On today's show, we discuss the Biden White House considering blanket pardons for the likes of Dr. Michael Fauci, Liz Cheney, and Adam Schiff. We also discuss the UnitedHealth CEO being assassinated in Manhattan, and why this is a big deal.
00:00:20.000to no one, it is being now is now being reported by Politico that Biden's White House is preparing, or I should say, having the preliminary discussions about blanket pardons for the likes of Dr. Fauci, Liz Cheney, Adam Schiff.
00:01:22.000And then, of course, man, UnitedHealth CEO, the biggest health insurance company in the United States, the CEO is assassinated this morning in midtown Manhattan, and the video has gone viral.
00:01:37.000But this looks like a professional hit.
00:01:40.000And once you start looking at what the gun people are saying about how the how the assassin was like manually chambering rounds, they're like, that guy knew what he was doing.
00:01:47.000So we'll talk about all that stuff, but before we get started, my friends, head over to CastBrew.com.
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00:01:59.000So if you're watching live right now, get your discount, CastBrew, while you still can.
00:02:04.000And I'm going to be honest, this is not an ad play.
00:02:06.000Like, literally, they put the date in wrong when they were programming the discount, and then messaged me on Monday being like, we accidentally made the discount Wednesday instead of Monday.
00:03:57.000I run a small channel on YouTube where I cover crime, culture, and politics with concise, light-order commentary on the tragic status that is today's reality, and I'm very excited to be here, so I'm glad you guys got me on.
00:04:08.000I'm always really excited when we have YouTubers on because they know the rules, and I'm like, this is what YouTube bans you for, and this is what they don't.
00:04:52.000It says, Biden White House is discussing preemptive pardons for those in Trump's crosshairs.
00:04:57.000The nomination of Kash Patel, who has vowed to pursue Trump's critics as FBI director, has heightened concerns within the president's inner circle.
00:05:06.000They say Biden's aides are deeply concerned about a range of current and former officials who could find themselves facing inquiries and even indictments.
00:05:12.000A sense of alarm which has only accelerated since Trump's last weekend announcement, last weekend announced the appointment of Kash Patel, based, to lead the FBI. Patel has publicly vowed to pursue Trump's critics.
00:05:23.000Yes, but not because they're his critics.
00:05:25.000He's going to pursue them for being criminals, and it just so happens that criminals don't want to be held accountable, so they criticize the person who wants to hold them accountable.
00:05:35.000They go on to add that White House officials are carefully weighing the extraordinary step of handing out blanket pardons to those who've committed no crimes.
00:05:50.000Ladies and gentlemen, I'd like now to give you an example of why you watch this show and why we hate, hate the corporate press and the fake news, the corporate media.
00:05:57.000They go on to say, those who could face exposure included such members of Congress, January 6th Committee as Senator-elect Adam Schiff, They sat to UP rep Liz Cheney of Wyoming, former rep.
00:06:08.000Trump had previously said Cheney should go to jail along with the rest of the unselect committee.
00:06:11.000Also mentioned by Biden's aides for a pardon is Anthony Fauci, the former head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, who became a lightning rod for criticism from the right during the COVID pandemic.
00:06:25.000Politico says, who've committed no crimes?
00:06:27.000Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Newsweek.com on their X account from September 9th, 2021. Newly released grant proposals indicate the National Institutes of Health funded controversial gain of function research appearing to contradict what Dr. Anthony Fauci had said previously.
00:07:07.000Dr. Fauci testified under oath before the United States Senate that the National Institute of Health had not funded gain-of-function research in the Wuhan Institute of Virology, yet a report by Project Veritas proves that Dr. Fauci did in fact fund research in Wuhan, China, and several sites across the United States.
00:07:27.000Dr. Anthony Fauci has repeatedly lied to Congress and the American people throughout the entire COVID-19 pandemic.
00:07:34.000Let me then just jump back to Newsweek.
00:07:36.000Fauci was untruthful to Congress about Wuhan lab research.
00:08:48.000They're in the Congressional Register.
00:08:49.000It was so egregious that Seamus and I... Actually ad libbed this comedy bit that he has on us Freedom Tunes channel where we were talking about it's this viral video where Rand Paul is saying, Dr. Fauci, did you fund gain of function research?
00:09:08.000And he's like, we did not fund gain of function research.
00:09:11.000And then Rand Paul's like, I have here a document from the NIH with your name on it saying gain of function research like, nope.
00:09:19.000It was a viral moment everybody saw happen, and nothing came of it.
00:09:24.000It basically was like they asked him, did you do gain of function?
00:09:27.000And he said, no, we did all the things.
00:09:39.000Which is, when saying no, is the lie, basically.
00:09:43.000He could have said, if he didn't say no, if he just said, we did this, and he rephrased it and refused to answer, but if he actually said to...
00:09:55.000Where the, I don't know if the guy's name is, the character is like holding the picture and he's like, he's like, so this is you, Dr. Fauci.
00:12:30.000And then it's delegated down to the, you know, the DNI, to your DOD, your people in charge of the DOD, you know, the people at state, the people at, you know...
00:12:40.000All of these cabinets exist so that way the president doesn't have to be involved in the day-to-day operations of every single administration, all of the different bureaucracies.
00:12:52.000So when you're dealing with—that's why cabinet-level administration matters, like who is in charge of— That's why it matters that Kennedy is nominated to be in charge of the Health and Human Services.
00:13:19.000And then how it gets executed is largely up to whoever's in charge of the particular bureaucracy.
00:13:26.000One of the big challenges, too, for Trump in his first term was he trusted the experts.
00:13:31.000They'd go to him and say, look, you know, Trump's sitting there thinking, look, I've got to negotiate this deal pertaining to the Red Sea and this trade route.
00:13:38.000I don't know what's going on with that health stuff.
00:13:53.000I can't say it's all executive branch's fault, because remember, Fauci's Trump's guy, and he kind of just let him do whatever he wanted, even though he disagreed with it publicly.
00:14:02.000Trump made a very big mistake of thinking that he could be president.
00:14:07.000When he ran, they accused him of being a traitor, and he thought...
00:14:12.000Once I win, I'm going to go in and say, okay, guys, look, I'm the president now.
00:14:17.000And the deep state had other intentions.
00:14:19.000They said, no, you don't understand how this works.
00:14:21.000Trump thought he was going to play ball.
00:14:22.000He was going to bring in some of these cabinet picks for some of the uniparty establishment, but he was not the player they wanted.
00:14:49.000He's gotten no tolerance for the shenanigans.
00:14:51.000I think that that's a big part of why so many of the people that have been flouted for nomination or brought up for nomination, why there's so much pushback.
00:15:03.000Because these people are a threat to the established order.
00:15:11.000I'm sorry, at Health and Human Services, that's going to make a big difference, right?
