00:02:38.000As to be expected, the Democrats somehow magically pulled ahead of Spencer Pratt and Steve Hilton in California, thanks to these late ballots that came in well after Election Day.
00:02:51.000And we all knew this was going to happen because this is what happens in California every single time.
00:02:54.000But Donald Trump is accusing the Democrats in California of cheating.
00:03:00.000And I will definitively state yes, it's cheating.
00:03:03.000But you see, when you make the claim that Democrats are cheating, what you will get in these liberal debates is they'll falsely frame what you are stating.
00:03:12.000To make it seem like you're out, you're stating something completely outrageous or impossible or conspiratorial.
00:03:18.000No, I think cheating just strikes at the spirit of what an election is supposed to be.
00:03:22.000We all come out, we express our thoughts on who should be our leader, who should be running this particular jurisdiction in this particular authority or office, and then whoever we all vote for ends up getting that job.
00:03:35.000I would not call it democracy when activists go door to door, convince people who don't want to vote to fill out a mail in ballot, collect it, and then drop them off.
00:03:43.000After the fact, and also giving them time, if we want to get into the hardcore cheating, giving them time after the election to figure out exactly how many ballots they would need.
00:03:51.000Because the most interesting thing about the late ballots they're counting in Los Angeles is that they like to say, you know, Democrats, they vote early.
00:04:01.000And that's why after an election, you see a whole bunch of votes coming in just for the Democrat.
00:04:07.000The problem is that California instituted a jungle primary to try and lock out Republicans, meaning that all parties.
00:04:14.000Go for the same primary, and the top two will advance to the general election.
00:04:19.000They did not expect a Republican to muster up enough votes to actually get that slot.
00:04:24.000Based on this mail in vote system, it's actually really easy.
00:04:27.000First, you get, if they didn't do the jungle primary, you'd get to the general election and you'd have a Republican on the ticket who's probably not going to win and a Democrat, and then you can just count the ballots after the fact.
00:04:38.000So, election day comes in, you go, oh crap, the Republicans are ahead by 3%.
00:04:45.000So let's just go through what we found from the mail in votes until the Democrat wins.
00:04:49.000The problem with the jungle primary is that Spencer Pratt was actually capable of advancing to the general, and they wanted to knock him out.
00:04:57.000Well, the problem now is the mail in votes that actually came in, for some reason, didn't come in for Karen Bess.
00:05:06.000And I'd make the argument that when you're in a desperate rush with only days after an election to try and find as many ballots as you can, with apparently the authority to backdate, and signatures can literally be beaten.
00:05:16.000Literally be pictures of the NES character Kirby.
00:06:50.000Here's what got my attention this week The Secretary of Agriculture publicly warned that America's consolidated meat supply is a threat to the country itself.
00:07:25.000Well, as Americans, we got to return, return to tradition where you know your rancher, you know your land, you know where your meat is coming from.
00:07:38.000Backyard Butchers offers Offer premium American beef from real Texas ranchers, born, raised, and processed right here in the USA.
00:07:45.00098% grass fed, 2% grain finished, zero hormones, zero antibiotics, zero preservatives.
00:07:51.000Go to backyardbutchers.com, use promo code POOL for up to 30% off, two free 10 ounce rib buys plus free shipping.
00:07:58.000And this summer, Backyard Butchers is celebrating America's 250th anniversary with a free America 250 box.
00:08:04.000When you purchase a steakhouse box, complete with burgers and hot dogs, built for my favorite holiday party, you know it, it's the 4th of July.
00:08:54.000With your help as members, this community exists, and you should join it if you have not.
00:08:59.000You get access to a bunch of members' exclusives, pre shows, morning shows, after shows, as well as the call in show where you get to call into this show and talk to us and our guest on the Rumble uncensored portion of the show.
00:10:24.000LA Mayor race, Ramon passes Pratt in quest for second place slot.
00:10:28.000Now, Spencer Pratt has said listen, there's still a lot of bouts.
00:10:31.000It's not definitive just yet, but Decision Desk has already called it for Karen Bass and Nithia Rahman, who might I add cried on election night because she was crushed with Pratt up by over 40,000 votes.
00:10:46.000Well, conveniently for her, she found those 40,000 votes in Malin Bouts.
00:10:50.000And you know what, the really interesting thing about all of it is just how Karen Bass didn't.
00:10:57.000This is the problem with cheating, okay?
00:11:01.000Now, I'm going to say first and foremost, Answer the question, what is cheating?
00:11:05.000Well, I would argue it like this An election is when people sit around and argue over who should be in charge, then everybody writes down a name, puts it in a ballot box, they count it out, and whoever got the most votes wins, right?
00:11:17.000It's supposed to be a democratically elected representative of the people.
00:11:23.000Well, when you create a universal voting system, a universal mail in voting system, where activists can go to nursing homes and otherwise collect ballots from people who do not want to vote and don't care, that's not an election.
00:11:36.000That's just you saying you've got more numbers than the other guy.
00:11:39.000But truth be told, if that's the system they codified, it is.
00:12:32.000That Karen Bass share of the votes dropped.
00:12:35.000Now, if you were calculating the votes that came on Election Day, And trying to figure out how you can remove a top two contender in second place, you don't need Karen Bastigan anymore votes because she's, well, you don't need her to gain any proportionally large amounts of votes.
00:12:53.000You only need Ramon to overtake Pratt.
00:12:57.000So I make the argument that when you are counting, when you are in a crunch for time to figure out how many ballots you need to knock out the only Republican, you don't have time to balance the percentages to make it look normal.
00:13:11.000And the reality is, They, given a long enough time, they probably could have generated enough bouts for Bass and Remonts that it looked plausible, but this just doesn't look plausible.
00:13:20.000Now, the jungle primary system, where Republicans and Democrats, all parties, run on the same ticket, was intended to lock Republicans out of the race, and it appears to have backfired.
00:13:30.000And now they're having the trouble of how do you eliminate the Republican from the general election?
00:13:35.000Well, it looks like this is the way they do it.
00:13:47.000I know Spencer Pratt is hopeful, but check this out.
00:13:51.000Governor candidate Steve Hilton revealed the stunning reality of California fraud.
00:13:54.000They allow mail in belts to be backdated by hand.
00:13:58.000It's not just the postmark, you can hand write the date.
00:14:03.000Now, I want to shock all of you and the conscience of the average American by I want to show you a tweet that we have.
00:14:13.000Human David Hamati, with this viral post, he says Many have been asking me to describe the potential signature verification loophole in LA.
00:14:20.000It says if a voter is unable to sign, the voter can make a mark witnessed by one person.
00:14:26.000Here, the person drew a happy face and witnessed it with a scribble.
00:14:29.000That scribble isn't validated as being a real person.
00:14:32.000Indeed, this is the viral image that's been going around quite a bit.
00:14:35.000It shows what appears to be a California ballot with, instead of a signature, a smiley face.
00:14:49.000Top critical thinkers have zero follow up questions when someone shows them a signature line with a smiley face on it and tells them it's from an officially counted California ballot.
00:14:58.000Can you believe how stupid these MAGA chuds are for believing this fake ballot?
00:15:03.000It's not like there's an official document from the government of California showing that indeed you can use a picture of Kirby on your ballot.
00:15:13.000With this page 28 on their signature verification guidelines showing pictures or symbols can be used as valid signatures.
00:15:21.000Since we have this symbol on file, it is considered valid.
00:15:25.000It's a picture of Kirby from the NES games, the Nintendo games, Kirby.
00:15:30.000So, welcome to California, where I love this.
00:15:37.000This epitomizes everything that we are going through in the culture war.
00:15:42.000That in California, a doodle of Kirby is called a valid signature.
00:15:47.000Liberals, smug and dumb as possible, I'm trying to avoid swearing, mock the idea of the truth because they're so stupid and arrogant, they didn't bother Google searching whether or not you could use a smiley face on a ballot.
00:16:20.000It's tough to look at the results so far and not think that there's something amiss.
00:16:29.000The fact that Democrats will just assert, no, this is normal, without trying to make their elections look.
00:16:39.000Proper is, I think, a major part of the problem because even if the situation is where Pratt didn't have the votes and the votes are legitimate, which I mean, obviously people are going to question that, but even if that's the case, it looks so bad.
00:16:54.000I mean, the rest of the world looks at the United States and says, What's going on?
00:16:58.000I have more respect for these African elections where the leader just comes out and says, I got 270% of the vote.
00:17:03.000It's like at least on election day, they gave us a number.
00:17:06.000I mean, this kind of statistical anomaly is absolute proof that the election is stolen.
00:17:11.000It's no different than if I bet you $100 that I could flip a quarter and get heads 50 times in a row.
00:17:16.000And then I flipped a quarter and I get heads 50 times in a row.
00:17:19.000You're not going to say, well, you won fair and square.
00:17:21.000You're going to say, you, MFR, you rigged the quarter, right?
00:17:27.000The average person just says, wow, you got lucky, I guess.
00:17:29.000Yeah, they don't believe that there's any possible.
00:17:31.000I think there's still a certain amount of people that have a certain amount of statistical faith in the system, and they're not willing to make that jump into believing something as important as an election would go through something like this.
00:17:41.000I would also wonder why, if they were looking to inject a little bit, Of, like, a little bit less concern from the public, why not count the mail in ballots first?
00:18:04.000Well, I know it's the whole point, but I'm saying, like, if they were looking to at least try to fake some sense of honesty, they would do this if they were going to win.
00:18:13.000The U.S. Attorney investigating said they don't have any authority to actually do anything.
00:18:16.000That they've tried to get the voter records and analyze this stuff, but they can't.
00:18:30.000You made the point statistically, this is impossible.
