Lizzo retires from politics, Kathy Hochul is heckled, and asked to leave a memorial service, and more. Plus, a new Good Friday special guest joins us to talk about it all and much more!
00:00:00.000So, Kathy Hochul tried to go to the fallen officer's wake and was kicked out.
00:00:18.000We have numerous stories talking about how she was heckled and asked to leave because people are quite upset with what's going on in New York City.
00:00:24.000More women are coming forward saying they're getting punched in the face and now you actually have some celebrities saying they've too been punched in the face.
00:00:46.000So we got those stories, and then we have Lizzo retiring a day after going to this big fundraiser where Joe Biden's bragging.
00:00:53.000You know, I just feel like lining up with Democrats is a surefire way to cause damage to your career because nobody likes Joe Biden.
00:01:01.000Well Lizzo says that she's tired of all the backlash and the negative feedback and being made fun of for being fat, so she's retiring, but I wonder what this has to do with being at this fundraiser because I have to imagine by appearing there, Lizzo probably got a massive wave of comments from people who are angry that she did, some simply attacking her because she did, and some directly criticizing her saying, hey, why did you do this?
00:01:25.000What I mean is, there's probably a lot of people who just started commenting, you're fat and you're gross, and things like that, because she had done something to anger them politically.
00:01:32.000Hey man, you want to get into the political fray?
00:01:54.000Everyone loves Appalachian Nights so much, we sell out insanely quickly.
00:01:59.000And now we're distributors just on, like, cycling.
00:02:01.000We just told them, like, just order whenever you want.
00:02:03.000Like, make it when you want it and build it, because people keep buying it.
00:02:06.000But I do recommend Rise with Roberto Jr., which is, of course, my second favorite, and used to be the lead seller until people discovered the amazing Robust Dark Roast of Appalachian Nights.
00:02:15.000And, of course, the re-Rise with Roberto Jr.
00:02:18.000is our gag from Halloween, and that's a limited run, so once that's gone, it's gone.
00:02:22.000I think there's a couple thousand left anyway, so.
00:02:24.000And Mr. Boca's Pumpkin Spice Experience is nearing the end of its run as well, so pick those up.
00:02:43.000Join our Discord is what I wanted to say.
00:02:45.000Join the Discord server as a member, and we don't have a members-only show coming up tonight, but as a member of the Discord, you can hang out with like-minded individuals, and we want to build that networking in that community.
00:02:54.000Joining us tonight to talk about this and whatever else is Blair White.
00:03:26.000Hi everybody, my name's Phil LaVantia, I'm the lead singer of the heavy metal band All That Remains, anti-communist, counter-revolutionary.
00:04:22.000Kathy Hochul kicked out of NYPD officer's wake.
00:04:27.000HOKOL WAS NOT A WELCOME SIGHT AT THE WAKE OF FALLEN OFFICER JONATHAN DILLER.
00:04:31.000HOKOL REPORTEDLY LEFT FRIDAY'S RECEPTION WITHIN 10 MINUTES AFTER SHE WAS GREETED BY A SHOUT OF, GET HER OUT OF HERE.
00:04:38.000AS SHE WALKED BACK TO HER CAR, HOKOL WAS CONFRONTED BY A MAN WHO SOURCES SAID WAS SPEAKING TO HER WHILE GESTURING WITH EMOTION.
00:04:44.000Videos of the exchange were shared to social media, and a statement to the Washington Examiner, a spokesperson for the Governor's office, would not confirm or deny the claim that Hochul was asked to leave.
00:04:53.000Governor Hochul attended the WIG today to mourn the loss of Officer Diller, offer her condolences, and hear from his family and loved ones who are dealing with unimaginable grief.
00:05:03.000Diller, 31, was shot and killed Monday while performing a traffic stop on an illegally parked car.
00:05:08.000The suspected shooter, Guy Rivera, 34, had been arrested 21 times before the incident and is now facing murder charges.
00:05:15.000And my understanding is there was no reason for it.
00:05:17.000The guy just walked up to the car and they just shot him through the window.
00:05:22.000I don't understand, and someone's gonna have to explain this one to me, how Joe Biden raises as much money as he does when everyone hates the guy.
00:05:32.000I have talked to people who said, I voted for Joe Biden in 2020.
00:06:20.000If you're making like four, five, six hundred thousand dollars a year, maybe a million dollars a year, you're making enough money where you can throw a lot of money at political, you have a lot of disposable income, right?
00:06:31.000You're not conspicuously rich, but you're definitely rich, right?
00:06:36.000And you're going to go to work every day, but you don't want anything to change because you're going to be set for life in 10 years, right?
00:06:59.000Trump came along and messed everything up and they wanted to go back to the way before Donald Trump.
00:07:04.000They were hoping that Joe Biden was going to be the way, you know, go back to the way things were.
00:07:08.000And I think that they're really mad that it's not working, but I still think that they're of the mindset that I'm just going to keep throwing money at Essentially the Obama team, because most people know that Joe Biden's entire administration is just the same people that were working there when Barack Obama was the president.
00:07:29.000So I think it's just people that throw money at people that have disposable income and throw as much as they can at those candidates.
00:07:35.000The reason why I brought that up is because Kathy Hochul shows up to an officer's wake and they scream at her to get out.
00:07:41.000Democrat policy is leading to such devastation.
00:07:44.000You've got women getting punched in the face, officers being killed.
00:07:49.000I mean, Anna Kasparian snapped off on Young Turks about in New York, they refused to hold people found with corpses and blood in their drains.
00:07:59.000And the cops are like, we can't hold them.
00:08:00.000Crime is one of the things right now that's turning a lot of people around for sure.
00:08:03.000And it feels like on the ground level, like you said, it's the least radioactive time for Trump in the sense of like, you can kind of, the temperature is just a little different right now, as opposed to while he was president leading up and even before now, where you can kind of openly talk about supporting Trump and get a minimal amount of backlash.
00:09:34.000Woke is a false reality built on post-modernist lies, and red-pilled is, you're actually seeing through the BS and breaking the fractured narrative of the corporate press and the establishment.
00:09:43.000And when you ask people that claim to be woke, a lot of times they'll say that the red pill people are delusioned and that the woke people have it right.
00:09:51.000It's the idea that one side has a picture-perfect view of reality and the other side is deluded.
00:09:56.000But in reality, we're probably all a little deluded and hopefully have some value to bring to the table.
00:10:01.000I actually think it's a fair assessment that, I would say, in the quote-unquote red pill, which, I wouldn't actually want to use the red pill, but I would say, because we don't really use those terms anymore.
00:11:03.000No, they thought that Donald Trump, you're right, they did think that it was going to bring him back before Donald Trump, but they thought that Donald Trump was the cause.
00:11:10.000And for the past almost decade, almost decade, I've been saying Donald Trump is a symptom of what is going on in society.
00:11:30.000And as long as people don't understand that, they're going to keep behaving as if Donald Trump is the problem and keep voting for the things that they were voting for before Donald Trump, which are the exact same things that gave us Donald Trump.
00:11:52.000This progress into the, I don't know what you call it, the devolvement of the United States government into this global corporatization where they're just siphoning off our wealth, that wasn't a Donald Trump.
00:12:46.000It was unveiling everything that was kind of sick and wrong with the culture and how the country was being ran, not necessarily him doing a bunch of stuff.
00:12:53.000Because you can also see how he didn't have all that much power during 2020.
00:12:56.000Well, I mean, just to clarify, you know, I do think it's true for the most part that public figures reflect back what people want to see in them.
00:13:03.000But do you mean by that, like, no matter what you do, people will choose, like, how they think of you?
00:13:23.000Like the bloodbath thing recently was a really good example.
00:13:26.000I didn't see many people genuinely falling for it.
00:13:28.000And then when I did see falling for it, their comment section was lit up with people of all over the political spectrum saying, actually, that's ridiculous to paint it that way.
