Biden continues to insist that he's going to run for re-election, and more and more Democrats are saying it's not going to be him. Meanwhile, Elon Musk is threatening to sue the big ad buyers. And MyPillow is sponsoring a special live show at the Republican National Convention.
00:00:31.000All the late night hosts are saying no to Joe Biden.
00:00:33.000And Joe Biden keeps saying, well, I'm going to run anyway.
00:00:37.000OK, the first The first thing he says in this press conference, which was delayed by an hour, mind you, was that Donald Trump was his vice president.
00:01:17.000This is, I don't know what he's thinking.
00:01:20.000But I don't know how anyone believes this is not all part of the plan, because there's no way Biden would actually step out and be this bad, unless that's just the way life is.
00:01:31.000So we're going to talk a lot about that.
00:01:35.000Luna's inherent contempt against Merrick Garland, but a lot of big news pertaining to what's going on with Joe Biden, whether or not he steps down and where this country goes.
00:01:44.000And then we do have some information on mass censorship.
00:01:46.000Elon Musk threatening to sue these big ad buyers.
00:02:45.000It's not going to last long, so go to MyPillow.com, use promo code Tim.
00:02:49.000And their phone number is, they got another number here, 800-925-9096.
00:02:56.000And I also want to shout this out, if you go to TimCast.com, next week, we will be at the RNC for a special live show on July 18th, and Mike Lindell will be there.
00:03:30.000If you're signing up as a new member, it's $25 a month, or it's sign up at $10 for at least six months.
00:03:36.000We have to have this gatekeeping because we get, you know, wackaloons try to come in and cause problems.
00:03:41.000So we're trying to keep out the rabble who are trying to be disruptive.
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00:03:52.000So smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends.
00:03:56.000We are joined by some lovely gentlemen from the Lotus Eaters podcast.
00:04:25.000I mean, we promised this since the last time I was on, and we will save the dueling for tomorrow morning, but I'm looking forward to that too.
00:05:47.000If you look at the Libsitiktox account right now, there is a wonderful picture of, I guess it's Donald Trump and Kamala Harris kind of mashed together.
00:06:21.000There's speculation that there won't be a second debate because the first was so bad, the Trump administration does not want to give Biden an opportunity to recover from that.
00:06:30.000So now people are saying he might just say no and argue against it, which means the last... Say no on humanitarian grounds.
00:06:45.000And that would twice highlight Biden's frail mind and capabilities.
00:06:49.000But so this is what they're trying to do.
00:06:51.000The reason he's probably doing this press conference is because they know his polling's in the gutter.
00:06:55.000They know that he has to come out and look stronger.
00:06:57.000But every time he does, he just looks worse.
00:07:00.000Well, there was that report that an unnamed staffer in Biden's administration had said, actually, we're kind of hoping that he embarrasses himself because that's the only way to get him to realize it's time for him to step aside.
00:07:13.000I obviously, you know, take it with a grain of salt.
00:07:16.000But if that's the internal dialogue from the people who are, you know, putting him on stage and providing him with a list of reporters to call on, it's not looking good.
00:07:24.000I like the idea this is accelerationism though because I decided to torture myself right before this broadcast and pull up the front page of the New York Times and the top stories were the George Clooney op-ed and everyone saying Obama's probably behind this.
00:07:38.000The fact that they were that brazen means they're almost lending credibility to the fact they want Biden to go.
00:07:42.000Then three unnamed sources, again they could well be the homeless man sitting in the corridor but if they keep pushing it then it means that they want it to be visible.
00:07:49.000And then also the idea, and I know this happened late in the press conference, that they were embarrassing the Biden campaign for prescripting questions and giving them to all of the news agencies.
00:07:59.000So if they're wanting to make the press conferences look illegitimate, when he's standing up there saying, this is the best press conference you've ever seen, almost Trump-like language, And then have Biden have as many opportunities to make gaffes as possible.
00:08:11.000It's like they want Biden to get out as quickly as possible to install someone instead.
00:08:15.000A major piece of this news cycle was that the Biden campaign was feeding questions to these radio hosts who would then ask him questions they wanted asked.
00:08:24.000And one of the first things, literally the first thing Biden does when he's going to questions, he goes, I have a list here of who I'm supposed to call on.
00:08:58.000This is why I think this is the scripted.
00:09:04.000I can bask in the glory that is finally Joe Biden is being embarrassed and the media is telling everyone his brain is fried and then go to my family and say, no, no, no, no, no, I told you so.
00:09:14.000Or I can get even deeper into the conspiratorial and say, Biden is in on it, and the reason he waited this long was to keep RFK from winning the Democrat primary.
00:09:29.000And then once the primary is over, and we're six weeks from the convention, now they can go, oh, well, I guess Biden's got to go.
00:09:36.000And that blocks RFK, who's now got an independent campaign and VP.
00:09:40.000There's no populist candidates who can come in.
00:09:42.000And more importantly, It gives Democrats the opportunity to, what they're now doing is advocating for a secret ballot among delegates, so no one knows who delegates voted for, just that they're going to go to the convention, the primary is nullified, the delegates are going to cast a secret ballot for, I don't know who, Michelle Obama?
00:10:00.000And that, so I can be, I gotta, I gotta say, I think that one makes more sense than Biden
00:10:05.000intentionally went out and went, I have quest, I have people I'm supposed to call on specifically,
00:10:10.000even though I was criticized for doing this.
00:11:06.000If he doesn't go, and I think that the reason that he's not gone is because at the end of the day, it is the president.
00:11:13.000I mean, he is the president, whether he's in charge of his faculties or not, he is the president, and there is no one that can actually force him out other than, you know... Other than Joe Biden.
00:11:25.000Yeah, and I think that that has a lot to do with it.
00:11:27.000I think it's Joe Biden, and I think it's Hunter.
00:11:29.000And if he doesn't go, The all of the criticism by all of the Democrats isn't going to, it's not going to be forgotten.
00:11:39.000The fact that there's been so much criticism recently, but everything was so pro-Biden and he's sharp as a tack, et cetera, for so long.
00:11:49.000I've said this multiple times on the internet.
00:12:30.000And so to your point, there are Ample ways for this to go terribly wrong and throw the world into significantly more chaos than we're already in.
00:12:41.000And furthermore, if he were to somehow be elected again, right, and stay in office, there is no question in my mind that that means that China and Russia are going to have a significant opportunity to push their agenda, whatever it may be.
00:13:01.000Now, I'm not saying that they're going to take Taiwan and blah, blah, blah.
00:13:05.000But you can guarantee that they're going to look, that they look at Biden and they say
00:13:10.000he is not capable of being the commander in chief.
00:13:13.000You just look at the way that Blinken was treated when he had the summit in Alaska with
00:13:32.000That was all just cope, because Donald Trump actually did inspire fear, if only because they're like, he's kind of crazy, he might do some crazy stuff.
00:13:48.000They super-delegated him, and they gave the questions in advance to CNN, all that stuff, to make sure Bernie could not win, and they were terrified.
00:13:55.000Trump was not supposed to win at the RNC.
00:13:57.000The establishment was supposed to be in control, and Trump, much tougher than Bernie Sanders, would not back down.
00:14:04.000They had to have these centrist establishment candidates all bow out at the same time and endorse Joe Biden, because Bernie was a serious threat.
00:14:11.000They could not have another convention, especially when you had, what was it, Dean Phillips?
00:14:36.000So so so he says, fine, I'll be independent.
00:14:39.000Then at the very last minute, the Democrats are now proposing Jon Stewart is now proposing a solution, whether there's and they're not saying it directly, but this is a solution to their Bernie Sanders populist problem.
00:14:50.000The conventions, at least right now, and I'm willing to bet from now on, are going to be secret ballots where you have no idea.
00:14:57.000The Democrats already had a problem with superdelegates.
00:15:00.000You guys familiar with how that works?
00:15:02.000So outside of the primary votes, so you've got the delegates assigned by the primary, and then superdelegates are just people like Donna Brazile, I think, and like Hillary Clinton, who choose who they want to be the nominee, regardless of what the people think.
