Timcast IRL - Tim Pool - May 10, 2024


BIDEN IMPEACHMENT FILED, GOP Files Saying Its THE SAME As Trump Ukraine w-Josh Smith | Timcast IRL


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 4 minutes

Words per Minute

211.9732

Word Count

26,373

Sentence Count

2,201

Misogynist Sentences

56

Hate Speech Sentences

72


Summary

On this week's episode of Inverted World: Live, we discuss the ongoing saga of Joe Biden's impeachment, Michael Rapoport's withdrawal of his endorsement of Donald Trump, and the solar flare that's sending the northern lights towards Earth.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 All right, well, the impeachment of Joe Biden has been filed, which is still kind of boring,
00:00:21.000 I mean, it's a big deal that they've formally filed to impeach Joe Biden over withholding military aid to Israel in exchange for a quid pro quo.
00:00:29.000 Basically, Joe Biden said to Israel, do not engage in military actions.
00:00:34.000 Although the ones that we don't want you to do otherwise, we will not give you congressionally approved military aid, which he does not have the authority to do according to Democrats.
00:00:43.000 And then he did withhold it when Israel or I actually before they even went into Rafa.
00:00:50.000 So that's a quid pro quo.
00:00:52.000 Why'd he do it?
00:00:52.000 Well, he's getting attacked mercilessly by many young Democrats for his support of Israel, and he's trying to signal that he's on the right side of history or whatever it is, so he's desperate for those political points, and now they filed for impeachment.
00:01:07.000 I don't know that actually goes anywhere, but last night we were talking about how they
00:01:11.000 were preparing to impeach him.
00:01:12.000 Now they've actually, it's been formally filed by Corey Mills.
00:01:16.000 We'll see if it actually goes anywhere.
00:01:17.000 We'll talk about that.
00:01:18.000 But the big news, of course, outside of that is Michael Rapoport has withdrawn his endorsement.
00:01:23.000 And as you know, that's a very big deal.
00:01:26.000 It's big enough in that, I mean, Rapoport, such a strong anti-Trump personality coming
00:01:32.000 out in the way he is, it's indicative of what we're seeing for a lot of different people.
00:01:35.000 But then I suppose the actual real big story, which, you know, we probably could have let off with, is the X-class solar flare.
00:01:44.000 That is barreling towards Earth, has already made contact in some places.
00:01:48.000 Europe is already seeing the northern lights, but they're red instead of green.
00:01:52.000 So, uh, whip out your biblical prophecies, prepare for a lesson in eschatology, because we're going to talk about whatever that means, but I actually don't know enough anyway, so we'll do that.
00:02:02.000 Before we get started, my friends, head over to casprew.com.
00:02:04.000 Buy coffee.
00:02:05.000 We got great coffee.
00:02:06.000 Some say it's the best.
00:02:07.000 At least that's what I've been told.
00:02:08.000 Appalachian Nights sells like hotcakes.
00:02:10.000 Rise of the Birdo Jr.' 's a close second, but really, Appalachian Nights is big.
00:02:14.000 Everybody really loves it.
00:02:15.000 And then we got our Alex Stein's Primetime Grind.
00:02:17.000 Two times caffeine, drink responsibly.
00:02:19.000 You know, caffeine, you know, you gotta drink responsibly.
00:02:21.000 And head over to TimCast.com, click join us to become a member, and hang out in the Discord server with like-minded individuals, but also When you're in the Discord server, you are networking, you're connecting with people, and you will get access to our Monday through Thursday members-only call-in show with a huge library of all of our Uncensored shows going way back.
00:02:40.000 And more importantly, it's about the networking and being a member supports the show.
00:02:44.000 It's how we make the show happen.
00:02:45.000 So smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with all your friends.
00:02:48.000 Joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more is Joshua Smith.
00:02:52.000 Hey, how's it going, Tim?
00:02:52.000 Thanks so much for having me on again.
00:02:55.000 For those who don't know, I'm a candidate for president for the Libertarian Party.
00:02:57.000 Our nomination's coming up in two weeks, so maybe we get the nomination, maybe we don't, I don't know.
00:03:01.000 Also the host of Break the Cycle with Joshua Smith, live on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
00:03:04.000 Thanks for having me.
00:03:05.000 Easy enough.
00:03:05.000 Shane's hanging out.
00:03:06.000 Yo, harp is trending.
00:03:08.000 The sun is exploding.
00:03:10.000 I'm Shane Cashman and Inverted World Live is going to debut on Sunday, 6 p.m.
00:03:16.000 on YouTube at Tales from the Inverted World.
00:03:18.000 My first guest will be Tim Pool.
00:03:20.000 We will talk about reality.
00:03:21.000 We will talk about the sun exploding.
00:03:23.000 We'll talk about ghosts.
00:03:24.000 Yeah, and Tales from the Inverted World, I'm 100% serious.
00:03:28.000 Tales from the Inverted World is filmed on location in a haunted house.
00:03:32.000 I've been living in a haunted house for three years.
00:03:34.000 And I want to stress this again.
00:03:36.000 I am not joking or exaggerating.
00:03:39.000 We actually got a barnhouse that was built in like the 1850s and fixed it up and that's where the show is actually shot and filmed.
00:03:48.000 And the staff at Timcast have been complaining about weird goings on there.
00:03:51.000 I'm not joking.
00:03:52.000 They're hearing strange sounds.
00:03:53.000 Doors are slamming.
00:03:54.000 It is bizarre.
00:03:56.000 Shane saw the meme online that's like, stay here for one million dollars and he just stayed.
00:04:00.000 He never left.
00:04:00.000 I didn't even need a million dollars.
00:04:02.000 I gotta be honest, if you're a ghost, you're pissed, because every space of that building is occupied by workers.
00:04:07.000 Yes.
00:04:07.000 But, like, the first week of being here, people are like, hey, there's some weird stuff going on here.
00:04:12.000 I'm like, well, you're in a haunted house.
00:04:14.000 I don't know what that means.
00:04:15.000 I don't know if they're ghosts.
00:04:16.000 I'm just telling you, it's a house that is like 170 years old.
00:04:20.000 The ceilings are like 6'5", because people were short back then.
00:04:24.000 So it's pretty wild.
00:04:24.000 And we're getting call-ins on Sundays.
00:04:26.000 So we have people lined up to call in and we'll be hearing their crazy stories about ghosts and centaurs and near-death experiences.
00:04:33.000 Oh yeah, it's wild, dude.
00:04:35.000 You do know that six-five ceilings weren't big enough for Nephilim Giants, so at least you're doing good there.
00:04:39.000 They might be underground waiting to come back.
00:04:42.000 We got Phil hanging out.
00:04:42.000 Hello everybody, my name is Phil Labonte.
00:04:44.000 I'm the lead singer of the heavy metal band All That Remains.
00:04:46.000 I'm a counter... jeez, I messed it up today.
00:04:48.000 I'm an anti-communist and a counter-revolutionary.
00:04:50.000 How you doing, Anne-Claire?
00:04:51.000 I can't believe you messed that up!
00:04:52.000 Why?
00:04:53.000 It's your monologue.
00:04:54.000 I am not perfect.
00:04:55.000 It's who you are.
00:04:56.000 It's the only thing.
00:04:56.000 I thought that was your whole name at one point.
00:04:57.000 I am not.
00:04:58.000 I'm Hannah Kliff Rimmel.
00:04:59.000 I'm a writer for SCNR.com.
00:05:01.000 I'm tonight's diversity hire here to represent women.
00:05:04.000 Fulfill all the Title IX requirements.
00:05:06.000 Hi, Serge!
00:05:07.000 Hello!
00:05:08.000 Yeah, let's get started, Tim.
00:05:10.000 Here's the big news, I guess.
00:05:12.000 I think the solar flare might be bigger news, but when they file to impeach the president, I feel like you can't ignore it.
00:05:20.000 And I gotta be honest...
00:05:22.000 I feel kind of bored with it.
00:05:23.000 Okay, so we all know Biden, he's being accused of a quid pro quo.
00:05:26.000 He tells Israel, if you invade Rafah, I'm not going to give you the military aid, which is beyond his capabilities as president, because Congress has already approved the aid to be delivered to Israel.
00:05:38.000 I'm not saying we like that, but Joe Biden doesn't have the authority to unilaterally deny Congress having voted to pass this aid.
00:05:46.000 That is one branch acting like they can do so much more.
00:05:49.000 Now, don't get me wrong.
00:05:50.000 The president sets foreign policy, and the president, in my opinion, actually could do this, but the standard has been set by Democrats when they impeached Donald Trump for doing the exact same thing.
00:06:00.000 Because Trump said to Ukraine, we're not going to give you the aid, we want to know what's going on, and then Ukraine said okay, and then went, ah, that's it, he's impeached.
00:06:07.000 So now Joe Biden's got to go, and then we can have, I don't know, Kamala Harris, I guess?
00:06:11.000 Oh, geez.
00:06:12.000 People are going to jump into the why.
00:06:15.000 They're going to jump into the, oh, well, it was different because Donald Trump did this, or it was different because blah, blah, blah.
00:06:20.000 There's already people beginning to make that argument on Twitter.
00:06:24.000 And the why does not matter.
00:06:26.000 The fact of the matter is, the that Congress approved the shipments, whether you like them
00:06:32.000 or not, Congress did.
00:06:33.000 And then the president threatened to intercede in those shipments because of politics.
00:06:40.000 And the president does not have the authority to do that.
00:06:42.000 So if you're going to impeach Donald Trump for it.
00:06:46.000 You gotta impeach Joe Biden for it.
00:06:48.000 Or at least there is justification to impeach Joe Biden for it.
00:06:51.000 And I say good for the Republicans for doing it because F the Democrats.
00:06:54.000 I'm not gonna do what past Libertarian candidates have done and say they're great public servants, but I'm riding with Biden on this one.
00:07:02.000 Look, I believe the president should have the power.
00:07:04.000 Even if they don't, I believe they probably do have the power to veto spending bills.
00:07:08.000 And this is, to me, it's a spending bill.
00:07:09.000 And the AUMF has given the president the power to direct our military all over the world for, you know, decades now anyways.
00:07:17.000 So, like, it's good for Biden.
00:07:18.000 Good for Biden.
00:07:19.000 I'm glad that Biden is deciding not to send any more of my taxpayer money to wars that I don't support.
00:07:23.000 Can he do it to all wars?
00:07:24.000 God, I sure wish he could.
00:07:25.000 Can we just eliminate all the wars?
00:07:26.000 Wouldn't that be perfect?
00:07:28.000 But he won't do that.
00:07:29.000 I would like to see it stopped.
00:07:30.000 Well, I suppose I should say, I got to agree.
00:07:34.000 I am also riding with Biden on this one.
00:07:38.000 Well, because let's talk principally.
00:07:41.000 When Donald Trump said that he's going to withhold military aid, I think that's fine.
00:07:44.000 Yeah.
00:07:44.000 I think the president negotiating with foreign countries needs to have the executive authority over our military and how we align and ally with other countries.
00:07:52.000 Congress saying we approve this being sent, I believe ultimately goes to the president to make the determination in these negotiations with foreign leaders.
00:07:59.000 That means the same would apply for Biden.
00:08:01.000 But if we're saying, this is the standard that has been set, you want to play ball, we'll play ball, that I get.
00:08:08.000 But I also disagree with impeaching Joe Biden in any capacity.
00:08:11.000 Because we are six months away from an election he is poised to lose on the merits, and we don't need to give them any more advantages.
00:08:18.000 So right now the real issue for the election is the shadow campaign, whatever it may be, I don't know, but there certainly is one.
00:08:26.000 Biden is a bucket of concrete strapped to the legs of the Democratic Party.
00:08:31.000 I don't think it's wise the GOP decide to help take that bucket of concrete off their legs as they're trying to swim this victory.
00:08:37.000 It's funny that we live in a world where impeachments are now like PR positives for presidents.
00:08:44.000 Don't do it because it's gonna help.
00:08:45.000 But then that happened to Trump like when he got impeached, his support went up.
00:08:48.000 Of course.
00:08:48.000 It's also hilarious because there's no way that happens with Biden, right?
00:08:52.000 If he gets impeached, so like everyone who's running away from his ship is already gonna be like, yeah, see, I told you he was a bad guy.
00:08:58.000 Look, the thing about the thing about Trump and God bless him for doing this is one of the greatest things that Trump did was he made people hate the corporate news media.
00:09:05.000 Like, absolutely.
00:09:06.000 That was one of the greatest things of the Trump presidency.
00:09:08.000 And so like, of course, when the news media started going in on him on this impeachment, Everybody's like, yeah, screw them, you know?
00:09:13.000 But this is just a ploy by the Democrats to slide somebody else in there right before the election.
00:09:19.000 There's no doubt about it.
00:09:19.000 Sure, sure.
00:09:20.000 But let's talk about my favorite thing ever.
00:09:22.000 And I can't believe it's been almost 10 years.
00:09:25.000 The well-done steak with ketchup.
00:09:28.000 It was Trump.
00:09:30.000 You know Trump knows what he's doing.
00:09:32.000 So a 30-day dry-aged steak.
00:09:35.000 And they said, Mr. Trump, how would you like?
00:09:37.000 And he says, well done with a side of ketchup.
00:09:39.000 And Trump, I've been to Mar-a-Lago, the man knows how to eat a steak.
00:09:45.000 You don't have a club like that about understanding culinary standards, the way people dress, the dress codes.
00:09:52.000 No, he did this because he knew the media would make fun of him, and then middle America would be like, that's how I have my steak.
00:09:58.000 That's how we eat our steak here!
00:09:59.000 Why are they making fun of Trump?
00:10:01.000 They're not making fun of Trump, they're making fun of the people when they did that.
00:10:04.000 Yeah, no, I think that that was the point in which I really understood the amount of troll Yeah, that Trump was was that was that and then the coffee meme as well You can't ever forget that you woke up if that was in the morning, too You woke up and you're like what the hell me like, oh, you know, he I know what's going on You know, we learned a lot by being in front of a camera on reality Knowing like if I just do this one thing I can yeah the entire media sphere, of course So that's what all this I mean most of it He always, since the day he started flirting with the idea of announcing his run for presidency, has controlled the media cycle, right?
00:10:39.000 I mean, it lives and thrives off of what Trump does, in part because they hate him so much they can't look away, which is sort of hysterical, but also because he knows that he is a bigger personality than anybody else on both sides of the aisle, including Joe Biden, who's like barely with us as far as I can tell.
00:10:56.000 It's really interesting to me, and maybe that's because of his reality TV background, but I also think you are just born that way.
00:11:01.000 There are some people with this kind of charisma.
00:11:03.000 This version of Joe Biden is almost not with us.
00:11:05.000 Thank you.
00:11:06.000 Who knows if it's the same one.
00:11:07.000 Thank you.
00:11:07.000 Agreed.
00:11:08.000 Whichever one is there.
00:11:10.000 The covfefe thing was great because, what did he say?
00:11:13.000 Despite the negative, despite the negative, it was like despite the negative, the media covfefe or something.
00:11:23.000 And then there were people actually, I think Cassandra actually wrote this, and it was like, kafafi is Arabic for I will stand.
00:11:30.000 And I'm like, come on, someone potato fingers to the phone and then accidentally hit send.
00:11:36.000 That's all that happened.
00:11:38.000 And then Trump responded with like, what could it mean?
00:11:40.000 Yeah.
00:11:41.000 And he's just loving it.
00:11:43.000 He's just laughing.
00:11:43.000 He's like, I'm in charge.
00:11:44.000 I'm living in all of your heads, rent free.
00:11:46.000 If it was a fat thumb thing, he would have taken it down.
00:11:47.000 I mean, there's no doubt.
00:11:48.000 I don't know.
00:11:49.000 It was a fat thumb thing.
00:11:50.000 I think he likes it.
00:11:50.000 I don't know.
00:11:51.000 I think he likes it.
00:11:51.000 It's a clown playing 4D chess, but it's not 4D chess.
00:11:53.000 I still think that he did it on purpose.
00:11:55.000 You think he wrote about fat feet?
00:11:56.000 Yeah.
00:11:56.000 I don't.
00:11:57.000 No.
00:11:57.000 I don't think he did it on purpose.
00:11:59.000 I do think that he just left it.
00:12:00.000 He's like, it makes people talk.
00:12:01.000 It's funny.
00:12:02.000 Yeah.
00:12:02.000 He's laughing when he realized how it was trending and he was like, and he was like, what could it mean?
00:12:08.000 I also think this is the difference between a president, you know, people point out that Joe Biden's the oldest president.
00:12:13.000 Trump is older, right?
00:12:14.000 He's like 78 now.
00:12:17.000 But he actually loves social media.
00:12:20.000 He loves it.
00:12:20.000 He loves Twitter.
00:12:21.000 He thinks it's great.
00:12:21.000 He started, you know, he started to social.
00:12:24.000 Whereas Joe Biden, I don't think ever was really in charge of his own social media account.
00:12:28.000 And so he doesn't have any way to message himself.
00:12:30.000 He is completely dependent on whatever Gen Z staffer.
00:12:33.000 They're like, you must know about the internet.
00:12:35.000 You read my tweets.
00:12:37.000 His hands don't work.
00:12:38.000 Nothing works.
00:12:39.000 His legs work separate of the rest of his body.
00:12:42.000 He's like a lobster.
00:12:43.000 Yeah, that's true.
00:12:45.000 Look, for my own candidacy for president, a lot of people are like, oh, you're too rough, you're this, you're too much of a troll online.
00:12:51.000 I'm like, did you not see Donald Trump in the White House for four years?
00:12:55.000 That's what people want now.
00:12:56.000 They want somebody that's going to say dumb shit like that all the time.
00:13:00.000 I miss him.
00:13:01.000 I think it's personality.
00:13:02.000 I think people want to feel like there is someone with decisiveness and who has a personality, whereas I think everyone sort of feels, even if, you know, registered Democrats are like, yeah, Joe Biden's there, but he's more of the amalgamation of whatever his staffers are doing.
00:13:16.000 He's not enough of a personality to feel like a leader, and he's not present enough in anyone's mind to really feel like an inspirational candidate.
00:13:23.000 Yeah, I don't think anybody in the United States believes that Joe Biden is running the country right now.
00:13:26.000 Well, I don't think anyone looks at him and says, yes, I want that guy as he is in the White House.
00:13:30.000 I think they're like, well, I guess I have to vote for him.
00:13:33.000 I think it's magic.
00:13:34.000 You know, I think it's it's Trump.
00:13:36.000 When he walks in a room, he has an aura just coming out of him.
00:13:42.000 And you can see it when he's somewhere.
00:13:44.000 The way people act around him, it's the weirdest thing.
00:13:47.000 Some people just have it, the X Factor.
00:13:49.000 I don't mean literal magic, there's like something about him you can't put your finger on.
00:13:52.000 Call it the X Factor, call it whatever it is.
00:13:54.000 Some people have it, some people don't.
00:13:55.000 Not a single Democrat's got it.
00:13:57.000 Trump's got too much.
00:13:59.000 And there's a bunch of Republicans that have a little bit.
00:14:02.000 But it's just like, Trump's that guy that everybody wants to tell a story to, that everybody wants to talk to, that everybody wants, they want Trump to hear what they have to say for some reason.
00:14:13.000 Don't know why.
00:14:14.000 Our guitar player's like that, Mike.
00:14:16.000 Everybody likes him.
00:14:16.000 Everybody wants to hang out with him.
00:14:18.000 And I can't figure out why.
00:14:19.000 He's been in the band 20 years.
00:14:20.000 I hate to go.
00:14:22.000 Phil's like, why is he still here?
00:14:23.000 He's still here?
00:14:24.000 Holy crap.
00:14:24.000 Phil votes him out every time.
00:14:26.000 He's still there.
00:14:27.000 Get out of here.
00:14:27.000 I call him stupid Mike Martin all the time.
00:14:30.000 He just shows back up and then we all just let him stay.
00:14:33.000 And he's bigger than me.
00:14:34.000 He's big and strong too, so I can't say no.
00:14:38.000 Are you being bullied in your own band?
00:14:39.000 Maybe a little bit, yeah.
00:14:41.000 That's why Phil works out so much.
00:14:42.000 One of these days, Mike!
00:14:44.000 One of these days!
00:14:45.000 Before he had a kid, he used to work out.
00:14:49.000 I think his max bench was like 4 or 5.
00:14:51.000 That's a lot.
00:14:53.000 Stupid!
00:14:53.000 So do people like him or are they just scared of him?
00:14:56.000 It is weird.
00:14:56.000 I've said it before.
00:14:57.000 He's got this weird charisma.
00:14:59.000 He's not super outgoing and he's not the kind of person that's really boisterous and he's not the kind of person that goes out and socializes a lot.