00:13:37.000And so that's a good sign because you think back to before, every person believed that he made fun of the mentally handicapped reporter.
00:13:42.000Every person believed he said all these things about, you know, Latinos and black people that just were either not true or taken out of context.
00:14:00.000I mean, I'm comfortable with that, you know, that framing as well.
00:14:06.000Essentially, like, look, the people on the left and your average Democrat need to understand that MAGA people are the Tea Party.
00:14:14.000Right, like the Tea Party came in response to what essentially was, you know, the overreach, what they felt was the overreach of the federal government, and a response to the bailouts of the banks, right?
00:14:27.000So there was the left response, which was Occupy Wall Street and stuff, and that got eaten up by the whole intersectional stuff, and you had the Tea Party, which was the response to, like, the bailouts in response to the ACA, and they essentially were like, you know, These are the things that we want, and these are the things we're upset about.
00:14:45.000And all they got from the Democrats was, oh, they're the racist, they're clinging to their guns and their God and blah, blah, blah, and all of the negative stereotypes.
00:14:53.000And so they were like, well, we wanted Mitt Romney, who was literally the most Boy Scout-ass Boy Scout you can get, right?
00:15:01.000As milquetoast as you could possibly come up with.
00:15:06.000They still said he was all these terrible things.
00:15:08.000And then they're like, well, then Donald Trump shows up, And Donald Trump's just like an endless line of middle fingers and they're like, that's my guy.
00:15:19.000So the idea that Donald Trump caused any of this is absolutely detached from reality and ridiculous.
00:15:27.000But the average person doesn't realize it because CNN will never tell them that and will never explain it in that timeline in a way that they'll understand that.
00:15:34.000It is apparent that he's more either a result of this problem of society or is a symptom or everyone has a response to it because like he didn't even want to be in politics in the beginning.
00:16:32.000And I think another big part of like the shift we're starting to see in attitudes towards Trump is also you can only beat up on someone so much.
00:16:41.000You know, how many times can they believe their people are going to get him?
00:16:44.000Until you start to realize, well, maybe if I can see they're lying over here and all these things that are coming out in the media with how the entertainment industry works, et cetera, then maybe this is a lie too.
00:16:57.000All of these hosts, like Joe Scarborough's brain just like fell out of his head a long time ago.
00:17:03.000The crazy thing is I watched Morning Joe from like from the morning after 9-11 or I watched MSNBC from the morning after 9-11 until like 2010 or 2011 where I was just like I can't take this anymore and I watched as Joe Scarborough who had a nighttime show and was pretty center Republican, like he used to be a Republican
00:17:52.000He wasn't big on the Middle Eastern wars, and then I dipped out for 15 years, and now when I see him, it seems like I'm watching Keith Olbermann.
00:17:58.000Like, losing his mind, I don't like it.
00:18:00.000What if what happened is that a meteor crashed on Earth carrying a bunch of slugs that enter a person's brain in their sleep and take them over, and that's what we're experiencing.
00:18:10.000How else do you explain, you know, people like Joe Scarborough Scarborough did it for the nookie, but like other people, he did it all for the nookie because Mika Brzezinski was like, let me teach you about politics.
00:18:22.000matters are gonna write. Tim Pool believes aliens have come.
00:18:24.000Scarborough did it for the nookie but like other people he did all for the nookie
00:18:29.000because Mika Brzezinski was like, let me tell you a joke. She's like let me teach
00:18:40.000But anyways, Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough started a relationship while they were both married and while they both started doing Morning Joe.
00:18:50.000Well, let's talk about Trump, though, because it's about, yeah, can he win?
00:19:00.000But maybe, if we can get Trump to work on this new world order thing, and we can all come together and be like, let's make a new world order, legitimately, that's better than the old liberal economic order, that uses American constitutionalism, we'll help lead, we don't have to be in front every second, you know, we'll work together.
00:19:21.000In 2028, my plan will be to explore running for president under the platform that I will bring all troops back, line them up on the northern border, and then march into Canada and take what is rightfully ours.
00:20:04.000The crazy thing is, they're passing gun laws in response to things that happened in the United States, so it's totally about virtue signaling.
00:20:18.000It's a whole different context in Canada, what their gun laws are, and their culture up there, like who's carrying guns, and what the people feel like they should be allowed to do when it comes to handguns and stuff.
00:20:32.000For them to respond to a crime in the United States by banning guns up there, it's all because Trudeau is a clown of a politician that is only worried about the way that his image is on the international scene.
00:20:51.000I mean, look, I'm not for an expansive kind of international foreign policy, but I tell you what, The Maple brothers and sisters need love.
00:21:06.000Here's my view is that there's a shared culture dating back to the time of the colonies between us and many of those colonists, and those people are being oppressed by their government, thus giving us a justification.
00:21:17.000So the first thing we'll do is we will politely request that they cede the territory of Montreal.
00:21:22.000I'm not saying all of Quebec, but Montreal to us, and if they refuse, then we invade.
00:21:28.000Well, I think that we'll have a better chance with the... I'm not serious, by the way.
00:21:33.000I think we'll have a better chance with your plan if we don't go after the French and we go after the English-speaking Canadians, because they're more polite than the French Canadians, or the French Canadians are much, much more likely to tell you to F yourself.
00:21:44.000Tim Kast has had two number ones in Edmonton.
00:21:53.000The problem with liberating a territory and not conquering it, just liberating it and letting it become free, is what we see in Cuba.
00:22:00.000We can see a result of America liberating Cuba from the Spanish Empire and then just letting it be free, and then it became a communist dictatorship.
00:22:08.000Could have made that a state, part of the United States, in retrospect.
00:22:13.000If they knew ahead of time what was to come, would they have just conquered it?
00:22:16.000I always go back and forth on how free they actually want to be because obviously we all probably have a lot of audience that is from Canada and so they want to be free.
00:22:26.000But it's also, I think we underestimate as Americans how dystopian it really is.
00:22:30.000They kill their poor, they do the suicide stuff.
00:22:33.000Now they're doing medical assistance in death for autism and depression and homelessness.
00:23:22.000Like, bro, we have laws in the books that say you can't put pie in your windowsill on Sunday.
00:23:25.000No cop is gonna come and stop you putting pie in your windowsill.
00:23:27.000We've never seen a king exercise his authority in the modern era.
00:23:30.000And what happens when you don't exercise, you lose your muscle.
00:23:34.000I'd be willing to bet that if the king came out and was like, I have cancer, so I'm taking over Canada, they'd be like, no.
00:23:39.000just total secession. Not only that, didn't Canada have some declaration in like 1950 about
00:23:43.000suffering from the king or something like that anyway? I'm not sure. I think there's still
00:23:47.000connections to the crown in Canada. There's technicalities that people don't ever,
00:23:54.000probably along the lines of blue laws in the United States, but if I understand correctly,
00:24:00.000there are still ties that bind Canada to England.
00:24:06.000I mean, they still have the Queen, or they had the Queen on their money, you know, until... I don't know if they put the King on their money now, but I know that the Queen was on their money for a while, so there's got to be some kind of connection.
00:24:19.000I would be interested to see what would happen if the king was like, I'm taking over New Zealand, Australia, whatever.
00:25:23.000So, um, we had Brad Palumbo respond to me saying, no, the violent victimization of innocent women at random is not hilarious, no matter how insane some of NYC's policies, which not all New Yorkers support, are.
00:25:37.000To which Austin Peterson says, it can be hilarious when it includes irony.
00:25:43.000If they didn't vote for it, then it's not funny.
00:25:45.000They didn't expect the Democrat voting would lead to this.
00:25:47.000Oh, whoops, slipped on a banana peel I just dropped.
00:25:50.000And he shows this old meme from back during Occupy, this was in Portland, a woman screaming while getting blasted in the face with high-pressure pepper spray, and it says, wants more government and more government.
00:28:55.000And because of the behaviors that the governments of these cities are, you know, because of the policies they're instituting, you're only going to get more of this.