00:15:17.000If you get Tulsi Gabbard as the DNI, that's going to make a big difference in the way that the U.S., Looks at intelligence gathering and looks at who is going to be scrutinized by the intelligence services.
00:15:33.000You know, if you do get Kash Patel in at the FBI, the way that the FBI behaves is going to be significantly different.
00:15:42.000And I mean, I don't know, I don't have any kind of information, any inside information, but I imagine that these people...
00:15:50.000If they do get their job, there will be significant changes in the upper management of these bureaucracies because there are people in the bureaucracies that are going to work against the desires of the administration.
00:16:05.000That's what Peter Stroke was doing at the FBI. He and I forget the woman's name.
00:16:12.000Actively working against the president, actively working against what the president had had stated he wanted.
00:16:19.000So you have to make you have to do more than just change the people that are the heads of the agencies.
00:16:25.000You have to get people that are the heads of these bureaucracies.
00:16:29.000The cabinet level, the people that are Secretary of State or whatever.
00:16:35.000You have to get people that are willing to go in there and get rid of the people that are going to inhibit the job that the president wants done.
00:16:46.000As the president, he has the authority to say this is how we are going to execute the daily business of this country, right?
00:16:53.000The executive is supposed to execute the laws that are passed by Congress.
00:16:58.000As the executive, he gets discretion as to say this is how we're going to do it and these are the things that we're going to focus on.
00:17:05.000So he needs to have a cabinet that is aligned with his desires and is also empowered to fire people or at least remove the people that remove people that are going to inhibit the administration's stated desires.
00:17:25.000And that's the reason that the president got elected is because the American people want that.
00:17:31.000So your Congress people are supposed to pass laws that reflect the desires of of the different different different jurisdictions.
00:17:40.000So your your your congressperson is supposed to be the person that's going to go ahead and pass laws for that that are going to represent the or they're going to vote in ways that represent your you know, your your area or whatever.
00:17:52.000But the president, by being elected by the whole country, you know, ostensibly, he's supposed to execute the desires of the American people when it comes to the way that the administration operates.
00:18:05.000And you need to have people in these positions at state, at HUD, at HHS, at DOT, at all these cabinet-level bureaucracies.
00:18:18.000You have to have people that are going to actually do the things that the president wants.
00:18:41.000Even when bad guys die, I'm unhappy, okay?
00:18:44.000But, you know, look, here in this country...
00:18:46.000You know, there are people who like to joke online about righteous retribution and the death penalty and all that stuff.
00:18:51.000And I think, okay, fine, I understand your anger when it comes to war, terror, conflict, crisis, evil people, but we should always look at death as a bad thing.
00:18:59.000And the reason I say that is we're going to get into the story and everything.
00:19:02.000But the first thing I want to point out is that you've got liberals and leftists all across blue sky and on X cheering for and advocating for more of this under the idea that the CEO himself is responsible for the death of people.
00:19:16.000And what really pisses me off is they're communists.
00:19:19.000Their worldview is if I get sick and you don't help me, it's your fault.
00:19:24.000And I'm like, dude, if you get sick, I understand, like, if you pay for something and don't get it, you're being ripped off.
00:19:29.000But you getting sick at the fault of some business guy.
00:19:47.000CNN says, UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was shot and killed in Midtown Manhattan Wednesday morning in a brazen targeted attack as he walked toward the hotel hosting the company's annual investor conference.
00:19:57.000Shortly before 7am, a gunman masked in the freezing temperatures was lying in wait before opening fire on Thompson outside the Hilton Midtown, according to NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch.
00:20:09.000Many people passed the suspect, but he appeared to wait for his intended target.
00:21:06.000It's intentional because he's a hit man.
00:21:09.000So, the speculation right now is one of two things.
00:21:13.000Big CEO, there was some scandal pertaining to a ransomware hack.
00:21:17.000They lost like a billion dollars in this ransomware thing.
00:21:20.000Some people think it's related to that and a hitman got called and he made a move on this guy.
00:21:25.000Others think it may be related to any one of the millions of people who feel wronged by a loved one who was not given their proper medical treatment coverage and may have gotten ill or died or become crippled.
00:21:37.000So a lot of people are saying, I bet it was a dad whose daughter got sick and they denied coverage and then he got revenge.
00:21:42.000And I'm like, dude, this is a professional.
00:21:45.000Well, the actual, like what you're saying about the way that the guy operated the firearm and stuff, it is likely that it was, if I understand correctly, the police report said that there were 9mm casings and a couple 9mm rounds.
00:21:59.000So that would lead me to believe that they were undercharged, subsonic.
00:22:05.000So you would have to rack it because it wouldn't have enough energy to actually work the action.
00:22:09.000The guy looks like he knows what he's doing.
00:22:12.000Whether or not he's actually been in, you know, whether he's a professional hitman or just a guy that's familiar with firearms, I can't say.
00:22:20.000And I wouldn't make the assumption either way.
00:22:25.000But he definitely knows what he's doing.
00:22:27.000He's definitely very familiar with firearms.
00:22:31.000A lot of people are saying subsonic rounds don't have the power to cycle that kind of weapon.
00:22:35.000I have heard people say that the right suppressor could do it, but, you know, I don't know.
00:22:41.000At any rate, he had a bike, like, across the street, so it was all perfectly premeditated, and there's still a manhunt underway, so that's why I think it's important to, you know, discuss this story especially, because if you're in New York, however, very clearly I think it was a hit.
00:22:57.000I'm seeing a lot of comments where they're like, dude, this guy's in Colombia already.
00:23:13.000I'm saying this is what people are assuming.
00:23:15.000Well, they know he got on a city bike and someone that was just scraping the data constantly was able to track where he went somewhere where there's no cameras.
00:23:26.000We actually, I believe we have the tweet in question.
00:23:30.000So this guy, he's going to be blocked, by the way.
00:23:32.000He says, I'm fairly confident of where the UnitedHealthcare assassin escaped to.
00:23:36.000He escaped on an electric city bike, according to police.
00:23:38.000I happen to continuously scrape city bike data every minute so I can see where the individual bikes go.
00:23:42.000The only northbound city bike, he says, the only northbound city bike to leave within 10 minutes of the shooting from any dock near the hotel went to Madison Avenue and 82nd Street.
00:24:23.000Natalie F. Nanolition on X says, Blue Sky is allowing threats of violence on its platform from none other than Taylor Lorenz.
00:24:31.000So a big story broke where Blue Cross Blue Shield will no longer cover anesthesia for the full length of certain surgeries in Connecticut, and she responded by posting the CEO of Blue Cross.
00:24:41.000Now, you may say, oh, well, maybe she wants to protest.
00:25:09.000But, I mean, like, politically, we voted to shut this stuff down.
00:25:13.000We voted for Donald Trump to bring accountability, to say we're not going to tolerate a fringe far-left extremist element in these spaces anymore.
