Miss Understood No. 14 — Is The World On Fire?
Episode Stats
Words per minute
206.68997
Harmful content
Misogyny
21
sentences flagged
Hate speech
50
sentences flagged
Summary
In this week's episode of Misunderstood, hosts Kat and Nat discuss the pro-choice march in Toronto and the insane counter-pro-prolife protest counter-march in Vancouver, Canada, as well as the fact that men can now allegedly be pregnant, and the left seems to have thrown civility out the window.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
Hello and welcome to Misunderstood, the show for all you culturally and politically misunderstood
00:00:13.420
ladies and gents. We're your hosts. I'm Kat. And I'm Nat. And today we want to talk about
00:00:19.820
the fact that the world is burning, not in the way the climate alarmists think it is,
00:00:24.620
but given men can now allegedly be pregnant and the left seems to have thrown civility
00:00:29.220
out the window, we think it's safe to say that the world's in utter chaos. Nice. But before
00:00:35.440
we get into our first topic, we're going to start things off with our patented culture
00:00:39.260
shock moment of the week. Take it away, Kat. So it was actually last week, but we, Nat
00:00:46.040
and I went to the March for Life in Toronto where a pro-life march was taking place. I
00:00:51.460
think it's a little obvious from the name. There was also a counter protest there, which
00:00:56.000
were pro-abortion, pro-baby murder, pro, also pro-indigenous women. Yeah. They were talking
00:01:04.240
about, um, socialism, indigenous women. Defunding the police. Defunding the police. They were
1.00
00:01:10.240
screaming defund the police at the police. They were screaming F you at any pro-life protester
00:01:17.020
that walked anywhere near them. There were nuns on the pro-life side. There were children.
00:01:22.140
They didn't care. No. They, it's crazy how much of a stark contrast there was between
00:01:28.480
the two sides on this debate. And I would argue that the pro-life people have more to lose
00:01:33.460
because they are in, they're swimming upstream. Yeah, they are. And they believe that they're
00:01:38.300
witnessing the murder of children, which I would agree with, but you know, that's, that's
00:01:42.300
the opinion of pro-life people. But so to them, they actually have so much on the line.
00:01:46.460
Yeah. Actual valuable human life where the pro-choice side really only has convenience.
00:01:53.800
Yeah. Like they didn't really, like we asked a couple of them some questions. Um, many of
00:01:58.140
them wouldn't really talk to us because, uh, I guess because not so ugly. Yeah. And I guess
00:02:04.260
rebel news is right wing. Yeah. We're so right. Maybe we're just right. Okay. But, um, the people
00:02:10.540
that we talked to didn't really have fruitful things to say. Some of them were a little creepy
00:02:14.380
actually. And one girl, when I asked her, um, when life begins, like, does it begin at
00:02:19.760
conception? She literally said no. And I was like, then these people clearly just don't
00:02:23.340
actually know what they believe. I think is ultimately, I think those people don't understand
00:02:27.240
that like the cells in your skin are alive. So like the, the argument of like life doesn't
00:02:32.140
begin at conception is just kind of stupid because it's like, of course it does. The sperm
00:02:36.380
is alive. The ovary is alive. Like the cells that are created when they are, when the sperm
00:02:41.040
enters the egg. Yeah. Yeah. It's all alive. So like, that's stupid. Like it was kind of
00:02:46.740
almost a trick question because it's like, duh. Yeah. She was so young though. Like she
00:02:51.120
was probably in high school. Well, a lot of them were, they were wearing high school uniforms.
00:02:55.240
It's scary how young they were though. That really freaked me out. And it's like these people
00:03:00.580
obviously aren't looking into this. They don't understand. And I think it's scary that adults
00:03:06.640
in their life and educators in their life are taking advantage of their vulnerability
00:03:10.400
and they're, they just want to be liked and they don't want to, you know, swim upstream.
00:03:14.480
It's hard being a teenager. I just, I don't know. It made me sad more than anything. Yeah.
00:03:18.520
Um, yeah, but they, they ain't helping their, their cause. No, like they're not making a great
00:03:23.920
case for the pro choice side. They were highly aggressive and disturbing. Yeah. And I think if you
00:03:28.380
were just an objective observer who was like, I don't know how to feel on this topic. And you
00:03:31.760
looked at both sides, you would be like, yoiks. Yeah. Because even, um, just before we get into
00:03:36.900
the show, even like when they began marching, the nuns, the cute little nuns were praying as
00:03:41.560
they were marching. And then when they were passing the police officers, they were like,
00:03:44.780
thank you for your service. Not just today, but always. Yeah. And then, you know, and the police
00:03:49.320
had to make sure that the pro choice, um, pro counter protesters left first for their march so
00:03:54.260
that they didn't like word for word, the police said, so they don't know where you guys,
00:03:58.260
as in the pro life people are going, as in they were going to harass them. Cause they're
00:04:01.440
unhinged. Yeah. They're unhinged. Yeah. Anyway, you should catch our full report at rebelnews.com
00:04:06.480
coming out, uh, today. Today slash yesterday. So it'll be yesterday for you. Uh, yeah. Check
00:04:11.720
it out. It was shocking. It was shocking. But you know what else is really shocking? Men
0.95
00:04:15.800
can get pregnant apparently. Oh, wow. This is great. It's, it's really nice. Um, so, you
00:04:22.000
know, I don't know if some of you guys know, but Calvin Klein recently did a Mother's Day ad
00:04:27.120
and they wrote this magnificent article. I wonder. Oh my goodness. I think it was me.
00:04:32.420
OMG, you guys. Oh my gosh. Um, yeah. So pregnant trans man stars in Calvin Klein Mother's Day
0.97
00:04:38.760
ad. Just look at that body. Oh my gosh. See. Okay. So, okay. First of all, it looks like
00:04:44.500
just people online are like, it looks just like a dad bod. It's just like a classic dad bod.
00:04:49.360
Second of all, why are you wearing a flower crown? Yeah. You're a man. Yeah. Like you're supposed,
00:04:54.460
you're, you, I don't understand. You're like, I'm a man. I am a man. I want to live as a man.
00:04:59.020
You have to identify me as a man and I'm offended and it's illegal if you don't identify me as a man,
00:05:03.020
but then also I'm going to have a beer beer. Well, and I'm going to wear a flower crown and
00:05:06.600
do maternity photo shoot. Like what? No, exactly though. How can you identify as a male when you're
0.92
00:05:10.960
knowingly doing one of the only things that females can do apart from men? I think it's just really
0.98
00:05:16.360
anti-woman for this person to deem themselves as a man when their, their body is literally showing us
00:05:21.140
otherwise. Like, it's just so not feminist to me and it's not at all uplifting or empowering for
00:05:25.940
women. And I just, I don't get why Calvin Klein is pandering to nobody. Like it's like the 1%
1.00
00:05:31.880
of people are transitioning and 1% like, and 1% of people even give a crap about like trans.
