00:02:21.000Donald Trump is accusing the Democrats of cheating in California and stated that the federal attorneys in the state are investigating what's currently going on.
00:02:30.000Now, if those that aren't following, the Republicans in the state did very well in the California primaries a couple days ago.
00:02:35.000But for some reason, they can't get us the results on the day of saying, well, you know, we got so many that just came into the mail where it's going to take a very, very long time.
00:02:43.000Interestingly, the margin for each candidate coming in through these votes are perfect, as such that Spencer Pratt and Steve Hilton will actually lose.
00:02:53.000And I don't know if they have enough to get Steve Hilton out.
00:02:55.000But people are pointing out that at the rates they're returning these mail in ballots or counting them, Spencer Pratt, if this stays as is, will get knocked out of the running for the mayor's race, which is weird anyway, because it'd be him versus Karen Bass.
00:03:09.000I just want to make sure it can't happen.
00:03:11.000Now, still, it's all pretty good news how Republicans have been performing, especially with California.
00:03:29.000Graham Plattner saying he knows what a Totenkampf is, being accused of, let's just call it Me Too territory.
00:03:37.000The New York Times is ripping this guy to shreds, and everybody is going after him now.
00:03:44.000Yeah, Democrats are throwing him under the bus.
00:03:47.000And with this latest scandal showing he knew exactly what that Nazi tattoo was and they got it on purpose, his whole campaign is unraveling.
00:04:07.000Click join now to get involved in the Discord community.
00:04:11.000It's not what you know, it's who you know.
00:04:12.000And the most important thing we can do as humans is build community together because we live for the human experience.
00:04:19.000Unless you're like some hippie that just wants to live in the woods and, you know, feed squirrels or whatever, most people are trying to better the lives of other people and share their experiences with other people.
00:04:36.000Get access to a community of over tens with tens of thousands of people in it, hanging out every single day with morning shows, afternoon shows, hangouts, meetups, et cetera.
00:04:43.000And as a member, you can call in and talk to us and our guest Monday through Thursday on this show, TimCast IRL.
00:04:50.000Don't forget to also head over to castbrew.com and pick up some graphene dream K Pods or maybe some Vault Black Cold Brew Concentrate.
00:05:00.000If you're someone who doesn't actually have a coffee maker and you're like, well, I don't buy coffee, I've got a coffee maker, you can buy the Cold Brew Concentrate where you just pour a little bit in a cup, add water or cream, and bang.
00:05:09.000You got a nice cold brew cup of coffee, and it is delicious.
00:05:12.000We also got bottled water for some reason called pool water.
00:05:16.000Think about how funny it would be to offer a drink of pool water to your friends or neighbors.
00:05:19.000They might think you're gross, but hey, we did it anyway.
00:05:22.000And of course, you can get Appalachian Nights, all the other really great flavors we got at CassBrew.com.
00:05:27.000Don't forget to also smash that like button, share the show with everyone you know joining us tonight to talk about this and everything else is J. Chase Davis.
00:05:36.000Hey, thanks so much for having me on, author of Offensive Chris Chaney.
00:06:32.000Several women who dated Graham Platner recall unsettling behavior.0.84
00:06:37.000What I love about the female coded New York Times is the lead they choose.
00:06:42.000Now, I think for most people, the real story here is that he's an admitted Nazi, knows he's a Nazi, is proud of being a Nazi, was a Nazi for 18 years, and they're like, yeah, yeah, but he was unsettling towards women.0.73
00:06:54.000Because that's the most important thing to women, I guess.
00:06:56.000So, when you actually take a look at the secondary reporting on this, we've got this from Town Hall.
00:07:11.000Joked about it being a Nazi tattoo while dating.0.99
00:07:13.000Three exes called him toxic, demeaning, heavily drinking, and cheating.
00:07:17.000The New York Times story delayed by his own lawyers.
00:07:20.000Ex blocked her from leaving rooms, uncontrollable fits of anger.
00:07:25.000One woman said, collateral damage to the world that is his, called exes to vouch for him before story dropped, obsessed with rape and bruised women.
00:07:34.000So, yeah, now I honestly don't care.0.97
00:08:04.000But you take Maine out of the equation because the front runner for the Democrats is a Nazi woman beater.0.93
00:08:11.000And you're going to have, admittedly, a weak Republican, but a Republican in the Senate, which means Democrats will not be able to secure control.0.80
00:08:18.000Now you factor in the Supreme Court recently ruled that Alabama is clear to redistrict.
00:08:23.000And the current swing in the House is Republican districts, 211 to 205.
00:08:49.000But the big picture Democrats are cooked.
00:08:52.000They're supposed to win a historical trend, defeating the party in power to be the opposition.
00:09:00.000And it's looking like that won't happen.
00:09:01.000But I'm curious what y'all guys think.
00:09:04.000Yeah, well, I mean, it's hilarious because the Democrats, like, they're a line in the sand for all these guys if they're just like creepy around women.
00:09:11.000I mean, I know Grant Blinder was like actual rape threats, but like before the rape accusations even came into play, they were just like, he has problematic behavior on women.
00:09:21.000And then it was the same thing with Swalwell.
00:09:23.000Like, Swalwell literally was like quite literally in bed with a Chinese spy.
00:09:28.000And they were like, that's what you can't, you know, where you're not allowed to, you know, have a little like a yellow fever once in a while.
00:09:34.000But then as soon as it was like, hey, he's kind of creepy and problematic around women, they're like, you're done.
00:09:38.000So it's like, you know, as a right winger, I'm hesitant to like dogpile in these situations, but at the same time, it is kind of like a taste of your own medicine, which I'm perfectly happy with.
00:09:47.000I mean, I don't know if I'd say a taste of your own medicine.0.50
00:09:50.000The Democrats have been so focused on women's issues.
00:09:56.000The way they treated Kavanaugh about, you know, when it came to completely fabricated stories.
00:10:01.000I mean, you know, people were, one of the Democrats was talking to Kavanaugh.
00:10:06.000I saw a post on X about this that reminded me.
00:11:10.000And this is why they're going to continue to lose young men who are swinging to the right and conservative and going back to church.
00:11:17.000And they're going to continue to attract women, particularly single women, into their party.
00:11:21.000But they have no categories for what you said.0.93
00:11:23.000It's just total hypocrisy on their part, right?
00:11:26.000They will celebrate strong women and they'll overlook a lot of blatant corruption in their own party.
00:11:35.000And yet, when stuff like this happens, they have no concept of what to do.
00:11:38.000And it's because they become feminized completely.0.78
00:11:40.000The term hypocrisy, I don't know that that's particularly useful in this context because it's not about the fact that they actually have any kind of moral compass or anything.0.54
00:11:55.000Yeah, when people that agree with us behave badly, it's perfectly acceptable.
00:12:00.000It's perfectly acceptable that Hunter Biden was doing crack, it's perfectly acceptable that Hunter Biden had, uh, had you know, illegal guns, it's perfectly acceptable that the Ukraine war was basically a slush fund for the Biden administration or for the Biden family.
00:12:15.000It's perfectly acceptable, but if it's a Republican, well, then they're gonna go ahead and clutch their pearls and they're gonna say this and that.
00:12:22.000So it's like I said earlier, just ignore them.
00:12:26.000It is true that, like, when this sort of situation plays out, now this is at least the second high profile instance of this happening in the last few months, it kind of short circuits them because I think, to your point, that is kind of like one of the core planks of the Democrat Party in which they understand that, like, a lot of our power now comes from women.0.52
00:12:43.000And so, again, if you are to encroach on that power vector at all, you're going to be in serious trouble.
00:12:48.000This is why it short circuits them when they're presented with something like this because typically what happens is what you're saying is if they engage in something corruption related or you name it, they just sweep it under the rug and the Republicans do it, they bring the knives out.
00:13:01.000But this does show that there are aspects of being a Democrat that you must maintain.
00:13:06.000And one of these is like being a wholesome, chungus, you know, respectful guy.0.80
00:13:11.000If you demonstrate that you're too heterosexual, it's a huge problem.0.99
00:13:32.000It's very apparent that they're like this kind of stuff just exposes them completely and they're not honest at all.
00:13:40.000What would you say to someone that says, look, the general public just feels like this is standard procedure in DC?
00:13:46.000It doesn't matter whether it's a Republican or a Democrat.
00:13:49.000Because generally, Americans are not happy with DC.
00:13:53.000They're not happy with the people in DC.0.99
00:13:55.000And so, whether it be staffers having sex, gay staffers having sex in the Senate chambers or what have you, or Graham Platner or what have you, The American people are kind of just like, yeah, that's what they do.0.97
00:14:09.000It's almost like the American people look at, you know, DC like, you know, District One or the Capitol.0.98
00:14:15.000I actually think those two guys having gay sex in the Senate is like the best argument that there's going to be a civil war because, aside, it's shockingly offensive and in a disturbingly hilarious kind of way.0.97
00:14:30.000But I would just say, and I mean this in a half joking kind of manner, when your Senate building has people having gay sex and filming it and nothing happens, nothing, you don't have a country anymore.0.96
00:14:42.000I'm sorry, because I just want to stress, you guys think that was the only time it happened?0.92
00:14:46.000Wouldn't that be an argument against civil war?
00:14:47.000Because if that happened, like Nigeria, they'd have a different name right now.0.86
00:14:50.000Like they would just pulverize the parliament building there.0.98
00:14:54.000Like if that were to happen over there, where in the United States, everyone's like, yeah, that's just kind of how things operate over there.
00:14:58.000No, I think that's exactly the argument.
00:15:01.000Something so shockingly offensive to your country that you would demolish the building and be like, this is what our country stands for, versus half the country is shocked, but no one will do anything about it.
00:15:10.000It's not shocking and offensive to at least a large enough segment of the United States.0.83
00:15:15.000And the fact that they had, you know, when you look at the, the, LGBT party they had on the White House lawn where they had, you know, a dude taking his fake breasts out and another, you know, like on the White House lawn.0.99
00:15:28.000Like this kind of debauchery, this kind of just deviant behavior.1.00
00:15:32.000And look, I'm a guy that's been in a band for 25 years.
00:15:36.000I've done my fair share of lewd and lascivious behavior, but even I can see that this kind of stuff is just unacceptable behavior.
00:15:45.000Yeah, but to your point, I mean, I think what's being demonstrated with this story is that they have a lower threshold for.
00:15:53.000For what behavior is considered beyond the pale.
00:15:55.000Because when the Thomas Massey stuff started coming out, even the most ardent Thomas Massey opponents weren't really harping on that as a reason why he shouldn't win his seat back.
00:16:05.000They were mainly focusing on policy related matters or other sort of things, such as Trump, et cetera.
00:16:11.000If that sort of scandal broke out with a Democrat, I think that would be enough to get them bounced.
00:16:26.000And that's why it's super important for men, especially, to become agenic, to become men who know where power lies, how to get power, how to accrue power, and how to leverage power.
00:16:36.000A lot of the American people feel powerless, whether it's economically, spiritually, whatever.
00:16:40.000And when they're desecrating these civil sites with just degeneracy like this, a lot of people, the reason they don't care is because they're like, well, what am I going to do?
00:16:52.000And that's why it's important to get men raised up.
00:16:55.000Who are capable of not getting into a civil war, I would not prefer that outcome at all.
00:17:01.000But to know how political machines operate to get them into power, to get them into positions where that kind of crime and heinous sin could be punished.
00:17:09.000I mean, because this is why people have coined the term demoralization porn, because what happens specifically on Twitter is there's these people that will just, there's like this account, Radio Genoa, and he just, you know, pal drives all day long.
00:17:23.000He's like, he'll post a video of like, you know, a Swedish woman with like a bunch of like African migrants, and he'll be like, this could be your daughter.
00:17:30.000And, like, if you were to question him on it, he would be like, Well, I'm trying to wake up the masses.
