The government is shut down and things are starting to get ugly. President Trump has called on the Senate to vote to end the shutdown, but Democrats are holding the door shut. Plus, the latest on the UPS plane crash, Jay Jones' win in the primary, and more.
00:04:24.000Plus, Jay Jones winning in Virginia and what that means for right-wing individuals and what Democrats are telling you they plan to do next.
00:04:31.000Before we do, we got some great sponsors for you, my friends.
00:08:12.000I'm the founder of the Classical Learner Homeschool Company, and I try to educate the children so that they don't vote for a communist next time one runs.
00:08:20.000And everyone talks about the young people voting for communists, but they don't talk about the reason that happens.
00:08:29.000And by the time they turn 18 years old, for a lot of them, it's already too late.
00:08:34.000So it really has to be a two-front war where one, you try to wake people up, and two, you prevent them from going to sleep in the first place.
00:09:16.000They are contemplating closing airspace.
00:09:18.000Now, right now, they have confirmed they will be reducing capacity by 10% at 40 major airports.
00:09:24.000The FAA will reduce flight capacity by 10% at 40 major airports.
00:09:27.000The decision could cut thousands of flights per day.
00:09:30.000The restrictions will go into effect Friday morning.
00:09:32.000FAA Administrator Brian Bedford and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said.
00:09:36.000The airports that will be impacted will be announced on Thursday, officials said.
00:09:40.000Our sole role is to make sure that we keep this airspace as safe as possible.
00:09:44.000Reduction in capacity at 40 of our locations.
00:09:47.000This is not based on light airline travel locations.
00:09:50.000This is about where the pressure is and how to really deviate the pressure.
00:09:54.000This comes after Duffy said earlier this week that the FAA will be forced to shut down the airspace in some areas if the shutdown continues into next week.
00:10:04.000We are already facing, what is it, like a 2,000 personnel shortage for air traffic controllers?
00:10:17.000And if you remember, Caroline Leavitt was talking the other day.
00:10:19.000She was answering questions in the press briefing room about the shutdown.
00:10:24.000And she said that she had heard a congressional staffer who worked for a Democrat lawmaker say that they wouldn't reopen the government until planes started falling out of the sky.
00:10:36.000I got to say, I think this refusal on the majority leader Thun's part to refuse to terminate the filibuster because he's afraid of what Democrats are going to do when they get back into office, if they get back into office.
00:10:49.000The next time they get back into office, this is something President Trump addressed at the breakfast this morning with GOP senators.
00:10:55.000He was like, they're going to get back into office.
00:11:12.000The idea, you know, we've talked about this at length at this point, but like the idea that there is some kind of limiting principle to what the Democrats are willing to do or what they're going to do, that is a pie in the sky idea.
00:11:24.000And to behave as if the Republicans' behavior is in any way going to affect what the Democrats do is a, I mean, it's a foolish endeavor.
00:11:35.000The Republicans need to exercise power while they have it.
00:11:39.000And to be honest with you, they need to do, and I've said this multiple times, the Republicans need to do everything that they can that is legal to make sure that the Republicans have as much of an edge to win in 2026 and in 2028 as they possibly can.
00:11:55.000Everything that they can legally do, they must do.
00:11:58.000This is no time for people that have a weak stomach for exercising power.
00:12:03.000This is no time for saying, well, the Democrats will do this.
00:12:49.000I mean, can we get Matt Gates back in here to get rid of some of these people in leadership?
00:12:53.000People were framing what's been going on.
00:12:55.000Like, what happened with Mamdani and all of the elections that happened yesterday as if that was a response to the way that the Republicans have been behaving for the first, you know, however long Trump has been in office?
00:13:05.000It's like they were never going to win anyways.
00:13:07.000Like those elections were a foregone conclusion.
00:13:09.000So you can't pretend because that's almost an attempt to try to get them to curb from actually using the power that they have.
00:13:14.000And that's, you know, I'm on this show once a week and we have to discuss it every single time, which is that no matter what you say, they're never going to actually use the power they have because they're too scared of being called names or being perceived as if what's going to happen to them in a couple of years isn't, it's already going to happen.
00:13:57.000Like Spanberger running against Trump.
00:13:59.000None of them were running against their opponents.
00:14:01.000And I think that I think that has something to do with the fact that there are no Republicans with any faces to speak of other than Trump and Vance and like a little bit of Rubio.
00:14:11.000It's the number one thing that like for the length of time that I've been on the show, I said they have a big problem coming in 2028.
00:14:19.000I think mostly for mimetic qualities in a lot of ways, but he doesn't have that same bulletproof ability that Trump seems to have to be able to let it all roll off his back not yet.
00:14:30.000But the problem is, is they don't have a way to coalesce around anybody else because there's no face there that anybody's really going to get behind, at least in my opinion.