0.73
00:05:39.320
Yeah. Like 1% of people are transgendered according to the recent like Canadian census. So I know that
0.94
00:05:45.520
this is probably American, but, um, of those 1%, you, you, not a hundred percent of that 1% are on
00:05:51.600
board with this. Like we know people like Blair White and there's other trans activists who are
00:05:55.000
like not on board with this kind of stuff. So to think that it's like less than 1% of people are
00:06:00.920
like, that's right. That represents me. I feel, I feel represented by that. It's just on mother's day
00:06:07.040
when that's a, this person identifies as a male. So why can't we let mothers have mother's day?
0.94
00:06:12.880
I don't know. I just, I, it, it just kind of further proves that the world's on fricking fire.
00:06:18.300
The world's on fire. That's the theme of the show. Yeah, it really is. Because like the fact
00:06:22.700
that culture thinks this is somehow stunning and brave and also sexy. Like how is this sexy?
00:06:27.800
Like I'm used to seeing a diaper, like the Kardashians, male diaper underwear. That's
00:06:32.580
what I mean. Like it's so not beautiful. With a flower crown. Like I'm used to seeing like
00:06:36.100
the Kardashians in their undies and like Justin Bieber, like that, you know what the world kind
00:06:40.880
of deems more conventionally attractive, but like this is supposed to sell me underwear. Nah.
00:06:45.740
No, I have a bunch of Calvin Klein underwear and I'm not going to throw them out. Me either.
00:06:49.520
Cause you know, they're a working girl. Yeah. But I'm not going to be buying any more. No.
0.92
00:06:53.860
So stupid. Me either. And I think a lot of people are on the same page as us. Yeah. It's great.
00:06:59.380
Yeah. Um, so boycott Calvin Klein. Yay. But, um, it's not just trans men that, so when people say
00:07:08.440
women can have babies, sorry, when people say men can have babies, usually it's like, oh, like if you
1.00
00:07:14.340
told that to my dad, he'd be like, what are you talking about? Well, what they mean is trans men.
00:07:18.260
So a naturally born biological female transitions to a man and then can still have her sex organs and
0.82
00:07:23.620
can still get pregnant either by IVF or naturally you can have your issues with that. However, I
00:07:30.060
understand the mechanics of it, but the next article that we're looking at is actually trans
00:07:36.120
women. So naturally born biological males are now possibly going to be able to carry children
00:07:42.260
through womb transplants. Yes. That doesn't sound at all. Bye bye women. Yeah. What a way to render
1.00
00:07:49.260
us completely obsolete. It's been nice being here. Thanks for having us earth. It's been peachy.
00:07:54.340
So Dr. Narendra Kaushik is a new Delhi surgeon. Uh, and basically he claims that, uh, this is the
00:08:01.840
future and hopes that the surgery will allow trans women to carry children. And apparently this has
0.97
00:08:07.640
only been done once before and it, surprise, surprise, it didn't work out. Yeah. Didn't they
00:08:12.440
die? The person died. Of course this was in the 1930s. So obviously medicine has changed since then,
00:08:18.720
but even so, like, let's, let's not even talk about the fact that this whole procedure is very
00:08:24.260
expensive and, um, you know, risky. What about the implications this might have on the child?
00:08:30.840
Like, how do we, we don't know. Like why are children always unconsenting subjects to weird
00:08:35.480
social experiments? It's the same with this pregnant man. Like they're taking hormones. You
1.00
00:08:39.300
mentioned this earlier. Like how do we don't know how that implicates a child's future. Yeah. I mean,
00:08:43.340
my understanding was once you take, um, hormones to change your sex, that a lot of the time you
00:08:47.940
become sterile. Right. So I think, I don't know about the Calvin Klein model. Model. Um, they might
00:08:54.880
have frozen, like he might have frozen his eggs when he was a woman. Maybe. Yeah. Um, that's possible.
0.74
00:09:02.400
And then have it like fertilized later and put in the stomach. Right. Um, so it's a confusing little
00:09:08.800
mishmash there, but it's a lot. This is, yeah, the, like you, great point. Like what are the
00:09:14.320
implications for the kid? Um, the, the last woman who had a transplant womb transplant died. And yes,
00:09:20.600
that was in the 1930s, but there's, they haven't done it since. Yeah. For a reason. And it's almost
0.99
00:09:25.500
a hundred years ago. Yeah. Oh my gosh. Um, and so there's a lot to go through here, but one of the
00:09:31.200
things that is mentioned is that, um, where did I write that down? Oh yeah. So experts recommend the
00:09:40.320
uterus be removed after, after the person gives birth to one or two children for safety reasons.
00:09:44.580
So it's like, it's not supposed to be there. It's not supposed to be there. And what is it going to
00:09:50.100
be like for that little baby growing inside that womb? That's not supposed to be there. And they have
0.99
00:09:53.360
to go on, um, uh, immune system, uh, suppressants while they're, where they're getting after the
00:10:00.840
transplant, because a lot of people who have like organ transplants, their body rejects the organ
00:10:05.020
because it's not part of their body. No, it's like a foreign object. So it's the same as surrogacy.
00:10:09.120
Yeah. Surrogacy. When you, when someone is a surrogate and you put another, you know, I guess,
00:10:14.220
baby, so fertilized egg and whatever in there, it, the body tries to reject it. So what's going to
00:10:19.520
happen when you have a, a used uterus inside of you? Like who knows? Yeah. Who knows? And like,
0.99
00:10:24.640
I, what I don't get is like, if it's, you're spending all this money for this temporary thing,
00:10:28.020
why can't you just adopt? Like why not just adopt? It's super insulting to women who can't have babies
1.00
00:10:34.780
themselves because it's like in one of the things here, it says, um, every transgender woman wants
00:10:39.540
to be as female as possible. That includes being a mother. This doctor's quoted as saying, so sorry,
00:10:44.960
first of all, not every woman can have babies and not every woman wants to have babies. So it's just
0.99
00:10:50.240
like when we see like that transgender, uh, tick tocker Dylan dressing up like a little girl, it's
1.00
00:10:54.740
like you don't, being a woman isn't a costume that you can put on in the famous words of Mark,
00:10:59.660
Matt Walsh. And you can't just be like, Oh, I'm a woman. So it's my right to have a child. No,
00:11:04.160
it's a privilege. And not every woman, not every natural born woman has that privilege. So yeah.
