Ep. 688 - How Our Culture Turns Kids Into Murderous Psychopaths
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Summary
Two teen girls in D.C. carjacked and murdered a man, and it s all caught on video. This is part of a far-reaching cultural trend, it s time we look honestly at the problem, or it s going to get a lot worse. Plus, five headlines, including Biden s plan to require vaccines, and Dr. Fauci says that children should still wear masks when they re with each other. Also, a TikTok teacher speaks out against the racism of light-colored Band-Aids, and in our daily cancellation, we will deal with what I consider to be the worst yet most common marriage advice.
Transcript
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Today on the Matt Wall Show, two teen girls in D.C. carjack and murder a man, and it's all caught
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on video. This is part of a far-reaching cultural trend. It's time we look honestly at the problem,
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or it's going to get a lot worse. Plus, five headlines, including Biden's plan to require
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vaccine passports. And Dr. Fauci says that children should still wear masks when they're,
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even when they're with each other, when they're playing with each other, they still have to wear
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masks, he says. Also, a TikTok teacher speaks out against the racism of light-colored Band-Aids.
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And in our daily cancellation, we will deal with what I consider to be
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the worst yet most common marriage advice. All of that and much more today on the Matt Wall Show.
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Well, the footage is significantly worse than the George Floyd video, to my mind,
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though it has attracted barely a fraction of the attention and the outrage. Mohamed Anwar
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was a 66-year-old Pakistani immigrant in D.C. He was killed this past Tuesday
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while delivering food for Uber Eats. Two black teenage girls, ages 13 and 15,
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attacked Anwar with a taser while carjacking him as he tried desperately to reclaim his property,
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which he needed. He needed his car to do his job and provide for his family.
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The girls sped away, with Anwar partially hanging out of the vehicle. They flipped the car in the
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escape attempt a few blocks down, sending Anwar careening several feet away. And he died.
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Cell phone video shows the victim splayed out on the ground, mangled and bleeding,
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while National Guardsmen, who of course are in the city, as you've heard, pull the murderers out
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of the wreck. And the primary concern for both of those girls is that their phones may have been
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damaged. They're running around screaming about their phones while this man is dead.
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Nobody at the scene, on the video anyway, to include the guardsmen, show any apparent concern
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for the dead man on the sidewalk. This crime is part of a growing trend in D.C. Over the weekend,
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two 13-year-old boys were arrested for multiple armed carjackings in the city. A few days before
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that, and a few days after Anwar's death, a different pair of teenage boys, 13 and 14 this time,
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were also arrested and charged for an armed carjacking. For those keeping track at home,
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that makes what, six kids, all under the age of 16, arrested for violent carjackings in the same city,
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in the same week. The mayor of D.C., fortunately, has the situation under control. On Sunday,
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she tweeted out a PSA video recommending strategies, quote, to reduce the risk of your vehicle becoming
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a target, with an accompanying protect your auto hashtag. Now, this, of course, is no different than
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a mayor responding to a string of rapes in the city by putting out a video recommending that women
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wear longer skirts. Now, feminists are quick to remind us that rape is the result, not of provocative
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fashion choices by the victims, but of evil actions by the rapist himself. In the case of Anwar's death,
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the tragedy was caused not by his failure to protect his auto, which he tried to protect it,
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but by the behavior of two teenage girls who have managed to become murderous psychopaths before
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either of them is old enough to, you know, buy a ticket to a rated R movie. The question we're
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afraid to ask, but must ask, is how do kids turn into this? How do they turn into monsters like this?
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Take a couple of steps further back, widen the lens, and it's clear that the trend extends beyond
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a carjacking epidemic in D.C. You know, you could draw a line that connects this incident
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to, for example, the equally tragic case of E. Lee in Milwaukee. A few months ago, Miss Lee,
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an Asian woman, was lounging alone in a local park when a group of black teens happened to cross her,
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and they decided to physically and sexually assault her, apparently just for fun, before dragging her
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to a nearby pond and leaving her for dead. One of the teens charged in her murder, Kamara Lewis,
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age 17, explained that he didn't really care if she lived or died because, quote, because, quote,
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he didn't know her personally. Now, a few weeks ago in Rochester, two black teens aged 14 and 16
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broke into 53-year-old Steven Ammonheiser's house, doused him in some kind of lighter fluid,
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might have been gasoline, and set him on fire. He died a few days later in the hospital, disfigured
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and in agony with burns over 70% of his body. Within a few days of that crime, a white middle-aged
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girl in a Virginia suburb was gunned down by a black teen. Lucia Bremer, 13 years old, was walking
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through the neighborhood with a friend at 4.30 in the afternoon in the suburbs when she was approached
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by the gunman and fatally shot. No motive has yet been given. We're told by the family, by the way,
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that Lucia was supposed to help with the neighborhood Easter egg hunt this weekend.
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The racial dynamics of these crimes make them politically inconvenient for the media, which
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is why you haven't heard very much about them. Indeed, the crimes defy all of the usual talking
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points and standard explanations. There isn't even a potential gun control angle on any of them,
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except the last. One victim was burned to death, another tortured, raped, and beaten, another killed
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by teen girls wielding a taser in a stolen car. These crimes cannot be pinned on racism, at least
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not the brand of racism that the media prefers to talk about, and they can't be used to push the kind
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of policies the left favors. So our strategy then as a culture is to look away, pretend it's not
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happening. I really think the image of the crowd stepping around Anwar's broken body and not even
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looking at him is a tragic metaphor, because this is the strategy that our whole society has adopted
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to these kinds of things. Still, these kinds of things are happening, and frequently. Young kids,
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often not yet at an age where they could obtain a learner's permit, are committing unthinkable acts
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of brutality against totally innocent people who pose no threat to them. Now, whenever there's a mass
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shooting of random victims in a school or some other public place, we generally will turn our
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attention to it and we'll engage in serious conversation and debate about what can be done
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to stop the bloodshed. But these smaller scale acts of casual sadism are much more common and
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widespread. They happen literally every day in our cities. Many more people are killed. Many more
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communities are terrorized. You know, during Trump's administration, his critics were fond of
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responding to whatever he did or tweeted by saying, this isn't normal. This isn't normal.