00:14:38.000We were talking about the elections yesterday and everything that's going on.
00:14:41.000And I was thinking about when Trump is not running, we're kind of screwed because people only turn out when Trump is on the ballot.
00:15:30.000Like I've always made the comment and people, well, and people have pushed back on me in this is like, I would like to go back to a time where it didn't seem like everybody was treating politics like a team sport and people who like you'd call them a tourist.
00:15:43.000You'd say, you don't really have a lot of interest in this.
00:15:45.000You're just kind of, you've picked it up since Trump came into office and perhaps you'll go by the wayside once he leaves.
00:15:51.000But I do think they'll end up keeping him on the ballot by saying, like, this is the guy that Donald Trump anointed as he, I remember we were talking at one point about how Trump didn't necessarily endorse Vance when he gave that first interview because he knows that it could probably be used against him down the line.
00:16:20.000Well, I think that that goes, that's kind of obvious for like whoever the Republican is.
00:16:24.000You know, if the Republicans have not delivered for the American people, or if the American people don't feel like the Republicans have delivered, then that's going to be a bad thing for whoever the Republican is, whether it be Vance or whatever.
00:16:35.000This is why I'm so much of the opinion that at the end of the day, it really does boil down to what the economy is like because the people will blame whatever party is in office at the time if the economy is not doing bad.
00:16:50.000If they feel like they're not able to make their dollar go far enough, if they feel like they can't put food on the table, then they're going to blame whatever party's in office currently.
00:17:00.000What do you think the, I mean, you guys are probably more plugged into this.
00:17:03.000Like, what is the general consensus from the public on the economy now?
00:17:07.000I think most people feel like it could be better.
00:17:10.000I don't think that people are feeling like there's a boom time.
00:17:13.000I'm not sure exactly what could be done to get back to the heady days of 2018, 19.
00:17:22.000But I think that people are still hurting out there.
00:17:24.000And I think that people still feel stressed.
00:17:27.000But I think the reason why that is is because of how long it takes for wages to catch up to the inflation that happened, right?
00:17:38.000Wages catching up to inflation is lagging.
00:17:41.000It takes a long time for people's wages to get up to match what inflation happens.
00:17:49.000That's why inflation is so bad and it's such a, you know, why it has such a negative effect because inflation happens quickly.
00:17:55.000It can happen in a year or in two years.
00:17:58.000You can have prices go up by 20, 30, 40%, which is what actually happened here in the U.S. Things are like literally like 20 to 30% more expensive overall.
00:18:06.000The dollar lost like 20% of its buying power.
00:18:10.000And so you haven't seen wages go up 20 or 30%.
00:18:14.000So until the wages catch up, you know, people are going to feel like that.
00:18:18.000And I don't know that, I don't know that that is going to be solved by the end of Trump's term.
00:18:23.000Well, do you guys think the government's going to reopen before Thanksgiving?
00:18:27.000I think the only way that the government reopens is if they do the filibuster thing.
00:18:33.000I don't think the Democrats are going to cave at all.
00:18:35.000I don't think they have to cave because the longer this goes on, as they keep telling us, the better it is for the Democrats and for their priorities.
00:18:42.000And low IQ voters will blame Trump for this anyways.
00:18:45.000Well, yeah, it's easier to blame Trump because he's one guy as opposed to blaming like just Congress.
00:18:52.000I think it's better just to call them by their proper name.
00:18:55.000Democrats will just blame Trump for all of this.
00:18:58.000No, because I would push back on that.
00:19:00.000There's a lot of people that are right now really angry with Trump for a lot of things that Trump either didn't do, didn't actually happen, or things that they assumed were going to happen that he never made a promise on.
00:19:15.000There are a lot of people that are still mad about the Epstein files.
00:19:17.000Trump has said we need to release the Epstein files.
00:19:20.000And the people that are holding any additional evidence, the people that are holding it back are the courts.
00:19:25.000That's likely because there are minors in the Epstein files that they don't want to put their names out there.
00:20:06.000The Republicans have no reason to reopen.
00:20:08.000Trump wants to use it as leverage to end the filibuster.
00:20:11.000Democrats think they're gaining from it, so why would they stop?
00:20:14.000Now, the sentiment now is considering they just want a bunch of races.
00:20:17.000They're like, okay, now we can end the government shutdown because we've milked it for all we can.
00:20:21.000The question is, will the Republicans, I don't know why the Republicans are keeping the shutdown going, considering they won on the filibuster either.
00:20:28.000Anyway, so what's the point of being shut down?
00:20:31.000Well, they would have to approve the extensions on these health insurance subsidies, which is really just a continuation of COVID relief.
00:20:41.000Well, like, even if Democrats caved, Republicans would just, they should, what, just reopen government thunder, just say sure.