00:15:06.000 But there's something about him when like people meet him they're just like I like that guy and and they he's just got this charisma where people are like I want to go and hang out with that guy.
00:15:14.000 Is he from New York?
00:15:16.000 Is he from New York?
00:15:17.000 No, he's from Ludlow.
00:15:18.000 Oh, okay.
00:15:19.000 I think, I think someone in the chat, they kind of explained it.
00:15:22.000 It's this, there's a new way to describe the energy that Trump has.
00:15:25.000 Riz.
00:15:26.000 Oh, the Riz.
00:15:27.000 He is Rizin.
00:15:28.000 He has Riz.
00:15:29.000 Yeah, the Riz, yeah.
00:15:30.000 My 12-year-old says that.
00:15:31.000 Do you think we're going to have fewer charismatic people because we had a generation of kids, like, every generation is increasingly more online?
00:15:38.000 Well, no, I think the charisma died out when comedy died out.
00:15:42.000 I mean, really, at the end of the day, any joke now is off-limits and offensive, and you can't go out and have that aura anymore.
00:15:49.000 You're misogynist or whatever.
00:15:51.000 So I agree with you about comedy, but I don't think the charisma has died off.
00:15:55.000 I still think that there is an innate Amount of charisma and it's not just pretty privileged because again like like I said Mike He's not what you would consider like an like a good-looking dude like he's not so you don't like him and he's ugly It's like we used to have a whole generation of men that wanted to have the wrist I mean that was like people aspired men spired to have the wrist I agree to have swag and now they aspire you're still you're
00:16:21.000 You're talking about something different than what I'm talking about.
00:16:26.000 Because what it sounds like is you're talking about things like being able to interact and how to win friends and influence people, right?
00:16:35.000 Sure, the aura.
00:16:36.000 Yeah, but the thing is there is a certain amount of just natural charisma that people have where you don't know why someone walks into a room and you're like, I like that guy and I don't know why.
00:16:48.000 Often times it's associated with things like height, with facial symmetry and stuff like that.
00:16:54.000 Not always.
00:16:55.000 Sometimes it's not.
00:16:56.000 And like I said, Mike isn't a weird looking guy, but he's not a particularly handsome guy where you're like, oh, that is a pretty dude.
00:17:05.000 I think everybody knows that, you know, the moment Trump steps out on that stage or appears on the TV, all the ladies are fainting and fanning themselves.
00:17:13.000 He's the new Beatles.
00:17:14.000 He's the Beatles.
00:17:14.000 He had that.
00:17:16.000 When he was younger he had that.
00:17:18.000 He also had a lot of money.
00:17:19.000 But there are a lot of people with lots of money who are very awkward and weird.
00:17:25.000 They still have women fawning over them every day.
00:17:27.000 Money has never made anyone ugly.
00:17:29.000 Like money has never made someone other.
00:17:32.000 Have you ever seen Bill Gates?
00:17:34.000 Have you ever seen an interview with Bill Gates?
00:17:35.000 Bill Gates is a melting marshmallow.
00:17:37.000 Yeah, he's a goofy person.
00:17:39.000 Let's jump to this next story from STNR.
00:17:41.000 Perhaps one of the most important and shocking things we've seen so far.
00:17:45.000 Michael Rapaport.
00:17:47.000 Has withdrawn his endorsement for Joe Biden.
00:17:51.000 I can't believe it.
00:17:51.000 The esteemed comedian is now saying that he will not be supporting Biden.
00:17:56.000 He says, I'm officially unendorsing Joe Biden.
00:17:59.000 I did so much work on behalf of this soft serve ice cream eating.
00:18:04.000 I'm done.
00:18:05.000 I want to give him a shout out.
00:18:09.000 The reason why his journey's been so incredible is because he's so vocal, he's so animated in his mockery of Trump and now of Biden, and he is a funny guy.
00:18:17.000 I think there's a P missing from it.
00:18:18.000 He has two P's.
00:18:19.000 I guess Israel's more important to Rappaport than our democracy, huh?
00:18:23.000 Well, that's unfortunate.
00:18:25.000 He's legit funny.
00:18:27.000 And even when he says voting for pig dick Donald Trump is on the table, it's funny.
00:18:34.000 And I can respect it but I think ultimately what we see here is the tides they are turning and there are a lot of people who are, this is not just about Mike Rappaport, we were talking about this the other day, Jewish voters who up until a week ago were anti-Trump and for Joe Biden and endorsing him and bang they're now pro-Trump, instantly anti-Biden just on one issue Overnight.
00:18:57.000 Well, I think the funny thing is, is that Biden has supported Israel way more than Trump ever has ever.
00:19:03.000 And they're, I mean, at the end of the day, they're both pro Zionist and Trump put the embassy in Jerusalem, right?
00:19:10.000 He did make big moves.
00:19:12.000 And Trump is the one who executive ordered the anti-Semitism definition.
00:19:15.000 Yes.
00:19:16.000 Yeah, and he did the Abraham Accords.
00:19:17.000 Well, the Abraham Accords are good.
00:19:18.000 No, I'm saying, like, he was trying to do things that were, seemed pro-Israel-ish.
00:19:22.000 Right, right.
00:19:23.000 Joe Biden's been voting to send money to Israel for 40 years.
00:19:26.000 Yes.
00:19:27.000 He made a career of this.
00:19:28.000 It's his career.
00:19:29.000 I mean, he supported Israel way more than Donald Trump ever has.
00:19:32.000 I see what you're saying.
00:19:33.000 It's not even close.
00:19:34.000 It's not like- Anything that pisses off the communists, the Nazis, at the same time, I'm
00:19:40.000 kind of for it, man.
00:19:41.000 So, if it hurts the Democrats, and it hurts the communists, and it pisses off the Nazis, I'm like, all right, I kind of, you know, I kind of like it, because all of that stuff is anti-American BS, so.
00:19:53.000 I just think this is, you know, an example of how many Americans feel betrayed by Biden, right?
00:19:58.000 Like, it's why when people say, like, We have empathy for loss of life in other places, but we want you to focus on what's going on at home.
00:20:05.000 Like, we are suffering here.
00:20:07.000 The border is way too open.
00:20:08.000 I cannot pay my bills.
00:20:09.000 None of that matters to Michael Rappaport at all.
00:20:10.000 No, but it's interesting because he's like, I was on your side and I feel as though you've betrayed me.
00:20:15.000 Whatever his reasoning is, like, I think that's a sentiment that a ton of voters share right now.
00:20:19.000 It's not that they're in love with Donald Trump.
00:20:21.000 Maybe there are people who are won over, but a lot of people are just like, Biden is the worst and he let me down.
00:20:27.000 Yeah.
00:20:28.000 Do you think this will be the thing that changes Rappaport to see other issues like that?
00:20:33.000 Like if Israel is his gateway drug into seeing other problems in this country?
00:20:38.000 This is a one and done kind of thing.
00:20:40.000 Israel, when it comes to Jewish people that are generally liberal or leftist, and they're like, oh, this one issue, this will be the one and done.
00:20:49.000 So you don't see him in a brick suit at the border wall?
00:20:52.000 No, I definitely don't see him being like, build a wall, build a wall.
00:20:57.000 The majority of the pro-Zionist people in the United States are liberal.
00:21:01.000 They just support pro-Zionist Republicans because they're pro-Zionist.
00:21:07.000 Well, I mean, what do you mean by liberal?
00:21:08.000 Like culturally, and they want, I mean, they want... Liberal in an American sense, or liberal as in... Not liberal as in the classical liberal sense.
00:21:15.000 Like neoliberal, open the entire borders... You just said neoliberal.
00:21:20.000 Hold on, you just said neoliberal, right?
00:21:23.000 Okay, do you think of libertarians as neoliberal?
00:21:27.000 Absolutely not.
00:21:29.000 Sitchin' at him, you see?
00:21:31.000 Anyways.
00:21:31.000 We lost that term.
00:21:33.000 We lost that term to the left.
00:21:37.000 Neoliberal is a reference to, like, Democrat establishment corporatism.
00:21:40.000 That's what I think, too.
00:21:43.000 But the classical term liberal was libertarianism.
00:21:46.000 I mean, the founders were classical liberals.
00:21:47.000 That's how they were.
00:21:48.000 But the left stole that term from us.
00:21:50.000 That's the problem with the right and libertarians is we've been losing the war on language for decades and decades and decades.
00:21:56.000 But that's why neoliberal exists.
00:21:58.000 Right.
00:21:59.000 Because liberal is a reference to, there's different facets of liberalism in classical liberalism, traditional social liberalism, and then you have neoliberalism, like you have neoconservatism.
00:22:10.000 It's the establishment, uniparty garbage.
00:22:12.000 But this is what I thought.
00:22:13.000 Are they arguing neoliberal means libertarian?
00:22:15.000 So that's what, yeah, they're like, well, libertarian, because they're saying that it's a new liberalism that's open markets and blah, blah, blah.
00:22:21.000 And I'm like, I never thought of neoliberal.
00:22:23.000 These guys are trying to take it back.
00:22:24.000 It's not going to work.
00:22:25.000 I always thought of neoliberals as Democrats.
00:22:28.000 Hillary Clinton.
00:22:30.000 Exactly.
00:22:31.000 Hillary Clinton.
00:22:31.000 So they were just as much the war machine as anything else.
00:22:34.000 That was my perspective.
00:22:36.000 The guy who started the Liberal Caucus in the Libertarian Party, who's trying to bring the term liberal back as neoliberal, as libertarian, and then he's praising Bill Weld on social media.
00:22:50.000 That guy sat on the board of CFR, like, come on, man.
00:22:52.000 He's so, like, that's the thing, it's like, that guy Josh, like, I think he means well,
00:22:57.000 I had to block him because he's annoying, but I think he means well, but he's so long.
00:23:01.000 I'd love to see your block list, Phil.
00:23:03.000 It's long, dude.
00:23:04.000 Because I block at the drop, I'm on the Michael Malice train.
00:23:08.000 Michael Malice is right when it comes to Twitter.
00:23:09.000 I only block the porn bots, that's it.
00:23:11.000 You block anyone for any reason at the drop of a hat because your Twitter experience is your experience and you are not obligated to listen to anyone's BS.
00:23:24.000 You have to monetize the hate, man.
00:23:26.000 Why even look at your mentions?
00:23:30.000 Oh, I still talk to people all the time.
00:23:32.000 Yeah, I can't.
00:23:34.000 I don't have two million.
00:23:36.000 Mine's random.
00:23:36.000 Mine's still manageable.
00:23:37.000 It's just nonsense.
00:23:38.000 I open it up and it's a mix of like crypto salesmen, marijuana, porn bots.
00:23:45.000 Mine's different now than it was like a year and change ago when I started coming down here regularly and stuff, but like it's still manageable.
00:23:52.000 I probably have 2,000 Twitter porn bots blocked, but nobody else.
00:23:55.000 What I do is, if there's someone that is, you know, if I see... I do periodically look at mentions and stuff like that.
00:24:04.000 If I see someone, the first thing I do is I don't block them.
00:24:08.000 I do block them.
00:24:09.000 And then I unblock them instantly.
00:24:11.000 It's a force on follow.
00:24:15.000 I'll stop appearing in their feed without them being blocked and then out of sight, out of mind.
00:24:20.000 That's pretty cool.
00:24:21.000 I didn't know that.
00:24:22.000 Tim's giving away Twitter secrets right now.
00:24:24.000 Now I know why Tim stopped showing up in my Twitter feed, dude.
00:24:26.000 That's messed up, man.
00:24:27.000 The force on follow has been around forever.
00:24:31.000 You block and unblock right away.
00:24:33.000 Because some people are trying to get blocked.
00:24:36.000 I just like following the people that are the worst to me.
00:24:36.000 Oh yeah.
00:24:36.000 It's a currency.
00:24:38.000 It's a currency.
00:24:39.000 Right.
00:24:40.000 It is.
00:24:41.000 So you don't give it to them.
00:24:42.000 You just, step one is block on block.
00:24:43.000 And they don't follow you anymore.
00:24:45.000 I just like following the people that are the worst to me.
00:24:48.000 I just follow them back.
00:24:49.000 I don't, I do, look, I take it back.
00:24:50.000 I do block, there are some people, you know for a long time they went after my family
00:24:54.000 and they were talking shit about my family.
00:24:55.000 I do block people that talk about my children.
00:24:56.000 That's the one caveat that I carry is if you talk about my kids, you're done.
00:25:01.000 There was a time where Antifa people were trying to go after the band, and so I started just blocking everything.
00:25:09.000 I'm pretty good at keeping myself separate from the band.
00:25:11.000 I don't do political stuff under the guise of all that remains, so I can keep them separate.
00:25:17.000 And the guys in the band, they're very different opinions in the band.
00:25:20.000 We're not a monolith at all.
00:25:22.000 Well, we were trying to adopt the baby sibling of our two adopted children, and people were calling the DHS trying to keep us from adopting.
00:25:29.000 And they did.
00:25:29.000 Eventually it happened.
00:25:30.000 Really?
00:25:30.000 You couldn't do it?
00:25:31.000 You couldn't adopt a kid?
00:25:33.000 They just made it too hard.
00:25:34.000 That's crazy!
00:25:35.000 Which means that people kept a child from having a home with their biological siblings because of what they did on Twitter.
00:25:41.000 Yes.
00:25:42.000 This is the thing about the internet.
00:25:43.000 I would be really interested to see an individual list of who has blocked all of us, because I think there is an aspect of the internet where people create a version of you.
00:25:54.000 You are creating it when you post, but also people have a version of you that they have come pre-determined to the platform.
00:26:00.000 They don't know me.
00:26:00.000 They see you on one thing and they're like, that guy is the worst and I hate him.
00:26:03.000 They don't actually spend any time looking.
00:26:05.000 They'll block you right off the bat.
00:26:06.000 I'd like to know how many of my hater dorks adopted kids from foster care.
00:26:10.000 I'd like to know.
00:26:11.000 This goes back to what we were saying about charisma.
00:26:14.000 there's the same kind of distaste, immediate knee jerk reaction that people have.
00:26:20.000 Like some people, you'll just meet someone and there's like, I don't like something about that person.
00:26:24.000 And you can't, and it's really, really hard to do anything about it if you like get that, you know?
00:26:30.000 Yeah, I think it's weird.
00:26:32.000 I can, I know there's one person who has me blocked on Twitter
00:26:34.000 and I know why, person who's never interacted with me ever.
00:26:37.000 You know what I mean?
00:26:38.000 Like, it's interesting to think, I don't care about you at all,
00:26:42.000 but you care enough about me even though we've never interacted
00:26:44.000 you have to go out of your way to block my content.
00:26:46.000 I'm like barely alive on Twitter.
00:26:48.000 I've had people call my jobs and all kinds of stuff.
00:26:51.000 These people are nasty, man.
00:26:52.000 We had bomb threats and death threats.
00:26:55.000 Yeah, you've had a bunch of shit too.
00:26:57.000 Yeah, absolutely.
00:26:58.000 I've had lots of death threats.
00:26:59.000 Lots of death threats.
00:27:00.000 If I showed up to my own anti-war rally for my own party in DC, they said they would kill me.
00:27:04.000 Wow.
00:27:05.000 That's weird because I feel like the stuff that happened with us was very specific and centered around one particular thing that I can't discuss but I see people post these messages where it's like someone sent me this message look and it's like this really awful nasty thing you're a scumbag piece of every swear in the world we really don't get any of that stuff.
00:27:25.000 Nice.
00:27:25.000 Yeah, uh, aside from the swatting stuff that was going on, that was hyper-specific to... You know, there's still an ongoing investigation related to it, but they think they caught the guy.
00:27:34.000 I don't know that they did.
00:27:35.000 But that was really, really specific.
00:27:38.000 In terms of the general death threats and stuff like this, for, uh... I don't see it.
00:27:44.000 Like, we did the skate thing in DC.
00:27:46.000 We announced we're gonna be there.
00:27:47.000 Not a peep.
00:27:48.000 We showed up and everyone clapped and cheered and we got high fives.
00:27:51.000 Yeah.
00:27:51.000 I carry everywhere I go.
00:27:52.000 I get, like, weird emotional messages.
00:27:55.000 Like, I've had people message me stuff that's like...
00:27:57.000 You know, just kind of dark.
00:27:58.000 They're telling me stuff that, like, I cannot help them with from the internet.
00:28:02.000 Again, you don't really, like, we don't actually know each other.
00:28:04.000 And that's where it starts to be, like, you know, the internet's such an interesting tool and people can feel really bonded with someone.
00:28:09.000 On the other hand, like, it makes it so there's this weird barrier where you're allowed to interact with someone in a way that, like, isn't real, but on the other end, like, They have no ability to help me if you're like threatening to hurt yourself or something like that.
00:28:22.000 And I, again, with the rise of like Twitter endorsements and like how many people, because if you were getting an endorsement for a presidential election in the past, right, you would like maybe get a congressman, maybe a newspaper would endorse you, their editorial board, whatever else, but now Michael Rappaport, different Uh, pillars of culture, especially that are big online, what they say really matters and it can reach people in a way that I don't think campaigns have the ability to keep up with.
00:28:49.000 I mean, the influencer effect on the election is intense.
00:28:51.000 We live in an influencer economy.
00:28:52.000 We do.
00:28:53.000 Culture war is very important right now.
00:28:55.000 So, let's talk about what's going on.
00:28:56.000 We got big news that in two weeks, we got RFK Jr.
00:29:00.000 and Donald Trump at the Libertarian Party National Convention.
00:29:03.000 And Vivek.
00:29:04.000 And Vivek.
00:29:05.000 Vivek's campaigning for Trump though, so I assume it's all just about for Well, Vivek has actually said that he's going to debate our vice presidential candidate.
00:29:15.000 Really?
00:29:16.000 Which could end up being Kurt Russell.
00:29:19.000 Sorry.
00:29:19.000 Kurt Russell?
00:29:20.000 Wow!
00:29:21.000 Good news, Joshua!
00:29:22.000 Listen, I just did exactly what Michael Recktenwald did on the show when he couldn't remember Clint's name.
00:29:27.000 I know Clint.
00:29:28.000 Clint's a good friend of mine.
00:29:28.000 Well, I said the other day that Trump made a mistake in hiring Michael Bolton, so... Yeah, Michael Bolton, exactly.
00:29:34.000 So, yeah, it could end up being Clint Russell from Liberty Lockdown is our vice presidential candidate.
00:29:40.000 He has no real... There are no challengers?
00:29:42.000 There are challengers, but, I mean, it's Clint.
00:29:45.000 He's kind of predetermined unless anybody else steps up, I think, at this point.
00:29:47.000 The fake signaling that he's VP?
00:29:49.000 I don't know.
00:29:49.000 That's what I felt like.
00:29:51.000 It felt like that's his signal.
00:29:52.000 But he's standing behind Trump at the fundraiser.
00:29:55.000 Has Trump picked a VP yet?
00:29:56.000 No, but he's at Mar-a-Lago with Trump at a fundraiser standing right next to him.
00:30:00.000 I don't see him... I see him going with the intent of helping Donald Trump.
00:30:05.000 But to have a major political candidate going to the Libertarian Party convention... A past president!
00:30:13.000 Right!
00:30:13.000 It's massive!
00:30:14.000 This is history!
00:30:15.000 The biggest thing that ever happened to the Libertarian Party.
00:30:17.000 And you know, the normal social club people that have been in the Libertarian Party for a long time are really upset about this.
00:30:22.000 Hey, you know, there's a part of me that's like, hey, this is taking, at first, like, this is going to take a couple eyes off our candidate.
00:30:26.000 But then I really got to the point where I was like, no, we're going to have more eyes on our candidate than we've ever had at the National Convention in 50 years, right?
00:30:33.000 So like, and there's also like, RFK Jr.
00:30:35.000 is pushing for a debate with Donald Trump, right?
00:30:37.000 Which, if that was to happen and get the LP, it's not going to happen.
00:30:40.000 No way.
00:30:40.000 It's probably not.
00:30:41.000 But if we stay able to get the Libertarian presidential candidate in there as well, because if we can pick the nominee early enough.
00:30:48.000 Then we have, you know, three different parties, basically, actually doing something that the Libertarian Party has never been able to do ever in history.
00:30:54.000 When do you guys pick your candidate?
00:30:54.000 On the first day of your convention?
00:30:56.000 So, it's supposed to be on the third day, but there is a way to amend the agenda to move it up, and there's a lot of people that are talking, the delegates.
00:31:02.000 Because, you know, our delegates, there's only a thousand people that pick our nominee.
00:31:05.000 These delegates from all over the country show up and pick our nominee two weeks from today, actually.
00:31:09.000 And so, there's a chance that we move it up, we have our nominee picked, and that's the person that questions Donald Trump at the show.
