The Ben Shapiro Show


The Most Hilarious Story Of The Year | Ep. 1643


Summary

Classified documents from Joe Biden s vice presidential office are found where they shouldn t be, a new study reveals that Russian Facebook 2016 interference made no material difference, and a brand new bag of all-female M&Ms hits the market. It s exciting stuff. This is the funniest story of the year, and I know the year is young, but it's really, really funny. And you'll recall that, again, Joe Biden said inimitably mashed potato style that Donald Trump was deeply irresponsible for having these documents. And I thought to myself: How could that possibly happen? How could anyone be that irresponsible? Well, I don t know, it could have been a recipe for the original recipe for Coca-Cola. And it's just totally ironic, I mean, if there was a recipe, it would be weird and there was no one who could be that weird and it could be a president of the United States. And so it's completely different than Hillary Clinton's servers at home, which were completely different from Hillary's at her hard drive at her home. And, you know what, it's totally different than what happened when Hillary Clinton did that in 2004, which is when she was running for president and she said it was "unthinkable and irresponsible." And, let's be honest, that's not even remotely close to what happened in the first place, is it? And, by the way, I think we can all agree that it's a good thing that she didn't have access to classified documents at Mar-A-Largo? And that she was keeping them in a place where they should be kept out of the purview of classified areas? And she did it in her pants at her office at the White House, right there at the Oval Office, right at the office where she's got them in the back of her office, right in front of her cubicle, right on the other side of the office? And she's not hiding them in her office in the bathroom? And there's no idea what she's going to do with them, right, right here, at her desk, right next to the bathroom, right after the office next to her office? Let me tell you what I think of it, I'll tell you why that's really funny, and why it's not weird, and how she should be doing that? And why she should do that, right? And how she can do it, you should do it?


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Classified documents from Joe Biden's vice presidential office are found where they shouldn't be.
00:00:04.000 A new study reveals that Russian Facebook 2016 interference made no material difference.
00:00:08.000 And a brand new woke bag of all-female M&Ms hits the market.
00:00:12.000 It's exciting stuff.
00:00:14.000 I'm Ben Shapiro.
00:00:14.000 This is the Bench Bureau Show.
00:00:15.000 Okay, so this is the funniest story of the year, and I know the year is young, but it's really, really funny.
00:00:27.000 So, as you'll recall, we've spent the last couple of years, really since the exit of Donald Trump from the presidency, waiting with bated breath as the media attempt to get him this time.
00:00:37.000 They're going to get him.
00:00:37.000 They're going to get him over Georgia voting, or they're going to get him Over January 6th, or they're going to get him over classified documents being held at Mar-a-Lago.
00:00:45.000 And we were treated to all sorts of bizarre conspiracy theories about why all of these classified documents were found at Mar-a-Lago, why Donald Trump was holding them there.
00:00:52.000 There are all sorts of theories that he had the nuclear codes there, that he was going to take those nuclear codes and hand them over to the Russkies or the Chinese.
00:01:00.000 Because as always, the simplest theories about President Trump are the ones that are true.
00:01:04.000 He had a bunch of documents.
00:01:06.000 He liked the documents.
00:01:07.000 He didn't want to give back the documents.
00:01:08.000 That is the entire thing.
00:01:10.000 And everybody in the media treated it as though this was a massive scandal.
00:01:13.000 He's out there.
00:01:13.000 He's stealing the documents.
00:01:15.000 He's going to hand them over.
00:01:16.000 He's a traitor.
00:01:17.000 We're going to hang him for treason.
00:01:20.000 That's what it is.
00:01:20.000 And Trump's like, no, I just like this document that has Kim Jong-un writing poetry on it.
00:01:24.000 That's what I like.
00:01:25.000 And the entire media spend a couple of years fulminating over the evils of taking classified documents out of a place where they should be into a place where they should not be.
00:01:34.000 Now, here's the thing.
00:01:35.000 Donald Trump was actually president of the United States.
00:01:37.000 So while he was president, he did have the summary power of declassification.
00:01:41.000 It's a complex legal issue as to actually how documents get declassified and all that.
00:01:45.000 But one thing is certain.
00:01:46.000 The entire Democratic Party said it was unthinkable Insane.
00:01:50.000 Ridiculous.
00:01:51.000 For a former president of the United States to have access to classified documents that he should not have access to, and those documents should not have been outside the purview of classified areas.
00:02:01.000 And it's completely different when Hillary Clinton stores classified material on her servers at home.
00:02:07.000 They couldn't explain why it was completely different when she did that or why it was completely different in a good way that she was actually storing them on technology that was accessible from outside the United States by foreign enemies of the United States, as admitted by former FBI Director James Comey when he decided not to indict her.
00:02:24.000 But they said, no, no, it's completely different because Trump was told to turn over the documents and Hillary, she turned over whatever she had, except for the stuff that she bleach bit on her on her hard drive.
00:02:31.000 And so it's completely different, completely different.
00:02:33.000 And at the time we had Joe Biden, who is a The President of the United States, we had him saying that it was absolutely unthinkable and irresponsible for anybody to store classified documents outside of classified areas.
00:02:47.000 Again, despite the fact that this has happened multiple times in the past, ranging from Hillary Clinton to Sandy Berger, who's an attorney for President Clinton, attempting to smuggle out classified documents in his pants from the National Archives in July 2004, all of which ended.
00:03:00.000 With Sandy Berger pleading guilty to a misdemeanor, right?
00:03:02.000 There are no accusations of treason in that particular case.
00:03:05.000 But with Trump, Trump's the worst person in the world, and therefore it was completely irresponsible and terrible for him to have documents on the premises at Mar-a-Lago, even if they were basically in a locked closet that no one was accessing just because Trump wanted the documents there.
00:03:16.000 And you'll recall that, again, Joe Biden was not quiet about this.
00:03:20.000 Joe Biden said in his own inimitably mashed potato style that Donald Trump was a deeply irresponsible person for having done anything like this.
00:03:29.000 When you saw the photograph of the top-secret documents laid out on the floor at Mar-a-Lago, what did you think to yourself, looking at that image?
00:03:40.000 How that could possibly happen.
00:03:44.000 How anyone could be that irresponsible.
00:03:47.000 And I thought, what data was in there that may compromise sources and methods?
00:03:52.000 By that I mean names of people who helped, etc.
00:03:56.000 And it's just totally irresponsible.
00:03:59.000 So irresponsible and what was in there?
00:04:02.000 I mean it could have been nuclear codes, could have been a recipe for Coca-Cola, the original recipe, no one knows.
00:04:08.000 I don't know.
00:04:08.000 Okay, well, it would be weird and ironic if the President of the United States, when he was the Vice President of the United States, had taken classified documents and put them in a non-classified area, would it not?
00:04:19.000 It'd be strangely hilarious if that turned out to be the truth.
00:04:22.000 Oh, well, breaking news.
00:04:24.000 According to CBS, Attorney General Merrick Garland has assigned the U.S.
00:04:26.000 Attorney in Chicago to review documents marked classified that were found at the Pentagon.
00:04:34.000 Guys, always remember, politics is veep.