00:20:48.000They just sign the CR. They keep voting for it.
00:20:51.000They keep voting for the CR. If the Republicans allow Democrats to do this, man, I tweeted just now while y'all were talking that Republicans are retarded, but oh boy.
00:21:31.000Is the reason that like school, is schools getting rid of civics?
00:21:35.000Is that why we're in the position that we're in?
00:21:37.000Well, I think schools getting rid of civics is a big deal.
00:21:40.000But just getting back to what you guys were saying before about how people feel about the economy, what I know for sure is that young people feel the economy is absolute trash.
00:21:50.000And you see that with what goes viral on the internet as soon as someone starts talking about, sorry about that, as soon as someone starts talking about the ability to buy a home, they don't have it.
00:22:00.000And what you get from that is young people who go to public schools and they're taught that they're taught CRT, they're taught gender ideology, they're taught that the rich are abusing all of these people and there's the oppressed versus the oppressors.
00:22:15.000And then they're taught Keynesian economics.
00:22:17.000And when they get into, when they turn 18 years old and they see Trump's in office and they see that the Republicans have been given power and they're not using that power to help the young people, what you get is a communist in New York City.
00:22:30.000And the Republicans, I mean, I worked hard.
00:22:33.000I fought for Trump, voted for him three times, but there's just no backbone there.
00:22:38.000And, you know, even like with taxes, like imagine how powerful it would be if they came out and said, we need to cut all taxes related to food.
00:22:49.000Restaurants, shipping, farms, grocery stores, absolutely no taxes.
00:22:55.000Let's gut them, get rid of them completely, and let's drive these prices down.
00:22:59.000And people would get behind that, but they don't do it.
00:23:02.000Those things would be state-level things, though, right?
00:23:04.000I mean, if there's no federal tax on food or anything.
00:23:08.000The Republicans could get together nationwide and they could start pushing these agendas and they can really start moving young people towards something.
00:23:16.000We saw with immigration, when you have an agenda that people feel is in their interest, they want to get behind it.
00:23:23.000And right now, the Republicans have been in power for a year and I don't feel that enthusiasm.
00:23:30.000I feel like Trump has kind of pushed the immigration issue as something that's going to be a long-form solution to help Americans.
00:23:36.000And a lot of people, they can't necessarily see that in the short term because they're hurting right now.
00:23:41.000And they're like, look, I love the long-term plan, but that doesn't always work when there's an immediate wound that needs to be fixed.
00:23:46.000And that's something that else we've talked about a lot on here is like when people get pushed to the brink economically, they're not going to look for free market solutions, especially young people.
00:23:55.000They are going to look for larger government answers.
00:23:58.000And that's, of course, guys like Mdani.
00:24:00.000When Trump was asked, I think it was, was it 60 minutes?
00:24:03.000Or when he was told grocery prices are up, no, they're not.
00:24:10.000And that is going to impact the elections more than anything Trump is doing on foreign policy or on immigration, these raids.
00:24:18.000As much as I'm for that, I do think it's fascinating.
00:24:21.000There's this obsession with foreign policy among on the right, I suppose, particularly around Israel, because it is an issue that does not move American voters in any way.
00:24:31.000And it's funny when I talk to these Israel first people, because there's two kinds of Israel first.
00:24:35.000There's the diehard, they love Israel, and there's the Israel center of all problems in the universe, like Zaran Mamdani.
00:24:41.000When he said the NYPD, when they lace their boots, it's laced by the IDF. He's insane and retarded for saying that.
00:24:47.000When you tell them, yeah, you know, American people just don't care about foreign policy, they desperately try to convince you it's the most important issue.
00:24:53.000And I'm like, okay, you are insane if you think that a working class guy works at a factory is coming home and going, Israel, and not going, I can't afford food for my kids.
00:25:02.000Well, that's because we're in a space where we get on these microphones and we talk about things in theory and we talk about like more avant-garde political issues that the average person who's going to a 95 job doesn't take the time to read unless they're really, really into it in their free time.
00:25:17.000But it's like the kitchen table issues don't even matter anymore to the people in these spaces.
00:25:22.000And if Trump isn't paying attention to the kitchen table issues, then they've got to do it.
00:25:26.000And the problem with that, of course, is that kitchen table issues are what got him to where he is, right?
00:25:30.000I mean, I'm pro-Israel for the most part, but really I care about when I go to the grocery store and instead of $150, it's $300, which lately my grocery bills, like normally my grocery bill is like $150.
00:25:45.000And the past two times, it's been $300.
00:26:04.000I think the Biden administration has sabotaged this country to a point where Trump doesn't have a quick fix for it.
00:26:10.000Yeah, I don't think there's a quick fix either.
00:26:12.000The flooding of this country with illegal immigrants is jacking up prices across the board for low-skilled workers.