00:25:21.000Now, to a certain degree, you have your free speech, but when you cross over into advocating for...
00:26:28.000I'm not saying she's going to jail for it.
00:26:30.000But I'm saying there's a degree of repercussion you could face where it's like, I'm okay with banning people from social platforms who are doing things like this.
00:27:09.000This is just her trying to be like a shock jock now, where she's kind of skidding out of relevance and knows that she wants to just tread the line of, you know, the First Amendment as much as she possibly can, just so we talk about her.
00:27:52.000She has done similar things to that, yeah.
00:27:54.000So then I kind of feel like this would be the perfect thing.
00:27:56.000I'm not saying she's playing 5D chess necessarily, but what if she's out there just saying, let me say these astronomically insane things that are just terrible to...
00:28:04.000Her fellow human, then later on, it's like, oh my god, when everybody calls me out, I'm the victim here, and it's just this new cycle that she gets where she becomes relevant again, producing absolutely nothing for the new cycle.
00:28:23.000It's my belief by reading past things that she said and knowing the left, that at the very least, she does think that rich people are bad.
00:28:34.000Like, you are morally wrong if you make too much money.
00:28:39.000If you accept a position that makes too much money, that's a very common perspective on the far left.
00:28:46.000I mean, it's the whole reason for communist revolutions all over the world, and those are as bloody as you can get.
00:28:55.000The reason that communist revolutions happen is they believe that the bourgeoisie have stolen from the proletariat by having all the money that they have.
00:29:04.000I don't ascribe to that worldview at all.
00:29:29.000So the larger portions that other people are taking, the less fortunate have to scrape by on.
00:29:36.000And if that were the case, which again, I don't agree with it, if that were the case, then it is actually reasonable to say those people are evil.
00:29:44.000I think that's not the case, but I do believe that Taylor believes that, that she believes that it's okay to look at people that have a lot and say, you've gotten that by taking from someone else.
00:29:56.000So I'm going to give a shout out to Landman, that new Tyler Sheridan show.
00:30:00.000You guys got to watch it because it's great.
00:30:01.000I mean, Yellowstone was awesome and it sucks Costner left because now the show is basically falling apart.
00:30:24.000He's like, from all the diesel to haul it out here to 12 feet of concrete in the ground and how much oil got to lubricate it, that thing won't offset its carbon footprint.
00:30:31.000He explains that they set up wind turbines to power the oil pumps.
00:30:35.000And she's like, they're using green energy to pump oil?
00:30:38.000And he's like, no, they're using alternative energy because there's no lines out here and they need electricity from somewhere.
00:31:29.000Where Daenerys Targaryen takes over a city of slavers, strings up all the oppressors, and then some guy comes in and says, my dad was fighting to end slavery and you killed him.
00:31:39.000That's what worries me when these people are violent, dangerous lunatics and they target random people.
00:31:58.000I talk about how the insurance companies are bringing us off, how I got ripped off, and it was this weird scenario where the bill was super high.
00:32:13.000I think I'm very concerned with for-profit medicine and giant corporations taking control of corporatocracy, but this ain't it.
00:32:21.000I want to believe that this guy did some behind-the-scenes malfeasance, and this was a personal hit on this guy, that he messed up somebody's money and now he paid for it, as opposed to some angry father hiring a hitman or going rogue.
00:32:35.000I mean, honestly, it doesn't matter either way, but it's not something to be so- Where are you headed with it?
00:33:05.000I was surprised, because you're supposed to not have guns in New York.
00:33:09.000Yeah, I thought what happens is as soon as you drive across the bridge and you get to that barrier of where New York starts, the gun just freezes in midair and it's like up against the barrier and you can't get in with it.
00:33:25.000Whoever is doing the trading for Pelosi, they had heavily invested in the company that is there to protect them from, like, cybersecurity threats.
00:33:46.000Which, I mean, I don't know what that is inferring at all, but, I mean, it's an interesting aspect.
00:33:52.000Yeah, I mean, I don't know that that, I'm not sure that that would speak to this, you know, or would have a, you know, context that makes it related to this.
00:34:03.000But I, and I don't, I mean, I personally don't want to talk about motive or anything like that until there's more information that comes out.
00:34:11.000But if the guy, you know, if homeboy split and he's in, you know, Cartagena now, you know, it's not.
00:34:29.000He's a super pro when he's going into Columbia or something.
00:34:33.000Let's jump to this next story from Sportskeeda.
00:34:37.000Three major firms, JP Morgan, AT&T, and Duncan?
00:34:41.000Wow, reportedly stopped Twitch ads due to allegations of anti-Semitism.
00:34:45.000But, you know, this is the Twitch ad-pocalypse getting worse.
00:34:49.000All these leftists that are on Twitch are losing massive sums of money.
00:34:52.000But for those that missed the previous, I just want to shout this out as well.
00:34:55.000When you go on Blue Sky or X right now after the assassination of this healthcare CEO and you see all these leftists cheering for it, yeah, that's why big brands don't want to advertise.
00:35:04.000Because nobody wants to put their toothpaste next to a guy advocating for murder.
00:35:10.000They say American multinational, JPMorgan Chase& Co., Telecommunication giant AT&T and Dunkin' Donuts' parent company, Dunkin' Brands, have reportedly stopped rolling advertisements on Twitch.
00:35:21.000This move comes following allegations of anti-temitism being levied against the purple platform over the past few months.
00:35:27.000Further, a fourth firm, Chevron Corp., is also reportedly considering terminating future sponsorships for Twitch's signature TwitchCon convention after a controversial panel involving Twitch content creator Frogan...
00:35:39.000It took place at this year's event in San Diego with the petroleum company's name and logo in the background.
00:36:22.000Dude, they've been doing this stuff for like a decade and we've been complaining about how the woke are hypocrites and they're racist and they're sexist and all the things they claim that everybody else is.
00:36:32.000And now, now the companies are like, oh.
00:36:36.000Well, I mean, not only is it like there's Frogan, but there's also currently Destiny's fans are going after Hassan and they're reporting him for anti-Semitism.
00:36:48.000So between Destiny, his whatever you want to call his people, just constantly...
00:36:57.000Mass reporting Hassan for anti-Semitism.
00:37:01.000It's finally broken through, or it seems that it's finally broken through to the advertisers and stuff.
00:37:09.000And I mean, look, Hassan is anti-Semitic.
00:37:16.000I'm not one for mass brigading people and stuff like that, especially when the people that are doing it is destiny, who's kind of a piece of garbage as well.
00:37:26.000So, I mean, the things that he said about MAGA supporters or the Trump supporters and stuff, he's lambasted all conservatives.
00:37:51.000You know, I hope they do a bunch of damage to each other.