00:17:34.000And I'm like, I think every man in the United States and broadly the West kind of understands what's going on.
00:17:40.000They just don't understand what the actual proper mechanisms are to actually attempt to deconstruct it.
00:17:47.000So, when you show them that, they're like, I know, I know, trust me, I'm clued in, I know what the problem is.
00:17:52.000And you keep hitting them with that over and over again.
00:17:54.000All that says to them is, Actually, there's nothing you can do about it.
00:18:03.000And they want some kind, they wanted to see some kind of release of something to be done about the things that they see in DC that are problems.
00:18:12.000And when Trump doesn't have the ability or the authority to just go in and say, you know, you're fired, you're fired, you're fired, whether it be because of procedure in DC or because the president just can't make those kind of calls, whatever it is, they get frustrated and they're like, well, Trump's not the guy, Trump can't do it.
00:18:29.000You know, and the Republicans are blah, blah.
00:18:31.000And Tate uses this phrase all the time, even though Donald Trump is the most viable political vehicle for.
00:18:37.000The right, there's people are just jumping ship saying, Well, throw my hands up.
00:18:42.000There's nothing that can be done to again to Tate's point.
00:19:07.000It's actually kind of the opposite problem is that we end up having to like dig back up the 90s to find sort of a viable culture.
00:19:14.000Scott Greer, he's like combating this all the time where he'll have Zoomers come into his mentions and they'll be like, Blockbuster was the greatest thing ever.
00:19:21.000And Scott will be like, A, you weren't there.0.52
00:19:23.000B, it's actually a very innocuous thing that just kind of exemplified what like the lower middle class lifestyle would be like in the United States.0.98
00:19:28.000So the fact that you glamorize that demonstrates something seriously wrong with Zoomer culture because in the past, people would have.0.93
00:19:34.000Because we'll think about people that grew up in the 90s.
00:19:36.000They glamorized Arnold Schwarzenegger.
00:19:38.000You know, they glamorized like Hollywood stars, top athletes, musicians.0.62
00:19:41.000Where, like, Zoomers will just go back to the 90s and they're like, What was a normal middle class life like?0.94
00:19:46.000Yeah, that's what I'm glamorizing now.
00:19:47.000And I think that indicates to your point one, the culture is completely disunified.
00:19:49.000There's nothing new that we can grasp onto and say that's ours.
00:19:53.000But then, B, it also shows how bad things have gotten that they just view a normal middle class American life in a stable suburb as a dream.
00:20:01.000Yeah, they're desperate for meaning.0.99
00:20:03.000And as our country has become flooded with illegal immigrants and our culture has become degraded spiritually, where people have no connection to eternal things, the things of God.1.00
00:20:15.000They're looking desperate for meaning.1.00
00:20:16.000So they're going to latch on to something like Blockbuster or Halo or something that.
00:20:23.000You see these videos of malls that used to be full of nice people who were walking around with their families.
00:20:29.000I remember doing that when I was a kid.
00:20:31.000But this younger generation has no concept of that.
00:20:34.000And it's not only a material crisis, it's a spiritual crisis for these young men that are looking for meaning and can't find it anywhere, not being given meaning in public schools or anywhere else.
00:20:43.000Yeah, to your point about malls, there's actually videos on YouTube where it's just like, POV, you're in a mall in 1990.
00:20:50.000Literally, it's the creepiest thing now is seeing Gen Alpha glamorize 2016.
00:20:55.000And like that would have been my, the Zoomer Prime would have been 2016.
00:20:59.000And so I've always had this like thing as a Zoomer where I'm trying to retcon millennials' lives and I'm trying to retcon and say, well, the 90s looked like the best time ever.
00:21:07.000Where it's like actually the 90s had a lot of the same problems.
00:21:10.000But now you're seeing Gen Alphas that are like, wow, imagine being a teenager in the pre COVID era.
00:21:16.000Like how amazing would that have been?
00:21:17.000And I sat there and I lived through it and I was like, I mean, it was all right, but you know, It's kind of sad to see that they think that's the greatest thing ever.
00:21:24.000I'm like, it was fine, but it wasn't like the top of human civilization.0.94
00:21:29.000The reason why I think this is a problem that can't be solved, and it's something that we need to pay attention to, but I don't know we can do anything about in that millennials are fighting for something.0.88
00:21:38.000Gen Xers are fighting for something.0.72
00:21:52.000Boomers, Gen Xers, and millennials have a small overlap in a shared experience of the 80s and 90s.
00:22:00.000For millennials, as little kids, barely remembering it, but kids into the 90s, society shifted dramatically in the 2000s and started to fracture and break apart, substantially more so in the 2010s.
00:22:12.000And now into the 2020s, it's who knows what, especially with COVID.
00:22:18.000When you look at Gen Alpha and Gen Z, There's no world that they want to preserve or they want to have.0.95
00:22:25.000When you mentioned like Gen Z, there's actually been a bunch of studies and articles about this.
00:22:30.000Gen Z is nostalgic for an era they did not live in.
00:22:34.000So I suppose you could say that there are some that are fighting for something similar to what everybody is fighting for.0.66
00:22:40.000But the way I see it is when you take a look at voting patterns, you take a look at media interest, when you take a look at political interest, it is the younger you get, the more fractured and spread out it is, which is one of the things I've warned about in terms of the potentiality for civil war.
00:22:55.000In that liberal boomers and Republican boomers overlap almost entirely in their political worldview.
00:23:01.000Similarly for Gen X and millennials, but they slowly start to come apart.
00:23:05.000Gen Z is where you start to see that there are two distinct moral worldviews isolated from each other, and Gen Alpha to a more extreme degree.
00:23:12.000And then within those pockets, you have your own versions of left and right.0.52
00:23:16.000So, what happens then when someone who's 20 years old today thinks a woman is whatever a person claims it to be and that babies aren't alive until three months after they're born?0.52
00:23:27.000And they try implementing and passing laws in this way.
00:23:30.000What happens when you get these young people who grow up on Antifa violence and they say this is the path towards victory and they want communism?
00:23:37.000You have such shockingly disparate worldviews, you will get violence because of it.
00:23:44.000I mean, when Obergefell passed and they disintegrated marriage as marriage between a man and a woman, this is what you have because marriage is the foundation of any nation.
00:23:54.000This is how ethnicities form, this is how nations form from marriage.
00:23:58.000And when they passed Obergefell, they broke it wide open.0.82
00:24:01.000Well, first of all, they didn't pass it.
00:24:24.000And it was all happening through, like you're right, it was happening through media before that.
00:24:27.000It was soft selling all these relationships, all this lifestyle before that, to where when it did happen, nothing happened.
00:24:33.000If there was a civil war that would have happened, It would have been, you know, I wouldn't point to just one thing like that, though I'd say it's a component, because really it's just the idea of not having kids.
00:24:46.000And that created a generation of people with no ties to the future and nothing but selfishness.
00:24:53.000The financial crisis played a big role.
00:24:55.000For someone like me, I'm, you know, I actually grew up, though we were a moderately liberal family, we were Catholic initially, and family was very important, and we understood this, and I always valued it.
00:25:08.000But the financial situation put me in an inability.
00:25:11.000I mean, I was sleeping on floors when I was in my early 20s.
00:25:14.000There was no circumstance in which I could have a kid at all.
00:25:17.000In the inverse, the people who actually had the means, they just told all these young men to go get abortions, not have kids.
00:25:22.000Kids are bad, kids are destroying the planet.
00:25:24.000Then, when there is not enough people to enter the workforce to sustain our either social security or just general economy, they say, open the borders and flood the country.
00:25:34.000Now you get tens of millions of people who don't share your values, and you create a country where the Trump base is the last vestige of.
00:25:42.000The American tradition, and everyone else is saying, get your bag before the system crumbles.
00:25:48.000That's what it feels like where we're at.
00:25:50.000It does feel like people are doing everything they can to, you know, enrich themselves before things fall apart.
00:25:57.000And not to turn this into, or not to, you know, drag it off into an economy talk, but like when you see the way that the government's spending money and you see the way that Social Security and Medicare and Medicaid are being treated and you hear things like I heard on what's his name, Caleb Hammer's financial audit.
00:26:19.000Maybe a week ago, he had a transgender person on that had breast implants paid for by the state through Social Security, through Medicare.0.70
00:26:30.000And so it makes perfect sense that people would be like, it's over, man.
00:26:35.000I'm just going to get as much as I can because this is going to blow up.1.00
00:26:38.000They're only going to keep importing illegals.1.00
00:26:41.000Donald Trump can't get as many out as we need to get out.0.74
00:26:43.000Even though the Republican Party, Donald Trump and his administration have made significant progress when it comes to illegal immigration, there's basically no illegal immigration.
00:26:52.000You know, no one's coming over the border at all.
00:26:55.000They are deporting people, not in the numbers that I would like, but they are deporting people.
00:26:58.000There are people that are self deporting.
00:26:59.000They're making it harder for people to stay here.
00:27:01.000They're looking at ways to make sure they can't get bank accounts and all kinds of different methods to get illegals to leave so that way we don't have the massive ICE raids that we had that caused such a hubbub earlier this year and last year.
00:27:13.000Even though all those things are happening, they're like, oh, well, you know, there's still people that are coming into the country.0.57
00:27:17.000There's still all these economic problems.0.91
00:27:18.000We're still giving away all this money.
00:27:21.000And we've got all these people that are committing fraud that we don't seem to be able to actually clean up.
00:27:25.000It makes perfect sense where people are just like, Well, I guess I'm gonna get mine.
00:27:28.000You know, I used to be very much a deficit hawk.
00:27:38.000And at this point, and you know, basically when COVID hit, I was like, All right, they're just gonna keep printing.
00:27:43.000You know, they printed so much money, both Biden and Trump printed so much money.
00:27:46.000And I was like, There's no stopping it.
00:27:48.000There's being on board the whole fiscal hawk thing and trying to get the people to understand that all these problems are gonna, you know, they're gonna blow up the dollar and inflation's gonna go through the roof or what have you.
00:28:06.000Yeah, I think a lot of this, I mean, I address this directly in my book.
00:28:08.000So it's not just Obergefell and it's not just money.
00:28:11.000It goes back to a fundamental understanding of human nature.
00:28:14.000And what I like to say is that modern solutions require pre modern, modern problems require pre modern solutions.
00:28:21.000And what we need to do is get back to a basic understanding of what men were made for, what men were made for, because a lot of these young men are looking for meaning.
00:28:28.000They don't know what they were made for.
00:28:30.000People are confused about men and women today.
00:28:33.000And men need to be told directly that they were made for glory.
00:28:36.000They were made to find glory in Jesus Christ.
00:28:39.000And if we're going to have our country again, it's going to look like that.0.74
00:28:42.000It's going to look like men coming back to Christ, returning to Him.
00:28:45.000And it's not going to be a weak Christianity.
00:28:47.000You see so many young men veering into ideologies that are un American or whatever it may be.
00:28:53.000And instead of coming back to Christ, they get into that stuff.
00:28:56.000And I'm trying to say in my book look, this goes back to the Enlightenment.
00:29:00.000This has been baked into the cake this whole time.
00:29:03.000And the fruit of no fault divorce, Obergefell, all this kind of stuff.
00:29:06.000Was baked into kind of a separation of body and soul that God made us body and soul as integrated beings destined for glory, eternal glory in Him that can only be found in Christ.
00:29:29.000I don't know if they gave it up so much as what they let it get taken from them or it got infected through a lot of movements, particularly like pietism.
00:29:50.000So, a lot of the existentialist subjectivism from the 19th century, German higher criticism, all of which is addressed in the book, it comes to full bloom in the 20th century.
00:29:59.000And evangelicalism just adopted a lot of this.
00:30:02.000So, a lot of the you talked about the evangelical base and kind of that being kind of a lone bulwark of sorts against the moral insanity.
00:30:10.000A lot of it got compromised at elite institutions through seminaries.