00:31:16.000 Can you, when you, when Angela made the announcement, she said that people were going to like send in questions or something beforehand.
00:31:22.000 There's going to be sort of a list for Donald Trump.
00:31:23.000 There's already a list of things.
00:31:24.000 So what's the, is he getting like, is somebody moderating and asking him questions or is he going to deliver speech?
00:31:29.000 I've heard so many different things, but there's one that says if we have the nominee by then, the nominee is the one that gets to ask the questions from the panel.
00:31:36.000 If we don't have the nominee, this is the list of questions.
00:31:38.000 He's going to talk maybe about Ross Ulbrich.
00:31:42.000 There's all kinds of things flying around out there.
00:31:44.000 Who knows what's real?
00:31:44.000 Angela probably knows much better than I do what is real and what isn't.
00:31:47.000 There's so much in the Twitter space.
00:31:48.000 But look, the fact of the matter is that this is the biggest thing that happened to the Libertarian Party.
00:31:52.000 And people are like, oh, you're asking your opponents to come over there.
00:31:54.000 I'm like, that's good.
00:31:55.000 That's good for me.
00:31:56.000 Because if I get the nomination in two weeks, because I'm considered one of the frontrunner, maybe top three.
00:32:01.000 If I get the nomination and we're on C-SPAN and we're on all these news outlets and Donald Trump's there and I'm the guy that gets the nomination after a debate, because we have a debate too, like our candidates debate on the news, that's gonna be more eyes on the Libertarian Party than ever before, ever in history, in 50 years.
00:32:17.000 Why would you be mad about that?
00:32:18.000 Don't be mad about that.
00:32:19.000 That's a good thing.
00:32:20.000 Well, I mean, legitimately, as far as libertarians go, like, Donald Trump is a really bad libertarian.
00:32:27.000 So I get why there are, like, the pure... Because, look, I'm a better libertarian than Donald Trump, and there are libertarians out there that would swear to God I'm not a libertarian, right?
00:32:37.000 Sure.
00:32:37.000 So, you know, that's just the way that it goes.
00:32:40.000 So Donald Trump drawing attention, you know, I mean, God, but they're both so far away from libertarian.
00:32:48.000 I think Trump's going to get booed and cheered.
00:32:51.000 He's going to get a lot of cheers and a lot of boos.
00:32:53.000 Well, you have to register for the Trump event, too, because there's limited space.
00:32:56.000 So there's going to be outside people.
00:32:58.000 It's not just going to be libertarians.
00:32:59.000 There's going to be a lot of people there.
00:33:01.000 It's essentially like Trump's own rally at the Libertarian Party Convention.
00:33:04.000 I was going to say, I would assume if libertarians are maybe like, don't siphon off our voters when we need them to vote for our candidate who we just selected.
00:33:11.000 This is the truth that Libertarians need to be confronted with.
00:33:13.000 That we have less than 700,000 registered Libertarian voters in the entire United States.
00:33:18.000 Trump can reach those people on the media today, right now.
00:33:21.000 He does not need to go to the Libertarian Party Convention.
00:33:23.000 But, there's a lot of other voters there that know nothing about the Libertarian Party that will see the Libertarian Party because of Trump being there.
00:33:30.000 Am I too close?
00:33:30.000 Am I hot?
00:33:31.000 Am I hot?
00:33:32.000 I'm pretty hot.
00:33:33.000 Look, he's cashing it!
00:33:34.000 My mic's starting to go out at home and I have the same mic and so I have to hold it real close.
00:33:37.000 I apologize.
00:33:38.000 I think Trump's going to earn votes.
00:33:40.000 So the idea is actually really simple.
00:33:43.000 Trump does not have the Libertarian Party votes.
00:33:46.000 He doesn't have Libertarians.
00:33:47.000 They want to vote Libertarian.
00:33:48.000 Trump showing up, it's only a net positive.
00:33:50.000 And if he can get even a tiny bit, it's just good news for him.
00:33:54.000 That's why he's doing it.
00:33:55.000 I disagree.
00:33:55.000 You think he's going there to be like, I better lose votes?
00:33:57.000 He can reach all those registered voters just on the news today, right now.
00:34:01.000 He doesn't have to go to the Libertarian Party.
00:34:03.000 Outreach matters.
00:34:04.000 Outreach doesn't matter.
00:34:04.000 Not to libertarians, buddy.
00:34:06.000 Have you ever met a libertarian?
00:34:09.000 Then what is the reason Trump would actually go to the convention?
00:34:12.000 I don't know.
00:34:12.000 I'm sure he hopes, but I don't think that's gonna help.
00:34:16.000 I think it's gonna help the libertarians.
00:34:17.000 Even if you only have 700,000 registered libertarians, there are a lot of people who I mean, I think of the effect that, you know, that show Parks and Rec's had when they had this one Nick Offerman character who was a libertarian.
00:34:29.000 And I think that brought that concept to a lot of people, a lot of young people, who would be more open to the ideas.
00:34:34.000 They don't want to say they're conservative.
00:34:35.000 They don't want to say they're Republican.
00:34:36.000 They're like, well, but I like the libertarian.
00:34:38.000 So by Trump showing up at the event, it's him saying, like, I recognize that this is a philosophy that's there.
00:34:43.000 And I think this is He's gonna make his case for why, like, you guys should fall in line.
00:34:46.000 There was a whole group in 2016 called Libertarians for Trump.
00:34:48.000 I mean, it's not like the Libertarians don't know who Trump is.
00:34:50.000 Like, they've never seen him.
00:34:51.000 They live in a country that he was the president of for four years.
00:34:54.000 I think it's the spectacle of it.
00:34:55.000 And I think it's for the sympathetic, like, the Libertarian independent voter.
00:34:58.000 Like, he's gonna be like, but look, I talked to them.
00:35:00.000 I think that more people are gonna see our nominee.
00:35:02.000 I think the issue with the Libertarian Party is that it's functionally just third party.
00:35:06.000 Right, you've got woke libertarians, anti-woke libertarians, pro-borders libertarians, anti-borders libertarians, it's just basically a group of a bunch of different people deciding that they don't like the establishment, and then operating under one banner.
00:35:18.000 Yeah, that's the problem with freedom, right?
00:35:19.000 Everybody's got it, and I said that before the show, everybody's got a different version of what freedom is to them, and that's the, it's a big, messy, beautiful thing, really, truly, and that's how freedom would be in any country that chose to adopt it.
00:35:30.000 But here's the thing, I posted on Twitter about this earlier, and Dave Smith God bless him said this on Twitter once too, but, um, you know, the thing of the, the, the, the simple thing about the white pill is if you have children or you plan on having children, you can't afford the black pill.
00:35:44.000 And that's the truth is like, I want my children to live in a society that has fewer laws than I lived in.
00:35:44.000 Right.
00:35:50.000 More freedoms than I lived in.
00:35:50.000 Right.
00:35:52.000 And, and so like, it's going to be a messy thing.
00:35:54.000 It's the freedom is going to be a messy thing, no matter what, because everyone's got a different version of that, but we've got to continue to push towards there.
00:35:59.000 I can't afford the black pill because I have children, you know, so many children.
00:36:03.000 Do you have an answer for the arguments that people that are post-liberals make?
00:36:11.000 Because I am still working through the liberalism has the flaw of liberalism takes arguments at face value and philosophies that are not liberal are not obliged to be honest or engage in debate in any kind of way that a liberal would understand it which is I think the reason why liberalism is has the people that say liberalism has failed whether they be on the left or the right the reason is because they have not allowed they have allowed
00:36:45.000 Illiberal philosophies to beat them by using illiberal arguments, but they're trying to still be liberal Do you know do you have a concept of what should be done?
00:36:55.000 When you're dealing with people that are going to openly lie that don't care about the truth that you know essentially the the the We're losing the war on language.
00:37:04.000 And we've been losing the war on language for a long time.
00:37:06.000 And a lot of that is deceitful, purposely deceitful.
00:37:07.000 seeing is articulated here. Yeah, well, we the problem is, like I said it once
00:37:11.000 earlier, is we're losing the war on language. And we've been losing the war
00:37:14.000 on language for a long time. And a lot of that is deceitful, purposely deceitful.
00:37:17.000 Yes. And so the best thing that we can do, and I don't consider myself a liberal.
00:37:22.000 Or I guess you can call it libertarianism, liberalism, whatever.
00:37:25.000 I don't really subscribe to that.
00:37:28.000 I think that technically to me it's a right-wing movement, and further right than the conservatives in the United States.
00:37:34.000 That's how I feel about it, and you know that we probably disagree on some things.
00:37:36.000 So philosophically, where would you say it comes from?
00:37:39.000 Philosophically, it probably was born out of classical liberalism.
00:37:44.000 And that's fine, but we seeded that word a long time ago.
00:37:48.000 Trying to bring that word back now as a libertarian is just failing us.
00:37:53.000 I understand what you're saying about the language, but what I'm trying to get to is where your ideas are going to stem from.
00:38:02.000 Is it a liberal philosophy?
00:38:03.000 what kind of philosophy do you have to inform your opinions, your epistemology.
00:38:07.000 I think the most important thing we can do is not mince our words anymore.
00:38:11.000 We don't want to play the language game anymore.
00:38:13.000 We want to use the language that's now in the now and not try to use the historical
00:38:17.000 language because we've lost that war a long time ago.
00:38:20.000 So no more mincing our words.
00:38:21.000 We've got to stand strong in every principle that we have.
00:38:24.000 And these are the important things, because it's becoming mainstream right now.
00:38:27.000 I mean, you've got MMA fighters going out there talking about Reed Mises and Rothbard in their post-fight interviews.
00:38:33.000 And Argentina seems like they're having... I don't know.
00:38:36.000 I haven't looked in deep, but I hear that the numbers are good now.
00:38:40.000 I go back and forth on Malay, and I think the Bitcoin movement in Salvador.
00:38:44.000 You know why I go back and forth on Malay.
00:38:46.000 I think he's done some really good things.
00:38:47.000 I'm not going to fault him entirely, but we'll see how Zionist he gets.
00:38:53.000 I still like him.
00:38:54.000 He could fix Argentina, man.
00:38:57.000 He won me over at Afuera.
00:39:01.000 I don't hate the guy.
00:39:02.000 I think he's doing a good job.
00:39:03.000 I think he's done some really good things.
00:39:04.000 So I support that.
00:39:05.000 I do.
00:39:06.000 And I'm very clear about supporting him.
00:39:08.000 I do.
00:39:09.000 Now if he starts sending taxpayer money across the world, he's not really a libertarian, is he?
00:39:13.000 I don't think he's going to be sending taxpayer money.
00:39:14.000 I hope not.
00:39:16.000 What does Josh Smith's presidency do for this country?
00:39:19.000 Well, first of all, and I talked about the first time I was on the show, the most important thing to me is the family in the United States.
00:39:24.000 I think the United States has had an open war against the family, whether it's economic policy, social policy, whether it's the actual family law in the United States right now with Title IV-D, the Social Security Act, which was signed into law by Gerald Ford in 1971.
00:39:40.000 That took us from a society that had 1 in 60 children living in a fatherless home to 1 in 4 just since the 70s.
00:39:47.000 With that's been undeniable stats for increases in violent youth offenders, increases in homeless and runaway youth, increases in school dropouts and mass shootings.
00:39:56.000 All this stuff is undeniably.
00:39:57.000 attached to the destruction of the family in the United States.
00:40:00.000 So that's at the forefront of trying to put the focus back on bringing families back together
00:40:05.000 and making families have to learn how to work it out.
00:40:07.000 That's the truth because we've just given people an easy out.
00:40:11.000 As president, you will executive order mandate people have families?
00:40:14.000 No, no, no, no.
00:40:16.000 You're losing my vote right now.
00:40:20.000 Why not?
00:40:21.000 No, I would work to remove Title 40 of the Social Security Act, which has paid states to separate families, where essentially the federal government pays a dollar to every state that spends 88 cents on these family programs.
00:40:33.000 But there's a lot of other things, too.
00:40:35.000 Economically, we're destroying the middle class.
00:40:37.000 You can't keep families together if you're destroying the middle class.
00:40:40.000 The Federal Reserve is obviously a giant counterfeiting machine that's, you know, stealing our wealth through a tax called inflation.
00:40:46.000 I know that's a bumper sticker, but that's the truth.
00:40:48.000 It's really the prop up for the warfare state and all the worst policy in the United States.
00:40:52.000 So, like, we've got to start working to dismantle the Fed.
00:40:54.000 Now, the president doesn't have the power to end the Federal Reserve, but he does have the power to nominate the Fed chair.
00:41:00.000 He does direct the Treasury.
00:41:01.000 Maybe we don't take any more fiat currency from the Fed.
00:41:04.000 There's a lot of different policies that could be worked on to start breaking down this Federal Reserve machine.
00:41:08.000 You could make Luke Rudkowski the Fed Chair.
00:41:11.000 Well, I've said that it would be someone along the lines of Ron Paul, Bob Murphy, somebody like that.
00:41:16.000 Somebody who's really good at economics.
00:41:17.000 Bob Murphy is one of the best followers on Twitter.
00:41:19.000 He's so much fun.
00:41:21.000 Holy cow.
00:41:22.000 He's probably the most fun economist that you can find on Twitter.
00:41:25.000 And we've got to stop the warfare state.
00:41:26.000 It's disgusting.
00:41:27.000 It's such a huge part of our budget.
00:41:30.000 We've got 12% of the population in the United States today can hardly put food on the table.
00:41:34.000 Like I said, the middle class.
00:41:35.000 I'm just a blue collar working class guy, right?
00:41:36.000 Like, I'm just a normal guy like everybody else running for president who might end up on all 50 ballots.
00:41:40.000 So I understand, like, how these policies affect families because I am a big family raising kids, like, doing everything that everybody else.
00:41:47.000 I put work boots on every morning.
00:41:49.000 And so, you know, the warfare state's got to go.
00:41:51.000 We can't continue to spend all of our citizens tax money on wars that most of them don't support.
00:41:57.000 It's got to be.
00:41:58.000 You change culturally first or policy?
00:41:58.000 What changes first?
00:42:01.000 I think people also have learned to hate or not want to have family.
00:42:05.000 The libertarians aren't going to win until we change the culture.
00:42:07.000 That's just how it's going to be.
00:42:08.000 We have got to culturally move society in a direction where they understand how bad the Federal Reserve is, how bad the warfare state is, how bad gun legislation is, how bad the drug war is, how bad all these things that have been, you know, the war against the family.
00:42:23.000 We have to get society to understand that stuff before they'll support a libertarian.
00:42:26.000 Here's one idea.
00:42:27.000 What if you held an event called, like, Free Cheeseburgers and Why the Fed is Bad Day?
00:42:31.000 Well, you know, I've been doing that on Break the Cycle twice a week for three years.
00:42:37.000 There's a lot of stuff, and there's a lot more libertarianism in culture now, too, like people like Phil over here.
00:42:44.000 You know, a musician, well-known, goes out and talks about libertarian philosophy and stuff, and Air July, and people making comic books, and that's the kind of cultural stuff that we have to do if we're ever going to get to a point where we do get a libertarian elected in office.
00:42:57.000 When it comes to family stuff, where does your libertarian presidency go with abortion?
00:43:00.000 Uh, so I'm, so I actually have, I am the only abolitionist candidate running in America today.
00:43:06.000 I'm the only one who thinks that it is absolutely ill-libertarian to kill your child.
00:43:12.000 And, and Tim, we're not going to argue about this, but let's, let's, let's jump to this, uh, this story from SCNR.
00:43:17.000 We can talk about it on the morning.
00:43:21.000 RFK Jr.
00:43:21.000 suggests abortion should not be regulated by federal or state laws.
00:43:26.000 And probably one of the most shocking and probably the most extreme position held by any federal politician, RFK Jr.' 's position saying, I mean this is a quote, even at full term,
00:43:39.000 She said, Kennedy says, I don't think it's ever okay that we should do everything in our power to make sure that never happens, but I ultimately think nobody sets out to do that.
00:43:49.000 And there are always some kind of extenuating circumstances that would make a mother make that kind of choice, a terrible, terrible choice.
00:43:54.000 You can't overstate how bad it is.
00:43:56.000 I think ultimately we have to trust women.
00:43:58.000 The interviewer says, even full term, to which Kennedy responds, even full term.
00:44:04.000 Now let's analyze what he said.
00:44:06.000 Nobody sets out to do that.
00:44:09.000 My guy.
00:44:10.000 Murder happens all the time.
00:44:12.000 And people do set out to do it intentionally because they want to end a life for whatever reason.
00:44:18.000 What he says in this interview Is basically, there should be zero regulation in any way up to full term.
00:44:27.000 If a woman decides, just trust her because no one would really do a bad thing like that.
00:44:32.000 I don't think there's any other federal level politician who's taken that extreme position.
00:44:37.000 I think mine's the opposite extreme.
00:44:39.000 That is the most naive position any president has ever... I've heard any president in this... It's insane.
00:44:47.000 Oh, no one would do that?
00:44:48.000 It happens all the time.
00:44:50.000 What are you talking about?
00:44:52.000 That is childish.
00:44:53.000 Tim, are you becoming more pro-life in real time right now?
00:44:56.000 What does that mean?
00:44:57.000 My position is the same as it's always been.
00:45:00.000 You're pro-life, right?
00:45:04.000 I've never held the position that at any point for any reason a woman can just kill a baby and I've said every single time we've talked about it that elective abortion is wrong.
00:45:15.000 This is Ralph Northam level.
00:45:16.000 Like, we'll keep him calm.
00:45:18.000 This is beyond.
00:45:19.000 It's crazy.
00:45:20.000 Ralph Northam.
00:45:21.000 He was saying, yeah.
00:45:22.000 It's, but no, what it really is is cowardice.
00:45:23.000 There's some regulation in this.
00:45:24.000 What it is is cowardice.
00:45:25.000 It's because he's afraid to say anything that would offend the Democrats or the pro-abortion
00:45:31.000 lobby.
00:45:32.000 hard in other direction to win them back because they think he's a conspiracy.
00:45:36.000 I mean, he's unacceptable anyways.
00:45:38.000 Like he's unacceptable across the board.
00:45:40.000 All of the stuff that he's that all the things that people like about him are
00:45:44.000 positions that he's come to in the past two years because of COVID.
00:45:48.000 That's why I don't trust that is unacceptable.
00:45:51.000 In 2021, he was still stomping for lockouts for for brain worms.
00:45:55.000 Get out of here.
00:45:56.000 Yes.
00:45:56.000 He's getting out of here.
00:45:57.000 He's Hollywood Catholic, just like Biden.
00:46:00.000 He seems like he's crawling out of the womb of liberalism, like in the bad sense liberalism, not good liberalism.
00:46:05.000 Are we just finding out who the Kennedys are today?
00:46:10.000 Kennedy from the first moment... Well, I like things that some Kennedys have done.
00:46:15.000 I like JFK saying no to Northwoods.
00:46:17.000 Yeah, that was good.
00:46:18.000 There's things that they've done that are nice, but he's also... He didn't make it long after saying no to Northwoods.
00:46:21.000 I wonder why.
00:46:22.000 I don't know.
00:46:23.000 I wonder why.
00:46:23.000 But, like, he said things I really liked, also, because I think he should understand the CIA and how they operate when it comes to his dad and all that stuff, but he's... I just see him hammering.
00:46:32.000 I want to find that point.
00:46:33.000 I think it's near the end.
00:46:35.000 He's a serial cheater, so I wonder if that's why he's pro-abortion, you know?
00:46:40.000 I mean, he's had a pretty rough life.
00:46:42.000 Even if it's full term.
00:46:43.000 Even if it's full term.
00:46:44.000 We should leave it to the woman.
00:46:45.000 We shouldn't have you guys involved.
00:46:48.000 Even if it's full term?
00:46:50.000 Even if it's full term.
00:46:52.000 Fuck.
00:46:53.000 Okay.
00:46:54.000 And I think that's what I wanted to clarify because there has to be a...
00:46:57.000 Right.
00:46:59.000 So in other words, keeping it as is, with Roe v. Wade having been overturned and leaving it up to the states to determine if and when a woman can have an abortion?
00:47:08.000 No, I wouldn't leave it to the states.
00:47:10.000 Right.
00:47:10.000 No, I would... You would say completely, it's up to the woman?
00:47:14.000 My belief is we should leave it to the woman.
00:47:17.000 We shouldn't have government involved.
00:47:19.000 Even if it's full term?
00:47:21.000 Even if it's full term.
00:47:24.000 And I think that's where, that's what I wanted to clarify because there are especially, uh, people in the middle trying to... Yo, we're, we're... Wow.
00:47:24.000 Okay.
00:47:33.000 Disqualified.
00:47:34.000 Male feminists are the worst.
00:47:35.000 Dude, nothing he says in that preamble leading up to it where he's dancing around the idea, it's all negated by the even full term.
