00:01:28.000We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries, destroyed lives, and we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the country.
00:03:00.000When I look at ads, sometimes it's Anna DeAlmas who's just kind of like reaching out and touching me, though not in the Marilyn Monroe version.
00:03:23.000A new poll from Echelon Insights shows that Ron DeSantis has a six-point lead ahead of Vivek Ramaswamy, the vegan Hindu who I have a lot of respect for, that is ascending in the polls.
00:03:35.000Meanwhile, a new pro-DeSantis video that touts his anti-LGBT accomplishments is being regarded as cringe and lame instead of based and red-pilled.
00:03:44.000Everybody, what is going on with Governor DeSantis?
00:03:52.000His presidential campaign is not going too well.
00:03:55.000Man, it's been so crazy to watch this whole thing from like start to finish because we've been right in the middle.
00:04:00.000You know, again, I think somebody pointed out, yeah, two years ago, I think everybody looked at DeSantis as like full onboard MAGA, like just this absolute rock star within like the MAGA universe.
00:04:12.000And you go on Twitter and you would think that the guy was like literally like, I don't know, like Saddam Hussein or something, like the way that they're treating him.
00:04:22.000But a lot of this is being brought upon himself because one of the things that we said from the very beginning, and I think we sat on your show and said this thing right here, was if Ron DeSantis copies and mimics exactly what Ted Cruz did in 2016, this is going to happen.
00:04:36.000Well, but it seems to be a very similar playbook.
00:06:25.000I will do everything in my power to protect our LGBTQ citizens.
00:06:33.000So if Caitlin Jenner were to walk into Trump Tower and want to use the bathroom, you would be fine with her using any bathroom she chooses.
00:07:42.000So it's kind of amazing that It's rare to see something like this where they've been able to become extremely homophobic and also the most homoerotic thing that I think I've ever seen.
00:08:15.000It's so it's it's kind of anti-gay ad ever.
00:08:19.000Yeah, it's it's like actually homo erotic and also anti-LGBT at the same time, which which is truly a feat in the adults of the internet, if I must say.
00:08:28.000So, you know, I will definitely give the dialogue.
00:09:14.000Yeah, I actually had a phone call today with a reporter who actually called and was like, what, what is going on?
00:09:21.000And they sent over the article that we could throw up, but the article was about how Trump is just demolishing the rest of the field with younger voters.
00:09:30.000I'm like, well, Trump has showed up to like all the turning point events for like the last five years.
00:09:36.000You know, we that's combined with hundreds of thousands of people and the peripheral thing.
00:09:40.000Well, and you're talking about tens of millions of views with all the clipping that happens that's directed that we direct towards young people.
00:09:46.000And everyone's like, oh, I don't know if turning point works.
00:09:49.000Like, guys, look at how much youth vote is supporting Trump.
00:09:53.000He's his dividends paying now into that.
00:10:41.000And it says the 77-year-old Trump's massive lead with younger voters is notable given that DeSantis is 44 years old and actually a member of that demographic cohort.
00:10:52.000So they're pointing out that DeSantis is actually under 45, and yet that's the demographic that he seems to be losing the most with.
00:11:00.000However, his best, just to round it out, his best seems to be with 65 and up, where he's 20 points back at 50, but still losing 50-30.
00:11:10.000So we actually have a theory at turning point that we've talked about a lot over the years, which is if you do content that's directed towards young people, it actually old people gravitate towards it.
00:11:21.000And this is something that's really interesting for campaigns, I think, is that campaigns, a lot of traditionalist type campaigners, which unfortunately, you know, I think Ron DeSantis is running his campaign like a traditionalist.
00:11:32.000This is the same way that Ted Cruz ran his campaign.
00:11:34.000This is where like Matt Salmon here in Arizona ran his campaign this way.
00:11:38.000You lose because you're directing all of your content towards the traditional boomer mentality type things.
00:11:44.000And so you're losing everybody basically under the age of 65 and how you're communicating with them.
00:11:50.000And like, again, whoever said this about this video, like, this is TikTok culture.
00:12:49.000Oh, it was one of the funniest things.
00:12:51.000He's sitting down with Brett Baer and he says, well, under your plan, you know, the woman that you pardoned would be given the death penalty.
00:15:10.000Look, it's, is it possible to turn around?
00:15:14.000That's, you know, let's, I don't know.
00:15:17.000But if I were to give them advice, I would say this.
00:15:19.000It's look, and we talked about this on Human Events earlier today, and Trump actually saw the clip and then retruthed it earlier when we pointed out the same.
00:15:30.000And so I'm going to repeat what I said there.
00:15:31.000The reason Vivek is now within striking distance, six points of Ron DeSantis nationwide, and that's in the echelon poll, which isn't some like right-wing, you know, whatever poll, is because he's made his targets the same targets that Trump voters are going after.
00:15:52.000He's shown that his interests align with their interests.
00:15:56.000He's essentially doing this move of I'm going to swing at those targets and I'm going to crack skulls as hard as Trump cracks goals or even more, but then doing so, by the way, in his, you know, he's obviously very patriotic.
00:16:28.000I have to just tell, I mean, Erica, my wife, she makes me play this clip all the time, the Trump RBG, because she just said it's one of the great clips in the history of public commentary.