00:30:13.000This is what the communists understood well in the mainline church.1.00
00:30:17.000Was that the useful idiots were the clergy and they would just go along with these ideologies.0.99
00:30:21.000And so, as America got wealthy and as evangelicals compromised and they put their main emphasis on being non offensive to the world, we're not going to speak the truth because we don't want to upset the lost person down the street.1.00
00:30:35.000Once the lost person down the street is cutting off their genitals and you still won't say something, you won't say, That's bad, don't do that.
00:30:42.000In fact, we should make a law to say you can't do that to yourself.
00:30:46.000If the church is unwilling to do that, of course we're going to keep going this direction.
00:30:49.000I'm trying to call men back to like, Hey, where are the pulpits?
00:30:51.000Where are the Christians that are willing to speak up about very clear moral issues?0.98
00:30:56.000And especially towards men, the church is compromised, telling men they're toxic, bad, they go to church and it's therapeutic and it's kind of baking gay.0.94
00:31:04.000I wonder if, just to caveat what I'm about to say, with obviously you're seeking to solve for what I'm about to say, but it feels like Christianity is going to just get wiped out.0.96
00:31:15.000And I'm saying that to be a bit shocking, but you take a look at Europe, you take a look at the United States, Christian men.
00:31:23.000That are strong and willing to stand up and defend their worldview and their religion are few and far between.0.99
00:31:29.000In Islam, it's quite the opposite.1.00
00:31:31.000Almost, I think, what is it, more than half?0.84
00:31:34.000They did a bunch of polls and they found that more than half believe that violence is a justified end, dealing with apostates and non believers and things like this.
00:31:44.000So you take a look at what Christians have been willing to do over the past couple of decades, and the nations that were once dominated by Christianity are just being run over.0.91
00:31:53.000And You take a look at Islamic nations and they're doing the running over.0.90
00:31:58.000Yeah, and this is why Elon Musk tweeted that Christianity Day has become toothless.0.87
00:32:03.000It seems like there's no agency, no power, no willingness to defend their way of life, which is what all of our forefathers understood.
00:32:09.000It's what gave them the spiritual backing to fight the Revolutionary War and justify their existence and really move westward.
00:32:28.000This is what Augustine wrote The City of God about, because a lot of people were actually back then, it's a similar thing that happens today in some circles.
00:32:35.000A lot of people were accusing the Christians of being the reason the Roman Empire fell, which of course is not true.
00:32:40.000There were many other reasons, but Augustine was making an apologetic back then for why Christianity was actually surpassed the Roman Empire in terms of eternal destiny and gave people a vision of a heavenly city.
00:32:53.000And so Christianity has gone through this before.
00:32:56.000It's not going away, but I'm trying to speak.1.00
00:32:59.000Practically to right now, if we can get Christian men to understand their purpose in life and stop entertaining sermons and music.0.99
00:33:09.000I mean, I grew up in the Christian church, and a lot of it was just feminine.1.00
00:33:13.000And if they can understand what they were made for, why they have a competitive drive, why they want to dominate, why they want to win, why they want to beat competition, all the stuff, Christianity and Christ does not come in and say, be a woman, don't do any of that stuff.
00:33:37.000Let's jump to this next story from Newsweek.
00:33:39.000Trump accuses Democrats of cheating in California over slow vote counts.
00:33:44.000Well, Trump's got two posts on Truth Social, and he says there's big cheating by the Democrats in California, he wrote.
00:33:52.000And they say, without providing evidence, he did when he mentioned it's taking weeks to count the vote.
00:34:00.000Votes are all tied up, may not be in for weeks, under investigation by the U.S. Attorney's Office in L.A.
00:34:07.000It is unclear whether the president has ordered the investigation he mentioned.
00:34:10.000What he said he did, I guess the argument is maybe they were already doing it.
00:34:15.000Newsweek contacted the White House for more information.
00:34:17.000Quote, they are trying to steal the governor of California primary and the mayor of LA primary away from two great Republican candidates, Trump said.
00:34:24.000Here we go at the very late and massive numbers of mail in ballots.
00:34:28.000Now, I got this tweet I want to show you.
00:34:32.000If the remaining 38% of votes cast for the LA mayor are all allocated at the same proportion as the last batch that came in, Nithya Raman will come to within 100 votes of Spencer Pratt.
00:34:43.000This is so precise that it appears those doing the counting know the rate at which they need.
00:34:49.000To proportion the votes to eliminate Pratt.
00:34:55.000Why should anybody believe an election is legitimate when they have weeks behind the curtains to count votes you can't see?
00:35:06.000You see, you do the ballot all in one day, it's hard to cheat.
00:35:10.000People are sitting around outside, you gotta count them, you only got a few hours.
00:35:14.000But when you have weeks to do it, it might be easy to find some ballots.
00:35:19.000The other interesting thing about the results that are now coming in from LA County.
00:35:22.000Is that LA County is a single electoral jurisdiction, yet for some reason, the mail in votes that are coming in deviate from the actual ballots previously, the early vote count.
00:35:32.000Considering you are taking a singular county and all of its votes and counting them, the proportions should not change.
00:35:40.000Now, for the governor's race, it's a different story.
00:35:43.000If a batch of votes from San Francisco comes in, you can expect it to be 90% Democrat.
00:35:48.000And then if something from Tulare comes in, you can expect it to be 90% Republican.
00:36:32.000But as for the law, I'd also make the argument that many of these returned bouts probably are coming from houses where the individuals no longer live.
00:36:38.000So, this was what was accused back in 2020 pertaining to universal mail in voting and ballot harvesting.
00:37:03.000I would be willing to bet the probability that Democrat activists are forging loose universal ballots that get sent to random addresses from people who are no longer registered there.
00:37:14.000I'd be willing to bet that's actually happening.
00:37:39.000And then there is a frontrunner or someone that's in a position that is an opposing party to the Democrats, and slowly you see the lead get picked away.
00:37:50.000And the only thing that you ever hear is well, you know, you have to have these mail in ballots.
00:37:54.000You have to have the ballot harvesting.
00:37:57.000You have to get every vote when there's no way to verify that these votes are real, that they aren't just people, you know, sitting some backroom writing them up or what have you.
00:38:06.000And again, I don't know the method by which they're doing this, but it's a consistent pattern.
00:38:11.000Over and over and over, whether it be the election, whether it be a presidential election, or whether it be state and local.
00:38:18.000They're done the same day because the 2000 election was such a sham and such a mess.
00:38:23.000They were like, this is never going to happen again.
00:38:25.000And Florida, Ron DeSantis has made it clear that he will do whatever he can to help any state that wants to get the system that Florida has in place in their states.
00:38:37.000Democrats don't want it because I truly believe it's because Democrats.
00:38:41.000Have figured out the way to rig the elections.
00:38:43.000But it also seems like Republicans don't want it because they won't pass the Save Act.
00:38:47.000Like, if they would pass the Save Act, wouldn't this solve everything?
00:38:50.000I don't know if it would solve everything or not.
00:39:03.000Yeah, I don't know if the Save Act actually impacts state elections, but something that must be noted, most obvious point that could ever be made, is that this is not normal.
00:39:11.000But it's like you should keep this in mind.
00:39:13.000India, 1.3 billion people, and we all know India.
00:39:16.000They have some problems going on over there.
00:39:39.000So in one day, they're able to, and that's on election day.
00:39:43.000So they have a six week voting period, but most people turn up on election day.
00:39:46.0001.3 billion people, they have pretty high turnout.
00:39:49.000And by the end of the night, they all know what the results are.
00:39:51.000And to your point about the Save Act, I mean, whether or not it would fix everything, the idea that you shouldn't have an ID to vote or you don't need an ID to vote, the United States is unique in that.
00:40:04.000Every other country, you have to show your ID.
00:40:23.000I mean, are we seriously having to like take election, you know, inspiration from India?
00:40:27.000Clearly, they have a thing called an EPIC card in India.
00:40:29.000So they have a separate ID that is required to vote, it's administered by their electoral commission, their national electoral commission.
00:40:37.000So you take an EPIC card to the ballot with you, and that's India.
00:40:41.000And I mean, again, it's like if they're able to pull this off and they use electronic voting, so it's all done in one day, what could possibly be the explanation for the United States?0.73
00:40:53.000I mean, Europe, far to the left of a lot of these countries in mainland Europe, far to the left of the United States, they have like, you know, they have ID, they're able to get the results by the time they go to bed.
00:41:02.000Like, this is not rocket science here.
00:41:05.000But again, most obvious point in the world is what's going on here is just obvious thumb on the scale.
00:41:09.000I think everyone's been ranting and raving about it so long that it's kind of desensitized us to the fact that like literally we don't have fair elections in the United States.
00:41:16.000And that's like something that when you utter that, when you utter, we do not have fair elections in a democracy, you should be like trembling when you say that because that quite literally means the foundation of your country, the thing that you're buying into.
00:41:28.000But on conservative shows, we just say it so much, or President Trump says it so much that it kind of loses its punch.
00:41:33.000But, like, when I say that, when I say we do not have fair, legitimate elections in our largest state in our country, that should be like a terrifying proposition.
00:41:42.000But we just say, like, yeah, I know all the fixes in, you know, it is what it is.
00:41:44.000Well, I mean, that goes back to the point earlier that we were talking about where people are just kind of like checking out.
00:41:48.000They're just like, well, I guess there's nothing we can do about it.
00:41:51.000You know, when your population feels so impotent to be able to do anything, you do it.
00:41:57.000Say people, well, I guess there's nothing I can do.
00:42:00.000You know, Edson Pratt is popular enough, and I think he is.
00:42:03.000Demonstrated such a just how a politician ought to be and going into the 21st century that I would imagine, you know, based on what I know of the Trump administration, the people staffing it, they're fully aware that Spencer Pratt and a normal election would be, you know, at least politically viable, right?
00:42:20.000I mean, LA is a very liberal place, obviously.
00:42:22.000So it's not safe, you know, it's not fair to say he would win in a landslide like some people have said, but it would be fair to say Rick Caruso, the last, you know, right wing candidate in Los Angeles, not right.
00:42:37.000I think he got about 43% of the vote or 44% of the vote.
00:42:41.000That's Rick Caruso, a guy no one even knows what he looks like or sounds like.
00:42:44.000Spencer Pratt, he's on everyone's television, by all accounts, very popular, combing through what options the Trump administration would have.
00:42:51.000Again, if they were truly convinced that this election in Los Angeles was fraudulent, I am fairly certain that they're going to comb through whatever they have at their disposal because this is another thing that's parroted on a conservative talk show.
00:43:04.000They have the right to fair governance, even if we maybe think the Democrats don't deserve anything.
00:43:08.000In addition to that, There's still a lot of capital concentrated, whether it's like fiscal capital or New York City firing on all cylinders.
00:43:14.000We need Los Angeles firing on all cylinders because when our country was great, those two cities were quite nice places and they certainly pushed above their weight.
00:43:21.000It doesn't feel like the Trump administration is doing everything they can be doing as it pertains to election rigging and ballot harvesting.
00:43:33.000Trump has applied pressure, but it would seem that, at least on the surface, I feel like to a regular person, The efforts of the Trump administration to deal with electoral issues is for Trump to say things.
00:43:45.000Well, I think, well, I partially understand why people would say that, but to be fair to Trump, this would require an act of Congress.
00:45:04.000The point Karl Rove brings up is that Democrat favorability is lower than Republicans right now, where historically they should have a double digit lead.
00:45:22.000211 seats are Republican, 205 are Democrat.
00:45:26.000This means Republicans have to win less in order to keep control of the House.
00:45:32.000When you take a look at the Senate race, you can see that it's 50 Republican seats with 46 Democrats, but that includes two of them being independent.
00:45:40.000Democrats would have to win every toss up state and flip at least one Republican state, which it doesn't even look like they're going to be able to flip Maine with Grand Platner being ripped to shreds by the corporate press.