00:47:43.000 Yes, even full term.
00:47:44.000 This is absolutely insane.
00:47:46.000 He's like, and we'll just trust women.
00:47:47.000 Dude, some women deliver their babies and throw it in a dumpster.
00:47:51.000 A million, a million babies are aborted every year in the United States.
00:47:54.000 A million.
00:47:54.000 But how many, how many instances, we can look this up per year, how many instances have occurred where women will have a baby and throw it in a dumpster?
00:48:01.000 Happens a lot.
00:48:02.000 It happens enough to where... In toilets.
00:48:04.000 In toilets and garbage bags.
00:48:06.000 There was the, that woman who had the baby and then the mom and her, they killed it or whatever, what was that story?
00:48:11.000 And he's like, just trust them.
00:48:14.000 Just trust the women.
00:48:15.000 Like, dude, look, I don't think the majority of women are set out to murder their babies in these kinds of ways.
00:48:21.000 I actually think a lot of women would rather not get an abortion, and society's pressuring them in this direction.
00:48:26.000 That's besides the point.
00:48:27.000 Yeah, sorry, any presidential candidate that says trust women is automatically disqualified.
00:48:32.000 But if the point is, he's like, well, you know, no one really wants to do this.
00:48:35.000 I'm like, yo, some guy in New York threw a belt around a woman's neck, dragged her behind a car, and then raped her.
00:48:41.000 Is that what happened?
00:48:42.000 Oh, that was crazy.
00:48:43.000 On video.
00:48:44.000 There are people who do want to do these awful things.
00:48:44.000 It's on video.
00:48:46.000 That's what government does.
00:48:48.000 But hey, I'll give it to this.
00:48:49.000 It's very libertarian, right?
00:48:52.000 And I mean this in the most dry sense.
00:48:53.000 I disagree.
00:48:54.000 In the dry sense of the anti-government word, the government being like, we literally just won't even enforce laws.
00:48:59.000 I think one of the important things to note with, you know, the stories you get about like girls who toss their babies in dumpsters or whatever else is they're also part of a culture that says having a kid ruins your life.
00:49:10.000 It's over after this.
00:49:11.000 And so I think it's it's crazy that we have this narrative of like, yeah, they're under terrible circumstances.
00:49:19.000 Quote from RFK when actually the terrible circumstances are like you might not get to go to college, you might have to take on more responsibility at a young age.
00:49:27.000 It's not common.
00:49:29.000 It's not the majority of people who have abortions who are really in dire straits.
00:49:32.000 They have all kinds of issues.
00:49:34.000 It's a thing that culture has told us you should do because otherwise you have to become responsible.
00:49:40.000 There's another part in this interview as well that's not being talked about here.
00:49:43.000 And this is the funny part.
00:49:44.000 He says he's for full-term abortions.
00:49:46.000 He's for full-term abortions.
00:49:47.000 But we need to make it so that women feel like they don't have to make abortions.
00:49:51.000 So he's also talking about using more taxpayer money for more services to take care of women.
00:49:56.000 Also saying that women should be able to commit baby murder up through full-term.
00:50:02.000 That's how I look at it.
00:50:02.000 I don't mince words on this anymore.
00:50:04.000 I'm done.
00:50:04.000 I'm done with it.
00:50:05.000 I don't do it anymore.
00:50:06.000 Yeah, that's even better maybe.
00:50:08.000 I'm the only abolition candidate running in the United States today.
00:50:11.000 So you're too close to the mic and you're too far away.
00:50:14.000 I'm going to start streaming human sacrifice right now.
00:50:18.000 Because it's loud in mine and so I'm trying to keep up, that's why.
00:50:21.000 They don't even know what they're doing right now.
00:50:23.000 I'll take one off, it'll be better that way.
00:50:25.000 No I mean I think there is this policy issue of like on what level of government do you regulate this but I also think the cultural issue of like we have raised generations especially of women to look at children and families as this negative burden that is you know going to make them have to do all these things they don't want to do or whatever else and for the most part it's inaccurate it doesn't really represent how people want to live but it also creates this negative hostility that makes I just hate that abortion is the woman's issue.
00:50:53.000 I think women have a lot of interest, I think they have a lot of things that could change their life, and they have boiled it down to like, but if you aren't allowed to get rid of your baby, your life is over.
00:51:01.000 Real quick, I just gotta give a shout out to Old Sticky Ketane, super chat.
00:51:06.000 He said, his brain worm died.
00:51:08.000 Poor guy starved to death.
00:51:12.000 So, Hannah-Claire, you said abortion is a women's issue?
00:51:17.000 They made it the women's issue.
00:51:19.000 I have very good news for you.
00:51:21.000 The issue is never the issue.
00:51:22.000 The issue is always the revolution.
00:51:24.000 That's true, but this is how they're selling it to women to join the revolution, right?
00:51:29.000 For the moment, because remember, they threw women under the bus as soon as the women with the penises showed up.
00:51:34.000 And the women welcome these women.
00:51:36.000 It's crazy to me.
00:51:38.000 I love this narrative where it's like, don't be Republican.
00:51:41.000 What if you need to kill your baby?
00:51:43.000 And they're like, that's a good point.
00:51:44.000 I can't be Republican.
00:51:45.000 I have to be able to kill my progeny.
00:51:47.000 I think it's disgusting.
00:51:49.000 It's the same group of culture that is like, you should 100% freeze your eggs because what if you want it to work until you're 45?
00:51:56.000 Also, what if you accidentally get pregnant and then you should have to be able to get rid of that baby?
00:52:00.000 I got it.
00:52:00.000 What is it here, team?
00:52:01.000 I solved it.
00:52:03.000 Okay, if a woman wants to get an abortion, you just take the baby out and freeze it.
00:52:08.000 There you go.
00:52:08.000 You can freeze it for a later date.
00:52:10.000 People do that.
00:52:11.000 They'll, like, conceive children and they put them on ice.
00:52:13.000 I mean, that's part of IVF sometimes.
00:52:14.000 You can take a baby out of a woman and put it on ice.
00:52:16.000 Not a full-born baby, but, like, it conceives.
00:52:18.000 Fertilized eggs.
00:52:19.000 The baby's being born and she's like, can I freeze it?
00:52:21.000 And usually that's used for people that are... IVF is typically used for people that have problems giving birth.
00:52:27.000 I'm saying, like, a woman walks in the clinic and she's like, hey, I'm four weeks pregnant.
00:52:30.000 They'll be like, we will take that thing out and we'll put it in a freezer.
00:52:33.000 In 1956, they were freezing hamsters for like, I think an hour, and then microwaving them.
00:52:39.000 And bringing them back to life, resuscitating them.
00:52:40.000 With a microwave?
00:52:41.000 Yeah.
00:52:42.000 It's almost like a radiator.
00:52:43.000 Look it up.
00:52:43.000 It's a microwave.
00:52:44.000 It might be a special microwave, but I'm calling it a microwave.
00:52:46.000 So, uh, the frogs out here, those little frogs are called spring peepers.
00:52:50.000 Are they gay?
00:52:51.000 Are they gay frogs?
00:52:51.000 No, they're based.
00:52:52.000 Oh, we got good water here, dude.
00:52:53.000 Oh, you guys got the, you got based frogs?
00:52:55.000 Yeah!
00:52:55.000 Spring peepers, dude.
00:52:57.000 These are little one-inch frogs, and they scream really loud.
00:53:00.000 Oh, jeez.
00:53:00.000 They're basically yelling at the ladies.
00:53:02.000 But they have super high glucose in their blood, so they don't freeze.
00:53:05.000 They just slow down and then don't move, and then when it gets warm, they just come right back.
00:53:08.000 Wow.
00:53:09.000 That's pretty wild.
00:53:10.000 That's based.
00:53:10.000 How do we change the... So, I don't think that... We gotta put the sugar in the baby when it's born, and then put it in the freezer.
00:53:15.000 Put it in the freezer.
00:53:16.000 And a microwave.
00:53:16.000 I think it's gonna be impossible to change abortion from the top down, although I think we need to get rid of...
00:53:21.000 Human sacrifice?
00:53:22.000 I think we need to do it, but I don't know if it's going to fix everything overnight.
00:53:25.000 Like, how do you do the cultural from the bottom up?
00:53:28.000 I look at the government.
00:53:29.000 Look, so as a libertarian, I think the only libertarian position is that if a government must exist, it has to exist to protect the life and rights of its citizens.
00:53:35.000 That's it.
00:53:36.000 I mean, that's what the government should do.
00:53:38.000 And the right to life extends to all people, including the unborn child.
00:53:42.000 So like, a government should say that it should be illegal to murder.
00:53:47.000 Period.
00:53:47.000 I agree with you.
00:53:48.000 I feel like outlawing it, which I agree with, will cause deranged people to do it more in other ways.
00:53:53.000 It should be dangerous.
00:53:54.000 Let me ask you a couple questions.
00:53:56.000 Let's say there's a person, and they're riding their bike, and then another person riding his bike jumps off the back of a tow truck, does a sick flip and tail whip, and then as he's landing, the tail of the bike hits the other guy in the head, knocking him down to the ground, hits his head again, and
00:54:15.000 then they bring him to the hospital, and this guy is...
00:54:18.000 His brain is gone. He's brain dead. Just lying there. Do you think the law should mandate that person be kept alive?
00:54:24.000 I think that... man, that's a tough one.
00:54:30.000 Uh, no, I don't think the law should mandate that person be kept alive because they have no, uh, they have zero life left.
00:54:37.000 I mean, it's, their life is gone.
00:54:38.000 Once you're, once your brain is, once your brain dead, I mean, technically you're almost legally dead at that point anyways.
00:54:44.000 It's like the Terry Schiavo thing.
00:54:46.000 Right.
00:54:47.000 A person's in a coma with a feeding tube and they're like, we don't think this person is
00:54:50.000 here anymore, we don't think they can come back from this.
00:54:52.000 Yeah, I think at that point your family should decide how much suffering they're willing
00:54:55.000 to let you do.
00:54:57.000 But when it's a baby that's not suffering, that's a new life being born.
00:55:00.000 There's a complete, this is an apple and orange argument.
00:55:03.000 I disagree.
00:55:04.000 The issue with people who are comatose is the doctors don't really know for certain.
00:55:08.000 I mean, there's certainly circumstances where they're like, yo, this guy, his brain is jello.
00:55:12.000 But there are a lot of circumstances where people have been said- There's not a lot, it's very rare.
00:55:16.000 When people are brain dead in comas like that, it's very rare they come back.
00:55:19.000 But it's also not uncommon for doctors to be wrong.
00:55:22.000 Well yeah, that's one of the biggest causes of death in the United States.
00:55:26.000 It absolutely is a malpractice.
00:55:28.000 So the issue then becomes do you trust the doctor when he's giving medical advice saying this person is no longer with us and then you run into a similar problem with abortion where there are many women who say the doctor told them your kid is not viable it will die you need an abortion and then they said you're wrong and they had the kid and the kid's healthy and twenty years old.
00:55:47.000 So the challenge I see there is Giving discretion to end life.
00:55:51.000 Now, with someone who's an adult, or older, or any capacity, like a teenager, whatever, they end up dependent upon a machine to live.
00:56:00.000 Someone's gotta pay for that, resources have to come from somewhere, that's a challenge.
00:56:04.000 With a woman who's pregnant, her body is already sustaining the baby.
00:56:07.000 So as long as she's eating and living, the baby is going to grow and be nurtured.
00:56:11.000 I just think there is a similarity there.
00:56:12.000 therein, at what point do we allow a medical practitioner or a state to determine that
00:56:17.000 a life can be ended?
00:56:18.000 Well, first of all, I want to start this off saying that like 1% of abortions in the United
00:56:23.000 States are medically necessary.
00:56:26.000 So we're talking like 99% of abortions in the United States today are not medically
00:56:29.000 necessary.
00:56:30.000 That baby would thrive and grow and be a human.
00:56:33.000 They're elective.
00:56:35.000 There's a huge, and I'm going to keep saying it's apples and oranges because it's a completely different argument.
00:56:39.000 We're talking about somebody who is brain dead, in a coma, cannot support their life anymore.
00:56:44.000 No, you're exaggerating the position.
00:56:45.000 A person who is in a coma and presumed brain dead could recover.
00:56:50.000 Should a doctor, a man, a fallible man say, we can pull the plug.
00:56:54.000 I hereby determine in my expertise as a doctor, I think he can't recover.
00:56:58.000 And then we're supposed to take his word for it.
00:57:00.000 That's the issue.
00:57:01.000 How is that the same as knowing that a baby is growing and gonna grow up to be a human being and a doctor saying this person is brain-dead?
00:57:09.000 Well, you're making a probabilistic argument.
00:57:11.000 The baby likely will not suffer a traumatic brain injury during birth.
00:57:14.000 The baby will likely have a fully functioning brain and no disabilities.
00:57:17.000 The baby will likely not... There are babies that are born brain-dead.
00:57:20.000 There are babies, there was actually a baby that was born without a brain.
00:57:24.000 Yeah, there's babies born with all kinds of different birth defects for sure.
00:57:27.000 That's also not the norm.
00:57:29.000 So you're making a probabilistic argument.
00:57:31.000 But the norm for people that are brain dead, they are dead.
00:57:34.000 Right, so again, you're exaggerating the position.
00:57:36.000 I'm saying there's a person who is, by all appearances, comatose, and the doctor says this person will not recover.
00:57:43.000 I'm not saying that there's no... I'm saying there's a chance... We don't know.
00:57:46.000 The person could recover.
00:57:47.000 It's happened.
00:57:47.000 Sure.
00:57:48.000 So, the question then becomes, and by all means, hold the position that's probabilistic.
00:57:53.000 Fine.
00:57:54.000 If there is a 10% chance the person recovers, do we say you can't kill them?
00:57:58.000 If it's a .001% chance, do we say... Well, I certainly wouldn't say that we should kill somebody with a 99% chance of survival, like we would with 99% of the babies that are aborted.
00:58:07.000 Right, but if it's a 99% chance of death, you're okay with it.
00:58:10.000 I mean, if there's a 99% chance that a medical professional is telling you this person is never going to come back, and there's 1%, at that point it's got to be up to the family to decide.
00:58:19.000 So then how would you deal with, when it comes to abortion law, a doctor just going, you want to get an abortion?
00:58:26.000 I hereby sign this baby as a 99% death- chance of death, so...
00:58:29.000 We're good.
00:58:30.000 Doctor says so.
00:58:31.000 Kill the baby.
00:58:32.000 Doesn't that sound like a medical malpractice suit waiting to happen, plus a murder charge, in my opinion?
00:58:38.000 Oh, sure.
00:58:40.000 They'll find ways to prove it.
00:58:41.000 I mean, if you make it a mandate, like to where these doctors have to go to jail for performing abortions, there's going to be ways to prove it.
00:58:51.000 I mean, it's got to be a criminal justice thing.
00:58:54.000 We prosecute murderers.
00:58:56.000 Look, anybody can murder today, right now, right?
00:58:59.000 We prosecute murderers.
00:59:00.000 Yeah, the idea that a doctor could make a mistake and then you're going to find intent on that.
00:59:06.000 The issue becomes, like many people have said, the issue with no-fault divorce.
00:59:09.000 I've said no-fault divorce is bad.
00:59:11.000 The response is, without no-fault divorce, women will falsely accuse their husbands of rape and how do you deal with that?
00:59:16.000 Women already do that.
00:59:17.000 No.
00:59:18.000 That's right.
00:59:18.000 Even with no-fault divorce.
00:59:19.000 And it'll get substantially worse.
00:59:21.000 I don't think that's an argument.
00:59:22.000 I think we should still get rid of no-fault divorce.
00:59:24.000 If you don't wanna get married, don't get married.
00:59:25.000 But the issue then is, not that it's the majority position, not that you shouldn't ban abortion.
00:59:30.000 I'm saying, simple question, how do you deal with doctors who lie?
00:59:33.000 Is it we try to investigate them?
00:59:35.000 I think the reality is, if you say a doctor can give, medically necessary abortions will always be permitted.
00:59:43.000 Like, look, the baby's gonna die and you're gonna die.
00:59:46.000 Doctor says so.
00:59:46.000 I think only if a woman's gonna die. I think that's the cutoff point.
00:59:50.000 To me, that's the abolitionist. And that's, you know, it has to be proven.
00:59:53.000 Not if the baby's gonna die?
00:59:54.000 I mean, the doctors say that the babies aren't gonna survive all the time, and they do.
00:59:58.000 So why would we risk it, risk murdering somebody just because there's a chance
01:00:03.000 they might not make it? I mean, that's just, that's insane.
01:00:06.000 That's an insane...
01:00:07.000 If we really get to the crux of this argument in the United States today about this thing, it's really disgusting.
01:00:12.000 It's really disgusting to think about the fact that we treat unborn children as completely expendable.
01:00:18.000 Completely expendable in the United States today.
01:00:20.000 So if a woman is pregnant and the baby has no brain, If the baby has no brain, I mean, if the baby's developing with no brain, then the baby's not alive.
01:00:31.000 I mean, that's just the truth of the matter.
01:00:33.000 No lungs.
01:00:33.000 The baby's not alive.
01:00:33.000 The baby's got no lungs.
01:00:34.000 The baby's not alive.
01:00:35.000 You don't survive without lungs.
01:00:36.000 Okay, so now we're getting to it.
01:00:37.000 So you are saying there are many circumstances in which a doctor's orders could result in abortion of the baby.
01:00:41.000 I don't, I mean, yeah, if the baby's, if the baby's an ectopic pregnancy that, I mean, you're going to know that within, What, six weeks?
01:00:50.000 Eight weeks max?
01:00:52.000 This is literally what I'm asking.
01:00:53.000 But here's the thing.
01:00:54.000 We're throwing up all these different hypotheticals.
01:00:57.000 The fact of the matter is that 99% of abortions are elected.
01:01:00.000 They're elected.
01:01:01.000 So we're talking a million babies a year.
01:01:03.000 99% of those are elective abortions where there was nothing wrong with the baby.
01:01:09.000 Their mother wasn't going to die.
01:01:12.000 There wasn't even rape or incest or whatever it is that the left throws at you when you say that a murder should be illegal.
01:01:18.000 So we're talking about hypotheticals.
01:01:20.000 So you ban it?
01:01:22.000 I would ban it, yes, absolutely.
01:01:24.000 I'm the only abolition candidate running today in the United States because I think that murder is wrong and it should stay wrong.
01:01:29.000 And we need a society... And no exemptions?
01:01:31.000 Or some exemptions?
01:01:33.000 What's the exemptions for the life of the baby?
01:01:35.000 If it's going to kill the mother, then it should be medically necessary.
01:01:39.000 Nothing on the baby?
01:01:40.000 Nothing else.
01:01:40.000 Nothing else.
01:01:41.000 Okay.
01:01:41.000 So there are scenarios where like a baby will have no heart or something like this.
01:01:44.000 It'll be developing improperly.
01:01:46.000 You're going to know that.
01:01:47.000 I mean, there might be some medical necessity where, you know, cause first of all, if a baby's forming with, you know, you're basically taking Louisiana's position.
01:02:01.000 It's got to be fool, it's got to be provably medically necessary.
01:02:07.000 Otherwise we're murdering people.
01:02:08.000 I mean that's really the truth of the situation in the United States today is we're murdering Unborn babies.
01:02:13.000 Every day, a million.
01:02:14.000 A million a year.
01:02:15.000 That's gotta stop.
01:02:16.000 And if we don't have somebody who's gonna stand up and denormalize this practice, and so we can get into all the hypotheticals you want.
01:02:23.000 That's fine.
01:02:24.000 But the truth of the matter is that 99% of the babies murdered in the United States today are perfectly fine healthy babies.
01:02:30.000 This is what I find frustrating.
01:02:32.000 I get it.
01:02:32.000 You can say it a million times.
01:02:34.000 I'm trying to understand what is the practical application of a law you would make.
01:02:37.000 What does it do?
01:02:38.000 How does it affect society?
01:02:39.000 Just saying abortion is bad, we want to get rid of it.
01:02:42.000 Totally agree.
01:02:43.000 Totally get it.
01:02:44.000 You do agree.
01:02:45.000 You agree that we should get rid of abortion.
01:02:46.000 I like that abortions are bad.
01:02:47.000 I've said it all the time.
01:02:49.000 I thought you were more pro-choice than that before.
01:02:52.000 Yeah, the issue being that in the case of rape and incest, I think where we would be, regardless of my opinion on what you should or shouldn't allow someone to do, is that the 14th Amendment would require a judge to sign off on every abortion.
01:03:05.000 That is not what I think society should be doing, but that is what the Constitution dictates.
01:03:09.000 We don't typically punish the children of criminals by death either, so that's something that we need to think about in society as well when we're talking about exceptions.