00:26:21.000It's making competition for these jobs insane and in key areas, mind you, not everywhere.
00:26:26.000But it's also making it impossible for young people to buy houses.
00:26:29.000And what's crazy to me is like, even where we are, there's massive developments popping up everywhere.
00:26:33.000And I'm just like, who's buying these houses?
00:26:35.000Also, if you look at the prices on these houses, because I look at these too, because they're everywhere, you know, you're driving down the highway and you're like, wait, there's 500 new houses.
00:27:04.000Well, what percentage of these homes are being purchased by corporations?
00:27:09.000Like, I know we've had that discussion before, and it's not as high of a percentage as people think it is, but it's still you're competing against, you know, investment firms rather than just going to rent it out.
00:28:02.000So if the first house you're buying is at 40, wow, we are cooked.
00:28:08.000Yeah, and this is why if right-wing America wants to win, and you kind of talked about this at the beginning where you talked about Discord and building community.
00:28:16.000Well, if right-wing America wants to win, you have to start showing young people, and I interact with them every day, the benefits of capitalism.
00:28:25.000And I know a 14-year-old girl that runs a dog walking business and she has 10 employees.
00:28:31.000I know a 15-year-old girl that's published four books, four novels, K.F. Barrett, and tons of kids with this type of story.
00:28:40.000And when you show these kids what capitalism could do for them and how they could earn money and how they could hire people and hire their friends, well, then when they turn 18, 19 years old, they'll see a pathway.
00:28:51.000They'll have hope in which they could buy that house.
00:28:54.000But right now, if the economy doesn't change and we keep allowing our children to be educated in this Keynesian economic theory model, then you're going to get more and more people who are turning 18 and they're turning to the left.
00:29:09.000Well, also, they were kind of sold on a world, like at least my generation was.
00:29:13.000You were sold on a world that didn't really exist anymore that you were going to have your parents' life where, yeah, you had to go to college.
00:29:19.000Maybe your parents didn't have to go to college, but you were going to be able to go to college and then you were going to be able to find a job and you could work that job for 22 years and retire.
00:29:27.000And that's a fantasy that's not really a thing anymore, not in any real sense.
00:29:31.000And I feel like a lot of what I see from millennials is just burnout because life has become so complicated.
00:29:37.000Like I was talking to someone today about like the fact that I have to log in to like nine things.
00:29:43.000Like your parents would have, their heads would have exploded if they had to like the guy who invented the password manager should get a Nobel Peace Prize and should be given a lifetime, like you should get a lifetime supply of everything because the average person having to do that, so if you're like, what happens when you forget the password to your password manager?
00:30:17.000But the school system doesn't in any way train you for that.
00:30:21.000The school system trains you to be able to take instruction, but not to actually move forward and develop plans of your own.
00:30:27.000It's like the idea of the person who runs a business not being somebody who actually teaches at business school because the guy who teaches at business school is rarely successful in business.
00:30:35.000Yeah, life school should be business school.
00:30:37.000And all they do is teach these kids to memorize.
00:30:40.000And then from the time they're in first grade, they tell them the only path to success is college.
00:30:46.000And they tell them that all the way up to 12th grade, they don't teach them financial literacy.
00:30:51.000They get one course in 12th grade, and that's on micro and macroeconomic theory, not personal finance.
00:30:58.000So these kids don't know what debt is.
00:31:14.000They should know if I go to college and I major in feminism, then I'm going to be broke and I'm not going to be able to afford a house.
00:31:21.000And by the time they get out and they figure out what happened and they're 22, 23 years old, and now they get a job at a corporation and they're making $30,000, $40,000 a year.
00:31:32.000If they get a job and forget about it, if they're white and it's the DEI hires, not to bring race into it because it affects all people of all different races, but you get the DEI hires and it's very difficult to climb a corporate ladder.
00:31:49.000And I think we're seeing that in America.
00:31:50.000And the response to that, the answer to that, should be as parents that we can start teaching young people these things from a young age.
00:31:57.000We can start teaching financial literacy in elementary school and we can start teaching entrepreneurship in middle school and high school.
00:32:04.000And if you do that, I think what you'll see is a lot of young people who embrace right-wing America and free market capitalism.
00:32:11.000But there's no middle ground there anymore, which is like what you're talking about.
00:32:14.000And it is kind of like a talking point on the right to say like college is a scam.
00:32:18.000But like 90% of the jobs that you're looking for out there now, they're going to require a four-year degree and 10 years of experience to get an entry-level position.
00:32:26.000So no wonder people are disenfranchised when they're going to look for jobs after putting themselves into debt and they can't find it.
00:32:32.000And then there isn't a middle ground there where you start at the ideas.
00:32:36.000Like you started in the mail room and then you worked your way up at the corporation.