00:04:35.000 everyone is a moron. Documents that were marked classified were found at the Penn Biden Center for Diplomacy and Global Engagement in Washington. Two sources with knowledge of the inquiry told CBS News. The roughly 10 documents are from President Biden's vice presidential office at the center, the sources said. CBS News has learned the FBI is also involved in the U.S. Attorney's inquiry. Womp womp from the Price is Right.
00:04:58.000 Like just.
00:04:59.000 Well done, Joe Biden.
00:05:02.000 Mashed potatoes for brains.
00:05:03.000 Terrible.
00:05:04.000 You should never have classified documents outside of a classified area, says Joe Biden, who had classified documents outside of a classified area, outside of a safe area.
00:05:12.000 The material was identified by personal attorneys for Mr. Biden on November 2nd, just before the midterm elections.
00:05:17.000 Richard Salbert, special counsel to the president, confirmed.
00:05:20.000 The documents were discovered when Biden's personal attorneys were packing files housed in a locked closet to prepare to vacate office space at the Penn-Biden Center in Washington, D.C.
00:05:28.000 Oh, you mean in a locked closet?
00:05:29.000 But I thought that locked closets were bad.
00:05:31.000 Like, if it's a locked closet in Florida, that's super bad.
00:05:33.000 And if it's a locked closet in Washington, D.C.
00:05:35.000 at the Penn-Biden Center, it's totally okay, apparently.
00:05:38.000 I do love that they discovered this November 2nd.
00:05:41.000 You'll recognize that November 2nd is before the actual election date, November 6th, and yet we only find out about this in mid-January of 2023.
00:05:52.000 Hmm.
00:05:53.000 Might it have made a difference in the midterm elections if people had known that Joe Biden had had a bunch of classified documents in his possession?
00:05:59.000 We'll get to more on all this in just one second.
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00:08:06.000 The documents were contained in a folder that was in a box with other unclassified papers, the sources said.
00:08:09.000 The sources revealed neither what the documents contained nor their level of classification.
00:08:13.000 A source familiar with the matter told CBS News the documents did not contain nuclear secrets.
00:08:17.000 Well, I mean, if that's the new standard, they have to contain nuclear secrets.
00:08:20.000 By the way, I've seen no evidence that Donald Trump's documents actually contained nuclear secrets.
00:08:24.000 There are all those rumors that he had nuclear secrets and they were being distributed, but none of that has been confirmed.
00:08:28.000 Sauber also said that on the same day the material was discovered, November 2nd, the White House Counsel's Office notified the National Archives, which took possession of the materials the following morning.
00:08:36.000 The discovery of these documents was made by the president's attorney, Sauber said.
00:08:39.000 The documents were not the subject of any previous request or inquiry by the Archives.
00:08:42.000 Since that discovery, the president's personal attorneys have cooperated with the Archives and the Department of Justice in a process to ensure that any Obama-Biden administration records are appropriately in the possession of the Archives.
00:08:51.000 Okay, so the distinction they're going to attempt to draw is that we discovered it and we handed it over as opposed to Donald Trump, where it was discovered and he refused to hand it over.
00:08:58.000 Okay, I will say that that is in fact a distinction.
00:09:01.000 But you know what is true?
00:09:02.000 Classified documents are out there floating around because politicians are irresponsible.
00:09:05.000 Joe Biden is no exception to that rule.
00:09:07.000 So when you have slow old Joe talking about how terrible it is, just pure irresponsibility to have these documents floating around outside of classified arenas.
00:09:16.000 Yeah, I don't take you seriously because I don't take any of you seriously.
00:09:19.000 And it just goes to show, as always and forever, the narrative matters so much more than the fact pattern when it comes to media coverage of these events.
00:09:25.000 If you just followed the fact pattern in the Mar-a-Lago case, the worst you could say about President Trump is that President Trump He was clumsy and silly about how he took the documents home to Mar-a-Lago and that he's a stubborn guy.
00:09:37.000 But all of the wild media narrative and speculation about how Donald Trump was actually a spy for the Russkies and working for Putin, all of that, of course, was designed to tie into a prior narrative.
00:09:46.000 And that narrative, as it turns out, was also a lie.
00:09:49.000 It's like a daisy chain of lies from the media.
00:09:51.000 They create a lying narrative and then they back up that lying narrative with another lying narrative, which is followed by a third lying narrative.
00:09:57.000 So if you'll recall, this is all part of the broader lying Russian narrative, which is also being debunked today.
00:10:03.000 So the first move in the Russia has affected America narrative was that the 2016 election was decided on the basis of Donald Trump coordinating with the Russians in order to skew the election results.
00:10:14.000 And there are a few problems with this.
00:10:16.000 One, they could actually prove no evidence of coordination between Donald Trump and the Russians.
00:10:20.000 The best that they had was Donald Trump out there doing what he did in public saying things like, I wish that Vladimir Putin would release all of the WikiLeaks.
00:10:26.000 Wiki, we love WikiLeaks.
00:10:28.000 And everybody going crazy over that.
00:10:30.000 And yes, the president of the United States should not be in favor of the release of classified materials by a foreign enemy.
00:10:34.000 But Donald Trump was not actively coordinated with Putin.
00:10:38.000 He was out there saying stuff because that's what Donald Trump used to say.
00:10:41.000 And so what the media spun that up into, of course, was Donald Trump is actively colluding with the Russians to steal the election because they had to come up with some explanation for why Hillary Clinton had lost to a real estate mogul.
00:10:51.000 They couldn't believe that Hillary had lost, so they concocted this entire narrative in which Russia had manipulated the American election.
00:10:56.000 And this required them to work with the FBI to push forward a complete bull crap, oppo dossier, the steel dossier, and to use that dossier as the predicate for surveilling people like Carter Page, who were tangentially associated with the Trump campaign, and then launch a several years of Mueller investigation costing tens of millions of dollars into the connections between Donald Trump and Russia.
00:11:19.000 And the pure proof that they had that the election had been affected.
00:11:23.000 They had no proof that Trump had coordinated with WikiLeaks or coordinated with Putin.
00:11:26.000 So they had to come up with something.
00:11:28.000 And the something they came up with was that on Facebook, the Russians had manipulated the American process.
00:11:34.000 So maybe that wasn't Trump's direct fault, but it was Facebook's direct fault.
00:11:36.000 So after 2016 and after Trump won, it exploded their world.
00:11:40.000 They came up with all these narratives.
00:11:41.000 Trump was colluding with the Russians.
00:11:42.000 The Russians were working with Facebook.
00:11:44.000 Facebook didn't shut any of this down.
00:11:45.000 So we need to shut down control of social media.
00:11:48.000 Social media must be brought to heel.
00:11:50.000 We must bring the methods of informational dissemination back under our own control.
00:11:55.000 And so one of the huge narratives coming out of 2016 is that social media, which heretofore had been seen as an unmitigated good in politics.
00:12:01.000 You'll recall that in 2012, Barack Obama was being widely feted for his use of social media in order to get people to the polls.
00:12:08.000 His unprecedented use of analytical data garnered from social media like Facebook.
00:12:12.000 This was considered an act of genius.
00:12:14.000 When Cambridge Analytica did the same thing for Trump in 2016, suddenly it was an act of criminality.