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Well, I wish the same could be said of a 13-year-old murdering a man for his car.
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I wish I could say this isn't normal, but it is. It's normal. The murder rate in most major cities
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attest to that. It is normal, but it shouldn't be. Now, it's not difficult to identify some of the
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factors that have made these kinds of things normal. It can be assumed without even checking.
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We can assume right now, and I'm willing to say right now, my guess without looking, is that most
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or all of the kids involved in the crimes that I just listed have been raised in homes without fathers.
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We know that right off the bat. This is the case for the majority of black children, especially in
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the city. And it's increasingly the case for children of all races, as unwed parenthood becomes
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more and more common. Compounding the problem, many kids spend their days marinating in the
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nihilistic filth produced by half-literate sociopaths like Cardi B. The rapper Lil Nas X made waves this
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past week when he released a music video, which shows him sliding down to hell on a stripper pole
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and giving a lap dance to Satan. The video was accompanied by the release of his new, quote,
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Satan shoes, which feature a pentagram and actual human blood in the shoe. Lil Nas X, who cultivated a
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large fan base of children with his first hit, Old Country Road, or rather Old Town Road, I think it
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was called, which itself was vapid, brain-numbing garbage. And I said as much, if you may remember,
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on this show when that song was popular. But he had a lot of children fans because of that dumb,
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awful song. And now he's trying desperately to shock us with a shtick that really wasn't even
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all that shocking when Marilyn Manson did it 25 years ago. Now, the only difference is that Marilyn
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Manson never pretended to be an artist for kids. This guy, this dirtbag did. So he had a whole lot
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of kids subscribing to his YouTube channel. And then without warning, he drops the video of him
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giving a lap dance to Satan. Bunch of nine-year-olds watched that this weekend without their parents
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knowing. Still, the content itself only fails to shock us because we're so accustomed to living in a
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culture where putrid, toxic sludge is pumped out of Hollywood and the music industry and directly into
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our children's minds. This is the situation that many millions of kids find themselves in. They have
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no moral guidance at home. They consume a media diet of nonstop perversity and degeneracy.
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They live lives that are 90% online, conditioned to see other humans as disembodied avatars on a screen.
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There's no beauty in their lives. No truth, no goodness, no joy, no love. That's another prediction
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I can make about all those kids we talked about earlier. How can we be surprised when they turn
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into killers and criminals? What else would they become? What else would you expect?
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It's only going to get worse from here unless we set about to make massive, massive cultural changes.
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But to do that would require us to confront the problem honestly from the start. That's the first
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step. And we don't have the courage to take it. Now let's get to our five headlines.
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You know, I felt kind of bad. I was at, well, I don't know if I felt bad is really true, but
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we were, I was out with my wife and my brother and sister-in-law in Nashville this past weekend
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on Friday. We were at the Stillery in Midtown, which is a great place. They got good, I'm not
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a big cocktail guy, but they got good cocktails there. So a quick recommendation if you're ever
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in Nashville. Anyway, we're sitting there waiting for our table and the woman comes up,
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she's a fan. And she says to me, you know, I love your podcast. And she says, I know you
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hate people, but I just wanted to tell you that I love your podcast. And everyone else
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at the table thought that was hilarious. And they started laughing hysterically. And then
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I responded, you know, and, and, and I said, I said, no, I don't hate people. I just really
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dislike them. Which of course, at that point, my wife, and she always does this because she's
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like, she's like my translator is why I need her in social situations because she of course
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stepped in and said, he's joking. He's joking. Which is what she always says when I do that
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kind of thing in public. But I thought about, and I realized that that's probably 85% of the
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time when someone approaches me in public, they begin with, with that. That's almost always,
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I didn't laugh because that's what I expect. That was, that's like the opening line for almost
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everyone. I know you hate me or hate people. I know you don't like people, but, and then they,
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cause like they have to open with an apology for talking to me and then they continue.
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And I thought maybe I'm coming off a little too harsh. If everyone feels the need to say that.
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And I had a moment of self-reflection and then I said, no, probably not. It's fine.
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And continued about, about my day. Um, and it's, it's, it is kind of nice though,
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because mostly what people will do if I see them in public is they'll just kind of give the head nod,
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which I, I kind of prefer that even if I, if I know you or don't know you, that's, that's my move
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anyway, even for people that I know, if I see them just a quick head nod, like acknowledgement.
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And then we all, we just keep moving. All right. Um, number one from the daily wire,
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the Biden administration is reportedly working on developing coronavirus vaccine passports that
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would allow Americans to prove that they've been vaccinated since, um, some businesses have,
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businesses have indicated that they will require proof of vaccination for people to enter the
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businesses. Washington post reported, quote, the administration's initiative has been
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driven largely by arms of the department of health and human services, including an office
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devoted to health information technology. The white house this month took on a bigger role
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coordinating government agencies involved in the work. The report said that a digital version
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of vaccine passport would be available through smartphone apps and could display a scannable code
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similar to an airline boarding pass. Well, no big deal there. You just, you need the equivalent
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of a boarding pass. That's what we're going to, that's where we're heading as a society is that you need
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the equivalent of a boarding pass to walk into a restaurant or really do any, go into a store.
