Ep. 721 - Don't Worry. Our Army Of Feminists And Gay Activists Will Protect Us.
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Summary
The Army has launched its own woke leftist ad campaign, as both the intelligence community and the military continue to prioritize left-wing ideology over less important concerns like defending the country from its enemies. We ll discuss that, also, a change to the dictionary that has now turned me and millions of others into anti-vaccxers. Plus, college students are suspended for not wearing a mask off campus, and outrage over a video of a brutal full-contact drill among little kids at a football practice. And, we ll discuss the former MSNBC host who has decided that it should be legal to kill any white man who uses a racial slur.
Transcript
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Today on The Matt Wall Show, the Army has launched its own woke leftist ad campaign
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as both the intelligence community and the military continue to prioritize left-wing ideology
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over less important concerns like, you know, defending the country from its enemies.
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We'll discuss that. Also, five headlines, including a change to the dictionary that
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has now turned myself and millions of others into anti-vaxxers. Plus, college students are
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suspended for not wearing a mask off campus and outrage over a video of a brutal full-contact
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drill among little kids at a football practice. Is the outrage overblown or do the critics have a
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point? And our daily cancellation, we'll discuss the former MSNBC host who has decided that it
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should be legal to kill any white man who uses a racial slur. And that perspective is more popular
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than you'd like to think. We'll talk about that and much more today on The Matt Wall Show.
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So war rages again in the Middle East. Major fuel lines are disabled by shadowy groups of
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international hackers. Gas shortages ravage the East Coast. Inflation threatens to cripple the
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economy. Anarchists terrorize American cities at will. Police departments collapse. Public trust
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in government plummets to an all-time low. The country faces an unprecedented combination of
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crises all at once. But don't worry. Everything is fine. The good news is that our government is
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run by a dementia patient. Our intelligence agencies are mostly focused on promoting diversity.
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And the military is busy recruiting feminists to defeat the threat posed by intolerance and hate
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speech. On second thought, everything is not fine. We would appear to be, to use the technical phrase,
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totally screwed. And there's no sign of common sense or sanity being restored in the near future.
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Which brings us to this. On the heels of an ad blitz by the CIA touting its recruitment of
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cisgender millennial women with anxiety disorders and gay men whose job is to keep the campus library
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stocked with stress-relieving board games to help agents cope with their feelings, the U.S. Army has
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started its own woke ad campaign. A new page on the Army's website highlights the stories of,
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quote, five young Americans who, quote, made the most important decision of their lives for reasons
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as diverse as they are. Now, the five Americans, all featured in a series of short animated videos
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together titled The Calling, are, of course, exclusively immigrants and women. Obviously,
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the Army doesn't want to offend anyone by admitting that it has white men in its ranks. Most of the videos
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are basically unobjectionable, if somewhat odd. For example, a lieutenant describes how he struggled in
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school searching for his purpose in life before deciding to pursue his lifelong goal of becoming
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a pilot. He assures us, quote, it doesn't take a genius to become an Army pilot. Now, this is
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probably true. It doesn't take a genius to learn almost any skill, but it still doesn't fill you
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with confidence to hear the military making that kind of pitch for itself. Hey, guys, doesn't take a
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genius to do this. Another video tells the tale of a first lieutenant who eventually decided to chase
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her dream of joining the Army after spending five years as a singer on a cruise ship. A scene at the
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end of the little cartoon shows her staring out from the deck of a ship at sunset, singing about her
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When I was 17, I had such real big dreams. I said, Dad, I want to be a soldier so I can be like you. And though the
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years have passed now, the feeling just seems to last now, it's not too hard to grasp now. Hey, Dad, I gotta be like you.
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I'm just trying to imagine, you know, old school, old school Army veterans, you know, Vietnam War vet hasn't
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been paying much attention recently. Turns on the TV season ad for the Army. That's that. It just
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thinks, what in the hell? Now, I doubt that our adversaries will tremble in their boots when they
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see that our military recruitment ads strongly resemble Disney princess films. But that is all
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nothing compared to the profile of Corporal Emma Malone Lord. Now, she tells us about her childhood
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growing up in a home with two lesbian moms and her time spent marching for LGBT rights.
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Eventually in college, she was inspired by her sorority sisters to pursue, quote, her own adventure,
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which is how she settled on a career in the Army where she says she can prove her inner strength and
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shatter stereotypes. If you want to see it, which, I mean, you probably don't, but I'll show it to you
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anyway. Here it is. Although I had a fairly typical childhood, took ballet, played violin, I also marched
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for equality. I like to think I've been defending freedom from an early age. When I was six years old,
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one of my moms had an accident that left her paralyzed. Doctors said she might never walk
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again. But she tapped into my family's pride to get back on her feet, eventually standing at the
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altar to marry my other mom. With such powerful role models, I finished high school at the top of my class
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and then attended UC Davis, where I joined a sorority full of other strong women.
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But as graduation approached, I began feeling like I'd been handed so much in life, a sorority
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girl stereotype. Sure, I'd spent my life around inspiring women. But what had I really achieved
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on my own? One of my sorority sisters was studying abroad in Italy. Another was climbing Mount Everest.