00:18:34.000Can you expand on that a little bit more?
00:18:36.000Well, you just don't see this kind of sudden discovery of votes for one candidate that's a multiple of all the votes the other candidates are getting.
00:18:44.000Unless that was going to be a general trend throughout the election, they were just a bad candidate.
00:18:49.000We're seeing people get certain percentages of the vote.
00:18:51.000And then when the preferred candidate falls short, suddenly they're literally using sheriff's helicopters to fly in ballots.
00:18:58.000And all those ballots are for the preferred candidate.
00:19:01.000That's just not the kind of statistical representation you'd expect to see.
00:19:05.000And the consequence of this is what we're really talking about is not just a stolen election.
00:19:09.000This is the death of the Republic, right?
00:19:11.000Our founders fought a desperate eight year war to free ourselves from the tyranny of the British monarchy because the British king did not get elected.
00:19:19.000He could not be held accountable to the will, the political will of the people.
00:19:24.000They were subjects, they were not citizens.
00:19:26.000Our founders established a Republic where you have that political accountability.
00:19:30.000Because you're electing your representatives.
00:19:33.000But if that election process is broken, if it's being stolen, then you're not in a republic.
00:19:38.000You're in another tyranny by the people who steal the election.
00:19:42.000Or either Trump's in on it or it's a civil war.
00:19:46.000We're in advanced information technology eras.
00:19:52.000And I say eras plural because we had, now we're entering the AI space and the way we accumulate and disperse information and disseminate information is getting much more dramatic.
00:20:01.000But The argument I always make, the purpose of war is to seize control of a region, a people.
00:20:36.000This is the Democrat argument whenever there's the quote unquote red mirage.
00:20:40.000They have argued now since 2016 that Democrats tend to vote by mail and Republicans tend to vote in person.
00:20:47.000First, I would contend that's retarded and makes no sense.
00:20:50.000What is the argument by which the political leanings of a person determine whether or not they decide to mail something in or walk to a ballot location?
00:20:57.000That is in fact, I'd argue the inverse.
00:21:01.000Conservatives tending to be in rural locations should be the ones mailing votes in because it's Harder to drive to a polling location than an urban individual who can just walk down the block and get to one.
00:21:21.000And within the first day, like election day, Republicans crushed.
00:21:26.000Democrats did succeed, but they held off a blue wave.
00:21:29.000Over the next several days, somehow Republicans started losing.
00:21:33.000The argument was well, when the mail in votes got counted, They skewed Democrat because Democrats tend to vote by mail more.
00:21:41.000The problem here is that Bass and Rahman are both Democrats, yet somehow the percentage changed.
00:21:48.000That is a serious statistical anomaly that cannot be accounted for because Rahman has lower name ID than Karen Bass and Spencer Pratt.
00:21:58.000If you want to make the argument, she was simply telling everybody when she was campaigning, vote by mail, don't vote in person, maybe that would make sense.
00:22:07.000But when you factor in that the machine, Only needed Ramon to outpace Pratt and not for Bass to make large gains, they would not have found votes for Bass at the same level because they don't need to.
00:22:19.000This looked like an overt, desperate attempt to steal the election from Pratt.
00:22:25.000And I want to say how I think they did it is ballot harvesting.
00:22:28.000They go to nursing homes, they go door to door, they collect a bunch of ballots.
00:22:32.000In the instance of California, considering they can backdate and they don't need signatures, this is the challenge.
00:22:39.000You say Democrats cheated, and they say Democrats did nothing illegal.
00:22:43.000These are all votes, they're all legal in the state of California, and the government, the federal government, has no authority to stop them.
00:22:49.000And then you realize they're saying that they may have voted after Election Day with smiley faces, so we can't even confirm these are real people.
00:23:00.000I can tell you in Colorado, we also have universal mail in voting, and we have two bedroom apartments with 100 people registered to vote in that apartment.
00:23:08.000So they're getting 100 ballots at that one apartment mailbox.
00:23:11.000There's no integrity to that election.
00:23:14.000I mean, the government doesn't have any ability to step in here, right?
00:23:18.000Like Tim was saying, they have no jurisdiction.
00:23:21.000The way our Constitution sets things up is the states run their internal voting, even for federal office, unless Congress steps in.
00:23:28.000So that's literally what the Constitution says.
00:23:30.000We're going to leave it to the states to do this unless Congress steps in.
00:23:33.000Chooses to step in, but they've not done that.
00:23:35.000And that's not, that wouldn't require an amendment.
00:23:48.000In 2020, a lot of people said the election was stolen from Trump.
00:23:53.000And my argument was if you are saying that spy satellites and, you know, Chinese forged ballots and all that stuff, I'm saying absolutely no.
00:24:02.000I mean, maybe to a little degree, but not significantly.
00:24:06.000If you are saying it was stolen through procedure, electoral manipulation, and things like this, we agree.
00:24:13.000Several states changed the structure of their elections outside the confines of the Constitution.
00:24:18.000The judges and governors did not have the authority to make these changes.
00:24:21.000My point when I correctly stated that Joe Biden was able to get these votes through ballot harvesting, what they did was voter in the park was a big initiative in Wisconsin.
00:24:32.000Activists were going to nursing homes.
00:24:33.000James O'Keefe uncovered a lot of this.
00:24:36.000The way they were able to get Biden to 81 million votes was because people were locked in their houses.
00:24:42.000The ballot was mailed to them, and an activist showed up, knocked on the door, and said, Hand that to me.
00:24:48.000And then you need only ask Mike Benz what happened after I correctly identified their strategy.
00:24:56.000While many people were making claims about German spy satellites and servers or whatever, I was pointing out the actual technique they used.
00:25:05.000So several prominent deep state Organizations engaged in a campaign to defame and lie about me.
00:25:12.000And it is shocking and insane to hear that.
00:25:15.000But Mike Benz has all the details, came on the show and broke all of it down, showing the various organizations.
00:25:20.000What they said was that Tim Pool is engaging in malinformation.
00:25:25.000Well, it's not disinformation where you intentionally lie or misinformation where you may be wrong.
00:25:31.000Malinformation is information that is correct but bad.
00:25:35.000So when Tim Pool says, They are using legal ballot harvesting techniques in their state in order to secure this election, and it was true, and it offered up an opportunity for Republicans to counter in the midterms or moving forward.
00:28:16.000The question I have here is not about the age, which can be chalked up to bad record keeping, but why, when he asked, when he said, It says you've been in 51 elections, I said, Oh, not me.
00:28:26.000She denied that she was in those elections.
00:28:27.000This, in and of itself, I could chalk up to error.
00:28:32.000Except for the fact that James O'Keefe and many others track down in Jersey and in New York individuals who had donated to Act Blue some 1,000 to 10,000 times.
00:28:43.000And they go to them and say, It says here you donate $25 a day, like 17 times per day for two years straight.
00:29:39.000And over a period of time, the number of ballots you control goes from the thousands to the tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, millions of people.
00:30:20.000Makes me wonder who Joe Rogan voted for in this election.
00:30:23.000It speaks to the apathy of the average everyday person where they either just don't want to know that stuff like this is going on, but you would have imagined, you know, for as long as this stuff has happened, especially in the state of California, that they would have worked to try to make it look at least a little bit fair, you know, for the sake of like keeping the public from revolting.
00:30:41.000But so many of the people are so apathetic.
00:30:43.000And when you get that description that Tim gave of like what it actually means ballot harvesting and all the other steps, it's so much less.
00:30:50.000You know, cut and dry than a person who's watched a bunch of movies or television shows about cheating.
00:30:55.000So they just kind of sign off and think, well, I just don't want to think of it that way because it's just too much.
00:31:00.000Then you have to go down the rabbit hole.
00:31:02.000And if you're not a part of the political, if you're not watching stuff about politics every day, it's just too much.
00:31:07.000This is why I intentionally pulled up the Reddit post from Top Minds of Reddit that mocked the idea you could vote by smiley face.
00:31:15.000Because anybody who actually reads into this knows it's true.
00:31:18.000And I have long argued, my experience with liberals and conservatives, the right, the left, whatever you want to call it, The left, they don't know what they are talking about.
00:31:28.000They don't know what's going on in the world.
00:31:29.000They only know surface level rumors about what's really going on.
00:31:34.000So, a really great example, which Hunter Avalon will never live down, is when he came on the show several years ago.
00:31:39.000And I correctly pointed out that Joe Biden said to the president of Ukraine if you don't fire the state prosecutor, you will not get the billion dollar loan, which is an illegal quid pro quo.
00:31:49.000The vice president doesn't have the authority to withhold congressionally approved loan guarantees.
00:31:53.000And Hunter Avalon responded with a smug face no, he didn't.
00:32:03.000And I played the video and he was stunned.
00:32:04.000He was flabbergasted because he didn't know what he was talking about.
00:32:07.000These people all just regurgitate liberal talking points amongst each other and they don't actually investigate what's going on.
00:32:14.000And I will throw way more shade at conservatives because conservatives tend to embrace the debate through liberal framing.
00:32:22.000So the liberals will say everything we're doing is legal, and a conservative will then say, Well, I mean, something must be going on that's it.
00:32:36.000Another example is I was watching this Jubilee debate.
00:32:38.000I did a video on it earlier between Dean and Parker versus two conservatives.
00:32:44.000And whenever someone would bring up a point of hypocrisy, the progressives would just laugh and then reframe the debate, and the conservatives would go along with it.
00:32:53.000And I'm just like, see, this is why you guys get crushed by these manipulation techniques.
00:32:58.000I want to show you this real quick from Robbie Starbuck.
00:34:56.000But if it's not happening, it's because it makes sense to somebody.