00:37:54.000But it is because of, you know, that kind of stuff, that anti-Semitism that, you know, Hassan engages in regularly.
00:38:04.000And Frogan's worse than Hassan, which is hilarious, but...
00:38:07.000They've been doing it for years and no one seemed to care.
00:38:09.000I really wonder if it has to do with Trump won the popular vote by a landslide and all of a sudden you're starting to see these companies do more regular conservative type of advertisements.
00:38:22.000There's that car company that did a very conservative ad and then Target even has changed the way they lay out their stores again.
00:38:30.000Because you know how Target had all the controversy with what they were pushing during Pride Month, and now all of a sudden they're saying Merry Christmas again, which they dare not do that before Donald Trump got, what is it, 80 million?
00:38:42.000There was, I guess a federal court ruled today that Target may have violated federal security laws by failing to disclose the risks.
00:38:52.000No, but it just seems like all of a sudden all these companies care about not advertising on Twitch because of the popular vote.
00:38:58.000It's not because any of these companies necessarily believe in what this is or they want to shut down a Frogan or they want to shut down a Hassan.
00:39:04.000They just don't want to be caught in the wrong side of what's currently trending online right now.
00:39:10.000Yeah, I mean, I do think that you're right, that the fact that there was such a strong change in, or a strong signal sent from the American people is probably the best way to say it.
00:39:27.000Because even if people will nitpick as to whether or not it was a landslide for Donald Trump, but what you can't do is say that there wasn't a landslide for the right.
00:39:38.000I think that it was something like 11 counties in California moved to the right and shifted red.
00:39:46.000If you look at the shift nationwide, there's a massive shift for policies that are more conservative.
00:39:58.000A lot of this, I think, is because of the backlash from a lot of the stuff that went on.
00:40:05.000With, you know, defund the police and stuff and the border situation.
00:40:10.000I think that people are seeing those things.
00:40:14.000If they're not seeing them in real life and in their day-to-day lives, they're seeing the results on social media.
00:40:33.000We had Cenk on last night from the Young Turks, and both Cenk and Anna have had a bit of a...
00:40:40.000At the very least, I think Anna's made a shift to the right, but I think that at the very least, Cenk is softening on opening the doors to discuss things with the right, where for a long time, it was outside of acceptable conversation to say, yes, I'll talk to conservatives.
00:40:57.000I'll give Cenk some credit because he has made the point for a long time We should accept the victories we can where we agree with the right.
00:41:05.000He's made that point whether you agree with him or not.
00:41:07.000He says Trump was an insurrectionist and all these things I totally disagree with.
00:41:10.000But I've seen him several years ago being like, hey, if the right wants to end foreign wars or whatever, let's take what we can get.
00:41:17.000And more recently, he got flack because he tweeted at Elon like...
00:41:29.000They overspend on purpose to get – then once they're done with their term or they leave the military or whatever, they go with these defense contractors and the left attacked them for agreeing with Elon.
00:41:46.000I believe her shift right is very genuine because of what happened to her, I believe, when she was walking her dog and she said that transients attacked her and then she saw the backlash she got for saying, hey, I'm in danger in Los Angeles County.
00:42:00.000Why can't I request safety from the police?
00:42:06.000I mean, I saw him on election night kind of going down with a ship, and all of a sudden, I don't follow him enough, so you guys know him better than I do, but when he's re-emerged, now he seems to be very open to Trump and very open to the conservative point of view, and it's almost like, does he see the writing on the wall?
00:42:22.000I'm not going down with CNN, MSNBC, and all the other Woke media outlets.
00:42:27.000I need to become more centrist so I can capture the actual audience that isn't propped up by bots.
00:42:33.000My take on Cenk, I'd like to see him, is that he's what you would define as a good faith actor.
00:42:39.000Whether you agree with him or not, or you like him or you don't, he's always been acted out of what he truly believes.
00:42:45.000He's like a hothead at times, but like...
00:42:47.000I would say he's hot-headed, emotional, wrong, and I'd give him the good faith thing.
00:42:52.000But the reason why I add the hot-headed stuff is because often he's so wrong, he can't see straight.
00:43:38.000When I was talking to him, I was complaining about the way that he was framing it and how people were framing the situation with the Senate and how senators are elected and what their designated role is.
00:44:24.000I can appreciate that then, because I know a lot of people in Los Angeles that are like that, where if you only watch CNN and what famous celebrities said about news cycle items, you would probably be like him too, because you'd think Trump is after you, he was attacking the Capitol, all that stuff, where if he means well, he just is misled, then I have, he's like, what do you say, a good faith liberal.
00:44:53.000That seems like his number one tenet is communication.
00:44:56.000He said something last night that was like, if we don't communicate with people we think we disagree with, we'll never find out about the things we actually agree with each other on.
00:45:02.000That's something that we've been saying here for a long time.
00:45:05.000The goal of kind of what we're doing here is to get people – is to find the off-ramp, right, to prevent the meme from coming to life and the civil war from happening.
00:45:20.000The goal is – the point is to try to find a way to prevent our country that we all love from descending into chaos.
00:45:29.000And so it was really bleak for a while because the left wouldn't talk and the left essentially just said, well, everyone that supports Trump is a racist bigot.
00:45:39.000They're all deplorables, blah, blah, blah.
00:45:41.000And the people that were in positions of authority in the Democrat Party, they were repeating this.
00:45:47.000You had the media, you had Hillary Clinton, you know, Joe Biden was saying they're MAGA Republicans are a threat to the very soul of this country, he said.
00:45:56.000And when you have that as your starting point, you know, then it makes perfect sense to be like, I'm not going to talk to them.
00:47:27.000That only choice is to try and reach an olive branch out to MAGA. One aspect of what I think, Phil, you mentioned it just a bit ago about how part of the problem from the last eight years was that there was a communication barrier.
00:47:40.000A lot of it was the media telling people, don't associate with them.
00:47:44.000And it was like the deplorable, whatever it was, don't associate with them.
00:47:48.000And it was probably both sides, but there was a lot of it coming from the mainstream media.
00:48:27.000I don't know who that is, but I think it's fair to say be careful of the people whose intentions are not to have real conversations but to create chaos and harm people.
00:48:36.000I'm not saying there should be an arbiter of who the determination is.
00:48:39.000I'm just saying trolling is fine, but some of these people are chaotic evil.
00:48:44.000And their intention is, I'll say it like this.
00:48:47.000There are people that I know, if I invited on this show, would be like, no, no, no, trust me, we'll have a conversation.
00:48:52.000As soon as the camera turns on, they're going to break every rule imaginable on YouTube to try and get the show banned.
00:48:57.000So some people you just are like, okay, that person's the joker.
00:49:01.000Yeah, and also to the point that you're making, there's nothing wrong with trying to associate with people and talk to people, and I agree with the spirit of your comment, but advertisers are not people.