00:15:14.000Now, because new information, Jon Stewart said, he called it new information, we should have a reassessment, a stress test, on whether this candidate can actually do it.
00:15:23.000Democrats are arguing they should go to the convention and cast a secret ballot and it'll be for someone else and no one will know, meaning there's no primaries anymore.
00:15:31.000It means the establishment uniparty will just decide who the candidate will be And then you vote.
00:15:37.000Yeah, that's kind of like China and North Korea.
00:15:42.000Yeah, because in 2019, Boris Johnson was elected and then cooed out on the basis of reputation destruction because he had parties during lockdown.
00:15:50.000So then it was put to the Conservative Party members whether or not they wanted to choose Rishi Sunak or Liz Truss.
00:15:56.000And Rishi Sunak was clearly the establishment international banking candidate.
00:16:03.000Yes, he worked at Goldman Sachs, if I remember correctly.
00:16:06.000And then you had Liz Truss, who, for all her faults, was very popular with the party.
00:16:11.000She was elected, and then within 49 days she decided to do a marginal tax cut, and also wanted to lower immigration behind the scenes, was blackmailed by the banks and stabbed in the back by her own party, and Rishi Sunak was installed instead.
00:16:22.000Now, if the Democrats want to go with that, I might suggest they look to the UK, and look at Rishi Sunak delivering the Conservative Party their worst defeat in about a century, and reconsider.
00:16:33.000But I don't think they can consider it from any other perspective, right?
00:16:36.000I think there's such internal chaos in the Democratic Party that they can't look beyond the doorstep of Congress.
00:16:44.000It was fascinating to me that Joe Biden sends this letter to them, a sternly written letter saying, I am going to run.
00:16:51.000And then Nancy Pelosi days later goes on an interview and says, well, whatever he decides, you know, we're just waiting for him to make the decision sooner rather than later would be good.
00:17:02.000What did he say in his other, his George Stephanopoulos interview?
00:17:05.000Until the good Lord takes him out of the race or tells him to leave or something like that?
00:17:09.000Like a little, a little dark there, Joe.
00:17:12.000He's not going to give this up and so there's a level of like if they were being strategic and considering how these types of strategies had affected other countries, maybe, but they're dealing with a really obstinate old man who is not leaving this position and they don't know how to navigate their way out of it.
00:17:26.000Let's jump to the story from the post-millennial.
00:17:29.000Biden flubs Zelensky introduction, calls him President Putin at NATO summit.
00:17:34.000Now, I know all of you listening, we know Joe Biden gaffes all the time and he calls people the wrong names and he makes up words that are not words.
00:17:46.000Sometimes you've got to make the word and then tell people what it means.
00:17:49.000What is surprising is that his own campaign account mocked him for it.
00:17:55.000We are at the point now where, okay, so, you know, a few weeks ago we're posting these videos like, that's a weird thing Joe Biden just did.
00:19:11.000I think he's reacting to it as in, what do I say next that doesn't lose me billions of dollars?
00:19:16.000You can see the calculation going thick and fast in Zelensky's head.
00:19:19.000How many times do you think this is going to get played in Moscow now, where Biden is saying, President Putin, and then Zelensky has to take the mic next?
00:20:23.000No, I mean, I think to a certain extent, this is just the result of months and months of, well, if we do anything to praise Zelensky, that's good.
00:20:30.000American people like it when we do that.
00:20:31.000So if it's actually, you know, us saying, oh, Zelensky is better than Putin, then surely they'll let this go.
00:20:37.000They won't realize how horrible this is for us.
00:20:39.000It's the only spin I could imagine going on behind the scenes.
00:20:44.000The idea is like, they know it's bad, they know literally everyone watched, they know the purpose of these pressers are to try and build confidence in Biden, and the only thing they can do is own it?
00:20:55.000Do you think there's a kind of war weariness in the Biden campaign?
00:20:59.000Like every day they get up and say, OK, OK, yeah, President Putin is ruling Ukraine.
00:21:06.000Vice President Trump is going to be the best president ever.
00:21:09.000Yeah, it's just another day on the trail.
00:21:19.000You ever see that meme where Death has got the crane game, and he grabs a guy, and it's like someone would die, and then he's like, George Carlin?
00:21:27.000Is Henry Kissinger even in this thing?
00:21:31.000Yeah, just every time some famous person died, it's like, and then when someone made the meme when Kissinger did die, and he was like, and he just said, Death said, finally.
00:22:01.000I'm sure he has been haunting the Senate for a long time.
00:22:03.000There was a tweet you put out once that said every politician, and it was right-wing politicians, but I think this applies, either has werewolf or vampire physiognomy, Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:22:11.000I think Trump's the werewolf, but Biden's definitely the vampire.
00:22:34.000while we're here. I'm just curious because you guys are from the UK, obviously you got your own
00:22:38.000problems. And even beyond that, you're more closely connected to what we're seeing with France.
00:22:44.000But I mean, how does this affect you guys? Do you watch this stuff? How closely are you
00:22:49.000paying attention to it? How can we not watch it? It's the greatest show on earth. Look at this.
00:22:53.000Well, we're also a vassal state of the global American empire, so we have to see what's coming out of central office.
00:22:59.000The thing is, you don't feel like America interfering in British politics, because British politics is just... I mean, American politics is so catastrophic.
00:23:06.000It's not like you guys don't have enough to deal with.
00:23:10.000The whole thing is... I mean, we just watch with...
00:23:14.000Just kind of a sigh, just be like, right, okay, Biden's done that.
00:23:18.000The Afghanistan thing was just a genuine moment of like, oh dear, right, okay, America is on a downswing.
00:23:26.000And the thing is, one thing that I've noticed that the New Worlders have, in a mindset difference from the Old Worlders, is the Old Worlders think in just much longer terms than the New Worlders.
00:23:37.000Everyone's thinking, oh, what's China thinking of Biden?
00:23:39.000China doesn't really care about Biden.
00:23:41.000China's thinking in terms of hundreds of years.
00:23:44.000So they're thinking, right, if America is at this point now, where are you going to be in 50 years time?
00:23:49.000And the answer is probably in a worse position.
00:23:51.000You know, one idea I love in sci-fi is like, not even sci-fi, but if we were to launch a spaceship with humans on it towards, say, Alpha Centauri, they'd be halfway there when a more advanced human spaceship would go past them.
00:24:08.000I thought you were going to say when Joe Biden leaves office.
00:24:12.000I guess my point is, it's this trope in sci-fi where it's like, the technology would advance so fast that by the time they're halfway, we've already well advanced beyond, we can go faster.
00:24:29.000They're thinking about, in 20 years, we're going to have A, B, and C, and we're going to intersect with where we think the United States is going to be.
00:24:35.000What do we need to build to counteract that?
00:24:37.000And by the time we get to that point, and the US is like, hey look, China just launched a bunch of satellites that are a threat to us.
00:24:42.000We better, eh, too late, because they already planned for that and they've already counteracted that.
00:24:47.000That's what we're dealing with internationally.
00:25:55.000If you go on the account of one of my favourite Twitter anons, Cunley Drucker, he has a clip of David Lammy when he went on the show Mastermind, which, if you're not aware, for those outside the UK, you sit down and you are quizzed on a specialist subject.
00:26:08.000David Lammy chose his specialist subject and got zero, if I remember correctly, and one on the general knowledge.
00:26:14.000He would answer ridiculous questions, like, he would say something like, oh, who is Edward VII's son?
00:26:38.000Yes, he's a racist, he's a sexist, all this and that.
00:26:40.000And now he's probably looking at dealing with him.
00:26:42.000And the suggestion has actually been recently, now that Nigel Farage is an MP, Trump could just go as a maverick, why would I want to talk to the Foreign Secretary?
00:26:58.000So it would, even if it wasn't sort of de facto or du jour, it would look de facto like Nigel was dealing with Trump in an official capacity.