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I needed my own adventures, my own challenge. And after meeting with an army recruiter,
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I found it. A way to prove my inner strength and maybe shatter some stereotypes along the way.
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I am, let me say, happy that Emma has found her inner strength. But there's a question here. Do we want
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to promote the military as a forum of self-discovery for sorority girls? Whenever we next find ourselves
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in an armed conflict with a rival superpower, and we certainly will eventually, probably sooner rather
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than later, will the military be better equipped and able to slaughter the enemy now that it has made
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diversity its first priority? Now that it has sold itself as a place to have an adventure and
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prove your inner strength. It's quite telling that out of all five of the soldiers featured in the
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video series, only one says anything about wanting to defend our nation from its enemies.
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National defense does not seem to be a major priority of the Department of Defense these days.
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Perhaps that isn't entirely fair, actually. Let me back up. Credit where it's due. Those entrusted to
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defend and secure the homeland are intent on defending and securing it from at least one
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physical threat. That is the threat of white supremacy. The Hill has this report this week
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as well. It says, quote, the Biden administration's top law enforcement officials on Wednesday pledged to
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dedicate their resources to combat domestic violent extremists amid questions over whether the agencies
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are equipped to monitor such threats in the wake of the January 6th Capitol riot. Attorney General
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Merrick Garland and Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas appeared before the Senate
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Appropriations Committee for a hearing on domestic extremism as Congress ramped up its scrutiny this
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week of the circumstances around the attack of the Capitol. Both Garland and Mayorkas testified that
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white supremacist groups posed the most serious domestic national security threat in the U.S.,
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reinforcing what analysts have long concluded about far-right organizations.
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Both the Attorney General and the Secretary of Homeland Security agreed with Senator Patrick Leahy's
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statement that white supremacists represent, quote, the most persistent lethal threat.
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But you do agree with your predecessors that white supremacist extremists remain the most persistent
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I do believe they do at this time, Mr. Chairman.
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I do, and that's the most recent assessment of the FBI.
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First of all, when are the, how old is that guy?
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Anyway, going into more detail, Garland went on to claim that, quote, the top domestic violent
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extremist threat we face comes from racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists,
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specifically those who advocate for the superiority of the white race.
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In other words, says Garland, the greatest threat we face comes from violent extremists,
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but not the ones who've been rampaging through our cities, inflicting billions of dollars
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of damage, blocking traffic, harassing innocent people, and attacking random bystanders.
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Those extremists are often racially motivated themselves, but they're not the ones we should
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Instead, according to the people at the highest levels of government, the racially motivated
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extremists that should attract our attention are the ones who aren't doing anything and are
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nowhere to be seen. Black supremacists can whip up a mob of thousands in an instant and
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terrorize cities for weeks on end. White supremacists can't do anything close to that, probably because
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they're hampered by the fact that they don't exist for the most part, which is a little bit
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of a logistical challenge I have found. You know, if you want to do something, but you don't
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exist, it presents problems. This is a threat that guys like Garland have fabricated. Now, perhaps
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they really are up at night frantically tossing and turning, screaming, no, the white supremacists
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are coming. But I doubt it. The people who invent the boogeyman don't actually believe in it
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themselves. It is more that they are politically bound to this conclusion. But whatever the
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motivations, we are left with the reality that the people running our government and in charge
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of defending this country against enemies, foreign and domestic, are all either left-wing ideologues
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or hollow shells and useful pawns for left-wing ideologues. I mean, all of them at the highest
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levels. They recognize no duty more sacred and solemn than to fulfill that role. They are loyal
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only to the ideology. They have infiltrated and effectively incapacitated every institution
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because they will not allow any institution, even the military, to have any priorities above and
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beyond the propagation of left-wing doctrine. All things and all people must be evangelists for
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their religion. That is how everything and everyone's ultimate purpose can be fulfilled in
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the mind of our leftist overlords. And no doubt, our enemies are watching this happen and laughing
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to themselves and licking their chops and biding their time. All of this, I guess, is just a long
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way of saying that you can start a free trial of Rosetta Stone today if you want to learn Chinese,
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which you probably should. Let's get now to our five headlines.
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We are, man, we're in the process of moving right now. Can I just whine and complain for one second
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here? And then for the rest of the show? We've been living in a rental in Nashville, but now we're
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moving into our home. And it is really the worst. I don't recommend moving at all. We've moved six or
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seven times and it never gets easier. But at the same time, especially when you add more and more
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kids into the equation, but at the same time, it's also potentially edifying because it's an
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opportunity to confront your own materialism. And so, you know, I've gone through this. My wife and
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I, we've gone through this every time we move, and especially in this latest move, because you never
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realize how materialistic you are until you move and, and you see all of your stuff in boxes
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and you think to yourself, what, what, what is that? How do I have all this stuff? Where did this
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come from? How did I buy all of this? How am I not bankrupt already from buying all this stuff?