00:34:59.000And the reason it makes sense is all these politicians who would be voting on them, all these senators, they won election, they keep their offices under the current rules.
00:35:09.000They have no incentive to change the rules.
00:35:11.000There's no guarantee they're going to win election if the rules are made more honest.
00:35:15.000They do change the rules, they give themselves raises all the time.
00:35:20.000To be fair, they haven't given the minority of alterations.
00:35:23.000The rules shall be that we all get paid more.
00:35:26.000They should, the Fed should stake out Doris's mailbox to see if anybody comes next year to steal a ballot.
00:36:19.000If the Supreme Court, likely they will, strikes down extended ballot counting after Election Day, I do not believe it will be possible for Democrats to win any of these upcoming races.
00:36:32.000If SCOTUS comes down and says you can no longer count votes after election day, I'm going to go ahead and say they will not be prepared for what comes in November because they really need those votes.
00:36:48.000And if the systems they have built are completely legitimate, they will not be able to update them in time for the November election.
00:36:57.000I think the bureaucracy would be way too thick.
00:37:00.000The New York Post says a pending case in SCOTUS could put an end to delayed ballot counts.
00:37:05.000The High Court and March heard oral arguments in Watson v. RNC, a Mississippi case that may result in a ruling stopping the practice of counting mail in ballots that arrive up to five days after an election date.
00:37:16.000In one of at least 14 states, along with California, New York, and Texas, as well as the District of Columbia, with laws that allow for late ballots so long as envelopes are postmarked by election day, around 30 states have some sort of grace period for absentee ballots as well, letting military or U.S. citizens broadcast their votes.
00:37:31.000That grace period for mail ballots, which the RNC has argued is unconstitutional, is one of the reasons that LA residents still don't know nearly a week after whether candidates Spencer Pratt or Nithya Rahman will advance to a runoff contest.
00:38:25.000But my point is mail in votes and absentee votes are both lumped together as mail in votes counted.
00:38:31.000Absentee was the original system by which, if you were in the military or otherwise not in your home state, you could request an absentee ballot, which required a bunch of verification.
00:38:40.000Universal mail in votes are just mailed to you whether you want them or not.
00:38:46.000Now, the big question here is whether or not SCOTUS will rule, if they do rule against extended vote counting, whether it's going to be broad or narrow.
00:38:55.000Because if SCOTUS just says from now on, once at midnight on election day, whatever day that is, no more votes can be counted, all Democrats would have to do is say, okay, then mail in votes have to be turned in a week in advance.
00:39:28.000So I don't know why we have to have all this extended periodage.
00:39:32.000And so the question is the broad ruling.
00:39:34.000A broad ruling could be something like you may not have a mechanism by which an individual's vote could end up being disqualified because of your mail in voting system.
00:39:47.000If the Supreme Court just says, Hey, look, I don't care how you run your elections, but once election day is over, you can't count anymore.
00:39:54.000All California has to do is just say all mail in votes and early votes have to be turned in one week prior to the election so that we can count them in advance.
00:40:03.000Now, this will make it harder to find votes after the fact.
00:40:08.000They will still probably pad the votes.
00:40:10.000But the Supreme Court could theoretically say these mail in voting systems have created a mechanism by which unknowing, innocent citizens.
00:40:20.000May have their votes disqualified because of this bureaucratic and broken mail in voting system.
00:40:26.000The Supreme Court could theoretically say votes must be able to be like they could theoretically argue that the current structure of the Democrat state's universal mail in voting system is unconstitutional because it de facto creates a voting system which requires longer than a day.
00:40:42.000The argument is this the RNC argues that federal law in Congress prescribes a single day for voting.
00:40:50.000Congress, the Supreme Court can say under the law with a single day for voting, you cannot have early and you can't have universal early and universal mail in voting.
00:41:01.000The exemptions for absentee exist only in very specific cases.
00:41:04.000If that happens, Republicans sweep the midterms handily, handily.
00:41:12.000Yeah, I mean, I would love to see any changes that make the elections more secure.
00:41:19.000I would love to see, I mean, I would love to see the Fed say, look, Florida's got a good system.
00:41:24.000Why don't you go ahead and model your stuff after Florida?
00:41:27.000Because, I mean, I think that there's some voting, vote counting that happens before the election day in Florida.
00:41:35.000But election day should be the end of it, you know?
00:41:38.000And the Democrats are a 20% political party if there's honest elections.
00:41:43.000They know honest elections are an existential threat to them.
00:41:46.000And they've been working for decades to develop a whole host of vulnerabilities the universal mail in ballots, controlling who gets a ballot.
00:42:20.000It's like a mirage that they have to convince the average everyday person of the cultural influence of Democrat policies or of liberal ideology, which is like for decades, whether it's through this, but also like an Over representation in things like Hollywood and places like that, where only a certain type of idea is kind of put forth to the public, it makes the public believe that perhaps that idea is more popular than it actually is.
00:42:45.000And in lieu of actually having access in a way of proving that it's not, people just kind of accept it as true.
00:42:53.000The same way we count illegals in the country or even any kind of migrants in the country in the U.S. Census, right, for apportionment of seats in Congress.
00:43:03.000They ought to have no role in deciding who's in power.
00:43:07.000Over American citizens, but they do simply by being present in the country because we count them as persons within the nation for apportionment.
00:43:15.000Yeah, I can't imagine why that's acceptable.
00:43:20.000You know, the fact that you've got basically a skewed Congress because of illegals.
00:44:45.000You know, my view of the country right now, I think I was talking about this last week, that Donald Trump represents the last of the United States, and everything outside of Trump is an external force acting upon the United States.
00:44:57.000So we've described it for years as a multicultural democracy.
00:45:00.000This is actually, shout out to Stephen Marsh, the author, journalist.
00:45:03.000He's actually a multicultural democracy guy.
00:45:08.000But he made the argument, and we did an interview on the Culture War podcast about the state of civil war.
00:45:12.000He believes we're heading towards a civil war.
00:45:15.000He made the argument that the United States consists of two separate nations within the borders of one country.
00:45:20.000That is a multicultural democracy and a constitutional republic, completely disagreeing with what is right, what is just, and how the world and how the country should operate.
00:45:29.000My argument is that the constitutional republic represents this country's founding, its maintenance, its expansion.
00:45:36.000And when we say the United States, we're referring to the constitutional republic.
00:45:40.000But this constitutional republic has a malignancy, it has a growth largely from illegal immigrants and mass migration that do not respect the founding fathers, the amendments to the constitution, the constitution itself.
00:45:54.000And what this country is supposed to represent.
00:45:57.000They represent only the quest for power to steal the wealth from people that they think don't deserve it.
00:46:16.000I'm paraphrasing, but let me explain to be fair.
00:46:19.000The second most important issue in the 2024 election was immigration.
00:46:23.000This people were fed up with mass migration.
00:46:26.000Zorhan Mamdani vowed, despite Trump's victory, That he would use his authority as the mayor to stop the federal government from deporting people.
00:46:37.000He is explicitly telling you, the American voter, he will use the force of the seat of New York City's executive to stop you.
00:46:44.000I know it's just New York City, but it's a bold thing to campaign on and win.
00:46:50.000But you were talking about people taking things from you by force, and he ran on affordability.
00:46:55.000And I do think that for all that is said, the younger generation does not see a path forward in this country in a lot of ways, with wages being what they are.
00:47:05.000Inflation has, you know, improved quite a bit since.
00:47:09.000I would argue that communists intentionally burn the system down, then go to the young people and say, Isn't it a shame that they burned down your house?
00:48:45.000They don't have a functional understanding of the way these things work.
00:48:48.000But it's also, it's like, look, when you're hurting and when you don't see a path forward, you're looking for the easiest answer possible.
00:48:54.000Now, like, I don't know what the, I don't know how you fix something like this.
00:48:57.000I don't think that there's an educational infrastructure that would be willing to call this type of stuff out.
00:49:02.000There's a good example in the, I brought this up several times now over the weekend, the Dave Rubin debate with, on Jubilee, where one of the debates was talking to Parker get a job.
00:49:11.000And Parker asked Dave, by what metric has Trump improved the country?
00:49:14.000Like, you know, inflation, unemployment.
00:49:16.000Dave did not give an answer, or he responded with the big, beautiful bill just got passed, so we've not yet seen anything.
00:49:22.000Parker asks him again, by what metric?
00:49:24.000This is, you know, like Parker is a grifter.
00:49:27.000That's why he debates people with no experience.
00:49:51.000I mean, like, you have a sense of identity.
00:49:53.000You share certain histories and traditions and moral frameworks.
00:49:57.000The important point is this if you were to look at my bank account and say, I judge whether you are responsible by the metric of percentage growth in your bank account, one day you say, Time to review.
00:50:11.000Hey, time to review your bank account.
00:50:47.000If you are a surface level or surface level non player character in politics, or you're a manipulative Democrat commie, you will trick people and say, for no reason, Trump hurt you.
00:51:19.000It is difficult for an American manufacturer to compete with Chinese cheap labor, Canadian or Mexican labor.
00:51:25.000So Trump implemented tariffs, which did strain the economy in certain ways, but it's an expense towards a better future.
00:51:33.000These people either don't understand this or don't want to understand it.
00:51:36.000Now, by all means, if your argument is, I understand that's why Trump was doing it, but I don't think it'll work or I think it's bad, I respect that.
00:51:42.000I'm just saying the people are arguing, oh no, inflation's up.
00:51:46.000Well, you're not making an actual argument there.
00:51:48.000Well, a lot of the arguments they're talking about right now would have been what with Iran and Israel and the price of gas going up for a lot of people because that's the first thing they notice is because it hits them in their wallet right away.