00:49:14.000Like, if you're just like, I'm going to put up the sign for my brand...
00:49:20.000You can't have a conversation with a sign.
00:49:22.000You can't have a conversation with a commercial.
00:49:25.000So as much as I do understand what you're saying about we should talk to people that we disagree with, that's perfectly fine.
00:49:31.000But if you're an advertiser, if all you're doing is saying, I'm looking to put my brand up...
00:49:39.000And then the person that is standing in front of the sign that has your brand is saying horrible things about Jewish people or what have you.
00:49:51.000I think that it's pretty reasonable for advertisers to say...
00:49:57.000I do think that it's probably not a bad thing for some brands to say, oh, we're okay with edgier content.
00:50:08.000I think if the UFC is looking for people to advertise, you could probably have edgier brands and stuff like that.
00:50:18.000But when it comes to Dunkin' Donuts, I totally get why they're like, no, don't.
00:50:24.000Don't put a Jew hater in front of our sign.
00:50:28.000That's pretty much describing Kick and Rumble compared to Twitch.
00:50:32.000Twitch was supposed to be the clean one that's more in line with what happens on Netflix as opposed to what happens on those alternative streaming sites.
00:50:39.000But then all of a sudden they turned around and said, hey, wait a minute.
00:50:42.000This is by far worse than anything we've seen on Rumble or Kick.
00:50:46.000Let's jump to the story from America First Legal.
00:50:49.000U.S. District Court denies Target's attempt to dismiss, AFL lawsuit and transfer venue, shareholder action against undisclosed risks, and losses caused by Target's ESG, DEI, and LGBTQ pride campaign to continue.
00:51:05.000So this is not a victory in that the courts have ruled.
00:51:10.000That Target caused undue risk to the shareholders by running these Pride campaigns.
00:51:16.000They are basically saying, no, you can't dismiss this.
00:51:20.000They say in a groundbreaking decision, the court denied both motions holding.
00:51:24.000Target's 2021 risk disclosure could be materially misleading because it was not specifically tailored to the risks related to its plan for a new and aggressive 2023 Pride Month campaign.
00:51:35.000Target failed to account for the specific risk that Target's upcoming Pride Month campaign was Long story short, Target ran this massive Pride Month campaign.
00:52:03.000Everybody knew it was toxic to do because I believe this happened after Bud Light.
00:52:08.000And yeah, Bud Light was before this, because that was April, I think, and then June was Pride Month.
00:52:13.000And they did not disclose to shareholders, hey, you know that thing that's costing billions of dollars over here?
00:52:25.000They say due to boycotts against Target, the company lost $10 billion in market valuation between May 18th and May 23rd, with an overall loss between May 17th and October 6th of that same year of more than $25 billion in market capitalization.
00:52:39.000In denying Target's motion to transfer, the court noted that many of Target's directors live outside of Minnesota, and most of its corporate employees are required to come into the office once per quarter, implying that many of them work remotely.
00:52:51.000Furthermore, targets 2020, 21, 22, and 23 shareholder meetings did not occur in Minnesota.
00:52:55.000For these and other reasons, Target failed to carry its burden in demonstrating that this court should transfer the securities litigation case to the District of Minnesota.
00:53:04.000So are they trying to say that since they saw how Bud Light tanked their stock with the Dylan Mulvaney fiasco, that Target, since they already set up their...
00:53:14.000Because I worked in retail many years ago, but the idea is...
00:53:20.000I think the point is everybody knows that these campaigns are extremely politically divisive, and Target did not disclose, hey, this is actually a political ideology that's risky, and they should have.
00:53:33.000Now, granted, the court didn't say they did.
00:53:35.000They're saying, you can't dismiss this.
00:53:37.000We're going to move forward and hear the evidence, and this could result in Target getting serious penalties for running these Pride campaigns.
00:53:45.000But I'll tell you this, this, where we're at right now with this, oh, it's going to send chills down the spine of every other corporation.
00:53:53.000Not only Donald Trump's victory in the Republican sweep, but seeing that they couldn't get this dismissed, companies are going to be like, yeah, we stay away from that stuff.
00:54:04.000They have a fiduciary responsibility to inform the shareholders of things that they're going to do that may negatively affect the stock price.
00:54:14.000And if you're going to do something that's controversial, again, like we were talking about, you know, we were just talking about why you wouldn't advertise with people that say controversial things.
00:54:23.000You know, whether they be, you know...
00:54:29.000But when it comes to things like LGBTQ stuff, especially stuff that's geared towards children, that's a risky thing to talk about and to have in your store.
00:54:41.000And to not disclose that to your shareholders when they're the ones that have a right to know what you're going to be doing and what you're doing.
00:54:54.000If you do something that could negatively affect the stock price, you're obligated to let your shareholders know.
00:55:02.000And if you cost people money, you've cost them money.
00:55:06.000And they may have the right to say, hey, you owe me money.
00:55:18.000And that I have little respect for is these people saying, like, we better watch out for cancel culture on the right.
00:55:25.000And I'm like, look, you know, I am not some surface level classical liberal guy who is like, all free speech must be protected at all times for everybody, no matter what.
00:55:37.000I was naive probably 10 years ago as to regard to these things, and now it's very clear that there is moral worldview, and there are those that would adhere to one and those that would not.
00:55:46.000So it's not so easy to say, I believe in free speech, because then you end up with woke institutional elements trying to destroy you.
00:55:53.000So my view is simply, overwhelmingly I agree with free speech, but I don't defend the free speech rights of people who seek to destroy my rights.
00:56:01.000I will not aid and abet people who are trying to destroy Our worldview and our values that pertain to classical liberal traditions and things like this.
00:56:10.000What I see with a lot of other people is they're like, We have to defend all of our enemies and let them do these things.
00:56:16.000And I bring this up in this context because the idea is, oh, I mean, we can't cancel these companies and boycott them for doing these things.
00:56:24.000I mean, I'm like, no, yeah, we absolutely can.
00:56:27.000These employees, these corporate employees, these are the ones who are running the censorship campaigns.
00:56:32.000These are the people who are getting your products banned.
00:56:34.000These are the people who are making sure that your books don't appear on Amazon.
00:56:37.000So when we say, no, no, no, no, enough of this crackpot ideology that's shutting everybody down, I will not defend you.
00:56:44.000In fact, I will be happy to see your company fail.
00:56:47.000And then, once we've stabilized and we're all in agreement that these people will not be in control of what we can see, think, hear, or purchase...
00:56:56.000Then we can say, okay, fine, have your section in the back of the store or whatever, and if people don't want to buy from you, they won't buy from you.
00:57:02.000But I'm not going to tolerate institutionalized authoritarian ideology.
00:57:09.000So if Target is going to play these games with these ideologies, I say, sucks to be you, I'm not going to defend a single ounce of your speech or anything like that.