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And then you start going through the boxes and you're like, wait, did I, did I buy this 12 foot
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statue of a frog in a suit of armor or whatever? And then I think back, I think about, you know,
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the, the, the Oregon trail. Okay. Early pioneers, they would pack all of their, it's like a family
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of 17 and they would pack all of their belongings, everything they owned in a wagon and set off into
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the wilderness. And these days, a family of three, you know, you need 14 trucks to move across, uh,
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then across the city. It really is sad. Of course, on the Oregon trail, the other thing is, uh, family
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of 16, like half of them would die on the way. So I guess they needed less stuff once they got there,
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but still the point is a lot of materialism and I'm, uh, very much part of the problem. All right,
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well, let's start here. We should probably start with, uh, I think the big news, the big news is that now
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I am officially an anti-vaxxer. This is my coming out moment. Um, I'm coming out as an anti-vaxxer.
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I can finally reveal my true identity. I begin my new life today as an anti-vaxxer. Pretty exciting.
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You probably do as well. I never really expected to be an anti-vaxxer. Um, but according to the newly
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revamped dictionary, I am. So Zuby, who's a rapper and a conservative and has a pretty big social media
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following, he tweeted this, the Merriam-Webster dictionary has changed their definition of
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anti-vaxxer to include quote, people who oppose laws that mandate vaccination.
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Welcome to 1984. This is the ministry of truth. So if you oppose laws that mandate vaccination,
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that now makes you an anti-vaxxer according to the change in the dictionary, which of course is how
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that label, that term has, is, has been used now for several months because, you know, when you think
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anti-vaxxer, someone who's anti-vaccine, you think, oh, that's someone who's anti-vaccine. They're against
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vaccines. And there are some people in that camp, some who are against all vaccines, but I think it's a,
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probably a pretty small category. And then, and then there are more people who are kind of more
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skeptical about vaccines. They're not against all of them in principle, but they, you know, they're
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also not going to just take every single vaccine that they're told to take, or they're not going
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to give every vaccine, every vaccine to their kid that they're told that, you know, they want to know
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a little bit more about it, uh, which is a reasonable perspective. And then there are the people
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who even aside from the vaccines themselves, don't think that the government should be forcing
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its citizens to inject substances into their body, no matter what the substance is.
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And, uh, I am very much in that category. As far as the vaccines themselves, as I've said a million
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times, my position on whether or not you should get the vaccine is, I frankly don't care. That's
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totally your decision. Completely up to you. Yeah. I don't have an opinion about what things
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you're, you should inject into your body. That's you got to make your own decision. And, uh, and
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that's fine. And if, if, if there's a, whether we're talking about COVID or any other communicable
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disease, and there's a vaccine available for it, if I trust the vaccine and I'm worried about it,
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I can get a vaccine and then, and then, you know, it doesn't affect me what your choice is.
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But as far as whether or not people should be forced to do it, obviously not.
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Yep. Anti-vaxxer. So that's, we, we have now the, the anti-vaxxing ranks have probably grown
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a hundred fold just with this change in definition. All right. Uh, number two, CBS reports this Fulton
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County district attorney, Fannie Willis says she will seek the death penalty for the Atlanta spa shooting
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suspects despite campaigning on her opposition to it. This is pretty revealing. This is someone who
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campaigned member of the far left, supposedly anti-death penalty campaigned as, as, uh, as anti-death
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penalty. Uh, and obviously when you're, when you're campaigning as a district attorney, the death
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penalty is not some academic issue. It's, it's really important, uh, very relevant to the position
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that you're going to be, that you're campaigning to, to win. She said she's anti-death penalty. That
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was what a year ago that she was campaigning as anti-death penalty. Now she's changed her mind. Let's
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let's listen to her explain her change of heart. I, along with my staff have made a determination
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that this office will seek the death penalty. Last year, I told the voters of Fulton County
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that I could not imagine a circumstance where I would seek it. And at that time I did not.
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Unfortunately, a case has arisen in the first few months of my term that I believe warrants the
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ultimate penalty and we shall seek it. By the way, to begin with, let me, let me say, uh, I agree
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that it warrants the ultimate penalty. You go and randomly slaughter innocent people. You should
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get a death penalty. I'm fully on board with that, but I would have said that before the spa shootings
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in Atlanta. Um, yeah, she's completely changed her position and that only shows that. And I think
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this is very often the case on the left that the opposition to the death penalty is not, it's not
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based in any coherent, solid principle. And we know that it can't be because these are our people
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who believe in executing babies in the womb. So when they say they're against executions, they're
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against the death penalty. We already know that there's a huge, huge exception there. Asterix and it's a
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huge exception, uh, except for all the babies in the womb. So we know that already. It's not based
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in any real principle. What is it based in? Well, political, political expedience for one and, um,
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and emotion really. It's an emotional thing. Most of the time, someone like Fannie Willis,
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she feels, you know, she can, she, she, she, she certainly can't empathize with, she has no real
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empathy for babies in the womb because you can't see the babies in the womb. They can't advocate for
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themselves. You know, we, we, we can have interviews and things with, uh, with criminals on death row
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and you see them sitting there pathetic and weak and just, and, and, you know, they're behind bars.