00:18:24.000That they said that they were like, somebody must have secretly tipped him off.
00:18:28.000Somebody must have secretly given him a symbol or a signal to let him know that she had like, you know, like the hand signal.
00:18:35.000Like that's the real, you know, offstage.
00:18:38.000Like they couldn't believe, they absolutely couldn't believe that he just had a natural response where he wanted to be classy and say something nice about her.
00:19:15.000And again, the DeSantis team has to realize Trump has now a bulletproof, immovable connection with 60 to 70% of the Republican base, period.
00:19:28.000That's why I do disagree with Jack a little bit where I think I don't think DeSantis can recover from this by like, oh, I'm going to do the Vivek thing and adhere really closely that he's going to be able to do that.
00:19:40.000He has to do the Chris Christie thing.
00:19:41.000I think that, well, the thing is, you have to remember, Vivek is not running against Trump.
00:19:45.000Vivek is running to either get a cabinet post or be his vice presidential pick.
00:19:48.000He is not running to have people vote for him over Trump.
00:20:16.000I could imagine Christie doing it if he weren't already sort of discredited or damaged from a variety of things.
00:20:20.000Like if we imagine Christie at the peak of his powers, you know, it's 2011 again, then I could see it happening, but I don't see it happening now.
00:20:28.000What DeSantis should probably do is he should probably like physically fight Trump.
00:20:33.000Like he should get in the same location as him, get Trump to insult his wife and be like, Trump, I am going to kick your ass and then like try to do it.
00:22:04.000It's just Brett Bears chuckling on my table.
00:22:07.000I think my next favorite Trump TikTok moment that goes down in history should be in the record books is on Halloween when he puts the candy bar on the kid's head.
00:23:24.000Like, this is what I don't want to get ahead of the lead too much, but I will be a little bit confused after doing all those events with us last fall and not coming to our big jamboree this fall, this summer.
00:23:37.000So I think the big winner is going to be Vivek because, again, we go back to that story that's out.
00:24:38.000And it was like, it was this thing that has, yeah, broad appeal on Twitter, but it's not a four-quadrant policy that's actually going to capture a wide swath of the country, or at least not enough to dislodge Donald Trump.
00:24:50.000But if you notice, since then, he's completely shifted his campaigning style, his message.
00:24:56.000He goes further than Trump in some areas.
00:24:59.000He comes out swimming, like I said before.
00:25:01.000I think he's done a lot better since that first week.
00:25:03.000Five out of five, or four out of four Republican primary voters, or even five out of five, which are the top super activists, which will be at our Turning Point Action Conference, they can see through BS very well.
00:25:14.000The conservative grassroots, they can smell it, they can taste it, and they will become hostile to you.
00:25:20.000And just look at how these other candidates are doing.
00:26:03.000And Charlie, just by the way, on that issue of the Indiana Jones budget, it was $300 million for the production plus another $100 million in PNA, Prince, and Advertising.
00:26:13.000So the marketing budget was another $100 million on top of that.
00:26:19.000Remember, Kathleen Kennedy was the one that Disney puts in charge of all of Lucas' films.
00:26:25.000So that's Star Wars and Indiana Jones when they purchased the whole thing.
00:26:29.000And she has systematically gone and destroyed it.
00:26:31.000Also, by the way, I should point out by committing the exact same error that Ron DeSantis has in that she attacked the existing fan base.
00:26:41.000She directly attacked them, said that she spiked her nose at them, etc.
00:26:45.000So on the flip side, Charlie, you're asked a question, did Disney have the rights to this at one point?
00:26:50.000Well, Charlie, that's actually true because do you remember Fox News when they cleaved News Corp essentially cleaved Fox Inc. away from the rest of Fox Studios and Fox Searchlight?
00:27:03.000So Angel, prior to them having the rights to it, so Angel.com is going to put it out, Angel Studios as the distributor.
00:27:10.000But originally, Fox had the rights to this thing.
00:27:14.000So when Disney purchased their portion of Fox Studios, that this movie was one of the things that was included in that purchase.
00:27:25.000So, in the same way, properties that everybody knows, like, you know, the X-Men got wrapped up into this and things like that, that also Angels, or what became Angels, Sound of Freedom, was on the list.
00:27:37.000And Disney, Bob Iger, sat on this thing for years.
00:27:41.000Angel only got this in March of this year.
00:27:45.000They said, Look, from March to July, we want to do a marketing campaign.
00:27:55.000It's about two and a half hours as is.
00:27:57.000I've been told that they have as much as four hours potentially.
00:28:00.000That could be coming out either on a you know kind of a streaming thing or a collector's edition, one of the director's cuts kind of versions, and um and so when they put this out to include this pay it forward option, which essentially it's kind of like group tickets, where you could go and say hey, I want to buy a bunch of tickets for my buddies down the street, or you know, my Nights OF Columbus group, I want to buy, you know, tickets for everybody there you can go and do that.
00:28:26.000When you included all of that together, combined with the at theater right, the at theater box office and pre-sales, it actually hit 14 million, whereas Indiana Jones only came in at 11.5.