00:29:04.000And this is actually something that is intentional.
00:29:09.000You know, there were tweets yesterday that I was sharing of people saying, you know, we aren't going to make anything better by putting people in jail.
00:29:17.000There are just some people that cannot be in society.
00:29:22.000It's a small percentage, but the problem is there's millions of people in New York City.
00:29:27.000And when you have a gigantic population, even if it's 0.5%, that's a lot of people because it only takes one person to cause absolute mayhem.
00:29:39.000And so if you've got a certain amount of the population that are just completely unprepared to live what we consider a normal life, then they're going to cause problems.
00:29:51.000And the people on the left are consistently saying, just because they have an alternative way of knowing the world, And they're neurodivergent, and because they experienced the world different to you doesn't mean they're bad, and we can't treat them bad, and we can't take away their liberty, and blah blah blah blah blah, and it is absolutely insane.
00:30:10.000Meanwhile, it's one of the cruelest, you know, paths you can take for these people.
00:30:18.000Allow them to F off and if they invade your space well then maybe you shouldn't have been in their space.
00:30:22.000It's cruel to them because especially if you live in these cities or just visit one and you see it's like it's so not a normal human thing to walk by people on the street and not know if they're like alive or dead and that's a common thing every day.
00:30:48.000And then you go to Austin for the first time and you're hanging out with Malice and you're like, so this is a great place, but where are all the dead bodies?
00:31:03.000It's like, I think the really scary part of this is that it's no coincidence that, you know, it defies logic that you would let someone out, like you said earlier, the story Anna Kasparian was talking about, like corpses found and that person gets let out, but it's intentional.
00:31:18.000I think it's to demoralize and destroy the city.
00:31:24.000What if we literally get a scenario where Trump shoots someone on Fifth Avenue because a guy is about to punch a woman in the face and then Trump's with a security detail and like grabs the gun and saves the woman or whatever?
00:31:36.000I'm just like, Trump famously says he could shoot a person on Fifth Avenue and not lose any votes and if the context was he's saving the life of a woman who's about to be killed by a deranged murderer, And like a bunch of children, he says, like a family of seven.
00:31:53.000No, they would just say the person was, like Kyle Rittenhouse.
00:31:55.000In addition to the toxic compassion that leads to people letting, you know, deranged individuals out on the street, they're great, let them out, you know, what are they?
00:32:04.000There's the big business of homelessness, which is just really disturbing, where they are people, these middle management, they make $50,000, $100,000 a year to oversee a group community.
00:32:23.000I need to tell you, I think non-profits are a big portion of the problems in this country, and the reason is...
00:32:29.000Uh, we can complain about for-profit business all day and night.
00:32:32.000Uh, T-Mobile, maybe you've had bad customer service, but they make your, you got a phone that works, you call people on it, and then maybe the company can have bad things.
00:32:39.000But what if, you start a business, and the purpose of your business is...
00:33:08.000It concerns me about the illegal immigration too, like what non-profits are popping up right now or NGOs are popping up to create like a permanent state of illegal immigration and profiting off of it.
00:33:19.000At this pace of illegal immigration, 300,000 per month, We're looking at the complete dissipation of the United States within a few years.
00:33:54.000They're taking over public buildings and giving them to non-citizens.
00:33:58.000And then you think of, it's a slightly different topic, but just all the laws in California allowing people to bum rush into stores and just steal just so much stuff.
00:34:09.000And it's clear that there's an intentional destruction of society that's underway right now.
00:34:14.000Did you feel that while you were living there?
00:34:17.000Especially during, this is why we were saying before we went on camera, it was like, you really saw who was who during the pandemic and COVID because it was clear as day.
00:34:35.000I mean, it wasn't like it was perfect.
00:34:36.000There were things that were going on, but for the most part, it was like, There was one, there's like one store nearby.
00:34:42.000I don't want to call them out, but they had like, you have to wear a mask.
00:34:45.000And then there's another store, comparable one, like competition across street, no mask.
00:34:49.000And it's like, well, we all know where we're going.
00:34:51.000So people in West Virginia were just like, I'm not wearing that.
00:34:53.000That's part of the problem with it in a way is that like everyone's idea of what really went down during that is so disjointed based on where you lived.
00:35:00.000Like you could have lived out here where you barely felt it, or you could have lived where I live where there was tanks on the street.
00:35:06.000When it first started, we were in Jersey and we had a backyard.
00:35:09.000The backyard had a big concrete slab and a mini ramp.
00:35:12.000So for the most part, like Ian sitting in the back, starting fires in the fire pit, we're like, we're hanging out after the show, just sitting there enjoying a nice fire pit.
00:35:19.000And we're like, this is what we normally do anyway.
00:36:31.000And I think people, part of going back to like all the crime we're seeing now
00:36:34.000that's waking hopefully a lot of people up, is that I think people had an idea
00:36:38.000that after COVID it was getting better, you know.
00:36:40.000But then they came in and enacted all the laws that you could shoplift and just destroy businesses, and so it didn't really get better, they just created new problems.
00:36:48.000Yeah, the border, the open border is insane.
00:37:28.000Then he says, I'm making a bunch of money, why don't you guys just steal Americans' homes?
00:37:32.000And the only reason, I assure you, he regrets making that video, because if he didn't make that video, they'd have given him a pat on the back.
00:37:45.000It's being invaded by people who know they can steal property, and it's happening in places like New York because New York is run by communists.
00:37:50.000Kathy Hochul and Letitia James are trying their hardest to burn New York to the ground.
00:37:54.000You know, I think, I, look, did you know Letitia James is like 60-something years old?
00:38:23.000And what's really sick is if you know that if there was like a disproportionate they would vote red, all the immigrants coming in, it's like they wouldn't be doing this.
00:38:58.000My first thought with this dude that got caught, this guy who's getting deported, was that they should make him make a new video saying, do not come here and do not take people's houses.
00:40:27.000There was no misunderstanding the tone.
00:40:33.000There was no misunderstanding the look on his face.
00:40:34.000There was no misunderstanding the intonation of his voice.
00:40:39.000Even if you didn't understand the words, you got that it was not friendly, warm, and inviting, and trying to sound like he wanted to Come to America and have gainful employment and actually start a business.
00:40:52.000He was looking to take stuff from people and make it his own and steal it.
00:41:17.000It's like, I don't know, I don't know the numbers, but it's mostly dudes that are, you know, like fairly young dudes that have been coming across.
00:41:23.000Dude, it's economic migrants, people that want to come here, make money somehow, and either send it back or, you know, just make money and try to live the best life they can.
00:41:35.000The optimist in me, you know, that's still there, thank God, does feel like maybe it's a good thing this story happened and this person did go viral because it kind of shows that, like, that sort of, you know, blue-pilled narrative of like, oh, it's just a helpless family and they're just trying to find the American dream and it's stacked against them and, you know, we have to help them.
00:42:05.000This is like an inoculation time in human history where we're becoming rapidly adaptable to fake crap and new stuff and resilient towards believing the first thing we see and overriding our compassion to do the right thing.
00:42:18.000I think that we're definitely in that age right now.
00:42:20.000At the very least, the younger generations are completely ignoring the corporate press.
00:42:25.000They've just become like Joe Scarborough and CNN, MSNBC, they may as well just be saying, Because nothing they say, like, younger people are just like, yeah, yeah, yeah, we get it, you're lying.
00:42:36.000It's what my grandma watches, you know?
00:42:37.000It's like, it's not... Maybe people are becoming better at reading tone.
00:42:41.000Because this guy's tone was insane in the video.
00:44:42.000If they catch people stealing them, they grab the people.
00:44:45.000But they're not in the business of like, let's go find all those cars that get stolen.
00:44:49.000So, you know, there's no incentive to call the police for anything other than, you know, I'm in danger.
00:44:58.000And there are police Police departments across the country that are starting to say we can't even cover that.