00:12:19.000 And the Russians, we were told, had used Facebook in order to manipulate American public opinion.
00:12:23.000 And that was why Hillary Clinton had lost the election.
00:12:24.000 It wasn't that she was the worst candidate in American history.
00:12:27.000 I mean, it would take the worst candidate in American history to lose to Donald Trump, who was, at the time, the second most unpopular politician in America, running against the first most unpopular politician in America.
00:12:36.000 No, the solution, they said, is that the Russians had somehow manipulated Facebook into changing the minds of the American people.
00:12:43.000 Now, I pointed out at the time that the amount of interference they were talking about from the Russians, the Russian memery, this really bad memory, much of it misspelled in bad American English, That that had had almost no impact like at all on the vote.
00:12:58.000 If you looked at the amount of actual virality to the Russian post, it did not exist.
00:13:04.000 The entirety of Russian viewership of viewership of Russian material was less than the viewership of my personal Facebook page in a single month.
00:13:14.000 That did not shift the election any more than I shifted the election in 2016.
00:13:17.000 Significantly less, I would imagine, than I shifted the election in 2016.
00:13:20.000 The Russians, however, this was the narrative, because the media always have the narrative.
00:13:26.000 So they have the narrative, it was Russian interference prompted by Trump, and then the Russians acted on behalf of Trump with Facebook, so we have to shut down Facebook.
00:13:33.000 And we have to curb its dissemination of information.
00:13:36.000 And the only way to do that is to get them to stop allowing for the spread of information from places like Daily Wire or Daily Caller or Breitbart or Fox News.
00:13:46.000 And then that turned into Russia's collusion with Trump never stopped.
00:13:49.000 That's why Trump was stealing documents.
00:13:51.000 That's why Trump was putting those classified documents in the closet.
00:13:52.000 Well, now it turns out pretty much all these politicians have classified documents in the closet.
00:13:56.000 And as it also turns out, reported yesterday, quote, Russian trolls on Twitter had little influence on 2016 voters.
00:14:04.000 Oh, you think?
00:14:05.000 Some of us were saying this at the time because it was perfectly obvious that this was an incredibly stupid and silly narrative.
00:14:11.000 And yet it was this narrative that drove debate on regulating the internet.
00:14:15.000 It was this narrative that drove debate on Donald Trump being a Russian tool.
00:14:19.000 It was this narrative that suggested that Facebook had to radically shift its procedures for how you see information in the news.
00:14:25.000 And now it turns out that what we were saying was true all along.
00:14:28.000 That Russia's interference, quote-unquote, on Facebook had pretty much no impact on the election.
00:14:32.000 quote, Russian influence operations on Twitter in the 2016 presidential election reached relatively few users, most of whom were highly partisan Republicans.
00:14:39.000 And the Russian accounts had no measurable impact in changing minds or influencing voter behavior, according to a study out this The study, which the New York University Center for Social Media and Politics helmed, explores the limits of what Russian disinformation and misinformation was able to achieve on one major social media platform in the 2016 elections.
00:14:56.000 My personal sense coming out of this is this got way overhyped.
00:14:59.000 Oh, did it?
00:15:00.000 Said Josh Tucker, one of the report's authors, who's also co-director of the NYU Center.
00:15:05.000 Now we're looking back at the data and we can see how concentrated this was in one small portion of the population, and how the fact that people who were being exposed to these were really, really likely to vote for Trump anyway.
00:15:13.000 And we have this data to show we can't find any relationship between being exposed to these tweets and people's change in attitudes.
00:15:20.000 And then I love the Washington Post trying to buy this fact.
00:15:22.000 The study did not go so far as to show that Russia had no influence on people who voted for President Donald Trump.
00:15:27.000 It doesn't examine Facebook and it doesn't examine Russian hack and leak operations.
00:15:30.000 It doesn't suggest that foreign influence operations aren't a threat at all.
00:15:33.000 But no, guys, that's exactly what this suggests.
00:15:36.000 What it suggests is if the huge social media outlet that is Twitter had no impact on the election via Russian disinformation, probably the same is true of Facebook.
00:15:45.000 The stats on Facebook were not great, as I pointed out in the Senate report at the time conducted by Democrats.
00:15:51.000 The results showed only 1% of Twitter users accounted for 70% of the exposure to accounts that Twitter identified as Russian troll accounts.
00:15:57.000 Highly partisan Republicans were exposed to nine times more posts than non-Republicans.
00:16:01.000 Content from the news media and U.S.
00:16:02.000 politicians dwarfed the amount of Russian-influenced content the electorate was exposed to during the 2016 race.
00:16:07.000 And there was no measurable impact on political attitudes, polarization, and vote preferences and behavior from the Russian account and posts.
00:16:13.000 So I noticed the calendar.
00:16:14.000 It is now 2023.
00:16:15.000 Why did it take seven years for this to come out?
00:16:18.000 This was perfectly obvious in 2016 when it was happening.
00:16:21.000 And the answer is, again, it is all part of these broader narratives that are crafted by the media.
00:16:26.000 The media craft these broader narratives at the behest of the Democratic Party.
00:16:29.000 They work together in order to launder those narratives into the public view.
00:16:33.000 And then they use those narratives as the predicate for actual law enforcement investigations.
00:16:37.000 Into the predicate for actual legislation against places like Twitter and Facebook.
00:16:41.000 And talk about how social media is destroying the Republic for allowing too much information we don't like out there.
00:16:47.000 Every narrative gets crafted.
00:16:48.000 Every narrative gets shaped by the media.
00:16:50.000 There's a reason why of all the major institutions in the United States, the legacy media are at the low ebb in terms of public trust.
00:16:57.000 This would be the reason.
00:16:59.000 And this is why people say, why can't we share the same set of facts?
00:17:02.000 Maybe because the people who are supposed to be bringing you the facts spend most of their day crafting widespread false narratives about the state of play.
00:17:11.000 Maybe it's that.
00:17:12.000 And then they use those narratives in order to cudgel places like social media in order to effectuate change.
00:17:17.000 So in the same way that they cuddled Mark Zuckerberg into going before Congress and claiming that people posting random memes was somehow his responsibility, which it is not.
00:17:25.000 Facebook is a platform.
00:17:26.000 It is not, in fact, a publisher.
00:17:29.000 Just as they were able to cudgel Zuckerberg into doing that and cudgel Jack Dorsey over at Twitter into pretending that it was his responsibility to do the work of the Democratic Party and the legacy media, well, they did that with regard to COVID as well.
00:17:40.000 We're now learning that Twitter was essentially being manipulated from the outside by the White House, coercing officials in the social media companies into doing their bidding with regard to COVID.
00:17:53.000 The Wall Street Journal points out newly released documents show that the White House has played a major role in censoring Americans on social media.
00:17:59.000 Email exchanges between Rob Flaherty, the White House's director of digital media and social media executives prove the company's put COVID censorship policies in place in response to relentless coercive pressure from the White House, not voluntarily.
00:18:10.000 The emails emerged January 6th in the discovery phase of Missouri versus Biden.
00:18:15.000 A free speech case brought by the Attorney Generals of Missouri and Louisiana and four private plaintiffs represented by the New Civil Liberties Alliance.