00:11:08.340
And that doesn't make them any less of a woman. No, absolutely not. And so you can train,
0.98
00:11:12.060
you can change your gender. You, I will respect you. I will call you. She go, go about your day,
0.99
00:11:18.680
wear dresses, do whatever you want. But like, it's not your right to just have a baby in a womb and
0.65
00:11:23.020
give birth like a woman would. Yeah. And I'm in, uh, the daily mail said that womb transplants cost
00:11:30.080
around 50,000 pounds. And then you have to do IVF on top of that, which is upwards of 5,000 pounds,
00:11:36.940
which most in most cases, it's a lot more expensive for people. Like that's not like a little bit of
00:11:42.000
money. Like, yeah. And you know, I mean, who's just like, you can argue like if someone has the
00:11:46.740
money and that's how they want to spend it fine. It's just like the sociological implications and
00:11:50.840
the moral implications of this, the ethics of it are, are astounding and complex and nuanced. And
00:11:56.760
we're just like, eh, it's cute. Let's do it. Yeah. I just think it's weird to risk your life
00:12:01.300
potentially too, for something so absurd and temporary. Like some of the major complications
00:12:06.220
that have been suffered are like organ rejection, urinary tract infections, blood clots, and like
00:12:11.140
internal bruising and like similar sorts of transplant situations. So it's like, I don't
00:12:16.920
know, like, is it worth it? Is it worth the risk? Like, like just to be able to- Especially when you can
00:12:21.360
still be a parent. That's the thing. Like there are so many options for people. I, and I just,
00:12:26.100
I don't know. I mostly just care about the child in this scenario. Like I just, I don't know how
00:12:30.680
that's going to affect them. And no one seems to care. They're just like, let's just experiment on all
00:12:35.120
these kids and like, whatever. Well, that's the same argument with the Roe v. Wade stuff. It's
00:12:39.440
like, it's all about the woman. It's all about the person and their convenience and their lifestyle.
0.73
00:12:44.900
The adults. And remember last week we talked about the, the number one reason why people
00:12:48.800
have abortions is because the baby won't fit into their life. Not even they can't afford it. That
0.99
00:12:52.580
was number two. But number one was astounding. It was like 78%. Yeah. Say the baby won't fit into
00:12:57.740
my lifestyle. Convenience. So it's all about your convenience and how you feel. And that's, and to hell
00:13:03.360
with the kid. Yeah. I just think it's incredibly selfish. It's incredibly selfish. And I, I don't
00:13:10.300
know. I just don't get why, like, why are doctors taking it upon themselves to play God in these
00:13:15.560
situations? Like, I just, I don't know. I find that I find it perplexing. And again, the world is just
00:13:21.420
on fire. Yeah. The world is on fire. It feels like the end of times. It really does. I'm just like,
00:13:27.120
what are like men can carry babies, abort your baby because you just don't feel like it even after
0.99
00:13:33.160
it's been born arguably like, and, and now let's just put uteruses. The one beautiful privilege that
0.99
00:13:39.420
women do have, most women do have is to be able to give birth. And you're just going to take that
1.00
00:13:43.600
away from us too. Like, goodness gracious, Lord, take me now. So what's going to happen to women
1.00
00:13:47.900
is, are we going to, so, you know, in the matrix, it's men and women who are kind of just like
00:13:52.020
the organs of the machine world. Right. But is this, is the future going to be just women
1.00
00:13:57.660
because they need to harvest our wombs? Yeah. Like that's a good point. Like,
1.00
00:14:01.480
is that what's going to happen? Until they have synthetic wombs,
1.00
00:14:03.340
which is also a thing. So like men can take another man, they can cut out a real woman's
1.00
00:14:09.000
womb and a man can take that and implant it into another man. Like what is the need for women at
1.00
00:14:14.660
all? There is no need for us. And we're going to become second class citizens. Like we were in the
0.87
00:14:18.480
past and this is feminism. Well, and here's the thing though. I know men are going to comment on
00:14:23.100
this and they're going to be like, Oh, women, you did it to yourself. But I don't think so. I think
0.73
00:14:26.440
this is both of us because I think men should do more to protect women, even though I think,
00:14:31.840
yes, the feminist movement has gone too far, but at the time, like, yeah, women should have been
1.00
00:14:36.700
able to vote. Like, you know, those kinds of things are not like, of course there's a slippery slope
00:14:41.140
with freaking everything for some reason. Um, and it always just swings way too far one way, but like
00:14:46.460
it's your job as men to protect us too. And I think this is where, this is a great opportunity for
00:14:52.120
men to do that. And it's a great opportunity for conservatives to conserve. Yeah. You know?
00:14:58.040
Yeah. I, I don't know. And I wish it wasn't a conservative liberal left, right issue. I wish
00:15:02.900
it was just like, uh, moral. Yeah. Ethics. Yeah. Those are nice. Oh yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Um, it is,
00:15:14.620
it is really messed up. Um, and I guess there's a few other things that are messed up. Should we move
00:15:20.440
on to, uh, a little, little fun climate hysteria? Hysteria. So, um, well, this is not fun actually.
00:15:27.660
It's not fun. It's, it's a little less, a lot less than fun. So this, this man is so anxious
00:15:33.480
about the climate. He wants medically assisted suicide. Howard Breen's anxiety about the planet
00:15:39.620
is so bad that he's asked Canada to let him die. Will he be accepted into the program?
00:15:45.020
Uh, okay. Yeah. So, um, this is super sad. It's so weird because he is so stressed about
00:15:54.420
the climate and the end of the world as he sees it, which I'm like, I see the end of the
00:15:58.620
world too, but for different reasons. Biblical. Yeah. Um, but he thinks that just not being
00:16:04.000
a part of it is better than him actually being an advocate for the climate where he could actually
00:16:08.240
do things and he could change people's minds and he could make good points. But you know,
00:16:10.960
it turns out he's part of the extinction rebellion. So making valid arguments is not
00:16:15.380
part of his repertoire. No, it's so true. Um, so I guess he's been clinically diagnosed
00:16:21.580
with eco anxiety and biosphere related depression, which by the way, is not recognized as a mental
00:16:27.060
illness by the American psychiatric association. So it's fake. That's not a real thing. Like
00:16:32.720
I'm sorry. I shouldn't be laughing, but it's, it sounds like, it sounds like a, a sketch,
00:16:37.040
like a comedy sketch, like biosphere related sketch. Yeah. Like literally biosphere related
00:16:41.960
depression. I wish we had come up with that. Yeah. That's hilarious. And I'm not trying to
00:16:44.920
laugh at this man because he's obviously suffering. He's suffering. Yeah. But okay. It sounds like a
00:16:49.660
joke though. But I think also these people who latch on to these crazy narratives, like these extreme
00:16:56.860
narratives, like they are obviously aren't doing their research because I believe we're called to
00:17:01.900
steward the earth, you know, as Christians and stuff and as just as normal human beings. In fact,
0.99
00:17:06.860
we should take care and preserve things. But apparently according to the wall street journal,
00:17:10.540
we're actually safer from climate disasters than ever before. And this was just an easy,
00:17:15.440
quick, like Google away. Um, so there's a, you guys should go read the article, um,
00:17:21.420
by the wall street journal, but basically they said a century ago, almost half a million people
00:17:25.140
died on average each year from storms, floods, um, wildfires and extreme temperatures. And over the
00:17:30.820
next 10 decades, global annual deaths from these causes declined 96%. Like that's
00:17:36.740
crazy. 96%, 96%. And, and basically the job guys, we did the reason they think like the climate
00:17:43.320
activists always latch onto this narrative. Oh, like there's so many more natural disasters.
