if identity is going to be our main argument
00:30:42.180 as a democrat it's identity identity identity i think it's fair to say that her identity doesn't
00:30:48.260 match anybody's that's my opinion kamala harris's identity doesn't match anybody she's not black she's
00:30:57.540 not indian she is both black and indian and maybe something else who knows and i've never met one like
00:31:04.420 her in my whole life i'm not i i was trying to think if i'd ever met anybody who was both black and indian
00:31:12.900 american i can't think of one and this goes back to my point that everybody is infinitely different from
00:31:20.420 everybody else the moment you say she's one of me you know then you want to support her hey she's like me
00:31:28.100 but we're not we're all just so different there's not a single person like her who is you know brought
00:31:35.060 up in america part black jamaican you know even to add a little extra flavor and i think the you know
00:31:44.180 obviously there's nothing wrong with either of those things right so so there's nothing wrong with being
00:31:48.980 black there's nothing wrong with being indian american obviously but why can't she just be the one person who's both
00:31:57.780 why does she have to choose one see that's the problem the the problem that bothers me is that
00:32:03.220 she's being forced to choose an identity that's not her identity she's not exactly just black and
00:32:10.900 she's not just indian american she's both of those things so why can't that be her identity why does it
00:32:19.060 have to be you know somebody's got to be like her so the trouble is that if you if you acknowledge that
00:32:25.220 she's unique there's just nobody like her she's the only one i know of that i've ever even heard
00:32:31.300 of really i've never even heard of that combination before so if you see a black man in a barber shop
00:32:40.340 there was just recently some video like that where the black man said yeah i'm not so sure she's black
00:32:45.540 like like like like we are that seems fair to me and i think it could make a difference so i think that
00:32:55.380 trump angered democrat women but they weren't going to vote for him anyway and i think black democrat men
00:33:05.540 said you know it's not the worst argument that the identity question needs to be sorted out and you
00:33:12.740 should understand what it is so i think trump actually won i i think there are the people that
00:33:19.300 could be persuaded maybe were a little bit and the people who couldn't be persuaded just got extra mad
00:33:26.900 which cost him nothing a little extra mad of the people who were mad already nothing it was free i think
00:33:33.700 this was this was free money i think he picked up free money and i think it completely worked that's my take
00:33:43.460 now should he talk about uh economics more yes but he put that out there and it can never get back
00:33:49.620 you know you can't put that toothpaste back in the tube so that will just live out there forever he
00:33:54.740 never has to bring it up again it'll just be a forever topic and do its work
00:34:02.100 well frank luntz says that the question that would take down kamala harris would be can you if you were
00:34:08.420 talking to citizens can you name one thing she accomplished as vice president however um i don't
00:34:17.860 think anybody would care what were barack obama's accomplishments before they voted for him for
00:34:24.820 president a junior junior senator who hadn't done anything so i don't think that i think frank luntz is
00:34:35.700 completely wrong that the democrats have no interest whatsoever in her accomplishments
00:34:42.100 and even if you know they make up some or they don't make up some i don't think it makes any difference
00:34:47.380 i think they're voting for somebody that represents the policies they want and that's the end of the
00:34:52.420 story you could put anybody in her place and they'd have about the same same support
00:34:59.940 so i disagree i think it's going to be about how we feel about things
00:35:03.540 more than any logic about what she accomplished so it looks like uh this josh shapiro the governor
00:35:12.900 of pennsylvania might it's not official yet right but it looks like he'll be the choice for vice president
00:35:18.980 but uh jack basabic and mike benz were talking about it um on uh video i think jack was hosting that and
00:35:28.100 it was a friday's episode of human events daily and they were discussing apparently there was some
00:35:35.700 case when josh shapiro was he must have been in some kind of district attorney role i don't know his
00:35:43.220 background exactly but there was a case of a woman who was ruled a suicide uh and she was ellen greenberg
00:35:52.900 and she was 27 and she was stabbed 20 times and died and um 10 of the times she was stabbed were in
00:36:01.940 the front 10 in the back and two of the stab wounds came after she was already dead
00:36:09.380 so the coroner of course labeled it a a homicide because how in the world do you stab yourself in