00:18:22.000 On March 14, 2021, Mr. Flaherty emailed a Facebook executive with the subject line, quote, you're hiding the ball, and a link to a Washington Post article about Facebook's own research into, quote, the spread of ideas that contribute to vaccine hesitancy, as the paper put it.
00:18:35.000 I think there's a misunderstanding, the executive wrote back.
00:18:37.000 I don't think this is a misunderstanding, Flaherty replied.
00:18:39.000 We are gravely concerned that your service is one of the top drivers of VAX hesitancy, period.
00:18:44.000 We want you to know.
00:18:45.000 We want to know that you're trying.
00:18:47.000 We want to know how we can help.
00:18:48.000 We want to know that you're not playing a shell game.
00:18:50.000 This would all be a lot easier if you'd just be straight with us.
00:18:52.000 On March 21st, after failing to placate Flaherty, the Facebook executive sent an email detailing the company's planned policy changes.
00:18:58.000 They included removing vaccine misinformation and quote, reducing the virality of content discouraging vaccines that does not contain actionable misinformation.
00:19:06.000 So in other words, they created a two-pronged system.
00:19:09.000 One, they declared certain stuff misinformation, which as it would later turn out was not in fact misinformation.
00:19:14.000 And two, even if it was not misinformation, if they thought they would undermine people wanting to get the vaccine, they would discourage the virality, meaning they wouldn't allow these posts to spread.
00:19:24.000 Facebook characterized that material as often true content that can be framed as sensation, alarmist, or shocking.
00:19:31.000 So even stuff that was often true was now subverted by Facebook at the behest of the White House under Joe Biden.
00:19:39.000 Facebook pledged to remove these groups, pages, and accounts when they are disproportionately promoting this sensationalized content.
00:19:45.000 In that exchange, Flaherty demanded to know what Facebook was doing to limit the spread of viral content on WhatsApp, a private message app, especially given its reach in immigrant communities and communities of color.
00:19:53.000 The company responded three weeks later with a lengthy list of promises.
00:19:56.000 On April 9th, Flaherty asked, quote, what actions and changes you're making to ensure you're not making our country's vaccine hesitancy problem worse.
00:20:02.000 He faulted the company for insufficient zeal in earlier efforts to control political speech.
00:20:06.000 Quote, in the electoral context, you tested and deployed an algorithmic shift that promoted quality news and information about the election.
00:20:12.000 You only did this, however, after an election, you helped increase skepticism in and an insurrection, which was plotted in large part by your platform.
00:20:18.000 And then you turned it back off.
00:20:19.000 I want some assurances based in data.
00:20:20.000 You are not doing the same thing again here.
00:20:22.000 And the executive responded, understood again, part of the broader narrative that when Democrats don't like an outcome, it must be that social media is to blame.
00:20:30.000 It must be manipulation by outside forces.
00:20:33.000 On April 14th, Flaherty pressed the executive about, quote, why the top post about vaccines today is Tucker Carlson saying they don't work.
00:20:39.000 I want to know what reduction actually looks like, he said.
00:20:41.000 The executive responded, running this down now.
00:20:43.000 On April 23rd, Flaherty sent the executive an internal memo he claimed had been circulating in the White House.
00:20:48.000 It asserts that Facebook plays a major role in the spread of COVID vaccine information and accuses the company of, among other things, failure to monitor events hosting anti-vaccine and COVID disinformation and, quote, directing attention to COVID skeptics, anti-vaccine trusted messengers.
00:21:01.000 On May 10th, the executive sent Flaherty a list of steps Facebook had taken to increase vaccine acceptance.
00:21:05.000 And Flaherty scoffed, quote, hard to take any of this seriously when you're actively promoting anti-vaccine pages in search.
00:21:10.000 And then wrote and then linked to an NBC reporter's tweet.
00:21:12.000 Because this is the way that this stupid little game works.
00:21:14.000 Members of the media spend their days doing the bidding of the Democratic Party.
00:21:17.000 The White House can pressure social media and social media does the bidding of the White House.
00:21:22.000 President Biden, Press Secretary Jen Psaki, Surgeon General Vivek Murthy later publicly vowed to hold the platforms accountable if they didn't heighten censorship.
00:21:28.000 On July 16, 2021, a reporter asked Biden about his message to platforms like Facebook, and he said, they're killing people.
00:21:36.000 Flaherty also strong-armed Google in April 2021, accusing YouTube of funneling people into vaccine hesitancy.
00:21:42.000 Flaherty demanded to know what further measures Google would take to remove disfavored content.
00:21:48.000 And this was, this was the constant push by members of the federal government to use social media in order to crack down on information they do not like.
00:21:58.000 That is absolute madness.
00:22:00.000 And yet this is the way, unfortunately, our news and social media work.
00:22:04.000 A narrative is crafted.
00:22:05.000 That narrative is crafted by members of the Democratic Party.
00:22:08.000 It is then pushed to the media.
00:22:10.000 The media are effectively the Praetorian Guard for the Democratic Party.
00:22:13.000 The media then report this narrative widespread.
00:22:16.000 And then officials in the government go to private companies and they pressure them to change their policies on informational dissemination based on what the media have reported by laundering in Democratic Party messaging.
00:22:26.000 This is the stupid little game.
00:22:28.000 And it's extraordinarily dangerous because it has real world impact.
00:22:32.000 It means that you and I don't see information we should see on everything ranging from elections to vaccines.
00:22:38.000 It's a serious problem.
00:22:40.000 And it goes even further than that, by the way.
00:22:42.000 We'll get to more on this in just one moment.
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00:25:06.000 As it turns out, an enormous amount of pressure has been brought to bear on these social media companies by outside forces connected with, for example, Pfizer.
00:25:15.000 So Alex Berenson, who is a VAX skeptic, he's been a VAX skeptic for a long time.
00:25:20.000 I disagree with much of what Alex Berenson has said with regard to vaccines.
00:25:23.000 I don't think that it is well founded journalistically or in the data.
00:25:27.000 However, however, Alex Berenson is reporting, and this is correct, that on August 27, 2021, Dr. Scott Gottlieb, a Pfizer director with over 550,000 Twitter followers, saw a tweet he didn't like, a tweet that might hurt sales of Pfizer's mRNA vaccines.
00:25:41.000 The tweet correctly explained that natural immunity after COVID infection was superior to vaccine protection, and it called on the White House to follow the science and exempt people with natural immunity from upcoming vaccine mandates.
00:25:51.000 That tweet didn't come from an anti-vaxxer.
00:25:52.000 It came from Dr. Brett Giroir, a physician who briefly followed Gottlieb as head of the FDA.
00:25:57.000 And the tweet actually said that if you didn't have natural immunity, you should get vaccinated.
00:26:01.000 It didn't matter.
00:26:03.000 So Gottlieb stepped in and he emailed Todd O'Boyle, a top lobbyist in Twitter's Washington office, who is also Twitter's point of contact with the White House.
00:26:11.000 The post said Gottlieb was corrosive.
00:26:13.000 He said, this is the kind of stuff that's corrosive.
00:26:15.000 Here he draws a sweeping conclusion off a single retrospective study in Israel that hasn't been peer reviewed.