00:28:44.000And so there's something more systemic happening with streaming though Blake, what is that?
00:28:50.000So there's there's been a lot of reporting recently.
00:28:53.000I think the recent one was from Vulture, one of those like uh media outlets, and the big realization is everyone, everyone in Hollywood has gone all in on streaming.
00:29:02.000You know, Netflix got massively huge, so now we have Disney plus Paramount plus UH or Peacock or whatever the heck they call it, and then like, Warner Brothers has their thing where they took HBO MAX and now it's just max.
00:29:15.000But whatever, everyone's made a million of these streaming services.
00:29:18.000They've spent billions of dollars on a gazillion shows for them.
00:29:22.000You know they spend 400 million dollars on one Lord Of The Rings show.
00:29:25.000And suddenly everyone is running the numbers and they're like, wait, if we charge like twelve dollars a month for this and we have, you know, x million subscribers, the math on this doesn't work out.
00:29:38.000You know people are paying 80 100 a month for cable and you can run ads on it.
00:29:43.000And after the show is done you release it on dvd and the diehard fans buy this.
00:29:48.000And we've just replaced it with this single input of subscribing to these services and the money doesn't work out.
00:29:54.000And suddenly they're all realizing like none of them are going to make money on this.
00:29:57.000And now we're not in the free money printing, low interest rates era, and so there's like massive layoffs going on in Hollywood right now and this is hitting Disney as much as anyone.
00:30:07.000Like you run the numbers and you're like it doesn't make a lot of sense for us to spend 200 million dollars on every single show, the way we did and now.
00:30:15.000So they always think we can fall back on our old properties.
00:30:17.000We can make a new Indiana Jones movie for $400 million and you know, these idiots will lap it up and apparently the answer is they won't lap it up forever.
00:30:26.000And eventually, you know, eventually some of these stars who are still starring in these action movies into their 70s and 80s and 90s will, in theory, eventually die.
00:30:52.000I worked at Small Studios most of my career and I'd heard, you know, we hear whispers, like I'd heard things like, oh, you know, they won't let you show this at a Disney show.
00:31:18.000Meredith Roberts and like the our leadership over there has been so welcoming to like my like not at all secret gay agenda and so like I feel like I felt like it was I mean like maybe it was that way in the past but I guess like something must have happened in the last like like they're turning it around they're going hard my not so secret gay agenda who wants to chime in here Well,
00:31:45.000I mean, does anyone think that it's to her point?
00:31:51.000I mean, they've been including LGBT characters in almost every single Disney property that we've seen lately, from Star Wars to children's movies like Buzz Lightyear, like this non-binary movie element.
00:32:06.000I don't believe that the Indiana Jones film has any at least overt LGBT characters.
00:32:13.000So that's not something that, believe it or not, that's not even one of the factors in terms of this.
00:32:19.000But we've seen again and again that they are putting wokeness in.
00:32:22.000This is the broader swath of Disney films, whether it be race swapping, traditional characters like the Little Mermaid, who people know is from Hans Christian Andersen, who is Danish, to any of these movies that are going from the animated to live action that they're now putting forward.
00:32:41.000They'll do anything they can to force different actors and actresses on you because of their race, because of their gender identity, etc.
00:32:49.000And by the way, it's also not just in Disney, because I would say this is also a major reason for the Flash movie completely failing because this guy Ezra Miller, or excuse me, this they-them Ezra Miller, who identifies as non-binary, has had insane scandals like bringing underage girls to like a farm he owns in New England and then stealing them from their families.
00:33:17.000And then Warner Brothers and James Gunn decide to just go ahead and leave him in the flash and keep it as is, which is a complete detriment, by the way, to the fact that Michael Keaton actually makes a huge return in The Flash as Batman.
00:33:30.000It's like an alternate timeline kind of thing.
00:33:33.000So Michael Keaton returns as Batman and nobody even knows because it was overshadowed by the insanity that is Ezra Miller.
00:33:40.000Maybe they were just upbeat about The Flash because based on the title, they thought it was like an LGBT-friendly movie.
00:34:46.000The people who are not afraid are the ones that are invested in gold with Noble Gold investments.
00:34:50.000Gold is the most stable asset outside of any government control.
00:34:54.000From billionaires to multimillionaires to institutional investors, Noble Gold Investments is seeing an unprecedented gold buying spree.
00:35:01.000Go to noblegoldinvestments.com and use promo code Charlie for a free five-ounce America the Beautiful coin or gold or silver IRA if you qualify.
00:36:12.000Is it that it's just this Hunter comes in and casually does blow in between trying to seek a pardon and preferential lifting?
00:36:19.000I mean, Charlie, do we really think that Hunter Biden was going into that library to read a book?
00:36:25.000All I would say is like it certainly, you know, in my entire lifetime, there's never been a cocaine in the White House story until like two weeks after we get stories of Hunter Biden moving into the White House.
00:36:38.000Oh, he has moved into the White House?
00:36:39.000Well, that's the rumor that he basically seems to live out of it right now.
00:36:42.000So it would certainly be a remarkable cocaine suddenly showed up at that time.
00:37:03.000Well, have you noticed, though, that they've been, that they're very slowly trying to turn the gears on this and put it on Kamala Harris and her family?