00:17:47.020
It's just cause we're recording them better. We just have more, we have more capacity to be able
00:17:51.460
to properly record when these instances occur. So it's, it's totally been like inflated and, you know,
00:17:57.660
politicized, unfortunately. Um, well, that's good to know. I feel better. It is good to know,
00:18:02.140
but it's like this person literally believes that the earth is like going to implode on itself.
00:18:06.760
And that's just a lie. And it's like, why is the government doing this to these people?
00:18:10.860
Well, I know I was thinking about this on my way in whenever the mainstream and by mainstream,
00:18:16.140
I mean like collective, large, like both mainstream media and just the, the zeitgeist sort of commentary
00:18:21.920
is all hysterical in terms of COVID and whatnot and climate. Whenever everyone's saying the same
00:18:28.120
thing and they're yelling at you have to question that because it's like, okay, are they saying
00:18:32.160
this? Like, is someone like Bill Gates and other climate activists, are they saying this because
00:18:36.060
they're genuinely concerned with preserving human life? Probably not. Cause Bill Gates is on record
00:18:41.520
as saying how we need to reduce the population of humanity. So is it that they literally care so
00:18:47.140
much about humanity that they want to preserve the lives of everybody or hear me out. Is it about
00:18:52.800
money? Is it about money? Like it always is. Buy electric cars, get rid of your Saturn that you've
00:18:58.260
had for 20 years or what? Maybe not 20, but get rid of your, your beater car that you drive to work
00:19:03.320
every day and you can afford and you have to buy a Tesla or some expensive electric car that, you know,
00:19:08.540
tinfoil hat, the government can like turn off if you're a problem. Right. That's a great point.
00:19:13.800
And meanwhile, they're taking, they're flying private. They're not eating bugs. When's the last time I was on
00:19:18.660
the jet? Um, many years. Yeah. Mostly because you knew. Yeah. Yeah. But like, it's just, it's so funny
00:19:25.240
how we're told, we're all told the same stuff from the same people. And whenever you're told the same
00:19:29.680
thing in a hysterical manner, you need to question it. Yeah. Just a little bit. A little bit. Just a
00:19:34.460
question. Just a tad. Yeah. And I'd rather think that I'm not like the planet is going to be habitable
00:19:39.200
in 30 years than not. And I recycle and I don't use actual water when I don't need to. Like I am an
00:19:44.940
environmentalist for all, in all sakes, really. No, I, I agree. We need to steward the earth. We
00:19:50.240
shouldn't be. We talk about this. Sorry. No, go. We talk about using like less plastic. Yeah,
00:19:54.340
exactly. Cardboard instead of plastic in our foods and with beauty products. And I have like reuse,
00:19:59.500
like not reusable, but like I use like silk floss and it comes in a, in a wood thing instead of
00:20:03.360
plastic. Nice. We try to reduce our footprint as much as we can because it's just better not to have
00:20:07.240
giant landfills and, yeah, and garbage. Nobody likes garbage. I mean, honestly, and I like the planet. I
00:20:12.580
want to, I want to preserve it. It's so cute. It's so cute. And God made it. So we should respect
00:20:18.300
that. We should respect it. Um, I also just think we should touch on the fact that he, this person
00:20:23.880
who wants this assisted suicide is a father and a husband. And he's willing to literally abandon his
00:20:29.900
family. Yeah. And did you see the part where they said, um, his, his, uh, he's also has the
00:20:35.460
support of his general practitioner, which is all right. Okay. His wife, his two daughters and his son.
00:20:41.020
So they don't care if he kills himself. Yeah. I'm, I'm like, does, do they hate him? I know.
00:20:46.920
I just, do they have an amazing insurance policy on his life or something? It's so dark, but can you
00:20:52.440
imagine your dad is like, I want to kill myself and I want, because I'm scared of the climate
00:20:56.460
disaster. And you're like, go get him dad. Yeah. Love that for you. Yeah. So I guess he's applying
00:21:01.840
for Canada's medical assistance in dying program and it allows people to take their own lives. Um,
00:21:07.940
basically rejected before. Yeah. He's been rejected before. And it's like, well, if you've been
00:21:13.420
rejected before, I don't, I don't see how you can get like everything's so much worse. Yeah. I guess
00:21:19.740
so. I just think though, like as like a man and a father and a husband, like you are everything
00:21:25.140
wrong with society. Like you're just putting yourself and your own emotions first. Like it does. And to
00:21:30.560
your point earlier, like if you were really this passionate about the climate, you would fight
00:21:34.040
till the death to defend what you believe in. That's what men do. You would be an example to
00:21:38.560
your family and your community. And what you're saying to your family is, well, things aren't
00:21:42.440
going my way and I'm terrified. So I'm going to kill myself. Yeah. Like that's terrifying. It's
00:21:47.260
so weak and it's everything that's wrong with society. And I just feel like if you had like
00:21:51.880
God or something, you wouldn't feel like this. Yeah. I would suggest church. Yeah. Like if you're,
00:21:57.420
if you're rooting your whole identity in the climate, which doesn't give a crap about you,
00:22:01.500
by the way, it doesn't care. Like you're, you're wasting your life. It's so sad. And
00:22:06.400
you're just, you're never going to be fulfilled, man. Like, and you killing yourself through
00:22:10.980
medical assistance is just not the answer. I don't want you to do this. And like, you
00:22:15.020
know, again, I'm not trying to make fun of it, but like, don't you think that in the
00:22:19.320
process of him killing himself through a medical procedure, there'd be like more plastic and
00:22:23.440
tubes and energy and the time of the doctor who could be using that for actual people who
00:22:28.460
were actually like terminally ill. Yeah. And what I also want to know is like, why is this
00:22:32.560
allowed in our society where people can just apply for this? And it's like, yeah, you're
00:22:36.840
good to go. You passed this test. Well, like again, he's been rejected. Yeah. Thank God.
00:22:40.980
It's for people who are actually like literally terminally ill. And, and right. I don't even
00:22:45.440
think that mental illness, I think it's, I think it was like people who are suffering irrevocably,
00:22:51.460
irrevocably, irrevocably, irrevocably. The only reason I know how to say that word is
00:22:56.720
from because of twilight. Okay. Bella says irrevocably in love with that word. Yes, exactly.
00:23:02.020
But like, um, but he, he has this quote where he's like, I'm not afraid of death. I'm afraid
00:23:08.360
of what could happen if we don't act on climate change. Well, that would be death. If climate
00:23:12.300
change is real, it's a real threat. You die anyway. So just let the climate wipe. Don't
00:23:15.540
you want to see what happens? Yeah. I'm like, he doesn't want to know the truth. Like maybe you're
00:23:20.380
just going to die in your sleep and old happy man and the climate won't be a disaster. And
00:23:23.900
would that be bad? Would he be like, well, it was wrong. Yeah. How embarrassing for me.