00:27:09.000But the Labour Party is incredibly left-wing, and they know that they're probably going to have to make a really difficult, pragmatic decision to deal with the giant, orange, right-wing evil that they've been decrying for the past five years.
00:27:21.000And so that's pretty funny, to be honest.
00:27:23.000But what's, you know, for a while, I mean, we can go back to Brexit, right?
00:27:26.000A lot of people felt that Brexit was like a precursor, not necessarily a precursor, but was like a sign Trump was coming.
00:27:32.000It was very much the same sort of thing.
00:27:34.000The same forces underpinned Brexit that they did with Trump.
00:27:49.000So I don't know, that kind of makes me not so confident for November.
00:27:53.000It's not that it couldn't have gone well, it's that we were governed by the Conservative Party.
00:27:57.000And the Conservative Party are a, I don't know how to describe them, treacherous, left-wing, literal, treasonous, I mean, we're deviants, corrupt perverts.
00:28:09.000Didn't you guys both just get kicked out of the Conservative Party?
00:28:16.000Yeah, we personally got kicked out of the Conservative Party.
00:28:18.000During former Home Secretary Soheila Braveman's speech at NatCon, we got emails saying that you have been removed from the Conservative Party.
00:28:54.000You can see that I'm flabbergasted here.
00:28:57.000What's the quick elevator pitch thesis of the speech?
00:29:00.000Oh, the thesis of the speech is, look, our country is genuinely falling apart, and we actually have to start thinking about the actual nature of what England is and why it's falling apart.
00:29:10.000But the thing is, the Conservatives, one of the primary reasons that England is falling apart, and they actively have a plan to destroy it, obviously.
00:29:17.000Which is why things are going so badly and which is why they're going down so far in the polls because the Conservative Party are the right-wing party but of course they're all a bunch of gay liberals and and I mean this literally gay liberals and so they who refuse to join the gay liberal parties and So people are like, okay.
00:29:34.000Well, I'm not gonna vote for this and I'm not gonna be lied to again And so, OK, the Labour Party, who are also a gay liberal party, said, look, we're going to destroy this country, by the way.
00:29:42.000And so people were like, well, we're just not going to vote Conservative.
00:30:10.000It's fascinating to me because I actually find it pretty remarkable when I went to Northern Ireland several years ago, how they did not reunify, but the borders opened because of the Schengen zone.
00:30:23.000And the general sentiment overwhelmingly was Ireland is no longer for the Irish.
00:30:28.000I mean, I want to stress this, it's crazy.
00:30:31.000There's bloody death being fought in the Troubles because people of Ireland wanted their country, they wanted their language, right?
00:30:40.000And I remember when I was a kid, we had close families and I really loved to visit Ireland and my dad's like, you know, the things that are going on there.
00:30:50.000There's that viral video, I think it was Derry, is that the name of the town?
00:31:07.000What is the line, they'll take our land, our freedom?
00:31:10.000Yeah, and the reason is they basically have white ethnic nationalism because they hate the English, but in order to have that in the liberal paradigm, you need to dress it up in minoritarian concerns.
00:31:19.000So they're like, we want Scotland for the Scottish, to then become a vassal state of global immigration and the EU.
00:31:26.000They spend so much time fighting, like hundreds of years, thousands of years fighting you, and then they're just like, oh well.
00:31:32.000The Scots were able and willing partners in the Empire, so you know, Scottish nationalism based on victimhood of the English is nonsense, and that can just go.
00:33:27.000Macron just destroyed his own vote share to save leftism from Le Pen.
00:33:33.000Right, like, I mean, I'll be, like, my view is that the centrists are just leftists with holding up, you know, masks, right?
00:33:40.000Because this is the power that they lend to, it's the power they want for whatever reason.
00:33:44.000And my prediction for what happens to Europe, you need only look at the United States.
00:33:50.000And I think that's the actual plan, and has been the plan for several decades.
00:33:53.000They want to dissolve the cultural bonds of each sovereign country of Europe, so they function more or less like the way US states do, in that The United States used to have, we used to have regional dialects, regional diction.
00:34:07.000And when television emerges, it was very, it was the thing to do if you were a television anchor who was going national to eliminate regional diction and make sure you spoke in a way that was like flat.
00:34:19.000And then the Chicago accent, the southern accent, you had the valley girl, you have all these different ways of talking that have started to evaporate as everyone starts to adhere to the national way of talking.
00:34:33.000Anybody can move to any state they want at any moment, vote in anything they want, and leave right away.
00:34:37.000Europe, with the European Union, is trying to accomplish what the United States is, when all of these sovereign states, pre-Civil War, was much more like the EU, and then the war happens.
00:34:49.000The famous saying is that we went from saying the United States are, to the United States is, that's what they want Europe to be.
00:34:57.000In the United States, state government is so incredibly powerful but completely ignored.
00:35:03.000Nobody pays attention, they don't know who their local reps are, and we could change this country overnight if everyone focused on their local elections, but it is culturally evaporated.
00:36:18.000On Brexit as well, this is important to note.
00:36:20.000Keir Starmer, the current Prime Minister, served in the shadow cabinet of Jeremy Corbyn beforehand, even though he doesn't like to think that he did, as the Brexit negotiator pushing for a second referendum.
00:36:58.000in seeing a lot of reporting on this, especially when reports are critical of Nigel Farage.
00:37:03.000They basically say it was a dumb idea and it never would have worked and they're going to change their mind and beg to be let back into the EU.
00:37:10.000It could totally have worked if we'd just seen ourselves in competition with the European Union.
00:37:15.000I mean, the corporate tax rate is the point I always make because it's just such an obvious one.
00:37:50.000Right, and so the European Union, as a whole, has a way of keeping companies right on Britain's
00:37:56.000So when in Britain, if you were to get like money from Google or something like that, it comes from Google Ireland, because they're of course all headquartered in Dublin.
00:38:04.000And so the Conservatives could have come out and gone, great, guess what our corporate tax rate is going to be?
00:38:08.000Well, you know, 6.5, 0, whatever you want.
00:38:12.000If you wanted to be competitive, you would have come out and really abolished it and been like, right, guys, come over.
00:38:16.000We've got loads of great talent, loads of great universities, loads of really educated people.
00:38:30.000Last year, to reiterate to our American viewers, The UK, in a country the size of New York State, let in 1.2 million people legally, with an extra 2 million visitor visas, obvious overstays, and 50,000 illegals.
00:38:46.000And so, essentially, Brexit was punished by betrayal, and Because the administrators of Brexit were the Conservative Party.
00:38:54.000The voters voted for lower immigration.
00:38:55.000The Remainers wanted to stay in the EU.
00:38:57.000The Brexiteers and the Conservative Party wanted global Britain.
00:38:59.000They saw the European Union as a constraint to having not enough Indian, Chinese, Pakistani immigration.
00:39:05.000I know you understand exactly what they're doing.
00:39:09.000They are going to decimate the individual culture of Great Britain so that you have too many warring factions and there will be no unified culture around anything.
00:39:22.000They're going to do that in France, they're going to do it in Spain, they're already doing it in these other countries, and the end result is going to be to create a flat, static, randomized system In a cultural system, the end goal of multiculturalism is to make sure that there is no unified force that will be in control or rise up against you.
00:41:42.000We have a lot of problems with the structure of our government, immigration, etc.
00:41:46.000You look at how the United States is, you can pack up and move to any place you want without question, get your ID changed in five minutes.
00:41:53.000I'm being somewhat, you know, I'm exaggerating.
00:41:55.000You move from New York to Idaho, you walk right in, you're an Idaho resident.
00:42:00.000It's crazy, actually, how ready Americans are to just pick up and move to somewhere else.
00:42:05.000Technology has made everything too frictionless.
00:42:07.000It's not just that, this is part of a uniquely American mindset.
00:42:11.000We were at the NatCon convention earlier, and on the Monday, one of the chaps giving the speech was like, well look, if you don't have a particular kind of church in your town, then you go to this other town, and if you can't get there, you move to another state.