00:51:58.000And the unfortunate reality there is that you've got, you know, look, I'm going to say it like this.
00:52:21.000I'm saying, like what George Carlin said think about how stupid the average person is.
00:52:25.000Now realize half of them are stupider than that.
00:52:28.000The problem is complicated problems have complicated explanations that some people just can't understand.
00:52:34.000There's not a justification of what Trump is doing in Iran.
00:52:36.000My point is, It's extremely difficult to understand the big picture, but the presumption that Trump is making mistakes simply because he's stupid and doesn't know what he's doing or didn't have a plan is ridiculous.
00:52:47.000Certainly, Trump could be making a mistake because his plan was bad, but they have a plan for what they're doing.
00:53:17.000If you count visas, green cards, naturalized citizens who are only paperwork naturalized, their allegiance is still to their home nation, every one of those people, hundreds of millions of them, increase the cost of living for Americans.
00:53:31.000They compete with Americans for every scarce resource housing, health care, education, employment.
00:54:08.000They all need housing, they all need food, right?
00:54:11.000So that drives up the cost of all those goods.
00:54:13.000And in terms of the illegals, they're on very high percentages of welfare, very high percentages of crime is committed by them.
00:54:21.000During Occupy Wall Street, one of the liberal activists was arguing for a set of demands, and the activists rejected the set of demands because, principally, the protest was about general corruption, and they were trying to organize a movement, probably because they were largely communists.
00:54:37.000But this one liberal activist said, in our list of demands, free public transport should be free for all people.
00:56:17.000Okay, at a certain point, we're going bust.
00:56:20.000The government, what is the debt, is the third biggest spending line item.
00:56:25.000The U.S. government is borrowing too much money from the American people and from other countries, and eventually it will not be able to pay that debt back.
00:56:33.000And then American dollars will be worth nothing.
00:56:38.000These communists, you know, I just feel like there are too many activists who don't know how the system works, exploited by powerful individuals and smart individuals who want the system to burn.
00:56:52.000I'll give you an example of the way it is just based on what I do over it.
00:56:56.000There's a lady who was the art director for Obsession.
00:57:05.000It actually increased week one to week two and then week two to week three, and it only had like a four or five percent drop off in the fourth week.
00:57:13.000And for a movie that was made on a $750,000 budget, some say a million, it was later sold to a company at like a film festival for $15 million.
00:57:23.000Well, this lady who was the art director on this movie, she agreed to about $300 a day.
00:57:45.000So instead of leveraging her being the art director on the biggest movie of the summer, she is now complaining about it online because even though she took no risk in this movie, the writers, the directors, the people who were in the production from when the movie was written to when it came out, they took all the financial risk.
00:58:02.000And now she'll never work again because nobody in the industry will ever want to hire somebody who speaks out of turn.
00:58:08.000Maybe, but the communists will just take over the industry and strip the money and then burn it down.
00:58:14.000There is a subclass of new writers and directors that do take that approach there.
00:58:19.000Like, Zendaya organized a back end deal for all the workers on a movie she made, with the understanding that if it made a big payday by selling at a film festival, they would all get points on the back end.
00:58:31.000But they also got their daily salaries.
00:58:33.000But she is the exception, not the rule, because she funded the movie herself.
00:58:37.000She didn't have to go through investors.
00:58:39.000One of the big problems with commies is they're like, well, we should take the portion, like the profits, and split up among the workers.
00:58:45.000And it's just like, when you actually do the math, For these companies that have like 100,000 employees, it's like, you know, I don't necessarily disagree outright, but they're like, the CEO got paid $25 million and the lowest paid worker is making $20 an hour.
00:59:24.000Those profits are coming back to the shareholders or they're being reinvested in the company.
00:59:29.000My point was more just that that lady's opinion is not rare anymore.
00:59:33.000Like the idea that you should get all the reward and take none of the risk is one of the defining traits of the next generation.
00:59:39.000Yeah, you hear that when people are like, oh, you know, if a company makes a lot of money, it should go to the people that work there because they were the ones that produce the value.
00:59:48.000And it's like, well, Are they going to lose out if the value of the stock goes down?
00:59:53.000Are they going to lose out if the company goes bankrupt?
01:00:02.000It's like, oh, I want to share in the profits, but I don't want to share in any of the risk.
01:00:07.000Let's jump to the next big story of the day in the past week the Carmelo Anthony trial.
01:00:12.000And I'm going to say right now we've got Brianna Morella reporting Carmelo Anthony's family knows he's getting convicted.
01:00:19.000Sources in the courtroom said they looked upset.
01:00:21.000Based on everything we've heard, even from the defense, Carmelo Anthony did nothing but literally just murder.
01:00:28.000There's, I'll give you the quick gist of it and then we'll throw it to Andrew, who's much more well versed in this.
01:00:34.000But sounds like Carmelo went there, provoked a fight before a threat emerged, grabbed his knife, then threatened them again.
01:00:44.000And Austin Metcalf, who was murdered, literally says, I'm not going to fight you.
01:00:48.000And then when he approaches him to either shove or put his hand on him for some reason, before he even could, Carmelo stabs him in the heart, killing him.
01:01:18.000There is not a sliver, not a scintilla of evidence in this case that supports his claim of self defense to the point where today, We broke for lunch.
01:01:28.000There was a two and a half hour delay before court came back and the defense finally rested.
01:01:34.000I suspect in that two and a half hour delay, the prosecution was arguing to the judge outside the hearing of the jury in the public that there's so little, there's so little evidence in support of self defense, the jury should not be given a self defense jury instruction at all on the legal merits.
01:02:31.000So, the quick gist of the story is that they were having a track meet, rain was stopping.
01:02:36.000Once the rain started up again, everybody went to their tents.
01:02:39.000Carmelo decided to go to the wrong tent.
01:02:41.000One of the witnesses there dabbed him and he caused a fist bump as he came and sat down.
01:02:45.000When a bunch of the other team members told him he can't sit under their tent and needs to go back, Carmelo refused and then became defiant, saying, Touch me and see what happens.
01:02:54.000He was asked around 15 times to leave, reached into his bag, unfolding his knife and holding it before there was any threat of force or violence.
01:03:06.000Austin Metcalf, who he murdered, says, I'm not going to fight you at a track meet, dude.
01:03:11.000Many of the students, this is where it gets crazy, according to some of the testimony, warned.
01:03:15.000Everyone to stay away from Carmelo because they thought he was grabbing a weapon intending to cause harm to people.
01:03:21.000So, Austin got up, went to either the presumption is shove, but one witness said before Austin could even touch him, Carmelo stabbed him in the heart.
01:03:32.000That sounds like premeditation to me, like based on the testimony that we've seen.
01:03:36.000This is a kid who went there, told them, touch me, touch me, took his knife in his backpack and unfolded it, prepared to use it while people were telling him, we're not going to fight you, nah, dude.
01:03:46.000And then, before any threat or conduct was made, he stabs the guy.
01:03:49.000Sounds like he intended to kill somebody.
01:03:50.000Yeah, so sometimes you hear people talk about Trump's complicated strategies, like he's playing 5D chess.
01:03:57.000Carmelo Anthony is playing 5D ways to lose self defense, okay?
01:04:01.000First, on a very basic level, one of the requirements of self defense is proportionality.
01:04:06.000You cannot use deadly defensive force unless you're facing a deadly force threat.
01:04:10.000There's zero evidence he was facing a deadly force threat.
01:04:14.000The people he was talking with had no weapons, there's no disparity of numbers evidence.
01:04:18.000There's nothing that a reasonable person in his position can say.
01:04:21.000Oh my gosh, I'm at imminent risk of death or serious bodily injury.
01:04:27.000Right there, he loses self defense completely.
01:04:30.000But even if he had a claim of self defense, when he does that provocation with intent, the instant, and the worst we have in evidence is that Austin Metcalf gave him a soft shove.
01:04:40.000Literally, that's what the witnesses said on his shoulder.
01:04:43.000The instant that contact was made, the knife was out and in Austin Metcalf's chest, which means the blade was open, it was already in his hand, and he's goading him go ahead, touch me.
01:05:20.000It looks like they're shoving almost or being punished.
01:05:22.000It feels like a punch when someone gets stabbed.
01:05:24.000They uh, the witness said they thought that Carmelo shoved Austin, right?
01:05:28.000Austin then fell down and started screaming, He effing stabbed me.
01:05:32.000The crazy thing is, the witnesses who said they were yelling, watch out, because they thought Carmelo was drawing a weapon from his bag.
01:05:39.000This is a dude who brought a weapon to a track meet, went to the opposing team's tent, reached in his bag and grabbed the knife and unfolded it, prepared to use it, started an altercation, then told him to touch me.
01:05:52.000Austin literally said, I'm not going to fight you at a track meet.
01:05:55.000And then when he got up to push him out, stabbed him in the chest, killing him.
01:05:59.000Does that not qualify as premeditated murder?
01:06:48.000And all these people arguing about things like, well, he wasn't technically trespassing under the tent, or it wasn't against Texas law to have the knife on school property.
01:07:18.000If evidence does come out that Carmelo was not, in fact, fighting for his life when he stabbed and killed Austin Metcalf, do you think that the black community will accept that?
01:07:28.000If evidence shows that he did not, no, we're going to stand by ours regardless.
01:09:34.000But when it's a football player, a white kid who gets stabbed, these people come out and say, We are going to stand by ours because they stand by theirs.
01:09:42.000This is the important thing that you brought up earlier, though.
01:09:44.000How are we supposed to react when we're trying to have a jury of our peers?
01:10:03.000It makes sense we don't know, to tell you the truth, because there are 12 jurors and six alternates.