00:36:16.340 the back 10 times and how do you stab yourself twice after you're already dead
00:36:20.260 so pretty clear case of obviously obviously
00:36:30.420 and so it's obviously murder but it turns out that uh josh shapiro was signed off on it being
00:36:38.100 changed uh the opinion changed to suicide
00:36:43.620 suicide now i don't know which facts about this story are true
00:36:50.260 you know i'd wait a little bit but suppose the basic facts were true
00:36:56.740 that she was stabbed all those times and a lot of them were in the back and two of them were after
00:37:01.060 she died if those facts are true then josh shapiro covered up a murder and knew it he would actually be
00:37:10.420 accessory to the crime wouldn't he if you knowingly covered up a murder when it was your job to do the
00:37:17.300 the opposite aren't you accessory to the crime in some way like isn't covering it up pretty bad
00:37:24.900 crime itself so although it seems that philadelphia is a totally rigged city we do have a vice president
00:37:33.620 who would have some uh good old blackmail on and does it seem like a coincidence to you that every time
00:37:40.340 somebody seems acceptable to be a major leader they're easily blackmailable or they look like they would be
00:37:49.220 i've got a feeling that he was selected because he knows how philadelphia and pennsylvania can cheat in
00:37:56.260 elections i think he's a designated cheater for pennsylvania that's what i think that he might be
00:38:03.620 connected to a machine that does some cheating now if you're new to my podcasts here's my take on the
00:38:12.020 cheating by the way trump is going hard in his last rally saying about 2020 was obviously cheated
00:38:19.540 have you noticed that it's easier to say that in public now ontario the wait is over the gold
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00:39:12.100 ontario 1-866-531-2600 19 and over physically present in ontario eligibility restrictions apply
00:39:19.620 see golden nugget casino.com for details please play responsibly do you know what changed
00:39:25.620 what changed what changed was about a hundred different stories about uh cheating that was
00:39:32.100 detected in various elections now none of them were big enough and confirmed by a court to reverse 2020
00:39:40.420 but we have been fed a steady stream of well you know this this wasn't right and you know these names
00:39:46.900 shouldn't be on the list and they haven't cleaned up their voter rolls and they do seem to be registering
00:39:52.980 people who are non-citizens at least going to mail them a ballot and wow it seems like a lot of the
00:39:58.260 ballots that were mailed in had the same home address and on and on and on and on so here's my take
00:40:06.260 and it's the strongest take on this i don't know if the 2020 or any other election was ever rigged
00:40:12.260 what i do know is if it's not if our elections are not rigged routinely
00:40:22.180 it would be the biggest surprise in the world why because i think it's possible to rig them and the
00:40:30.020 rewards for doing it would be enormous and the people who do that sort of thing are in fact involved
00:40:35.780 in our domestic politics which is the cia so if the cia never did anything that was
00:40:42.660 internally focused if we knew that the intelligence units had never done an op on american soil then i'd
00:40:50.660 say well the people who would be so well trained to rig an election you know the really ones who really
00:40:58.500 know how to do it right uh they don't even work in the united states so you don't have to worry about
00:41:03.300 it they're not really focused here but we watched the intelligence people um do the laptop op we
00:41:10.660 watched them do the uh russia collusion op so we don't have to wonder if our intelligence assets in
00:41:18.180 the united states have turned their weaponry on the domestic situation they have it's all confirmed
00:41:24.260 in a number of different ways and they do it with you know mike ben's tells the story the best
00:41:29.060 but uh you know there are all these ngos that are funded and they can use european entities to
00:41:34.660 influence businesses in the united states so basically there's an entire web set up for the
00:41:41.700 intelligence units of the united states to control domestic everything from domestic news to everything
00:41:48.900 so if we don't have rigged elections it would be the weirdest thing because they of course have an
00:41:57.140 interest in rigging the election a big interest gigantic interest they have so they have the ability
00:42:04.420 they have the ability it's legal apparently or legal enough and they have an incentive
00:42:12.180 in one situation ever have you seen where there's a huge incentive to cheat
00:42:18.660 there's the ability to cheat and get away with it and you have lots of time so that if you wanted to do
00:42:25.700 something bad even if you didn't get it done this election well you have four more years to get