00:38:31.000No, here's what's interesting, by the way.
00:38:34.000So my White House source hit me up yesterday, yesterday afternoon after the show.
00:38:40.000And this is a White House staffer in the Biden administration that said Secret Service has gone through the CCTV three lifetimes over.
00:38:48.000There were only a small amount of people that were in that area, two of which included the Secret Service agents who discovered it.
00:38:57.000Hunter was one of the people on the list, but that Jeff Zayns, the current White House chief of staff, who nobody talks about for some reason, has been obstructing at every turn, and that the Biden staffers essentially have started a rumor mill that maybe it could have been Ella's.
00:39:14.000So Ella was the stepdaughter, is the stepdaughter of Kamala Harris.
00:39:19.000However, what I'm told is that Ella has not actually been at the White House since like Christmas.
00:40:55.000And by the way, if they want to make some sort of diatribe on white privilege, it's kind of like, I don't believe in white privilege, but you kind of have an opening here.
00:41:03.000I mean, these guys are doing blow in the West Wing, and everyone's like, I don't know.
00:42:31.000When we were growing up, this is like only HBO would show the things that happen in the White House right now that are going on in the White House that we know about.
00:43:20.000They were, it's the one where he's like announcing that he's about to send UN troops into some like Jordan Valley thing and they needed extras.
00:43:30.000And this is when I was still in the military and me and a bunch of guys took leave and actually went out for the thing.
00:43:36.000And so, yes, we are standing directly behind Kevin Spacey.
00:43:40.000I think it's like season three, episode eight.
00:44:14.000We had like two years in a row where we got creepy, ominous Kevin Spacey videos on YouTube out of nowhere where they were like, I'm Kevin Spacey, and I'm going to come back and kill everybody.
00:45:25.000So they're like, we're just going to get late night shows where it's Stephen Colbert coming on, like looking like a 60-year-old lesbian and being just like, ha, you know, the FBI has a new memo out and Trump, Trump, he said this thing with his documents and everyone.
00:47:21.000What if corn pop was actually a good dude, and he just saw some weird lifeguard who was bothering all the kids and trying to smell them and wanted to protect the children?
00:48:50.000Like this, you know, follow your buddies kind of thing.
00:48:53.000But then all of a sudden you go to the timeline and they're jamming left-wing hell crap down your throat.
00:48:59.000And the reason is, is because it's very clear that Mark Zuckerberg has made a play here or is making a play to try to counter signal this idea that the, you know, the journalist crowd is out at Twitter and they're looking for somewhere to go and they can't go to Mastodon anymore because it turned out to be full of child porn.
00:49:22.000No, I reject social media as the as the poison it is.
00:49:26.000We should, I think the rational solution, while I appreciate what Twitter has done for free speech, so we'll give we'll give a grandfather clause to Twitter.
00:49:35.000All other social media should be banned with a death penalty attached for recreating it.
00:49:40.000You can sense my solution to a lot of societal ills.
00:50:14.000So I think part of the reason why they're doing this, actually, and again, my wife has, you know, not that many followers, not like Tanya level followers, but she's got a few followers.
00:50:24.000And it's just, and not Erica level followers, right?
00:50:27.000But we have seen the decline in Instagram.
00:50:32.000Like people don't use Instagram anymore.
00:50:33.000So I think they're rolling out this new product as a cope.
00:50:37.000Because what's happened to Instagram is what happened to Facebook.
00:50:39.000Remember Facebook, everyone used to post every second of their life on there?
00:50:42.000People started doing that with Instagram.
00:51:48.000And so, you know, they can pump this one full of advertising.
00:51:50.000They can make threads the safe version of this to use.
00:51:54.000And with the Instagram crowd, you know, able to transfer the followers over really quickly.
00:51:58.000I do think it is a real hazard to Twitter if they're able to get this off the ground as an alternative way of getting that sort of microphone.
00:52:43.000And then even then, Twitter Spaces does not get, and I've just got to say it, like, unless it's one of these huge events, like when Elon Musk went on with BBC or when Ron DeSantis, of course, did his, which nobody talks about anymore, the fact that he announced his campaign there because of the technical difficulties.
00:52:59.000That those are the only times I've ever seen spaces really get the same amount of just followers and live participants that say a regular Rumble stream would get.
00:53:11.000And so there's an idea, I think, with threads that Zuckerberg has just kind of thrown it out there and say, hey, we're the anti-Twitter.
00:53:19.000And then, of course, Elon has come up and said that, and even I was at the gym and the local CBS was covering that Elon has said that he will sue Zuckerberg over this because he's claiming that it's so close to Twitter that it's actually a copy of their proprietary proprietary resources, proprietary technology.
00:53:38.000And I mean, if you look at the two of them side to side and you kind of like zoom out, you really can't tell the difference.
00:53:45.000Well, so what I'm told is that a bunch of employees left Twitter and potentially had their work phones.
00:53:54.000That Zuckerberg basically just picked up like half the people that just hired them and onboarded them and took their intellectual property.
00:54:03.000But I imagine they have NDAs and non-competes and stuff.
00:54:06.000I mean, we're talking about some serious.