01:10:08.000And the six are going to be thrown off, but they're randomly selected.
01:10:11.000So we don't know what we're going to end up with in terms of the 12.
01:10:14.000Right now, it's a mix of white jurors and at least half a dozen different ethnicities.
01:10:19.000If you're going to go on trial for a murder and the black people are like, if he's black, he's not guilty, well, then we're not really having a jury trial, are we?
01:10:29.000We have to keep in mind our jury system comes from the British, right?
01:10:32.000When we were still British citizens, subjects, I should say.
01:10:36.000And it was incorporated into the American legal system.
01:10:39.000When we were a very homogenous culture, right?
01:10:42.000We had very similar cultural beliefs and religious backgrounds and ethnicities.
01:10:46.000The jury system does not work in a multicultural environment because every ethnic representative on the jury will vote for their ethnic peer and against their ethnic non peer.
01:10:57.000The only people who don't do this, because there have been many studies done on this, the only ethnic group that doesn't do this is white people.
01:11:04.000But every other ethnic group, they will, black jurors will vote guilty for a white defendant at three times the rate they will vote guilty for a black defendant.
01:11:14.000And the presumption is even if the white person is innocent and even if the black person is guilty.
01:11:46.000The other thing that kind of throws water on her argument, which is not, I don't know if it's necessarily a one to one comparison because I don't know the makeup of the officers.
01:11:53.000But I mentioned earlier, I said the killing of Tony Timpa.
01:11:56.000There was none of the outrage that was felt after he died, despite the fact that it was just as brutal in a lot of ways, if you saw the video from that.
01:12:04.000And there was no outrage from what she referred to as the community.
01:12:08.000There's no money to be made in that setting.
01:12:11.000There's no political capital to be gained.
01:12:14.000Yeah, I mean, I mentioned this on Twitter today how ethnically people will go ahead and basically exonerate people that share their ethnic makeup.
01:12:29.000And it's a large portion of each ethnic group that'll do it.
01:12:48.000You can go see man on the street interviews like Sav did there, and people will come out and say it.
01:12:55.000I said it in response to a guy that was essentially saying that.
01:12:58.000I quote tweeted him, and it's like, it's still even to just like address the obvious truth, then people are going to go ahead and say that you're some kind of bigot because you're saying something that is true.
01:13:12.000And that's something that has cowed a lot of people, you know, and made them afraid to, you know, to say the emperor has to.
01:13:19.000Like this Minnesota fraud stuff, probably trillions of dollars in fraud in Minnesota, mostly committed by the Somalian migrants in Minnesota.
01:13:27.000You think any of them are going to get convicted at trial?
01:13:29.000I mean, all it will take is one Somalian juror, and you'll never have a unanimous guilty.
01:15:02.000They are trying to steal as much as they can from America before it burns down.
01:15:07.000They're literally trying to steal the country.
01:15:09.000If they can take over the politicians, if they can take the seats of power, then they can do whatever they want.
01:15:16.000Yeah, but I disagree with the assertion they're trying to steal the country because they're extracting.
01:15:20.000Like Ilhan Omar is not doing anything to the benefit of the United States for herself.
01:15:24.000If these people were trying to take the seats of power to control America as a singular entity and say, now we control America, I would agree.
01:16:17.000So the overall happiness in the country went up.
01:16:20.000I had a bike stolen once and I had to actually get really annoyed because it was my own fault because I went into a store and I locked the bike, but I didn't turn the dial on it because it wasn't a key lock.
01:17:30.000Low trust society, you turn your back for one second, it's gone.
01:17:33.000The city I live in now, like I can go run at night after work and it's perfectly fine.
01:17:37.000There is literally several bikes that I've seen that have been sitting in these like yards for days that have never moved and nobody's touched them.
01:17:46.000To your point earlier, I have related a story a couple times.
01:17:50.000I saw a Somali immigrant talking to a representative in Maine, and there was an issue, a question of fraud and stuff.
01:17:58.000And he was at a town hall or whatever, and he came out and said, Look, we've elected you, so it's your job to protect us, implying or directly saying, We're going to commit crimes, and it's your job because we elected you to protect us from the ramifications of those crimes.
01:18:17.000And that's the kind of thing that you hear.
01:18:19.000You know, happens again in third world countries.
01:18:22.000I was listening to a podcast that had Sullenberger was talking, and he was like, Look, if you're in South America, it's normal for someone to give you a job, and you have to give that guy 10% of your pay in perpetuity, much like he got you the job.
01:18:43.000He said, You know, if you are in an apartment in India, you don't call the electric company, you pay the The owner of the building and he goes down and he bribes the electric one of the guys at the electric company to turn on the electricity to either the apartment or to your to the building and stuff.
01:18:58.000And that kind of stuff is so foreign to Americans that, for the most part, they don't believe that it's real.
01:19:04.000I mean, it's that completely different worldview of being high trust and low trust, right?
01:19:09.000So, in a high trust society, we can have lots of social safety net programs and we put very low guardrails on them because it would never occur to me to cheat on welfare, it just wouldn't occur to me.
01:19:21.000And if you had high guardrails, they're tremendously inefficient, right?
01:19:25.000So if every day you had to go to a welfare recipient's home and make sure they're not cheating, you couldn't afford the program.
01:19:31.000You'd be spending all your money doing that.
01:19:33.000So what we do is we trust people to do the right thing.
01:20:10.000Yeah, yeah, yeah, English mentalist and illusionist.
01:20:12.000He had a big show and he did a bunch of amazing tricks.
01:20:14.000And one of my favorites is he went into, I think it might have been New York, it might have been central London, and he places a full wallet, very clearly a full wallet.
01:20:22.000On the ground, and then he takes a yellow sidewalk chalk marker and he circles it.
01:20:28.000Then they have cameras secretly set up and he walks away and they time lapse.
01:20:56.000There's a lot of people who do these prank videos.
01:20:58.000There's one guy, he goes into a casino and he has fake hundreds and he'll drop it next to a person and then he'll go down and be like, oh, did you?
01:21:06.000And then he'll just say, like, did you?
01:21:08.000And then he'll grab it and she'll go, that's mine.
01:21:10.000And there's like a viral video and he's like, nah, nah, it's mine.
01:21:12.000And she's like, there's a video where this guy does it a bunch.
01:21:55.000In the town that I live in, I found an entire wallet full of stuff, like wallets full of credit cards, debit cards, ID, social security card, just the other day, and just picked up and brought it to the cops here.
01:22:09.000Like, not in a wallet, literally just sitting across the street from a restaurant.
01:22:24.000And if I found a wallet or anything, I'd just turn it in.
01:22:28.000I wouldn't take the cash out or anything like that.
01:22:29.000I'd just be like, I don't know, I'm not going to do it.
01:22:31.000My rule of thumb for that is like in my lifetime, before I was in my mid 20s, I lost my wallet seven times.
01:22:36.000It got returned to me every single time.
01:22:39.000And if there was like at one time, I lost it at a skate contest in Detroit and it came back to me with IOUs for what they spent the money on.
01:22:46.000I still remember one of the worst days I ever had.
01:22:50.000And that's, I'm half joking, but I was riding my bike and my wallet fell out of my pocket.
01:22:56.000And 10 minutes later, I'm at home and I'm like, oh crap, I jump on my bike, I run right back out, only a couple blocks, can't find it.
01:23:04.000Next day, gas station fill ups on my debit card, on my credit card.
01:23:09.000I got to call the bank and say, cancel all of that, shut down everything.
01:23:34.000We live in a world of scarce resources.
01:23:37.000If you were a culture where you looked at all the other cultures and said, I'll just share all the resources equally with you, you get wiped out because they're not doing that.
01:23:46.000So it's morally required, it's required by evolutionary biology that you have greater interest for those.
01:23:54.000Closest to you culturally, genetically, or you cease existing.
01:23:58.000What happens internally to a culture when resources become too scarce for the population?
01:24:07.000Well, generally, they'll go out and take resources from somebody else.
01:24:10.000Let's say you have a singular nation without the means to go to war, and that nation undergoes a famine or economic collapse.
01:24:21.000This is a precursor to revolution and civil war.
01:24:25.000Cultures will actually tear each other apart because.
01:24:30.000You know, the way it's been described is if a zombie apocalypse, what show was it with the zombie apocalypse and the guy goes to the pharmacy to try and steal, get medicine, and then like a cop points a gun at him or something like when World War Z?
01:25:25.000When you had me on in Florida, you had a hypothetical.
01:25:28.000It's like there's been a post apocalyptic thing, and your family's in a cave and shelter, and you're out with a rifle looking for food or whatever, and you see another guy with a rifle, right?
01:26:47.000I mean, nobody wants to say that they would cause harm to innocent people because of the rest of their family, but this is the reality of what life is and always has been.
01:26:56.000Oh, yeah, I'll say that without hesitation.
01:26:58.000Men of consequence, reluctant but steadfast, will shoot you in the face and take your water for their son or daughter.
01:27:57.000My point is, the degree of violence that we faced 10, 15 years ago was so dramatically low relative to the natural state of the world.
01:28:06.000So the story goes that a man and a woman find a nice field in which they decide to build a home, and the man builds a large fence around his home so that his wife can tend to the garden without facing threats from the predators.
01:28:20.000One day, while she's out tending to her garden, she hears a whisper Why are you locked in this cage?
01:28:26.000And she says, I'm not locked in a cage.
01:29:12.000Well, there was a viral post from Business Insider and it said, it was like, why Pakistan is a must destination for the solo female traveler.
01:29:19.000Who wrote this bit of human trafficking?
01:29:21.000And then someone commented saying, was this article written by human trafficking?