00:42:30.660 ready for the next one how in the world with that setup can the elections be real i don't even know
00:42:38.900 if it's an option if you just said on paper let me just describe the situation here all right you're
00:42:44.260 an alien from another planet here's the situation the who wins the election is of the greatest greatest
00:42:51.140 import like billionaires can make another billion and wars will be fought and you know economies will
00:42:57.700 be destroyed or helped based on who gets elected it's the biggest biggest biggest benefit if you could rig
00:43:04.820 it how about the ability well we've got a whole industry of people our intelligence people who know how to
00:43:14.740 rig elections because they do it in other countries are those other countries so different from america
00:43:21.220 that none of those techniques would work here i think they would work here we have machines we have mail-in
00:43:28.980 ballots it's all the it's all you need really so do i have any specific accusations about machines or
00:43:37.380 companies or entities no i do not but that's why they do it the the reason that our intelligence people
00:43:45.380 can meddle in other elections is that they are pretty confident they can get away with it even if
00:43:51.060 they get caught so even if they get caught they'll be like oh well what are you going to do about it so
00:43:58.740 that's the current situation even if they all got caught it would be well what are you going to do about
00:44:03.140 it the news i'll tell the news to say you didn't we didn't get caught and then the news would say nobody
00:44:08.660 got caught and you would say i just saw it but i just where's that story it's gone now well i'm going
00:44:15.300 to google that story and i'm going to prove wait the story's gone so they can disappear any story they
00:44:22.420 can reframe any story with their immediate dominance they have a huge incentive to do it no downside whatsoever
00:44:30.020 and lots of time and infinite money how is it not rigged you can't even tell the story where it
00:44:40.660 would sound not laughable that under those conditions we would have a like a you know a good election with
00:44:47.540 no doubt whatsoever so i'll i'm going to double down and say that i think that our elections will not
00:44:54.580 produce a winner it will produce a result that is doubted by one side no matter which way it goes
00:45:02.180 the other side will say it was rigged
00:45:05.700 so it looks like we'll have a president who's not elected by the people
00:45:10.420 because i guess it then goes to the house right and then the house would pick trump
00:45:16.020 because there are more states that are republican and then trump would be considered an illegitimate
00:45:22.420 president because the democrats would say he rigged the election somehow and then they would have
00:45:28.900 organized protests that the intelligence units would organize and make it look like they're normal
00:45:35.140 and cities will burn so i expect cities will be on fire for much of the trump term if he were to win
00:45:46.100 but i don't think there's much chance it can happen because if they do control the election they're
00:45:50.660 going to make sure he doesn't win let's talk about venezuela which can't be that different from the
00:45:57.540 united states but you know how the united states and the opposition that at least on paper lost
00:46:06.420 they're saying that they won by a major landslide and that madura stole it do you know what sources
00:46:14.100 they're looking at and what sources the united states is looking at to determine that the election was rigged
00:46:19.380 they're looking at sources that the united states pays so the united states funds
00:46:28.740 some people that said the election was rigged and then the united states says look these independent
00:46:36.580 people over here say that election was rigged except that they're not independent they're funded by the
00:46:41.940 people who want to hear what they have to say and they want to say the right thing it turns out that
00:46:47.540 there is one um maybe independent polling firm that says the opposite so there's a independent polling
00:46:57.460 firm that is not paid for by the united states i don't know who does pay for it but independent would
00:47:04.980 mean maybe not maduro but you can never be sure um and that says that maduro won fair and square
00:47:14.980 now i don't know so i would say that this is one of those situations where you can't trust
00:47:20.660 anything the united states says about the election because the united states has been very transparent about
00:47:27.700 working on overthrowing the country so why would you believe anything they said about it
00:47:34.980 and then why would you think that we would overthrow venezuela so obviously and so transparently and that
00:47:42.020 we wouldn't do the same thing or the same people wouldn't do the same thing in the united states
00:47:46.900 of course they would whatever it is that drives them to do venezuela is 10 times stronger to do it in the