00:23:28.360
Like just be wrong there. Yeah. Hang in there for your family and for your community and for
00:23:32.080
your, for the environment. Yeah. And I kind of want to know like why it was vice that wrote
00:23:37.760
this. Like, why are they publishing this? I know it's so dark. Like it's really dark.
00:23:41.320
And it's like, are you glorifying this? They weren't really one way or the other. Like I get
00:23:46.020
they were just telling this person's story, but it's like, should we be, I don't know. We are.
00:23:49.720
Yeah. But we're criticizing it at least because we don't want this guy to do this. Yeah. Like
00:23:53.600
I don't want you to die, man. No. I hope you choose life. Yeah. Choose life. Your mom
00:23:58.900
chose life when she had you. Yeah. So yeah. It's not going to be so bad. Well, it reminds
0.59
00:24:02.580
me of those TikToks that I sent you last week of those women who were like, um, I had an
1.00
00:24:08.360
abortion last year because they were like, the planet is not going to be inhabitable in 30
0.80
00:24:13.320
years. So why would I have a child? And it's like, you don't, that's messed up. You don't
00:24:17.380
know that 30 years. That's nothing. Yeah. Like you really think that like, maybe my
00:24:22.580
face will be red if it's not, but like, I want, I at least want to be around to see
00:24:25.820
it. Yeah. And I hate this, this mentality of like, why would I want to bring a child
00:24:30.140
into the world? It's so messed up. The world has been messed up since the dawn of
00:24:33.260
time, literally since Eve ate the apple. Yeah. So like your parents brought you into
00:24:38.540
the world and you're glad that they did. Right. Yeah. That's the thing. Like all these
00:24:42.700
people have a mom who chose life. I don't get that. It's like, why can't you just think
00:24:47.440
about, sit and think about that for a minute. Just sit on that. Like you are on this earth
00:24:51.880
and you're fighting for whatever you believe in. Like let your own child have that chance
00:24:55.760
to become whoever the, even if they're a blue haired weirdo. Yeah. And we'll accept them
0.93
00:24:59.680
in society. And you know, maybe by then science and technology will get to a place where your
00:25:04.580
child can be a part of, of fixing these problems that you foresee. And that's how I feel
00:25:08.900
too. It's like, I do, I think the world is burning. Yeah. Proverbially. Yes. But I still
00:25:13.640
want to have a child so that they can be a part of the solution and see the good in people
00:25:17.420
and bring out good in others. Like, no, it's so true. And to your point, there is just this
00:25:22.080
very strange agenda to encourage our generation specifically not to have children. And I definitely
00:25:28.820
have population control. Putting on my tinfoil hat. Yeah. I think there's a really weird,
00:25:33.360
cause think about it. Like, okay, trans kids, let's just sterilize kids. Um, women don't need
1.00
00:25:38.660
to have kids anymore cause men can do that. Uh, you're like the economy, all these things,
0.88
00:25:42.820
climate change. Like these are all these reasons that they give us for not wanting to stay inside.
00:25:47.120
Don't like social distancing. That was a big one where it's like, okay, you literally want people
00:25:50.740
to become manic, crazy, depressed, depressed people. Yeah. Like crazy. Like the government is
00:25:55.500
just doing, there's something at play here for us to stop reproducing. And that's why we have to
00:26:00.760
grab someone right now. Just kidding with your, with your partner, um, your consenting partner.
00:26:09.580
Yeah. Um, yeah. And maybe this is a good segue into, um, like this, uh, Evie article. Um,
00:26:19.320
do you want to take it away? Yeah. So this article is called, we need to stop telling men the lie
0.50
00:26:23.640
that marriage ruins their life. Um, this was, I didn't even write any notes cause I was like,
00:26:28.420
yup. My notes is literally like, yup, yup, yup. Yeah. It opens on a, an anecdote from the author
00:26:34.960
about when she was in university and men, she noticed men would be like at last call at the
00:26:40.160
bar, kind of like panicking for someone to take home that night. And she thought, okay, well,
00:26:44.760
that's fine, but it'll, they'll grow out of it when we're in our thirties. And she's like,
1.00
00:26:47.940
nope, thirties, forties. This is how men are acting still. And it's because they have this idea
00:26:54.040
in their head that when you're in a marriage that you have no sex, you have no social life,
00:26:58.660
you have no fun. And it's just like, look at happy married people. Is that there? Is that what you
00:27:03.720
see? Yeah. And apparently according to this article, married men make more money than their single
00:27:08.880
counterparts have better sex and live longer. So, uh, jokes on all you 40 year old single men,
0.88
00:27:15.100
like, sorry, Leonardo. Yeah. You can't have really great sex with someone you just met.
00:27:21.120
Yeah. It's literally impossible. It's just, you don't have the mechanics down. You don't have the,
00:27:25.380
the, you don't know each other and you don't, you don't want to look into each other's eyes and you
00:27:29.300
don't say, I love you. Like you're probably wasted anyway. Yeah. You're probably hammered. And it's
00:27:33.500
just, it's awful. Yeah, it is. Like, like sex is such an intimate thing and intimacy comes with
00:27:39.460
knowing who that person is and wanting to like, please them. Because I find in our hookup culture,
00:27:43.580
it's all about how do I feel? What can I get out of this transaction? And that's really not
00:27:47.920
actually fun for anyone at the end of the day. Just grinding on a stranger. Yeah. Is that fun
00:27:52.680
for you? And then feeling gross about it the next day. We've talked about this before where he's
00:27:56.220
like, I've known girls in, in my life who are like, Oh, I don't care. Like I like to have sex
1.00
00:28:00.700
and yada, yada. But literally every time they're like, he didn't call. Yeah. Like you do care. Of
00:28:06.600
course. Yeah. Of course they didn't call. And because it was probably horrible for both of you. And of
00:28:10.460
course you care. Why would you pretend you don't care? It's crazy to think
00:28:13.460
that you don't care. No, there's something in your brain as a woman, especially that just
0.99
00:28:16.840
you're, you're like automate, you're connected to that person for life. Like, yeah, definitely.
00:28:23.240
Yeah. I think it's, it's just obviously makes sense that men who are married are more successful
00:28:29.340
and more stable because they have that foundation where it's like, okay, I have some purpose. Now I
00:28:34.300
have to provide for my family. I have to be a good husband, be a good dad. Like I have, you know,
00:28:39.220
I have a goal. I have a goal. And I mean, to contrast the other guy who's thinking about
00:28:44.440
suicide over the climate, it's like, man, you really dropped the ball on what your purpose
00:28:48.660
is as a husband and a father. And Jordan Peterson talks about, um, how people pursue happiness
00:28:54.960
as their goal, but really this pursuit of happiness never really leads to long-term happiness because
00:28:59.500
it's always about your instantaneous expedited happiness and pleasure and temporary. But if you,
00:29:04.720
if you have a long-term goal for meaning and value, you're going to end up happier overall
00:29:10.540
long-term. Well, it's like, we talk about this often, but like contentment leads to joy,
00:29:14.940
like just being content, you know? And I, I think that that's something that's severely lacking in
00:29:19.740
our society. Cause as you said, like, we just want more, more, more, more, more. And, um, it's always
00:29:24.860
fleeting. And it's kind of like, you know, when you get older, like when you're a kid receiving
00:29:28.820
presents is awesome and it's amazing. But when you're, when you get older, I think everyone would agree.