00:33:00.000And most of my employees, some of them are high school dropouts and didn't go to college.
00:33:06.000So what you teach young people is that if you could be entrepreneurial and you could hire like-minded people, you start to raise people that aren't looking for those college degrees in sociology.
00:33:18.000I'm actually looking for, I want employees who didn't go to college because then I don't have to deal with the indoctrination.
00:33:23.000I don't have to deal with all the HR issues and everything that comes along with entrepreneurship.
00:33:28.000And so I think a lot of the problems we face in the political realm, we could actually fix at the grassroots level, whether it's your Discord or whether it's people building businesses and educating their kids right from the start.
00:34:07.000I mean, the personality matters too, though, because if you're the kind of person that believes that life happens to you, you're not going to be the kind of person that thinks, I can go out and start this.
00:34:36.000And then you keep asking them, yeah, but what do you see?
00:34:38.000And eventually what you want them to come to is opportunity.
00:34:41.000They see the opportunity to cut the grass.
00:34:43.000They see the opportunity to plant seeds in the ground.
00:34:46.000They see the opportunity to sell the fruit that grows out of the trees.
00:34:50.000And what you teach them is that this is the window of opportunity.
00:34:53.000everywhere around you your entire life, you are standing in front of the window of opportunity.
00:34:58.000And if we raise our kids that way with that mindset and we help them get experience throughout their childhood, you get more and more people that are independent.
00:35:08.000And ultimately, the goal should be to raise free and independent people because then they vote for a free and independent country.
00:35:16.000Let's jump to the story for the post-millennial.
00:35:19.000Jewish NYC fire commissioner resigns one day after Mamdani mayoral win.
00:35:28.000The resignation came first thing Wednesday morning, Solsis told the New York Post.
00:35:32.000And Tucker, a Jewish philanthropist and businessman, will be stepping down from the role on December 19th, just over in 12 months after taking the role.
00:35:38.000The letter obtained by the New York Daily News stated, between now and then, I will continue to lead the greatest fire department in the world and will ensure an orderly transition.
00:35:46.000A source in the FDNY told the outlet there have been no talks between Tucker and Mamdani's team about him staying on as commissioner and added that Tucker reportedly felt he would not fit in with Mamdani and his team.
00:35:56.000Was there anything explicitly about him being Jewish as to why he's resigning?
00:36:10.000Well, apparently there was a resignation letter, but we don't know if it had something specifically to do with him being Jewish.
00:36:16.000We do know, I mean, Jessica Tish is Jewish.
00:36:19.000She's the police commissioner, and Mamdani had said that he would keep Tish on, and she's been doing, you know, by all accounts, a pretty bang up job.
00:36:27.000So I don't know necessarily that it has anything to do with his being Jewish, but it certainly is interesting that he does not feel that he would fit in with the, you know, socialist mayoral agenda.
00:36:38.000There was, if anybody here knows who Deborah Messing is, she's an actress, Will and Grace.
00:36:43.000She's in very big trouble from people on her own side of the aisle.
00:36:47.000She's a longtime advocate for LGBTQ rights.
00:36:50.000She was in Will and Grace, which was like formative show for that type of topic.
00:36:54.000And she posted a meme the other yesterday of like a ballot that said a regular Democrat.
00:37:03.000And at the bottom, it said is an Islamic jihadist, Karl Marx quoting blah, blah, blah, blah.
00:37:09.000And then the meme is that the other option was just a regular Democrat.
00:38:10.000I mean, the idea that this is about Trump, I think that that's an error, though.
00:38:16.000I think that most of the people that voted their voting, voted for Mamdani, like they're really voting thinking that capitalism is their problem.
00:38:35.000I'd be willing to bet that eight out of 10 of the people you talk to on the street of New York who voted for Mamdani are going to be like, I think he'll do a good job.
00:38:43.000They're not going to tell you what he's doing.
00:38:44.000They just wanted to vote for the cute guy who smiles big and makes them feel morally superior to others because they're voting for the brown guy.
00:38:53.000I mean, I think that's true for a lot of the young white women who voted for him.
00:38:56.000But I think most people voted for him are going to be like, derp.
00:39:18.000He'll make sure that everything's to everyone's taken care of.
00:39:20.000It's very maternal kind of thing about it.
00:39:22.000It's not that there was a significant pushback against Trump.
00:39:27.000It is unfortunate that, was it 84% of 18 to 29-year-old women voted for Mamdaniel because it just says terrible things about their IQ. Mamdani promised things the mayor can't do.
00:41:18.000Like, you should assume all politicians are looking to, at the very least, double speak to you and give you a half truth because that's their job.
00:42:25.000They don't have to have America be their primary residence.
00:42:27.000They don't have to do any of that at all.
00:42:29.000It's shockingly easy to just go move somewhere else when you're a billionaire.