00:26:19.000 But this tweet will end up going viral and driving news coverage.
00:26:23.000 And this apparently resulted in Twitter acting.
00:26:29.000 Through JIRA, an internal system Twitter used for managing complaints, Oboe forwarded Gottlieb's email to the Twitter strategic response team.
00:26:35.000 That group was responsible for handling concerns from the company's most important employees and users.
00:26:39.000 Please see this report from the former FDA commissioner, Oboe wrote, failing to mention that Gottlieb was a Pfizer board member.
00:26:44.000 A strategic response analyst quickly found the tweet did not violate the company's misinformation rules, but Twitter wound up flagging Girard's tweet anyway, putting a misleading tag on it and preventing almost anyone from seeing it.
00:26:54.000 It remains tagged, even though several large studies have now confirmed that what Girard said was actually true.
00:27:00.000 A week later, on September 3rd, Gottlieb tried to do the same thing, complaining to O'Boyle about a tweet from Justin Hart.
00:27:05.000 Hart is a lockdown and COVID Vax skeptic with about 100,000 Twitter followers.
00:27:08.000 He said, sticks and stones may break my bones, but a viral pathogen with a child mortality rate of approximately zero has cost our children nearly three years of schooling, Hart had written.
00:27:16.000 Gottlieb objected to the words, but the simple fact of the matter is that that was right.
00:27:20.000 Now, again, this is dangerous stuff.
00:27:24.000 Now, Scott Gottlieb has been a guest on this program because, again, he was the former FDA commissioner.
00:27:27.000 The fact that he was using that position and that influence behind the scenes in order to quash the opinions of others is insanity.
00:27:35.000 And this is the widespread move.
00:27:38.000 You find people who are in positions of influence, and those people are able to pressure sort of mid-level management at these big social media companies to quash informational dissemination.
00:27:46.000 And then you wonder why levels of trust are so unbelievably low.
00:27:49.000 That's particularly true When you have the Pfizer CEO now admitting that immune protection from vaccines does not last for long.
00:27:57.000 So the Babylon Bee joke today that Pfizer is now going to create a Bainsuit where you are injected with a vaccine every 12 hours until your body is entirely comprised of vaccine.
00:28:07.000 That seems about correct at this point.
00:28:08.000 Here's the Pfizer CEO who's admitting that the length of the durability of vaccine immunity is pretty low here.
00:28:18.000 I think a lot of people are still wondering what's going to happen with COVID.
00:28:21.000 Of course.
00:28:21.000 And with your vaccine.
00:28:22.000 How are you sort of modeling, based on what you've seen this winter so far, what does that look like going forward?
00:28:28.000 Look, we are dealing with a very nasty virus.
00:28:30.000 Two characteristics.
00:28:31.000 One it is, if you get sick, even, or vaccinated, the immune protection that you are getting from those two, it doesn't last for long.
00:28:40.000 And then the second it is, keeps changing.
00:28:43.000 That creates even more complications.
00:28:46.000 So all the things that we were originally told about the vaccine, much of that is not true.
00:28:51.000 All of this leads to massive societal distrust.
00:28:54.000 And when you combine that with the fact that our leading scientific thinkers, right, the institution that is supposed to actually provide us with goods and services that improve our lives, those scientific institutions have been hijacked by actual ideologues.
00:29:09.000 All of this makes our situation ever more precarious.
00:29:12.000 So for example, you have the editor of Scientific American suggesting that Tamar Hamlin's collapse on the football field, quote, highlights the violence of black men experienced in football.
00:29:24.000 The terrifyingly ordinary nature of football's violence disproportionately affects black men.
00:29:28.000 This is not a think piece in Slate.
00:29:31.000 This is a piece in Scientific American.
00:29:34.000 Millions of people watched as DeMar Hamlin, a 24-year-old player in the NFL, executed a seemingly routine tackle during a highly anticipated Monday Night Football game, immediately after Hamlin rose to his feet and then collapsed.
00:29:43.000 Players from his team, the Buffalo Bills, and the opposing team, the Cincinnati Bengals, created a tight huddle around him on the field as medical personnel tried to revive him.
00:29:50.000 We learned the next day that Hamlin suffered a cardiac arrest.
00:29:52.000 His heart had suddenly stopped working.
00:29:54.000 The scene was horrific for both its regularity and its exceptionality.
00:29:58.000 Matt Gutman of ABC tweeted as much.
00:30:00.000 The scariest part of this is that the hit was in fact not scary.
00:30:02.000 It looked terrifyingly ordinary.
00:30:04.000 The ordinariness of men running into each other at full speed represents a normalized, even rationalized violence that is routine.
00:30:10.000 So this American guy, this is the editor of Scientific American.
00:30:14.000 This ordinary violence has always riddled the sport, and it affects all players.
00:30:17.000 But black players are disproportionately affected.
00:30:19.000 While black men are severely underrepresented in positions of power across football, they're overrepresented on the gridiron.
00:30:24.000 Non-white players account for 70% of the NFL.
00:30:27.000 Nearly half of Division I college football players are black.
00:30:30.000 Further, through a process called racial stacking, coaches racially segregate athletes by playing position.
00:30:34.000 These demographic discrepancies place black athletes at higher risk during play.
00:30:38.000 Well, I have a solution for this.
00:30:39.000 We'll have only white players.
00:30:42.000 Sound like a stupid solution?
00:30:44.000 That's because what you're suggesting here is idiotic.
00:30:46.000 Of course black players are disproportionately affected by things happening on a football field where a disproportionate number of the players are black.
00:30:53.000 It's like saying that white people are disproportionately affected by checking in hockey.
00:30:58.000 Well, yeah, because most of the players are white.
00:31:00.000 The hell are you talking about?
00:31:02.000 But the head of Scientific American is a cultural anthropologist.
00:31:05.000 I've spent the last decade learning how black college football players navigate the exploitation, racism, and anti-blackness that are fundamental to its current system.
00:31:12.000 These are our scientific geniuses out here.
00:31:14.000 The same exact people determining what it is that you are supposed to say in the media with regard to ta-science.
00:31:23.000 It's amazing stuff.
00:31:24.000 By the way, speaking of ta-science, CBS News is now promoting, in the name of ta-science, that children who are fat ought to have surgery on hormones.
00:31:32.000 It seems like they're not really talking about fat kids, to be honest with you.
00:31:36.000 It seems like this is a proxy for another conversation entirely, but because the media are very into apparently surgically altering children and hormonally treating children.
00:31:45.000 But apparently, according to CBS News, quote, children struggling with obesity should be evaluated and treated early and aggressively, including with medications for kids as young as 12 and surgery for those as young as 13, according to new guidelines released on Monday.
00:31:58.000 The longstanding practice of watchful waiting or delaying treatment to see whether children and teens outgrow or overcome obesity on their own only worsens the problem that affects more than 14.4 million young people in the United States, according to researchers.
00:32:09.000 Left untreated, obesity can lead to lifelong health problems, including high blood pressure, diabetes and depression.
00:32:14.000 Waiting doesn't work, says Dr. Ihuma Inelli, co-author of the first guidance on childhood obesity in 15 years for the American Academy of Pediatrics.