00:45:06.000Yeah, and there's a lot of people, you know, and I'm included in this, that kind of have the philosophy that if something were to happen, say someone breaking in my home, someone physically assaulting me, my mind wouldn't even go to police until the situation's already resolved, whether it's me defending myself or whatever, getting out of it, then you think, okay, maybe I should do that now, because there's no feasible way for them to help you, you know?
00:45:26.000That's why you have to have guns, but... When, what is it, when seconds matter, police are minutes away.
00:45:33.000But that's what happens when you live in a place like New York.
00:45:36.000You know, even when we had Luke on, we were talking about gun ownership in New York and the risk of, like, what if someone's got a .308 and they're in their apartment and they shoot it and it rips through a bunch of the, like, a bunch of buildings and hits a kid or something.
00:46:41.000You'll have a guy who is driving in his car, and then... Oh, I got a story for you.
00:46:49.000A guy was driving in his car, this was in Illinois, and then he rear-ended a vehicle in front of him, killing three of the people in that car, because he was at full speed, going 70 miles an hour up the ramp.
00:46:58.000They were stopped, slammed into him, launched him forward, car got hit a couple times, everybody dies.
00:47:16.000But the family that was emotionally impacted demanded that he go to prison because they want to feel better.
00:47:21.000There are a lot of instances where people go to jail not because they're criminals but because people want to feel better.
00:47:26.000There's a lot of instances where people go to jail not because they're criminals but because they accidentally drove over a bridge carrying their legally permitted weapon and a cop didn't care and went and locked her up.
00:47:36.000So, I'm joking about a supreme despot, but I understand why a lot of people are saying they want a strongman to come and take over, because they want rigid, uniform, focused cleansing of criminal actions and corruption in the country, and that can't be done.
00:47:53.000I feel like the process, the system we have, the end result was always going to be the gradual accumulation of corruption.
00:48:01.000Because the underlying ethos of our civil order is that guilty persons should be free so that innocent persons are protected.
00:48:08.000But that means over a long enough time, you build kind of a crust around the edge of the bowl, you gotta scrape it off eventually.
00:48:14.000Well, I don't have all the answers, but there are a lot of people who see that and say, just send in the emperor, let him come and clean everything up, and then we start over.
00:48:22.000I don't know that you'll ever get to start over as soon as you have something like that, though.
00:48:25.000Unless you get lucky with, like, a Cincinnatus.
00:48:28.000Or you could just go the route of Rome and then you get varying empires and varying civil wars and the whole thing explodes and then you get the Dark Ages.
00:48:34.000Yeah, the United States is too valuable to give to the hands of a man.
00:48:38.000That's why we have this decentralized unification.
00:48:40.000And honestly, if we can keep local police tight and strong, we're good.
00:48:45.000Otherwise, we will need a strong man to torch it all to the ground and start over.
00:48:48.000I think it's inevitable because if you look at Rome and how it went from, you know, it's a republic, but then eventually there's like, okay, enough of this.
00:50:17.000So Thomas Massey tweeted this this morning, and I retweeted it.
00:50:21.000In his estimation, there are three places we end up.
00:50:23.000He says, steer our government away from economic collapse, one.
00:50:27.000Two, economic collapse, and then renaissance, totalitarianism, or national divorce, which I think all three, I think renaissance is unlikely, totalitarianism or national divorce are the ones that would end up happening.
00:50:38.000Or a slow devolution into Chinese-style communism and central control.
00:50:42.000That's the one that's most likely because of, like, the internet and people's reliance on devices that are constantly monitoring you.
00:50:52.000So, I mean, it's not exactly a happy outlook, but I think it's probably the most likely.
00:51:00.000Yeah, and you read the last line of that, slow devolution into Chinese-style communists and central control.
00:51:23.000There should be Education on all totalitarianism, so communism as well as Nazism, it's... you get a decent understanding of how bad Nazism is, you don't get any understanding of how bad communism is, and communism is arguably as bad as or worse than Nazism because of the number, just the sheer numbers.
00:52:36.000And they say like, And you claim that there is a God or something and he's like there's no evidence one way or the other and they just start beating him to death.
00:52:44.000Yeah, and the thing is that so that is emblematic of things that actually happen in China.
00:52:49.000You can hear stories about Tofen Lysenko and medical and Lysenkoism in the Soviet Union, which is essentially he was like, hey, this is how plants like it.
00:53:07.000He's like, look, plants are communist.
00:53:09.000All of that Darwinism stuff, that's all Western and that's all just bullcrap.
00:53:16.000Plants are communist, so if you plant plants that are like each other, close to each other, they will flourish because they will actually help each other.
00:53:25.000Which is absolute horse crap, and it caused a massive famine and killed millions and millions of people.
00:53:32.000And this is something that happens in communist countries all the time.
00:54:12.000And you end up hurting people when you tell them that actual science and biological facts, reality, like Plants don't need to be planted on top of each other because they compete for resources in the soil like that kind of stuff Spreads through your society and it kills people remember and it trickles out to so many different things, you know Unhoused not homeless and then you're suddenly denying the ways to actually help people.
00:54:36.000Yes, or like someone favorite is pig iron Yeah.
00:55:48.000First, and civilized second, so we need to be animals in cities, and we need to embrace that as opposed to reason, because reason is fallible, and reason can be mistaken, and we can make errors in reason, so the most real thing that human beings can experience is our emotions, so we should follow those, and that's how you get, I want society to be perfect.
00:56:12.000Let's make a sci-fi short film where it starts with some people hiding in an attic and then, like, the finale of it is dudes in, like, white unitards with- with weird sci-fi looking guns break in and the people are, like, screaming.
00:56:30.000Then, like, the dad gets up and he has, like, a stick and he's like, Get back!
00:56:33.000And then they- they grab him and they jab the gun into the side of his temple and click it and it goes, And then when they pull it out, there's a Norlink in his head and he goes, And then he turns around to his family, and then he goes and he grabs their kids, and then they all stick them with the chips, and then they all turn and go, we're sorry about that, and they all walk downstairs.
00:56:48.000That's a good intro to, like, a series.
00:56:51.000Three minutes or something, that'd be badass.
00:56:53.000You got people, like, hiding underground, and the people who are in the Hive Neuralink are trying to find resistors and chip them.
00:56:59.000Part of me thinks that in the future there are going to be people that are transhuman and not transhuman, and there's going to be transhumans that specifically take it upon themselves to defend the non-transhumans, so that way there are actual human beings that are allowed to be purely human beings.
00:57:17.000There's going to be a religious group of people that are like, we don't want any of this transhumanism, and it's going to take transhumans that have augmented abilities to protect the pure humans from other Think about where this goes.
00:57:40.000They wear sleek unitards and they can float through the air.
00:57:44.000And then there are Amish-type Mennonites who don't want to become... And the funny thing is, probably like traditional conservatives today, like, we do not want to become whatever you are.
00:59:08.000And it's like, yo, bro, you're experimenting with the human genome.
00:59:11.000You might have these, you could turn people feral.
00:59:14.000You could do lots of different unintended consequences.
00:59:17.000Not least of all, death to 99% of the people doing it.
00:59:20.000But like, that on top of like, mRNA therapy, which is also genetic therapy, like, do they understand the implications of foisting this on the species as a whole?
00:59:38.000You know, you're not allowed to say, well, I have this or maybe I don't want it.
00:59:41.000It's like one size fits all, which is really the You know, what's fascinating is how, it's like, what year, I don't know what year they, oh, it's 1989 they introduced the Borg.
00:59:52.000I think it was the first season of Next Generation the Borg was introduced.
00:59:56.000So the general premise behind the Borg is that a species of human-like people started creating medical technology, and then they started integrating themselves, and then eventually they neural-linked themselves and became a hive mind.
01:00:12.000You know, I'm not a big fan of where they took it, where there's a queen who controls all of it.
01:00:16.000It was much better when it was just a hive of all the thought of all of the beings, and so there was no individual.