01:29:25.000But there are women who do this because even like the world itself has become substantially more safe than it ever has been.
01:29:32.000But this creates a false sense of security, which then in turn creates these communist feminist ideas of, Release the prisoners.
01:29:59.000Maybe one day when we have replicators that can just pull matter, you know, can convert the matter of a rock into a cheeseburger or something, maybe then you can have whatever you want.
01:30:09.000To your point earlier, though I'm not a fan of the zombie genre in general, that's why it always ends up the same trope.
01:32:54.000In the rural areas where there are still wild animals and feral hogs, for instance, people still understand the threats, the fear, the wild animals.
01:33:02.000Like where we are right now, we got coyotes, maybe sometimes.
01:33:35.000And it's usually white, affluent liberals who said to do this.
01:33:39.000One of my favorite breakdowns was I don't know if it was like John Stoss or whatever, but he was like, when you look at the demographics, poor minorities keep requesting more police and affluent white people keep requesting defunding the police.
01:34:02.000In good neighborhoods, upscale neighborhoods, where crime doesn't usually go to.
01:34:07.000I think you may have just solved all of our political issues.
01:34:11.000We should release a couple hundred black bears into New York so that these people have a political awakening and realize sometimes you need guns.
01:34:20.000I mean, but it could have been a brown bear, and that's the real concern.
01:34:39.000I go motorcycle camping, stay in a tent up in the mountains, and they brought these wolves back.
01:34:44.000And it was the entire state voted against it, except for Denver and Boulder.
01:34:48.000Because these people have never seen a wolf outside of a Disney animated movie.
01:34:52.000Just if you've never seen a real wolf, just imagine the biggest German shepherd you've ever seen, the most aggressive looking German, and triple it.
01:34:59.000I mean, they are huge and they run in packs.
01:35:03.000And if you're a family, mom and dad, and two little kids, and a cloth tent, And these things are hungry, you are done.
01:35:10.000I don't care if you have a gun or not.
01:35:51.000I've looked what the wolf actually looks like.
01:35:53.000No, no, I think what we should do is we should time the average person's run speed.
01:35:58.000And then if you want to vote on this, you are placed at a distance from the wolf where if you run at least the average human run speed, you will escape through the exit door, just through the turnstile, only one way, and the wolf will not.
01:36:34.000Because I guess it's because we've made dogs so weird that when you see a wolf and they're like tall and built to run, that I'm just seeing like people think Golden Retriever.
01:36:46.000And they're foofy and doofy, you know what I mean?
01:36:48.000They don't really look that much like dogs.
01:38:57.000A bunch of them are predators, sex offenders, diddlers.
01:39:02.000These people are lucky they are being denaturalized and deported.
01:39:06.000I'd like to see the Democrats defend that because these people would probably agree with the denaturalization.
01:39:10.000Some of them pleaded guilty to abusing children sexually, in which case, there are many conservative American people who have a certain penalty they would like to implement against you.
01:39:21.000You getting denaturalized and deported is a free ticket out.
01:39:35.000I understand that if there's a diddler and Trump says your citizenship is gone, we all agree, right?
01:39:40.000Some people might actually call for the death penalty on that one.
01:39:42.000These people are lucky to get away with whatever, like to leave the country.
01:39:46.000But fraud against a tribal casino is a serious crime, but it's substantially less than child abuse.
01:39:55.000The fact That the DOJ is willing to denaturalize this level of crime is promising to me because they're saying outright if you come here and you become a citizen and commit a crime, you're out.
01:40:34.000Because I'm so, to give you an example, when like Stripe, the payment company, right, they investigate fraud, they do studies on fraud internationally.
01:40:44.000And this country, you know, America, first world, very low fraud relative to Central and South America.
01:40:49.000They had to come up literally with an infinity fraud category for India.
01:40:58.000So when you look at their map of the world, the colors keep changing until you get to India, and then it's black, and it's just 30 to infinity.
01:41:06.000But I need you just to imagine, everybody listening, like living in India, and your parents are like, You need to go and get a job.
01:41:31.000But my point is the way you go and apply at like UPS for a truck job or something, or the way you apply at Walmart is the way they apply to do scams.
01:41:41.000There's literal call centers set up where they're literally just scamming people.
01:42:40.000There was one really great one where the guy actually got the IP address, found the address, the name of the company, and then said to the guy, like, here's where he freaked him out, basically saying, we're private security.
01:44:17.000But from a lawyer's perspective, when I heard about his shooting Joshua Fox and I became aware of his social media content, the nature of it, he calls black people the N word to their face.
01:44:28.000My concern for his claim as self defense was well, if he did that here, If he provoked that confrontation, he does not have a claim to self defense for that shooting.
01:44:37.000It just goes completely out the window.
01:44:40.000What's developed is there's literally zero evidence that he did that here.
01:44:45.000Now, of course, he's done it many times in the past, but not in this confrontation with Joshua Fox.
01:44:50.000And what I mean to say is that he actually, in this case, it was the other direction.
01:44:54.000He was attempting to disengage from the interaction.
01:45:21.000If you would have qualified for self defense, you hit all the elements, you lose it if you provoke the confrontation.
01:45:27.000So before we even get to the provocation question, set that aside.
01:45:32.000He's walking away from Joshua Fox, whatever happened before.
01:45:35.000Joshua Fox chases him down, hits him in the back of the head, puts him in a headlock, his arm around his neck, and it's a sustained beating.
01:46:38.000But so he has a robust claim of self defense.
01:46:40.000The risk there is well, all that could be true, but if he provoked the attack in the first place, he called that guy the N word, then it all goes out the window.
01:46:49.000You simply lose the self defense because of the provocation.
01:46:52.000But there's been several hearings in court now, and the prosecutor has been talking about the facts of the case and never once has said, We have evidence of provocation.
01:47:01.000What they're trying to do is take all his videos where he said the N word in other cases and say, We're going to ask the jury to infer from those instances that it must have happened here.
01:47:11.000But we don't have any actual evidence that it happened here.
01:47:56.000He's done it lots of other times when he's walking around with his camera.
01:47:59.000He was creating social media content here and did it again.
01:48:03.000And the judge may well allow it for that purpose.
01:48:05.000If the judge does, then all that other video content now is fair game to come in before the jury.
01:48:10.000And then you have the problem where he could be very meritorious on a self defense claim, but it all becomes tainted because normal people are conditioned to recoil.
01:48:40.000With the Dalton shooting, I guarantee you, and I think you agree with me, they already had the meeting probably with activists, probably like a prominent lawyer, and they all said, Well, we don't want riots, so we're going to lock Dalton up and make sure he doesn't get out so that way no one burns the city down.
01:49:23.000He says an invader was trying to decapitate a man in Ireland, in Belfast, and a bunch of dudes run up with shovels and they start bashing him.
01:49:30.000I'm just sitting here watching this video being like, you know, when do the indigenous say no?
01:49:37.000The native born Irish say enough of this murder and rape.
01:49:41.000And we've seen some riots and some stuff.
01:49:44.000But take a look at the Henry Novak story in London.
01:49:48.000He was murdered by a Sikh, and the police came and they were like, oh, no, but he was racist.
01:51:10.000Yeah, because I'm like, as soon as I start thinking about how big this copyright news is, and I'm like, yeah, we didn't even talk about this.
01:51:15.000This means that you could theoretically, if you made a YouTube channel called I Hate Marvel, you could watch Avengers in its entirety.
01:51:21.000Live streaming it, staring at it, as long as you make some comments periodically.
01:51:25.000My guess is that the Marvel lawyers will fight a lot harder than you.
01:51:39.000So there's already precedent in the Akila Hughes v. Benjamin when he had an official ruling stating, like, you can take someone's video and just change the title and it's fair use.
01:52:14.000Yeah, they're very primitive organisms, politicians, right?
01:52:17.000They respond to pain and they respond to reward.
01:52:20.000And if they're getting more reward, more political capital from a particular path than from an alternative path, They go with the rewarding path until you make them feel pain for doing that.
01:52:29.000And traditionally, in civilized societies, the pain was de election.
01:52:34.000But as we talked about earlier, if the election process is broken, if we cannot legitimately hold accountable the people to whom we provide political power, then there is no way for us to inflict pain.
01:52:46.000And we're living under a tyranny of the people who count the votes and keep them in power.
01:53:04.000I fear that Trump is not strong enough.
01:53:06.000Crushing USAID was good and I think it was tremendous.
01:53:11.000But, you know, I see in the chat people saying every day Trump has not put one person in jail.
01:53:16.000So the question is will that, you know, my hope is that after the midterms, the Supreme Court comes out and says mail in votes are dead because the system of mail in voting creates a voting week.
01:53:27.000The law says election day is the voting day, so you can't have any votes collected before or after.
01:53:32.000That would mean Republicans win forever.
01:53:34.000If that happens, I am hoping that Donald Trump, after the midterms, just goes nuclear.
01:53:41.000That's a win on Trump's part in general because of his appointments to the Supreme Court, Amy Coney Barrett notwithstanding.
01:53:48.000But in general, having a more conservative leaning Supreme Court, getting them wins on things like that for precedent is a big deal, even if there's a lot left to be desired with a lot of the other things going on.
01:53:58.000And I don't know if I buy that there's going to be a lot of arrests after the fact.
01:54:02.000Though you could make the argument you said earlier that de election was like.
01:54:06.000The thing that you had to play on them to try and win them over.
01:54:10.000But a lot of times that's what ended up having politicians make bad decisions.
01:54:14.000You make deals with Iran for a certain amount of money because you understand that giving them money is better than the oil prices hurting and then the Americans not being able to get it, the gas prices going up.