00:47:52.740 united states because you need to control your environment especially if a lot of resources
00:47:57.700 are involved that's the united states so of course they're going to try
00:48:04.900 well here's a report uh from some auditors uh so united sovereign americans whoever they are they
00:48:14.020 filed the lawsuit against multiple states uh this is the gateway pundits reporting this and this group
00:48:20.100 found that according to them 29 million voter registrations that need to be removed explained
00:48:25.940 or adjudicated meaning that it would be people who maybe had the wrong address or there was a typo
00:48:32.580 in the address or something so there could be lots of different reasons not all of them are evil but 29 million
00:48:39.700 questionable registrations is that enough to change an election yeah like by a lot that's plenty
00:48:50.900 if these were all illegal voters and most of them ended up voting democrat yeah that's enough to rig an
00:48:57.300 election that's all you need right there so let's talk about iran uh has anything happened in the last
00:49:08.020 20 minutes as iran bombed israel so i know hezbollah had been sending a bunch of rockets into
00:49:15.380 a city in israel but the iron dome was doing its job i guess these were kind of low quality rockets
00:49:23.060 someone else said that the reason there were so many low quality missiles being fired at israel
00:49:29.460 is that israel would use up its anti-missile defense on the low quality ones and then they would also
00:49:36.820 learn more about where the defense is and where it's working and not working and then they would
00:49:42.020 use their high quality missiles so the thinking is that you know tel aviv might be very close to a
00:49:49.380 major missile attack uh that you know at least it would have some chance of getting through the iron
00:49:55.700 dome and the reports today that gps is being jammed in tel aviv which would be an indication that israel
00:50:04.340 expects missiles or drones that use gps and it's expecting them any moment that's why they're jamming
00:50:12.820 gps so it could go down very quickly so trump was in uh did a rally in georgia and he inexplicably but
00:50:23.220 i guess we understand why went after the government governor kemp who was a republican so you don't
00:50:29.700 expect trump to go after a republican this hard but he went after him for not being supportive when he was
00:50:35.460 when trump had been questioning the 2020 election but not being supportive now i guess he's not endorsing
00:50:41.620 trump and so trump went after him he said he's a bad guy he's disloyal he's just an average governor
00:50:48.580 you could do better and then some people said trump why are you going after republicans
00:50:55.620 and then i said because it works that's why you do it you do it because it works do you think he
00:51:03.540 hasn't noticed that that works trump's endorsement or lack of endorsement of a candidate is pretty powerful
00:51:12.180 and he does make a big deal about loyalty you know look you're either republican or you're not you
00:51:17.300 should be loyal if you are and i think his loyalty argument which can be kind of off-putting if you're
00:51:24.100 watching it from the other party you're like whoa it sounds like a dictator he just wants loyalty
00:51:29.060 uh but i think it's a strong play especially among men among men loyalty has i hate to say this but
00:51:41.220 has a deeper meaning than it does to women uh loyalty in a political sense has just more meaning to men i
00:51:47.700 think we're just designed that way and i think it works yeah i think if trump can get people who are
00:51:56.980 more supportive of his campaign and he can depress people who are against him that's part of his job
00:52:05.620 so i don't i don't care that he praises people who likes him and goes after people who don't support him
00:52:11.540 seems fair to me all right here's a uh i did a test um well i i posted this yesterday
00:52:22.180 i asked people to see how long it takes from the time they turn on msnbc to detect a lie
00:52:28.420 and then somebody said to me but scott why don't you try the same thing with fox news
00:52:36.180 fox news doesn't lie too so i thought to myself i will do that i'll do cnn msnbc and fox news and
00:52:44.740 i'll just randomly this is not a science of course no science here but i'll just randomly turn them on
00:52:51.300 and i'll see how long before i hear a lie so i started with cnn and within 30 seconds one of the
00:52:59.220 guests said that trump lied about the 2020 election results that's a lie because what we know is that
00:53:08.020 trump thought that they were rigged and then he said he believed they were rigged is that a lie
00:53:14.020 it's not a lie at worst he's wrong but you couldn't know one way or the other so do you think there's
00:53:22.660 anybody who works at cnn or is invited in cnn as a guest who would know if state actors had cleverly