01:00:23.000Yeah, just like an AI computer would have been cool.
01:00:25.000But it is fascinating how, even before the advent of these technologies, we could, like the boomers who were making that show, could see Where this would go... They need more Borg dogs, though.
01:00:38.000They don't have enough non-human Borgs.
01:00:40.000They'd have cats Borg'd up with them, they'd have all their pets and shit.
01:00:43.000Well, no, technically, in Star Trek, there's a whole bunch of different species that are Borg.
01:00:47.000Yeah, because they capture anyone, and they assimilate you into their... Your, what is it, your technology and your culture will be assimilated.
01:00:57.000And the fascinating thing is when the crew, like, when they Borg the Borg vessel, they're ignored completely.
01:01:02.000And it's because Like, when you get, like, a bacteria in your system, like, you get an infection, it is ignored until there's an immune response.
01:01:11.000So their idea was, like, if humans from the Federation go into the Borg ship, the Borg just, like, they're completely not a thing to us.
01:01:19.000Until they become a threat, then they react to the, you're right, like an infection almost.
01:01:24.000I think there's a strong possibility with Neuralink, this is where we end up.
01:01:30.000Because the way it will start is, you already have that dude who tweeted out through Neuralink, and I'm excited for the guy.
01:01:44.000A lot of people are probably happy to have some freedom back in their lives.
01:01:47.000But what happens then is, when we advance to read-write capabilities, Even if we get to the point where it's just a read-no-write, meaning it can detect input from your brain and put it on a screen.
01:01:58.000Meaning you'll be sitting in a room with the doors closed, the windows closed, looking at a screen, and you're sending information out, and you're just using your mind, and it's happening super fast.
01:02:08.000You're absorbing information through your eyes with a screen, but you're sending information with your brain, so it's still rapidly speeding up the process.
01:02:15.000Once we get to that point where it can write to your brain and in your mind you can see the responses for people, the exchange of information will be so rapid that it will be like the Borg.
01:02:28.000You will be walking in the street and three guys will turn and they'll come at you and you'll have no idea what's going on or why, but in their mind they already got the alert.
01:02:37.000Police on the lookout, be on the lookout for a guy wearing a maroon shirt with a black baseball cap.
01:02:41.000Everyone instantly knows and they turn and they point at you and you're like... Everyone's Mr. Smith or Agent Smith.
01:03:54.000I mean, you might be able to melt them.
01:03:56.000It's any system that understands binary would be able to infect our entire grid networks of all of our machines and take them over in only a short manner of time.
01:04:06.000Yeah, but means we could do it to theirs as well, but but if they are in Integrated with it dude the machine I speed this that's this it's a speed It'll become just a speed thing like even if we could like hack them as soon as you start trying to hack it if it is an AI then it's gonna go ahead and know what you're trying to do and it'll write code to it Let's jump to this next story.
01:04:50.000They said, Anna Kasparian praises Ron DeSantis and Florida for passing an anti-squatter bill and criticizes New York and California for sitting on their asses and doing nothing about it.
01:04:59.000She undercuts the premise when she says, we don't know how widespread squatting really is.
01:05:04.000So we, I suppose, it's only a matter of time before Anna comes out and says she's voting for Trump.
01:05:10.000And I think she might take, like, that probably would irk her that I said that, but it's reality.
01:05:30.000And when she says, if this is what it means to be on the left, I'm not on the left anymore.
01:05:34.000And Jen goes, no, no, no, trust me, it's not.
01:05:36.000And then every single time, they prove her right.
01:05:40.000The left comes out and says, yes, we want this.
01:05:43.000Jank is trying to maintain this facade for the Young Turks of, we're progressive, trust me.
01:05:47.000But deep down, the more Anna reads, the more she knows they're wrong, they're crazy, and Jank is just gonna keep saying, no, no, trust me, don't worry.
01:05:56.000You can't be on the same, you know, set with her talking about this and feel like she's wrong.
01:06:01.000I can't speak to what's going on inside of her head, but it seems like she's come in contact with reality.
01:06:11.000I continuously say that people that are on the left tend to have a counter-enlightenment perspective.
01:06:21.000Set their their kind of foundation or the way they structure their lives based on reality, and I think that You know Anna's personal experiences and and the things that she's seen have started to Kind of wear away at the at the romantic idea that or a lot of the romantically ideas on the left What do you say this morning?
01:06:58.000This is why I say, though, like everyone talks about there's that saying that like progressives live in the future, conservatives live in the past.
01:07:05.000I think progressives catch on to things quite late.
01:07:07.000Actually, they'll come to terms with like problems that exist and see it around them actually quite late.
01:07:13.000So, she's talking about crime being a problem, you know, in 2024, and most of us were seeing that 2020, 2021, and, like, losing our minds.
01:07:22.000And also, like, it also speaks to the fact that there is a significant section of the left that doesn't believe in putting people in jail at all.
01:07:34.000Apparently, the Sam Seder crowd was calling her the next Dave Rubin a year ago.
01:07:39.000Yeah, well- Yeah, she was starting around a year ago, talking- Well, but they also- they also called her, what, like a womb haver or something?
01:07:46.000That was the- I think that was the first thing is- Yeah.
01:07:48.000That was the first thing she started talking about, and then the crime was the big one that she was like, wait a second.
01:07:52.000And then she was like, wait, I read about Kyle Rittenhouse, and y'all were wrong.
01:07:57.000I mean, look at all these things that she's, you know, as far as we're concerned, these are things that were obvious and we've known and talked about for five years or whatever.
01:08:57.000I'm going to be honest, I would bet, yeah, she's going to be like, I'm not going to vote for Trump.
01:09:01.000She's going to walk in the booth and hit Trump.
01:09:03.000Yeah and it goes to show just like any cult like you said it things just have to get so extreme for a few stragglers to start to be like wait you know you hear about people who leave actual cults and it it gets to the point where things are just so extreme so you know people not going to jail for having corpses in their house and it's so crazy for me because for me that was the breaking point yeah it's like there was a lot leading up to that sis but whatever I think In the age that we're in now, if you leave a cult and you have a microphone and you tell the world about the cult and expose it, you can completely dissolve the cult, one person.
01:09:36.000We're not really in the age of this controlling mechanism crap that we used to be and, God willing, we'll never enter into again if we can maintain freedom.
01:09:46.000So it's easy, once you're out of it, to speak the truth, especially if you're the righteous one.
01:10:30.000So the issue is like, I have to imagine that Anna, after all this time of being on The Young Turks, has a pretty happy nest egg, and is not concerned at all about the negative repercussions of calling out the BS.
01:10:42.000Because she could easily go independent, you know, if she left or was fired for straying, she could go independent for sure.
01:10:48.000How long have they been doing The Young Turks?
01:11:03.000I think it's more so that, you know, when you're younger and you're like, I don't know what I'm doing with my career, I don't know how far I can go, and they say, play ball, you might get worried, you might be like, if I lose this job, what do I do?
01:11:13.000She's at the point in her career where she's like, I got money.
01:11:15.000Ain't nobody telling me what I can or can't say.
01:11:18.000And she's just older, you know, she was really young when she started.
01:11:20.000And also, I think you can't underestimate how powerful just the fact that she's built her entire social circle probably up around people that are hardcore lefties.
01:11:29.000And, you know, you see it on the right too, people build their social circle around it.
01:11:33.000That's why, you know, when you come out as a different, you know, ideology or start thinking differently, you shed friends, you shed people.
01:11:39.000I think the fact that she's a co-host actually has somewhat insulated her from the cultism of the cult.
01:11:46.000So for a lot of these people who host their own channels, like Hassan's mental breakdown, you saw that?
01:12:27.000This is why also I always say it's equally important to, you know, gain fans or viewers or listeners as to alienating viewers and fans and listeners.
01:12:32.000Like, you should be alienating people.