01:03:19.000 We don't typically punish the children of criminals.
01:03:21.000 The 14th Amendment needs to be, the Supreme Court needs to answer this, are the unborn persons.
01:03:26.000 Right.
01:03:27.000 Because it draws a distinction between what a citizen and what a person is under the Constitution, and that persons cannot have their life, liberty, or property taken or hindered without due process.
01:03:37.000 Do you get a double homicide if you kill a pregnant woman?
01:03:40.000 Depends on the state.
01:03:45.000 If that's the case, then, the unborn have personhood, and a judge will have to sign off on the approval of an abortion.
01:03:52.000 And that's the 14th Amendment.
01:03:54.000 I believe the 14th Amendment, interpreted properly, would ban abortion in almost all circumstances.
01:04:01.000 Here's what I don't like about conservatives, is that they say, rape and incest.
01:04:06.000 And I say, why is incest banned?
01:04:09.000 A rape, I get.
01:04:10.000 You're making an argument about a woman who did not consent to give her body in the government being restricted on whether it can force that woman to give her body to someone else.
01:04:17.000 But incest?
01:04:18.000 Like, if a brother and a sister have a kid, I mean, it's gross and it's bad for a lot of reasons.
01:04:22.000 It's degenerate as hell.
01:04:24.000 But do you sentence the baby of incest to death?
01:04:27.000 A baby born of incest would have all kinds of health issues.
01:04:30.000 Not an argument.
01:04:31.000 I'm not saying I agree.
01:04:32.000 I just heard that as presented.
01:04:33.000 When the conservatives say rape and incest, I'm saying the incest thing has no moral argument other than icky.
01:04:38.000 There's negative consequences, dramatic negative consequences to incest.
01:04:42.000 But if we're talking about two consenting siblings, which I think is a bad thing, And they have a baby, why make an exception to kill that baby in the circumstances, irrespective of its medical conditions?
01:04:54.000 If the argument is, if the baby is suffering from severe deformity, it opens the door to it, well then we have a medical argument.
01:05:01.000 But if the issue is the baby appears to be healthy in every way, but it's an incest baby, so kill it, that doesn't make sense.
01:05:05.000 Here's my last point on this, because I know you and I like to argue this every time I come here.
01:05:10.000 It's usually on the Members Only show, but here's my last point on this, is that, you know, We we let the left throw these the same the same hypotheticals that other people bring up to the rape the incest the medical necessity We're talking about less than 1% of those abortions.
01:05:27.000 We let the left beat us on these issues with 1% Hypothetical okay, we let the left beat us on these issues.
01:05:34.000 We've got to stand strong in these we got to stop mincing words We got to lose not lose the war on language and it's the only way to do that is to call it what it is It's baby murder, and it's become normalized in the United States, and we've got to stop it I I'm actually really surprised.
01:05:44.000 A lot of people in the chat are pro-choice.
01:05:46.000 Oh, I'm sure.
01:05:47.000 I'm sure.
01:05:47.000 There's probably libertarians watching.
01:05:48.000 They're saying I'm wrong, and if a baby is conceived of incest, it should be aborted.
01:05:52.000 There should be an exception to kill it.
01:05:54.000 Yeah, well, those people are wrong.
01:05:57.000 If a baby is conceived of incest, you shouldn't kill it, right?
01:06:01.000 I don't think you should kill it.
01:06:01.000 I don't think you should kill babies at all.
01:06:04.000 I don't think I've gotten any clear.
01:06:08.000 I don't think I can be any clearer.
01:06:09.000 I don't think babies should be murdered.
01:06:10.000 I honestly think the incest question will become more prevalent over the next couple of decades because there are so many cases of sperm donors who are like, you know, you hear these cases of like fertility doctors who use their sperm and suddenly they're like, I have 500 siblings and we actually all grew up in the same state.
01:06:25.000 Like, I wonder if this will be something we confront as a society.
01:06:32.000 I think the thing that I find frustrating with the abortion issue is that I typically find a lot of people are unwilling to state their actual opinions on how to do it because there's no – it is the moral equivalent of like a gigantic spear.
01:06:48.000 There's no fence.
01:06:50.000 There's no dead man's land.
01:06:51.000 There's no middle ground.
01:06:52.000 There's no compromise.
01:06:53.000 There is either the abortion side or the no-abortion side.
01:06:56.000 And so there's a lot of people in politics... We had one guy on the show who refused to say abortion was murder.
01:07:03.000 Pro-life guy.
01:07:04.000 Because he's worried about the... Optics.
01:07:08.000 Right.
01:07:09.000 Of what it's going to be when people see him say that.
01:07:11.000 How it affects him politically.
01:07:11.000 Yeah, that's the same thing.
01:07:12.000 Listen, this is, you know, when Donald Trump came out with this kind of wishy-washy... I know, Carey Lake did it too.
01:07:17.000 Yeah, they all came out with these wishy-washy things and then all of a sudden the Republicans were like, well, it's an issue we can't win on.
01:07:22.000 And I said very clearly too, look, if you care...
01:07:26.000 I'm sorry, the chat is very adamant.
01:07:29.000 It says a lot about the culture.
01:07:31.000 Pro-life people are saying if babies are conceived of incest, they should be aborted.
01:07:35.000 Listen, listen to me.
01:07:37.000 If you're going to be wishy-washy on this issue because you think you can't win on this issue, then you don't deserve to win.
01:07:42.000 I'm sorry.
01:07:43.000 If you're running for a government position and you can't win on protecting unborn lives, Then you shouldn't win.
01:07:51.000 I'm sorry, you should lose.
01:07:51.000 I mean, it's ridiculous to me that Trump and Carrie Lake are now just saying safe, legal, and rare in a new 2024 way.
01:07:56.000 It's like they're parroting the left.
01:07:58.000 We're losing that war because we keep compromising on these issues.
01:08:03.000 This is what I think though, like, no offense to all the politicians, but like, nothing's going to fix it.
01:08:08.000 Because this has to be a cultural thing.
01:08:10.000 Because we're dealing with a cult of nihilism.
01:08:11.000 And you can't win the culture war if you mince your words and start saying the same narrative as your opponents.
01:08:16.000 Yeah.
01:08:16.000 It's not going to work.
01:08:17.000 It's going to have to come from the bottom up.
01:08:19.000 The chat's getting really mad because I'm reading, and I said, why is there an exception?
01:08:23.000 Why do conservatives have an exception for incest?
01:08:25.000 And they're all saying, Tim, you're wrong.
01:08:27.000 You're wrong about this position.
01:08:28.000 And I'm like, okay, so you're saying that babies of incest should be aborted or could be aborted?
01:08:33.000 And I'm like, no, no, we're not saying that at all.
01:08:34.000 It's like, I know not each individual is saying things, but like, overwhelmingly, people are saying, I am wrong to suggest that when, like, I've heard Ben Shapiro talk about it.
01:08:44.000 Abortion exceptions for rape and incest.
01:08:46.000 And I'm like, why incest?
01:08:48.000 Like I get it, incest is very bad.
01:08:50.000 I'm not going to make a Ben Shapiro joke, that's right.
01:08:52.000 I'm not going to make a Ben Shapiro and his sister joke, I'm not going to do it.
01:08:55.000 I do think too, outside of this, let's just move into general politics for libertarianism and otherwise, is a lot of people just want to assert a moral position they haven't thought about, or they hold moral positions without logic.
01:09:09.000 And so if, you know, I'm trying to look at a law and understand the logic behind it and why it makes sense, because two pieces have to fit together, that's important for how the Supreme Court answers things.
01:09:21.000 For example, in the oral arguments on presidential immunity, one of the things that Trump's lawyers were arguing is that you must interpret it this way, because if you don't, Here's a list of laws that will break if you change the interpretation of immunity.
01:09:39.000 And the general concept idea is arguing one facet of law or code or anything like that could have negative impacts across the board in all of the other written law.
01:09:55.000 So that's why the logic of the law makes sense and the application of it and its nuances are extremely important to break down.
01:10:03.000 But a lot of people will be like, you shouldn't be allowed to do this thing.
01:10:05.000 And I say, okay, if you ban this, then over here, this law breaks.
01:10:09.000 So like, what do you do in this instance?
01:10:11.000 And there are a lot of people who don't actually have a logic plan for this.
01:10:15.000 It's what Thomas Sowell says, though.
01:10:16.000 There's no solutions, only trade-offs.
01:10:18.000 What exemptions do we make for murder?
01:10:20.000 Self-defense?
01:10:21.000 Correct.
01:10:22.000 Defense of yourself and defense of others?
01:10:24.000 Sure.
01:10:25.000 And war.
01:10:25.000 So we should make those same exceptions for baby murder.
01:10:30.000 If you're gonna die, or you're in grave bodily danger, then there should be an exception.
01:10:35.000 If not, it's murder.
01:10:37.000 Well, that's interesting, too, because here's a scenario for you.
01:10:41.000 A guy is... How can we break this down?
01:10:46.000 A guy is driving a self-driving car.
01:10:49.000 And the car goes out of control.
01:10:52.000 Oh, actually I got a better, a real world example.
01:10:53.000 A guy was driving a car, this actually happened, and the car randomly accelerated.
01:10:59.000 There was a defect with certain vehicles where the accelerator would just punch it.
01:11:03.000 And he rear-ended a family and killed three of the family members.
01:11:06.000 They put him in prison.
01:11:08.000 Someone's driving a car and the car goes out of control.
01:11:13.000 You as a bystander are seeing the car move towards an old lady.
01:11:18.000 Do you think it is legally permissible to kill the man in the car?
01:11:23.000 The only way to stop him is to, you know, do something that will cause... This is an old argument brought up by Walter Block a long time ago, by the way.
01:11:29.000 So, the reason I'm mentioning is that you said the self-defense for the life... to defend the life of a person or... right?
01:11:36.000 To defend yourself or the life of another person.
01:11:37.000 Do you have the right to kill an innocent person to protect other people?
01:11:41.000 It's the... I mean, it's the trolley car problem, right?
01:11:43.000 It's the same... Well, I don't know... I don't think innocent person is the right word.
01:11:46.000 I'm saying If he's in a car that malfunctioned, it's an accident and he's an innocent person.
01:11:51.000 So someone accidentally drops something and it's about to kill somebody and the only way you can save the other person is to kill the person who was involved in the accident, right?
01:12:02.000 Right.
01:12:03.000 The car is out of control, he doesn't know what he's doing, he's not intentionally trying to kill someone, is it still self-defense to kill that person Even though there's no murdering?
01:12:11.000 Problems not because you're still killing an innocent person now if that if the people in the other car were my
01:12:16.000 family I'm probably gonna do it right just like you would murder
01:12:19.000 somebody to protect your family But but this is this is getting totally to the trolley car
01:12:23.000 Conundrum right like where do I have the right to kill the one person to save the five people Jack Bauer? Yeah,
01:12:30.000 exactly And no, you don't.
01:12:32.000 Morally, you don't have the right to kill an innocent person even if you think it's going to save other lives.
01:12:37.000 And now we're getting into World War II territory and the atomic bombs, which has also been an argument for a long time.
01:12:43.000 Another thing I don't agree with.
01:12:44.000 Yeah, so like, no, you don't.
01:12:46.000 You don't have the right to kill innocent people morally.
01:12:48.000 So then the exception for abortion there does not apply.
01:12:52.000 Right.
01:12:53.000 So if the baby is not intending is an innocent person not intending to kill the mother why kill the baby at that point?
01:12:59.000 You have to so so there there's first of all, there's a solution.
01:13:03.000 Okay, and the mother has to take precedence at that point.
01:13:08.000 I mean the fully formed adult and when you're like We're talking about two different things here, right?
01:13:14.000 Like one's an accident and one is unavoidable.
01:13:16.000 Someone's gonna die no matter what, right?
01:13:19.000 And you have an egg or a fetus, right?
01:13:22.000 Depending on what stage it's in.
01:13:23.000 And you have a fully formed mother with a family and all this stuff.
01:13:26.000 I mean, you have to make a sad decision at that point.
01:13:29.000 This is not an elect... And again, we're talking about less than 1% of abortions in the United States.
01:13:35.000 Right, but we're trying to answer... You're trying to hash out the moral logic of how we enforce laws.
01:13:40.000 But at that point, you have to choose.
01:13:42.000 I mean, you have to, right?
01:13:44.000 One of them's going to die or they're both going to die.
01:13:45.000 So, equal scenario, the same scenario I mentioned, a guy's car is out of control.
01:13:51.000 If he crashes, he and the woman will die.
01:13:54.000 Sure.
01:13:54.000 You can divert the car, the car will explode and only the man will die.
01:13:58.000 You say you divert the car.
01:13:59.000 I mean, you might have to, yeah.
01:14:02.000 If it's a foregone conclusion that they'll both die either way.
01:14:04.000 But there's also a chance that you go to jail for murdering an innocent person.
01:14:08.000 I mean, that's truth.
01:14:10.000 But you're trying to interact with a situation to save lives.
01:14:14.000 I get that.
01:14:15.000 And there's so many different hypotheticals that we're talking about right now.
01:14:18.000 But at the end of the day, again, I want to reiterate it, 99% of baby murders are elective.
01:14:24.000 You know what's fascinating about the trolley problem is that I just totally lost my train of thought.
01:14:30.000 I had a really great point, uh, about it.
01:14:32.000 Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:14:33.000 I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
01:14:33.000 Here we are again.
01:14:34.000 Okay.
01:14:34.000 What's fascinating about the trolley problem is most people, uh, what was it?
01:14:38.000 Most people say they would not pull the lever.
01:14:40.000 Right.
01:14:41.000 Yeah.
01:14:43.000 I don't think we actually get to the heart of the trolley problem without telling people they have legal liabilities.
01:14:47.000 Right.
01:14:48.000 I think you tell someone, a trolley is heading on a track, it will run over five people.
01:14:53.000 Yeah.
01:14:54.000 If you pull the lever, you'll save the five people and it'll run over that one person.
01:14:57.000 Right.
01:14:58.000 And you'll also go to prison for murder.
01:14:59.000 Right.
01:14:59.000 Be like, what state is this trolley in?
01:15:01.000 As of right now, I posted a poll.
01:15:02.000 The poll in the chat is, should people be allowed to abort incest babies?
01:15:05.000 39% yes, 61% no.
01:15:06.000 Let's get into the hypotheticals. I like it. Yeah, dude.
01:15:09.000 There we go. Let's bring up some more hypotheticals for sure.
01:15:11.000 Alright, let's stop talking about it.
01:15:13.000 As of right now, it's uh...
01:15:15.000 I posted a poll.
01:15:17.000 The poll in the chat is, should people be allowed to abort incest babies?
01:15:22.000 39% yes, 61% no.
01:15:24.000 We're winning, boys. We're winning.
01:15:26.000 I like it.
01:15:27.000 Look, incest is disgusting, but I think every life is a blessing.
01:15:31.000 If you're committing that kind of degeneracy, you really need to reevaluate your life anyways.
01:15:37.000 But I think this kind of breaks it down when you've got people in the chat that are saying you should be allowed to abort incest babies.
01:15:43.000 That's what I was pointing to.
01:15:44.000 I'm not saying everybody in the chat agrees.
01:15:45.000 Now it's 40 to 60.
01:15:47.000 40% now believe incest babies should be aborted.
01:15:49.000 Should be allowed to be aborted.
01:15:50.000 40 people that support baby murder, that's pretty rough.
01:15:53.000 40%.
01:15:53.000 That's what I said, 40%.
01:15:54.000 So it's actually 400 because there's 1,024 votes.
01:15:55.000 Yeah, that's unfortunate.
01:15:59.000 I think it's just a cultural thing.
01:16:00.000 It's hard to divorce people from the idea of abortion.
01:16:05.000 That's why I've been training myself to just call it human sacrifice.
01:16:09.000 I'm going to adopt that.
01:16:09.000 Because I feel like, and I say that because it happens on such a high level all the time.
01:16:13.000 There's people celebrating that the no's are winning so I'm going to word, I'm going to make a new poll that words it in a way that I can just decide what it means, like how pollsters do it.
01:16:24.000 So we're at, uh, well, here we go.
01:16:25.000 You see the, uh, the no's aren't having it.
01:16:28.000 So now we're up to 1400 votes and rising, and now, uh, no is at 64%.
01:16:32.000 There we go.
01:16:33.000 So the people who do not like abortion are now deciding to step up and hit that, that pull button.
01:16:38.000 See, now we can win on this issue.
01:16:40.000 That's why you have to have these conversations as crazy as they might be and hard for people to listen to.
01:16:44.000 You have to have these conversations.
01:16:45.000 You have to have these conversations.
01:16:46.000 Because there's a lot of people out there that that believe the same thing that I believe and if we...
01:16:50.000 You are not gonna win on this one.
01:16:51.000 We're gonna win on this issue.
01:16:52.000 Death penalty.
01:16:53.000 Dude, it's gonna happen.
01:16:54.000 Death penalty.
01:16:55.000 What's your position?
01:16:56.000 I'm not for the states handing down capital punishment like that.
01:17:01.000 Hear hear.
01:17:02.000 Yeah.
01:17:03.000 The states shouldn't have that right.
01:17:04.000 I think that they get it wrong too many times and there's an issue there.
01:17:08.000 One wrong death.
01:17:10.000 And we brought up Kamala Harris in the beginning and I really wanted to say, you know, she kept someone on death row even though she had the evidence that could have exonerated him.
01:17:18.000 And that's your vice president.
01:17:19.000 This is what I always tell people who are pro-death penalty.
01:17:21.000 I'm like, it's because, look...
01:17:23.000 that you know a lot of conservatives are are in favor the death penalty and
01:17:26.000 they'll say there are child rapists out there and we know they did it i'm like
01:17:29.000 i totally get that i totally get it the problem is it's kamala harris who's
01:17:33.000 trying to convince me of that it's it's it's like it's not it's not
01:17:37.000 my brother coming to me be like dude trust me man this guy's bad news we got
01:17:40.000 to do something about this it's kamala harris and every single
01:17:44.000 prosecution has a political element because da's don't want to lose like
01:17:49.000 There is a motivation to win that goes beyond just finding out if the person is actually guilty or innocent.
01:17:56.000 If you're making a career on whether or not someone dies, it's rough.
01:18:00.000 If you have a motivation, then that inherently kind of makes the state not Not unbiased.
01:18:09.000 Well, here, I'll tell you this.
01:18:10.000 I'm all for families getting retribution against people that have harmed their children or whatever.
01:18:14.000 So, um, you know, and then if, and then if afterwards they find that that person was not the right person, then that family member needs to take accountability for their murder of an innocent person.
01:18:25.000 You know what I mean?
01:18:26.000 But I, I am not, I'm not, I think that families that, uh, exact their own punishment or revenge against people that have harmed them, uh, should not be held liable.
01:18:35.000 If that makes sense.
01:18:36.000 I think the death penalty is a really complicated issue because if you have someone, you know, let's say it's a perfect case.
01:18:42.000 Confess, you can confirm with DNA, it's all there and then we just pay for them to be alive for decades like the taxpayers are then paying for this person's life.
01:18:49.000 And that's why I said make Australia a penal colony once again, okay?
01:18:54.000 And New Zealand can be where they manage it.
01:18:57.000 Yes, it's time to, we need to go back in and take over Australia and turn it into a penal colony.
01:19:02.000 To be fair, You look at what they did during COVID and you're like, maybe they still are.
01:19:09.000 There's a reason they went that direction.
01:19:11.000 It's in their history.
01:19:12.000 It's in their genes.
01:19:13.000 But I really actually believe this and maybe not Australia, but I believe this is what, instead of the death penalty and instead of using taxpayer funds to keep people in jail for 50 years, we should have a penal colony and be like, you're a pedophile or a murderer or a rapist or whatever.
01:19:27.000 You go live there.
01:19:27.000 Goodbye.
01:19:28.000 And that's what we should be doing.
01:19:30.000 We need our own Siberia.
01:19:31.000 Interesting.
01:19:32.000 Correct.
01:19:32.000 It's Siberia.
01:19:34.000 Somewhere preferably that cold.
01:19:36.000 I've been to Alaska, and it is very empty.
01:19:39.000 Yeah.
01:19:39.000 And there's a big opportunity for sending all of the federal employees there, because it'll start terraforming the region.
01:19:45.000 We talked about this a lot on the show.
01:19:47.000 Yeah, and the Alaskans were like, no!
01:19:48.000 And my Alaskan friend was like, please don't do that.
01:19:51.000 If you somehow win in 2024.
01:19:52.000 We already have HAARP.
01:19:53.000 We don't need any other problems.
01:19:54.000 It's hard enough here on us already.
01:19:55.000 Just let us keep our little oils tight and leave us alone.