00:42:32.000But he's already, he's also said that he's going to tax, you know, everyone that makes more than a million dollars, they're going to get a 2% tax.
00:42:38.000And you tell anyone that their taxes are going to go up by $20,000 just because, and that's if you make a million dollars, right?
00:42:45.000That's just the very, very entry level is $20,000.
00:42:52.000But the point is, to people that are, that don't have, you know, don't have a pot to piss in, it sounds like a ton of money.
00:42:58.000But if you tell anyone at all, your taxes are going to be increased by $20,000 just because they're going to be like, well, how do I avoid that?
00:43:06.000This is the problem with the developmentally disabled being allowed to vote and run for office, okay?
00:43:12.000There's something called the laugher curve, which is the point at which when you tax too much, you make less money.
00:43:18.000So the story that I like to tell is Cook County, Duke Page County, a Home Depot story.
00:43:22.000I learned this when I was like 18 because my friend's dad was a contractor, and I forgot how it came up, but there was a Home Depot in Cook County that closed down and reopened several months later in DuPage County, which was like 10 miles down the road.
00:43:35.000And what was explained to me, Cook County increased their sales tax by like 0.01% or something like this.
00:43:51.000I mean, I understand you're paying more in taxes, but is it really worth moving?
00:43:55.000And what my friend's dad said was contractors will drive an extra 50 miles if it means saving a couple hundred thousand dollars a year in materials costs because you're not just going to the store to spend 50 bucks here and there you're doing massive lumber orders and and getting tools but a lot of this a lot of these deliveries you're ordering from home depot massive amounts of lumber that gets delivered to the site so if you're spending millions of dollars over the year even 0.01 percent is not worth it you
00:44:26.000may as well put in the order someone else it's coming for delivery why pay the taxes on it and i was like oh wow so cook county lost money by increasing tax revenue how about that more importantly because i grew up playing civilization i understood very simply when you increase the taxes on your cities you make less money because people stop spending and they stop they don't have money to spend and then i was like in civ 2 i love it they revolt they stop your economy stagnates you stop generating gold and you're like oh maybe that was a bad idea
00:44:56.000but zoran mandani either doesn't know or doesn't care i think it's a brilliant combo it's it's real simple i got to tell you if you're if you make a million dollars a year and he says twenty thousand dollars extra gone people are going to be like i think i'll spend that twenty thousand dollars on the uh on an apartment across the river in jersey and i'll stop coming to new york jersey city is going to get real nice to be fair though they have the reciprocity between jersey and new york because of this and if you spend more than half the year in new york they'll talk they'll tax you at the full rate right and
00:45:26.000so i think it's fair to say people are the the estimates right now are that property uh values in florida tennessee and texas are going to skyrocket because these are like big republican strongholds texas and florida are a bit full so some speculate that nashville might start popping off nashville has been popping off it's been popping off but now with new york it's not as far South is Texas or Florida.
00:45:51.000So, for people who don't like that hot of weather, Nashville seems to be the place to be.
00:46:37.000It's that unless the argument is in New York, there's going to be armed rebellion against New York City government, which there's not going to be, people will just leave, and then New York will crumble.
00:46:48.000There was a point where Detroit was this massive industry leader.
00:46:52.000I mean, Detroit made Pennsylvania, or I'm sorry, made Pittsburgh.
00:46:56.000Pittsburgh was providing all the steel for Detroit.
00:46:58.000Detroit was like the mecca for economic activity in the U.S. And that was that, you know, that ended because of the, I think a lot of the manufacturers left.
00:47:08.000Yeah, and then there were all those riots.
00:51:37.000Yeah, and if I could shed a little bit of light on this, when if you go back to 1920s, you had in 1920, you had the Frankfurt School and you had these academics who got together and they wanted to figure out why cultural Marxism didn't take root in the West like it did in Russia.
00:52:00.000They came up with something called CRT, critical race theory.
00:52:05.000They came up with the gender ideology.
00:52:08.000And their idea was that they could extend Karl Marx's ideas of the oppressed versus the oppressors from, I'm sorry, they could extend his idea of the rich versus the poor and make it the oppressed versus the oppressors in as many different areas as they could.
00:52:25.000And those academics who were in Germany in 1920 made their way to New York and ultimately took over the American academic system.
00:52:34.000And that's where these ideas come from, that CRT, the gender ideology.
00:52:39.000So now you have a generation of young people that have been educated in what is hidden as, they don't understand is, but is Marxist ideology.
00:52:49.000So when someone runs for mayor and they say, look at all these filthy rich people, look at these billionaires, they've been oppressing you.
00:52:56.000Well, these kids have been indoctrinated into this their entire lives.
00:53:00.000It's, you know, it might not be under the rich versus the poor, the class struggle, but it's been taught through CRT. It's been taught through gender.