01:12:33.000No, no, no, no, don't leave the left because he's thinking how many subscribers are we
01:12:35.000going to gain or lose from this line of thinking that you say?
01:13:00.000He ends up supporting, he's being criticized by a lot of people for supporting terror and authoritarianism and calling babies colonizers, but it's because he kept trying to say what he thought his chat wanted to hear, so he went crazier and crazier.
01:13:16.000Because the extreme ones are the most vocal.
01:13:19.000So he's responding to the most vocal as opposed to the normal average person that's watching us on that was, you know, honestly probably watched him because it was like, man, I think we should have free health care.
01:13:32.000That's literally the doorway, you know?
01:13:35.000You know, we have people who come on this show and they're like, oh, I read the comments and I'm like, why?
01:13:47.000But while it's great that people are commenting and we recommend you comment and chat more.
01:13:52.000The majority of people who watch this are watching on their TVs.
01:13:56.000This is something I think is really important for a lot of people to understand.
01:13:58.000They're turning their TV on and they're opening YouTube TV or the YouTube app and playing the live stream on their TVs while they're hanging out.
01:14:05.000So they don't have the keyboards in front of them.
01:14:20.000That 1% of the people are responsible for 99% of the content.
01:14:23.000So then you're getting led astray by the 1%, so you're losing a lot more people than you think by going in that direction.
01:14:29.000This is why when I tweet, I think it's funny that women in New York City are getting punched and everyone loses their collective mind, I laugh.
01:14:35.000And people are like, they're super mad about it.
01:15:06.000Well, a lot of people also treat politics like, you know, a group thing or trying to be part of a group rather than just saying what you mean and how you feel.
01:15:14.000And also people that are saying those kind of things are used to the people that they're talking to responding to the offer of proximity.
01:15:26.000So like we talked about like you don't get money for a lot of things that people in the press do.
01:15:43.000If he'll take your call, if Barack Obama's Chief of Staff will take your phone call or respond to your text, that is worth a whole lot more than $10, $20, $50 grand in your pocket.
01:15:55.000Honestly, especially when you're at that level where you could possibly get that, $10, $20, $50,000 doesn't matter to you.
01:16:29.000So, you know, and if you, if you take, if you have power, Then you don't need the money to get people to do things.
01:16:36.000So that access to Barack Obama or maybe to Donald Trump or whoever, to Joe Biden, to Hillary Clinton, the access to those people or the people around them is way more valuable than money.
01:16:51.000I found with power and the definition of what that means, when you are speaking the truth and you believe what you're saying and you're real, people will listen to you and then they'll join you.
01:17:00.000And then you've created a movement that is irrelevant of the cost.
01:17:03.000It's like, It's the most powerful force on earth.
01:17:07.000And I think that's probably the most terrifying force to authoritarian power structures is that an uprising of people that aren't in it for them.
01:17:23.000Actual longevity, if you want to do politics or commentary for a living, is actually not being led astray by the few comments.
01:17:30.000Just being in your own little bubble, not reading comments, and just saying what you truly mean and how you feel, because when you're being influenced by, I want to be friends with this person, I want access to these parties, I want to be a social climber, essentially, which is why a lot of people do it, that's when you start lying and they burn out one by one.
01:17:46.000Hassan, didn't Hassan say he wanted to like, off himself because of all this?
01:17:50.000Yeah, he was being dramatic, but apparently that was one of the posts.
01:17:53.000Yeah, that's suicide thoughts usually start- That was one of the posts?
01:17:56.000If I understand, I don't have any kind of confirmation, so I don't- A lot of that stuff starts as a joke, so he's probably going through a really low point right now, take it seriously.
01:18:04.000The thing about comments I learned over the years is I read them, I often read all of them, I don't take any of them personally, good or bad, I try not to, and I just kind of look at it as like they're using me as a concept and they're expressing what they feel, and I'm just an idea, so I don't take it personally.
01:18:20.000I stopped responding to the negative comments.
01:18:23.000I used to respond because they'd be the most stark.
01:18:25.000They'd be all nine good comments and one bad one being like, you smell.
01:20:06.000Right now the Krasensteins are doubling down, arguing that Donald Trump committed fraud because puffery.
01:20:12.000Because his company, Puffed up the value and the property sizes and submitted it to a bank to try and get a loan.
01:20:20.000What they're omitting is that they include in those documents that these are subjective and may be wrong.
01:20:26.000That's part of the documents that are provided.
01:20:29.000And as part of the negotiations, the bank does their own due diligence.
01:20:32.000The bank testified, one of the bankers involved from Deutsche Bank said, we actually evaluated his documents and lowered his estimated net worth way down, which is totally normal.
01:21:47.000We lowered the valuation, offered him a loan based on our assessment.
01:21:49.000And they went not on, but he lied in the first place.
01:21:51.000This is not too complex for the average person.
01:21:53.000The average person, if they look into it and they're not using motivated reasoning, it's clear, which is again why Kevin O'Leary is speaking on this on every show that he can be on, because this strikes at the very fundamental ability for people to do business in New York City.
01:22:12.000It makes people afraid to do business.
01:22:13.000This is very clear, unless you are intentionally dishonest.
01:23:01.000Second, he also may have provided separate square footages based on what is residential, commercial, what is legally usable versus what is the actual size.
01:23:13.000I don't know the context because there was no evidentiary, there was no trial.
01:23:17.000The judge didn't allow people to come in and testify what this means.
01:23:55.000If I'm gonna write down total square footage of property, I'm gonna include the outdoor barn, we've got attic space, none of it is livable square footage.
01:24:04.000If someone's gonna ask, what's the residential square footage of the building, I'm gonna give a different number and say, the amount you can actually use to live in, because certain parts are unfinished.
01:24:12.000There's a reasonable potential for a difference in square footage allotments.
01:24:17.000So when I first heard that, I said, I don't actually know.
01:24:19.000I'd have to look at blueprints and figure out what they meant by that.
01:24:22.000But I accept Trump may have fluffed up the number by three times to make it seem like it's bigger.
01:24:32.000It's like, okay, well, unless you have an adversarial assessment of why that was, and Trump on the stand talking about it, Trump's response when he was deposed was, you know, it's a big document, a lot of people worked on it, we told him that it's subjective and maybe wildly inaccurate.
01:24:50.000I would love to get Kevin O'Leary obviously on the show if we haven't reached out to him yet.
01:24:54.000I could listen to him go for two hours and just let the world know.
01:25:13.000And so, it could be worth a hundred bucks, but because it was given to me by Massey personally, I'm gonna say it's a thousand bucks, but I gotta be honest, I could be wildly wrong on its value.
01:25:20.000Why don't you figure out what the value is and then tell me what you'll give me for it?
01:25:23.000I don't know, it sounds like you're committing fraud, Tim.
01:25:42.000That the Trump organization lied about the square footage to make it seem like it's worth more money so the bank would give them more favorable terms.
01:26:17.000Look, I say that's gold, I could be wrong, let me know what you want to give me for it.
01:26:22.000So is that fraud if it's obviously not gold, and you tell them it's gold?
01:26:26.000And this is what Deutsche Bank, the banker basically said is, we reviewed all the documents and reduced his estimated valuation way down, like by less than half.
01:26:34.000And then we offer up a loan based on that.
01:26:36.000And there are other people in real estate that have done that, where they said, my thing's worth is three times the size of what I'm doing it.
01:26:54.000But I seriously think there's a strong probability that it's something like, the building we're in right now, total square footage is 12,000 square feet.
01:27:02.000If you were going to ask me, how much is the residential square feet, how much is the living square footage, I couldn't say that.
01:27:09.000But if I'm filing for different things, so let's say I'm going to a bank to get like a mortgage, I would say there's 12,000 square feet available for living space.
01:27:18.000What I mean is, the unfinished portions could be converted.
01:27:22.000If someone was trying to buy the property, I would give them the square footage of living space, which is like 8,000.