01:54:24.000So they take the least, the path of least resistance because they want to get reelected or they want to stay in office and stuff like that.
01:55:11.000We're going to go to your Rumble rants and super chats.
01:55:13.000So, smash the like button, share the show with everyone you know, join us at timcast.com.
01:55:18.000This uncensored portion of the show is not for the faint of heart.
01:55:21.000This video from Tommy is absolutely shocking, but we're going to have to talk about where things are headed and have been heading for some time, especially with the Carmelo Anthony story, Dalton Earthly, and what we've been seeing in Europe.
01:55:31.000In the meantime, we've got a few minutes.
01:55:34.000Hey, can I plug something before we wrap up?
01:55:37.000Joey Giggle says not politics related, but if you played Destiny, remember to sign the petition to hop on tomorrow for the final patch after Bungie and Sony killed it.
01:55:54.000I played Destiny 1 the whole way through.
01:55:57.000I played Destiny 2 until just before the final shape.
01:56:02.000And I think that was the last one that I actually, no, I think I might have played the final shape, but I didn't really do much.
01:56:08.000I think I was on it for only a few minutes.
01:56:10.000And yeah, I just, you know, I work too much to play video games anymore, but I played Destiny 2 quite a bit.
01:56:15.000I know Phil played Destiny quite a bit.
01:56:16.000Yeah, the final shape was fine, but I think that the.
01:56:21.000The release that had the uh, the where they first went to the dreaming city, and uh, I forget what it was called.
01:56:28.000There was a lot of it was uh, anyways, but it was I played for a while.
01:56:32.000I'm impressed with how they salvaged the mistakes they made from Destiny One, you know what I mean?
01:56:37.000Uh, so it was it was a very, very, very fun game with uh, I would say adequate story.
01:56:44.000Adequate, they could have done better, yeah.
01:56:45.000I mean, the final shape was supposed to wrap the whole thing up, and then the stuff that they did after that, it was just kind of like, yeah, you know, and so.
01:56:53.000They could do Destiny 3 and they should because Marathon is whack.
01:56:56.000And if they start with Destiny 3, they have an opportunity for something tremendous.
01:56:59.000And that is starting a new story of humans' expansion.
01:57:03.000And your missions are based on new cities, new settlements, new threats, and new areas of the solar system or the galaxy, even.
01:57:10.000There's a lot of opportunity they can go with.
01:57:27.000The robots were fine in Destiny if you wanted to play the robots.
01:57:30.000Anyway, The Fallen 501st says, Hey, Tim, have you thought about making a video covering the recent Lego scandal involving the Utah Police Department?
01:58:02.000Even if it isn't actually like the kind of fraud that people are assuming, it's definitely a system designed to benefit one party, clearly, you know?
01:58:13.000And that's not what a vote is supposed to be.
01:58:17.000John Rambo Z says Have you seen the video of Roy Beck explaining immigration with gumballs?
01:58:21.000That's a classic, breaks it down beautifully.
01:58:24.000One of my favorite ways to explain immigration is the game Life Genesis.
01:58:39.000Windows made a version where the game of life was a grid with yes or no squares.
01:58:45.000So they turn on, they light up, or they turn off.
01:58:48.000And based on certain rules, they would reproduce or die.
01:58:51.000And this created a bunch of interesting interactions where you could program.
01:58:55.000They then made a version with red and blue.
01:58:57.000So these things could destroy each other.
01:59:00.000You could do interesting things where you freeze it, you can draw a big blue square and press go and see how the life of blue will grow, reproduce, and spread out and then create.
01:59:11.000If you introduce red into it, the blue would engulf and destroy the red.
01:59:15.000If you created equal parts red and blue, they would go to war with each other and then create permanent structures.
01:59:20.000And if you take a big blue square or a big blue structure and then keep introducing red into it in real time, if you introduce too much red, the blue stops destroying it and the red starts destroying the blue.
01:59:31.000So we'll go over this in the unsensitive portion.
02:06:48.000They're going to make up some bullshit reason.
02:06:50.000I'm half kidding, but I honestly would not be surprised if they're like, the man was already dead and you didn't need to beat him with the shovel or some bullshit.
02:06:59.000Yeah, I'd be interested to find out, like, if the guy did survive.
02:07:20.000The way that I hear people describe it is it's very, very unlikely that you're going to have to use a gun for self defense, but it's also very unlikely that your house is going to burn down, but you still have fire insurance.
02:07:34.000The cost of not having a firearm when you need it is so great that carrying a firearm with you, even though it's an inconvenience and, you know, you're.
02:07:43.000Walking around with a big old piece of metal in your waistband all day.
02:11:23.000But that's the way I look at it that if you have 100 people in a town and you bring in 10 migrants, over a generation or two, those migrants don't really change much.
02:11:32.000They're forced to assimilate to the existing structures.
02:11:35.000They don't really have strong voting power.
02:11:54.000The argument that the left makes that, you know, it's a good thing to bring in migrants in these quantities or that it won't change the structure or the composition of what your country is, I find it difficult to believe that people actually believe that.
02:12:12.000Of course, You know, that's because I don't.
02:12:15.000Well, we have this mythos that we're a nation of immigrants, right?
02:13:14.000But they were not easy to assimilate, and they come from a very similar culture.
02:13:17.000Culture, same religious background, same European heritage, same first world high trust values for the most part.
02:13:24.000And it was very difficult and costly for us to do it.
02:13:26.000And they were in relatively modest numbers to what we import now.
02:13:30.000Now we're importing vastly greater numbers of people, have no religious commonality, no cultural commonality, almost adamantly refuse to actually assimilate into America.
02:13:41.000They form their own little Somalian enclaves or Indian enclaves.
02:13:45.000You know, the Indians in the Carolinas build these 135 acre temple, Hindu temple.
02:13:51.000They don't assimilate with other Americans.
02:13:53.000They set up whole communities that are, look at Dearborn, Michigan, it's become a Muslim community.
02:14:09.000And yeah, it's frustrating because you don't get a lot of people that will actually discuss these things.
02:14:19.000If you do discuss them, you're branded a racist or whatever.
02:14:22.000And I think that the American people really need to grow a thicker skin when it comes to accusations of racism and stuff like that.
02:14:32.000If you're disparaging racism, A group for no reason or whatever, maybe that it might stick.
02:14:39.000But if you're just talking about racial issues, that's not racist.
02:14:43.000Yeah, I think the Overton window is shifting.
02:14:46.000I think we see conversations today on this that you couldn't have had even five years ago.
02:14:52.000But it's very dangerous to be outside the Overton window if you're a normal person, right?
02:14:55.000You're risking your job, you're risking your family's standing in the community.
02:15:00.000So it really takes people who have a certain degree of security, a certain immunity to those kinds of social influences to be willing to talk about this kind of stuff.
02:15:07.000And continue moving the Overton window.
02:15:10.000I mean, the stuff we hear, how long is Trump in an office, a second term?
02:15:15.000The change in view of just like H 1B visa holders, and that's 16 months, has been tremendous, tremendous.
02:15:22.000Increasing numbers of people now view them more as just taking advantage of America as an economic zone, as opposed to this lie we've been told where these are the best and brightest from India coming here to help everybody out.
02:15:36.000They're competing with us for all those resources.
02:15:45.000They were both highly intelligent, but we were getting the creme de la creme.
02:15:49.000We were not getting the residue of people they don't want to absorb.
02:15:52.000They send them to America as a strategy to loot us as an economic zone and send $85 billion a year in remunerations, money out of America back to India.
02:17:01.000My name is Joshua, screen name Aquafan, and I have a proposal for absentee voting procedures that I think would solve the main issues that lead to election fraud and impropriety.
02:17:48.000I propose requiring a valid excuse in writing to request an absentee ballot prior to each election to solve the first issue.
02:17:56.000Many states already do this, like my home state of Florida.
02:17:58.000To solve the second issue, and I know of no states that do this, this is a new proposal, a partnership between states where your absentee ballot is dropped off at your nearest precinct, which will then deliver the results to your home state or precinct.
02:18:13.000In other words, related to my specific situation, I would have to take my absentee ballot this November to the nearest precinct here in northern Kentucky, and then that precinct would report those results back to my home county in Florida.
02:18:26.000No mail required, and I have to show up in person here in Kentucky with my ID as a Floridian to deliver my ballot, which then would report the results back to my home county in Florida.
02:18:36.000Just how about we just do this partnership would between states andor precincts would help to resolve the chain of custody and verification issues by requiring absentee voters to show up in person, even if not in their home state?
02:18:51.000I mean, look, even if this would work, you have to have.
02:18:57.000A government that is motivated to do that.
02:19:01.000And right now, the problem isn't that there aren't solutions or viable solutions that people would propose.
02:19:08.000It's that neither the federal nor many of the localities, states actually want to fix this.
02:20:01.000Every vote, even though people that don't want to vote aren't motivated to go vote, like there's plenty of people that don't care, but they do ballot harvesting to get those votes just because they want the extra votes.
02:20:14.000It's not like, in my opinion, it should be you have to show up on election day with an ID and that's how you vote.
02:20:50.000That was what I was going to suggest earlier, but I was like, that's what it used to be.
02:20:54.000So, yeah, your ideas sound great, but again, without a political will to do it, it's never going to happen.
02:21:02.000And we're not facing an issue of lack of ability to secure the votes, it's a lack of a political will.
02:21:13.000I think y'all make really good points there.
02:21:14.000And one little bit of pushback that I've heard from a lot of conservatives, myself being a conservative libertarian myself, is on this idea of who should be able to do absentee voting.
02:21:25.000I know I'm a bit of a minority here probably, but I'm a big advocate of absentee voting for college students, mainly because I spent a lot of time in a college town that's a very conservative college town.