00:53:11.000So by the time they hear that message, it really resonates with these young people and then they buy into it.
00:53:17.000And to your point, right, the argument of, you know, the critical race theory, the point of that is to awaken a critical racial consciousness, right?
00:53:25.000They want to have people that are the oppressed classes or oppressed races, as they would call it.
00:53:33.000They want them to be aware of their class consciousness.
00:53:36.000And Hassan was talking about this in a clip that I saw today, or he was talking about how in the United States, there is no class consciousness or there is very little class consciousness and how that's a terrible thing.
00:53:48.000The left wants to awaken that class consciousness and they want to awaken it in the white population as well.
00:53:55.000And when they awaken in the white population, they use it against you.
00:53:59.000So if you're a white person, you say, well, I want to align based on my white identity.
00:54:04.000They will look at you and they'll say, you're a white supremacist.
00:54:21.000But the point that I'm making is the left tries to awaken a class con a racial, critical racial consciousness in everybody, and they will use it depending on who you are.
00:54:32.000If you are of some kind of immigrant or if you're a person that has a brown or a black identity, it's perfectly fine for you to say things like black power.
00:54:40.000It's perfectly fine for you to align your politics based on your race.
00:54:44.000But if you're a white person, they use that same class consciousness that they teach in school.
00:54:49.000They teach with CRT. They use that same class consciousness to beat you down and call you names and accuse you of all sorts of terrible things.
00:54:58.000So to your point about critical race theory, it's like a double-edged sword.
00:55:02.000They will use it in one way to help one group of people, and then they will use it in a different way to hurt another group of people.
00:55:09.000And the other thing about it is, like, the hardest part now is that this has been going on since 2008 and the last economic crashes.
00:55:16.000Those ideas take a lot easier hold when the economy is bad, when people can't afford a home, when people don't feel like they can start families because they don't have the income to do so.
00:55:26.000It's a lot easier for, you know, what's the old saying?
00:55:30.000Like, what's the scariest thing someone can say?
00:55:32.000I'm from the government, I'm here to help.
00:55:34.000But that doesn't work as much when they actually need the help.
00:55:37.000And then those ideas have been fed to them since they were in grade school and on upwards.
00:55:42.000So it's a combination of both economic problems, indoctrination at schools, and all of that coming together.
00:55:49.000And we're like, one of the, when you posted about the, when somebody posted about him taxing about the taxing on millionaires as well, right?
00:55:56.000The first post under there said billionaires next.
01:00:07.000If a politician promises something that literally is not within their power as the office they're running for, shouldn't we just call that fraud?
01:00:24.000Like the way I see it is: if someone's running for office to be mayor and they say, as mayor, my powers include, you know, signing legislation, control of the police department, I will advocate for free buses to the city council and I will work with the police on making their budget more efficient and I will request of the city council more money.
01:02:20.000But Trump doesn't want to give any more until they reopen government.
01:02:25.000I actually think the call sheet prediction for 45 days is probably wrong.
01:02:30.000To be fair, maybe I should, you know, I always talk about how maybe I should buy stock because we often have access to knowledge and stuff before people because we're reading the news all the time.
01:02:41.000But I've heard from people in government it's going to be close till Christmas.
01:02:43.000The expectation among staff is that they're going to be furloughed till Christmas.
01:03:17.000Yeah, they want to extend the tax subsidies for the Obamacare and illegal immigrants that they first put into place at the American Rescue Plan Act and then extended with the Inflation Reduction Act, which, as they said, was the biggest climate change legislation in history.
01:03:40.000Isn't this whole thing a great opportunity for the churches?
01:03:44.000That right now, if you have all these people that have been relying on SNAP for food, that the churches could position themselves to get people to show up.
01:03:54.000And I do wish right-wing America would think more in these terms.
01:03:58.000Well, some of these things might be hard to pull off.
01:04:01.000Every one of these things that happened, the government shutdown, the SNAP benefits being taken away temporarily, are massive opportunities to win at the grassroots level.
01:04:11.000And ultimately, the only way to win politically is to be strong enough at the grassroots level that you force the political class to respect you because ultimately they only respond to money, power, and influence.
01:04:26.000And you have to have that to get them to do what you want them to do.
01:04:32.000So do you think that, so for the churches right now, so I have seen videos of churches getting more people coming through for these types of things.
01:04:38.000Do you think there will be growth there?
01:04:40.000I think there's an opportunity for it.
01:04:46.000And I hope that pastors that are listening to and churches that are listening right now see this for the opportunity it is because I think a lot of people have been trained to think that they can't do what seem to be incredible things, but you look what you guys have built here.
01:05:24.000Yeah, I mean, I think in theory, what you're talking about is great.