00:54:09.000That's probably the heart of where the lawsuit is.
00:54:11.000It's not necessarily around the proprietor.
00:54:17.000Pretty forceful language saying, like, you know, theft is not okay, basically.
00:54:20.000Yeah, I think it's probably around the former employees that now work for Facebook.
00:54:26.000I wouldn't want to be one of those guys.
00:54:27.000I wouldn't want to be one of the people that went over to Facebook from Twitter because that's really playing with fire where you're, you're, no one's going to care about you.
00:54:38.000They're going to sue you for everything you're worth and your life's going to be over because you decided to leave after signing that non-compete.
00:55:17.000Charlie, I mean, Public Square, which, by the way, just celebrated their first anniversary anniversary of the launch, which is crazy because I'm going public.
00:55:26.000I'm going to talk about Michael Seifert and these guys.
00:56:12.000You guys could take out your application phone or you take out your app store on your phone and type in public square and download the public square app location.
00:56:25.000They are building the parallel economy.
00:56:26.000Michael Seifert does a terrific job running that company.
00:56:30.000We need to support the furtherance and the continuation and the strengthening of the parallel economy.
00:56:37.000And Public Square is the way we do it.
00:56:40.000They're big supporters of Turning Point Action.
00:56:56.000Next topic: CP5, Central Park V rapist on City Council, a member of the famous Central Park V, Youssef Salam, has just become a Democrat nominee for New York City Council.
00:57:06.000This is being celebrated as a triumph by a wrongly convicted man who turned his life around, except Blake.
00:58:08.000Many more people were involved in this, but ultimately they convicted five of them.
00:58:13.000And later, they threw out the convictions and they eventually pinned it all on this one person.
00:58:19.000I think his name was Matias Arayas, something like that, who was in fact confirmed to be part of it.
00:58:24.000They did a DNA test, and this man was a rapist of this woman.
00:58:28.000And what they've basically done is they've retconned it to just this one guy did this assault where this woman was maimed so badly she lost, you know, three or four pints of blood and horrible, gruesomely maimed.
00:58:42.000It was one of the most horrifying assaults anyone had ever seen, the amount of blood that it created.
00:59:17.000Like, we have plenty of details about how this happened.
00:59:20.000So, for example, this guy, Yusuf Salam, they'll say that they interrogated him when he was only 15 years old, and you're not allowed to interrogate a boy who's 15 without his parents.
00:59:30.000Well, the reason they did this is because he gave them a fake ID that said he was 16, and they stopped the exact moment that his mother showed up and said he's only 15 years old.
00:59:39.000But before then, he was talking to them.
00:59:41.000And, you know, the way they convicted them is they didn't have DNA evidence because it was 1989 yet.
00:59:46.000And so they did it the old-fashioned way, which is like the reason they arrested Yusuf Salam is because they picked up a lot of men, young men, who were involved in, they called it wilding.
00:59:55.000They would just go through Central Park and attack people.
00:59:57.000So multiple people were attacked that night.
00:59:59.000This was just the climax of it, so to speak.
01:00:03.000And multiple people said, yeah, this guy who was involved in this, so that's why police picked him up in the first place.
01:00:09.000And the reason he confessed is the police said, hey, you know, we have this woman's clothes.
01:00:15.000If we find your fingerprints on this, like we will take you down for rape.
01:00:19.000And according to the police, unless they were all systematically lying about this, which we have no reason to believe, the way he replied was, I didn't rape her.
01:00:28.000I just helped hold her down, which, as I'm sure some of you may know, still makes you an accomplice to a gang rape if you are involved in that.
01:00:37.000And he also, we know, because he testified to this in the trial, even when he's trying to defend himself from charges of gang rape, he admitted he went into Central Park with a long pipe of the exact size and dimensions that were used to savagely beat this woman in this gang rape.
01:00:55.000And all of this is just being thrown out to celebrate this as this wrongfully convicted person.
01:01:00.000When it's just, no, these men, whether they were involved in the gang rape or not, of which there's substantial evidence they were, they were involved in savagely assaulting a large number of people in Central Park in the 1980s.
01:01:14.000And this is all just being thrown out to say like they were the victim of like a racist system.
01:02:10.000I mean, he won the Democratic nomination for Harlem.
01:02:12.000I mean, I can only imagine the only other rival he might have is maybe there's a Democratic Socialists of America nominee who could compete with him.
01:02:19.000I don't think a Republican is going to win, though you never know.
01:02:27.000Well, I should point out that there's another part of the story where this becomes somewhat newsworthy because two weeks after this event in 1989, so this was about April 15th, 1989, or April 19th, I think.
01:02:42.000Two weeks later, May 1st, a New York City real estate developer goes and takes out a full-page ad in the New York Times stating in massive block letters, bring back the death penalty, bring back our police, a 600-word open letter and writes a line in here.
01:03:09.000At what point do we cross the line from the fine and noble pursuit of genuine civil liberties to the reckless and dangerously permissive atmosphere which allows criminals of every age to beat and rape a helpless woman and then laugh at her family's anguish?
01:03:24.000They laugh because they know that soon, very soon, they will be returned to the streets to rape and maim and kill once again, and yet face no great personal risk to themselves.