00:32:21.000 What we see is a continuation of weight gain and the likelihood they'll have obesity in adulthood.
00:32:26.000 For the first time, the group's guidance sets ages at which kids and teens should be offered medical treatments like drugs and surgery, in addition to intensive diet, exercise, and other behavior and lifestyle interventions, said Nelly, director of the Center for Healthy Weight and Nutrition at Nationwide Children's Hospital.
00:32:38.000 Okay, so just to be clear, culturally, are we done with fat positivity at this point?
00:32:42.000 Are we done with this?
00:32:43.000 Are we still gonna pretend that the Lizzo body type is just as normal and healthy as any other body type?
00:32:47.000 Is that what we're gonna do here?
00:32:49.000 Or are we telling kids at 12 that we should hormonally treat them if they're too fat?
00:32:53.000 In general, doctors should offer adolescents 12 and older who have obesity access to appropriate drugs.
00:32:58.000 And teens 13 and older with severe obesity, referrals for weight loss surgery.
00:33:02.000 Those situations may vary.
00:33:04.000 The guidelines aim to reset the inaccurate view of obesity as a personal problem, maybe a failure of the person's diligence, said Dr. Sandra Hasink, medical director for the AAP Institute for Healthy Childhood Weight.
00:33:15.000 This is not different than you have asthma and now we have an inhaler for you.
00:33:18.000 Well, no, actually it is different from you have asthma and we have an inhaler for you, in that obesity is due to a failure of caloric deficit.
00:33:26.000 Eat less food.
00:33:27.000 Exercise more.
00:33:29.000 There are certain people who have congenital defects that lead to obesity.
00:33:32.000 That is not 14.4 million young Americans.
00:33:36.000 That is not what is happening.
00:33:37.000 The actual answer to this is stop putting food in your face.
00:33:40.000 Your parents need to stop feeding you crap.
00:33:42.000 That is the answer to this, but we're not allowed to say that.
00:33:45.000 If you say that, then apparently it's intolerance.
00:33:47.000 The better answer is that we have to medicate and surgically alter small children.
00:33:53.000 Young people who have a body mass index that meets or exceeds the 95th percentile for kids of the same age and gender are considered obese.
00:33:58.000 Obesity affects nearly 20% of kids and teens in the United States.
00:34:03.000 The group's guidance takes into consideration that obesity is a biological problem and the condition is a complex chronic disease, says Aaron Kelly, co-director for the Center for Pediatric Obesity Medicine at the University of Minnesota.
00:34:13.000 Obesity is not a lifestyle problem.
00:34:15.000 It's not a lifestyle disease.
00:34:16.000 It predominantly emerges from biological factors.
00:34:20.000 I'm going to need to see the evidence behind the idea that obesity is predominantly due to genetic conditions that are unalterable by diet and exercise.
00:34:30.000 This makes no difference.
00:34:32.000 This is amazing.
00:34:33.000 This is what the science says.
00:34:35.000 So apparently now, if you say, perhaps the parents of kids who are overweight should try to have them get more exercise and eat less food and different food and take less calories in, that apparently is really, really bad.
00:34:47.000 Dr. Robert Lustig, longtime specialist in pediatric endocrinology.
00:34:51.000 He worries.
00:34:52.000 He says, I'm not.
00:34:52.000 It's not that I'm against the medications.
00:34:54.000 I'm against the willy nilly use of those medications without addressing the root cause of the problem.
00:34:57.000 Lustig said children have to be evaluated individually to understand all the factors that contribute to obesity.
00:35:02.000 He has long blamed too much sugar for the rise in obesity.
00:35:04.000 He urges a sharp focus on diet, particularly ultra processed foods that are high in sugar and low in fiber.
00:35:10.000 Well, yes.
00:35:11.000 But it doesn't matter.
00:35:12.000 The American Academy of Pediatrics, they're ready to experiment on the kiddies.
00:35:15.000 They're ready to do that incredibly fast.
00:35:17.000 And that, of course, is no shock.
00:35:18.000 These are the same people who suggest that it's absolutely necessary for your 11-year-old to have hormone treatment when he believes that he is a girl.
00:35:26.000 Which, of course, gets laundered then into the media, right?
00:35:29.000 These quote unquote scientific narratives get laundered into the media, which is how you end up with articles like this one from the Associated Press quote, States target transgender health care in first bills of 2023.
00:35:38.000 It's transgender health care.
00:35:39.000 It is not a hormonal and surgical mutilation of children.
00:35:42.000 It is health care.
00:35:44.000 Gender affirming health care providers and parents of trans youth are the primary targets of these bills, says the AP, many of which seek to criminalize helping a trans child obtain what doctors and psychologists widely consider medically necessary care.
00:35:57.000 Well, if the scientists say so.
00:35:58.000 The same scientists who say that fat kids should be treated by having a stomach stapling.
00:36:04.000 Amazing stuff from our geniuses over here.
00:36:07.000 By the way, the people who they cite in this article include, of course, the World Professional Association for Transgender Health, which is an anti-scientific interest group that takes no account of actual watchful waiting or the simple fact that boys cannot become girls.
00:36:20.000 Oh, these folks.
00:36:22.000 But again, the narrative trumps reality every single time.
00:36:25.000 The narrative trumps reality.
00:36:26.000 We'll get to more of this in just one second.
00:36:28.000 First, did you know if you become a Dailyware Plus member, you can get this show without hearing me say, but first, like ever, and redo an ad?
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00:36:58.000 Oh, and when we talk about scientific narratives that have gone awry, What is amazing is that when there's an actual scientific win, it just does not get enormous media coverage.
00:37:05.000 So for example, let's say that there had been a discovery, a discovery that lowers the global warming trajectory by 0.5 degrees Celsius, which is a significant amount considering that what we are currently worried about is 2 degrees Celsius in global heating over the course of a century, 2.5 degrees Celsius.
00:37:21.000 So lowering the global temperature by 0.5 degrees Celsius That'd be like a major thing, right?
00:37:27.000 So why isn't it getting major coverage?
00:37:28.000 And the answer is because we're never allowed to see the good news.
00:37:31.000 If you ever see good news, it might imply that human innovation and creativity are capable of getting us out of our problems as opposed to, you know, wide scale cuts to your living standards.
00:37:40.000 So, this is the actual thing that is happening.
00:37:43.000 And it happened because, over the course of the last several decades, human beings stopped destroying the ozone layer.
00:37:48.000 According to the Jerusalem Post, efforts to lower the use of ozone-depleting substances have succeeded, with the ozone layer healing, and the Earth expected to avoid 0.5 to 1 degree Celsius of global warming.
00:37:59.000 1 degree Celsius of global warming is a lot of global warming that has been avoided because the ozone layer healed itself.
00:38:05.000 The Earth healed itself because we stopped doing things that were wildly damaging, which suggests that when human beings see a major problem that is coming over the course of time, they're pretty quickly capable of providing substitutes.
00:38:18.000 Innovation is a good answer to many of the problems that the Earth faces environmentally, but you're not supposed to see that sort of stuff.
00:38:22.000 Again, this would be big news if there are any Invention that came online that lowered the global temperature by one degree Celsius.