00:43:06.000It's very common and very normal, and I think that's partially because of the fact that you can travel so easily from state to state without... and it's been that way for the entirety of the existence.
00:43:17.000But I consider myself a New Englander, and even when I've lived in other places or I travel, I'm from New England.
00:43:23.000Part of that is because, like you had said before, the United States is kind of the fulfillment of the English promise, right?
00:43:35.000The United States is the, for lack of a better term, the fulfillment of the English promise.
00:43:39.000And I honestly, I take that to heart and I feel that because I look at New England and Massachusetts as as something that is more than just a place.
00:43:50.000It's where the idea for America really started in Massachusetts.
00:43:54.000And even though I don't live in Massachusetts, I live in New Hampshire, just 15 minutes over the line in New Hampshire because of legalities.
00:44:02.000But I consider myself a New Englander, and there's as much history in New Hampshire as there is in Massachusetts.
00:44:07.000I mean, I've got a tattoo of Massachusetts on my arm specifically because it's something that I do feel is a part of me.
00:44:13.000So I don't think that I don't think that it's something that's totally foreign to Americans, but you definitely have it on a point.
00:44:20.000But the issue is, we're, you know, what are we, a hundred and, what are we looking at, a hundred and eighty, a hundred and sixty years from the fracture point where the states started to homogenize in such a way.
00:45:13.000I mean, not even, depending on where you are.
00:45:16.000Entirely different language, different food, they're smoking cigarettes and eating snails.
00:45:21.000So we do have different legal codes, and this does matter because some states have constitutional
00:45:25.000carry some don't but culturally comedy everything In France, it's not just the fact that the laws are different, it's the structure of the legal code that's different.
00:45:35.000You still have common law across the United States, even if that manifests in slightly different ways.
00:45:43.000The Napoleonic Code is a totally different approach to law.
00:45:46.000And so my point is, the only reason We are more nomadic.
00:45:51.000We still do have that, you know, Phil's got the Massachusetts, but we're losing it, and they are trying to dismantle that.
00:45:58.000That's why they want to get rid of the Electoral College.
00:46:01.000This is why they bring in non-citizen en masse to the tens of millions, because they're trying to flatten everything out and make—Idaho will be a name.
00:46:10.000Exploiting a weakness that we have, because you're saying you're from here, you're going to die here, hopefully all of your children are there too, and that says that you have a pride and attachment to the area.
00:48:24.000So, for example, my history curriculum when I was in secondary school and I took it as a proper qualification was the First and Second World Wars, the Cold War, Which obviously Britain had barely anything to do with after about 1950, and we also didn't talk about the Holodomor.
00:48:38.000And then it was slavery, Jim Crow, and American history.
00:49:05.000I think there are huge gaps in history and it's sort of because of the modern narrative around how history should be presented, what you should know.
00:49:12.000Did you learn about the American Revolution then?
00:49:56.000I think, I'm surprised to hear this, but I guess it does just play to my assumption was that today, I would have assumed that 30 years ago you would learn about your country, but that being not the case, my assumption, the reason I asked was that likely what's happening today is that they're not going to teach you the history of your country, much like we don't, I can't speak for anybody else, but growing up in Illinois, I don't know what year the state was founded.
00:50:22.000I don't know about any great battles that were fought by the militia forces of Illinois.
00:50:28.000We learned about the Revolution, we learned about World War II, we learned about our federal government, our presidents, and the state did not matter in our education.
00:50:45.000Because the things they were teaching us were about the Revolution and the early days of America.
00:50:49.000And the thing is, in New England, at least, we did it every year, all the time.
00:50:53.000I mean, it was very uncommon up until I got into high school that we didn't talk about the American Revolution, the founding of the military.
00:50:59.000The field trips were going to Boston and going to... Well, like walking down the street and they were like, right over there, that's where they fought.
00:51:05.000I mean, this is just the way it works.
00:51:06.000But again, Texas is unique in the sense that they teach a specific history there.
00:51:55.000I'll tell you in a minute, but the point being, like, you know, Connor, proud Englishman, works at Lotus Eaters, we are here to revive an English identity because it's obviously a necessary thing.
00:54:12.000It's like, they all talk like this or something, you know, have some kind of Commonwealth accent.
00:54:16.000And the fascinating thing is when you actually read the real history of what was going on between the Crown Parliament and the colonists, it's not so stupidly one-sided.
00:54:40.000We hear often in the United States, taxation without representation.
00:54:43.000And the colonists were furious about it.
00:54:44.000They kept petitioning saying it's not fair.
00:54:47.000There's a perspective of Britain that these weren't just blind, evil people being like, you're all slaves.
00:54:52.000There was, we have spent, because I was reading, I read an academic article about this, the Crown was upset they had spent so much on the defense of the colonies that it was bankrupting them.
00:55:03.000And they said, these taxes are not about telling you you have to pay us without representation.
00:55:06.000It's that we're the one funding your protection.
00:55:10.000Because we're constantly with France and Spain.
00:55:45.000I think one of the things that would be very good for Americans to learn or to understand is how close The United States and because, like I said, the argument that you made really touched me and I found it really, really compelling that we really are an extension of England and the things that the English fought for and the Magna Carta is directly related to all of our founding documents and the things that the English fought, you know, would go to fight with their king and stuff, all of that stuff is directly related to the United States and without England and without the
00:56:20.000The foundation laid by England, you don't have the United States.
00:56:24.000And people forget that, you know... You're an English country.
00:56:27.000And, you know, and as much as, you know, as much as Canada and New Zealand and Australia are significantly different, we all have a legitimate special bond between all, between the United States, England, and those countries, because of the... Shared heritage.
00:57:11.000Vance got up on Wednesday, whether or not he was making his VP bid is still up for debate, but he said, America is not an idea.
00:57:17.000It's a people with a shared history and a shared lineage.
00:57:20.000And that lineage is explicitly English.
00:57:22.000And I remember sitting with you and saying, yeah, what you guys need to realize is, Common law only developed in England.
00:57:29.000Common law came, as we all know, from Blackstone's formulation, but it took an Englishman to interpret Sodom and Gomorrah as, if there are ten guilty people, if there are ten innocent people, then, you know, the whole city should not be destroyed, rather than as every other civilization interpreted it, which was, burn all the gates.
00:57:45.000And that's why America ended up a bit better.
00:57:47.000Yeah, and that is something that is one of the things that is special about the progeny of the
00:57:55.000English society. The fact that the English sensibilities were passed down, it does make
00:58:07.000the United States and England inseparable, in my opinion.
00:58:09.000100%. That's why so quickly after the Revolutionary War, you notice how quickly
00:58:14.000the Americans turned on the French. It's amazing. The French are the reason you
00:58:19.000guys got your independence. And it literally is a matter of decades where people are like, okay,
00:59:13.000The erosion of our protections does not mean those protections were not a good idea in the first place because what we've seen now is we're actually winning on gun rights across the board.
00:59:21.000More than half the country now has constitutional carry or some kind of permitless carry.
00:59:26.000We have the right to keep and bear arms to a great degree and I just saw, what is it, they want to ban crossbows now in the UK, is that the thing?
00:59:33.000Yes, because there's- I'm surprised they were even allowed in the first place.
00:59:36.000Well, there's a guy who tied up his ex-girlfriend and a sister and a mom and shot them in the head with a crossbow.
00:59:41.000Yeah, it's evil, but it also doesn't mean that every single weapon should be- because we were just chatting outside, there's a massive knife crime epidemic in London.
00:59:49.000You're saying you haven't banned knives, as far as I know.
00:59:50.000Yeah, it's on the- That's all they have.
00:59:54.000It's almost like the Boy Scouts have been carrying pocket knives for years and there haven't been mass stabbing epidemics.
00:59:59.000It might be something to do with the people holding the knives that's causing this epidemic.
01:00:03.000And this is the point I'm going to make about the Constitution.
01:00:06.000A written Constitution, this is an observation from Joseph de Maistre, matters less than what is written in the hearts and in the minds of the legislators.