01:27:28.000There's a reasonable explanation for why there may be a different number, and I don't know.
01:27:32.000Maybe the Trump penthouse includes an unfinished underfloor or something.
01:27:37.000What I can tell you is these people are not trustworthy, so when they come out and they do this, First thing is, I know that they're lying about the fraud because Trump literally said these assessments are subjective and may vary wildly and told them to do their own due diligence.
01:27:51.000The bank said we did and we're fine and we're going to lower the valuation and give you a different loan.
01:28:48.000They would make money off it due to interest rates.
01:28:50.000And so they argued, if Trump didn't inflate the value, Well, Jon Stewart wasn't paying taxes on a $17 million property.
01:28:58.000That's a whole other argument, though, by the way.
01:29:00.000I mean, the issue there is that Jon Stewart is a tax fraudster, along with all the other real estate... Like, I think what we're learning here is that New York real estate is a tax fraud scheme.
01:29:13.000And the reason why Kevin O'Leary is freaking out is because he knows The market value of his buildings are different from what the real market value of the city is assessing, and the city's cutting backroom deals with everybody.
01:29:24.000And another thing that is being overlooked here is there's a lot of places where valuation and what the value is is not dictated by the state or anything, and it's totally arbitrated by a third party.
01:29:40.000I have a guitar right that is a remake of a 60 it was a remake made in the 80s of a guitar made in the 60s but it was made in this specific factory and there were only so many and because of that it's worth X amount of dollars right?
01:29:56.000It's not nicer than a brand new American made Fender Stratocaster, but because of where it was made, when it was made, how it was made, the people that literally worked at the factory when it was made is part of why.
01:30:11.000And you can't Like, the going rate, the market value for that is dictated entirely by what people are willing to pay for.
01:30:42.000And again, we've talked about this before, like, there are agencies that have to be licensed with the federal government to do the appraisals.
01:30:49.000The reason they're licensed is so that way they have the authorization and it protects them in court
01:30:55.000and the government says, oh, you know how to do it.
01:31:27.000When I found out that the majority of properties in New York market value, everyone can plainly see, and the government walks in and goes, what is this $20 million penthouse?
01:31:37.000I'll write you down for a million bucks.
01:32:33.000All of these people in New York do this.
01:32:35.000The reason why Kevin O'Leary is freaking out, in my opinion, is because he knows he's got tons of real estate valued at 20, 30, 40 million dollars, or however much real estate he's got, and he's paying tax on them as though they're worth only a million bucks.
01:32:51.000The thing is, like, there is nothing that Donald Trump has done, be it in his In his business life, in his private life, or as president that every single other president has done.
01:33:05.000Bill Clinton was stooping girls outside of his marriage.
01:33:12.000There has been all kinds of violations of the whole Constitution during Barack Obama and George Bush's tenures as president.
01:33:20.000Every single thing that they're attacking Donald Trump for Presidents have done previously, and other people have done in the private sector.
01:33:30.000But it is specifically because he is Donald Trump, and he was not supposed to win the presidency.
01:33:37.000He was disfavored, and he had the audacity to beat what people thought was the incumbent Hillary Clinton.
01:33:45.000It was her time, even though she wasn't the president.
01:35:10.000I think that it's a bad idea to just say we should reset.
01:35:15.000I think what is probably the better idea is to prosecute a couple people, the largest offenders, and then reassess the whole city.
01:35:27.000You can have the assessors go through and reassess all of the properties, all the tax properties, and straighten it out so that way it reflects reality.
01:35:36.000And that, honestly, would likely produce enough revenue for the city to hire more police officers and do something about the crime.
01:35:47.000That's why I said that tax on all those people that own these businesses is great.
01:35:49.000Let them contribute to the United States.
01:35:51.000Let them contribute to our taxes that I have to pay for, that you have to pay for.
01:35:54.000Now, I just yell at a stick for a living, right?
01:36:11.000federal government, the way taxes apply to a nation are different than the way the taxes apply to a state that doesn't print the money.
01:36:19.000So they actually have to spend that money.
01:36:21.000They have to, they have to, they can't just print the money to do stuff.
01:36:23.000They actually have to, if they can't get the federal government to just give it to them, which they usually do, but they have to, they can take that tax money and they can do things with it, which is the way that it used to be.
01:36:34.000But these are problems that New York State and New York City are fully empowered to solve.
01:36:41.000The problem is that they don't have the desire because the people that are in positions of power in the state and local government are stupid.
01:36:53.000I mean, it's clear that it is not a secret how to stop crime.
01:37:02.000Now, it's not exactly pretty, because there's a lot of crime out there.
01:37:08.000Was it like cops beating people on the street?
01:37:10.000No, no, it wasn't, it wasn't like, there was not a Rodney King incident every day, but they were stopping and frisking people.
01:37:17.000So they were, they were like, if you were in the wrong place at the wrong time and looked like the wrong person, they were like, yo, I'm gonna, you know, I want to stop and frisk you, blah, blah, blah.
01:37:24.000And that's how they started to push back on gun crime and violent crime.
01:37:29.000Disproportionately young black kids were getting stopped and they're like, this is systemic racism and that's where it all began.
01:37:35.000That's not where it all began, but that was one of the things that would be considered systemic racism.
01:37:39.000But again, like the police officer that we had, we had two police officers here today and they were saying, look, there is a difference between a racial, racial crime.
01:37:48.000Or a crime that is because it looks like there is a person that is suspicious and a police officer can make that judgment But society has decided that we no longer trust police officers to make that judgment.
01:38:01.000We're just going to say if they make Make that judgment.
01:38:04.000It automatically is because they're racist, which is part of the whole idea that's in like white fragility.
01:38:10.000And that's the whole idea on the on CRT with race and stuff is that it's not about whether racism did happen.
01:38:21.000And if there's always racism, then there's always going to be an argument against why this person in particular is is being targeted if there's any kind of racial component at all.
01:38:33.000And the problem is they'll see it in any situation, right?
01:38:36.000It's like there's video after video of, you know, what was the one recently where there was someone attacking a cop with a shovel or something, running out of their house and he got shot and, you know?
01:38:45.000He was an autistic guy, he was like 15, but he was huge too!
01:38:48.000Which sucks, but you can't come at a cop with a shovel.
01:38:51.000And if that cop, you know, shoots you out, it's kind of like, how is that about your race?
01:38:55.000Yeah, we were talking today to the police officers, and one of the things that people don't think about when it comes to police officers having guns, a police officer doesn't have the option of losing consciousness.
01:39:05.000Because that means that they are likely to die, and there's a crazy person on the loose with their gun.
01:39:18.000If 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 to support the show because this show is made possible thanks in part to viewers like you.
01:39:25.000Alright, let's see what you got to say.
01:40:15.000That's the NICS check, so that way you can be sure that you don't have a felony.
01:40:19.000And if you take possession of a gun, you're supposed to... Make sure that they didn't have a felony before you take it?
01:40:23.000Well, the context is we were talking about it this morning, and so if you send a gun out to have gunsmith work, whatever it is, when they send it back to you, you're supposed to take a 4473 before you take it back because you could have committed a felony, making you ineligible to possess a gun.
01:42:39.000The joke I had a long time ago was, I was at this party with a bunch of hackers and political personalities, and I was like, you guys realize that, like, in the NSA right now, there's some, like, intern, and an alarm goes off, and he goes, BOSS!
01:42:59.000Like they look at mind maps of like pulsing your face with like a pulsing circle around it that gets bigger the closer you get to other maps of other pulsing faces of people and then they can like spin it around and zoom out and see how you're connected to other realms of pulsing faces.
01:43:14.000My NSA agent and Ian's, they work together all the time, because every night they sit down and they're like, oh, you're tracking Ian's stuff?
01:44:47.000I'd love podcasting because we have studios already.
01:44:49.000It's already built, like different podcast studios.
01:44:52.000Like yeah, one of the ideas was renting out podcast production space and stuff like that to people who are doing, because often it's mostly infomercial stuff.