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Um, the vaccine passports are expected to face significant hurdles, quote unquote,
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surrounding data privacy and making sure that the passports cannot be counterfeited.
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Well, I would hope, I would hope that they would face hurdles, um, beyond, beyond those.
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The post added, quote, one of the most significant hurdles facing federal officials,
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the sheer number of passport initiatives underway with the Biden administration this month,
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identifying at least 17. Those initiatives such as the world health organization led global effort
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and a digital pass devised by IBM that's being tested in New York state are rapidly moving forward.
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Even as the white house deliberates about how best to track the shots and avoid the perception
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of government mandates, uh, of a government mandate to be vaccinated.
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Absolutely. And that's, I said that months ago, I believe I did, or if I didn't say it, I thought
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it and should have said it that people are worried about it. Yeah. A mandate. People are worried,
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have been worried that the government's going to say, you have to get this shot. If you don't get it,
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you're going to, uh, be fine. You're going to have to go to jail or something. No, they're not going
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to mandate it. They're going to do an end run around the mandate by simply making it so that
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you can't do anything. You can't live your life unless you get the vaccine. But then that always
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allows them, cause there are a lot of civil, civil liberty problems with a national federal vaccine
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mandate. So they're going to get around that by making it so that you can't do anything. And then
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they can always say, what do you mean? There's not a mandate. I'm not, we're not forcing you to
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get the vaccine. Sure. You can't leave your house or do anything if you don't get it, but, uh, you're
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still free not to get it. That's all they can get around it. But the real irony here is that we get
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this news right on the heels of renewed panic over voter ID laws, right? We had that, the law that
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passed in, um, in Georgia, which for the most part, really basic minimal level kind of putting,
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putting a few systems in place to make sure that people who are voting are, you know, legitimate
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residents of the state and so on really basic stuff. But even that we're told is to require someone
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to do something really simple, like have a photo ID when they go vote simply to prove that they are
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who they say they are and that they are a resident of the state in which they're voting. We're told
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that that is racist somehow. Um, and it's a, it is a burden, an undue burden to have to produce an ID.
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I mean, think about how often you vote at most once every two years. We're talking presidential
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elections once every four years. So it is a, it is a, a cruel undue burden to tell someone that,
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look, if you want to vote in 2024 in the presidential election, you've got four years to figure out how to
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get some kind of photo ID, license, anything, just some kind of photo ID, you got four years to do it.
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That's a problem. But requiring a vaccine passport every day to potentially do anything to participate
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in society, forget about participating in the quote democratic process to participate in society
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generally. That's, that's fine. There's no problem there. Of course, yet another, uh, yet another
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double standard of many. Okay. Number two, I have to play this from CNN. Our friend, uh, Brian Stelter,
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there, there, there are, speaking of irony, there are so many levels of irony here that, um,
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I think it's worth playing. And, uh, here it is. Let's watch. You may have noticed something
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about the former president. I don't know what it is. Either it's an unwillingness or an inability
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to leave the spotlight, but it's been on full display this week. Uh, actually five times, uh,
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president Trump making appearances on Fox news, news max, and on a Fox personalities podcast here is,
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we just, we wanted to summarize it all in one soundbite. So here it is. Here's a summary of
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what Trump said about the Biden administration. They're destroying our country to destroy our
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country. They're destroying our country. They're destroying our country, Lisa. They're destroying
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our country, Lisa. Right. It's like he was singing a song, but really off key. He's saying the same
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thing on every show. And he was back on Fox last night visiting with Janine Pirro. Now let's contrast Trump
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with the last one-term president, the last guy who was defeated after a single term. That is
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George H.W. Bush. You want to see what Bush was doing after losing reelection? This is what he was
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doing. Oh, it looks great. Doesn't it? Looks so relaxing. Bush told his successor, Bill Clinton,
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quote, you're not going to have any trouble from me. And he kept his word. Now Trump is the anti-Bush,
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of course. But to borrow a phishing metaphor here, is the media taking his bait? Does this feel like
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2015 all over again with outrageous statements stoking days of news coverage? Is the media,
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am I taking his bait right now? Am I currently doing the thing that I'm criticizing? What do you think,
00:19:53.540
guys? Yeah, I'd say so. So we've got two things there. Number one, yet again, this thing the media
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does now where they are romanticizing. First, it was George W. Bush and now George H.W. Bush
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romanticizing the Bushes. For years, we were told that these are war criminals and scumbags and
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horrible people. But now, remember the Bushes? Those were good people. You know, why can't we get a
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Republican like that again? Like the people I accused of war crimes? But also, what's funny is
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that those, whatever it was, four or five media hits that Donald Trump apparently did, I didn't
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even know about any of those until I watched that clip from Brian Stelter. I might have heard of one
00:20:44.200
of them. And I'm in conservative media. So Stelter's saying that Trump can't get off the stage. Well,
00:20:52.260
you're, no, you're putting him on the stage. Donald Trump doing an interview on Fox News,
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that's not really being, that's, he's, that's, that's, that's, that's one thing. He was accessing
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the conservative audience. No, no big surprise there. But you're the one putting him on the
00:21:12.760
larger stage by, by giving his, his message access to an audience that wouldn't hear it on Fox.
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So no, it's, it's not that, that Stelter and CNN, it's not that they're worried that Trump won't get
00:21:25.820
off the stage. It's that they desperately need him to be on the stage. And they're going to drag him
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onto the stage if he does step off of it because they need him. He's the only thing they know how
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to talk about. They've been conditioned that way for the past five years. That's all they've got.
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And yeah, they've kind of moved on to, on CNN, it seems like 80% of their programming now is
00:21:51.260
complaining about Tucker Carlson. So they, they kind of, they, they've replaced Trump a little bit
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with, with someone else, but they still, they can't quit Trump. They just can't quit him. They
00:22:02.020
need him. Brian Stelter, most of all. All right. Number three, Dr. Fauci was on face the nation.