01:00:13.000And if you completely change the demographics and the culture of the United States, the Constitution becomes an appeal to mercy.
01:00:18.000Which is why you're winning on gum rights, but it's because it's a defensive posture using law to argue for what was already the assumed culture a hundred years ago.
01:00:28.000The fact that you are pointing out that it was assumed because they're natural rights, just, you know, that is something that obviously does come from, again, as we've been talking about, comes from the tradition of free Englishmen.
01:00:42.000And it's something that we in America have taken from, brought with us, or brought, you know, they brought with them and have, you know, have given to us as their project.
01:00:52.000You can just look at any other European country, and there isn't a history of an unarmed citizenry.
01:01:44.000There was also a school shooting in Dunblane in Scotland and then there was a large campaign for disarmament where parents wrote petitions and took them to Parliament.
01:01:53.000But we didn't have a written constitution to say that.
01:01:55.000But I actually don't think that is what I would focus on.
01:01:58.000My question is how did the culture change to where, you know, what was that cultural?
01:02:02.000The lack of the Second Amendment, that's what it is.
01:02:05.000I agree that's why they passed the law, but the United States has gun culture.
01:03:21.000Yeah, so I think that the fact that just the sheer size of the United States and the necessity of having the arms to hunt and to provide for your family and also to defend from, you know, the possibility, I think that that has a lot to do with it.
01:03:32.000Yeah, industrial cities were in closer proximity to one another in England than in the States and also, you know, things like street lighting and then the innovation of Peel's police over here that would have But also, that sort of thing's only possible in a culture that has a very high trust culture, where it's... In America, you're a lot more social contract culture, right?
01:03:50.000So it's like, you know, okay, I've got a set of rights, and you've got a set of rights, and we're not gonna come near each other, and if you touch me, you know... Whereas in England, it's not quite like that.
01:03:58.000It's a lot more, like, tribal, old-world culture, where it's emotional and sentimental.
01:04:03.000You've got, like, different accents five miles apart.
01:05:04.000And that makes a big difference because so much of the American people while they might
01:05:08.000come from shared geographic backgrounds and it might come from England, ultimately there's
01:05:11.000so much country to fill that they have a certain level of isolation that they don't have to
01:05:17.000establish this sort of interconnected trust.
01:05:19.000You could be on your 60-acre plot of land and not see anyone for a long But like Phil was saying, you do see it in America, right?
01:05:25.000You do see small towns that are quite homogenous, that have been there for maybe 100, 120 years, something like that, where that kind of culture has grown up in it.
01:05:33.000And so you can imagine that most of those guys probably aren't carrying guns, because why would they bother carrying guns, right?
01:05:37.000Well, imagine a whole country like that, where everyone's very domesticated, very close with one another, very close to the land.
01:05:42.000And like I said, there are forests and mountains, but they've got trackways that are 1,000 years old in them.
01:05:49.000Everyone's walked for such a long time.
01:05:54.000There's nothing, there's no wild land.
01:05:57.000Look, this is pretty wild because I pulled up Google Maps and I'm like, I'm looking at the UK and I see this green over here and I'm like, okay, there's got to be some like, you know, trees and you zoom in.
01:06:37.000England, Wales, Scotland, covered in hedgerows.
01:06:39.000Because what these are are ancient settlements, you know, like where, you know, farmers, yeoman, free farmers, have marked off, okay, well, I've bought this bit, I've got that bit, you know, we've split this between two sons or something like that.
01:06:51.000And so the whole thing is just an ancient settlement that has grown up over such deep time, like going right the way back to before the Romans had arrived.
01:07:10.000Anytime someone talks about immigration, right, on Twitter, there'll be some midwit leftist who has taken the train out of London for the first time and taken a photo out the window and gone, oh, they say we're too densely populated.
01:07:37.000Even if you could flat pack, build human battery farms from here to the heat death of the universe, why am I entitled to house the entire third world on what is otherwise a beautiful rolling hill?
01:07:53.000Scotland is actually, the mountain range, the Appalachian Mountains, that's in Scotland as well.
01:07:59.000The actual, the Appalachian Mountain range is older than the Atlantic Ocean.
01:08:03.000In Scotland, if you can zoom in on it a bit, you'll see on the sort of like the north left, right, it's all, not uninhabited, but it's all difficult to inhabit mountain ranges, right?
01:08:40.000We don't have that, you know, and so it's, you know, that is... Did you used to?
01:08:44.000No, well, I mean, maybe in like the 6th century or something.
01:08:47.000We did for a brief while, forestry was almost entirely eliminated before the Industrial Revolution, and then the forests that we have have actually been regrown since we started centralizing in cities with a manufacturing base.
01:08:57.000Yeah, I mean, we do have forests, but as you can see, if you zoom out again on that particular bit, you can see that it's quite geometric.
01:09:05.000Like, that's not a natural area of growth.
01:09:08.000We've allowed that bit to grow because we wanted some greenery, right?
01:09:11.000I mean, I gotta be honest, heading down to Colegryn Cottages sounds like a good vacation.
01:09:46.000And Manchester, Birmingham, Luton, which are now these cities, our biggest cities now, majority immigrant, majority minority, English people, Luton, London, I think Leicester as well, about a third of the population.
01:10:30.000They floated here across the boat even though we told them not to.
01:10:33.000I mean, it's similar language to what we have, but I think Americans are sort of complacent about preserving the American cultural identity.
01:10:40.000Do you think British people are as well?
01:10:55.000You can see a little bit east of London, you've got Clacton, which is where Nigel Farage just won, and Clacton has lots of London refugees from diversity.
01:11:05.000So lots of English people have moved... Where?
01:11:20.000So a lot of people from the inner areas of London, a lot of Eastenders, have moved from London to Clacton, which is 96% English, from now the 37% London, because they felt they were pushed out by demography.
01:16:54.000I had to have a license to have a television.
01:16:57.000The thing about the taxes as well is just what it's spent on, like huge amounts of our
01:17:01.000tax are going to people who don't deserve it, right?
01:17:04.000To services you're not using, and to people who are taking advantage of the system.
01:17:08.000It's a form of institutionalised exploitation.
01:17:11.00047% of social housing in London is taken up by people who were not born in the country.
01:17:16.00072% of Somalians living in Britain are on social housing.
01:17:19.000I think it's 14 billion pounds a day that is, no sorry, 14 billion pounds a year, 10
01:17:23.000to 15 million pounds a day that is spent on the hotels for the Channel Crosses.
01:17:28.000This is something that motivated people to turn out in France, right?
01:17:32.000You do see these rise in populist movements across Europe, but it doesn't seem to be enough.
01:17:38.000I mean, there are gains in certain countries, but it doesn't seem like it has reached a dire enough straight for people to say, right, we have to prioritize this now.
01:17:47.000A lot of it is the sort of dying gasps of the old order, because they do control the state, they control the media, they control the civil services and all these sort of things.
01:17:55.000And so they're very good at propagandizing people.
01:18:01.000You say, well, hang on a second, things are getting worse and there's no light at the end of the tunnel, so actually maybe I'll take that chance.
01:18:40.000And then also it will be exempt from income tax when it passes the income tax threshold.
01:18:44.000And so the boomers still voted for the Conservative Party despite the betrayal.
01:18:48.000And I think this is going to be a demographic thing.
01:18:50.000As you see it age out, you're seeing more and more young people in Europe, now with Trump, in the US, in the UK for Nigel Farage, they're starting to vote for Reform and the Populist Parties.
01:18:59.000I think the two-party system, the sort of switching between the teams on a halo match thing, will age out too.
01:19:04.000You can already think about how unsustainable these promises are, right?
01:19:07.000Like, obviously that's not going to happen.
01:19:10.000The amount of money that's going to cost is going to keep going up, and the amount of money that's coming into the exchequer is going to keep going down.
01:19:16.000I think when you look at the recent election in France, the breakdown of the centrists and the leftist alliance or whatever...