00:29:34.200
It's so much better to give someone a present and watch their face glow when you know that
00:29:39.440
they like it rather than receive something. Yeah. Wouldn't you rather just buy yourself what you
00:29:43.140
want? Yeah. I like, I prefer to buy myself. Exactly. I love the presents I give myself.
00:29:48.020
Me too. I'm the best self-giver. I know. Oh my God. Same. But like, so it's exact, it's, that's just a
00:29:53.360
tiny micro example of the larger issue, which is like, it's so much better to, to serve others and to
00:29:57.940
please others. And that's where Christianity comes in because when you're a good Christian, you're
00:30:02.320
serving God. Yeah. But in serving God, really you're serving everyone around you. You're being
00:30:06.740
a good person. You're putting your happiness, your expedited happiness last, but you end up feeling
00:30:13.480
amazing. And that's the beauty of it. And that's kind of what people don't understand. I think.
00:30:17.600
Yeah. And do you think that part of this whole like goal for like to encourage men to remain single
00:30:24.860
for life basically is part of this agenda to like denuclearize the family and like we were
00:30:30.300
not talking about population control. Yeah. Yes. I totally agree. It's like, you don't want a happy
00:30:34.660
family and you don't want to be woken up by giggles and you don't want good toddler. Yeah. You don't
00:30:38.740
want good sex with someone you love and you don't want to be woken up by toddlers jumping on you and
00:30:42.260
laughing and giggling and like seeing your child walk for the first time. And you want a yacht.
00:30:46.760
Yeah. You definitely want to live in a cube and eat seaweed chunks and you're going to be very happy.
00:30:50.700
But it's like even look at like Leonardo DiCaprio, for example, he has this he's wealthy. He's I
00:30:56.120
guess maybe he has he's had like a million girlfriends or whatever. He has never settled
00:30:59.480
down. It's like, OK, he has all the money in the world, but he doesn't look or seem happy to
00:31:03.660
me. And he's also one of those crazy climate people. Yeah. So it's like he's constantly
00:31:06.740
chasing. He's a hypocrite. Yeah. Well, he's a climate hypocrite. Yeah. Episode one. Hello. Yeah.
00:31:11.100
Huller. But he's constantly chasing some meaning in his life because he doesn't have any. Yeah.
00:31:16.340
Yeah. To me, anyways. So it's like we should look to these people who are telling us to live a
00:31:21.800
certain way. It's like, are they happy? Like we should just like, are they happy? I don't think
00:31:26.060
so. I think, you know, like I don't think money can buy you happiness. It helps. It reminds me of
00:31:31.220
like half of the blitzes that we're doing are literally like another Kardashian has anxiety.
00:31:36.000
Meanwhile, they're like, buy this product that I just invented. It'll bring you so much joy
00:31:40.000
like me. And then they're like, oh, my anxiety. It's like, why are you? Why are you so miserable?
00:31:45.560
You crazy rich girls. It's true. And it's like, we shouldn't like these people are not the example.
00:31:50.400
Like we should not follow their lead. Y'all follow our lead. Follow specifically only our lead.
00:31:56.740
And us follow us on Instagram. Yeah. And follow us on socials. That will help. That will help us be
00:32:02.460
happy. Just kidding. Temporary satisfaction. Yeah. Yeah. Um, anyway, so the world is burning men
00:32:09.340
get married. Okay. Just, it's time for you to get married, get married. Just do it. Just do it.
00:32:16.040
You know, just grab someone. You're marrying me. I'd marry them. Okay. Yeah. It worked for us.
00:32:23.760
Yes. Well, in another, um, effort to burn down society, there's a, and it's not a new,
00:32:30.980
we were talking about this before we came on. It's not a new concept, but economic disobedience
00:32:35.680
is a new, well, again, not new, but it's, it's up and coming. It's in vogue and it's
00:32:40.420
trendy. It's cute right now. It's super hot and cute right now to not pay your rent.
00:32:45.300
Apparently. And my first thought on this is just why is a magazine for teens? Cause obviously
00:32:50.440
this is teen vogue. Encouraging them to break the law. They don't even have rent. It's teen
00:32:55.280
vogue. That's what I'm wondering. I'm like, who are adults other than us for research? Do
00:32:59.520
actual adults read this and enjoy this? It's so weird. It's like being an adult who likes Disney
00:33:04.200
too much to me. It's like, Oh, I'm 30, but I love teen vogue. You know, you're like,
00:33:08.360
like, like butterfly fly clip. Yeah. Spaghetti straps. Like that's my whole, I'm obsessed.
00:33:15.000
It's like, no, it's time for you to grow up. Yeah. So in, in reading this article,
00:33:20.020
it kind of sent me down a rabbit hole of like a million other articles. And I ended up reading
00:33:24.200
about the Boston tea party. It happens. And I was on Mises, which is, I've mentioned before,
00:33:29.380
like an economics, um, online kind of blog article thing. Um, it's interesting because
00:33:37.140
economic disobedience has actually had a large impact on the history of America. So when I
00:33:42.660
mentioned the Boston tea party, cause at first when I was reading this, I was like, Oh, these
00:33:45.460
dirty hippies, like they just don't want to pay their rent, but it's like, which is partially
0.52
00:33:48.340
it is partially that. And, and they're not the Boston tea party, but you know, the, the fact
00:33:53.300
that these, um, Americans were so upset with the changing laws of British tea in the East
00:34:00.560
Indian trading company. And so they were so upset that they decided to throw hundreds
0.61
00:34:04.600
of bags of tea in the Boston Harbor, which led to the American revolution, which I would
00:34:09.720
argue is a wonderful thing that happened to America. I wish we could do it in Canada, 1776,
00:34:14.420
kind of. Um, so on one hand, it's like, you can't just like, you can't just not pay your rent
00:34:22.460
because you don't want to, because life is really expensive and heck we know what that's
00:34:27.040
like. We've both worked dirty jobs. I've cleaned up poop at Starbucks. I've done all the jobs
00:34:32.840
and I still don't really have enough money to live in a place that I would like to live
00:34:37.060
in. It's tough out there. It is. And what's interesting is all these people who are screaming
00:34:42.800
about the cost of living, for example, are still voting Democrat or liberal or NDP. It's
00:34:47.260
like they're part of the problem. Like, you know what I mean? And also like you don't
00:34:51.440
have to live in San Francisco. Like it's, you don't have to live in these expensive
00:34:55.080
cities. And like New York city is the place that they talk about. And it's like, that's
00:34:59.480
one of the most expensive cities in the world to live in. Like you, you're choosing to live
00:35:03.780
there. Yeah. So you got to make it work. Like when I, like you said, you were cleaning
00:35:07.620
up crap. When I moved here, I worked four jobs and I lived in like a roach infested apartment
00:35:11.960
because I just want to be here so bad. And I worked my ass off, you know, and now look
00:35:16.760
at us, look at us. We're so misunderstood, but you know, like work, the hard work pays
00:35:22.800
off and hard work pays off. And at the same time, two things can be true at the same time.