00:53:30.020 rigged an election in ways we couldn't tell no the only thing you can know is that trump makes a claim
00:53:36.980 that cannot be tracked positively or negatively right so it's a lie to say that he's lying about
00:53:44.740 the election because that would assume that you know for sure that the election was not rigged which
00:53:50.260 is not knowable that's a lie so cnn failed within 30 seconds a guest told a lie that wasn't checked by
00:53:59.220 the host so then i turned on msnbc and they were going to break so they they went a good 30 seconds
00:54:10.020 within a lie but then as they went to break they said and when we'll be back alexander vindman will be
00:54:16.420 here to fact check trump now i didn't come back but do you think alexander vindman is going to tell
00:54:25.460 the truth about trump there's no chance for that there's there's not the slightest chance he's going
00:54:32.260 to tell the truth so they did make it 30 seconds but only because they went to commercial then i went to
00:54:41.060 fox news and i thought all right let's be fair you know i'm sure somebody on fox news is going to say
00:54:47.940 some bullshit and i'm going to say all right you know you got me there it is it's you know it's
00:54:52.980 everybody's doing it and i turned it on and it was a somebody talking about a bill they were introducing
00:55:01.780 to end sanctuary cities and it was just somebody talking about the bill and i'm waiting for the lie
00:55:08.900 to see one now i'm not going to claim that fox news has never told you something that didn't check
00:55:18.100 out that would be dumb because all the news stations get stuff wrong they all have some you know elements
00:55:25.540 of bias that's just universally true but there's nothing like msnbc msnbc is only lies all day long
00:55:34.740 and when i say only lies i mean really a hundred percent of what they say about trump is either the
00:55:40.740 wrong context or just a flat-out lie and cnn is somewhere in the middle and and fox news at least
00:55:48.100 does a much better job of separating its news from its opinion so to me that gets differently
00:55:55.140 here's a law fair update i don't even remember what this was judge tanya chuckkin uh has uh
00:56:05.380 let's see she's back on the case for the federal election interference case and maybe the mar-a-lago
00:56:11.780 boxes or something and uh she's denied trump's motion to dismiss the case based on selective and vindictive
00:56:21.620 prosecution chuckkin found no evidence that prosecutors abused their authority or behaved
00:56:27.620 vindictively really really there's no evidence of that
00:56:34.180 so it's been denied so i guess that uh there'll be some kind of hearing coming up on that
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00:57:14.260 the law fair stuff because i really think none of it's legitimate and i also think that trump's lawyers
00:57:20.820 now know how to stall anything until after the election so i don't know not not too worried about
00:57:28.580 it axios is reporting that a bunch of researchers in europe say that there could be a tipping point
00:57:36.100 well there is they say there is a tipping point and that we might be getting closer to it on the
00:57:41.220 climate meaning that we'd reach such a point that everything goes off the rails it's just like
00:57:47.300 suddenly you hit that point where everything falls apart because it's too hot and here's what they said
00:57:53.380 there's a 45 chance of triggering one or more tipping points by the year 2300
00:58:00.660 by the year 2300 now those of you who've been with me for a while do i need to explain to you
00:58:16.020 that there's no science that can predict something to the year 2300 are you fucking kidding me and this
00:58:24.260 made it into the news the news is so stupid here here's what here's how this should have been handled
00:58:32.420 hey i've got a story about some researchers who made a prediction for the year 2300 oh well
00:58:38.980 fuck you and go away what this is an important story it's about climate change and what will happen in
00:58:46.180 the year 2300 fuck you you're an idiot go away but it's coming from researchers important researchers
00:58:54.660 who do science and stuff and they say with their numbers and their calculations and their percentages
00:59:00.500 that by 2300 there's a 45 chance that there will be a tipping point
00:59:05.380 what's going on in the year 2300 if you if you needed my help on this one you haven't been paying
00:59:21.300 attention nobody could predict the future it used to be my job to predict the future and and everybody
00:59:29.620 knew that a three-year prediction was the only thing you could sell you know beyond that everybody
00:59:35.300 would laugh but even everybody knew the three year was bullshit it's just that you had to do some
00:59:40.820 kind of analysis but you didn't want to do it beyond three years because then everybody would laugh at
00:59:46.980 you and say come on you can't guess five years in the future nobody can do that so no guessing to the