00:38:31.000 Huge news.
00:38:31.000 In fact, what they are currently talking about in terms of taking trillions of dollars out of the global economy would probably lower global temperatures by like a small fraction of that.
00:38:41.000 And that gets all the coverage.
00:38:41.000 That's stuff where Greta Thunberg looks at you and says, how dare you?
00:38:44.000 How dare you drive a car?
00:38:46.000 How dare you sell?
00:38:48.000 And that's the stuff that gets all the attention.
00:38:49.000 But, you know, a move that was made over the course of the last several decades to get rid of, for example, certain materials in your aerosol cans that harm the ozone layer.
00:39:02.000 That just doesn't get the same coverage.
00:39:05.000 Because, again, it implies that people are pretty creative.
00:39:07.000 The ozone layer, compiled of O3, reduces the amount of harmful UV radiation that reaches the Earth's surface.
00:39:14.000 A group of substances called chlorofluorocarbons, CFCs, commonly used in refrigerants, aerosols, and solvents, were found to cause damage to the ozone layer, posing a risk for human health and the environment.
00:39:23.000 In 1987, dozens of countries signed the Montreal Protocol, which obligated signatories to phase out the use of CFCs.
00:39:28.000 According to a report published on Monday, the ozone layer is expected to return to the state it was in 1980.
00:39:33.000 Which heals the entire ozone layer by around 2066 in the Antarctic, around 2045 in the Arctic, and around the year 2040 in terms of the global average.
00:39:42.000 The ozone recovery is on track, according to the latest quadrennial report.
00:39:44.000 It's fantastic news.
00:39:46.000 The impact the Montreal Protocol has had on climate change mitigation cannot be overstressed.
00:39:49.000 Over the last 35 years, the Protocol has become the true champion for the environment, said Meg Secchi, Executive Secretary for the UN Environmental Program's Ozone Secretariat.
00:39:57.000 The assessments and reviews undertaken by the Scientific Assessment Panel remain a vital component of the work of the Protocol that helps inform policy and decision makers.
00:40:05.000 While the ozone in the upper stratosphere continues to recover, ozone in the lower stratosphere has not yet shown signs of recovery despite simulations showing there should be a small recovery.
00:40:13.000 The report noted reconciling this discrepancy is key to ensuring a full understanding of ozone recovery.
00:40:19.000 The new report additionally warned that plans to use stratospheric aerosol injection to try and offset global warming could cause damage to the ozone layer.
00:40:26.000 This is the use of so-called geoengineering because there are companies now that are seeking to essentially change the composition of the air in order to facilitate global cooling.
00:40:40.000 But the point here is that human beings are actually really good at coming up with quick-fix solutions on a lot of this stuff because you still use aerosols, don't you?
00:40:48.000 You still use refrigerants that are different, do you not?
00:40:51.000 That is a far cry, however, from the idea that we're just going to get rid of carbon-based fossil fuels.
00:40:55.000 But this sort of stuff does not get the same sort of coverage.
00:40:57.000 It does not get even remotely the same sort of coverage in the mainstream media because good news never gets the coverage that bad news gets when it comes to the alarmist tales that are being told by your legacy media.
00:41:07.000 Okay, meanwhile, Republicans are getting set to take over the Congress.
00:41:12.000 One of their first moves is that they are going to attempt to defund the IRS, which, of course, would be welcome.
00:41:17.000 They're going to repeal the Democrats' army of 87,000 IRS agents.
00:41:20.000 And Democrats are giving you a split message on this.
00:41:22.000 On the one hand, they say, well, guys, it's not to hire new agents.
00:41:25.000 It's to hire people who are, like, in support staff.
00:41:27.000 But also, if you cut those agents, then we're going to lose $100 billion in revenue grabbed from the American people.
00:41:34.000 They can't have it both ways.
00:41:35.000 If all we're worried about is just getting rid of a few computer programmers, then why are you saying that you're going to take in less money?
00:41:43.000 Anyway, House Republicans, according to the Daily Wire, who are now in control of the legislative body, voted Monday evening to cut billions of dollars to the IRS after the agency received a significant boost in funding in the Democrat Inflation Reduction Act.
00:41:54.000 House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who was just elected to the position, hailed the passage of the bill by a 221 to 210 vote.
00:42:01.000 He said in a statement, The increase in funding was estimated to be north of $80 billion over 10 years.
00:42:05.000 Now, realistically speaking, are the 87,000 IRS agents gonna go away?
00:42:07.000 of 87,000 IRS agents in our very first day in the majority.
00:42:10.000 Promises made, promises kept.
00:42:11.000 The increase in funding was estimated to be north of $80 billion over 10 years.
00:42:16.000 Now, realistically speaking, are the 87,000 IRS agents going to go away?
00:42:20.000 No, because the bill is unlikely to pass in the Senate.
00:42:22.000 However, the bill included a bunch of good provisions that Democrats are going to have to run against, including curbing wasteful government spending that is raising the price of groceries, gas, cars, and housing, and growing the national debt, moving supply chains away from China, and all the rest.
00:42:36.000 So, this is good.
00:42:38.000 Other good things that the House GOP has been doing?
00:42:41.000 They are aiming a weaponization panel at the DOJ.
00:42:45.000 Apparently this is a very bad thing according to Politico.
00:42:47.000 Here is the rule.
00:42:47.000 When the legislative branch does oversight of the executive branch, and the executive is a Republican and the legislative are Democrats, this is good.
00:42:54.000 It's an unmitigated good.
00:42:55.000 It's democracy at work.
00:42:56.000 It's how the Republic ought to function.
00:42:58.000 When there are Republicans in the legislature doing oversight on a Democratic president, it is the threat of fascism, cruelty, insanity.
00:43:04.000 According to Politico, House Republicans are declaring what amounts to an investigative war on the Biden administration, pledging to probe, quote, ongoing criminal investigations at the DOJ.
00:43:13.000 Veterans of some of the Congress's major recent probes in the department itself predict they will be told to pound sand.
00:43:19.000 GOP lawmakers are dramatically escalating their standoff with the administration by launching a wide range investigative panel to probe what they call the weaponization of government.
00:43:28.000 It's a broad mandate that will allow the party to look into any government agency or program that it views as suspect.
00:43:33.000 This includes the FBI, IRS, and the intelligence community.
00:43:38.000 According to Politico, it's an opening salvo that promises to escalate quickly.
00:43:41.000 The DOJ is certain to fiercely protect its most sensitive investigative files.
00:43:45.000 Prosecutors are not going to hand over information on open criminal probes, according to legal experts.
00:43:49.000 The resulting conflict promises to erode the already strained relationship between the DOJ and congressional Republicans.
00:43:55.000 This will be a separation of powers hornet's nest, said former House General Counsel Stan Brand, who represented witnesses before the January 6th Select Committee.
00:44:02.000 In order to insulate the process from taint, DOJ will have to draw clear lines in the sand over what they will provide.
00:44:06.000 Now, this sort of oversight is deeply necessary considering the malfeasance of the FBI during the Crossfire Hurricane investigation into Hillary Clinton, during the investigation into Carter Page, The Mueller investigation, right?
00:44:20.000 There's a lot here to worry about the DOJ and its weaponization against, for example, say parents.