00:22:10.220
And the question to him was about specifically kids and masking and what we should be requiring
00:22:16.480
our kids to do. Here's what Dr. Fauci said. So if parents are vaccinated, they still do need to
00:22:22.740
be concerned about their unvaccinated children playing together in groups. Is that right?
00:22:30.480
Yeah. The children can clearly wind up getting infected. When we talk about what you can do
00:22:35.680
when you're vaccinated, you can certainly have members of a family. If the adults are vaccinated
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and you're in the home with your child, you don't need to wear a mask and you can have physical contact
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when the children go out into the community, you want them to continue to wear masks when
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they're interacting with groups from multiple households. Oh, that's good. But don't complain.
00:22:59.000
He did, he did give you permission to have physical interaction with your own child. So he said that
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if your kids at home, the kids at home, Fauci will allow you to, uh, to have interaction with them.
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And they don't even have to wear a mask. So that's, that's very generous of Fauci, isn't it?
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That he's giving you that permission in your own home.
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That people are still listening to this guy. People are still hanging even a year into this
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when he's changed his mind on a million things. So it's a different thing every day.
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People are still hanging on to his, to his every word, letting, letting him guide their day-to-day
00:23:41.440
life. When he was never qualified for that to begin with.
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Even if he was the greatest guy in the world and the most honest guy in the world, which I don't
00:23:52.960
believe he is, but he's still, he's an immunologist. That's, that's where he, if he has any expertise,
00:24:00.500
that's where it would be. In terms of advice on how to live your life generally,
00:24:05.980
balancing all these different things, balancing the risk of a virus versus the risk of locking a
00:24:16.160
kid in their home for a year, taking away the friends, education, everything. He has nothing
00:24:21.360
to say on that whatsoever. He's not an expert on that. Never was. There's absolutely no reason to
00:24:26.720
listen to him on that. The only thing he can allegedly tell us is what sort of activity is more likely to
00:24:33.820
spread virus and what sort of activity isn't. But how do you balance that in the grand scheme?
00:24:39.300
He was never an expert on that. Should never pretended to be. He should have been clear about
00:24:45.940
that from the beginning. If he was really an honest guy, he would have been. He would have said,
00:24:49.340
listen, this is what I do. I can tell you about the virus, but in terms of how you live your life
00:24:53.980
and what you do with your kids and whether they go to school and all that stuff, whether they see
00:25:00.160
their friends, what they wear when they see their friends, I can't tell you about that. Those are
00:25:05.200
decisions you have to make on your own. An honest and humble man, that's what such a man would have
00:25:11.180
said. But of course, he's not that kind of man. No, if you're still, look, if you need to take your
00:25:19.940
kid into a store or something, or you need to get on a plane, you really need to, and you have to get
00:25:26.200
them on the plane too, because you got to go somewhere. And you put your kid in the mask
00:25:29.440
because you have to. I get that part of it. If it's absolutely necessary. Now the plane part,
00:25:40.360
they're going to kick you off the plane two and over. So if you have a two and a half year old,
00:25:45.520
they're going to tell you that the two and a half year old has to be in a mask. So for me,
00:25:51.220
I'm just, we're not getting on a plane until that madness stops. And if it never stops,
00:25:54.320
we're never getting on a plane as a family again, because I'm not doing that. And we have a kid
00:25:58.920
who's almost two, she's not going to be in a mask. But if you have to be in a certain situation and
00:26:04.280
the rule is that you got, you got to put the kid in the mask, then I understand that you got to do
00:26:07.660
what you got to do. But if you're still choosing in a, in a voluntary situation to put your kid in a
00:26:13.460
mask, I don't know what to say to you. Like you're getting together for a play date or something at a
00:26:19.600
playground and you've got your little four and five-year-olds in masks, no one is forcing you
00:26:26.020
to, but you do it. And I've seen this kind of thing at playgrounds. You're, you're like,
00:26:31.800
you're a lunatic is what you are. And you're harming your child. You're doing psychological
00:26:37.020
damage to your child because of your own fear and paranoia to make yourself feel better.
00:26:43.200
Nothing's not for your kid. Be clear about that. You're doing this for you and you're hurting your
00:26:47.080
kid. Knock it off. You maniac. All right. Number four, here's an article from Fox five NY about a
00:26:58.260
new survey on internet usage. None of this is terribly shocking, but I still think we should
00:27:02.400
look at these numbers. We see these surveys that come out every once in a while. Uh, just so we
00:27:06.700
can see, we can see how bad it is. So the survey says, uh, researchers found 31% of respondents in the
00:27:12.520
survey admit to constant internet use. Another constant as in basically never stopping throughout
00:27:19.860
the day. Every, almost, almost every waking moment they're online. Another 48% said they log in several
00:27:25.660
times a day. And just 6% said they limit their online activity to about once a day. Since 2015, near
00:27:31.300
constant internet usage among people ages 30 to 49 has risen by 14 points. And for people between 50
00:27:38.540
and 64, it's grown from 12% to 22%. Researchers have noticed the percentages of near constant users
00:27:44.780
between 18 to 29 years old has remained 48% since, since 2019. And people older than 65 are stagnant at
00:27:52.660
8%. Well, that's half 18 to 20. And again, constant is exactly what it sounds like all the time.