01:03:35.000Criminals must be told that their civil liberties end when an attack on our safety begins.
01:04:24.000Like, you're, you're, you know, you're, that's usually a one-way ticket.
01:04:28.000Uh, years later, if I remember correctly, I don't remember her name on the top of my head, but she did come, she did come forward, name herself.
01:04:36.000I think she wrote a book about the entire thing in like, I want to say it was mid, maybe mid-2000s, like 2005, something like that.
01:04:43.000And so she is out there as someone as an advocate for these things.
01:04:48.000But yeah, this is something where Trump was completely excoriated over this, claiming, oh, you know, how dare you?
01:04:58.000What is this line here from producer Angelo?
01:05:00.000I want to hate these murderers, and I always will.
01:05:03.000I am not looking to psychoanalyze or understand them.
01:05:50.000So, Jack, we live in this very strange moment where children are being sexualized in ways never before that we've seen in our lifetime.
01:06:00.000Pornography is ubiquitous, and yet the rates that people are having sex are at record lows.
01:06:06.000There's a stat in here that's really telling.
01:06:08.000And it's a recent study that found that the proportion of 18 to 29-year-olds, so this is relatively horned-up people, as it were, the proportion of 18 to 29-year-olds who had zero sex partners in the last year.
01:06:32.000And like, that's like not even just like a single people, I think that's all people.
01:06:37.000I don't understand why people are so worried about abortion if they're not even having sex.
01:06:41.000Well, it's like I always say: the people who are always at the abortion rallies, it's always like the lesbians that are down there at the abortion rallies.
01:06:48.000It's like it's like they said afterwards.
01:06:56.000I don't know if anyone's told you guys, but you guys are the.
01:06:59.000But this is like, I actually think this is tied to, you know, we've seen all these polls that have come out about how the rise in people who think that they're gay, right?
01:08:45.000No, this comes down to men and women's behavior as relates to hookup culture and these one-night stand apps like Tinder and others that are out there.
01:08:55.000Because what they used to run, some of these OKCupid and others used to actually run stats on how many people would swipe right versus swipe left.
01:09:05.000And when you broke it down by gender, it found something men would swipe right on something like 70% of women that they come across on these apps, but women would only swipe right on something like 15 to 20%.
01:09:21.000This means that the pool of men that have, that are now cut out of that, that are trying on there, they're trying in vain.
01:09:30.000Because keep in mind, it's like you swipe right, you make the connection, you have to do all the stuff to actually get to a date with somebody, but they're already swiping right because now you're having to compete with guys that are way potentially out of your league.
01:09:42.000If you are basically like a beta male, if you're someone who's maybe like a six or a seven, you don't have the ability just to rent a Lamborghini and stand in front of it or something to make it look like you can do something to higher your status.
01:09:53.000So women are swiping left on more and more men.
01:09:57.000So if you're someone who's even in that kind of dating pool, women are, on the other hand, going for the highest status men, and you're getting more and more men falling into this intel trap.
01:10:07.000Do you guys know who Michelle Welbeck is?
01:10:11.000He wrote Submission, which is the novel where the Muslims take over France.
01:10:15.000Oh, yeah, you know, but his very first book, it's called Whatever in English.
01:10:20.000In French, it translates as extension of the domain of struggle, which is a way better title.
01:10:26.000But that one is actually about dating culture in France in the 90s, which is basically America today.
01:10:31.000They're very much ahead of us in some of these things.
01:10:34.000But he has a line in it that I want to read where he says, sexual liberalism produces phenomena of absolute pauperization.
01:10:56.000Economic liberalism is an extension of the domain of the struggle.
01:11:01.000It's extension to all ages and all classes.
01:11:04.000Likewise, sexual liberalism is an extension of the domain of struggle to all ages and all classes of society.
01:11:12.000And so what he basically says is it's like modern competition.
01:11:15.000It's like the dating app culture, what Jack said, which is that if you have a sort of like, you know, if you're competing against the entire world, you basically make it where there's a handful of extremely strong winners and a much larger number of losers.
01:11:30.000So how much is pornography to blame for this, Jack?
01:11:34.000Well, I think that's another part of it as well.
01:11:36.000And Charlie, you and I talked about this last week a little bit.
01:11:39.000We touched on it at least that the male sex drive is something that drives innovation, is potentially in many cases the driver of much of civilization, much ambition, much driving.
01:11:54.000When you make the satiation, or at least the superficial satiation, the instant gratification of the sexual appetite so easy and so simple, as it's on a piece of glass in your pocket every five minutes, then you are driving that down on a regular basis.
01:12:14.000And thus by doing so, you're driving down the drive of men in general.
01:12:19.000And so for men, they're sitting there saying, look, this is what led to the rise of those guys, the MGTOWs, right?
01:12:27.000And if you've ever watched, you know, if you've ever watched, yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:12:30.000If you've ever watched The Red Pill by Cassie Jay, which is one of the great documentaries about that, who she herself is a feminist who was setting out to kind of do an expose on men and these men's rights movements, that in there, they were basically talking about how that because of the liberalization of American women, that they are quite simply going their own way and they're moving away from women in the dating space and in general.