00:57:17.000Yeah, it kind of seems like they're done because they've shifted back to like Christmas, not holiday season, Christmas stuff again.
00:57:23.000And you're seeing it with, what is it, Apple just did a very unwoke, just family, not necessarily family friendly, but like family first with not all the DEI woke nonsense interjected in it.
00:57:36.000You say you couldn't attack a company because they're a faceless machine, but it's oftentimes like the CEO and the board, how taken over are they by the woke mob?
00:57:45.000So it seems like these corporations and companies are starting to turn back to what the regular person wants to see, which is just, I want to know Jaguar is going to be the coolest car.
00:57:55.000Don't tell me about all the inclusivity.
00:58:36.000He said, okay, that's who we're targeting then.
00:58:38.000Democrats tend to be higher income individuals with crackpot ideologies, and they realized they're not going to get the cool city slicker guy anymore with the old classic Jag.
00:58:50.000I guarantee they had a marketing meeting where the guy said, here's your current 35-year-old millionaire in New York City who's going to buy a Jag.
00:58:58.000And it's some hipster guy with black glasses and a beard and a flannel, and he's got a pride flag pin.
00:59:36.000And they're not a broad market company anyway.
00:59:39.000You know, Jaguar, these are luxury cars.
00:59:41.000They're not like Coca-Cola in a grocery store or Bud Light.
00:59:43.000They're specifically targeting one group of ultra-wealthy people, and they probably said, eh, a disproportionate amount of people who live in cities and have money that are woke, so let's roll with it.
00:59:51.000Is Jaguar owned by a company kind of like Lexus and Toyota, or are they their own thing?
01:00:00.000I'd be curious if they have a smaller, more economy line underneath their umbrella, and are they just doing regular stuff at the same time they're having Jaguar?
01:00:34.000They're targeting that they're only going to target.
01:00:36.000They're so in their bubble, they can't see beyond Bud Light because they know that they're not trying to sell to beer drinking, college football watching people.
01:00:43.000They sat down and they said, look, That $55,000 a year plumber, he ain't buying a Jag.
01:01:28.000All concept cars don't really turn out to be what actually goes on the assembly line out there for the regular people.
01:01:32.000But it does change my perspective on this, because then you're saying how they targeted their people, and us seeing from the outside in, what is it, all the promotional stuff for that Wicked movie?
01:01:42.000And it's like it was insufferable for anybody regular, but my girlfriend loved it.
01:01:46.000I heard it's doing great on the box office, so they know their target demographic.
01:01:50.000The movie, even conservatives, like actually the movie was really good.
01:02:06.000I can't do the bit justice, but Danny, we've had him on the show, you know, Ryan Long and Danny Polishchuk, they do bits together, but Danny's YouTube channel, check it out.
01:02:14.000He's sitting down with them and he asks some questions.
01:03:01.000Jason Bateman, and it's kind of like a slow turn, but if you're into something spooky, it was really good, and to see her kind of go off the deep end on press tours, it's like, I really wish I didn't see that, because I thought she was an amazing actress, and then...
01:03:12.000Speaking of Up the Deep, I guess that that Snow White movie is going forward.
01:04:54.000Like, I'm surprised he wasn't upset that his car was hit.
01:04:59.000Like, if that's his deal, is to, like, do car streaming or whatever, you know?
01:05:03.000I think he's a car snob as a means to an end.
01:05:05.000He just wants to be a social media star, so he's doing it with the car, and then he...
01:05:10.000Sadly, it looks like the car is tumbling towards him, so the person could have had lots of damage to them, and then he's only seen it as an opportunity to go viral, which he did, but it's sad that that's how disconnected we are from reality, where it's not a car accident where someone almost got harmed.
01:07:07.000Yeah, because I was going to say, it's like this disgusting culture of people putting cameras on themselves, but we're putting cameras on ourselves right now, and it's not disgusting because, yeah, this isn't a flash-in-the-pan moment where we're hoping to get a viral clip.
01:07:19.000This is a consistent endeavor where it's constantly putting out quality over and over and over and over and builds a huge audience as a result.
01:08:30.000Obviously, we could do stupid things like that and make the show have more viral moments with, I don't know, someone could throw a frisbee at Ian and just say, he gets hit in the head.
01:09:54.000They think if they go viral with this moment, I'm going to go from six viewers to ten viewers to a thousand, not knowing that they only tuned in for this viral moment.
01:10:58.000So he's either going to always wonder why he let that opportunity slip for him to become the next Jack Doherty or whatever, or he's going to continuously outdo himself staging things or doing something dangerous to put himself in this situation.
01:11:12.000There's no path out of this that ends happily.
01:11:15.000I mean, look, you can learn how to, you know, you can spend your time trying to go viral by doing things like this, or you can spend your time trying to do something or hone a skill that people find valuable.
01:12:47.000There's the gender dysphoric version, which is the one that people are typically discussing, although there are a lot of people that do the kink stuff.
01:12:52.000But then there's Dylan Mulvaney, which is the Madonna version, which is get plastic surgery to be famous.
01:12:59.000You know, in the pictures or whatever.
01:13:01.000So Dylan was like, better get surgery to play this role and get traffic.
01:13:04.000And you can see it in the evolution of Dylan's content.
01:13:07.000That's what we see with all of these people.
01:13:13.000Whatever terrifies, shocks, enrages people the most in that moment to get views is all that matters.
01:13:19.000Being good, smart, funny doesn't matter to these people.
01:13:23.000There's like, there's this, I don't know what you call it, but there's this miscalculation by a lot of people that get famous doing something that they have to keep doing that thing now that they're famous to get more famous.
01:13:36.000But a lot of times, you might springboard into notoriety through doing one thing, like complaining on the internet.
01:13:42.000But then once you're famous, you don't need to complain anymore.
01:13:45.000Like, you can now do humanitarian things.
01:13:47.000You're still well-known, and you can evolve more.
01:13:49.000And some people get trapped in that cycle of doing what they used to do because they think they have to keep doing that to get bigger.
01:13:55.000I think it's when a celebrity gets bigger than the medium that brought them into stardom, where you have somebody like Michael Jordan or Mike Tyson.
01:14:05.000They get famous from this particular sport, but then once more people know about Mike Tyson than watch boxing, now he can do whatever he wants.
01:14:13.000Be in the hangover, do cartoons or whatever.
01:14:19.000You have Outkast and Andre 3000. Once he becomes bigger than rap, he can pivot to whatever he wants, movies or do that different type of album, the experimental type of stuff.
01:14:27.000So if you can get past that, I guess it's called an inflection point, then you can do whatever you want.
01:14:33.000But the people that are still trying to recreate the same thing in the same medium over and over and not evolving, it's because they don't have the option to.