00:27:59.760
It's, you know, when I, when I read these surveys, it, I can't really judge because I'm, I'm very close
00:28:07.640
to the constant category though. I always have the excuse that it is actually my job. I mean, I do get
00:28:13.920
paid for it, but even so, um, and this is the kind of thing we talked about at the beginning. You know,
00:28:22.020
this is absolutely one of the factors when we talk about what is, what's turning kids into violent
00:28:29.820
sociopaths. Why is this happening? Uh, this, this is one of them. Yeah. It's, it's lack of parental
00:28:37.640
guidance at home. It's pop culture. It's all these are factors that, that, that go into it. Um, and a
00:28:44.420
big part of that is when you got kids and this is how a lot of kids are raised now, and it's going to
00:28:48.680
get worse if they don't have parental guidance, they don't have a dad in the home. They don't have a mom
00:28:51.980
that's very present. Um, maybe the mom's on drugs or something, which is often the case like no
00:28:58.920
guidance at all. And so all they have is their phone. They've got the internet and, um, and that's
00:29:03.060
what they do all day. And think about that from, it can be hard for us, those of us who at least had
00:29:10.200
a little bit of a childhood before the internet took over. For me, there's a very distinct moment.
00:29:16.260
I can, I think it was about maybe about the age of like 13, 14 when the internet it's, it seemed
00:29:23.380
looking back on it, it seems almost like an all, like a, like an all at once thing or before that
00:29:28.940
the internet existed. And, you know, I had, I can remember being nine years old and I had a friend
00:29:34.100
down the street who had the internet. I think it had AOL 1.0 and I didn't really understand what it
00:29:38.100
was exactly. And I used it once and I wasn't that interested. Um, and then a few years later it took
00:29:43.500
over and everybody had the internet, but so, so, so people, my generation, we had a childhood where
00:29:48.160
this kind of stuff basically didn't exist or certainly wasn't ubiquitous. Um, but kids now
00:29:55.020
don't have that. They never had a childhood without it. So what do you think is going to happen to a
00:30:00.160
kid every second of the day? This is what they're doing. Of course, it's going to have a desensitizing
00:30:07.460
effect. When you're conditioned to interact with people like in this way, not really interacting
00:30:17.340
with them as human beings, but as, as images on a screen, it all plays a part and it all contributes
00:30:26.680
to it. And that's why I say massive cultural changes. Part of that, part of that massive change
00:30:34.420
is a, is a, is a, is a move away from this, trying to raise kids in a way that allows them to have an
00:30:42.360
authentic human childhood that involves things like going outside, running around the woods,
00:30:51.580
going out and playing dodgeball or something. It's all part of it. Okay. Number five, um,
00:30:58.060
this has become the standard, the traditional time, I guess, for me to play crazy TikTok videos.
00:31:02.860
And I know, I know you people like it. Don't, don't claim that you don't. This is for your own
00:31:07.680
good. And here's today's installment. Let's take a look. White privilege. Think about it.
00:31:18.320
Whose flesh tone is this? I have brown band-aids in my classroom. I had to special order them.
00:31:25.640
They're twice as much as these and they're hard to find and they're frequently out of stock.
00:31:30.560
But when I hand a brown child, a white band-aid, I am literally adding insult to injury. And I
00:31:39.540
refuse to do that in my classroom. She's a hero speaking out against the scourge of light-colored
00:31:46.060
band-aids. Now, if we really have to engage in this conversation, which I guess we don't,
00:31:50.280
but I'm choosing to, um, choosing to waste my own time and yours, you're welcome. Uh, the first thing
00:31:55.880
is that there, there is, of course, a logical explanation for, for why there would be more
00:32:01.460
band-aids in that, in that color than in the darker colors, because that skin color is more
00:32:08.500
common. And so there are going to be more of them out there in the marketplace. It really makes a lot
00:32:14.200
of sense when you think about it. But also in my experience with, with, first of all, kids love
00:32:20.820
band-aids. I don't, I don't, I don't quite understand it. Even though I was a kid once
00:32:25.020
and I can remember having a band-aid fixation myself, I still can't figure out quite what it
00:32:29.540
is. Kids love band-aids. Um, they're always trying to invent reasons why they need a band-aid.
00:32:35.420
You know, as when you're a parent, you constantly have kids coming up to you. Oh, I got a cut. I
00:32:39.240
have it. Where's your cut? Let me see. And they show you the like, it's on their finger and you look
00:32:42.540
at it. Nope. That's, there's no, I see nothing there. They insist that there's a cut. And so you put
00:32:48.540
the band-aid on and, and, uh, magically it makes everything better. But kids love band-aid and
00:32:52.960
what they prefer in my experience are band-aids that don't, that don't match their skin color.
00:32:58.260
They want bright colored band-aids. They want a Batman band-aid. They want a Scooby-Doo band-aid.
00:33:04.580
What, what message does she think is sent when you give a kid a Scooby-Doo band-aid?
00:33:11.960
Are you making them feel, how does she think that works? I don't know.
00:33:18.540
But you know, you know, you know, you're getting desperate. You know, the white privilege narrative
00:33:22.800
is, uh, falling apart when you have to look to the colors of band-aids to prove your point.
00:33:29.400
When you're reduced to that, I think that tells you that white privilege, really not much of a
00:33:34.000
problem in this country. Well, let's move on to reading the YouTube comments. This is from Kyle
00:33:38.600
Stewart. He says, birds are not neat pets. They're filthy. It's almost like owning ferrets.