01:12:57.000This is something where Libby Emmons and James Younger got into it big time because James Younger went so far down this MGTOW line that he was saying this is James Younger was the one who had the son that was at one point it looked like was about to be forcefully transified, tranified, transmorphed into a female.
01:13:18.000I think that eventually the judge was able to find a mediation.
01:13:22.000So anyway, he's on Timcast with Libby Emmons.
01:13:24.000I'm paraphrasing for me to butcher it, but he essentially was saying that men should just hire surrogates now and not even worry about dating or marriage.
01:13:35.000This is a really, it's a strange trend when you kind of put the couple things together because you would think that as the as the culture and the society becomes more sexualized, Blake, that that would only go up, not down.
01:13:52.000Well, you'd think, I think one thing, obviously with the incel discussion, because it's very online and male-focused, they focus on the male side of it.
01:14:00.000But, you know, there also is a rising percentage of like women that this applies to.
01:14:04.000And one thing I do wonder about is like the heavy sexualized thing.
01:14:09.000A lot of people have pointed out what might drive why more girls are identifying as like trans or non-binary.
01:14:15.000And they point out it's like society's like kind of really disgusting if you're a woman.
01:14:19.000Like you turn 15 and suddenly like there's a lot of sexual aggression that you run into, which we used to keep a cap on.
01:14:26.000You used to have to be like chivalrous and kind and we kind of eased people into this.
01:14:29.000And now it's very in your face very early and a lot are really disgusted.
01:14:33.000And I could see that being a driver of this too.
01:14:35.000Like imagine you're a normal enough American girl and you go on like a college campus.
01:14:40.000It's like your freshman fall and you're at a party and you're having a good time and one thing leads to another, bam, you have like a bad hookup with someone and you hate it.
01:14:53.000Feel like garbage, and you don't have any way to articulate this other than like, wait a minute, like men suck, sex sucks, and like, I can see a ton of them having a very negative reaction to this, and they just sort of secede from the and all of the one-liners and the narrative and the systems are waiting for you to capture that sentiment as a weapon.
01:15:15.000And you don't even have a way to articulate it because we don't even have a way to describe this other than like the consent framework.
01:15:20.000So, this is where a lot of them will say, like, I was raped in college because it's not that they literally were, but it's that this is the only way they have of articulating like a sexual experience that is really bad and negative for them.
01:15:32.000Yeah, and I think to kind of piggyback on that, this is just my one observation.
01:15:37.000And I think this is part of what's increased.
01:15:38.000So, you have the number of people that are joining, adhering to the gay community, the gay lobby.
01:15:47.000For the myriad of reasons, you know, they are born gay, they've, they've, they've, they feel that they've been talked into it, they are somewhere on the spectrum, so they're somewhat gay, or more feminine, high, whatever, more feminine.
01:16:01.000But then, on top of this, like what you're bringing up is that, you know, you have this entire culture of the hookup culture that's through applications.
01:16:07.000I think dating applications have actually destroyed dating.
01:16:10.000Yes, and so part of the thing is, is like if you are on the applications, you have to be sex ready almost, right?
01:16:18.000So, friends that I've seen like with hookup culture, they feel like they can't even date on dating applications, which now is like basically the only way to date because there's not really this, the old way of dating.
01:16:33.000Like, if you're almost down the old way, you're almost like a weirdo if you try to date people the old way.
01:16:38.000If like if I'm suspicious of it, it's yeah, if I've approached somebody so built into everything, and now it's like creepy guy showed up and he's like, I won't say who this is, but it's a female that I know that's not married, close to my age, so it's getting mid mid to late 30s, and she hasn't been able to date because I, it's it, there's no one that approaches her ever anywhere.
01:17:02.000So, the only place to actually get approached now is digitally, but digitally, it's been created into a so I think that this is creating that quandary for people where it's like I'm either on dating apps and I have sex like on the first or second date, and then I get married out of that somehow, and then I probably get divorced pretty quickly.
01:17:20.000Yeah, seriously, not exactly built on a good foundation, or yeah, it's not built on a normal foundation, or I just don't have sex because I'm not dating anybody.
01:17:28.000Yeah, because I'm never because if I try to hit somebody up, you're basically like you're treated like a prostitute.
01:17:33.000And probably even things like you know, the anti-thorascal culture, people used to get married because they knew people through work.
01:17:39.000Like, that used to be really common, and now that's like really not acceptable, or you know, you can get sued, your employer's not going to like it because they can get, you know, you get blown up like you're Fox News in every lawsuit ever.
01:17:50.000Yeah, and we're seeing this reflected in the birth rates, Jack.
01:17:52.000The birth rates are down big time because people are getting married less.
01:17:55.000And if they get married at all, they don't even want kids because it's too expensive.
01:17:59.000I mean, this is societal civilizational stuff.
01:18:02.000I do think pornography plays a bigger role than not.
01:18:05.000I would have to, I don't know if people agree or something.
01:18:08.000I kind of, I'm, I dissent on that one because I think that causes so much damage to relationships.
01:18:13.000Like, tons of cases where they get addicted to that or it causes unreasonable standards.