00:59:54.580 year 2300 absolutely ridiculous let's talk about project 2025 as you know the trump campaign has been
01:00:05.060 been trying to slap it down because it has some uh policy recommendations that trump does not
01:00:11.940 embrace the best example is that uh abortion pill the project 2025 people want it to be uh illegal
01:00:20.900 federally illegal everywhere trump does not want it to be illegal so the project 2025 people would want to
01:00:28.660 do something that basically tells women what they can do with their bodies trump has said nope i'm not
01:00:35.140 going to tell you what you can do with your body is that a small deal or a big deal to me that's a really
01:00:42.260 really big deal because one of the strongest messages on the left is that the republicans want
01:00:50.180 to control your body trump is very aggressively saying the opposite no i'm not going to do anything with that
01:00:56.660 drug no the states get to decide if you have abortion i'm out so trump wants to have nothing
01:01:04.260 to do with telling anybody what to do with their body he doesn't want the vaccinations to be mandatory
01:01:10.020 he wants it to be an option he doesn't want uh abortion to be maybe illegal at the federal level
01:01:17.700 he wants the states to work it out he doesn't want the abortion pill to be banned again i assume states
01:01:25.700 can work it out so project 2025 would sort of accidentally brand trump with some pressure to
01:01:35.940 ban this abortion pill which would be hugely bad for his political prospects hugely bad because it just
01:01:44.340 paints a target on his back that isn't even his target it's not even his policy so the pushback on
01:01:53.460 this and i've seen some smart people pushing back molly hemingway mike cernovich etc thinking that maybe
01:02:00.980 the trump campaign's pushback of this project 2025 thing and trying to dance on his grave is really bad
01:02:10.260 and the argument would be that these are loyal people who could be on your staff maybe in the future
01:02:16.980 and you're you're making the your most loyal employees um maybe not like you as much as they should
01:02:26.580 i disagree with all of that um but i'm open to the fact that i might be missing something in the story
01:02:33.780 because i think both molly hemingway and cernovich are closer to the personnel questions
01:02:40.100 so i'm not as close so i'll speak with my level of knowledge you cannot have somebody who's making a
01:02:49.940 big noise about political policy when somebody else has different opinions and is running for president at
01:02:56.580 the same time that's the end of the conversation if you say to me but but but scott the the loyal and
01:03:04.260 good employees that trump has are working on that project i say well they're not very loyal they're
01:03:12.020 not very smart i wouldn't want them anywhere near me that they've proven that they should not be working
01:03:18.180 on the campaign if they're pushing the 2025 thing which is nothing but problems for trump
01:03:23.540 we've got another drunk here in all caps lol scott tell us about all the pharma stock you bought
01:03:34.340 before you pushed lockdowns i didn't push lockdowns i didn't push any any drugs and i didn't own any stocks
01:03:45.300 except in index funds so i'll assume you're drunk and i'll assume that you will continue yelling like a drunk
01:03:57.380 because that's what drunks do
01:04:01.540 he'll be back in a moment
01:04:04.980 so the fact that none of that is even remotely close to anything that i've done or said or thought
01:04:10.420 will that stop a drunk no i think you'll be back in a moment
01:04:17.860 all right so um to me there's a it's just a firing offense let me put it this way if the people
01:04:27.540 involved with project 2025 were doing that as part of their uh let's say indirect application for working
01:04:35.620 in the administration i would say that that's a firing offense i wouldn't want somebody working
01:04:43.460 in my administration who is behind the project 2025 thing because if you didn't understand how how
01:04:51.380 damaging this was to republicans i wouldn't want you in my administration the the minimum you'd need
01:04:58.420 to know is that the president's in charge of what the policy ideas are it's just the minimum if you
01:05:03.780 don't know that you shouldn't be anywhere near the campaign now that said there there could be bad
01:05:10.820 hires in the trump administration too uh there could be yeah so you don't want to get too many rhinos i
01:05:19.940 guess and stuff but uh no the people who pushed a confusing message in the middle of a campaign at a critical time
01:05:30.660 that is not an application for a job that's an application to not get a job
01:05:37.620 all right
01:05:40.980 apparently judicial watch
01:05:42.500 watch is filed uh some kind of foia request lawsuit to find out um how the cia was connected
01:05:51.620 to the january 6 event because there's some kind of records where the cia was involved with maybe