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And obviously now that they're behind bars, they're not really a threat to anyone. So they've
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been neutered. They're pathetic. They're weak. They're just sitting there. Someone like Fannie Willis,
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she can connect with them and feel some empathy. Sometimes you can't do that with babies in the
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womb. There's no interviews with them. There's no documentaries where we, where we can interview and
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get their perspective on it. They are silent. They are hidden. And so there's no emotional
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connection, at least for people on the left. And so we say, we'll go ahead and slaughter them. No big
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deal. Not the case for, uh, for the people on death row. And so it's all emotional, but in this case,
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her emotions are, are different because what she considers, you know, even though it's never even
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been established that the killer in the Atlanta spa shootings was motivated by race. In fact, all
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indications are that he wasn't motivated by race. He's not a, this was not a racist killing and doesn't
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matter anyway. You slaughter all those people. It's what is, what is your motive even really matter?
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It's not like there's any motive you could have for doing that. That would make it worse. It's already
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the worst thing that you can do. It's as bad as it gets. So your motive for my mind is a moot point.
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But for Fannie Willis, um, she number one considers him a racist and has decided that this is race
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motivated, even if it wasn't. And being a racist is the ultimate sin. That's even actually worse than,
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than murder. So we're going to execute him. You know, she says like this, this is a crime that
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warrants the ultimate penalty. Okay. Again, agreed, but I don't know. I, I, I think it probably
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wouldn't take me very long on Google to find a lot of horrific crimes that have been committed in
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Atlanta. Did none of them warrant the ultimate penalty? I am quite certain that I could right
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now on Google find examples over the last year of children being murdered in Atlanta that didn't
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warrant the ultimate penalty. Why not? Just no principle here whatsoever. All right, let's move.
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Uh, number three here. This is from Fox. A video of a youth football drill went viral Tuesday and
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sparked outrage on social media with many wondering whether children should be doing something like
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this. The eight second clip shows a young ball carrier going head to head with a would-be tackler.
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Uh, the ball carrier lowers his helmet and runs over the defender and appeared the two connected
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with each other's helmets. The defender hit the ground and was a little shaken up. Video shows
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it's unclear when the video was taken or what youth youth football program was hosting the drills.
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The Tennessee Titans logo was on the field and the players helmets, the Titans USA football
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and pop Warner didn't immediately respond to Fox news request for comment on the video. Uh,
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this went pretty viral yesterday, a bunch of sports media people and former NFL guys
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chimed in on it and they were all very much on the side of, uh, uh, they were, they were all
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outraged at the coach and they said that this drill is not appropriate for kids. We have the clip.
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Let's, um, let's play this here. Let's play the clip.
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I wanted to play that cause I wanted you to hear number one, you hear the reaction from the coaches.
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They're laughing. And if you're, if you're watching this on YouTube or on dailywire.com,
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you can see the kids and how, and how they match up.
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So it's kind of like a pursuit tackling drill. And the one, the, the ball carrier has, I mean,
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several inches on the, uh, the tackler or the would be tackler.
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And I would guess like, you know, seven or eight pounds as well, which is a lot at that age.
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So they're not evenly matched up. These are young kids. I mean, how old are these kids? Probably,
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I don't know, eight, eight years old, maybe. Um, these are young kids, not evenly matched up the,
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the, the, the, you know, the tackler doesn't have proper form at all, which is, which is,
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which is expected at that age, but he runs in now you got to get down. You got to get low to make
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that tackle, but he runs in, he's standing straight up. And then the, uh, the ball carrier
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hits him helmet. It's clearly helmet to helmet contact, which is, which is, you know, against the
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rules and in football. And then, uh, and then the kid falls back and he smacks the back of his head
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against the ground. That's got concussion written all over. I would be shocked if that little kid,
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that eight year old kid does not have a concussion from that. I mean, almost certainly he's got a
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concussion because he gets, he gets smacked in the front of his head and then he hits the ground
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hard on the back of his head. The first part of his body to hit the ground is his head absorbing all
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of that impact. You watch that and you think, and we don't know the context here. And as the Fox news
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article says, we don't know where this was or, or anything seems like it was probably, probably local
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here in Nashville because of the Tennessee Titans logo, but we don't really know. Um, but I think
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there are some pretty safe assumptions we can make. One is that, you know, the coaches or whoever is
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filming this, why are they filming it? It seems likely that they filmed it because they knew that
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these kids were not evenly matched. And the one kid was about to get blown up and they knew it.
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And so they filmed it so they could get, so they, so they could get that. So they thought it'd be funny.