00:33:44.320
People can tell that you own ferrets just by jogging past your house. The set, the smell is
00:33:50.560
unmistakable. Yeah, that is true. That's just birds. If someone had recommended last week,
00:33:55.820
I guess a bird as a pet, if I don't like cats and dogs, but yeah, birds seem like they smell even worse
00:34:02.160
and they're, and they're noisier like we covered. And on top of it, they're even, they're even more
00:34:07.200
useless than a cat or a dog. Like a bird's not going to do anything for you at all. A cat could at least
00:34:13.120
kill a mouse. Maybe a dog can bring you the slippers. Maybe he's going to chew them up and
00:34:19.440
slobber on him too, but he can try. What's a bird going to do for you? Um, let's see. AV reacting to
00:34:27.860
the video of the woman screaming at people who don't wear masks and claiming that workers in
00:34:33.080
hospitals are exhausted. AV says that lady is nuts. Uh, I work in hospitals. We aren't exhausted,
00:34:38.780
maybe tired, but that's because we work 10 to 12 hour shifts to begin with. If anything,
00:34:42.700
we have less people to take care of. I've, I've, I've heard that a lot all along for the past year.
00:34:48.720
I've, I've heard that from many hospital workers. Rachel says, Matt, I think you're wrong about the
00:34:53.360
age limit policy. Even at 90 years old, Thomas Sowell is a, Sowell, Sowell arguably has one of the
00:35:01.340
sharpest, soundest minds I've ever heard. Instead, we need to have campaigns, um, that can't hide
00:35:07.320
candidates in a basement and the media can't run cover to achieve their agenda policies. Yeah.
00:35:13.340
I got a lot of comments and we talked about an age limit for the presidency. And I think it should
00:35:17.700
be 75 to run. You know, that's, that's the oldest you could be. And I think that's pretty generous
00:35:22.100
because that gives you 40 years, right? 35 to 75, you have 40 years to run for president. Don't do it
00:35:25.620
in that time. Then go retire and sit on your, on your porch with a rocking chair in the rocking chair
00:35:30.160
with your grandkids. Sounds like a great plan. Much, much better way, by the way, to spend your
00:35:34.180
final years than as president. Um, and a much more respectable way too, in my view. And I got a lot
00:35:41.660
of these kinds of messages and comments from people, you know, saying, well, no, we don't need an age
00:35:45.860
limit because here's this random older person who's doing really well at the age of 90. Uh, whether it's
00:35:51.460
a prominent person or, you know, oftentimes I'll hear, oh, my grandmother, you say that, but you don't
00:35:56.720
know my grandmother, she was sharp as a tack until she died in 93. I get it. But first of all, even at,
00:36:05.880
if you're saying that a 90 year old is sharp as a tack, what you mean is for a 90 year old,
00:36:13.640
but there's still the reality of being 90 and you're going to have a lot of physical decline,
00:36:19.740
a lot and even mental decline. Your mind is not going to be as sharp and spry and aware and able
00:36:29.240
to process things as it was at 50. It's just a simple fact that there's no way around it. We are
00:36:34.740
mortal creatures. You can't get around it. So that's what you mean. That's the qualifier. You mean all of
00:36:40.620
that for 90, he's doing pretty good, which is great, but still, and also these are the exceptions,
00:36:47.720
right? But when you, when you're setting a general rule or policy, you can't do it based on the
00:36:53.820
exceptions. Again, 35 is the lower limit, right? And there, there, there are some 31 year olds out
00:37:03.000
there who maybe would make fine presidents. Not a lot of them, but they probably exist. You'd probably
00:37:09.160
find a 31 year old who would make a good president, but they're the exception. And so we have the limit
00:37:15.240
at, uh, at 35 and no one complains about that. So a, you know, an 82 year old who could handle
00:37:22.180
being president, handle it physically and mentally and not lose their mind in the process or die in
00:37:28.460
the process. They are a rare exception. And when you're making policies, you, you can't take into it.
00:37:36.660
You can't make a policy based on rare exceptions. Um, and finally, Nicholas says, Hey Matt, talking
00:37:46.760
about my, my idea for competency test for voting says, Hey Matt, say your competency test is put
00:37:52.880
into effect. If a 12 year old aces the test, would you allow that child to vote? Um, that wouldn't be
00:38:00.700
ideal to me, but that is a deal that I would make. So that's a compromise that I would be willing. If
00:38:05.980
we could talk about this and if we came to that, uh, compromise, I would be fine with that. It's not
00:38:11.480
my ideal, right? Because I think that there should be on top of a competency test for voting, there
00:38:15.960
should be other requirements too. And another requirement is I think we should actually raise
00:38:19.480
the voting age probably to 25 and then put other requirements in place as well.
00:38:23.460
But if we could only do one thing that I'd say, fine, you know what, let's have the really basic
00:38:29.960
competency test for voting. And all that's going to establish is that you have like even a third
00:38:35.580
graders level of, uh, of, of knowledge when it comes to, to civics and government and all of that
00:38:41.900
and politics. And I'd be fine with that. So let's just say anyone who could pass that test can vote.
00:38:47.160
And so if you're, if you're 56 and you can't pass it, you don't vote. If you're seven and you can
00:38:52.360
pass it, then you can vote. I would take that deal. Now a quick word from rock auto. You know,
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00:39:03.140
weekend. We got like 50 feet of rain, I think was the last check, but normally weather's nice. And
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what that means is that you want to get out of the house and, and, uh, and, you know, just be doing
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anything other than sitting in or standing around an auto parts store. Why waste your time doing
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that? Rockauto.com makes it a lot easier when you have access to rockauto.com at your desk,
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for a worse selection, but you might not even find the same parts that you can find on rockauto.com.
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Rockauto.com is a family business. They've been serving auto parts customers online for 20 years.
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The rockauto.com catalog is really easy to navigate and you can very quickly find everything you're
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00:40:00.560
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truck and write Walsh in there. How did you hear about us box? So they know that we sent you.