01:18:20.000From some of the literature that I've read, and I mean, we've been very open with it on our show: of I mean, every man has had their struggle with it, but there are plenty of literature and anecdotes of people that now say, I would rather engage with pornography than go out on a date.
01:18:35.000Well, it goes into this whole tech thing, right?
01:18:37.000Which is like, I think that there's people on top of that treat the digital relationships that they have on these applications where it's just conversation as enough relationship for them.
01:18:49.000So, they could even just have conversations with people.
01:18:53.000They can have basically an asexual, a non-touching, you know, non-committal relationship, which means like I don't have to touch a person.
01:20:02.000Has it made America a saner, more stable country, Jack, or has it made us crazier?
01:20:07.000You know, it's funny because, you know, it's interesting being married to someone who is an immigrant from outside of what we would consider the traditional West, I suppose.
01:20:18.000Because when Tanya is talking to American girls sometimes, I remember she came to me after this party she was at, and she said, I don't understand.
01:20:27.000All of these girls are on pills every single one, every single home.
01:20:39.000And she looked back and said, you know, I've never even heard of anyone having this conversation back home.
01:20:46.000I was like, well, what do you talk to your friends about?
01:20:48.000And she said, we talk about, you know, where we want to take the family on vacation, what kind of schools we want our kids to get into, what jobs we hope our children have.
01:20:58.000These are normal, healthy types of dreams and desires because the idea, of course, is that's pro-social, as in pro-natal, pro-having families, pro-increasing society.
01:21:12.000We've completely bastardized the words pro-social, antisocial, because those are the types of things that actually do support your society, not importing hundreds of thousands of mass third worlders because you don't have your birth rate has dipped below replacement.
01:21:30.000The question is: is modern American women talking to their girlfriends about their therapy and their antidepressants better or worse than the 1990s American women habit of talking to their friends about why they should divorce their husbands?
01:21:44.000I think it's better for women to talk to women than I think women probably still talk about all their problems.
01:21:52.000It's better for them to talk up to women than therapists.
01:21:54.000Therapists are American women would literally rather go to therapy than go to therapy.
01:22:01.000I think part of what Jack is bringing up is like part of the what to marry like the two ideas together.
01:22:07.000The problems that are talked about today in American culture are vastly different from even 10 years ago, or vastly different from 20 years ago.
01:22:16.000And so, yeah, I mean, I can tell you what, I think what scares me is like, yeah, what is what is what is your partner talking about with other people?
01:23:01.000We talk about that with children all the time.
01:23:03.000There's an element to that, which is like for ourselves.
01:23:06.000Like, sometimes I just have to go out in the backyard and like rake up leaves and like do stuff.
01:23:10.000But again, how many men are actually doing that stuff because they're like so depressed or they're being told that they need to be more feminine and everything they're injecting us with is making us less masculine and all those things.
01:23:24.000That plays a huge role, a huge factor, I think, into this conversation.
01:23:49.000Just before we just before we change the topics to talk about the lizard people, I would like to make sure that everybody knows that I am doing my part to end the sex recession.
01:25:42.000Okay, so is it staged or is that the first thing my wife said is, I believe her greatest trick the lizard people ever played was teaching the world to disguise themselves among us.
01:25:55.000Okay, so we need to bring that woman in.
01:25:58.000We should have had her interview today.
01:26:00.000Why didn't we get a picture of the lizard person?
01:26:02.000That's what everyone wants: is what who is the person you're talking about?
01:26:05.000Well, they change the shapeshifters, sure.
01:26:09.000This drives me nuts about in general when people are filming things in public or whatever it is.
01:26:15.000If someone is talking about something, if they're pointing and gesturing off screen, turn your freaking hand and let's see what it is that she's talking about.
01:26:27.000Because the films are like, you can't even still.
01:26:57.000When my children saw this video of this woman, my kids have been obsessed with the aliens conversation.
01:27:04.000And so my 14-year-old and my nine-year-old, all they can talk about is where are the aliens today, you know, because everybody's been talking about it.
01:27:14.000And they accidentally saw me swipe through a reel of, do you remember this from a few years ago?
01:27:21.000The Israeli Navy general that's like 90 years old that was like, Trump knows about the aliens.
01:27:28.000And like, they told him not to tell anyone.
01:27:30.000And he's like a decorated veteran in the Israeli Navy or whatever it was of the Air Force.
01:28:17.000Well, it could be a demons online and telling everyone they're.
01:28:19.000I'm a My Hammer 40K, where the demons come through the warp in space.
01:28:23.000And so aliens and demons are like the same thing.
01:28:25.000If you Google it, the Israeli guy I'm talking about said that there's like a galactic, there's like a galactic federation, and they told Trump to not say anything about it.
01:29:21.000We're calling it Turning Point Action Conference.
01:29:23.000So At Con or Action Conference for short.
01:29:25.000We have some incredible breakouts that are happening where we're actually training activists on the things that are happening on the ground and the direction that we need to go and providing people with opportunities to provide feedback, to talk, to network, and to prepare ourselves for going into 2024.
01:29:39.000And I don't know of any conference that has this caliber of speakership here.
01:29:44.000We have Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump, Vivek is speaking, in addition to Dan Bongino, of course, the great Charlie Kirk.