01:19:23.000If you were to take out all of the non-French native individuals, it's probably, what, 80?
01:19:29.000Like, the amount Marine Le Pen would have won, it's going to be everything.
01:19:43.000And an overwhelming number of minorities vote for left-wing parties in the UK, which is maddening that Farage's party is now pandering to minoritarian concerns rather than the exact kind of people that live in Clacton.
01:19:53.000Because he's never going to promise them what Labour's going to promise them.
01:19:55.000Labour's promised, look, I'm going to give you a free house and loads of English taxpayer money.
01:19:59.000Farage's going to be like, well, we don't hate you.
01:20:01.000And it's like, well, no one thought you hate them.
01:20:18.000We just had a big thing happen recently.
01:20:21.000With Anna Paulina Luna, our rep, where she tried to hold our Attorney General Merrick Garland in contempt of Congress for defying congressional subpoena, and Republicans defected to join the Democrats in saying, we will not hold him accountable for the crime he committed.
01:20:34.000And so I'm sitting here looking at these, and these are, so these are four Republicans, three of them are in safe Republican districts, they're at no risk of losing their seat.
01:20:44.000One of them is, he's actually in a Democrat district, he's lucky to have won in the first place.
01:21:13.000Because you're going to win anyway because you're in a safe Republican district.
01:21:15.000Same thing happens with the Conservatives in the UK.
01:21:17.000The only people that clung on after this electoral wipeout were the diversity hires that David Cameron put in in 2010 after modernizing himself, calling himself the heir to Blair.
01:21:26.000And so the only ones left are the woke ones like Caroline Noakes who wants Parliament to be, by fiat, 50-50 male and female.
01:21:33.000I think, and this might be scary, but I feel with this The only actual solution is for absolute Democrat supermajority victory.
01:21:45.000Welcome to the Labour Party's recent victory in our elections.
01:21:48.000But what I mean is, so long as the Republicans, and I'm sure as you mentioned it's similar, the Conservatives, so long as they keep winning, And they hold the chain so it's moving just slightly above the speed limit, people tolerate the destruction.
01:22:03.000But if the Democrats were to have the chain unleashed, and they just want a supermajority across the board, and all of a sudden we're unrestrained, and the United States turned into California overnight, there would be a flash revolution within four years.
01:22:16.000That is exactly what we're hoping is going to happen in Britain.
01:22:21.000No, no, this is the exact scenario you've laid out that's happening currently, right now.
01:22:24.000I mean, the collapse of the Conservative Party, because Nigel Farage ran the Reform Party and split the Conservative vote, basically down the middle, allowed... I mean, we don't have super majorities, but allowed a colossal majority for the Labour Party.
01:22:36.000410 seats, 412 seats, something like that.
01:22:39.000You only need, what was it, 305 or something for a majority.
01:22:43.000And so it is just, you know, the map is basically red.
01:23:24.000That's actually kind of good because the Conservatives have fallen into this weird fighting over the ashes mentality, where the incredibly left-wing people who can't describe got parachuted into the safe seats are the powerful people within the Conservative Party.
01:23:38.000And so at NatCon, Sweller Braveman came out and go, hey guys, I'm not sure mutilating children's a great idea.
01:23:44.000I actually don't support the pride flag.
01:23:46.000And the Conservative Party, the right-wing party, is melting down over it.
01:24:50.000There are some discouraging things happening.
01:24:53.000What does getting their act together look like?
01:24:55.000Uh, professionalizing, making sure they have better candidate selection because they- Building a huge coalition.
01:24:59.000Yeah, ensuring you have youth support on a sort of channel to do that, having essentially an American Moment organization that you guys have here where you're training up young people with experience in parliamentary offices, ready to repopulate the civil service when they clear it all out so on day one their agenda gets implemented and doesn't get blocked, and is on messaging because one of the problems they're having at the moment Leading up to the election, you had Nigel Farage and a man named Lee Anderson.
01:25:25.000Lee Anderson is like North FC Baz incarnated as a politician.
01:25:33.000He got kicked out of the Conservative Party, he was a high up in the Conservative Party, because he said the London Mayor Sadiq Khan has Islamist mates.
01:26:00.000Well, other members of the party are turning around and putting out...
01:26:03.000Very cringeworthy videos going, they say we're all racist and then it smash cuts to all of their non-white candidates.
01:26:08.000Basically just saying, look, please don't, please don't call us mean names.
01:26:11.000Guys are always going to call us mean names.
01:26:13.000And after doing that today, they've had a reshuffle and they have appointed a man named Zia Yusuf at the top of their organization.
01:26:19.000Yusuf came in about three weeks ago with a massive donation, bought his way onto a rally stage alongside Nigel Farage and is now the chairman of the party with No track record within the party, no political history before, and actually kicked out one of the best members, a man named Ben Habib, who has been a tireless campaigner for reform before Nigel Farage came back and before they had any chance.
01:26:42.000And so if they're gonna do this sort of like regime-approved bulletproof armor, they're gonna go just left wingers of the Tories.
01:26:48.000It's important to note that the messaging is exactly as Phil was saying, right?
01:26:52.000The messaging from Ben Habib is the English are an indigenous ethnic group to the British Isles, right?
01:26:59.000It was the Anglo-Saxon tribes that came to Britain who became, through a process of ethnogenesis, the English people, and we are not the same.
01:27:08.000We don't speak the same language as them, we don't have the same identity as them.
01:27:12.000Something unique to Britain called England exists.
01:27:17.000He's like, look, the native English population are being discriminated against in the two-tier policing system and things like this, right?
01:27:34.000We're here for our British values, as if the men who fought at Agincourt, who didn't hold modern British values, were somehow less British than Zia Yusuf, who holds British values.
01:27:46.000It's like, well no, these guys were medieval English yeomen.
01:27:49.000You know, they couldn't have been more authentically British, but they didn't hold modern British liberal values.
01:27:55.000And so that's the problem with the propositional nation, is it allows you to kind of substitute out these two things, and it's just not on.
01:30:54.000And I will go back slightly and disagree a little bit with just how Machiavellian the elites are with importing all of these third-worlders.
01:31:02.000Yes, they would like to inflict a narco-tyranny on us and have a sort of mothering, TSA-style
01:31:07.000state to constantly monitor all of our relationships, but a lot of them are really stupid, and a
01:31:11.000lot of them are true believers, and they genuinely believe that by virtue of making contact with
01:31:15.000the magic stoil or stepping through the portal of the passport gate at Gatwick or Heathrow,
01:31:20.000that the most ardent jihadian will dissolve his identity in secular liberal capitalism.
01:31:25.000And this is why all of the Palestine protests...
01:31:29.000When the Senatoff was being respected by people at the Armistice Day, when British servicemen held the Union Jack, you had police officers walking up to them and saying, you need to lower that.
01:31:39.000And there are more than them and there are of us.
01:31:41.000And what that means is that an expression of your culture is seen as a provocation.
01:31:54.000I think that the giveaway here is there's more of them than there are of us.
01:31:59.000What the British policeman is saying is that, by using the first person plural and not including the Palestinian protestors, is admitting that no, we're not the police of those people.
01:32:07.000He thinks that, but the elites aren't necessarily thinking of a conscious conquering.
01:32:11.000They're thinking that we'll have this universal cosmopolitanism and we'll all sing John Lennon's Imagine.
01:32:16.000What did you guys do when you took Ireland?
01:32:41.000I think that was a sort of later thing, though.
01:32:43.000Because what really was initially, in the sort of medieval view, it was treated as a sort of fiefdoms, right?
01:32:49.000So you'd get an Anglo-Norman baron or duke or knight or something like that who'd be put in charge of a bunch of Irish peasants.
01:32:56.000It wasn't until, I think it was probably 1800s, 1900s, something like that, where the actual active cultural Anglicization of Ireland took place.
01:33:07.000So, but I'm not an expert on that, so... But, you know, I bring it up just because typically what you see with a nation being conquered is the elimination of their cultural identity.