00:40:09.920
You know, as you probably heard, Candace joined the Daily Wire a few weeks ago with the premiere
00:40:14.720
of her new talk show, Candace. Um, you may have heard us mentioned that in time or two. The show
00:40:20.140
streams Friday at 9 p.m. Eastern, 8 p.m. Central and offers a stimulating perspective on politics,
00:40:25.600
culture, and America at large. Candace hosts a series of guests on the show each week,
00:40:29.160
making for lively panel discussions and insightful interviews. Featured guests have included, uh,
00:40:33.400
Jocko Willink, Brandon Tatum, John Rich, just to name a few. I mean, and you know, I think probably
00:40:39.160
the headline here is that I'm going to be a guest on Candace pretty soon. So, you know, that should
00:40:43.460
be in this copy. I don't know why it isn't. Candace is the first Daily Wire show to appear in front of
00:40:47.320
a live audience, but don't worry if you can't attend the show in person, tweet your questions to
00:40:50.900
at the Candace show for a chance to have Candace answer your question at the end of the night.
00:40:54.420
Um, and make sure to become a Daily Wire member, go to dailywire.com slash subscribe,
00:40:59.620
use code Candace to get 25% off. That's code Candace for 25% off. Now let's get to our daily
00:41:04.900
cancellation. For the daily cancellation, we're going to step away from matters of politics and
00:41:12.940
ideology so that I can put my relationship expert hat on. That's actually mine putting a hat on. So
00:41:18.460
you understand I'm not really a relationship expert, but, but then I don't think it's really
00:41:21.780
possible for anyone to be that kind of expert. So I have as much claim to the title as anybody else.
00:41:27.220
So today I want to deal with and cancel, uh, of course, what I believe is perhaps the worst
00:41:31.900
marriage advice you will ever hear. And precisely what makes it the worst is that you will hear it
00:41:37.920
and you have heard it a million times already. It's very commonly believed and commonly said,
00:41:43.260
even by people whose own personal experience contradicts the advice they're dispensing.
00:41:48.800
The advice I refer to is this, never go to bed angry, never go to bed angry. Like I said,
00:41:56.620
you've heard it a million times, right? What brings it up right now is a new study,
00:42:00.100
uh, making the rounds online, which purports to lend scientific credibility to this awful piece of
00:42:05.460
faux wisdom. Here's the article from psychology today. It says when people resolve, when people
00:42:09.960
resolve interpersonal arguments before winding down their day and going to bed, it can break the
00:42:14.560
vicious cycle of festering negative emotions, perpetuating chronic stress. Along this line,
00:42:18.860
new research from Oregon State University suggests that the daily habit of resolving an argument before
00:42:23.040
day's end can curb the emotional toll of everyday stress triggered by interpersonal conflicts in ways
00:42:27.900
that might have lifelong benefits. Over time, the OSU researchers speculate that getting in the habit
00:42:33.160
of resolving arguments by day's end may reduce chronic stress and promote living a longer,
00:42:38.120
healthier life. Everyone experiences stress in their daily lives. You aren't going to stop
00:42:42.000
stressful things from happening. Uh, the senior author of the study noted, but the extent to which
00:42:46.060
you can tie them off, bring them to an end and resolve them is definitely going to pay dividends
00:42:49.900
in terms of your wellbeing. Resolving your arguments is quite important for maintaining wellbeing in daily
00:42:54.440
life. In other words, don't go to bed angry. And this is not the first study that has claimed to
00:42:59.980
confirm this age old advice. Another one was done in 2016. And there, according to the Guardian,
00:43:06.180
the lead researcher also concludes, quote, we would suggest to first resolve arguments before going to
00:43:11.980
bed. Don't sleep on your anger. Now, this is all fantastically wrong. In fact, the best thing you can
00:43:20.000
do with your anger in a marriage is sleep on it. This is the practical reality most of the time,
00:43:27.460
no matter what the studies say. Now it's true that if you can simply snap your fingers and make yourself
00:43:34.280
not angry and your spouse not angry before putting your head on the pillow, that would be ideal.
00:43:39.260
And if you can snap your fingers and forgive and snap your fingers and make your spouse forgive,
00:43:45.120
again, that would be best. But experience suggests that you can't always curtail your emotions with
00:43:50.480
the snap of your fingers. And you certainly can't curtail your spouse's emotions by snapping your
00:43:55.120
fingers. Trust me, I've tried. Hey, stop being angry. Snap out of it. Often this will have the opposite of
00:44:02.380
the effect that you intend, I have found. What this means is that when you're actually in this
00:44:07.740
situation, okay, you're in the thick of it. You're in an argument with your spouse. The clock is ticked
00:44:12.600
past 9 p.m. You're both angry. You're both frustrated. You have two choices. Assuming the
00:44:19.140
snapping fingers trick didn't work. You can either keep hammering it out until the wee hours of the
00:44:25.900
morning, going around and around in circles, refusing to go to sleep or allow your spouse to sleep until you
00:44:30.580
feel that the issue has been resolved. Or you can simply go to bed and let your emotions settle and
00:44:37.340
see how you feel in the morning. If you choose the latter course, what will almost certainly happen is
00:44:42.840
that when you wake up in the morning, you will realize that you were overreacting and you'll be
00:44:47.400
grateful that you went to bed rather than saying all of the things you wanted to say in the moment.