00:35:28.240
Yeah. You know, the, the housing crisis is a real thing. Like the price of a one bedroom
00:35:34.060
in an apartment in Toronto right now is like $1,800 or more $1,900. It's obscene. Yeah.
00:35:39.780
It's obscene. And that is way too much. But at the same time, what are you supposed to
00:35:44.040
do? So we're, we're going to just pay our rent and struggle and, and have all these
00:35:48.580
jobs and you're going to just not. And that's going to work out somehow for everybody. I
00:35:52.920
don't see that as the answer. Well, I just feel like this whole article is just encouraging
00:35:57.000
people not to take responsibility for their own actions. Cause like we just said, you can
00:36:00.520
choose to live in a cheaper city and on the topic of roommates. Yeah. And on the topic of
00:36:04.760
university, like maybe study something that gets you a job after college, you know?
00:36:09.780
Yeah. Like they want to, people are arguing that their student loans should be erased.
00:36:14.860
Well, what about people who worked really hard to pay off their student loans or didn't
00:36:18.020
go to university at all because they couldn't afford it? Yeah. Or, you know, just studied
00:36:23.140
medicine and they're like, this will, this will pay off later. You know, I mean, I'm sorry
00:36:26.980
you studied women's studies, Brock. Like, but you know, like that's your own choice.
0.63
00:36:32.360
I mean, I studied philosophy. I studied theater, but then I dropped out. So we know the score.
00:36:38.220
College dropout. Yeah. It's just, it is a nuanced issue, but I feel like these,
00:36:43.140
I feel like the fact that like you mentioned a teen Vogue, pretty much encouraging young kids who
00:36:50.420
probably live with their parents that go to New York city, make it work, find your dreams. And if
00:36:55.020
you can't pay your rent, just don't pay it. Like the, remember the musical rent? Yeah. That's
00:36:59.560
literally, and that was like based in the eighties and everyone had AIDS and they were struggling
00:37:02.840
and starving to death. And they're like, we're not going to pay rent. It's like, we've tried this.
00:37:06.580
That's not at the end of the day, how it's going to end up working out for you.
00:37:10.340
No. And there is a social structure that we have to abide by. Okay. Like they're like,
00:37:14.420
life is so transactional. You have to do certain things to do, be able to do certain things,
00:37:19.060
you know? Like, and then I just, I think that you just need to take more responsibility for your
00:37:23.500
actions. And I don't know. I just, I'm, I'm very creeped out by teen Vogue. I just think it's
00:37:29.900
creepy how like this, this author of this article is probably like 35 years old. And then they're just
00:37:35.340
like, I, my life sucks. So I want teenagers lives to suck too.
00:37:39.100
And I want, I want nobody to have anything because I don't have anything. Yeah. Like I'm
00:37:43.420
as it's like Demi Lovato when she's like telling you to do something, you're like, she's not happy.
00:37:47.620
I shouldn't be listening to her. Like life kind of sucks and then you die, but you find you pepper
1.00
00:37:53.280
your struggle with moments of beauty and happiness. And then you build something meaningful. It's not
00:37:58.880
supposed to be sexy and fun all the time. Like you're not going to brunch and living in a gorgeous
00:38:02.680
apartment in New York city. That's not reality. It's not going to achieve those things if you
00:38:07.340
work hard, maybe, maybe not. But you know what? Like just take it in stride. And, and I think just
00:38:12.920
it's sort of like a, an entitlement that young people have. Yeah. And I think like just going
00:38:18.940
back to like the cancellation of a student loans specifically, it's like I, as a taxpayer, shouldn't
00:38:24.260
be forced to pay for your decisions as a, you know, like that's like, I'm sorry you made a
00:38:30.760
decision. And like the taxpayer will be implicated the most by these sorts of big
00:38:34.700
over taxpayer too. That's the thing that they don't understand. It's like a free, free rent,
00:38:39.380
free education. Okay. Well your income, which is probably, sorry, I'll bleep that out. You're,
00:38:44.980
you're going to be taxed at like 80% of your income to pay for all these free services that
00:38:49.020
you're now enjoying that you're going to be like when you're 30, 40, 50. Hey, why am I still paying 70%
00:38:54.860
tax on my income? Oh, because 20 year olds today want free rent, which I wanted when I was 20,
00:38:59.640
but now I have stuff and now I want to conserve it. Yeah. Conservative. Yeah. Well, and also too,
00:39:07.040
like obviously there's a lot of buzz around the great reset right now. Uh, Kian and Lewis rebel
00:39:12.860
reporters are launching a docu series, which y'all should check out. But when you give the
00:39:17.720
government an opportunity to pay things off for you, so to speak, that means they own you.
00:39:22.480
And when they own you, you own nothing. And I guess you'll be happy. Yeah. You know, it's,
00:39:28.620
it's a scary thing. And obviously I have a feeling the author of this article doesn't know anything
00:39:34.620
about this, but goodness gracious, y'all, we should be mindful that if you give the government
00:39:40.100
an inch, they'll take more than a mile. And they're not going to give, they're not going
00:39:43.600
to reduce taxes. That's not what they do. So if they increase taxes, uh, an absorb, absorbent amount,
00:39:49.020
I can't speak. I'm not going to talk anymore when they increase taxes a lot. Yeah. They're not
00:39:52.940
going to reduce it a lot just because you happen to be in a better position in life where you're like,
00:39:56.540
oh, I own property now. I don't want all these property taxes and income taxes. Like too bad.
00:39:59.700
You voted for that. Yeah. Too bad. So please stop voting this country and the United States
00:40:05.620
into the ground. That's the moral of that story. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. One more thing. Woo. We're on fire.
00:40:12.320
Just like the world. The world is on fire. It's been great. So, uh, protests over abortion access
0.90
00:40:19.000
shouldn't have to be civil. Is this the same author? Like, uh, no, I think, okay, just looking at it.
00:40:23.880
They look alike. Yeah. They're all the same. Anyway. So again, Teen Vogue is encouraging young
00:40:29.340
people to break the law or have temper tantrums when things don't go their way. Nice. This is great.
00:40:34.640
So this is really funny for so many reasons. Um, mostly because, um, Teen Vogue and we actually
00:40:40.640
showed this article. Um, they had an article in February about how the freedom convoy isn't really
00:40:47.180
about freedom and it was very, and in the article, um, what did she write? Okay. I didn't
00:40:53.180
write the quote, but she, in the article, the author talks about how it was violent and they
00:40:58.680
were, they were disrupting people and, and, and it was like obscene what they were doing.