01:05:59.780 looking at the pipe bombs or something yeah but my question is this is there any such thing as a
01:06:07.540 legal process that a citizen or judicial watch could do that would get the cia to admit what
01:06:14.500 they do can't the cia just say oh we don't tell you what we do wouldn't that be legal is the cia
01:06:24.180 obligated to give up their secrets if somebody just files a freedom of information act to me there's
01:06:31.140 something in this story missing it seems like you wouldn't be able to do that if the entire point of
01:06:37.380 the cia is that nobody knows what they're doing including america so even though they would be
01:06:45.700 doing something domestically which potentially could have been illegal i can't see any way that they're
01:06:51.940 gonna just talk about what they do so i can't imagine that working but judicial watch i obviously knows
01:07:00.740 more than i do about this process so i assume they know what they're doing i just hard to imagine
01:07:06.260 that would make any difference that they would give up their secrets even if it was a domestic
01:07:11.140 stuff and even if it was stuff they shouldn't have been doing project 2025 has been around has not was
01:07:18.980 not introduced during the campaign um that's probably a true fact of no importance
01:07:25.220 it became a thing during the campaign they promoted it during the campaign
01:07:32.420 it wouldn't matter when they started it it acts like it's new
01:07:38.580 all right that's about all i got now
01:07:44.900 um yeah foia is going to be denied for national security reasons i just assume that's what will happen
01:07:51.300 be denied for national security reasons
01:07:57.140 are there any more drunks in the comments who would like to um out themselves by yelling in all caps
01:08:04.500 the drunk did come back by the way and just yelled the same thing again
01:08:10.740 i like our drunk all caps people
01:08:12.820 claudia was leaving for her pickleball tournament i've been visualizing my match all week she was so
01:08:24.180 focused on visualizing that she didn't see the column behind her car on her backhand side
01:08:29.780 good thing claudia's with intact the insurer with the largest network of auto service centers in the
01:08:34.580 country everything was taken care of under one roof and she was on her way in a rental car in no time i
01:08:39.940 made it to my tournament and lost in the first round but you got there on time intact insurance
01:08:46.100 your auto service ace certain conditions apply
01:08:51.220 yeah the olympics you know what is interesting is uh you know i i mocked the olympics as something i
01:08:58.180 wouldn't want to watch um
01:09:02.740 oh oh here's something interesting no i can't show it to you i was watching uh
01:09:07.220 bad men in the olympics singles it was one person playing one other person and i couldn't tell the
01:09:14.500 genders
01:09:17.140 so i'm watching the the bad men and i'm like i think that's a male player but could be female
01:09:24.260 could have been born one thing and there's now another thing i couldn't tell
01:09:28.980 has that ever been true in the olympics before that you would watch a player in the middle of the
01:09:33.460 competition you'd say i'm not sure am i watching the women's bad men or the men's bad men um it took a
01:09:40.260 while i think it was the men's bad men but i'm not positive
01:09:50.820 all right i'm just looking to see what other topics you're
01:09:53.700 yeah the uh the turkish olympic shooter uh got a lot of attention he was the guy who just smoked
01:10:02.980 cigarettes and hey our drunk is back prince mambo the drunk
01:10:08.740 he's just hitting that repeat button wow wow probably a 4chan believer
01:10:26.180 um
01:10:29.380 how about cartels pedo i don't know about that
01:10:33.140 have you heard the number that there are 85 000 missing children who came across the border
01:10:40.660 is that a real number because when that number is used it's like oh 85 000 kids got sold into sexual
01:10:49.860 some kind of thing but i think the 85 000 just means that they came in through asylum or something
01:10:55.620 and we don't know where they are it doesn't mean anything's wrong with them
01:10:58.500 could be i mean i don't want to minimize it but the 85 000 number is just how many we don't have
01:11:06.980 accounted for it doesn't mean they're trafficked
01:11:13.940 yep i think some uh reporters need to ask the democrats what they mean by taking away your freedom
01:11:21.380 can you believe that we've gotten to this point in the campaign and nobody has asked
01:11:26.340 uh biden or harris what do you mean by taking away your freedom what what would be some examples of
01:11:33.780 where somebody's taking away your freedom because if they answer the question they're going to say
01:11:38.500 well and then they're going to mention some things in the 2025 document and then the reporter would say
01:11:45.220 okay but those are not part of trump's policies he's actually opposed to those things here's the