00:44:53.220
If you choose the former course, that is, you decide to take all this bad advice and stay awake until
00:44:59.060
you reach resolution. What will almost certainly happen is that the fight will escalate into the
00:45:03.780
night as you both get more tired and more annoyed until finally it ends, not so much on a resolution,
00:45:09.140
but just on a note of sheer exhaustion. Then you'll still have to go to bed like you could have done
00:45:13.740
four hours ago. And you wake up in the morning way more tired, perhaps still annoyed because you're
00:45:18.200
tired. And rather than thanking God that you didn't say all that you wanted to say, instead wishing to
00:45:22.800
God that you hadn't said all that you did say, I don't care what the study results say or what
00:45:28.400
Facebook meme cliches say, this is how it works in real life. See, in a marriage, there are like
00:45:36.080
fight levels, almost like a video game. Okay. Level one is the standard brief snippy little exchange that
00:45:44.180
you might have with each other over some extremely unimportant thing. Maybe you're, you know, you're
00:45:47.940
looking for the lost TV remote and you're both accusing the other of being the last one to have
00:45:52.480
it, even though it was always one of the kids that lost it. Um, and maybe someone left the milk
00:45:57.340
out on the counter, you know, maybe, and this is a totally random example. Maybe your wife keeps
00:46:02.460
putting the pancake syrup in the fridge when it clearly belongs in the pantry. And you exchange
00:46:06.180
words over that. Like I said, random example. The thing about a level one is that it's stupid
00:46:10.780
and all you have to do in order to resolve it is realize how stupid it is and move on or better yet,
00:46:16.680
laugh at yourselves. That's the best way to end an argument really is by laughing and it can be done.
00:46:22.260
All you have to realize is how dumb this is, but then the fight, the fights work their way up,
00:46:27.540
right? In gradations until you get to level six, which is a fight where one or both of you are
00:46:33.580
threatening divorce. Now it is possible and very much advised to try to go your whole marriage
00:46:38.900
without ever having a level six. I mean, we've made it 10 years and counting without a level six.
00:46:43.020
So that's what I would advise there somewhere in between level one and level six around levels
00:46:48.000
three and four. That's where you start making statements that begin with phrases like you
00:46:53.060
always. And Oh yeah. Well, you remember that time three Christmases ago when you, this is when you're
00:46:59.260
dredging up old offenses. You're reopening old wounds, taking one offense. The other has committed
00:47:04.960
and claiming that it's a chronic problem. They always do it. Giving specific examples of other times
00:47:11.520
when they've done it showing that you've been holding a silent grudge all this time.
00:47:15.240
This is the danger zone. It's where you go from irritated to deeply angry. It's where the shouting
00:47:21.400
starts. So here's my point. The longer you drag an argument out, especially at night, especially when
00:47:28.320
you're tired after a long day of work or a long day dealing with the kids, the more likely it is that
00:47:33.540
you will work your way up through these levels. So don't worry about resolving your level two dispute at
00:47:38.160
1030. The best resolution is simply to stop talking and go to bed. Trying to resolve it only
00:47:42.080
means that you'll be at a level three before you know it. And who knows where it goes from there.
00:47:45.800
I'm not saying that you should avoid confrontation at all costs in a marriage. I'm not saying that,
00:47:49.300
you know, there's never a time when you really need to hash something out, but the idea, the very
00:47:52.540
popular idea that every conflict, every argument must reach a mutually satisfactory conclusion
00:47:58.220
before either of you can go to bed is lunacy. It's a recipe for sleep deprivation and lots of
00:48:03.960
arguments that get a hell of a lot more emotional and intense than they ever needed to be.
00:48:08.460
I mean, if you want a level one milk on the counter dispute to have a chance of becoming a level six,
00:48:13.960
I'm moving out and taking the kids with me situation, then the best way to make that happen
00:48:18.360
is to keep the argument going well into the night. Angry and tired is a brutal combination.
00:48:24.160
It's a recipe that can cook up all kinds of dishes that you'll regret eating in the morning.
00:48:29.800
Trust me. One other note. You'll often hear that don't go to bed angry is biblical.
00:48:37.480
Supposedly, this horrifically misguided, stupid advice can be found in scripture.
00:48:42.440
Thankfully, that's not really the case. The verse that people usually cite is Ephesians 4.26.
00:48:47.820
And I've even heard, you know, pastors use this in sermons and with this exact advice.
00:48:52.800
And what that verse says is, in your anger, do not sin. Do not let the sun go down on your anger.
00:49:01.600
Now, if you want to take that in the most literal possible way, then you must take it to mean that
00:49:06.880
you should resolve every argument, not before bed, but resolve it before sundown. And this might be a
00:49:13.340
real problem because if one or both of you was at work, you might not see each other until 30 minutes
00:49:18.080
before sundown. So you better get to arguing right away before the witching hour. Maybe you could do
00:49:22.680
it over dinner in front of the kids. That's always a good idea. Or you can interpret that verse to be
00:49:27.340
a warning against sinful, wrathful anger and an admonition that we should not stew in that kind
00:49:32.480
of anger, no matter if it's dark outside or not. Because the other part of that verse is like, well,
00:49:38.620
as long as I start, if I'm angry at 8 a.m., that means I got, you know, all day to be angry and I'm good
00:49:44.420
to go as long as it's before sundown. No. And, you know, you don't stew in the anger. That's the
00:49:50.720
point. That's true. But by no means does it entail that you have to finish every argument before
00:49:54.480
bedtime. In fact, in the Psalms, we're told that when we're angry, we should, quote, reflect in our
00:49:59.340
hearts while on our beds and be silent. There you go. Reflect and be silent is a much, much better
00:50:07.100
thing to do when you're angry in a marriage. There's really no downside because you can always say
00:50:12.780
what you wanted to say at another time if you still feel that it needs to be said.
00:50:17.580
You can always live to fight another day, but you can't always take back the things you do say.
00:50:23.380
You can't always undo what you said when you were angry and tired and insisting that you both stay
00:50:28.580
awake. So for all of those reasons, this piece of marriage advice is most definitely canceled.
00:50:37.880
And frankly, if you follow the advice too much, your marriage might be canceled too, eventually.
00:50:42.780
So we'll leave it there for today. Thanks for watching. Thanks for listening. Have a great day.
00:51:12.780
The Matt Wall Show is a Daily Wire production. Copyright Daily Wire 2021.
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