00:41:03.820
But then in this article, because they like abortion, it's okay to get in the face of people
00:41:10.660
in power and to disrupt the system. To yell at nuns. So it's like, and, and so mostly it talks
00:41:16.380
about how, um, people are protesting outside of the, the justice of the Supreme court's houses.
00:41:20.960
Yeah. That is, you know, as someone who supported the truckers, I would say that they have the right
00:41:26.800
to protest outside of the judges' houses. I agree, but peacefully. Peacefully, exactly. So like,
00:41:30.320
can you threaten them with violence? No. Can you, should you be like knocking on their door
00:41:36.440
and like putting like fireworks and like anything? There should be a healthy distance between you
00:41:40.600
and the house. Yes, exactly. I, and I think honestly, if the truckers knew where Justin Trudeau
00:41:45.580
was, they would, I don't think they would have heard him, but they would have definitely gone
00:41:50.280
there and, and protested outside of his home, which I think they had the right to. So I do
00:41:54.240
agree with the author on this, that people do have the right to go to someone's house and protest
00:42:00.560
peacefully outside. But this girl is saying, take it further, take it further. It's like,
00:42:04.380
you guys are so hypocritical because when it's your, when it's your cause, yeah, you will burn
00:42:09.740
the earth. Yeah. And it's easy for this author to say when she's hiding behind her, her keyboard,
00:42:15.520
you know, like, let's go encourage all of our youth to go commit crimes and go riot and burn
00:42:21.620
things. You know, it's like easy for you to say, you're not going to have to deal with the
00:42:25.280
consequences, maybe permanent. I mean, think of like the chop zones in Seattle, Chaz or chop or whatever
0.95
00:42:31.280
it was like, lives were lost because of those acts of, you know, uncivility. And it's like,
00:42:38.440
was it worth it? I don't think so. I really don't think so. And she also brings up the,
00:42:44.420
I think she brings up like the George Floyd riots in 2020. Those were riots. That was actually right.
0.89
00:42:50.700
People, crimes, people were burning. That's what I mean. Smashing windows. Lives were lost.
00:42:55.100
Exactly. So, so peaceful protests, like the truckers in Ottawa and, and assuming that they're
00:43:02.580
being peaceful and outside of like judge Kavanaugh's house, like that is not the same as
00:43:06.820
actually burning things and destroying businesses and stealing. Like I, yeah, I just think it's so
00:43:13.540
convenient. It's so convenient. And I think I wrote like, so the, the article title is protests over
00:43:19.160
abortion access shouldn't have to be civil. We mentioned that, but I wrote, it's literally called
00:43:23.240
civil disobedience. And if you're not being civil about it, you're being a petulant child and you're
00:43:27.080
not protesting. You're just being a thug. Yeah. You're, and it's somehow okay because you're sad
00:43:33.680
about Roe v. Wade overturning. Yeah. Cause you want to murder your baby. Oh, you poor little. Yeah.
00:43:38.760
You know, it's just, it's enough. I've had enough. I've had enough of team Vogue. Yeah. Let's give,
00:43:43.560
let's never read Vogue again. I can't help it though. They're so bad. I know because they're
00:43:46.680
infiltrating the minds of the youth. Yeah. It's terrifying. It's really scary. Um, so, you know,
00:43:52.160
the world is burning, but like, I don't know, maybe there's some optimism. Is there any hope
00:43:57.220
that we can maybe offer, um, our loving fans? I think you just need, like, it's a stupid
00:44:04.800
cliched saying and I don't know who said it, but it's like, be the good you want to see in the
00:44:08.320
world. Yeah. I think it was like Gandhi. Yeah. There you go. Thanks Gandhi. Someone smart said
00:44:12.920
that. And I agree with them. Like you have to, you have to lead by example and have faith that
00:44:18.960
things are going to be okay. And, um, definitely buy merch from our store. That's true. Use code
00:44:23.920
misunderstood 10. Um, I think the great thing is to like, as Christians, like we don't need to live
00:44:28.460
in fear, even though the world is burning because like our hope is not found in earthly things. Like
00:44:32.900
we're called to, we're supposed to keep our eyes fixed on the unseen because that is eternal. And
00:44:37.640
that's where our hope is. Like my hope is like, this ain't my home. I'm going to heaven. Like, see ya.
00:44:42.820
Um, but I think it's like an action item. Like we just need to keep paying attention to color
00:44:46.480
culture and keep calling it out. I mean, a lot of people always make fun of our show. Cause we talk
00:44:51.240
about Kim Kardashian, but it's like, she has sway. These people have influence in it there. It's
00:44:55.500
working. We saw the protests, the March for life, like these kids, those kids read teen Vogue. Those
00:45:00.900
kids are actually teenagers and are actually reading this stuff. And they're like, the world is on fire
00:45:04.900
and I can't kill my baby and everything sucks. And it's like, okay, everything does suck, but not even
00:45:09.020
for those reasons. And you can change it. If you just sit up straight and look, face the evil in the
00:45:14.660
world and take it on head first and have faith that it's going to be okay. Yeah. Be honest and
00:45:19.380
have respect for yourself and people around you too. Yep. I, and like conservatives, it's time to
00:45:25.140
conserve, conserve, conserve. Okay. Let's conserve and just, and I mean, it was funny. I was talking
00:45:32.020
about this on the weekend with some friends, but like conservatives are like the modern day hipsters.
00:45:36.180
Like we are the ones swimming upstream and we are, we are called to be counter-cultural and just,
00:45:41.620
let's just keep doing it. Just keep doing it. Okay. So grab somebody, grab, so get married.
0.62
00:45:46.900
Just go grab people and just go, let's get married. Exactly. Let's save the planet. That's it.
00:45:52.900
So yeah. Yeah. I think that's the show. I think that's the show. I think that's the show. I think
00:45:57.940
that was a good show. That was a mighty fun show, missy. Did you know that you can catch this show
00:46:02.660
every Tuesday at 7 PM Eastern time at misunderstood show.ca, but you gotta be a rebel news plus subscriber.
00:46:10.900
So be sure to sign up and send it, send the show to your friends and family, get them to sign up too.
00:46:16.180
Darn tootin. And if you are not a rebel news plus subscriber, you can listen to the show on Tuesday
00:46:21.780
at seven on all your favorite streaming platforms. Don't you know?
00:46:24.900
Oh my goodness. There's a free podcast. Who'd a thunk? Who'd a thunk it?
00:46:28.740
Yes. And then on Saturdays at 2 PM, you can watch the show for free on YouTube or Rumble,
00:46:34.660
but subscribe to our YouTube channel, misunderstood show so that we can monetize and make rebel news a
00:46:39.780
bit of dough. We need more dough than just cookie dough up in here, these parts.
00:46:45.460
So anyway, as David Menzies would say, uh, follow us on socials. Love you. Love you.
00:46:54.260
Yee-haw. It's going to be okay. I don't know. We're going to be fine. Come to Christ. Yeah. Yee-haw. See you later, fam.