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So they've got a kid. It would seem sustaining potential head trauma for their amusement. And they
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think it's funny. That is, uh, look, I'm all about, I I'm fine with kids playing football. This is a,
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this is an argument I have with my wife. Sometimes I, you know, I think it's fine to have kids play
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football. She's, she's does, doesn't really like the idea for, for this exact reason. Um, so we go
00:25:59.180
back and forth about that sometimes, but personally I'm fine with kids playing football and I'm all about
00:26:04.160
like, you got to toughen kids up. You got, especially boys, you got to toughen them up, little tough love
00:26:07.780
sometimes. Uh, you know, I'm not, I'm not big into babying kids as you can imagine, but this is
00:26:14.340
just not acceptable at all. That is, that's actually horrific that, that, that, that, you know, you can
00:26:19.100
make an argument that that's criminal. If I'm right, that they knew these kids were, were unevenly
00:26:26.880
matched and that, and that kid was about to be smacked to the ground like that. And they filmed it
00:26:30.680
because of it for their amusement. Then I think this goes beyond bad coaching and we could look at
00:26:36.000
criminal charges. It's, this is a serious deal. We head, head injuries at any age, but especially
00:26:44.240
for kids as they're growing, that's not some small thing. The effects of that in the long term can be
00:26:52.000
devastating. And really look, there's, there's no reason for kids at that age to be running a drill
00:26:59.140
like that. You know, you don't run a drill like that pursuit tackling full on, you know, head of
00:27:05.800
steam. You got to make a tackle on a guy when he's coming, he's got a full head of steam and he's
00:27:09.620
coming at you. You don't run a drill like that until everybody on the team has absolutely mastered
00:27:16.120
the form of tackling, has mastered the, the art of tackling. And probably most eight-year-olds
00:27:24.360
haven't, aren't going to master it. So there's no reason to be running that drill or drill anything
00:27:28.880
like it at that age. At that age, it should be all about learning the form. And yeah, you can,
00:27:35.020
there are drills you can do to learn, uh, pursuit tackling, to learn form tackling without actually
00:27:40.240
having full on collisions like that. And that's what they should be doing. Um,
00:27:48.900
without the full contact, learning, learning, just running through the drills, learning the form,
00:27:55.800
learning the form, drilling that into their head. And then later on at the older ages,
00:27:59.900
that's when you introduce the full contact head of steam collisions like that.
00:28:05.780
So I think that's pretty, that's, that's just pretty horrific. Um,
00:28:10.420
and it's, uh, you know, this is one of the reasons why when you watch the NFL,
00:28:15.480
a lot of the tackling in the NFL, even now is, is horrible. They got horrible form because you go
00:28:22.000
down to the earliest ages and they have these idiot coaches who don't know what they're doing
00:28:26.000
and aren't teaching proper form. So even in the NFL, you see these defenders, the way that they,
00:28:31.580
the way they try to make tackles is just by launch, like a torpedo. They just launch their
00:28:35.840
whole body at someone. They don't wrap up. They don't do anything like that.
00:28:38.180
This is where it starts. Young ages. All right. Um, let's go here. Another article from Fox news.
00:28:45.800
It says the parents of three university of Massachusetts Amherst students who were suspended
00:28:50.120
for allegedly violating the school's COVID-19 health policy told Fox and friends,
00:28:55.180
the draconian punishment was completely overkill. The decision was reportedly was made after school
00:28:59.760
administrators got hold of a photo of the trio maskless at a party off campus.
00:29:05.980
The students, all women were first removed from campus and then were cut off from their remote
00:29:11.400
lessons. Um, and then they, they talked about the situation on Fox and friends, but they were,
00:29:18.820
so they were off campus, not even on campus. And now they're suspended for not wearing a mask.
00:29:28.960
How did the school find out about this? Well, apparently they posted the pictures to,
00:29:33.300
I guess it was Instagram or some social media thing. And then someone else at the school,
00:29:37.780
another student apparently, uh, took the screenshot and sent that over to the school and said,
00:29:43.140
look what they're doing. Teacher, teacher. That's one element, one part of the story over the last
00:29:52.060
year. Um, that, that I, maybe the thing that I find most disturbing is all of the snitching that has
00:29:57.840
gone on among citizens. I wish that this was just a us verse them type of thing. And you have the,
00:30:07.960
the government tyrants oppressing, you know, the, the public and we're all, we're all in it together.
00:30:14.820
That's what we've been told. We're all in this together. I wish I could say that, but it hasn't been
00:30:19.040
quite that simple because a lot of just average citizens have shown themselves perfectly willing and
00:30:26.640
even eager to turn on, uh, on their neighbors or their classmates, snitch on them, get them in
00:30:36.460
trouble because that's power too. You know, that's, we talked yesterday about these government
00:30:43.720
bureaucrats and everything and, and, and how they've, we've given them all this power.
00:30:48.380
They're reluctant of course, to give it back. Um, but a lot of average citizens also find power.
00:30:56.640
When they can, you know, get someone in trouble, they can manipulate, impose their will through the
00:31:03.040
means of government force. And they don't want to, they don't want to give up on that either.
00:31:08.140
All right. Let's, uh, okay. Finally, we have this from CBS. It says officials are warning people not
00:31:13.260
to pour gasoline into plastic bags amid panic over a shortage of gas in Southeastern States.