01:19:58.000 I have successfully created a poll that allows me to give any answer I want to the abortion question.
01:20:03.000 What's your question?
01:20:04.000 Should incest babies be exempted from abortion law?
01:20:04.000 How do you say this?
01:20:06.000 Oh, jeez, nobody's gonna know how to answer that.
01:20:08.000 It's 50-50.
01:20:08.000 Yeah, everybody's like, uh, what?
01:20:10.000 What?
01:20:11.000 Well, the point is, the abortion law is a vague, it's a nebulous statement.
01:20:14.000 It's meaningless.
01:20:15.000 The abortion law could be for or against abortion.
01:20:19.000 We've done an hour on abortion now.
01:20:20.000 It's at 54 to no, they should not be exempted from it.
01:20:23.000 I'm happy that we've done an hour on abortion, you know why?
01:20:25.000 Because we get to talk about it.
01:20:26.000 It's actually been 16 minutes.
01:20:28.000 Has it only been 16 weeks?
01:20:29.000 We started talking about abortion?
01:20:31.000 No way.
01:20:32.000 I have a timer.
01:20:32.000 You have an abortion timer?
01:20:36.000 I have a timer for when segments start and end.
01:20:39.000 Oh, smart.
01:20:40.000 We track them, write them down, that's how we make the segments.
01:20:41.000 We actually shifted into a death penalty segment.
01:20:43.000 All these trade secrets to me.
01:20:44.000 I'm not compromising.
01:20:45.000 And we're actually, we actually shifted into a death penalty segment.
01:20:48.000 Yeah, we did shift into the death penalty.
01:20:49.000 That's true.
01:20:50.000 That's true, yeah.
01:20:52.000 If you're going to be pro-life, you've got to be pro-life, right?
01:20:54.000 Across the board.
01:20:55.000 Whenever somebody's like, oh, I'm pro-life, I'm like, are you anti-war?
01:20:58.000 And they're like, no.
01:20:59.000 I'm like, I'm pro-life, but I love bombs and war.
01:21:03.000 I like bombs and innocent dead children across the world.
01:21:07.000 Children everywhere else.
01:21:08.000 It's whatever.
01:21:09.000 No big deal.
01:21:10.000 Not for me.
01:21:12.000 Anti-war, anti-death penalty.
01:21:13.000 But I'm all for a penal colony, for sure.
01:21:16.000 We've got to talk about the solar flare.
01:21:19.000 We've got ten minutes for Super Chats and we haven't even got into the fact that the world's going to end tonight and we're laughing like morons.
01:21:25.000 There are already significantly impressive pictures of auroras hitting Twitter.
01:21:32.000 They're all over the place.
01:21:33.000 We can see them outside right now.
01:21:34.000 They might be so strong that you can see them through the clouds.
01:21:35.000 So what are these Shane?
01:21:36.000 Really you might be they might be so strong that you can see them through the clouds space really
01:21:40.000 So what are these Shane tell me well harp is?
01:21:43.000 Attacking me directly I think You're a little narcissistic!
01:21:47.000 It's about you. Yeah, that's posted. Oh, yeah every day.
01:21:50.000 Yeah, not stop that guy that guy makes great pizzas. Um Okay, cannibal is the word of the year has anyone noticed
01:21:56.000 this like it's funny to me that the solar problem is now the cannibal
01:21:59.000 Thing we had we had the cannibal got the barbecue in Haiti.
01:22:03.000 We had That one actor like a year or two ago who was a cannibal
01:22:07.000 supposedly When I was in Vegas a man ate someone's face at the 7-eleven
01:22:12.000 down the road. I'll bath salt. Yeah, I don't even know I think he was just hungry.
01:22:16.000 I don't know if it was bath salts.
01:22:18.000 And now the sun's a cannibal.
01:22:20.000 Let me tell you, I know.
01:22:21.000 My Costco bill went from $800 a month to about $1,200 a month.
01:22:23.000 But that's because you have like a baseball team.
01:22:25.000 Yeah, but can you imagine inflation on a family like mine right now?
01:22:28.000 It's killing us.
01:22:29.000 I don't know what's going on with this.
01:22:32.000 It's crazy, because it could do some damage, but it might just be another eclipse.
01:22:37.000 We're just a couple of months out from an election, okay?
01:22:40.000 They need some kind of wild thing to point to, right?
01:22:44.000 Look, we're laughing at the COVID regime now, right?
01:22:46.000 We're all laughing at it.
01:22:47.000 We're like, we're definitely not falling for this again.
01:22:49.000 So the Netspec thing is turn off all the internet.
01:22:52.000 Well, they've been talking about the internet apocalypse for a year and they've been connecting it to solar flares,
01:22:57.000 which I don't think I from what I've heard from other people who hit me up
01:22:59.000 about this That's not really the case with solar flares. It might
01:23:02.000 actually take out ham radios first Yeah, but that's according to people who say they know
01:23:05.000 stuff take your in Hey, if you've got it if you got like ham radios and stuff
01:23:12.000 just can just can disconnect your antennas So that way they're not you know
01:23:16.000 Here's the crazy antennas are antennas and wires and cables and stuff or what actually can conduct the electricity and
01:23:22.000 stuff So you have a radio runs on the same technology as 5g
01:23:27.000 It was like the original 5G.
01:23:30.000 Are you sure though?
01:23:32.000 Yeah, pretty sure.
01:23:33.000 Because I'm pretty sure 5G is a super high frequency.
01:23:37.000 Well, ham is a low frequency.
01:23:38.000 I thought ham was low and 5G is high.
01:23:40.000 Ham is UHF and VHF, which are varying ultra-high frequencies.
01:23:47.000 Yeah, 5G frequencies are super compact to contain a lot of data.
01:23:53.000 Don't quote me, but I'm pretty sure that they have a very similar technology.
01:23:56.000 Welcome to Science Fridays on IRL!
01:24:00.000 Mystery Science Theater.
01:24:01.000 They're all just, they're all actually the same technology except for the... It's all the same.
01:24:05.000 Especially when you don't understand it.
01:24:06.000 It's just rebranded.
01:24:07.000 It's all magic.
01:24:08.000 It's just rebranded magnetic waves, you know?
01:24:09.000 And then Harry Potter just shoots around in the air.
01:24:12.000 So, uh, Ham Radio is 1.6 MHz to 1240 MHz.
01:24:12.000 So, Ham Radio is 1.6 MHz to 1240 MHz.
01:24:21.000 5G is 450 MHz to 6 GHz.
01:24:26.000 It goes higher.
01:24:27.000 We can go back to harp frying the ionosphere.
01:24:29.000 But there's an overlap.
01:24:31.000 With its hertz, with its frequencies.
01:24:33.000 And I think, I just think harp is a problem.
01:24:35.000 I think when you play God with machines.
01:24:38.000 What is harp?
01:24:38.000 What is it?
01:24:39.000 It's bouncing radio waves off the ionosphere?
01:24:42.000 Yeah, which does, I think, and I've talked to people who believe this as well, who know things, Hannah Clare.
01:24:49.000 about uh, about cryptochromes. Cryptochromes in birds eyes, migratory birds eyes, they've been affected by problems
01:24:56.000 I think personally that HAARP is messing with that, like look at um, messing with the clouds in Dubai what happened.
01:24:56.000 with their ionosphere.
01:25:03.000 I think when you play God, it doesn't go well.
01:25:05.000 Oh that's wild.
01:25:06.000 It doesn't go well.
01:25:07.000 So, so this is like, there's a bunch of news stories saying it's debunked, but Dubai did a cloud seeding operation,
01:25:13.000 which they do normally.
01:25:15.000 It's, what is it, potassium chloride or something?
01:25:17.000 They drop in the sky, which basically adds weight to the water molecules and then they fall.
01:25:23.000 And then they had mass flooding.
01:25:24.000 And I think it was Bloomberg that reported Cloud seeding contributes to the mass flooding, causing a disaster.
01:25:32.000 And then a day later, all these corporate press outlets are like, no, no, debunked, didn't happen.
01:25:38.000 Shills for big cloud.
01:25:40.000 If you know anything about big cloud, there's Shills.
01:25:42.000 But I won't get started on that.
01:25:43.000 But I'm just saying, when you mess around with stuff like this, and it's just interesting to me that they called it harp, which angels in the Bible don't play the harp.
01:25:49.000 But people do associate angels with harps, probably because Greek mythology and a lot of those types of angelic figures were playing harps.
01:25:55.000 They shouldn't be messing around with Dionysphere.
01:25:56.000 I don't know if that's crazy or the particle.
01:25:59.000 Dude, don't get me started on CERN.
01:26:01.000 If you want to hear more about this, Inverted World Live will be this Sunday.
01:26:05.000 These are the things that concern me.
01:26:07.000 These are the things that concern me.
01:26:08.000 I would love to come talk about that stuff.
01:26:10.000 Because it's all messing, I think.
01:26:12.000 There were actual lawsuits about CERN.
01:26:14.000 There was a whole conspiracy theory that the world ended in 2012 and we're all living in purgatory right now.
01:26:22.000 That's why the whole thing is different.
01:26:23.000 That's why they're having the Mandela effect.
01:26:26.000 Last time CERN was supposedly blasting particles, Shinzo Abe was assassinated and that same week the Guidestones were blown up.
01:26:34.000 That is also wild, too.
01:26:36.000 The Guidestones blew up.
01:26:37.000 Did they rebuild those?
01:26:38.000 Well, I did talk to the guy who collected the debris from the Guidestones, and he was weird.
01:26:43.000 Like, why would you want—he was putting them in his museum.
01:26:45.000 He wants to rebuild them, but everyone in that area doesn't want to rebuild them, because everyone in that area—most of the locals believe that they're bad, because they're eugenicist propaganda.
01:26:55.000 And nobody really knows who made them, who paid for them.
01:26:57.000 Yeah, well, it depends who you talk to.
01:26:58.000 No, I mean, there's an official, like, There's the R.C.
01:27:02.000 Christian guy, which is a pseudonym, supposedly.
01:27:05.000 The argument is, at the height of the Cold War, there was a fear that we'd wipe ourselves out in nuclear annihilation.
01:27:10.000 So they created the Guidestones in the event humanity got blown up.
01:27:13.000 However, that doesn't happen.
01:27:14.000 People look back on them, and they look at it now as a plan to enact, as opposed... So it's either... Sorry, that just doesn't sound as cool, Tim.
01:27:23.000 We're gonna have to go with the original conspiracy theory that it was a plan.
01:27:26.000 No, that's actually the later conspiracy.
01:27:28.000 Originally it was, hey, we might all die in a nuclear annihilation, here's how you restart the Earth.
01:27:34.000 And the crazy thing is it's got like, didn't it have, I say it's got, it's gone, didn't it have like a thing to track the sun's position?
01:27:40.000 Yeah, it had a hole in it.
01:27:41.000 And it had like math and stuff on it.
01:27:42.000 Yeah, all the different languages, and then there was a time capsule supposedly, but all the police told me there was no time capsule and they dug it up after they bulldozed it.
01:27:50.000 The languages thing is really important because of the Rosetta Stone, for instance.
01:27:54.000 Yes.
01:27:54.000 We're like, basically, we don't know what the Egyptians were saying.
01:27:56.000 It's a picture of a snake seven times.
01:27:57.000 Right.
01:27:58.000 And then we find the Rosetta Stone and we're like, yo, we can translate Greek to Egyptian now.
01:28:01.000 Suppose there's a replica in Japan still.
01:28:03.000 I don't know.
01:28:03.000 Of the Guidestones?
01:28:04.000 That's what I've been hearing.
01:28:05.000 I haven't seen the images.
01:28:07.000 But it's interesting to me that Shinzo Abe was taken out around the same time.
01:28:10.000 I'm the Charlie Day meme with the guy and all the things connecting.
01:28:10.000 But that's just me.
01:28:14.000 That's my brain.
01:28:15.000 But I don't think we should be messing with that stuff.
01:28:17.000 The photos of the storm, it's already crazy.
01:28:19.000 And it's wild because it's red.
01:28:21.000 I went to Alaska in December and right when we landed in Fairbanks, right when we got out of the airport, we looked up and I was like, oh hey, look at that!
01:28:28.000 And it was minus 30.
01:28:30.000 So I've got icicles forming all over my face.
01:28:33.000 And the rental car key didn't work because it was frozen.
01:28:37.000 And so Allison is like, get a picture, get a picture!
01:28:39.000 And I'm like, I'm going to turn the car on and worry about it.
01:28:43.000 And then as soon as the car turned on, it just, it was gone.
01:28:46.000 And then we didn't see it again.
01:28:48.000 We had a negative 30 day in Iowa this last year.
01:28:48.000 Yeah.
01:28:51.000 It's fun.
01:28:52.000 We deal with a pretty cold winter.
01:28:54.000 Negative 30, it's great.
01:28:56.000 You get icicles forming on your eyelashes.
01:28:58.000 Your mustache freezes the second you walk outside.
01:29:00.000 Every single time.
01:29:01.000 Does not sound fun.
01:29:03.000 So I don't know if they're saying this is going to be as big as the Carrington event?
01:29:07.000 Which means we might see substations blow up?
01:29:09.000 Yeah, that was... I mean, that's what we were talking about today on the Culture War.
01:29:14.000 There were two dudes that have survival states and stuff.
01:29:19.000 And, I mean, look, I don't know for sure, but it is something that people are talking about.
01:29:24.000 Like, Normies, quote-unquote, are talking about it, so...
01:29:27.000 They've been peppering it into the corporate press for a year now, which I think is why a lot of people are talking about it.
01:29:31.000 But then we had Suspicious Observers, Space Weather Man, Ben on Culture War, where he talked about the Earth turning upside down.
01:29:37.000 He's been following this.
01:29:38.000 According to him, he follows this stuff very closely.
01:29:40.000 He thinks there's a 10% chance of, like, that kind of thing happening.
01:29:43.000 Like, really bad stuff.
01:29:44.000 What if the shadow campaign is this?
01:29:48.000 The reason why they don't care about Joe Biden, the reason why they don't care about Trump, the reason why they don't care about the polls, is that what really happens is the grid gets knocked out for a month, and then we, it's like, October 27th, and then there's a massive geostorm hits, and this is the primer.
01:30:03.000 So it's like, this happens, then, you know, like, in September they say, we're forecasting another major solar storm to hit the earth, it's gonna, it could be as bad as the Carrington event, we all saw this happen, everyone get ready, October 27th, boom, Communications go down and we're all sitting around going, what's going on?
01:30:21.000 And then the power's out until like November 20th.
01:30:24.000 And then we wake up and they're like, Kamala Harris is president.
01:30:27.000 What did the evil people learn about the last few years is that we use the internet to subvert their narrative.
01:30:33.000 Yeah.
01:30:34.000 And now they want to take that from us.
01:30:35.000 That's true.
01:30:36.000 We did use, I mean, the way that we've been trying to get our language back has been through the internet.
01:30:41.000 100%.
01:30:41.000 Exactly.
01:30:41.000 And people found that language.
01:30:43.000 And there's a lot of people who don't agree with the power class who have a language now that could subvert them, and they don't want us to do that.
01:30:49.000 And whether you love them or hate them, Elon helped give us some of that back, too, on Twitter.
01:30:53.000 Shout out to that.
01:30:53.000 Yeah.
01:30:54.000 If communications got knocked out, That's how it used to be.
01:30:58.000 It used to be that you'd go to vote, and then, like, two months after the election, or maybe like a month, a pony rider, you know, brought up the paper, and they were like, oh, that's who won.
01:31:08.000 Last month, they swore him in, huh?
01:31:10.000 Dude, I just been up here farming.
01:31:11.000 If the power goes out again, Hillary Clinton could go to Harlem and pull out hot sauce from her purse and not get in trouble and ragged about it like she did last time.
01:31:17.000 That's right.
01:31:18.000 Because she can just go and be whatever that area needs her to be.
01:31:20.000 But let's be serious.
01:31:21.000 Think about this.
01:31:22.000 If the communications did go down, And you Google nothing worked.
01:31:28.000 Internet was knocked out.
01:31:29.000 It would jam up the economy real bad, something fierce.
01:31:32.000 It would really shuffle up the economy.
01:31:36.000 But let's be real.
01:31:37.000 When the grid comes back on and they come out and say Kamala Harris is president, or Joe Biden, There's going to be no argument.
01:31:45.000 Right now... No more doubt.
01:31:47.000 Well, it's because people can go back and be like, how come on this day, during the election, CNN ran these numbers, but then these numbers.
01:31:53.000 How come these people were seen on video, in a viral video, being blocked from viewing the counting process?
01:31:59.000 They get rid of all of the surveillance footage.
01:32:01.000 They get rid of all of the questionable footage of people who can't see in, the windows are being boarded up.
01:32:08.000 And then all they can say is, most secure election we've ever had.
01:32:11.000 And you're good.
01:32:13.000 If the grid went down, they could literally just go, all right, everybody, election's off.
01:32:18.000 We're just gonna say Biden won, done.
01:32:20.000 And no one can prove otherwise because all evidence has been destroyed by the solar flare.
01:32:24.000 What if that backfires on them and actually causes widespread maximum distrust?
01:32:29.000 It will.
01:32:29.000 And then people, on a massive scale, reject anything they're told.
01:32:34.000 It'd be worse than massive distrust.
01:32:35.000 Then how about this?
01:32:37.000 What if the grid goes down for four months?
01:32:39.000 I think it's disturbing.
01:32:40.000 What is it?
01:32:41.000 21 days for a routine or something?
01:32:42.000 Most people realign themselves to the new economic order when the communication grid goes down.
01:32:42.000 Yeah.
01:32:48.000 And then when it finally comes back up, no one's asking who the president is.
01:32:51.000 They're asking, what do I got to do today to get my loaf of bread?
01:32:54.000 Yeah, the president might be useless at that point.
01:32:57.000 He's just so international to them.
01:32:58.000 You're just making arguments to get on propane, first of all.
01:33:02.000 Second of all, start stocking food, start storing food.
01:33:02.000 Yeah.
01:33:05.000 If you're not prepping by now, I'm sorry.
01:33:09.000 Yeah, it's time to start prepping.
01:33:09.000 For sure.
01:33:10.000 It's been time to start prepping for a while.
01:33:12.000 We were talking today, if you go to FEMA's website, a lot of people don't like to think about doing prepping stuff because they're like, oh, it makes me weird and let's show on.
01:33:12.000 Especially if you've got kids on.
01:33:22.000 History Channel and blah blah blah and they feel like they're weirdos or whatever, but if you go to FEMA's website That is you know the Federal Emergency Management Agency or whatever like they have a list of stuff And that's what the government recommends.
01:33:34.000 That's not like weirdo outside of you know crazy person stuff It's just the stuff the government recommends, and if you do that you're ahead of the game.
01:33:44.000 You're significantly ahead of the game This is a really easy campaign promise for me if you vote for me.
01:33:48.000 I won't cyber attack you You say that now, but what if you really don't like us once they talk to you?
01:33:53.000 I'm sorry, Joshua, as candidate for president, have you been checked for brain worms?
01:33:56.000 I have not, no.
01:33:57.000 But my wife is very big into the anti-parasite stuff, so I'm sure if I had them, I would know by now.
01:34:03.000 She would let me know.
01:34:04.000 We're going to go to Super Chats, so if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends, and become a member at TimCast.com.
01:34:13.000 We don't do the members-only shows on Fridays, but we will read your Super Chats now.
01:34:17.000 TokenBlackGuy with the first one saying, howdy people!
01:34:20.000 No Clint today, just TokenBlackGuy.
01:34:22.000 He takes the first super chat.
01:34:25.000 Let's see, what does it say?
01:34:27.000 It's always hard to tell if it's an M, R, or an N. If it's an R and an N next to each other.
01:34:30.000 So I think it's Loomis.
01:34:32.000 Hey Tim, been watching you for years.
01:34:34.000 My sister just had twins and I'm wanting to fly out to meet them, but cannot afford it.
01:34:37.000 My Venmo is Samjda.
01:34:39.000 Good luck, sir.
01:34:41.000 Maybe someone superchatted money to be sent to a random person.
01:34:44.000 So I guess that's a thing that's happening now.
01:34:46.000 Wow.
01:34:48.000 All right, Owen Frechette says, I think he's meaning to say, could you give a shout out?
01:34:53.000 To my brilliant and beautiful wife, Molly McGuire.
01:34:55.000 It's her first Mother's Day and I just want her to know how much I love and appreciate everything she does for our daughter.
01:35:01.000 That's adorable.
01:35:02.000 Mother's Day is Sunday.
01:35:04.000 If you have a mom or a wife, maybe you should do something about that.
01:35:07.000 The only day I'll be home in the next two and a half weeks.
01:35:10.000 Wow.
01:35:11.000 Well-planned.
01:35:11.000 Good.
01:35:12.000 Thank God!