01:14:39.000Because if they experiment outside their genre of music or their experiment outside of the movies they've been typecast into...
01:14:47.000All of a sudden people are like, ugh, I don't like this.
01:14:49.000And it's like, yeah, because you're not popular enough to just make it on just your face.
01:14:52.000I feel like it'd be the same thing if some random guy out the street wanted to do a YouTube channel and become a YouTuber compared to Will Smith.
01:14:59.000He can come on the platform and become popular day one.
01:16:05.000Quote, Tragically, deaths by suicide in trans people of all ages continue to be above the national average, but there is no evidence that gender-affirmative treatments reduce this.
01:16:33.000Immutability is the key to being a protected legal class.
01:16:38.000This argument for the Supreme Court, I don't think it's likely, but has the potential to effectively remove 1964 civil rights protections from people based on gender identity.
01:16:48.000Under the argument that gender fluidity proves that being trans is not immutable, in fact, you can change whenever you feel like it, and thus, it is not protected.
01:16:58.000I hope that it actually does turn out that way.
01:17:02.000Well, the question then is, is SCOTUS a bunch of cowards?
01:17:07.000Well, there are some cowards on SCOTUS, but there are also some absolute idiots.
01:17:14.000So like Sotomayor and Cade, I forget what her name is.
01:17:33.000The fact that she refused to answer what a woman is...
01:17:39.000I mean, if you're going to refuse to answer based on ideological grounds, I think that that should prevent you from sitting on the Supreme Court, particularly when cases like this are going to be brought before the Supreme Court.
01:17:56.000We know exactly where she's going to come down.
01:18:02.000Even spend any time inquiring with anyone about this stuff.
01:18:09.000You know exactly where she's going to come down.
01:18:11.000And it's not because of her opinion on the Constitution, but because of her ideological possession by the left.
01:18:19.000I gotta say, when it comes to being trans, if someone feels that they're in the wrong body, that would be very rough.
01:18:27.000And I think people like that, it should be taken seriously if someone's feeling like that, and they should be handled with whatever kind of care and kindness or whatever you need to do to help someone like that.
01:18:38.000But if you can truly say, I'm a woman now, and then tomorrow you can be like, I'm a man again, it's not a protected class.
01:20:04.000So for the ACLU right now, knowing it's a six to three conservative leaning court to say, let's bring this lawsuit forward and try and do they think that Alito and Thomas Are going to be like, yes, give children sex changes?
01:20:18.000Yeah, I really don't see that happening.
01:20:20.000So then you've got Amy Coney Barrett and you've got Kavanaugh.
01:20:25.000And then I suppose everybody's hoping that Roberts is going to side with them, but he's probably not.
01:20:50.000I've heard, you know, you hear the meme, when you have transgender children, the people deciding the children are transgender are the same people deciding that their cats are vegan, right?
01:21:02.000You know, it's not something that the children are actually deciding.
01:21:08.000I think it's something like 85% of transgender children desist at puberty and it just turns out that they were gay or lesbian.
01:21:16.000Which, like, there should be no limitation or whatever on who you want to marry or whatever.
01:21:24.000But as far as children go, and furthermore, if you are taking a position that transgenderism is something that we should, you know, affirm when they're adults and you want to make sure that transgender people can get surgery and blah blah blah,
01:21:40.000if you prevent The children from going through natural puberty, you cannot produce neo-vaginas, and you cannot make, like, because there's not enough material with the genitals because they don't develop properly.
01:21:55.000So even, you can make a pro-trans argument, you can make a neither here nor there trans argument, or you can make an anti-trans argument, but the fact of the matter is they're kids.
01:22:08.000You should not be doing life-changing surgery or giving children drugs that will sterilize them for life because they cannot make an informed decision.
01:22:21.000Axios says, just four years ago, the court ruled that firing trans workers because they are trans is a form of illegal sex discrimination.
01:22:28.000Advocates argued that that same logic should apply to health care.
01:22:31.000Neil Gorsuch, a triple pointe, wrote the majority opinion in that case by Roberts and the court's liberals.
01:22:36.000Gorsuch did not ask any questions Wednesday, so there's no way to know whether he thinks the two cases are aligned.
01:22:41.000Even if he is inclined to side with the families challenging Tennessee's law, he would need to bring along at least one other conservative justice to achieve a majority.
01:22:48.000The oral arguments are an indication of how the justices are thinking about a case, not a surefire prediction of how they'll ultimately rule.
01:22:54.000It would be insane if the Supreme Court sides at the ACLU and says that Texas isn't allowed to ban these treatments.
01:23:02.000The oral arguments from Tennessee were sound.
01:23:12.000But it was incumbent upon the states to impose those regulations to stop these practices from happening, as we are doing now.
01:23:18.000And you even have the story from the Postmillennial, where the attorney for the ACLU admitted there's no evidence child sex changes help prevent suicide.
01:23:25.000That's really the sticking point for me, because a lot of the argument of we need to rush these kids through life-changing It's life-saving medical care.
01:23:54.000All the evidence indicates that if you give children these surgeries or these kind of life-changing drugs, there is no change in suicidality afterwards.
01:24:32.000If you're an adult and you say, I want to live as a woman and you were born a man or you're a man and you want to live as a woman, society can handle that.
01:24:43.000We can absolutely deal with that because once it stops being something that's pushed in schools and as a trend and something that is cool and unique and once the LGBT community, the politicized LGBT community, stops trying to create more Trans people and tell children, oh, maybe you're this.
01:25:08.000Once it returns to normalcy, it will go back down to being an extremely small percentage of the population.
01:25:14.000I just saw a tweet, and I don't know where it went to, but something like 1 in 33 people now.
01:25:21.0001 in 33 people in Gen Z say they're trans or something like that.
01:27:22.000And you can see this huge chart, because it's public blockchain, showing these individuals bought nothing and only sold to the tune of $40,000.
01:27:36.000I don't know if what she's doing is illegal.
01:27:38.000People are claiming that the Hawk to a girl has launched a crypto scam and is publicly lying and defrauding people and they're making tens of thousands of dollars and she's going to have to talk to a judge.
01:28:30.000As long as I'm being honest about what it is, people can buy whatever they want.
01:28:33.000The issue is, did she say nobody's selling them and they're all selling them?
01:28:37.000So she essentially did what they did in Wolf of Wall Street where they launched an IPO and they already held it and they were selling it off?
01:28:51.000Well, I mean, they had their brokers selling it to everybody they knew, and then once it capped out, they all mass sold off just themselves.
01:30:55.000Well, yeah, I mean, essentially, if you can make a token and you can get it onto an exchange and you make a boatload of them, you could just change those tokens for Bitcoin.
01:31:06.000And the Bitcoin's actually valuable, you know?
01:31:20.000Yes, there's a popular name in crypto.
01:31:22.000Hayley Welch has launched its own token named Hawk.