01:33:16.000And so, you know, you look in the modern era, especially with social media, we are no longer in a time period... I mean, we describe it as fifth generational warfare.
01:33:29.000Psychological manipulation is the effective tactic for dominating and conquering a group of people so that they do what you want them to do.
01:33:37.000You don't, or I should say this, there's still an invasion, but you don't need to march in with weapons and subjugate and then fight for decades to erase their identity.
01:33:48.000It's subtle, it's through media, it's through shame, it's through selective policing, it's like going up to a man with a Union Jack and saying, you can't fly that flag, it's offensive, while people fly rainbow flags.
01:34:01.000That, because your identity must be suppressed.
01:34:04.000Well, there's a dark reason why every time anyone mentions, oh, the birth rate is collapsing in all sorts of Western countries.
01:34:10.000But don't worry, we have immigration to solve that.
01:34:12.000I mean, they don't look at the people who are native to a country as being valuable because they are native to the country.
01:34:18.000They say, you guys are very difficult to deal with and we'd like some new people.
01:34:22.000This is what Camus meant by that phrase that is a conspiracy theory that I can't utter otherwise I'll get you demonetized.
01:34:27.000But Vivek Ramaswamy and Tucker Carlson have said time and time again, he didn't mean a conscious plan to replace one ethnic group with another.
01:34:36.000He meant that you're just seeing the entire world as undifferentiated human mass that you can just carve a bit off and drop it where the market demands.
01:34:43.000And so there was a Research study by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation recently that said by 2100, all but six countries in the world are going to have sub-replacement birth rates.
01:34:53.000And rather than tackle that through policy, or say, maybe we shouldn't gaslight young people into believing that they shouldn't have children because of climate change or racism, they said, it's alright, we'll just take everyone from Sierra Leone and redistribute them accordingly.
01:35:04.000And also, just a quick thing there, like, notice the linguistic sleight of hand to this, right?
01:36:09.000Couples that are struggling with infertility that desperately want to have their own children are not necessarily fulfilled by the fact that we have allowed immigrants into the country.
01:36:28.000I think it's a good dose of reality, though.
01:36:30.000I think Americans sort of have a romantic view of England and it's good to be realistic about what happens, especially since you are a smaller geographic scale.
01:36:37.000That old romantic England does still exist, but you can see the rot has set in everywhere.
01:36:43.000That's something that's honestly going on throughout all of Western society.
01:36:49.000The United States is probably the most insulated, and I think that there's probably multiple reasons for that, but you see it definitely in Canada, you see it in Australia, you see it in New Zealand.
01:37:02.000All of the Western countries, obviously you see it all over Europe, the idea that a nation should be a nation or that a people should have a nation, like there's only a handful of places where people will even argue about that.
01:37:33.000It's just that, like... I mean, I understand why the United States is different because we actually did come from... We came from something that is less dependent on the people that are there.
01:37:45.000It's more... It is something that has been...
01:37:49.000been more open than other cultures and other countries in the past. But a place like England
01:37:53.000or like Ireland or like, you know, France or Germany, like, for them to say, you know,
01:37:59.000we want to have, you know, our country remain our country and our history remain our history
01:38:04.000and our culture remain our culture. I can't understand why there are so many people that
01:38:08.000accept the idea that that is bad. We'll discuss that tomorrow. I want to I want to talk more
01:38:13.000about the state of Europe, where this is all going. And I think it's better left for the
01:38:19.000members only uncensored portion of the show, because this is where we get into historic,
01:38:25.000like, we can look to history, we can see how things have gone in the past. And we can make
01:38:29.000predictions about the future. And these are not good predictions. And they're very worrying.
01:38:33.000So we'll, we'll keep that one to the members only. And in the meantime, we'll go to your super chats.
01:38:37.000So smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, head over to TimCast.com, click join us, become a member.
01:38:45.000the members-only uncensored portion of the show where U.S.
01:38:47.000members get to call in, and I want to talk about the dark predictions for what happens to Europe if all of these things are happening, and it may be a bit dark, so we'll keep it for the uncensored show, too, and I think you guys will have some ideas to pitch in for that one, but we'll grab your Super Chats.
01:39:01.000We got Fix Bayonet says, we are not Rome.
01:39:46.000But you go to a lot of these parks, and it's an excuse for people who don't care about skateboarding to just smoke and occupy space.
01:39:53.000So that's a cultural thing that we need to fix.
01:39:56.000If you live in a state where it's legal and recreational, fine, but keep it away from the kids.
01:40:00.000I don't know I'm not even fine with it to be honest it's kind of I you know I've smoked weed before plenty of times and it's just It's not something that should be accepted.
01:40:11.000We are going to have a great conversation tomorrow morning.
01:42:42.000You know, he's honest, he's trustworthy, and he knows what he's talking about.
01:42:45.000I think what had happened was, like, after I left Fusion, you watched some of my streams or something, and you said something where you were like, he's not lying.
01:43:11.000When I got home, you know, like a week later, I looked at my monthly revenue and I was like, I am making a living now.
01:43:17.000And it was a couple grand, but I was like, it pays my bills.
01:43:20.000It changed the direction of your life, I think.
01:43:22.000You know it's, I would assume that it's all part of the dominoes falling over, that be it Carl or, and then like, because obviously what happens then is, a year later Joe Rogan says something similar, like, hey come on my show, you're doing really well, and then that does another big jump, and that's kind of how it goes.
01:43:40.000I got a massive jump off Rogan as well, you know, this is a huge audience.
01:43:43.000But that's how it starts, you know what I mean?
01:43:56.000And then we've had a handful of people who've come on this show and have similar experiences and everything, so it's all part of that cycle.
01:44:01.000And then by the time I'm like 60 or 70, there'll be some kid who's, you know, 35 or 40, who's had 10 million subs, and he's like, well, you know, I went on TimCast back, you know, 10, 15 years ago, and that's how it goes, man.
01:44:53.000He has a family and a bunch of kids that he has to raise.
01:44:55.000And also an entire business that you could just watch alongside Tim cost. That's true
01:44:59.000Yeah, but the thing for me like, you know, you get those people are just like I can't wait to go on holiday
01:45:03.000I can't wait to go on holiday and I I'm the opposite right?
01:45:06.000I hate going on. I love my life for Shia folk Yeah, yeah, but you know, I've got like my house my kids my
01:45:11.000wife and my business and like I've built my life So I don't feel the need to escape it
01:45:17.000Yeah, you know and that's what you should try and do, you know
01:45:19.000Try and make a life that you don't feel the need to escape So going on holiday and going places in in a way feels like
01:45:24.000a bit of a burden, you know It's like okay. Fine. I'll do it for Tim
01:45:28.000But like, it wouldn't be for anyone else, you know what I mean?
01:45:30.000I mean, even though you call this holiday, it's like, this is still kind of working and it's doing the same thing or a similar thing to what you do at work.
01:45:39.000We were exceptionally productive at NatCon.
01:45:41.000We have some very interesting meetings.
01:46:05.000Someone said that, it might have been Nigel Farage, about an international alliance of nationalism, and the media And they know what it means.
01:46:17.000Because their midwit and low IQ people were like, international, national, you're so dumb.
01:46:23.000And it's like, what they're saying is we're going to respect each other's sovereignty and work towards allowing each other to remain sovereign.
01:47:11.000You can just walk across the Irish border.
01:47:13.000I think I was there, it might have been like 2018, and I had been talking to someone about, like, hey, if we go to Ireland, do we just, like, how do we do it?
01:47:21.000Is it passport control in Northern India?
01:47:23.000And I was like, wait, wait, wait, hold on.
01:47:25.000I was like, I thought this was a big deal.
01:47:27.000And they were like, it was, but because of the EU, basically, all of a sudden, It's not, I guess.
01:47:33.000But I mean, basically, it would have been a big deal if the European Union had actually put up a border.
01:47:39.000Because I mean, either Britain or the European Union could have put up a border and during the Brexit negotiations, it was a contentious issue.
01:47:45.000And we just sidestepped it by just not putting up a border with Ireland.