01:11:52.260 thing that the left doesn't understand but trump can't say out loud but i can
01:12:02.900 republicans are scary if you're only looking at the the most conservative group among them
01:12:12.020 they're kind of scary to the rest of america now just as the far left is scary to the rest of america
01:12:18.260 right the extremes on both sides are pretty scary to the rest of america trump moderates republicans
01:12:27.940 i used to think republicans were it's it's got to be in my bible and i want lots of wars
01:12:35.300 that's how i thought of republicans it's got to be compatible with my bible that's the end of the story
01:12:40.340 and we've got to have big wars because we need those big wars trump is anti-war and has found a
01:12:49.940 pretty reasonable or at least defensible position on abortion so it's a non-religious position if it were
01:13:00.180 religious he would probably also want to ban it completely but since he doesn't take a religious
01:13:06.340 point to it he's he's more of a practical sense and make sure it's compatible with the system make
01:13:12.420 sure the states set up their own laws um i think trump is a moderating force for republicans
01:13:20.740 which ironically is exactly what democrats would want let me put it this way if you're a democrat
01:13:28.420 would you rather have rashid tlaib you know president or somebody who's as left as she is
01:13:35.380 which is kamala harris or would you have rather have somebody who makes republicans closer to the middle
01:13:43.940 if you're a democrat what's best for you is watching republicans move to the middle
01:13:51.620 that's what trump does so they're getting what they would most want which is the other side changing
01:13:58.580 and think about it it so so the republicans would like democrats to change right but they're changing
01:14:09.540 they're changing and going more extreme so democrats are moving further from the middle
01:14:15.780 which nobody's in favor of even even normal democrats are not in favor of that
01:14:20.260 so if suddenly there were some candidate that emerged like a bill clinton for example
01:14:27.940 if bill clinton or somebody like him were the candidate i might be backing him do you know why
01:14:34.180 because bill clinton wasn't a super democrat he was he was a moderate
01:14:43.780 and he moved democrats to the middle trump moves republicans to the middle
01:14:49.140 if you can find anybody who can move either side to the middle that's usually good for the country
01:14:58.820 hey we got our other drunk back mr fart guy you know all caps always always extra drunk
01:15:07.780 a little extra drunk today all right
01:15:14.500 uh except he was a rapist uh except he was a rapist
01:15:24.420 well you know let me let me say uh what i've said before
01:15:30.180 which is every every important male figure has fake rape charges
01:15:41.620 some presumably are real we can't tell the difference
01:15:46.100 so i i've just decided not to count it because if you can take out every man by saying he's been
01:15:55.380 accused of a sex crime then no man can ever be in charge of anything ever
01:16:00.180 because it will always be a fake accusation if it works
01:16:04.100 so to me if it's not proven in a court of law and i i'm not counting a civil suit but if it's not
01:16:11.540 proven an accountable in in a court uh i'm not going to count it doesn't mean it didn't happen
01:16:19.620 what it means is i can't tell and so i'm going to do presumed innocent for citizens but not for
01:16:27.460 governments so candidates uh even though they may have done something terrible um i'd rather say i
01:16:36.500 don't know for sure it's the same thing with kamala harris you know i hear people trying to make
01:16:43.220 something of the fact that she you know may have uh leveraged her relationship with willie brown
01:16:51.140 to which i say so so what everybody's everybody uses every leverage they can get
01:16:58.820 as long as it's legal if it were legal for her to be in a relationship with somebody who could help
01:17:07.140 her with her career and then it happened so what that's just the way everything works that's just so
01:17:14.100 ordinary it doesn't she she's either qualified for this job or she's not has nothing to do with how
01:17:20.340 she got here i don't care now that she's here you can say but where are qualifications that that's a
01:17:27.700 perfectly good question but i think it's all about uh my drunk is trying another approach
01:17:38.580 have another drink hit that bottle
01:17:43.620 she's always been appointed never elected yeah those are good points
01:17:48.100 but if she gets elected this time that's all that matters
01:17:50.500 uh department store rape also charged her dentist
01:18:07.460 all right i'm just looking at your comments i think we're done here i'm going to go talk to the
01:18:11.140 locals people privately thanks for joining on x and rumble uh and youtube
01:18:16.980 uh and uh locals subscribers i'm coming to you privately
01:18:22.900 you