00:46:05.000The probability that the market is giving for the Republican Party to win is 52.
00:46:10.000So let me just say this it's looking real bad for Democrats.
00:46:14.000Send that hopium straight into my veins.0.66
00:46:19.000What I am hoping is that with the procedural moves made by the Trump administration, with his election integrity army, meaning Trump expects to have some kind of watchdog going on, or at least the pressure of, Making it more difficult for Democrats to pull shenanigans.0.80
00:46:34.000But with the redistricting efforts, Republicans may at least hold Congress a little bit.
00:46:41.000And if they do, I hope Trump unleashes the dogs of war after the midterms.
00:46:47.000I am hoping that what we see after the midterms is a bit more gruff, aggressive, and brutal than what we have been seeing now.
00:46:54.000And I want to caveat people really need to understand that when Trump said drain the swamp and then he shut down USAID.
00:47:02.000That was a large portion of the swamp.
00:47:04.000Don't get me wrong, he's friends with swampy monsters.1.00
00:47:06.000Lindsey Graham's got a seat right next to that throne, which is nasty.
00:47:09.000But USAID being shut down was one of the most aggressive and brutal things a president could have done to curtail the deep state and drain the swamp.
00:47:20.000I'm just hoping that all of these dirty games we see playing, played by the Democrats, like in California, oh, it's going to take us a month to figure out who won in a city.
00:47:29.000You want to make the argument about the state, and I'll roll my eyes.
00:47:32.000You make the argument about LA County, it's like, bro.
00:47:34.000You're not talking about a statewide race.
00:48:01.000If the economy is not in the toilet, the Republicans can win.
00:48:06.000I think if the economy takes a significant downturn before Election Day, they have no chance, no matter what the polls say now.
00:48:15.000It would be great to see the Republicans hold on to the House and Senate and have Donald Trump not have to worry about the administration, not have to worry about just endless inquiries and impeachment papers filed and stuff.
00:48:31.000I don't know that I have high hopes yet.
00:48:32.000We'll see as it gets closer to Election Day.
00:48:35.000Yeah, because the gas prices are totally freaking people out.
00:48:40.000And unless we can figure out a way, and I don't know what mechanisms of power can be used, but the economy has to turn around, at least when people are going to the pump, because it's not building a lot of confidence in voters' minds for the current president.
00:49:12.000That means everything is going to go up and it's going to get real bad.
00:49:17.000You know, we had this debate in the uncensored portion of the show.
00:49:20.000You guys should check it out with Myron Gaines last night.
00:49:23.000His argument was the war in Iran is for Israel, and all of the actions taken by the Trump administration that seem to line up are unrelated or just coincidental.
00:49:33.000I don't want to, I'm not trying to put words in his mouth, but the general idea I made was, or I posited is, they take out all the drug traffickers and criminal elements in the Caribbean, these narco terrorists and boats.0.82
00:49:53.000I don't know, it's an interesting question.
00:49:54.000Surrounding Cuba, securing the Panama Canal from China, trying to secure the Northwest Passage, access to Greenland.
00:50:01.000And then, of course, the Suez is a large component, hence the war with Iran.
00:50:06.000My argument is taking out the drug traffickers was to clear traffic lanes for oil ships that are going to be coming from the Gulf, which is happening now.
00:50:15.000Taking oil from Venezuela is because we are, Donald Trump wants to secure energy for the Western Hemisphere and for American interests.
00:50:24.000You factor in the Pana Canal and Northwest Passage.
00:50:25.000Those are paramount if you are going to be the principal oil exporter of the world.
00:50:31.000If you're going to be the dominant oil producer and trader, you need to be able to access the other parts of the world.
00:50:37.000So these trade routes are extremely important.
00:50:45.000If he wanted the strait open, he could leave.
00:50:47.000Myron's argument was he can't because he needs a political win.
00:50:51.000My argument is that does not account for all of the actions taken.
00:50:56.000Previously, such as sending an armada there, securing oil, it seems like Trump is taking all of these actions for the purpose of shutting down Eastern oil production, cutting off China, and centering the world's energy in the West, in the United States, through the Gulf.
00:51:13.000That being said, Myron said he did not believe that was a good thing for America, nor was it America first.
00:51:20.000I would simply agree and say it would appear that if this is the case, Donald Trump's strategy is we're going to give the world a fever.
00:51:28.000We are going to make our enemies suffer more than we suffer, but everybody suffers all the way down.
00:51:32.000So the American people are going through tremendous hardship with these gas prices.
00:51:49.000You know, I'm always interested in that polling data.
00:51:53.000The housing market's in trouble as sellers are giving up and pulling their houses off the market to just sit on them, which is creating a weird phenomenon.
00:52:01.000And Arguably, gas prices are a principal component in why everything is getting crazy.
00:52:08.000If this is true, Donald Trump, the Republicans are going to be in trouble.
00:52:13.000This is their war, these are their policies.
00:52:16.000Now, I'm wondering if maybe the strategy is maybe in September, maybe in October, Trump's October surprise is the straight finally reopens because Trump just leaves.
00:52:28.000Gas prices come down, and instantly everybody feels a pressure release, which creates the mirage of improvement.
00:52:37.000Entering a midterm, feeling like everything just got really good thanks to Trump, forgetting that several months ago it is the war in Iran for which Trump is president that caused it all, that could be a strategy.
00:52:49.000It's kind of like you ever go into the covers and you get real, real hot, and then you come out of the covers and you feel cold, even though it's still hot.
00:52:58.000That's what it seems like Trump is doing.
00:53:00.000Yeah, and Trump doesn't have great options right now as far as getting the gas price down with the global energy pinch because one thing he could do is repeal the gas tax.
00:53:09.000That would drop it by about 30 cents per gallon.
00:53:12.000But a lot of people have proposed, and this is like more of a populist proposal, as well, we should just tariff oil exports.
00:53:20.000We did that, I think it's starting in the 60s or 70s.
00:53:23.000And I think it was like 2015 when Congress finally lifted it.
00:53:26.000The problem with that, why did Congress lift the oil export in 2015?
00:53:31.000Well, because that's actually impedes our domestic oil production from expanding.
00:53:37.000So, if you're in the oil business, if you're ExxonMobil, the more access to the global market you have, the more incentive you actually have to expand your oil production.
00:53:47.000And the less or the more restricted the market is, like the harder time you have exporting oil.
00:53:53.000The harder it gets to run your refineries, the harder it gets to run your drilling and all of your related oil operations.
00:53:59.000So, what would end up happening, and this is why I think people should be cautious saying, well, why doesn't Trump just tariff it?
00:54:04.000If we're truly exporting so much oil, why don't we just tariff it and bring that back home?
00:54:08.000Because that'll give you temporary relief.
00:54:09.000Like, yes, the gas prices will drop pretty hard, actually, for, I don't know, maybe a year, maybe two, maybe three years.
00:54:16.000But once the oil companies start losing money because they can't export to the global market, you talk about diesel, most of the diesel gets produced in the United States, gets exported overseas.
00:54:25.000Because everything runs on diesel, especially in Europe, even they don't even have unleaded gas there, they use diesel.
00:54:30.000These oil companies will start hemorrhaging money.
00:54:33.000They'll start closing down their production.
00:54:34.000They'll start closing down refineries.
00:54:36.000Right now, a lot of the refineries in the US are actually designed for global export, and it will actually drive fuel up even more.
00:54:45.000Everyone's saying, well, why doesn't Trump just do this?
00:54:46.000And it's like he can't because it'll actually make things much worse if you're just kicking the can down the road.
00:54:51.000Well, yeah, but he may need to kick the can a few years down the road in order to save the midterms, in order to continue implementing his policies.
00:55:05.000Yeah, that could limp you across, you know, past the midterms.
00:55:08.000But then, you know, if there's a successor to Trump, if he's wanting a Republican to win and we're nearing the end of the Trump term and then gas starts going crazy, sure.
00:55:16.000And now these oil companies are lining up to give money to the Democrats.
00:55:27.000Like whenever you meet a guy in the oil business, he's typically a conservative.
00:55:30.000But ExxonMobil, They don't care about transgender bathrooms or whatever.
00:55:33.000They're concerned about their bottom line.
00:55:35.000And if they say Trump just screwed us over and he ran the oil industry into the ground, you better believe they're going to be lining up to put money in the Democrat Party's pockets.
00:55:43.000I don't know that anybody's giving the Democrats any money.
00:55:47.000They're in debt and it's just the funding's not going to the party anymore.
00:55:50.000I'm just saying this would be a good way to give them some relief if you destroy the oil industry.
00:55:54.000I just kind of feel like the state of the Democratic Party is the donors don't see.
00:55:58.000Look, if you're $3 million in debt, why give you a dollar?
00:56:01.000Well, the problem that Democrats are having right now, primarily why they can't fundraise, is because they still are successful at smaller dollar donations.0.98
00:56:08.000So you still have your, you know, your random libtards across the country that'll throw a few bucks the Democrats' way, but they've lost all their major donors.0.97
00:56:13.000And the primary reason, what they've all cited, is because the Democrats are pursuing redistribution policies.1.00
00:56:20.000And so far as what you're saying in California, the billionaire taxes, et cetera, et cetera, these taxes, you may as a populist say, well, that sounds great.
00:56:27.000You know, let's like punish these rich people.
00:56:43.000It actually will screw you over at some point.
00:56:45.000I know that's like, you know, boring take, especially from a Zoomer, but it's like true.
00:56:50.000And what will happen is you'll start losing elections because, again, if the Republicans started just driving business into the ground, they're going to line up and bail the Democrats out.
00:56:58.000Because to Tim's point, the Democrats are on the ropes right now.
00:57:10.000They're completely dependent on their activist base.
00:57:13.000And if Trump keeps racking up victories again, if he can put a bow on Iran and get out of there, get a golden parachute, these activists are going to be demoralized.
00:57:19.000Look, in the first year, the activist base of the Democrats, they were completely demotivated.
00:57:24.000So if you can return to the activist base to shut down, there's no money flowing into the party, it's over for them.
00:58:37.000I don't know if he can do this through, like, maybe not a governmental thing, but I'm saying the conservatives need to be dumping as much money as possible into.
00:58:47.000Into pro America cultural media spaces.
00:58:50.000Now, don't get me wrong, the Ellisons certainly are doing that, but I don't know that the moves they've made have been so overtly pro American culture.
00:58:59.000Don't get me wrong, the firing of Scott Pelly, I was tap dancing and laughing my ass off.0.98
00:59:06.000I never like to say I hate people, but man, when Barry Wars started firing these people, I'm just sitting back and be like, someone get me a coconut.
00:59:12.000I'm going to kick back and put my feet up and watch.
00:59:33.000I'm just hoping that they're doing something bigger than it seems they're doing because the midterms are coming up and it does not seem like they're making large moves in cultural spaces the way they could or should be.0.84
00:59:45.000Well, I think the reality is the Ellisons, Elon Musk, who would be probably classified as 90s Democrats.0.69
00:59:52.000Are having more impact on the culture right now than like 90% of conservative media whose sole purpose is to influence culture.0.85
00:59:58.000There's something to be said about that.
00:59:59.000I don't want to name names, but if you look around the conservative space, these guys are more interested in funding their pet projects than they are in like actually investing in like something people would want to watch.
01:00:11.000Yeah, there's some dragon something that lost a ton of money and was really embarrassing and was a total waste of money and it was the pet project of this guy.
01:00:38.000Well, because the problem is, and this is what Elon Musk learned that a lot of these guys haven't learned, is that sometimes you just have to re tick the core institution.
01:00:45.000Because sometimes it works, sometimes you can build a parallel institution.
01:00:48.000I think podcasting is a great example.
01:00:51.000I would say Timcast IRL and other night shows that are in the new media have dethroned late night television.