00:31:18.900
Um, the, uh, U S consumer product safety commission posted a flurry of tweets, advising people not to
00:31:27.880
carry gasoline in plastic bags or any other container not approved to carry fuel. The agency
00:31:33.160
tweeted on Wednesday, do not fill plastic bags with gasoline. We know this sounds simple, but when
00:31:38.280
people get desperate, they stop thinking clearly. Then it also says there was a, there's actually a
00:31:43.300
bunch of tweets about basic safety with the, when, when, you know, using gasoline. Another one was,
00:31:50.360
um, don't pour gasoline over an open flame. Uh, you know, this might be one of those Darwin,
00:31:58.480
Darwin award type things where if someone needs that, there are some lessons you just need people
00:32:04.100
to learn the hard way. I don't know. Maybe that's one of them. Is that actually a pro is that a thing?
00:32:09.100
Is that a problem? People pouring gasoline into plastic bags or is this the government inventing
00:32:16.760
a problem just to give them an excuse to lecture us? I don't know. All right, let's move on now to
00:32:23.080
reading the YouTube comments. This is from Jesse B says, Matt, you're a hundred percent dad listening
00:32:27.440
to expound on the joys of parenthood and the visuals you gave for yourself and wife as a young couple
00:32:31.400
growing together through the years and stages of parenthood could be a poem. That was sweet.
00:32:35.280
Well, it's not very often that people have a reason to call me sweet, but I will normally that
00:32:43.160
will get you banned, but I'm feeling nice today. So I'll, I'll let it go. Adam says, my wife is very,
00:32:48.320
a very successful surgeon, but she always says being a mother is her greatest accomplishment.
00:32:53.600
Well, you know, Adam, that's a nice sentiment. And it sounds like your wife is a great woman and a
00:32:57.540
great mother. I will say though, not to be pedantic, but being a mother is not her greatest
00:33:02.880
accomplishment because it's not an accomplishment at all. Simply being a mother is not an accomplishment.
00:33:09.380
Literally any physically healthy woman can be a mom, right? There's, there's no achievement there.
00:33:14.300
The achievement is to be a good mom, to be a good parent, which I'm sure she is. I'm not saying she
00:33:20.180
isn't, but I do think it's important for us to remember that if we want to call parenting an
00:33:25.640
accomplishment, um, we have to earn that. And sometimes maybe as parents, we could lose sight of it.
00:33:32.260
So it is, it is important to remind ourselves, I'm sure your wife has earned it or will. I'm offering
00:33:37.540
this as kind of a general thought. It's kind of like you hear parents all the time say, uh, having
00:33:44.020
a kid was the greatest thing I ever did. The best, the best thing I ever did. And it can be, and I hope
00:33:50.080
it was, but that's also up to you. It's not, it's, it's like you have the kid, but then there's the
00:33:56.080
whole, that's the easy part, especially easy. If you're the man, the having the kid part, because we
00:34:01.260
don't, we don't really have much of a role at all. Although we still have more of a role in that
00:34:05.860
than I wish, because I wish we were back in the fifties when the man would be at the hospital, they
00:34:09.420
have the smoking room and we're going to, we're just out there smoking, waiting for the deed to be
00:34:13.240
done. Everything's cleaned up. And then we're called back into the room. I would prefer that, but either
00:34:18.080
way, even for the women, the hat, the actual having of the child is the easy part compared to the
00:34:24.400
challenge of now being a parent on a day-to-day basis. And that's where, you know, that's where
00:34:32.160
the accomplishment comes from. Now, being a good parent for, for years, right? Every single day,
00:34:41.640
waking up every single day and being a good parent, not perfect, but good, that is extremely difficult.
00:34:48.720
And if you can pull that off in a sustained fashion, then I would say that is a great
00:34:54.280
achievement and would probably be anyone's greatest achievement in life. Um, trust me says,
00:35:00.580
here's my thought. When I hear Fauci speak, good thing. The emperor wears no clothes. It allows us
00:35:05.660
to feel, to see how full of bat guano he is. You know, I gotta say, I prefer not to think of Fauci naked.
00:35:11.440
My God, I just thought about it. I'll never recover from this. This is your fault.
00:35:18.420
You put that thought in my head. Um, Mr. Kwong says, Matt, I tried finding a wife when I was young,
00:35:23.920
but didn't find my wife until I was in my late thirties. I agree with you completely about getting
00:35:27.740
married and having kids when you're young, because it's hard for me to keep up with my two young boys,
00:35:31.940
but God didn't have me marry and have kids until I was older. So I'm going to encourage my kids to get
00:35:36.500
married when they're in their twenties. Right. That's what I, we were talking about the advantages of
00:35:40.100
marrying young and how it should be encouraged in society. It's better generally speaking that
00:35:45.160
people are getting married younger than, than the situation we have now. Uh, but that's also why
00:35:49.920
I said it's, that's not going to be, it's not how it's going to work for everybody. So your own
00:35:54.320
individual situation might be different, but when we talk about what our general goals should be and
00:35:59.260
attitude should be, I think that should be it. Um, Christian says, please react to the masterpiece
00:36:03.940
back in blood by poo shysty. I think it has a lot to say about the essence of human existence.
00:36:10.100
And it's one of the finest pieces of musical art. The current generation has produced.