00:44:26.000 The use of Merrick Garland's DOJ to go after parents who are angry at school boards.
00:44:31.000 There's gonna be a lot to investigate here.
00:44:33.000 Kevin McCarthy has indicated to House Republicans that Jim Jordan is going to lead that, which is great.
00:44:36.000 Jim Jordan is an absolute bulldog on this sort of stuff.
00:44:39.000 Representative Dan Bishop of North Carolina, who pushed for the investigative body for months, is viewed as a likely member.
00:44:44.000 Thomas Massey of Kentucky, another bulldog, has said publicly he expects to participate as well.
00:44:50.000 The panel was greenlit after months-long push by conservatives growing from a fringe idea to a formal demand made by several McCarthy holdouts last month.
00:44:57.000 Jordan has made clear he is willing to go full tilt at the Biden administration using subpoenas if necessary.
00:45:01.000 Many areas the new panel plans to target are ones Jordan has already identified in letters saying he would move to compel testimony.
00:45:06.000 Presumably this will include investigations into not only the DOJ, but also into Department of Homeland Security.
00:45:12.000 It will include investigations into the misuse of resources at the CIA and the FBI.
00:45:19.000 All of this is well worthwhile.
00:45:21.000 So it's good to finally see some business being done in the House of Representatives.
00:45:26.000 Alrighty, well folks, I'd be remiss if I didn't comment on the dumbest story of the day.
00:45:29.000 Mars Company has decided that they are going to woke virtue signal they have created an all-female bag of M&Ms.
00:45:35.000 Now, it's not females in the M&Ms.
00:45:37.000 They're actually like M&Ms, you know, like the little characters.
00:45:39.000 They're making a bag with just the female M&Ms.
00:45:42.000 Are you excited, ladies?
00:45:43.000 Are you excited?
00:45:44.000 The company announced the feminist-forward candy wrappers on Thursday, according to Fox 7 Austin, saying it will exclusively display M&M's female characters, the green, brown, and most recently introduced purple M&M.
00:45:55.000 In addition to featuring the three female M&M's on the wrapper, each package in the limited run will only include the corresponding green, brown, and purple candy-coated chocolates.
00:46:02.000 The package will feature the female M&M's flipped upside down to represent how women are flipping how they define success.
00:46:08.000 Wow, they're upside down also because women are flipping how they define success.
00:46:12.000 The series will come in milk chocolate, peanut, and peanut butter varieties.
00:46:15.000 Oh, I was getting afraid there.
00:46:16.000 I'm glad that at least some of these M&Ms will have nuts to represent the transgender community.
00:46:21.000 So we have to ensure that some of the M&Ms are actual trans women.
00:46:26.000 We wouldn't want these to be cisgender M&Ms.
00:46:29.000 So good news, some of the female M&Ms will in fact have nuts.
00:46:34.000 The movie's the latest in a series of marketing moves M&M's has made to promote inclusivity.
00:46:38.000 Its previous announcements involved the introduction of the purple female M&M who represents body positivity and self-acceptance.
00:46:44.000 Well, I'm sure M&M would love people to accept body positivity because you eat enough of them and you get fat.
00:46:47.000 That is what they are.
00:46:48.000 They are a candy.
00:46:50.000 Early in 2022, Mars announced it would alter its mascots to reflect the more dynamic, progressive world we live in, saying the refreshed M&M's brand will include a more modern take on the looks of our beloved characters.
00:47:01.000 So, that's exciting.
00:47:02.000 Mars Wrigley North America Chief Marketing Officer, Gabrielle Wesley, explained the move.
00:47:06.000 Quote, Women all over the world are flipping how they define success and happiness while challenging the status quo.
00:47:10.000 So we are thrilled to be able to recognize and celebrate them.
00:47:13.000 And who better to help us on that mission than our own powerhouse, spokes candies, green, brown, and purple.
00:47:19.000 Ah, so moving.
00:47:22.000 So incredible.
00:47:23.000 So unbelievably stupid.
00:47:25.000 So women, do you feel represented now because of the green, purple, and brown M&Ms on the M&M package that you're guzzling down lonely in your apartment with your wine and your cat?
00:47:35.000 How's that going for you?
00:47:38.000 Amazing, amazing.
00:47:38.000 But at least you feel represented.
00:47:39.000 That's the important thing.
00:47:41.000 Honestly, I'm mostly just happy because if it's an all-female M&M, I assume that it costs 77 cents on the dollar of what the regular M&Ms would cost, right?
00:47:50.000 That's how this works.
00:47:52.000 Also, do not ask the female MNMs for directions.
00:47:58.000 It's just not going to go particularly well.
00:48:01.000 Corporate America, man.
00:48:02.000 Filled with morons.
00:48:03.000 But until there are alternatives, this is what we're going to have to suffer with.
00:48:05.000 So I suppose we're going to have to launch Jeremy's Candy or something.
00:48:09.000 To fight with the woke corporate American infrastructure.
00:48:12.000 So stupid.
00:48:13.000 And the way this works is that if I make jokes about this on the show, if I talk about this, then the entire left-wing media infrastructure, he's joking about M&Ms.
00:48:21.000 Why is he joking about it?
00:48:22.000 Can't he?
00:48:23.000 Why is he taking it so seriously?
00:48:24.000 Why is he?
00:48:25.000 What?
00:48:25.000 No, no, he can't pay attention.
00:48:27.000 Why is he making a big deal out of this?
00:48:29.000 Face tattoo syndrome.
00:48:30.000 It's a real thing.
00:48:31.000 As I've explained before on the program, face tattoo syndrome is where you walk into Starbucks and there's some weird guy with a face tattoo.
00:48:36.000 And you're looking at his face tattoo because it's weird.
00:48:38.000 He's got a big tattoo on his face.
00:48:39.000 And he's like, what are you looking at?
00:48:40.000 Like, your face tattoo.
00:48:42.000 That's what I'm looking at.
00:48:43.000 Because you're begging for attention because you put a tattoo on your face.
00:48:46.000 And that's what all these corporations are doing.
00:48:48.000 They're woke signaling.
00:48:48.000 And then when you notice the woke signal, they're like, why are you noticing that we're woke signaling?
00:48:52.000 What's wrong with you?
00:48:53.000 Why are you even caring?
00:48:53.000 Why do you even care?
00:48:54.000 Huh?
00:48:56.000 You should care more.
00:48:57.000 But you shouldn't care.
00:48:58.000 Well, again, as I say, the important thing is that you feel represented by your M&Ms.
00:49:05.000 You don't have anything else to represent you, you know, like family or community, but you do have a corporate brand seeking to take money out of your pocket to make you fat and giving you colorful M&Ms that represent female characters in the process.
00:49:19.000 Exciting stuff.
00:49:20.000 Alrighty guys, the rest of the show is continuing right now.
00:49:22.000 You're not going to want to miss it.
00:49:22.000 We'll be getting into the rap battle between Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene and Dr. Dre, plus the New York Times whining so much about why Ron DeSantis won't talk to them.
00:49:31.000 If you're not a member, become a member.
00:49:32.000 Use code Shapiro at checkout for two months free on all annual plans.