01:01:17.000Well, I mean, to be fair, then Libs just left Twitter and went to Blue Sky and Threads.1.00
01:01:22.000And now you've got two psycho platforms full of psychotic people.
01:01:25.000But what's happened to the culture for the last nine months, and I can use my normie oracles to fact check this, is the political discourse has been between one side of the right and the other side of the right.
01:01:35.000The left has been completely frozen out of the political discourse.
01:01:39.000And that's not me saying that as someone that's in it.
01:01:42.000They know more about Tucker Carlson feuding with, you know, Mark Levin than they do about, you know, whatever Sam Cedars are.
01:01:48.000Yeah, it's what everybody's talking about.
01:01:49.000But I don't know that Democrats need, like, they can have all the debt and they still have a lot of cultural cachet as long as the divide between men and women, particularly single women, and you saw that poll from the last election that single women overwhelmingly vote Democrat.
01:02:11.000And as long as the Democrats keep pushing this, Empathetic feminized framework, this moral virtue signaling, and these young women are lapping it up and knowing that the government's going to take care of them, that's their base at this point.0.98
01:02:23.000Yeah, we can get super esoteric here.0.52
01:02:25.000I mean, like a good indication of, I think, a big problem what you're seeing is like who's controlling the culture is like hypergamy playing out in real time.
01:02:32.000As long as dating apps make up the majority of how couples met, that indicates that the left's winning.
01:02:37.000And I know that's like a really reductionist thing to say, that's almost like cliche, but it's broadly true because that effectively institutionalized this hypergamy.
01:02:45.000Which indicates that women and men are both miserable, and that's going to continue the political divide between the two.
01:02:51.000If you see a restoration of, again, healthy institutions that function how they should, and one of those being courtship, dating, whatever you want to call it, turning into a marriage, if that starts firing on all cylinders again, that does indicate that the conservatives, so to speak, or the right wing is back in the driver's seat.
01:03:09.000But if you look at the IRS actually that releases data on how couples met, believe it or not, I think it's the IRS.
01:03:14.000It's one of the government institutions you wouldn't expect.
01:03:16.000They're the ones that actually release the data on how couples met.
01:03:24.000And that just institutionalizes hypergamy.
01:03:26.000Well, the other thing is that the evangelical church right now, which is supposed to be Trump's base, a lot of the institutional leaders keep promoting singleness for women as like God's path for them.
01:03:35.000So they keep releasing videos and articles saying, like, no, it's good.0.71
01:03:41.000Can you break down, because this is interesting, you kind of were like maybe hinting at it earlier.0.81
01:03:44.000Can you break down, because I get flack from this by, I'm not saying girl dads, when I attack girl dads, I'm not saying men that have daughters.
01:04:01.000But yeah, typically, I think what you're talking about is the Dave Ramsey.
01:04:06.000Yeah, the guy, the father who becomes feminized himself, who almost worships his daughter as like an idealized, you know, this is going to sound scandalous, but like partner, somebody who idolizes him back and respects him.
01:04:18.000Like ultimately and finally, he gives her whatever she wants.
01:04:22.000And this is a huge problem, and it is a problem in evangelical spaces because the church.
01:04:52.000And the evangelical church, instead of helping them, is just reinforcing the same pattern of life by suggesting.
01:04:56.000Suggesting singleness and becoming a boss babe, whatever, instead of like saying, Hey, this church is a great place to meet a husband and get married.
01:05:05.000We're going to raise up strong men who are attractive to you naturally, even though you're going to tell people that, you know, I'm not attracted to that.
01:05:12.000And so we're going to raise up strong men that have stable jobs, that have a mission in life, that know where they're going, that aren't filled with bitterness and resentment, playing video games all day.
01:05:26.000And that's going to be attractive to women.1.00
01:05:28.000Instead of that, they're often reinforcing kind of this boss babe mentality among young women, raising up women in the church, putting women in the pulpit, all this kind of stuff.
01:05:36.000And so the evangelical church is typically like, what, 10 to 20 years behind the culture.0.51
01:05:40.000And they're living out everything that was like 10 to 20 years ago in terms of raising up women in every institution.
01:05:45.000Well, and this is why I think like this sort of thinking, which is completely taken over the evangelical church.0.58
01:05:50.000And to your point, we dealt with like 10, 20 years ago and like I guess you would say the cultural zeitgeist, is it battery farms.0.66
01:05:56.000This is almost like two on the nose, but it battery farms Democrat voters because again, it pulls on like the deficiencies that women have right now that are engaging in the girl bossism because A, it gives them a sense of stability and strength and a Father figure being the state.0.75
01:06:11.000I mean, I hate to go with like Jordan Peterson and everyone, but there's like that's broadly true.0.55
01:06:15.000And then it also siphons off their maternal instinct with migrants, where they like legitimately view these migrants as like a newborn baby that's paralyzed.0.72
01:06:24.000And it's, yeah, it's totally preying on their maternal instincts.1.00
01:06:26.000This is what women like are literally hardwired and built for biologically is to be this way.1.00
01:06:33.000And unfortunately, they've been given a vision of like, well, my baby now is an immigrant from a third world country, and now daddy government has to feed the baby.1.00
01:06:40.000You think this is World Vision's fault?
01:07:03.000A flesh eating parasite that had been kept out of the U.S. livestock for decades has been detected in Texas, threatening the nation's cattle industry.
01:07:10.000And I just want to let you guys know that basically it's a parasitic fly.
01:07:14.000That will lay its eggs inside your body and it can target humans too.
01:07:19.000And then, my question to all of you that are watching, please comment.
01:07:23.000How do you think this thing came back into the United States?
01:07:28.000It can swim, swim across the Rio Grande.
01:07:30.000It just one day it got a bus, maybe it rode the beast that's there.
01:07:35.000The weird thing was when I was going through Africa and you would cross border crossings, this was in every country, is they would have like a little pool.
01:07:41.000So when you're crossing the border, it's very primitive, like border patrol.0.94
01:08:09.000And as the guy is explaining to me that this is what we do to ensure that disease doesn't spread, literally a farmer shepherding a bunch of goats just like walks right.
01:10:04.000It's all based on what feels nice to people.
01:10:07.000And this is the biggest problem is they keep suggesting policies.1.00
01:10:11.000And the problem with going back to the single women thing is they're typically driven by their feminine instincts, which what sounds the nicest that's going to upset the least amount of people.0.87
01:10:21.000And so that's what they're going to keep pushing is this kind of nonsense.0.76
01:10:24.000And there was some pushback during trans stuff, and they still celebrate this in many places.0.88
01:10:31.000But people kind of saw it then, but they're not going to stop.
01:10:34.000I don't think woke is going away at all.
01:10:36.000I don't think the Jackson Dart thing illustrates back in full swing.
01:10:55.000But to the broader point you were talking about, I mean, I think this is true because, again, they view illegals broadly as their children and they use really like vapid, redundant statements to justify it, where they'll say, and I know it's like, let's dunk on leftist show, but it's like true, is they'll say, oh, well, they're looking for a better life.
01:11:15.000That's like a really redundant statement because every decision I make at all times is to make my life better.
01:11:20.000So it's like, yeah, America's like awesome.
01:12:06.000I mean, yeah, I mean, like, as much as I, you know, I'd be the first person to blame this on the third world, which I think broadly is true.1.00
01:13:18.000It's like, you know, if your enemy is like throwing you a bone, take the bone and run with it.
01:13:21.000Like if George Soros got up and he said, I'm releasing something that's going to kill all wasps, be like, yes, sir, take over my district attorney.
01:14:04.000What about we do like one gigantic bug zapper that every, like you put on a big metal post so everyone can gather around like town center and like hold hands and like they watch.
01:14:15.000We can just have bugs exploding like that.
01:15:05.000Now you drive down the highway and there's no bugs.
01:15:07.000Well, because I remember, you know, this can we maybe there's a little culpability on the bugs here because I remember in high school, I moved to San Antonio and like the year we moved there, there was this like butterfly migration wave or something.
01:15:20.000And all the butterflies, this is on them.
01:15:24.000So they were just getting like, we were stacking bodies every time you commute.
01:15:28.000But I remember that had a psychological toll on me because I was learning to drive and I'm driving for the first time and these beautiful butterflies were just like, like kamikaze into my car.
01:15:38.000And I remember I would, everywhere I go, I'd have like, Tears in my eyes because I'm like, I think I've just killed 50,000 butterflies.
01:17:33.000So, when you capture like a hundred of them, put them in a jar, you got a jar full of dudes being like, I want sex, but there's no women anywhere.1.00
01:19:54.000Officer gets in his car and pursues, performs a pit maneuver, causing the car to crash, ejecting the 11 year old girl from the car, not wearing a seatbelt.
01:20:57.000So, I mean, like, you know, this is kind of the problem is when we talk about like sectioning the country off and having like a national divorce, it's like, well, even in these blue states, I mean, obviously it's where the people live, but the liberals are concentrated in the cities.
01:21:09.000You're going to sacrifice all these red state folks, these conservatives on the altar of like our national divorce.0.53
01:21:15.000And that's why we can't give up California, can't give up LA, can't give up New York City.0.67
01:21:44.000This is like a 12 year old's wall, but in real life, it's really amazing stuff.
01:21:49.000But yeah, I mean, I just reject the notion of like we should just divide the state up because then also it's not like the conservative movement has successfully excised the problems that led to what we're in in the first place.
01:22:01.000Most conservatives still have a lot of preconceived notions that are very liberal ideas.
01:22:04.000And so, if you divided the country red and blue on a long enough timeline, there's a good chance that red America would just turn into what we're dealing with maybe 2010, like in the not so distant future.0.75
01:22:14.000Look, the joke is that in 20 years, the Republican Party will be a bunch of gay communists and the Democratic Party will be AI.0.87
01:22:22.000Like the trend of the political parties and the direction that they go, the Republican Party today is pro gay marriage.0.91
01:22:28.000It's shifted, mind you, but go back to like 2010, and it was like absolutely not.0.95
01:22:56.000Like, the idea that man is detached from.
01:23:01.000Man in society is actually detached from his nature.
01:23:04.000And like Rousseau said, you need to make.
01:23:07.000Into savage man that lives in cities and stuff like that kind of stuff is baked into liberalism and all of the things that follow from liberalism or from the foundational principles of liberalism.
01:23:21.000All of the stuff that we're seeing today is all the stuff that obviously follows.
01:23:25.000And I think that while I don't agree 100% with his estimation, I think that there's a lot of things he's got right about that.
01:23:31.000No, I agree with a lot of the stuff in the same way I write about it.
01:23:35.000You can trace it back to the Enlightenment.
01:23:37.000A lot of the ideas of our founding classical liberalism.
01:23:42.000When you say enlightenment, which one?
01:23:43.000Because there's different enlightenments.
01:23:45.000Like the French Enlightenment was different than the Scottish Enlightenment.
01:23:49.000Yeah, I'm tying it back to the age of liberalism and the rise of liberalism and all these institutions that we have today that we've inherited that are now kind of being sacrificed, gutted, and corrupted.
01:24:00.000And so when we detach ourselves from nature and when we don't understand human nature and our purpose in life and we just have rationality and it came up through the Enlightenment.
01:24:13.000Through romanticism, all of these movements, and you saw it worse, of course, in the French Revolution, which was early stage 2020.
01:24:23.000These ideas that what they do is they separate body and soul for people.
01:24:27.000And so, no longer like if you return to a state of nature, it's going to be very apparent that men are the more powerful and dominant creature.
01:24:34.000But we've anesthetized ourselves through modern civilization to where we don't have to live in reality, it's detached from reality completely.
01:25:12.000Well, because, I mean, if, again, if the state has a monopoly on power, not to go like libertarian, but like if the state holds a monopoly on power, that does reduce the ability for men to organize and.
01:25:26.000You know, it used to be, if you go back a couple hundred years, women weren't involved in issues of conflict because there was a real threat to civilization if women got hurt or were unable to have kids or raise kids or raise families.1.00
01:25:38.000Babies need milk, they can't eat food.