01:45:01.000Like some will say, Hey, we need to do a infomercial style thing.
01:47:54.000I don't understand this, because I have friends who are women who are in New York, and there are people who have been on the show who have been in New York, and they're like, hey, you know, you shouldn't say that, and I'm just like, you dude.
01:48:06.000I gotta say this to all the conservatives.
01:48:09.000You don't get to call people retarded.
01:48:12.000You don't get to insult people's appearance or call them fat pigs and laugh whenever you want to make a joke about somebody and then get upset when people are joking about your circumstances.
01:48:24.000It's just like, roll with the punches.
01:48:54.000And I'm like, in Florida, the dude is getting a lot done, and the Republicans suck.
01:48:59.000And then there was some guy, he follows me, he's like, Turning Point USA said that they're trying to break, like, he said, he criticized them for it.
01:49:15.000They are not prepared for my intelligence.
01:49:18.000Like if he's reporting and he's like, cause he was so good and just weirdly, I don't know if it's autistic is the right word, but weirdly socially awkward during this presidential run, unfortunately.
01:49:28.000Cause he was like really put together before that.
01:49:30.000He had good morals and aims and ethics.
01:49:32.000And I wonder if it's like society's just not ready for that kind of style of leadership yet.
01:49:36.000Just in terms of policy, it's just like A1, you know, he's amazing in terms of policy, but yeah, his personality just.
01:54:01.000Igor V says, the danger with people who have a chip implant is the government's having access to the eyes and ears of every implanted person and not being able to hide from the stream from every implanted eyes and ears.
01:54:14.000I thought they can already listen to you though.
01:54:15.000You know, there's just too much stuff that pops up on my phone just for me thinking about it.
01:54:19.000There are technologies like penetrating radar, I think, where they can listen to you from space through walls, things like that.
01:54:26.000So the phenomenon that you're experiencing or you're talking and pointing out and talking about, I don't think that it's actually because they're listening and grabbing things that you say for keywords, for advertisements.
01:54:36.000I think the algorithms are just so good that, like, you see something and you recognize it because you talked about it, but you don't think about the 10, 15, 20 things that went by that you didn't notice.
01:54:46.000So what happened to me was me and my brother went to Walmart.
01:54:49.000And they had a sale on these TVs that they put right in the middle of the aisle.
01:54:53.000When they really want to sell something, they put it in the middle of the walkway.
01:54:56.000Like, you know, not when you're in one of the actual aisles.
01:55:47.000She was looking up things like feeling sick. She was looking at she didn't know she was pregnant either as the
01:55:52.000crazy thing She was looking up things that pregnant women look up, but
01:55:56.000she didn't know it was pregnancy But when you put you you connect the dots this computer
01:56:00.000solves the doku puzzle Yeah, the read write thing is scary because if they can
01:56:04.000write information into your brain directly obviously But the read-only is also scary because the machine's gonna
01:56:10.000be writing information into your brain just with its feedback
01:56:13.000So like, you know, if I say hello to you, I'm writing information into your brain that's being written.
01:56:17.000So like, it'll be able to tell how I feel, and then it'll show me colors and sounds in response to my feelings, and it's basically writing... That's what I was saying, the write portion right now is a screen through your eyes and ears, and the read portion will be from your brain.
01:56:32.000So it will know your thoughts, and then you will look up and a TV will pop on and it'll go, hey Ian!
01:56:38.000And you'll be like, like in that scene in Minority Report where he walks into the mall, and then it's like, hello Mr. Guan Zhao or whatever.
01:57:11.000Like, we're building Pandora's box all for it to emerge whence Yeah, I think that the AI may actually be, what do they call them, like figments or like angels and demons.
01:57:26.000They might end up being like you're familiar in the alternate reality, in your augmented realms, and they'll communicate with you.
01:58:09.000Sal Grover, uh, at S-A-L-L Tweets, is the founder of Giggle, and we wanted her to come out to talk about this because, uh, she made a social media space just for women, and trans women wanted to come on it, and she said it's for females only, and then they sued... I don't know exactly what's going on right now with this lawsuit, but we asked her to come out and talk about what was going on, and I guess it was too difficult to fly from Australia, so...
01:58:33.000Is your take on like trans women and like you'd think that there should be spaces that are... Yeah, I don't know why it's so hard for everyone to just stay in their own lane and why that hurts people's feelings.
01:58:41.000I feel like you don't, not everything is for everyone, you know, and it's just that simple.
01:58:46.000You don't have to, like you said earlier, you don't have to divorce certain realities from your perceived reality, you know?
01:58:53.000So yeah, I mean, that's what my whole channel pretty much is based upon.
01:58:56.000Do you just use whatever bathroom when you go into the bathrooms?
01:58:59.000Do you just pick whatever or do you go into one particularly?
01:59:02.000I mean, I very much avoid public bathrooms in general because they're disgusting.
01:59:27.000Yeah, I don't think you and I have ever, we never even actually talked about stuff like this on the show.
01:59:33.000I think you pointed out before, you were like, we never talk about the trans stuff, and I was like, oh, whatever.
01:59:37.000But we have talked about it, I was talking about it with Cassandra, it's like, if a trans man who looks like Buck Angel goes into a women's room, there's gonna be a problem.
01:59:50.000If a trans woman who looks like Blair goes into a men's room, it's not going to be the same kind of problem, but people are going to be like, oh, there's a woman in here.
01:59:57.000And then what you have now is you have different problems.
01:59:59.000You might be in danger if you do that, though.
02:00:01.000I mean, it's it's just about causing the least amount of problems.
02:00:05.000And there seems to be this new found, not even with just trans, like idea in the world with people that like, It's just your world, and any problems that happen around you because of your actions, there's no responsibility, no anything.
02:00:18.000And that's the destruction of everything, too, right now.
02:00:20.000Seamus has a new cartoon out on Freedom Tunes, and the issue that is actually at play is there are large men, like the photo of the guy shaving his beard.
02:00:34.000Yeah, there's like a guy shaving his beard saying that he's allowed to be in there, or the Wii Spa guy who was not even trans, and just exposing himself, and then they're like, but we can't do anything because he might be trans.
02:00:43.000And it's like, well that's just a guy who's getting naked in front of a little girl, that's, come on!
02:00:47.000Exactly, and I've always, like, been confused by how If you actually transition, you actually are trying to become a woman, or, you know, there are some of us who don't think you can actually become a woman, but you live- But live your life that way, you know?
02:00:59.000It's like, you would think you would get an increased empathy for women, like my empathy for women's only increased the more and more I'm perceived that way in the world, you know, and getting negative attention from men, or, you know, just scary stuff happening.
02:01:11.000A lot of them don't have that empathy, it doesn't increase for them, which is how I know it's like they're not really trans then.
02:01:16.000Well then, we're gonna wind things up, so if you haven't already, smash that like button, subscribe to the channel, share the show with your friends, head over to TimCast.com, click join us, become a member, to support the show.
02:01:25.000Because this show is made possible thanks in part to viewers like you.
02:01:28.000And Hi-Rez the rapper keeps asking me if I will do that rap song with him.
02:02:52.000If you like third-person shooters, you fight bugs, kind of like Starship Troopers, and you fight automatons like Terminator, it's pretty awesome.
02:02:58.000Four-player squad-based combat, friendly fires on, so it's hilarious when you misfire, you know?
02:03:03.000Yeah, I think I have just about exhausted all of Baldur's Gate.
02:03:12.000I was thinking about playing it the other night, and it's like, I almost feel like, Impotent compared to I'm like, how can I even begin to talk to Tim about it?
02:03:19.000Because you know the game so thoroughly in and out now Yeah, it is such I mean such a good game.
02:03:25.000It's like in the car I'm playing it and then there's usually like after I'm eating and I'm sitting down and have Fox News on for like an hour I'll play it But that was typically what I was doing.