01:31:27.000While insiders sniped 97% of supply, a newly created wallet sniped $175 million Hawk for $4,195 SOL. Worth $965,000 and sold it for $2.6 million for a profit of $1.66 million.
01:32:14.000And then she just waited too long to reveal herself and then do a podcast, went into relevancy.
01:32:19.000But I guess that's still infinitely better than Yeah, I really do.
01:32:22.000I think she had a great episode on her Talk Tua podcast about the inversion of time and parallel realities where time could flow in reverse.
01:32:31.000No, the meme is to make a point about something that's academic and intelligent that then imply that she said it because we know she didn't.
01:32:41.000I just saw her on a Whitney Cummings show and I saw her being like, I hate man and saying just this dumb stuff.
01:36:02.000So there is something that has to be done to get it.
01:36:05.000And there's utilities in certain tokens where they can actually instigate smart contracts and you can embed data transfers within the tokens themselves.
01:36:14.000Just moving a token will cause a program to take...
01:36:17.000I don't know that it did hit It's 99.968.
01:36:21.000According to the thing that I have right now compared to Tether, it's at 99.9, 100,000 right now.
01:38:53.000I think the sad, it's a sad reality, but it's also just reality, is that the U.S. dollar spiraling out of control with the inflation indicates that everything is going to go up in value.
01:42:22.000Superchat, superchat, smash the like button, share the show with everyone you know, become a member over at TimCast.com for that uncensored show coming up.
01:42:29.000And we'll have you as callers coming in.
01:44:31.000What's the number where the average person is going to say, I'll cash out 100 grand.
01:44:35.000Once that wall finally broke, meaning every time someone tried to buy, let's say there's 1,000 people with a Bitcoin and they want to sell it 100,000, you need 1,001 to set the price above that number.
01:44:47.000Once they officially sold out of all of the Bitcoin at a hundred thousand, the demand is going way up.
01:44:53.000The crazy thing is people have noticed the exchanges don't have Bitcoin anymore.
01:44:58.000The amount of Bitcoin available for purchase has been dropping dramatically and I think governments are buying in.
01:46:00.000If one bit, so if you were to break it down to eight decimal points, the smallest decimal position, we call them SATs or Satoshi, after Satoshi Nakamoto, if that were equal to one penny, if one Satoshi was one penny, that means one Bitcoin is one million dollars.
01:46:40.000Way back when, in 2011, for $0.70, with my $5,000 in savings, I would have $722,320,570.
01:46:52.000There's a lot of people that are in that position that just went off the map that are like, they don't want anyone to know.
01:46:58.000So here's the crazy thing about Bitcoin.
01:47:00.000The initial adopters were creepy weirdos who wanted to do nefarious things and have a way of exchanging money that people weren't tracking.
01:48:06.000No, he's got something that sounds like that.
01:48:08.000Alright, Scott, Dietrich Jr. says, let the pardons happen and force them to testify under oath without the ability to plead the fifth so they can tell the world what they did.
01:48:17.000Hearing the truth is more important than their jail time.
01:48:39.000It's almost better that Hunter Biden has to—he can't plead the fifth anymore because I some doubt how doubt that he is the criminal mastermind behind everything that happened over in Burisma, so have him testify and tell us who was calling the shots.
01:49:29.000Well, because she stated definitively that I was told to say things on the show, despite the fact that all of the facts of all of the issues surrounding the case, that is absolutely not true.
01:50:48.000Sean says, Tim, if the gunman mounted a suppressor without a booster, the suppressor will make the barrel too heavy to unlock and properly cycle.
01:50:55.000Someone else pointed out that you can actually modify the weapon so that the gas exits through the front of the gun so it won't cycle the weapon intentionally to reduce volume.
01:51:24.000Christian W. says he chambers around every time instead of the gun cycling automatically using a slide lock.
01:51:29.000Spec ops guys do it when they use subsonic ammo to suppress noise signature to a minimum by canceling the slide noise and gas escape from the ejection port.
01:52:13.000Al Rum says Google search did Anthony Fauci work for the CIA will bring up a ton of MSM reports as well as alternative media reports that he had a role outside of NIH with a gain-of-function research.
01:53:57.000Which is, I mean, it's terribly incriminating.
01:54:00.000You know, I suppose, I didn't actually listen to the bit that he said, so it may have been misrepresented, but, I mean, look, I don't know why you would even want to say that kind of stuff, because...
01:54:16.000I mean, I don't know if you're in an actionable position, but you're definitely in a position where the incoming administration would look at you and be like, all right, well, what do you know?
01:54:54.000But, I mean, like I said, do you really want to be the guy that says, oh, there's going to be a bunch of pandemics coming right when Donald Trump is inaugurated and then actually have a bunch of pandemics come?
01:55:08.000I mean, it seems pretty incriminating to me, you know?
01:56:06.000Or the weapon wasn't from the U.S. or something.
01:56:08.000I bet, look, if this was targeting a CEO for the biggest healthcare provider in the country, probably the world, I don't know, outside of governments.
01:56:17.000If this job was professional, assuming it was professional, then they probably got a non-American.
01:56:22.000They bring someone in the dead of night by flying him over the border on the south in a single-engine Cessna.
01:56:28.000He goes to New York, gets on a bike, he doesn't care, he doesn't live here, and he's gone.
01:56:49.000Luke and I were at the RNC when Alex Jones was streaming and walked up to the Young Turks set at the RNC and started a fight and Jimmy Dore spat on him.
01:57:13.000Eric F. says, Taylor Lorenz quit WAPO to become an influencer.
01:57:16.000Someone should tell her that OnlyFans is not an influence platform.
01:57:21.000I mean, I think the joke works better of being like she'd maintain more credibility and respect if she went with OnlyFans instead of writing that she's raw-dogging the air.
01:57:31.000Or that, I'm sorry, sorry, that we are raw-dogging the air.
01:58:57.000So this is the thing about YouTube or any social media platform.
01:59:00.000People will be like, hey, I gained five followers today on X. When in reality, you lost 50 and gained 55. There's a constant change of who's watching your show.
01:59:10.000So MSNBC and CNN go full anti-Trump, their normal viewers leave, anti-Trump viewers join, and then once Trump is no longer the narrative, they've got nothing.
01:59:23.000Now they're just pandering to weirdos.
01:59:58.000But we'll talk about it on the Uncensored show for obvious reasons.
02:00:01.000So smash that like button, share the show with everyone you know, become a member at TimCast.com.
02:00:04.000You can follow me on X on Instagram at TimCast.
02:00:06.000Decoy, do you want to shout anything out?
02:00:08.000Yeah, follow me over at Decoy Voice on YouTube.
02:00:10.000I do a small channel that does concise slide order commentary on the tragic status of today's reality and I really appreciate being on here today.