01:25:41.000So the men were like, stay here, we'll take care of the crazy stuff.
01:25:44.000Then we built great walls around our cities, massacred all of the predators, eliminated most of the war and conflict.1.00
01:25:51.000I suppose the argument is the women are desperately trying to bring it back by voting for these policies that release criminals onto their streets.1.00
01:25:57.000But When you live in a society where you've eliminated all of the threats, then there's no more reason for women to be shielded.1.00
01:26:04.000There's something to shield them from.1.00
01:26:06.000The problem then emerges when these women start voting, develop voting patterns.1.00
01:26:10.000I'm not saying literally every woman, ladies, calm down.1.00
01:26:12.000We know how you like your micro level politics.1.00
01:26:14.000It results in a tendency among female voters to vote for policies that release criminals.1.00
01:26:19.000The criminals then victimize, prey upon women.
01:26:22.000Yeah, well, you can actually get a great case study of this in motorsport, in which, like F1, NASCAR is a great example, actually.
01:26:30.000Where, when you were driving in a season, a NASCAR season or whatever, there was a good chance a driver was going to die every year.
01:26:36.000Like the threat of death was very real, very palpable.
01:26:39.000All the drivers knew, you know, one of the guys, one of my buddies is probably going to die in the next few years.
01:26:44.000It was a very real phenomenon, a very real reality.
01:26:47.000But as the cars got safer, this new generation of drivers, there's zero fear of death whatsoever.
01:26:52.000They know for sure, no matter how reckless I drive, I'm not going to die.
01:26:57.000And what's ended up happening to the sport is the drivers, I've never been more reckless.
01:27:02.000It's actually like ruined the sport in a lot of ways because these drivers know that I don't need to respect, you know, space or, or, or like, you know, proper kind of like traditional racing maneuvers.
01:27:14.000Because again, if I crash and I take out half the field, we're all going to be fine.
01:27:18.000But when there was that really real reality of death, it was actually, it had a civilizing effect.
01:27:24.000It had a civilizing effect on the drivers insofar as they knew that one wrong turn could kill me andor kill this guy next to me.
01:27:30.000Once that was gone, There's no civilization anymore.
01:27:33.000And on the track, I mean, I know it's like a very Southern.
01:27:35.000Well, if you were to expand that illustration to how few people talk about eternal matters like hell, like you rarely hear the topic of hell and judgment brought up in church.
01:27:47.000And many people want to avoid this, they find it, you know, offensive to people.
01:27:51.000But this is like basic Christianity that there's eternal judgment.
01:27:55.000Whatever you think happens in that judgment, at least let's agree there's eternal judgment.
01:28:06.000It's going to result in widespread degeneracy everywhere because people have no sense of consequence, not only from the civil magistrate, not only from the government, are they not going to punish them, but there's going to be no pulpit that's going to be teaching from God's word, like, hey, sin has consequences, not just in this life, but in the life to come, which are much more severe than this life.0.89
01:28:27.000Well, I mean, that's the specific mechanism as to why the Christian West. Was so successful is because people knew even when I was out of sight, out of mind from the government, I still ought to behave myself because there's still like a cosmic ledger that is accounting for all of this.0.73
01:28:43.000And again, once that began to dissolve, people only feared accountability from the state.
01:28:48.000This is why, like at the outset of the United States and even like broadly every Western country, the government was minimally involved in a lot of your affairs, your day to day affairs in your life, because they trusted their population could behave in a certain way.
01:29:00.000And yes, there's a whole conversation on high trust, low trust society, but that we can't downplay that effect that you're talking about.
01:29:06.000If God has an eye on me, if God is watching what I do, even in my own room, I'm still going to be a hell of a count for that.
01:29:11.000And that has a massive civilizing effect on people.
01:29:14.000I mean, The idea of freedom, there is a corresponding idea of responsibility that comes along with it.
01:29:22.000And we have totally rejected the idea of responsibility, whether it be the concept of women looking to the state to be their husband and their father and stuff like that, or whether it be men that have decided that they want to check out of society and stuff.
01:29:41.000We're so focused on my freedom, my ability to do whatever I want, with no regard for the responsibility that comes along with it.
01:29:50.000I go back to is that the freedom is great so long as it's in service of your duties and responsibilities.
01:29:57.000And people have everything in our modern world teaches people that they have no bonds.
01:30:04.000They have no loyalty, no honor, no duty to anyone.
01:30:08.000And what happens in Christianity sometimes is that you'll have evangelical leaders who never want to talk about obedience, what you owe to the Lord, sanctification.
01:30:19.000And that's what young men right now are being drawn into.
01:30:22.000Faith traditions and the churches that are not heavy handed by any means, but just honestly telling them this is what God expects from you.
01:31:07.000God designed the world that way, and I should submit to that reality rather than bucking against it and buying this Disney narrative of like the parents are always dumb and the kids are always right.
01:31:18.000We're going to buy God's story, what He's written, that I'm going to honor my father and mother, and I'm going to live into my legacy.
01:31:24.000I'm going to honor my duties and my responsibilities to my family.
01:31:27.000My church, my nation, and carry on a legacy, people just don't have a vision for that anymore.
01:31:31.000And yeah, that's like functionally the mechanism to see that's broken down is that, again, previously when you were born, you did have this sort of slate of identities that had expectations, that had responsibilities, that corresponded to them that you're pointing out, like as a father, as a mother, husband, son, et cetera, et cetera, American, you know, Protestant, Christian, like you can get really granular, but you were assigned a slate of identities at birth that demanded something of you.
01:31:55.000Where in the modern world, even if you're born and you become a conservative, It's too late.
01:31:59.000That's already been severed because of how liberalism functions.
01:32:01.000And so you're seeing, I think, what you're talking about is a lot of young men struggling, is because now they realize they're coming into life as a husk.
01:32:08.000Like, I don't have any responsibilities, nothing binding me.
01:32:11.000And so they have this menu of identities that they can choose from.
01:32:14.000And when you hear that, you instantly think of LGBT people or whatever, where it's like, but you see this on the right, where men will start adopting very kind of strange sort of identities and traits.
01:32:24.000And it's because, to their defense, they didn't have any pre assigned.
01:32:28.000So they are forced as an adult to sort of Rebuild themselves in a sense.
01:32:33.000And so some people nail it, but a lot of guys just end up miserable because they're in a weird fit or something.
01:32:39.000We're going to jump back to the story we were covering in the first one, but a new element of it.
01:32:43.000See, I wanted to be a little bit more serious in terms of the political discussion, but now I don't.0.99
01:32:47.000This is an excerpt from the Graham Platner story on the New York Times, where he said that if anybody ever broke into his house, or he said, If anybody ever broke in here, I would rape them in a sexual way, not in a gay way.0.99
01:33:04.000He was like, I would rape them to show them that I'm dominant.0.96
01:33:09.000Asked about those remarks, a Platner campaign official did not dispute them.0.93
01:33:13.000A friend who knew Mr. Platner and Ms. Fifield during that period said the comments sounded out of character.
01:33:22.000Platner threatened to rape men who would break into his house.0.98
01:33:28.000I guess he said if anybody, so I guess that would include women.0.96
01:33:31.000I just don't think a lot of women would be breaking into his house, but you know.0.67
01:33:34.000Well, I have to say, I mean, and this is a guy with a Tottenham tattoo, this might be his most right wing thing he's done or said because, again, this idea, this is like Greco, this is like very Hellenic.
01:33:44.000Tendency to like literally dominate a man who's your girlfriend.0.94
01:33:48.000I can't get over this sentence a sexual way, not in a gay way.0.95
01:33:54.000I'm against this for the record, but I am saying that is like very rooted in deep like Greek tradition.0.77
01:33:59.000But it's like true because like you can see if you get a group of guys together and you're watching like, you know, like football or something and the ref just keeps like just making horrible calls, one of your friends is going to say, I want to rape that guy.0.69
01:34:10.000And it's like that's like a real thing that happens.
01:34:12.000And again, I think it's I don't know what circles your very masculine ones are.
01:34:16.000Is that a new masculine ones, huh?0.97
01:37:15.000Like, if you put, no, no, actually, those San Francisco stuff, you're noticing.
01:37:17.000If you put guns on there or whatever, like, people would probably still break in.
01:37:20.000But if it said, you will get like danger rapists in here, you'd be like, I'm not, it depends on the neighborhood.
01:37:24.000I couldn't help but notice, I couldn't help but notice that Tim started talking about guns and you started, you brought it right back to the rape.
01:37:30.000I mean, that's the scariest thing I've heard in a long time.
01:37:32.000And I, like, you know, we get death threats all the time here at Tim Guest.
01:38:19.000And everyone's focusing on the bad behavior, but allegedly, he had an AR 15 in his DC apartment.
01:38:25.000She said, Fifield said, he kept an AR 15 lying around his apartment on Capitol Hill and would sharpen an axe, a relic from his time working on the Appalachian Trail before he enlisted in the Marines.
01:38:37.000He had what she described as a warrior ethos and would fantasize about killing people he deemed a threat, she said.
01:38:43.000She said he told her that rape was about power.0.76
01:38:48.000I think he just secured the suburban woman vote.0.99
01:38:51.000Like, every suburban woman rating this is just getting all hot and bothered, being like, he's got a gun illegally and he sharpens his axe, threatening to murder people and he wants to rape.0.96
01:39:00.000Like, this sounds like Fifty Shades of Grey, but, you know, the Democrat Party edition.0.95
01:39:04.000Like, an axe wielding rape is that sounds like one of my mutuals on Twitter.
01:39:07.000Like, I could think of like two dozen guys that probably fit that description.0.98
01:39:39.000It's like, I mean, I've we've made this point on the show multiple times, but like, men will unwind with, like, I don't know, you know, like a documentary about like how.
01:39:45.000Fascinating historical figure, you know, maybe like, you know, a Ken Burns documentary or something.
01:39:49.000Women will unwind with like the actual rapist, the documentary, and they're like, This is great stuff.
01:40:00.000So, no, Grant, I mean, this thing just does illustrate this guy is like, you know, when we use the word all the time, but he like genuinely is mentally unstable.
01:40:37.000This goes back to the Shane Gillis bit where uh, the Vikings come over and like you know, they're intimidating and then they raise the rainbow flag of yeah, literally.
01:41:45.000And look, I mean, not to beat a dead horse, but we should have seen this coming when, you know, at first Hilton and Bianco were topping the jungle primary before Swallow jumped out.
01:41:54.000And someone asked Gavin Newsom, Well, you know, before, and then someone asked Gavin Newsom, What are we going to do?
01:42:01.000You know, if it ends up with two Republicans, because the whole point of the jungle primary was to lock Republicans out of power forever.
01:42:22.000Which, I mean, we should, when you said we should have seen it coming, like, you can just, just, just by the fact that there is an election coming, you know that the Democrats are going to be rigging it.
01:42:43.000Trump does have some tools at his disposal.
01:42:47.000So, what he could do is he can start, well, what he has at his disposal is he can start campaigning for litigation.
01:42:57.000So, if there's a state level litigation, right, someone sues the state of California or whatever, that gives the DOJ, if it's credible grounds, which it likely is, that gives the DOJ precedent to go in and investigate.
01:43:08.000So, they can start investigating, they can issue subpoenas, et cetera, et cetera.
01:43:11.000What can then end up happening is, again, if a DOJ investigation does turn things up, They can't force a recount, but the Californians could potentially force a recount.
01:43:20.000That would be the situation that could play out.
01:43:24.000But that doesn't seem terribly likely.
01:43:26.000But to be fair, I mean, California has issued a recall election fairly recently.
01:43:30.000It went terribly, but at least that shows that I'm not going to, you know, I don't think the California GOP is going to necessarily like roll over on this if there truly is a rig.