00:36:14.620
What poo shysty is, is this a rapper? I assume poo shysty.
00:36:22.180
What? I assume as a, I don't know exactly what the process is as a rapper for picking a name,
00:36:27.620
what your rap name is going to be, but I assume you can really pick anything you want
00:36:39.900
I assume to have a name like that and pull the, I don't know anything about, about Mr.
00:36:43.520
Poo shysty, but I will assume that you gotta be a real tough guy, you know, to pull off a name like
00:36:50.640
that and to not be ruthlessly mocked for it every single day. I gotta assume this is a tough guy,
00:36:59.060
but I'll, I'll look into that song and maybe we'll review it. If I, and I believe you a hundred percent
00:37:02.800
that it sounds like it probably is a fine piece of art and I'll look into that. And finally,
00:37:07.940
Carrie says, I love how, as soon as Matt demanded everyone hit the like button, the likes jumped by
00:37:12.360
about 500 likes. Did they really? Maybe that's it. So you have all these other YouTubers who are
00:37:18.560
groveling for likes. Hey, smash that like button. Yuck, yuck. Come on. Um, but maybe,
00:37:25.660
maybe I've stumbled on what it really is. You have to demand, put down your foot and demand it,
00:37:31.660
hit that like button, hit it right now. We'll see if it worked again. I prefer, I prefer that method.
00:37:39.800
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00:39:01.160
And if you're a fan of my show, you know, that I'm a pretty much, you know, that I'm always right
00:39:06.520
about it. Even when I contradict myself, I'm right on both ends somehow. So when I say we're in the
00:39:11.220
middle of an authoritarian power grab by the out of touch weirdos at the top, you should probably
00:39:15.380
believe me. Uh, and if you don't just think about that for a moment, lockdowns, cancel culture,
00:39:20.640
the ideological indoctrination of children that I'm always talking about, it's all right there.
00:39:24.640
That's why you should pick up a copy of Ben Shapiro's new book, the authoritarian moment to learn
00:39:29.500
how we got here and how to fight back. So if you want to preserve your individual rights and protect
00:39:33.660
the ones you love from mob rule, the authoritarian moment is now available for pre-order at Amazon,
00:39:38.900
Barnes & Noble, or any other major bookseller. Go there now, make sure to pre-order. Now let's
00:39:42.800
get to our daily cancellation. Our daily cancellation today, surely one of the most deserving cancellations
00:39:50.480
I have yet dished out, starts with a story out of Dunkin' Donuts in Tampa, Florida. Last week,
00:39:55.200
according to police, a Dunkin' Donuts employee named Corey Pujols punched a
00:39:59.340
77-year-old customer in the head, knocked him to the ground and fractured his skull. The victim
00:40:03.300
died in the hospital two days later. Pujols has been charged with aggravated manslaughter because
00:40:09.480
of it. Now the assailant says that he assaulted the elderly man because the man had repeatedly used a
00:40:14.200
racial slur. Apparently the man was upset about what he perceived to be poor service at Dunkin' Donuts
00:40:19.460
that day. They argued, things escalated, and that's when the victim allegedly used the slur.
00:40:25.740
We're not told what the slur was, nor is there any proof that it actually was used.
00:40:31.820
It doesn't really matter what was said, obviously, as no word could possibly justify murder. But it is
00:40:37.660
worth noting, all the same, that the assailant claims a slur was used. By no means does that
00:40:42.540
guarantee that it actually was used. Because he used a racial slur as an excuse often offered in
00:40:48.820
these situations, and very often it ends up being a lie. Either way, in this case, the assailant killed
00:40:55.740
that's all that matters here. At least as far as I can tell. Enter now former MSNBC host Tory
00:41:01.260
Neblet. The Daily Wire reports, quote, Neblet publicly celebrated the death of a 77-year-old
00:41:06.860
white man who was reportedly punched by a black employee after using a racial slur to Dunkin'
00:41:10.800
Donuts. Tory, who goes by his first name, hit up social media to celebrate. He wrote, quote,
00:41:15.900
a 77-year-old white customer at Dunkin' Donuts was upset about something, and he called a black 27-year-old
00:41:20.840
employee the N-word. The brother told him to say it again. The old man did. The brother knocked him
00:41:25.320
out. The old man fell, lost consciousness, and died. He effed around and found out.
00:41:32.440
Tory was not yet done celebrating and justifying the physical assault, later asserting that saying
00:41:36.760
the N-word is a, quote, violent act, and he classified Pujols' deadly assault as self-defense.