02:21:36.000And I see a lot of leftist students coming in and voting in that conservative town instead of in their home districts.
02:21:59.000College students come in and they vote in New Hampshire, and obviously the colleges are very progressive and it skews the election against what the actual residents want, the people that live there, the citizens of New Hampshire.
02:22:12.000And look, again, I don't disagree with any of the ideas that you have.
02:22:54.000The people I meet are the dumbest people I ever meet, blah, And then they'll say with the same breath, everyone should have the right to vote.
02:23:04.000Why should everyone vote when there are clearly people that have no understanding of how politics works in this country?
02:23:12.000You see it all the time on X. People are arguing, oh, it's such a bad thing that there's only 2 million people in all of the state of North Dakota and there's two senators, but there's 39 million in California and there's two senators.
02:23:25.000They don't even understand the basics.
02:23:28.000And they complain about Wyoming while ignoring Rhode Island.
02:23:31.000Yeah, you know, it's entirely ridiculous that everybody should vote.
02:23:35.000And people that say, oh, well, you know, blah, blah, blah, Phil, you're saying this and you wouldn't give up your right to vote.
02:23:41.000I tell you what, if the Constitution worked as intended and my rights were actually as secure as the Bill of Rights and the Constitution say they're supposed to be, I would give up my vote in a heartbeat.
02:24:36.000And I totally agree with the idea of like a civics test or, you know, even Tim's idea of the blank ballots to make it so people that are knowledgeable are the only ones voting.
02:24:46.000But I see there's three other callers waiting to call in.
02:24:48.000So I'll go ahead and give my little outro here, my little shout out, and I'll be out of y'all's way.
02:25:03.000It's my goal to be a Become a professor and help return conservative Christian values to the American classical music conservatories and American schools of music.
02:25:11.000So, please pray for me in this endeavor.
02:25:13.000And I want to thank you all for your time.
02:25:53.000The election heist that's taken place in blue states like California and Colorado and others are apparent, whether it be through procedures or other means.
02:26:03.000The Save America Act failing seems to also be calculated as well on a federal level, maybe in conversation to have a voting issue for the upcoming general election to have that similar to what they did with the Obamacare Act.
02:26:19.000But with all that being said, and the procedural, legislative, and judicial processes that are currently in place, whether it be the legislation passing these, how it be legal laws, that doesn't necessarily mean it will be beneficial to our constitutional republic.
02:26:39.000How can we, the people, begin to actively reclaim our elections when we see these broken institutions using this as their employment to continue their cultural Marxist agenda?
02:27:25.000Donald Trump is kind of the only guy, the only game in town.
02:27:28.000And again, just like Andrew said, as imperfect as he is, because he's not perfect, there are plenty of flaws, there are plenty of things that I think he should be doing, but he's not.
02:27:38.000But at the same time, we live in a world where you're left with basically two options.
02:27:45.000And if you decide to opt out, then you're taking your vote away from something that could benefit you.
02:27:55.000Even if it's only benefiting you 10, 20%, it's still.
02:28:00.000Taking a vote away from something that's actively going to harm you and your interests.
02:28:10.000I think the big, my biggest, the conversation I'm trying to have with these other people that I talk with in the political sphere here in Colorado and other states is how do we gain that foothold to promote that kind of, you know, institutional messaging to actually.
02:28:31.000Like, we obviously see what's happening in California.
02:28:33.000We obviously see in all these other blue states, it's like something is fundamentally wrong and it's been ingrained and entrenched institutionally.
02:28:42.000And, like, you know, without getting someone in these positions of power, like Secretary of State's office and what have you, county clerk levels, like, we're not going to see any of that change.
02:28:54.000Are you thinking how to save, like, Colorado?
02:28:58.000I mean, that's been my fight for a long time, particularly.
02:29:42.000But the only way to save Colorado is to win in places we have a realistic chance of winning and advancing, and then you come back and save Colorado.
02:29:57.000Do you think that having a heavy handed federal intervention, like using the NVRA or HAVA and doing a blanket, like we obviously need the Save Act, but I feel like they've stonewalled this and now it's a lost cause, at least with these midterms?
02:30:14.000Colorado is a lost cause through these midterms.
02:30:17.000I mean, we're not going to have the Save America Act.
02:30:19.000It's going, this is a generational war we're in.
02:30:22.000We didn't lose the nation to this point in a single election.
02:30:25.000We're not going to get it back in a single election.
02:30:28.000But what we need is another three, four MAGA senators who are not going to obstruct things like the Save It.
02:30:33.000Once you have that authority at the federal level and the political willingness to use that authority, then you can pass federal legislation.
02:30:41.000Then you can come in with a heavy hand.
02:32:24.000You got anything you want to shout out?
02:32:26.000Yeah, I mean, that answers my question because I kind of, I was kind of, I've kind of been in that mindset as well.
02:32:33.000It's an internal battle with me because I'm very limited government, but I also know that we need something at a federal level to build that.
02:32:41.000So, with that being said, I'm on X's under Break the Chains M.
02:32:45.000I do a lot of obviously Colorado politics, election politics.
02:32:49.000I've been going on a tear about the, Current state of California and their corruption.
02:32:53.000But, and then Freedom Fest is a great event that we're going to be doing at the end of the month.
02:33:51.000Tim, in light of the Carmella Anthony trial, should America follow Singapore's 1969 decision to abolish jury trials?
02:33:59.000Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew viewed the jury system as unsuitable for Singapore's multicultural society, as witnessed by juries being swayed by bias and prejudice.
02:34:10.000Right now, we see people want to get on juries to protect their people and would give a not guilty verdict to protect their people.
02:34:17.000So basically, should we go full Singapore?
02:35:29.000The van stops for a red light or something and he hit his head on the bulkhead.
02:35:33.000The coroner called it a shallow water diving type injury, right?
02:35:38.000So he just broke his own neck in the van.
02:35:40.000Well, the local state's attorney, Marilyn Mosby, who's since been convicted of federal felonies for mortgage fraud, by the way, She decided she was going to make headlines for herself by prosecuting half a dozen of these cops for crimes as serious as murder.
02:37:03.000I mean, I'm sure the legal argument against the cop was his conduct was reckless under the circumstances, and a reckless death is a manslaughter death.
02:39:38.000So, you guys had a Myron on last week, and you went into how do we get into discouraging the violence epidemic that we have going on inside the United States, specifically political violence?
02:39:50.000And I think stockades and butt plugs were mentioned, so I'm not going to get into that.
02:39:59.000And that's my question for Mr. Branca is not the ethics of the situation, but the constitutionality and whether or not it would be effective.
02:40:36.000So we already know through due process, courts can remove these constitutional liberties.
02:40:40.000Okay, so I got to thinking, why can't it remove 14th Amendment rights, meaning your right to life, where we remove the government from that decision making process?
02:40:50.000So, uh, who are some of the high profile ones?
02:40:53.000Tyler Robinson, Carmelo Anthony, Luigi Mangione, they get convicted.
02:40:59.000They don't get sent to prison because we've closed down half the prisons because we don't keep violent offenders locked up anymore.
02:41:05.000We send them home with a big scarlet letter tattooed on their forehead because they no longer have the right to life.
02:41:14.000Yeah, so does that mean anybody can just kill them?
02:41:16.000Since they committed murder, they can no longer be murdered.
02:41:28.000I was like, the technical definition of an outlaw was someone who is outside the law, meaning they were not subject to the protections of the law.
02:41:36.000They were subject to being killed by anybody.
02:41:38.000Could we live in a world like that again?
02:41:42.000Prisons are a relatively modern invention.
02:41:45.000In the past, we would either execute someone or we would exile someone.
02:41:50.000We didn't house large numbers of people.
02:41:52.000And that, by the way, that policy prevented us from needing to house large numbers of people.
02:41:58.000One of the reasons the first world is so different than the third world in terms of high trust is we used to routinely execute 1% of the population every year.
02:42:08.000The psychopaths, the worst actors, their genes are no longer in the gene pool.
02:42:13.000The genes that are left are the law abiding, the rational, the not insane.
02:42:19.000And nations that didn't do that end up with very different genetic pools.
02:42:22.000Yeah, that's how Europe became what it is today.
02:42:44.000So I said, what you do is you make them wear a diaper and a baby bonnet and they have to crawl and hop down Roosevelt Avenue while everyone watches and films them as they say, I'm a big baby boo boo.
02:42:55.000And their honor is destroyed for life.
02:42:58.000Because what these guys are really motivated by is proving they're tough.
02:43:01.000Grab wads of cash and they flash them around like that, and then someone shoots them and steals it because they're trying to say, I'm better than you in the most rudimentary ways.
02:43:08.000You make them dress up like a baby in a diaper, they can never have that back.
02:43:23.000And then with Myron, of course, we escalated to you put them in a stockade, lube up a butt plug, and insert it very slowly while everyone films it, and their lives are destroyed.
02:44:39.000Mr. Branca, if I have a debate coming up with a TDS progressive, we're specifically going to be talking about the Border Patrol shootings up in Minneapolis.
02:44:48.000Now, we know in order for a shooting to be justified, you need a third reread of the law of self defense.
02:45:35.000Does he have that knowledge from the officer three, four months ago?
02:45:38.000Whatever he knows is imputed to that hypothetical reasonable and prudent person.
02:45:43.000Just like his police training, past injuries, past experiences, but it would need to be stuff that he possessed knowledge of at the time he acted in self defense.
02:46:02.000I have nothing to shout out, but I am working on a little something something for the Discord or maybe the members only to kick off MAGA Month right.
02:46:09.000I only need one more thing, and I think it's against policy, but I'm going to ask anyway with respect.