01:43:40.000And I think the DOJ is sniffing around this.
01:43:42.000Like, I'm not black pilled on this at all.
01:43:55.000But even with like Colorado, for example, Tina Peters, she goes to jail because she was trying to catch election fraud and Trump pardoned her and they still kept her in jail.
01:44:06.000Finally, Polis now has released Tina or is planning to, but his whole party's pissed about it, right?
01:44:12.000Because it was so apparent he was releasing somebody else, another corrupt politician, let her off, I believe, as a woman.
01:44:19.000And then Tina is just suffering in jail.
01:44:21.000This patriot who was trying to secure elections and make sure it was all good.
01:44:25.000So, anywhere they get power, they're a threat, the true threat to democracy.
01:44:31.000Maybe they're always, they always have been.
01:44:35.000Colorado is the most egregious case in the country because it was a swing state with the McCain election.
01:44:40.000I mean, even the Romney election was considered a swing state.
01:44:43.000And now it's one of the safest blue states in the country.
01:44:47.000And you could maybe chalk that up to like interstate movement or even immigration, but clearly that was a bureaucratic entrenchment that happened there.
01:44:54.000It's a lot of bureaucratic entrenchment.
01:44:55.000It's a lot of, they know how to get power and they pursue power.
01:45:25.000We're going to take these tech guys who just happen to be gay and we're going to just flood the market with money, demoralize the base, because there's a lot of good people, just like in California, there's a lot of good people in Colorado.0.99
01:45:59.000And it's like that's totally not true.
01:46:01.000I mean, the fact that the California GOP, and I don't know, this isn't my domain, you know, the statewide affairs of the GOP in California, but the fact that they weren't on the same page and ran two Republicans.
01:46:11.000Is a bit of a problem because again, Bianco right now, it seems like he's taking about 10 to 15 percent of the general ballot vote right now.
01:46:19.000You know, to be fair, he's a native Californian.
01:46:22.000Steve Hilton moved here or whatever, but clearly, like, it was obvious that Steve Hilton was going to be the guy.
01:46:27.000He had the backing of Trump, the national GOP, he's a Fox News guy.
01:46:30.000Clearly, he's going to be the candidate.
01:46:32.000And I, and this is like, I love Chad Bianco, I think he's great, but at a certain point, it should have been like, let's consolidate around one guy.
01:46:38.000This pipe dream of it being two Republicans and winning the jungle primary.
01:46:41.000Because what are the Democrats going to do this because they get rid of Swallow, right?
01:47:35.000I know I talked about earlier the demoralization porn, but I think this is a good example to show that things are actually maybe even a bit worse than people realize.
01:47:43.000And again, a lot of Americans are resting on their laurels and they're saying, well, that's Britain.0.97
01:47:48.000You know, they're crazy over there.0.98
01:47:49.000Like, they have all these crushes.0.63
01:49:01.000He said, He believes that this will be a turning point in Britain, that legitimately the average British person is not going to see things the same way after this.
01:52:05.000Why did they bring on this attractive young model and say, we're going to scan your face to make a character and then we're going to make her ugly?0.97
01:52:35.000And so anything that's beautiful, anything that's good, anything that's true, they're going to corrupt and pervert and invert and flaunt it and show their power.
01:52:43.000And look, we can take anything from you and make it ugly.
01:53:12.000And beauty has been the chief marketplace for the left for a long time.
01:53:16.000Conservatives have not paid attention to this.
01:53:18.000But I think that's the chief vector for a lot of leftist ideology taking over beauty and then trying to promote a vision, which now everyone can see.0.96
01:53:58.000Probably one of the most powerful cards in the game is called Black Lotus.
01:54:00.000It's like worth $5 million if you get one in like grade 10.
01:54:04.000So, anyway, they reduced dramatically the power of the game, slowing it down, and then.
01:54:10.000Every time they release a new set to keep the game fresh, they have to introduce new game mechanics and new cards that invariably become more powerful.
01:54:21.000Suffice it to say, if you were playing with fourth edition from 1994 95, you would get absolutely crushed by a set that came out in 1998 because the cards are just getting stronger and stronger.
01:54:32.000So, there was a set that was released, it's called The Block.
01:54:34.000It was three different magic sets Urza Saga, Legacy, and Destiny.
01:55:12.000Because you have two sets that are just ridiculously strong in this really trash set nobody's going to use.
01:55:18.000But once they rotate out the older sets that were really powerful, you're only left with three really trashy sets, and everyone's brains readjust to the speed of the game.0.98
01:55:29.000My point is we've been inundated with perfect celebrity, big tittied women and porn.0.63
01:55:37.000So young men have this view of women that is not attainable and not real.0.94
01:55:42.000And so I say this somewhat facetiously the gaming industry goes, We have to nerf women because of the power creep.0.83
01:55:51.000So they're like, We need to stop showcasing all of these like perfect big tittied beautiful model women because it's ruining young men's brains and they're not satisfied with regular women.0.98
01:56:03.000So, what they do is they crank up the ugly filter, start showing nothing but fat, ugly women, and then guys reduce their standards quite a bit.0.95
01:56:12.000I'm mostly joking, I think the real reason they're doing this because feminists are jealous and they're ugly, and so they're like, Women should look like us, but they don't put big fat guys in games, you know.0.97
01:56:25.000I mean, well, I guess technically they do sometimes.0.95
01:56:26.000But any characters are always just ridiculously ripped, dehydrated looking guys.
01:56:30.000So, anyway, to your question, yeah, I saw it.0.97
01:56:33.000And it's ridiculous that they put the ugly filter on women every time.1.00
01:56:36.000And I'm just saying one more time ladies, ladies, feminists should be mad that they're doing this to you.1.00
01:57:03.000Is that true that Christ will not come until every nation bows to him?
01:57:06.000That verse is, that's one interpretation of that verse.
01:57:09.000The application of the verse is basically like we need to be evangelizing and discipling the nations.0.57
01:57:13.000We believe that as Christians, we should be discipling the nations and we should be, honestly, going into nations, promoting Christianity, promoting the one true religion, and yeah, bringing them into submission.
01:57:26.000But as it currently stands, Christ is seated on his throne ruling the nations now, and he will return with a rod of iron to judge those nations who are unfaithful.
01:57:37.000And yeah, all the nations belong to Christ.
01:57:38.000This was the faulty temptation of Christ where Satan says, I'll give you the nations.
01:57:45.000Jesus knew that not only he rebutted him with scripture, but he didn't need to do that.
01:57:50.000He needed to go to the cross and rise from the grave and ascend, and now he's seated at the right hand of God where he rules and reigns eternally.
01:59:35.000The guy would just take a pic, like they would just have the phone at home then and give the instructions to the person to go do it without the app.
01:59:41.000Yeah, good, but just Face ID could do that with your, you know, the pin in and all that.
01:59:47.000One thing that's pretty crazy is like the Dasher delivery fraud stuff.
01:59:50.000Like people will walk into a McDonald's and walk up to the mobile delivery box and just grab the food and walk out.
02:00:23.000Eric Shaver says If a fantasy world full of hemoglobin siphoners who vamp out at the sight of a symbol and a hunter goes around flashing it in their face, then one bites him.
02:02:14.000Well, it's because on Tuesday, that's typically when people were gathering at the town center for public meetings and they didn't want to attract wild animals.
02:02:23.000Oh, so they said, don't put pies on the window on Tuesdays.
02:09:24.000And fair enough, but that's not relevant to my point.
02:09:27.000I think that we have a responsibility because of the fact that dogs inherently generally trust humans, at least here in the US and in the West and stuff.
02:09:37.000So I think that we have a responsibility to do what we can to take care of animals that have co evolved with us.
02:13:17.000Yeah, just a titty twister or something, you know?1.00
02:13:19.000The worst is when the guy that we contract is unavailable, and we only have this hot local 24 year old woman who has to come in and go to second base with Tate.0.93
02:13:26.000But, you know, hey, punishment is punishment.1.00
02:14:28.000When that dude's kid got raped and then he showed up at the airport and blasted that guy in the head, everybody, every man celebrates that.0.99
02:14:35.000This is how we get rid of weak Republicans in the Senate if we elect Graham Plattner, he's like, I'm going to rape my enemies.0.99
02:14:40.000Lindsey Graham is going to be like trying to piss him off all the time.
02:14:43.000Like, I'm voting yes on the Save Act, actually.0.99
02:14:45.000I'm going to ram this through so I get raped by Graham Plattner.0.88
02:14:49.000We should push Graham Plattner across the finish line because all these Senate Republicans are going to be like, finally, get some action, get some play.
02:15:57.000We have a man in the cloth here, guys.
02:15:59.000Anyways, does the panel currently see any groups like Proud boys coming back into the conflict now that Republicans are more in power, maybe after the midterms.
02:16:09.000Will they keep them out of jail potentially?
02:16:11.000Is there any strong part of the cultural right willing to enforce?
02:16:15.000I don't know, maybe Nick Fuentes types.
02:16:17.000I don't know where the blue collar guys are at.
02:16:20.000But maybe Trump gives them pardons on his way out if there's a large event like January 6th.
02:16:25.000There could be a major narrative when, if the hypothetical groups here only show up with shields, I think it'd be kind of powerful to see federal law enforcement removing pedophiles, rapists.0.66
02:16:36.000Whoever from our country, the left attack them, local cops not show up, but average Joes show up with shields would be such like a Korean rooftop Korean moment.0.83
02:16:46.000And are there any cities primed for this?0.94
02:16:49.000I mean, you should follow Enrique Tario, the guy that was one of the OG Proud Boys.
02:16:57.000If I understand correctly, there are still Proud Boys out there.
02:17:02.000I don't know if they're particularly vocal because they did have a lot of.
02:17:08.000Attention from the FBI and stuff when Biden was in office.
02:17:13.000But I mean, those guys are still out there.
02:17:16.000Yeah, it was really specific circumstances that led to Proud Boy type organizations kind of hitting their peak, I guess you would say, around like 2015.
02:17:25.000The primary one being a large contingent of them were GWAT veterans.
02:17:32.000Now, most of the GWAT veterans are getting a bit older.
02:17:34.000So they're not fresh off of conflict, they're not high adrenaline, et cetera.
02:17:40.000That was one of the sort of components that led to that.
02:17:43.000The second that Phil pointed out, most of them got jammed up.
02:17:46.000I think they initially thought that maybe they'd be able to operate anonymously.
02:17:49.000I think they might have underestimated quite how ferociously the left would be, in addition to the state siding with the left on this particular issue.
02:17:58.000And the third being, you kind of hit on it.
02:18:00.000Is there any cities that could support this?
02:18:01.000No, actually, because part of the reason why the left is able to organize so effectively is because of how American cities are designed, is because, again, they can mobilize quickly because they all live next to each other, where right wingers can't because we all live in suburbs.
02:18:15.000And the perfect example to prove this is in Britain, you'll see right wing riots all the time.
02:18:20.000Are the British just more primed for violence or demonstrations or riots or whatever?
02:18:26.000I think what's actually going on there is they live close to each other.
02:18:28.000So if they put on Facebook and they say, Hey, we're all showing up to the Southampton City Council or police station tonight, that's a walk.
02:19:25.000Um, I jokingly say I was at the Capitol on January 6th, but I was at the Texas Capitol in Austin, and there were straight up militia guys who showed up and they were like fist bumping the cops.
02:19:35.000Austin's still a little base, right?0.65
02:19:37.000I mean, it's gay as it's very corporate gay right now, but I don't know.
02:19:41.000I live like 30 minutes outside the city.0.64
02:19:43.000If there was an event going on in Austin, I'd show up with a shield, like, legitimately, if it was an event where it's like everyone's showing at capitals around the country, like the election for January 6th, like that was a crazy day.
02:19:55.000If we had something primed like that in Austin, I don't know.