00:41:47.520
If there was an actual justice in this country as opposed to white justice, then if you went to
00:41:53.520
someone's minimum wage job and called them the N-word twice, whatever happened after that would
00:41:57.700
be legally acceptable. Tory went on for a while longer. He was arguing his case that a black man
00:42:04.780
has a right to murder you in self-defense if you say a word that makes him sad. He even posted a poll
00:42:10.120
asking his followers if they believe that a black man who kills a white man for saying a word should
00:42:14.500
be acquitted. In the poll, 70% of his followers said yes, he should be acquitted. Now, I wish that
00:42:22.160
I could just chalk this up to Tory being a horrible person, an idiot, a psychopath, and he is indeed all
00:42:27.640
of those things, but he's not alone. This is a prevailing belief. There is a prevailing belief out
00:42:32.600
there that white people who utter certain syllables ought to lose their right to live. And we've known
00:42:38.380
about this belief for a while. Just think back to last summer when a Macy's employee was brutally
00:42:42.080
assaulted by a black man on film, and it was roundly celebrated because the black man claimed
00:42:46.920
that the employee used the N-word. And that turned out to be a lie because, again, these claims are
00:42:51.020
very often lies. But the fact is that lots of people were willing to give him a pass for felony
00:42:56.140
assault on the basis that he heard a word that made his tummy hurt. Indeed, even after the story was
00:43:02.900
revealed as a lie, lots of people still wanted to give him a pass because the victim was white and
00:43:08.040
therefore probably deserved it anyway for one reason or another. I mean, he might not have said
00:43:11.940
the N-word, but he might have thought it. Or at least at some point in the past, he probably has
00:43:16.360
said it or thought it or maybe probably heard it like in a song or something and therefore thought it.
00:43:22.820
It seems like a rather fruitless exercise to actually engage intellectually with the argument
00:43:27.200
that black people have the right to kill other humans who use bad words. But it seems we have to
00:43:31.560
engage with it because this is an idea that is far more popular than you'd like to believe.
00:43:35.140
And on that end, I have a couple of brief thoughts. First of all, we have here another example,
00:43:43.460
a big example of the bigotry of low expectations. Now, Tory is black himself, so it's a sort of strange
00:43:50.240
self-bigotry, self-loathing thing in his case, certainly among the white people who endorse Tory's
00:43:56.180
point of view. And again, there are more in that camp than you'd like to believe. What they're saying
00:44:00.700
is that the black man who kills the white man over a word cannot be expected to control himself. It
00:44:06.680
would be unreasonable, as the logic goes, to demand that he refrain from beating an elderly man to
00:44:11.400
death. He's upset and we must allow him to convey his emotions in whatever way feels right to him.
00:44:18.080
We can't expect anything more. A similar attitude is taken towards rioters and looters whose
00:44:22.940
wanton destruction must be understood and sympathized with because, as we are reminded,
00:44:27.840
they're sad and they're angry. And what else can we expect them to do? We have heard that exact
00:44:35.640
argument many times. Well, they're angry. What else would you expect of them?
00:44:42.980
This, along with being totally insane, is also horrifically demeaning and degrading.
00:44:48.340
As much as I decry the double standard that gives one person license to act out violently but not
00:44:53.660
another and grants the license based on race. At the same time, I'm not sure I'd want anyone to ever
00:44:59.060
argue in my favor and on my behalf by saying that I should be allowed to kill people or burn down
00:45:04.180
buildings when I'm angry. And that it would be oppressive to hold me to a standard of basic human
00:45:09.400
decency. That's the kind of advocacy that I don't want for me. Now, second point, it must be reiterated
00:45:17.420
that the N-word, assuming that's what the victim in this case said, if he said anything at all,
00:45:24.100
the N-word is not a mystical incantation. It doesn't have magical powers. Despite what Torrey
00:45:32.120
argues, it's not some sort of witch's spell that might physically harm you and therefore you need
00:45:38.080
to physically defend yourself against it. It's a word. It's just a word. It's a bad word. It's a slur.
00:45:45.640
It is right in line with many other slurs and profanities. There are a lot of them out there.
00:45:52.200
All of these words are words. They are comprised of syllables. They are sounds that a person makes
00:46:00.320
with their mouth. The special power and near mystical quality that we've attributed to this
00:46:07.520
one word and this one word alone is absurd and indefensible on every level. The rules which decree
00:46:14.280
that you may say the word in any context, if you have a certain skin tone, but if you have another
00:46:18.400
skin tone, you can't say it in any context, not even when quoting someone or reading from a book.
00:46:23.900
And if you do say it, you could be killed. All of this is abject lunacy.
00:46:31.340
And the thing is, everybody knows that it's lunacy. Everyone knows it.
00:46:38.000
But it's lunacy that we're expected to simply accept without question.
00:46:45.360
And, you know, there's a lot of that sort of thing in our culture today.
00:46:49.880
And that is why Tory today is most definitely absolutely canceled.
00:46:55.180
And we'll leave it there for today. Thanks for listening. Thanks for watching.
00:47:30.660
Our technical director is Austin Stevens. Production manager, Pavel Vadosky.
00:47:36.040
The show is edited by Sasha Tolmachov. Our audio is mixed by Mike Coromina.
00:47:40.500
Hair and makeup is done by Nika Geneva. And our production coordinator is McKenna Waters.
00:47:45.180
The Matt Wall Show is a Daily Wire production. Copyright Daily Wire 2021.
00:47:49.380
Libs make a martyr out of Liz Cheney. Rand Paul rips Dr. Fauci.
00:47:53.680
And Fareed Zakaria pushes a failed foreign policy by repeating the same old slogans.