01:47:48.000And so that leaves the ball in their court.
01:47:50.000So but yeah, it's, it's, it's a small, small quibbling sort of technicality that they've got you on there, but it's not a big deal.
01:47:59.000First show back after my honeymoon, my wife is pregnant with our first child, and my two favorite shows doing the most ambitious crossover in history.
01:48:07.000Best of luck with UK and US from Rural Strya.
01:48:11.000See, that's a guy who's not desperate to go on holiday.
01:48:13.000That's a guy who's got it all sorted out.
01:48:15.000Dude, uh, we- I traveled to see family for, uh, the Fourth of July weekend.
01:48:21.000We had a four-day weekend, it was fantastic.
01:48:59.000And, uh, yeah, but anyway, we got to travel for the RNC on Saturday.
01:49:03.000So tomorrow night's show, as soon as it's over, we go to the airport because our flight's super early in the morning and it's just like, I don't get to sleep.
01:49:11.000This is why when the whole Patrick bet David thing happened, did you guys see that one?
01:49:16.000Was this about booking the private jet thing and there was a spat about time?
01:49:20.000So he calls me a liar and says I wanted a private jet or I wouldn't come and it's like the real context was they had asked our PR person if I could do the show and they said there's no way for Tim to get there Saturday morning, he does a show Friday night.
01:49:56.000Yeah, yeah, but usually if we have to, like I'm not flying private to go to the RNC, we have the weekend, but it is super brutal to travel on Saturday because I'm not going to get any sleep, I'm going to be on a plane, I'm going to try and take a nap maybe, then Sunday I get to wake up and start getting ready because it's like...
01:50:14.000So it basically means I will work Monday to Friday, get little sleep and travel on Saturday, have some time on Sunday to get my bearings and what the plan is, but we also have to do audio tests and make sure everything's working properly, otherwise I gotta fly back to do the show here, then I work Monday to Friday, and then Saturday, heaven, Saturday I will get to hang out in Milwaukee and maybe play some Magic the Gathering with Jeremy, you know, over at the Quartering.
01:50:38.000Yeah, he's gonna come on a couple of our shows, really excited to have him.
01:51:09.000So the argument they made after the debate—the media, I say, when I say they—was that he's not suffering dementia, it's just age-related decline.
01:51:43.000I would like to congratulate President Putin there.
01:51:47.000Did you notice during his press release today, or his address today, he was like, I'm getting all kinds of, you know, crap from my wife, like Jill Biden is the one berating him behind the scenes.
01:52:38.000For whatever reason, 80% of the time I meet someone outside of Chicago who says they're from Chicago, they're from Naperville, which is a southwest suburb of the city.
01:52:51.000This used to happen to me, I grew up two hours outside of New York City, you know, a lot of people's parents commuted on the train lines, but you would have people at my high school in Connecticut say, oh, well, I'm a New Yorker.
01:53:36.000Yeah, well, leopards, actually, specifically, black leopards.
01:53:40.000So the story with it is that, you know, during the British Empire, of course, you have Brits going around the world, conquering, exploring new lands, and bringing back strange animals.
01:53:51.000And so people used to keep leopards and things like that as exotic pets.
01:53:54.000And then in, I think it was the 1960s, the Labour government came in and said, right, we're banning this.
01:53:59.000But they made no provision with what to do with these animals, so people just let them out.
01:55:00.000Greg Baudry says Biden is not delusional for staying in the race.
01:55:03.000He executed an immigration policy that could potentially add millions of votes to the Democratic party base or seats in Congress to the census.
01:55:10.000Why would he hand his winning strategy over to another candidate?
01:55:15.000So are you familiar with how our Congress works at all?
01:55:20.000We have 435 seats and every 10 years we do a census and then divide up the districts to each state based on how many people they have.
01:55:29.000And so what's happened is California, for instance, in the last census is estimated to have between one to seven extra seats because non-citizens are counted in our census.
01:55:39.000So that means What Democrats are doing with what they call sanctuary citizen states, where they don't deport illegal immigrants, is that the maximum voting population might be 650,000, which leaves about 100,000 people, and I'm saying for like California and specific areas that are high illegal immigrant population, you will have a captured population that cannot vote.
01:56:02.000This also counteracts the fact that their policies are making American citizens flee those states to Republican strongholds.
01:56:09.000They're basically, rather than gerrymandering a district, they're gerrymandering the electorate.
01:56:17.000So if you look at, I think if you assess generally what Americans do want, without any political games or whatever, you'd probably see a Trump landslide.
01:57:30.000Yeah, but there is an interesting, I would say this, there's an interesting debate to be had about it, because there's the obvious reason for it, which is...
01:57:41.000The example I love to give is California.
01:57:43.000Tulare County, east of LA and San Diego, it's in the southeast, farming area, and they had surface water during the drought 10 years ago.
01:57:52.000San Diego, Los Angeles, dense population centers.
01:57:57.000The farmers have to give up their water.
01:58:00.000This area with 350,000 people no longer has access to surface water, because even though the water is literally on their property, city folk voted, it's our water now.
01:58:09.000The minority population literally lost the water of where they live so that city people could take it from them.
01:58:16.000The idea of the Electoral College was, we're going to balance out, basically the two extra votes each state gets to the Senate, we want to have some balancing force so that California can't take the water from Illinois.
01:58:27.000Some separate, you know, it's a republic, we've got to have that kind of... They knew the cities would dominate the countryside.
01:58:33.000But even then, it was conceived of with a relatively homogenous population.
01:58:37.000And in the age of mass demographic change, actually, constitutions and voter registration and voting systems don't really matter all that much.
01:58:47.000Yeah, I, you know, I'm sure you guys are aware of this, our listeners are aware of this, but laws don't matter.
01:58:53.000What matters is what a culture is willing to tolerate.
01:58:55.000Because right now we got a ton of laws in the books that are not, laws are not being upheld.
01:59:00.000For example, the one I like to give is that in West Virginia, particularly in Berkeley County where we are, drag shows, illegal, and including children, is an aggravation.
01:59:28.000And these public displays are illegal, but the police won't do anything about it.
01:59:33.000I don't know if you guys saw that video from Tenet.
01:59:36.000Taylor Hanson caught two adult men engaging in adult behaviors in public in San Francisco on a public street, and the cop said, you know, they can do whatever they want.
01:59:45.000Choose your battles, you know what I mean?
01:59:47.000I didn't see that, but I'm not surprised.
02:00:06.000Kevin Simmons says, Carl introduced me to Tim during This Week in Stupid Days, and he also introduced me to Jordan Peterson with his early defense.
02:00:12.000It wouldn't be an exaggeration to say that Carl and the fruit of his work saved my life.
02:00:25.000There were lots of people who were supporting that, but I saw what was happening.
02:00:29.000I saw that it was just a popular revolt against woke ideologues who had a narrow minority of woke ideologues who had the mechanisms of power in that industry, and it was a popular revolt against them.
02:00:42.000And I saw that very quickly, and that's why I supported it, because that's what has to happen.
02:00:57.000Everyone's doing it everywhere because everyone can see this woke hegemony is going to literally make abominations out of our civilizations if we don't make it stop.
02:01:08.000Before we go to the Members Only Uncensored show, it's funny how you say that meme, like, I just wanted to play video games, and back then we were all much younger, and we're talking 12 years ago about, or 11, 12 years ago, and we're a lot younger and it's a bit more irreverent because we're talking about the video game industry and movies.
02:01:27.000Now it is the highest echelon of government.
02:01:30.000So, with that being said, smash the like button, subscribe to this channel, head over to TimCast.com, click join us.
02:01:36.000We're going to talk about the future of Europe and the United States and what it means that we're seeing mass migration and Marine Le Pen, the investigations against her, Donald Trump.
02:01:46.000It's going to be, it'll be a little spicy.
02:02:18.000You can catch us this summer on the Destroy All Enemies Tour with Megadeth and Mudvayne, starting August 2nd, going through until September 29th.