02:19:57.000Maybe we could see something like that.1.00
02:19:59.000It would be a very big cultural shift to see a bunch of average Joe Show with Shields to make sure the immigrants get out.0.54
02:20:54.000And so what I would answer to this man is, you know, If you want to do this, start networking and finding other guys that are aligned in your area and figure out a way to make it happen yourself.
02:21:07.000Because a lot of people on the right, they have a good instinct waiting for, like, we're all waiting for Eric Prince to finally, like, you know, come in and be like, okay, it's I'm Q.
02:21:18.000Uh, but a lot of times we need to stop looking outside ourselves and uh, do things, yeah, and activate.
02:21:24.000And I'm going to add something to that too is you know, I was hitting on logistics, something that's really important is there's almost this tendency on the right where we feel a bit, and I'm using this word precisely because this would apply to me too.
02:21:35.000We almost get a bit insecure that we're not seeing our work translate to um, like visual demonstrations because what ends up happening, you see this a lot in like dissident right wing circles, they say.
02:21:47.000What we're doing isn't legit until we like get together and like show that we're like a thing.
02:21:52.000And that's like a really strong tendency for a lot of people on the right.
02:21:56.000But I think Trump and others have demonstrated that it's more effective just to infiltrate and then push things in your direction rather than just do demonstrations because, again, that's a strong tendency because we want to show like, hey, we have power in the real world.
02:22:09.000We can like show this, we can sort of show power and these sorts of things.
02:22:14.000But I think that actually sometimes, I'm not saying in this instance would be powerful, but You'll see these guys, we're going to have a conference.
02:22:20.000We're all going to get together and network.
02:22:21.000It's like, well, you guys are already talking on the internet anyway.
02:22:23.000Like, you're able to do things over the internet.
02:22:25.000That's actually somewhat of a beautiful thing.
02:22:28.000What ends up happening at these conferences, they're almost always like disasters.
02:22:30.000I mean, that recent one, they were insecure.
02:22:33.000They were saying, we got to show that this is a real movement.
02:22:36.000So, we're going to organize a conference and like show that we're like doing stuff in real life.
02:22:39.000We got to show that we're doing stuff.
02:22:42.000And it's just, I think it ultimately stems from a like maybe we're not actually pushing things in the right direction.
02:22:48.000So, if we like show in real life that we are, then that will show that we're powerful.
02:22:53.000If you are concerned, is just try to infiltrate, you know, your Austin City Council, your school boards.
02:22:58.000And by infiltrate, I'm using that word precisely insofar as get elected, keep your head, you know, keep your nose clean, keep your honest level, be nice, be polite, be presentable.
02:23:08.000That's going to do so much more for the country than organizing demonstrations.
02:23:12.000Look into what's been going on in New Hampshire with the Free State Project, regardless of whether or not you like the idea of libertarianism or not.
02:23:22.000They had a bunch of people that are, well, They had a bunch of people that I'm not.
02:24:28.000Means to power and a viable means to change.
02:24:32.000So if you, it's not getting a bunch of guys together to sit around and yell at the courthouse or yell at the Capitol, that's not going to do anything.
02:24:42.000And again, whether you like libertarians or not, like what's going on in New Hampshire is a roadmap for how to actually enact change in your town, your city, your state, your county, whatever.
02:24:59.000Get into office, find people that have some charisma and work with them to get them into office.
02:25:06.000The political means are still very available to people.
02:25:10.000And the evidence of that is the left does it all the time.
02:26:56.000But just final thing to add to potentially Austin being primed the shooting that we had a few months back, that was in like the frat boy part of 6th Street.
02:27:07.000And I would imagine that enraged a lot of them.
02:27:09.000So that's another reason I'd throw it out there of like these are regular like frat guys, kind of reminding you that that image that we had a while back of the flat guys protecting the flag as leftists tried to tear it down a similar situation, but like near an ice protest that's happening near UT or something like that.
02:28:35.000All right, with the potential for him losing this election with the mail in ballots that's coming in, and with Spencer Pratt campaigning in rolling 60s territory and going into these inner city gang rid neighborhoods and talking to the people, if Spencer Pratt loses his second place, do you believe that this will be?0.58
02:28:59.000The wake up call to the default big city African American Democratic voter just started paying attention to the Republican Party.0.55
02:29:09.000No, I bet when the exit polls come out, it'll be 90% went through.0.64
02:29:27.000I mean, Spencer Pratt has had some really good campaigns, or sorry, really good campaign rallies, like in South Central, for example.
02:29:35.000But again, polling, the black vote is pretty much locked up for the Democrats.0.79
02:29:40.000I don't think that's going to change anytime soon, just because, again, For black Americans, there are, for a lot of them, massive incentives to vote for the Democrat Party, primarily because they'll uphold entitlement spending on welfare, et cetera.0.69
02:29:57.000I mean, this is something that's been discussed at length in conservative media.0.84
02:30:00.000You know, Republicans are racist, et cetera, et cetera.
02:30:02.000That's actually really, really tough to shake for Republicans.0.96
02:30:07.000Like Republicans very rarely get more than 15% of the black vote at any given election, even if they're black and then the Democrat is white.0.84
02:30:20.000Yeah, I don't expect anything to change really with Spencer Pratt, unfortunately.
02:30:24.000No, there's a high degree of ethnic loyalty.0.86
02:30:27.000And there's something that, you know, maybe with all the, we talked about the murder in England, that might be coming back with the white population.0.75
02:30:40.000I mean, you look at the demographics in LA, it's crazy how the people that are most likely to vote for the, what is it, a Democrat, socialist, a registered socialist.
02:30:54.000I don't know if it's possible, but there's something about, you know, when you do those man on the street interviews, they're, you know, basically the only litmus test for why they're voting is the race of the person.
02:31:43.000But I can tell you from this side, when you got Liz Everett Ellison, April Chapman, Chad O. Jackson, and Jason Whitlock leading the charge.
02:32:02.000And, like, you know, this is, you know, I hit on my show a lot about the idea of the heritage American, right?
02:32:06.000You know, when you're looking around the United States, who has the most stock in the country, as in who has the most stake, who has the most skin in the game, so to speak?0.68
02:32:14.000And I sincerely accept Ann Coulter's sort of America's a white and black country.0.60
02:32:19.000And so far as the average black American has been in the country longer than the average white American, which you factor in the Ellis Island immigration wave and everything.0.91
02:33:32.000I don't know if it'll be towards the Republican Party, but maybe they'll be able to organize a bit more than the Democrat Party.
02:33:37.000But Guys like Jim Clyburn potentially losing their seats, but a lot of these congressional black congressmen losing their seats.
02:33:44.000I just think the trend actually is that black voters will increasingly be without sort of a party because they're going to lose their position in the Democrat Party.0.90
02:33:53.000Is Clyburn looking like he's going to keep it now because they are going to keep a Republican, a Democrat seat, but a lot of his ilk are going to lose their seats.0.64
02:34:01.000The treacherous 14 state senators in South Carolina.
02:34:04.000I was born and raised in South Carolina.
02:34:06.000I live in Georgia now, so I follow it pretty closely.
02:34:16.000But there's a backstory to Jim Clyburn that Vince Everett Ellison has detailed about basically how Jim Clyburn is the white Democrats' duboy.
02:34:27.000He's a snitch to keep everything in line.
02:34:30.000And basically, as long as Jim Clyburn got that seat, the black Democratic political apparatus in the state of South Carolina will be under control.0.62
02:34:43.000Clyburn's a kingmaker, you know, in the Democrat Party.
02:34:46.000You don't get To advance at the national level without Clyburn's blessing.
02:34:55.000You started to see the black caucus within the Democrats start to decline in influence when Elijah Cummings was out of the picture.
02:35:03.000Because as I understand it, I actually spoke to a staffer for a congressional black caucus member, and he was saying that Elijah Cummings was kind of the guy that would sort of push black issues in the Democrat Party.
02:35:16.000But as the Democrat Party becomes more third world, like immigrant based, Yeah, you're going to see that less at the forefront.
02:35:23.000And American culture reflects this.0.99
02:35:25.000I mean, rap is no longer top of the charts.
02:37:05.000So, my question this is kind of an open discussion panel.
02:37:10.000Has this movie been suppressed so long because it's not a family friendly screwball comedy fueled by nostalgia, but it's actually a stealth documentary.
02:39:44.000It looks lib coded, but I'll probably watch it.
02:39:46.000Yeah, it's like the corporation is evil and wrong and has been wronging the coyote, and you know, yeah, because clearly the coyote is not using these devices properly.
02:39:54.000I think that's, of course, yeah, yeah.
02:39:56.000I think it's anti sec propaganda, probably.
02:42:26.000So Tater brought up the idea of export tariffs on oil.
02:42:31.000So if we tied export tariffs to the price of the pump, wouldn't oil producers be more motivated to keep domestic prices lower to access more lucrative foreign markets?
02:42:43.000There's got to be a lapar grip to that.
02:42:45.000Wait, so if exports are tied to the price at the pump, so you're saying exports would increase as gas prices go up?
02:43:47.000I mean, the problem is like more the diesel market because the oil, not to like glaze oil companies here, but like they need access to the global market for diesel because that's what like a lot of our refineries are equipped for.
02:44:02.000And so the tariff, I guess it could just be a specific tariff on.
02:44:06.000But none of our gasoline really gets exported, like our actual unleaded gasoline.
02:45:07.000Oil exports would indicate that the numbers just aren't adding up.
02:45:10.000I think that's kind of been my takeaway.
02:45:12.000Besant has shown as well that he's not hesitant to throw a tariff on something.
02:45:17.000So, yeah, I just, I'm really, I really don't think that would work out how we think it would.
02:45:24.000I think we should get rid of the gas tax or suspend it for a few months.
02:45:27.000And I think Trump could do that via EO.
02:45:29.000I know that would be an act of Congress, but long enough to give some relief to Americans if the war is going to keep going.
02:45:37.000I think people will scoff at that a little bit.
02:45:39.000Like, oh, it went down 30 cents, da da da da.
02:45:44.000And maybe it'd be good, but there's something psychological about the four.
02:45:49.000I think if you can get it below four bucks, like I filled up for $3.95 the other day, I'm like, oh, the West is saved.
02:45:55.000Um, so there could be something psychological.
02:45:57.000Maybe I think if Iran's going to continue to drag out, which it looks like it may, um, I think he'll nix the gas tax in like October and then it'll start hitting the pumps by November.0.77
02:46:11.000If I had to guess, I guess we'll see.0.86
02:46:37.000Every time I try to do that exercise in my head, I get to so many negatives.
02:46:41.000But I really think there's got to be a laugher curve on it, where you could do it a little bit to try to push things in a certain way.
02:46:49.000And just see how the markets react because we've never tested it ourselves.
02:46:53.000The problem is that the Fed is about this.
02:46:55.000So, the Fed is the organization who tracks inflation.
02:47:01.000They would probably be tasked with, because they track CPI, so they would probably be the ones tasked with developing a nationwide gas price, so to speak.
02:47:10.000And the problem with that is they're about to get rid of tracking oil and energy broadly because Kevin Warsh has come in and he said, We're going to change the way that we measure inflation.
02:47:23.000So, any asset that is subject to increased volatility, like oil, we're no longer going to track that as a part of our inflation metric because it's artificially making the inflation metric higher.
02:47:39.000So, inflation is about to drop, even though in actuality we have high inflation right now because they're going to stop measuring at the excess.
02:47:47.000So, again, any asset that is subject to high volatility will no longer be included in our inflation metric.
02:47:54.000And so we're going to be at like 2% inflation, even if gas is through the roof.
02:47:57.000So I don't even know if they'll have the ability to even build out any sort of metric that would track gas that then Congress could be like, yep, that's good.
02:48:07.000And then that Trump would be like, yep, I'm comfortable using that in a tariff calculation.
02:48:11.000I just think it's just too convoluted.
02:48:13.000I don't know if it would ever make it to the finish line.