01:35:13.000 Love you, babe!
01:35:16.000 I'll see you Sunday. David Doerr says, Tim, you were absolutely right about prisons on the culture
01:35:20.000 war this morning. As a former guest of the state, I can corroborate. Most would leave,
01:35:25.000 but prisons are extremely secure and they have vehicles, weapons, fuel, and food.
01:35:28.000 So we were talking about prepping and I said, in the event of a collapse,
01:35:33.000 prisons become fort marauder.
01:35:36.000 Well, sure.
01:35:37.000 They're going to open up everything, and then they're going to use that as a fortification, because as hard as it is to get out, it's hard to get in.
01:35:44.000 And so they're going to have weapons, they're going to have vehicles, they're going to have resources, and they're going to go marauding, and then they're going to come back and store everything in this fortress.
01:35:52.000 I believe that, yeah.
01:35:53.000 Definitely.
01:35:53.000 Definitely.
01:35:54.000 I've also watched The Walking Dead.
01:35:55.000 I was going to say, I was thinking what zombie movie did they do that in?
01:35:58.000 Yeah, Walking Dead.
01:35:59.000 There are ideas that I have that I'm not going to say because it's a T.O.S.
01:36:03.000 Just thinking that, dude.
01:36:04.000 I'm bugging out to Appalachia, for sure.
01:36:06.000 You've got to keep zombies close to the chest.
01:36:08.000 Got a lot of water, you've got rivers, you've got wells, and it's mountainous and easy to defend.
01:36:08.000 This is the place for me.
01:36:13.000 It's like our own little Afghanistan.
01:36:15.000 That's right, it is.
01:36:17.000 All right, Brian Egon says, howdy people.
01:36:20.000 Tim, I award this $100 to the Super Chatter of your choice.
01:36:24.000 A sort of pay it forward if you like.
01:36:26.000 Have fun.
01:36:27.000 Oh, man.
01:36:27.000 They're doing some cool things in your chats there, dude.
01:36:30.000 Yeah, I paid a couple people's rent this week.
01:36:32.000 Oh, that's really nice.
01:36:33.000 That's awesome.
01:36:34.000 And so, uh...
01:36:37.000 So we do have one person who wants to fly to see his sister, who just had twins.
01:36:41.000 Twins!
01:36:43.000 That's so many nieces and or nephews.
01:36:45.000 Maybe that will be the $100 that someone is gifting.
01:36:49.000 EpicGamer says, not a coffee drinker, but cast brew coffee is good.
01:36:52.000 Can't wait for cast brew tea.
01:36:54.000 If you ever make it, make sure you do loose leaf and CTC, not just tea bags.
01:36:58.000 As for flavors, consider Ceylon and Earl Grey.
01:37:01.000 Go back to Britain.
01:37:02.000 Hey.
01:37:03.000 Hey.
01:37:03.000 I like tea.
01:37:04.000 Earl Grey.
01:37:06.000 I vote Earl Grey.
01:37:07.000 I vote coffee, man.
01:37:08.000 I'm a coffee guy.
01:37:09.000 I drink a lot of coffee.
01:37:10.000 Drinking Earl Grey right now.
01:37:11.000 You got 7k?
01:37:13.000 Russell W. says, Hi Tim.
01:37:14.000 Today my HVAC failed in my workshop.
01:37:16.000 I'm a small ring maker.
01:37:17.000 Can't run machinery till I can afford to fix it.
01:37:20.000 Gets over 100 degrees without it.
01:37:21.000 Anything helps.
01:37:22.000 Love the show.
01:37:23.000 And then he lists his Venmo, Russell Warner.
01:37:27.000 What's more important?
01:37:27.000 I don't know.
01:37:28.000 Visiting your newborn twin niece and nephew or having your workshop be able to be worked in?
01:37:34.000 What size is his HVAC?
01:37:35.000 Where does he live?
01:37:36.000 I do HVAC.
01:37:37.000 I can come fix him.
01:37:39.000 You want to return to the hypotheticals about abortion or should we just decide people's fates in Super Chat?
01:37:46.000 Rainmaker is cool, though.
01:37:47.000 There used to be a guy who would Super Chat into Pop Culture Crisis all the time who was like a goldsmith in, I think, Texas.
01:37:54.000 I feel like careers where you make actual things are very cool.
01:37:57.000 Yeah, and there's fewer and fewer people that do that, too.
01:38:00.000 I knew a guy who – because I grew up in New England, probably you knew guys who do this,
01:38:03.000 but who knew how to stack the stones to make those iconic stone walls. And his son had very
01:38:10.000 serious addiction problems. He was raising his grandson, and he died before his grandson was
01:38:13.000 very old. So that trade that he had learned from his grandfather, who had learned it from his
01:38:16.000 grandfather, just completely went away with him.
01:38:18.000 When I still live in Oakland, I started my own handyman business, and I did Laugh and
01:38:23.000 Plaster. And I come to find out that everybody who was good at Laugh and Plaster was dead.
01:38:28.000 Thank you so much, and absolutely not!
01:38:29.000 I was getting calls like every day because there's tons of lath and plaster in the city.
01:38:33.000 And old houses too if you know how to do it.
01:38:36.000 So they were calling me in to do lath and plaster all the time.
01:38:38.000 I was making money hand over fist.
01:38:40.000 Yeah, it was good.
01:38:41.000 Alright, Beavis McLean says, Phil the new single Divine is awesome.
01:38:44.000 The vocals and drums are just next level.
01:38:46.000 Keep up the great work.
01:38:47.000 Phil's never going to get tired of this.
01:38:48.000 I hope to catch all that remains in Megadeth on the road this summer.
01:38:51.000 Thank you so much.
01:38:52.000 Absolutely not.
01:38:53.000 Why on earth?
01:38:54.000 Are you kidding?
01:38:55.000 Dude, I'm going to drive to Minneapolis to see you.
01:38:57.000 I don't want to hear it.
01:38:58.000 It is such a massive, massive compliment.
01:39:00.000 You guys are coming to Iowa.
01:39:00.000 I'm so, so appreciative of every single... Phil hates Iowa.
01:39:03.000 Phil hates Iowans.
01:39:05.000 Listen, I don't do the booking man.
01:39:06.000 I know, I know.
01:39:07.000 I love Slipknot.
01:39:08.000 I want to put that on the record.
01:39:09.000 Yeah, everybody in Des Moines has a story twice removed from Corey Taylor or Slipknot.
01:39:14.000 Every single person.
01:39:15.000 That's because he still lives up there.
01:39:16.000 Dude, I know somebody who saw him running down the street naked at 3 o'clock in the morning once.
01:39:19.000 That doesn't surprise me at all.
01:39:21.000 Wow.
01:39:22.000 I feel bad for Alicia sometimes.
01:39:23.000 time. All right, Pimms the Great says, Howdy Tim and crew, I threw my shoulder out a couple
01:39:28.000 weeks ago, tilling my garden. Doc said I need to avoid doing it again. Have a give send
01:39:33.000 to go for a small tractor. Look up Pim the Tractor. I don't know, I think the guy's workshop
01:39:37.000 is the current leader. Yeah. That's what my gut is, just because he's got to take care
01:39:43.000 It's a toss-up for him and the twins.
01:39:45.000 I get seeing the twins, but it's unfortunately not your kids, and this guy's got to work.
01:39:49.000 I'd love a new tractor, too, buddy.
01:39:51.000 I think we all would, for sure.
01:39:53.000 We're looking into getting some guy, he races his lawnmower.
01:39:53.000 It's tough.
01:39:57.000 We're going to get him a wrap, because we got Cody Dennison's ARCA racer, NASCAR, wrapped Tim Kast's car.
01:40:04.000 And so someone super chatted, like, I race lawnmowers.
01:40:07.000 You want to wrap it?
01:40:08.000 I was like, yes, we do.
01:40:09.000 Nice.
01:40:09.000 We're just supporting American culture everywhere there is.
01:40:12.000 I saw that you guys did that on the NASCAR rap.
01:40:14.000 That was really cool.
01:40:15.000 That was a pretty cool thing.
01:40:15.000 My mom watches NASCAR.
01:40:17.000 I don't, but my mom does for sure.
01:40:20.000 All right.
01:40:21.000 Rodney says, my brother almost died from quitting alcohol.
01:40:23.000 He is home now, but they drained 13 to 15 gallons of fluid from his body.
01:40:27.000 His girlfriend set up a GoFundMe to help with the bills and calling all neighbors in the friendly neighborhood.
01:40:32.000 Anything can help them right now.
01:40:33.000 Oh, wow.
01:40:34.000 Does that beat the guy who needs his air conditioning fixed?
01:40:38.000 It might, dude.
01:40:39.000 It's pretty tough.
01:40:40.000 I mean, can you do a poll and make them decide?
01:40:42.000 I don't want to decide this.
01:40:45.000 You should make the chat decide.
01:40:46.000 It's always a question of, like, do you support a lot to one person or, like, do you give small amounts to several people?
01:40:51.000 Wait, this guy went through all this after being a heavy drinker?
01:40:55.000 Yeah.
01:40:56.000 Is that what it said?
01:41:01.000 That's a tough one.
01:41:03.000 Oh, it's a GoFundMe, though.
01:41:06.000 That makes it tough.
01:41:08.000 Oof.
01:41:08.000 Yeah.
01:41:09.000 Yeah, we like give, send, go here.
01:41:11.000 GoFundMe is super woke and they ban good people who need real help and so, you know, I don't want to hold that against you though.
01:41:17.000 But maybe.
01:41:18.000 Maybe.
01:41:20.000 Alright, we'll grab some more super chats.
01:41:22.000 Right now it's basically like a shark tank of need.
01:41:24.000 Yeah.
01:41:24.000 You know what I mean?
01:41:25.000 Yeah.
01:41:25.000 Wow.
01:41:26.000 Uh, TokenBlackEye says, hey Tim, here's 10 bucks to pass forward to a lucky Super Chatter for pizza.
01:41:30.000 Also, Phil, can I get a yeah?
01:41:32.000 Yeah!
01:41:33.000 Yeah!
01:41:34.000 So it's up to 110 now to give to a person in need.
01:41:37.000 Look at that, that's super cool.
01:41:40.000 Operation Outstanding in field, says Shane.
01:41:42.000 Drew here.
01:41:43.000 For your show, would you like to have me on and talk about my coma fever dream hours after getting diagnosed with GBS?
01:41:50.000 It's the stuff of nightmares and life survival.
01:41:52.000 Exactly.
01:41:52.000 That's exactly what we want to hear about.
01:41:54.000 Hit me up.
01:41:54.000 Coma dreams are crazy.
01:41:56.000 Oh, if it's the Drew, I think it is.
01:41:57.000 Yeah.
01:41:58.000 Definitely.
01:41:58.000 Definitely hit me up, dude.
01:41:59.000 You were in a coma?
01:42:00.000 No, I wasn't.
01:42:01.000 One of my step grandparents was and he came out of it talking about it.
01:42:04.000 Oh, yeah.
01:42:05.000 In a coma?
01:42:05.000 Really?
01:42:06.000 For like, for like a long period, right?
01:42:08.000 Holy shit, dude.
01:42:09.000 Glad you made it.
01:42:10.000 Yeah.
01:42:11.000 Yeah, his story is actually pretty wild.
01:42:12.000 He got knocked into a coma.
01:42:14.000 And then he was like on a roller coaster into this weird city where a
01:42:19.000 small monkey creature rode the thing back up into his body and then was running around
01:42:24.000 doing flips and stuff and jumping over cars. This was in your coma you saw? Yeah no no no the the
01:42:28.000 monkey entity took over his body and woke up and then he was in this weird coma world where he
01:42:33.000 had to take over Chris Kattan's dead body.
01:42:35.000 I love that movie. Yes.
01:42:37.000 us. We don't say that. Does anybody... Where are we going now?
01:42:40.000 does anyone know you're going there i just haven't heard i couldn't think
01:42:43.000 christmas money from him dude it's a job that's right i know it was a real
01:42:46.000 but i never get brandon fraser and chris chris katan he takes over the dead
01:42:50.000 olympic uh... this time that movies are so good That was a good movie.
01:42:54.000 That was a cheesy good movie.
01:42:56.000 Right, right.
01:42:57.000 Cheesy, but we enjoy it for its badness.
01:42:59.000 Have you seen the movie John Travolta that came out not too long ago that's directed by Fred Durtz from... I heard about it.
01:43:05.000 Is this like the action movie or whatever?
01:43:07.000 No, he's like a stalker.
01:43:09.000 He's like an autistic stalker and he's stalking like a famous actor.
01:43:13.000 And the famous actor is... what's the guy from Idle Hands and Little Giants and... Devin Sawa.
01:43:20.000 It's like so cheesy, but it was really really good money.
01:43:22.000 You should check it out.
01:43:23.000 I can't remember the name of it.
01:43:24.000 Fred Durst, huh?
01:43:25.000 Fred Durst is the record.
01:43:26.000 He's back.
01:43:27.000 That's why I said I'm running as president.
01:43:29.000 And I promised to make him... Fred Durst is a registered member of the Libertarian Party.
01:43:32.000 Is he really?
01:43:32.000 I want him to be the poet laureate of the country.
01:43:35.000 So if you become president, could you hit him up?
01:43:37.000 The newest Limp Bizkit record is great.
01:43:39.000 Dad Vibes.
01:43:40.000 It's awesome.
01:43:41.000 It's called Dad Vibes?
01:43:41.000 It's a great record.
01:43:42.000 I'm pretty sure.
01:43:43.000 I know there's a song called Dad Vibes.
01:43:44.000 I'm not sure how I'd recommend it.
01:43:45.000 Are you saying it's pro-family?
01:43:47.000 Are you saying it's pro-natalist?
01:43:48.000 The last song on that record is actually better than most, like, 90s pop music as well.
01:43:53.000 I was born in 1983.
01:43:54.000 I proudly went to Limp Bizkit concerts, and they were insane.
01:43:59.000 Absolutely insane.
01:43:59.000 I mean, and also, sorry, I know we don't want to talk about Limp Bizkit forever, but they also are part of Family Values.
01:44:03.000 Yes.
01:44:04.000 So there is a family theme here.
01:44:06.000 Yeah, yeah, I like it.
01:44:08.000 So we just got a super chat from the Bearded Fatsman says, watch the show every night.
01:44:11.000 Diagnosed with leukemia last month.
01:44:13.000 Self-employed and struggling with business and medical bills.
01:44:15.000 Everything helps.
01:44:16.000 Give, send, go.
01:44:17.000 Kyle's fight against leukemia.
01:44:19.000 That's the one we got to help there.
01:44:19.000 That's the guy.
01:44:20.000 Leukemia is rough.
01:44:21.000 It's a tough one.
01:44:22.000 God bless you, man.
01:44:22.000 Good luck.
01:44:23.000 Sorry.
01:44:24.000 Whoa, really?
01:44:26.000 That's terrible.
01:44:28.000 Oh, there's a there's actually a whole bunch call of GoFundMe's titled that.
01:44:33.000 Oh, well, no.
01:44:34.000 Yeah.
01:44:35.000 This is tough.
01:44:37.000 Is it up to you, Tim, to decide this at the end?
01:44:39.000 It's up to everybody.
01:44:41.000 I think the chat should decide.
01:44:43.000 I don't like having to decide.
01:44:45.000 Are we going to get questions at all in there?
01:44:48.000 Are we going to talk about any questions?
01:44:50.000 Phil, we should get the money.
01:44:51.000 I don't know that I can actually find this, my friend.
01:44:54.000 Don't put me in charge of that stuff.
01:44:57.000 Yeah, I searched for that title and it didn't come up.
01:45:00.000 Kyle's Fight Against Leukemia Give Send Go.
01:45:05.000 Not finding it.
01:45:07.000 Let me try a broader search.
01:45:10.000 Drag.
01:45:12.000 Yeah.
01:45:13.000 But in the meantime, yeah, there's a little kid.
01:45:17.000 Oh, man.
01:45:19.000 Now I gotta give this kid money.
01:45:20.000 Yeah.
01:45:20.000 Well, he's over his goal, actually.
01:45:22.000 Oh, wait, no, he's about to hit his goal.
01:45:23.000 Okay, I gotta give this kid money.
01:45:26.000 This is just some little kid.
01:45:27.000 Helping people peripherally now.
01:45:29.000 Yeah, no, I just searched and this is a little kid.
01:45:30.000 He's got leukemia.
01:45:31.000 Yeah.
01:45:32.000 What is this?
01:45:33.000 Oh, man.
01:45:34.000 Four years old!
01:45:35.000 Oh, jeez.
01:45:36.000 Terrible.
01:45:36.000 All right, he needs a couple grand.
01:45:39.000 Maybe we should just, like, scroll through Loot Keeper or Gives & Go all the time.
01:45:43.000 Be like, support you, this one.
01:45:45.000 Yeah.
01:45:46.000 You can pull it up and put it, like, in the super chat.
01:45:49.000 Do you think people prioritize charitable giving enough?
01:45:52.000 Or do you think, especially in economically hard times, people sort of...
01:45:56.000 I think charitable giving has been outsourced to the government.
01:46:00.000 There's a social safety net, there's taxes, so charitable giving does not exist for people that are not religious.
01:46:11.000 I think they've seen that in studies.
01:46:13.000 I'm not sure.
01:46:13.000 I've heard that as our community sort of fell apart, one of the first things to go was charitable giving.
01:46:17.000 And it's actually something that people talk about in relation to women staying at home, because typically in Indiana University had the School of Philanthropy did a study on this.
01:46:27.000 Women tend to be the people who decide the charitable giving.
01:46:30.000 Like if you have a family budget, you're like, well, this is where these things are going.
01:46:34.000 And so as we focus more on work all the time and Individualize ourselves these structures that we have that would have normally been the ones be like, okay Now we got to make a decision about who we're helping they fell apart.
01:46:44.000 It's also aid isn't their charity They asked you for charity everywhere now like you check out at Petco or supermarket.
01:46:51.000 They want an extra 10 cents No, my favorite thing was someone filmed a video where they went to a grocery store and it was self checkout only and the self-checkout asked for a tip after No, for real.
01:47:03.000 Yeah, it was like 5, 10, 20 percent.
01:47:05.000 And they were like, who am I tipping?
01:47:07.000 America's the only culture that does this.
01:47:09.000 I would have stole a bag of chips just on principle.
01:47:11.000 Man!
01:47:11.000 We're the only culture that does this.
01:47:15.000 I'm taking some Reese's Penises and I'm getting out of here.
01:47:18.000 I'm not anti-tipping, but it's gotten to a point.
01:47:21.000 There was a female comedian who said that like she doesn't like tipping especially when you're like at a coffee shop
01:47:26.000 and like you're doing most of herself like you're paying.
01:47:28.000 She's like I work here now you pay me like that's how I feel about the self check out at the grocery store. You
01:47:33.000 should get a discount because you're now an employee.
01:47:36.000 I always like when they ask you if the amount is okay I'm like can I negotiate?
01:47:39.000 Is this up for a discussion?
01:47:41.000 Yeah is this amount okay?
01:47:42.000 Yeah I don't like it.
01:47:43.000 Not really.
01:47:44.000 Brad Marklin says Tim please state what cut off you'd be okay banning.
01:47:49.000 There are some who have even considered partial and post-birth abortion.
01:47:52.000 No time for a full cut-off.
01:47:54.000 I don't know what you mean.
01:47:55.000 He's asking where you think the cut-off should be for abortion.
01:47:58.000 Well, I said this last night on the Members Only Show.
01:48:00.000 The solution is actually really simple.
01:48:02.000 When the woman goes into an abortion clinic, Holy crap!
01:48:06.000 She signs the paperwork and you're like, are you sure this is what you want to do?
01:48:08.000 She says, yes.
01:48:09.000 Say right this way.
01:48:09.000 You sit, you lay her down.
01:48:11.000 Then you administer anesthetic, which will keep her in a medically
01:48:15.000 induced coma for nine months.
01:48:16.000 And then when she wakes up, you just say procedures done.
01:48:20.000 I'm kidding.
01:48:20.000 Holy crap.
01:48:21.000 Her family doesn't wonder where she went.
01:48:23.000 That's pretty base, Tim.
01:48:24.000 I'm not gonna lie, dude.
01:48:26.000 That's what was going on in that brainwashing camp in Canada.
01:48:29.000 Put you in a coma for a year.
01:48:33.000 There is no easy answer for the abortion question, like I was saying before.
01:48:37.000 It's a spear.
01:48:39.000 There's no battleground.
01:48:40.000 There's no fence.
01:48:42.000 You cannot stand in the middle.
01:48:43.000 It doesn't exist.
01:48:44.000 So I think ultimately what it comes down to is the 14th Amendment says that a person can't be deprived of life without due process.
01:48:51.000 And I believe that human beings are persons.
01:48:54.000 There's no legal distinction and there's no logical or scientific distinction between a baby gestated at eight and a half months and a baby gestated at eight and a half months that was born.
01:49:03.000 They're the exact same level of development.
01:49:06.000 And so I've asked this of every pro-choice person, they can't give me an answer, what is the legal distinction between two babies that were conceived at the exact same moment, they're both gestated to eight and a half months, and then one woman goes into an early labor, they deliver the baby.
01:49:21.000 The moment that baby touches air, it's now got due process rights, but because it hasn't touched air it has no due process rights, it doesn't make sense.
01:49:27.000 So what's the logic and the law for that?
01:49:29.000 I think whether anyone wants to accept it or not, and whether my opinion matters, it doesn't, a Supreme Court ruling on the 14th Amendment would be, abortions require a judge's sign-off.
01:49:42.000 Now whether or not you want to say, with medical exemptions, and for contraception, whatever, it doesn't matter, a judge still has to sign off on it.
01:49:50.000 Because a person has due process rights.
01:49:52.000 And that being said, ultimately what I think that turns into is, abortion's over.
01:49:59.000 Because judges won't sign off on it.
01:50:01.000 But this means all, in like almost every circumstance.
01:50:03.000 The judge would sign off on issues where the mother's life is in jeopardy and things like that.
01:50:08.000 There would be emergency hearings.
01:50:11.000 Those already exist.
01:50:12.000 A lot of pro-abortion people are like, well then what if a woman's in a serious medical emergency and they need to act now and they can't?
01:50:18.000 It's like, yeah, they already have courts for this where A judge can be contacted in moments.
01:50:23.000 We're talking minutes to an hour or whatever.
01:50:26.000 So I don't think that's the issue.
01:50:30.000 Seamus Coghlan brings up a good point.
01:50:32.000 When the left says there will be back alley abortions, he goes, yeah, of course.
01:50:36.000 And there will be very few of them, and there will be overwhelmingly no abortions.
01:50:40.000 And that's the thing.
01:50:41.000 Murder and robbery and theft, these things are dangerous.
01:50:44.000 And they're supposed to be dangerous, right?
01:50:46.000 So like, yeah, there's gonna be back alley abortions, and people can die from back alley abortions.
01:50:51.000 And, good!
01:50:52.000 I mean, at the end of the day, it should be dangerous to commit murder.
01:50:56.000 I don't want them to die.
01:50:57.000 I don't want them to die, but it should be dangerous.
01:50:59.000 Work on your messaging, because someone will take that right away and be like, oh, people will die?
01:51:03.000 Good!
01:51:03.000 Well, there you go!
01:51:04.000 It should be dangerous to commit murder.
01:51:06.000 Just say and work on the messaging.
01:51:06.000 It should be.
01:51:08.000 Hal Gailey says, a baby conceived in rape is not a second assault on the woman, it's a second victim of the rape.
01:51:13.000 Make that POV, the prevailing one, fix the premise.
01:51:17.000 And I understand this, too.
01:51:18.000 The argument from the right on this one is that the attack on the woman is not the rape, it's the rape and the entire duration of the pregnancy to which the baby has to be born.
01:51:28.000 So, in that argument, it's, I'm sorry this happened to you, ma'am, but the pregnancy already happened to you.
01:51:35.000 That's the point.
01:51:37.000 That's where you have the conservative argument on saying no exceptions for rape.
01:51:42.000 And we don't.
01:51:42.000 And we're not in the business of punishing the innocent children of criminals.
01:51:47.000 With death.
01:51:47.000 Right.
01:51:49.000 Brad Markland says, No, you're right, Tim.
01:51:49.000 All right.
01:51:51.000 Incest shouldn't count, but birth defects from it, or if it's rape, should count.
01:51:56.000 Incest babies are still alive.
01:51:58.000 So this person, I believe, says there should be an exception for rape.
01:52:04.000 Cain Abel says, pro-life conservative, Tim, no babies should be murdered.
01:52:08.000 It is not the baby's fault for the sins of the father or both mother and the father.
01:52:13.000 Those are my people there.
01:52:14.000 What we do is we take the baby out, we put it in a bag, where they grow the goats, and they grow a person.
01:52:20.000 And then the baby is... They are working on an artificial womb.
01:52:24.000 The moment you get an artificial womb, abortion's illegal.
01:52:29.000 The problem right now with the logic of Democrats is, When RFK Jr.
01:52:35.000 says, even if it's full term, it's like, why kill it?
01:52:39.000 Right.
01:52:40.000 If a woman wants to end the pregnancy or needs to end the pregnancy, why kill the baby?
01:52:43.000 Yep.
01:52:44.000 I've never gotten a real answer.
01:52:46.000 That's why I keep saying human sacrifice.
01:52:47.000 It's like they fetishize the violence of it.
01:52:50.000 Like when there's ways to protect it.
01:52:52.000 It's a murder cult.
01:52:53.000 Yeah.
01:52:53.000 It stems out of this nihilism.
01:52:55.000 When they're coming out of the abortion clinics, handing the pictures of their unborn baby to pro-life people saying, that's the baby I'm going to murder.
01:53:02.000 It's a murder cult.
01:53:03.000 It's a murder cult.
01:53:03.000 Yeah.
01:53:04.000 Holm Brian says, I thought incest was illegal for medical reasons.
01:53:07.000 No.
01:53:07.000 In fact, in some states it is legal.
01:53:09.000 New York, I believe you're legally allowed to gay marry your cousin.
01:53:13.000 Yeah.
01:53:14.000 In New York?
01:53:15.000 Yeah, New York State allows it.
01:53:16.000 Can you straight marry your cousin?
01:53:18.000 Yes.
01:53:18.000 New York is such a weird state.
01:53:21.000 So New York is a state where you can marry your cousin and get gay married, which means you can gay marry your cousin.
01:53:29.000 There's already a meme of me calling Clint Russell, Kurt Russell tonight.
01:53:33.000 Thanks a lot to Dan Smoth.
01:53:35.000 I don't think you're getting his endorsement, you know?
01:53:38.000 No, listen, we were calling him Kurt Russell in Georgia.
01:53:41.000 So that's why I said that.
01:53:44.000 They were calling him Kurt Russell McCarthy because he was doing the Inquisition about COVID stuff to Jacob Hornberger.
01:53:50.000 Richard Slammer says, Tim, by definition incest is non-consensual.
01:53:55.000 It's a form of rape a parent forces on a child that some people argue to normalize it by so-called brosis consent.
01:54:02.000 Almost never happens.
01:54:03.000 A straw man.
01:54:04.000 That's not the point.
01:54:05.000 The point is the term legally incest refers to familial sex.
01:54:08.000 It could be brothers and sisters.
01:54:11.000 But what if it's a forty-year-old parent with a twenty You're old.
01:54:18.000 That's degenerate.
01:54:19.000 Disgusting.
01:54:20.000 Penal colony.
01:54:21.000 So, arrest?
01:54:23.000 No.
01:54:24.000 I don't know.
01:54:25.000 Well, there's an argument for... That's degeneracy.
01:54:27.000 They definitely need to leave a polite society.
01:54:30.000 Are there blasphemy laws in your libertarian presidency?
01:54:34.000 Not to go too crazy, but it's something I think about a lot.
01:54:38.000 In my perfect world, sure.
01:54:40.000 But can those exist in this country?
01:54:42.000 I don't think so.
01:54:43.000 I don't think they could.
01:54:44.000 We're built on it.
01:54:46.000 I believe that we were built as a Christian nation with the right to freedom of religion, right?
01:54:51.000 And free will.
01:54:52.000 And free will, yeah.
01:54:53.000 So like 70% of the population of the United States today calls themselves some type of denomination of Christian, right now.
01:55:01.000 And I'm sure that the founding was meant to be more Christian than that, but it's written into our founding documents that we have freedom of religion.
01:55:10.000 70% of people will say they're Christian.
01:55:12.000 I don't think that 70% of... They're not practicing.
01:55:16.000 Only 40% of us have ever read the Bible.
01:55:17.000 They're as Christian as Biden is.
01:55:19.000 Yeah, I think that it's... and I think that they're actually not even... they don't even behave like Christians anymore, though.
01:55:26.000 No, what they mean is, my parents got me baptized, we went to church a couple times when I was a kid, so I'm gonna say this.
01:55:30.000 Christian in name only.
01:55:31.000 Right.
01:55:33.000 It's very different.
01:55:33.000 And I think this is interesting because I think you'll see people who turn to religion as one of these segments in culture.
01:55:41.000 You'll have a lot of people – atheism was one of the – atheism and agnosticism were the two – one of the two fastest growing religions.
01:55:49.000 I think the Pew Research Center has a poll on this and people are always like, oh, this That's crazy.
01:55:53.000 But is it actually crazy?
01:55:54.000 Because I think this is the culture we're in.
01:55:56.000 They don't want you to be any religion at all.
01:55:59.000 They don't want you to be Christian in America because that's too close to what the founding fathers wanted.
01:56:02.000 But on top of that, they want you to believe in nothing and not have families and to be alone and to be completely self-absorbed.
01:56:09.000 I am agnostic, and I don't have... this isn't a spiritual thing that I'm talking about, but the left wants you to be anti-christian.
01:56:17.000 Well, they don't want you to have any community.
01:56:20.000 No, they want you to be anti-christian.
01:56:22.000 The project that the left does is all anti-family, anti-christian.
01:56:29.000 There were times when Marx would call himself the Antichrist.
01:56:32.000 The whole left is about tearing down the things that people consider Quote-unquote good, and we get our conception of good from the Judeo-Christian... There's no such thing.
01:56:47.000 Whatever.
01:56:48.000 You know what I'm talking about?
01:56:50.000 I don't want to fight about freaking Israel every time.
01:56:53.000 Like, Jesus Christ, you people are autistic.
01:56:55.000 But the point is... It's the Communist playbook.
01:56:59.000 The point is they want to tear down all of the things that Western society is built on.
01:57:05.000 All of the things that make our society work.
01:57:07.000 If you need any proof of that, just look at the Communist Revolution in Russia where they actually had to excommunicate and kill the Orthodox Christians.
01:57:14.000 It's part of the playbook, man.
01:57:16.000 We're up to 235 and people have super chatted saying, you know, give it to someone else.
01:57:21.000 There is this dude, AltoNative, said he lives in his car and he needs new tires, needs the help, but he did not link a Venmo or GoFundMe or anything like that.
01:57:28.000 Bummer.
01:57:29.000 Did you see that story about the homeless woman who's been living on the roof of a building like behind their sign for over a year?
01:57:36.000 No.
01:57:36.000 She had like a computer up there.
01:57:38.000 She had some appliances.
01:57:39.000 Isn't there a term now for that kind of thing?
01:57:41.000 They call it frogging where people are living secretly in a place.
01:57:46.000 But also sometimes I think frogging is like Specific to residential. Okay. I don't know if maybe cannot
01:57:52.000 be applied commercially Did you ever see the the home video of that the there was
01:57:56.000 that family that lived in an apartment?
01:57:57.000 And there was like this space above their front door like randomly it had like a kind of like a door on it
01:58:02.000 And then and then they put in a camera because they kept hearing noises and stuff and there was someone
01:58:06.000 I saw a video where someone was complaining about noises at night and
01:58:16.000 They would like it got bad where they called the police a couple times the police came in
01:58:19.000 Looked around and couldn't find anything So they installed a camera and then they actually saw
01:58:23.000 someone crawl out of the ceiling into their Into the kitchen and started taking food and then crawled
01:58:29.000 back up The show that I was watching, again it's called Froggy,
01:58:32.000 You know, every episode there's like a couple stories and this one mom was like, yeah, like I noticed a lot of sodas were going missing, but I had a bunch of teenagers.
01:58:38.000 And she was saying one night she had a young daughter who was like spending the night in her bed, you know, had bedroom or whatever.
01:58:43.000 And at one point she woke up and she's like, mom, there's a man standing in the closet.
01:58:46.000 And it turned out the closet had one of those things where you like push up and get to the attic.
01:58:50.000 He had been living there for like a long, long time.
01:58:56.000 1600 square foot basement, okay, it's the same it's the same size as our house It's a ranch level and then the basement the same exact size and there's like all kinds of nooks and crannies and there's like four different Rooms down there and then there's a part that's unfinished and that's where I my podcast studio And there's several doors that enter into there too and every night you check them every night.
01:59:14.000 I go down there.
01:59:14.000 I'll do it on the same way through everything the same way.
01:59:16.000 Yeah, I check every nook and cranny every night. You never know
01:59:19.000 obviously Every night see this is why women should live with men. Yes
01:59:25.000 There's a reason why.
01:59:26.000 A bear would never do that for you!
01:59:26.000 Will a bear do that?
01:59:32.000 There are a couple crazy stories.
01:59:33.000 I mean, I highly recommend this TV show, but again, I can only watch like two episodes at a time.
01:59:36.000 It makes me like, you know, I moved into a new apartment and like every once in a while, here's something I'll be like, who lived here before me?
01:59:42.000 I'm already paranoid.
01:59:43.000 I don't need a TV show to make it worse.
01:59:44.000 I regret to inform women that after two weeks of living with them, the bear has returned to men, in case you were wondering.
01:59:52.000 So I couldn't find, uh, I searched GiveSendToGo for leukemia, Kyle leukemia, I couldn't find it.
01:59:57.000 It's not there.
01:59:57.000 Dang, that sucks.
01:59:58.000 I did give some other kid who was four years old and had leukemia a couple grand, so.
02:00:02.000 Oh, that's good.
02:00:03.000 Yeah, that was brutal.
02:00:04.000 And that was from a few months ago, so their family's gonna see it, and hopefully, you know, it'll help them out, because they said nuts, the surgeries and everything.
02:00:09.000 But, um, I think the guy who needs to fix his AC is currently winning.
02:00:13.000 I'd like to help the guys living in his car, but he didn't give us a Venmo or anything.
02:00:17.000 So the guy who's trying to work hard because he wants to get his workshop up and running seems to make a lot of sense.
02:00:22.000 This is really cool, man.
02:00:22.000 When did you start doing this, Tim?
02:00:24.000 Well, I just abruptly paid someone's rent.
02:00:26.000 On like Monday.
02:00:27.000 And then people started asking more and more, and so I just started paying other people's rent.
02:00:30.000 That's really cool, man.
02:00:30.000 That's a really cool thing.
02:00:31.000 That's awesome.
02:00:33.000 But then some people are like, Tim, stop.
02:00:34.000 Now everyone's just posting and begging.
02:00:35.000 And I'm like, I mean, People are just doing it.
02:00:39.000 I never said I was going to give him money, but I guess you do, and then people are like, if he is, you know what I mean?
02:00:43.000 Yeah.
02:00:44.000 No, I get it.
02:00:45.000 Things are really bad.
02:00:46.000 Like, I've traveled this country so much, and it's everywhere.
02:00:48.000 Here we go.
02:00:49.000 Fix your air conditioning, guy.
02:00:50.000 Here's $235.
02:00:51.000 Sick.
02:00:52.000 Damn.
02:00:52.000 Nice.
02:00:53.000 Yeah, I've been talking to, like, taxi drivers, and people in the hotels, and teachers, small business owners.
02:00:58.000 Dude, people are not doing well.
02:00:59.000 Yeah, everyone's crushed.
02:00:59.000 I'm telling you right now, it's going to be worse than 2008.
02:01:01.000 It's coming.
02:01:02.000 Bad crash.
02:01:03.000 Bad.
02:01:03.000 The worst.
02:01:04.000 It feels like something is brewing.
02:01:05.000 It's coming bad.
02:01:06.000 Really bad, yeah.
02:01:07.000 You take a look at the Fed's losses, the unrealized losses, their balance sheet, it's just like negative to insane, it's nuts.
02:01:17.000 Horrible.
02:01:17.000 Yeah, House of Cards is an understatement.
02:01:20.000 Alright everybody, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, head over to TimCast.com, click join us, become a member, because that's how we fund the show, and you get access to the Discord server where you can hang out.
02:01:31.000 There's going to be an after show, but only in the Discord server, and it's the members that put it on.
02:01:35.000 So definitely check that out.
02:01:36.000 You can follow me at TimCast on X and Instagram.
02:01:39.000 Follow the show at TimCast IRL everywhere, as well as Rumble.
02:01:42.000 Joshua, do you want to shout anything out?
02:01:44.000 Yeah, follow me on Twitter.
02:01:45.000 I'm at war with all the other blue checks there.
02:01:46.000 It's at Joshua at large.
02:01:48.000 And of course, go check out the campaign website at joshuasmith2024.com.
02:01:52.000 We got two weeks till the nomination.
02:01:54.000 Two weeks.
02:01:55.000 And we set a goal to raise 10 grand.
02:01:56.000 So if you could throw a couple bucks, we'd appreciate it.
02:01:58.000 What's the YouTube channel for Sunday?
02:02:00.000 Tales from the Inverted World.
02:02:02.000 What time?
02:02:02.000 It will be at 6 o'clock Eastern Time and you will be there and we're going to have call-ins.
02:02:07.000 We have already a bunch of people lined up to tell us stories.
02:02:10.000 We'll go through some news items about some weird stuff that's going on in the world and it's going to be a lot of fun.
02:02:15.000 I can't wait.
02:02:15.000 Subscribe everybody!
02:02:16.000 Go to Tales From The Inverted World on YouTube.
02:02:18.000 Subscribe now.
02:02:19.000 Anything else you want to shout out?
02:02:20.000 I want to come on the show.
02:02:21.000 Yeah, you should definitely come on the show.
02:02:23.000 Everybody has been asking to come on, like who works here, because literally everybody.
02:02:28.000 They're like, This is so much fun stuff to talk about.
02:02:31.000 Aliens, ghosts, murder mysteries.
02:02:33.000 Yeah, thank you to everyone who sent me messages.
02:02:35.000 I've had so much fun reading all these messages.
02:02:38.000 If you have one, hit me up at shanecashman at scanner.com, s-c-n-r dot com.
02:02:43.000 I'm taking submissions there.
02:02:44.000 Also on X, wherever.
02:02:46.000 I'm going through them all.
02:02:46.000 I'll hit you up.
02:02:47.000 I'll send you a link.
02:02:47.000 You can be a caller on the show.
02:02:49.000 We're still tweaking out.
02:02:50.000 Please have Aiden from the Lore Lodge on your show too.
02:02:52.000 I was just thinking about those guys.
02:02:53.000 Yeah, the Lore Lodge is what's up.
02:02:55.000 So I got a lot of people lined up and it's going to be a lot of fun.
02:02:57.000 I'm stoked.
02:02:59.000 I am PhilThatRemains on Twix.
02:03:00.000 I'm PhilThatRemainsOfficial on Instagram.
02:03:02.000 The band is All That Remains.
02:03:04.000 You can catch us this summer on the Destroy All Enemies Tour with Megadeth and Mudvayne starting August 2nd going through September 28th or something like that.
02:03:16.000 The new single from All That Remains is out now.
02:03:19.000 It's called Divine.
02:03:20.000 It's available on Spotify, Apple Music, Pandora, Deezer, Amazon Music, YouTube, you know, the internet.
02:03:27.000 Hank, real quick, I just want to stress, I think it's been up for about a week now.
02:03:31.000 You've got like 600k on YouTube, and anybody who follows their favorite bands, that's massive.
02:03:37.000 It's crazy.
02:03:39.000 It's amazing.
02:03:40.000 It's a super big deal.
02:03:41.000 I really, really appreciate all the people that have Has spun it just because like we've been gone for six years.
02:03:47.000 We haven't put out new music because we had a bunch of stuff.
02:03:49.000 So when one of our guys passed away, COVID, when another guy had a kid and a bunch of other business stuff.
02:03:55.000 So like the fact that so many people have been spending our stuff and showing so much support, I really appreciate the heck out of it.
02:04:00.000 Thank you so much.
02:04:01.000 It's been wonderful and I can't wait to see you guys on the road.
02:04:04.000 Hannah Clare!
02:04:04.000 I think it's going to be a cool summer for you, Phil.
02:04:06.000 I'm excited for your tour.
02:04:07.000 Cheers.
02:04:07.000 It's been fun to be here with everybody.
02:04:09.000 I'm Hannah-Claire Brimelow.
02:04:10.000 I'm a writer for scnr.com.
02:04:11.000 That's Scanner News.
02:04:12.000 You can follow all of Scanner's work at TimCastNews on Instagram and Twitter.
02:04:16.000 If you want to follow me personally, I'm on Twitter at HannahClaireBee, and I'm on Instagram at HannahClaire.Bee.
02:04:21.000 Bye, Serge!
02:04:23.000 Bye, guys.
02:04:23.000 Have a good weekend.
02:04:24.000 Cheers.
02:04:24.000 Thanks for hanging out.