01:05:29.000I just don't know that the, I don't know that there's enough churches that are going to be, that are, that are kind of on the ball enough to be like, okay, let's jump on this opportunity.
01:05:58.000It's like $9 billion a month in the church isn't trying to solve all the government's problems.
01:06:04.000They're trying to help, you know, but a lot of churches are set up with food banks and things.
01:06:09.000But even with just announcing a food drive when people suddenly don't have access to the food they had access to, you get people to show up that day.
01:06:19.000And when they show up that day, you could have conversations with them and you could let them know what you do and let them know that, hey, we'll be doing this again next weekend.
01:06:27.000And if you show up and we'll feed you and we'll talk to you about our beliefs and you'll find out that the people that you heard are these monsters are actually these really kind people.
01:06:37.000And then we could talk to you about why we have the views that we have.
01:06:40.000And I know that when you were in the school system, these views were framed as being monstrous, right?
01:06:46.000For example, feminism in the school system, they teach these kids that they don't want you to have abortions because there's a patriarchy, a patriarchy, and misogyny.
01:06:56.000And that's where you get all these celebrations from someone like Charlie Kirk getting shot because the young people have been taught that people that hold these ideologies are filled with hate.
01:07:05.000And by getting in front of people and talking to them face to face and helping them in their time of need, you could start to swing people that you think you wouldn't be able to swing in your direction, but you'd be amazed what those face-to-face interactions could do.
01:07:21.000And if I could add one more thing, before the nanny state took over, before the government came in and said, we'll be daddy, when a woman gave birth out of wedlock, which was rarer, it was the churches and community groups that stepped in and took care of people.
01:07:36.000And if we ultimately want to get off this tax system, we have to start building the infrastructure that we could point to and show people and say, listen, if you abandon this nanny state, we have a safety blanket here for you.
01:08:10.000Specifically, Christianity has been under attack.
01:08:13.000And you have the Democrats have rather successfully put together a plan where the government will partner with an individual throughout their entire life.
01:08:20.000So it is important, I think, to make sure that the churches are robust and that these places of faith are strong.
01:08:28.000And I hope that, you know, I hope that the religious community is taking heed of that.
01:08:34.000I'm not sure how we combat the Democrat messaging that has ruined God, has replaced the soul with gender and has replaced family with government.
01:08:47.000Yeah, I think you're right to the point where it's like getting those face-to-face interactions are key in a lot of ways.
01:08:54.000It's so much easier to reach a person when you talk to them face-to-face.
01:08:58.000Like when you're having those, you could have all the positive interactions with somebody online that won't speak to most people the same way that having somebody appear, like show to themselves to be a completely different human being than what they've been told they would be their whole lives by the school system, what that could do for those people.
01:09:16.000Just a heads up, I just got a warning for a severe thunderstorm.
01:09:20.000If the power goes out, we have generators, but maybe the show just disappears.
01:09:46.000In the meantime, and all welfare benefits and all subsidies and abolish government, period.
01:09:50.000Yeah, I mean, I'm, well, I mean, I love that.
01:09:53.000I don't understand exactly what the point of like withholding SNAP benefits when the government shut down and they're not giving them out anyways.
01:10:01.000What I don't get is why you would some of these people you've seen like the videos.
01:10:09.000What was funny is Cerno posted, Cernovich, Mike Cernovich posted, someone should do snap benefits of TikTok.
01:10:16.000And then like two days later, there it was, you know.
01:10:18.000But the EBT of TikTok, you'll see people being like, I've been on these benefits for 30 years.
01:10:23.000I've, you know, this is how I feed my six kids.
01:10:26.000I don't have a job because I have six kids.
01:10:28.000And I'm thinking like, if you have put your ability to be sustained in the hands of government, don't be surprised when the government starves you.
01:10:37.000Like, why are you giving someone else control over whether you eat or not?
01:11:27.000I was surprised that it was that much, that it's that many people who are collecting these benefits and don't have jobs, you know, and don't work.
01:11:36.000I mean, everyone I've known who's been on food assistance, it's always been either they're between jobs or like their job just isn't enough and they're looking for more work or something like that.
01:11:47.000You know, they're always like trying to better their lives and grateful that there's assistance temporarily available.
01:11:53.000It's not like I've never considered it as something that's like a lifestyle choice where you're just going to be subservient to the government in that way for your entire life.
01:12:03.000It was like, what, 12% of Americans are on SNAP benefits?
01:12:06.000It's like 40 million or something like that.
01:12:21.000People with the student loans and stuff.
01:12:23.000Well, people had to pay their mortgages.
01:12:25.000So when you tell someone that their job is unessential and they have a mortgage and they could lose their home, well, to them, that's very essential.
01:12:32.000And then people had to go to the grocery store to get food.
01:12:35.000So they said that if you want to come to this grocery store, you have to wear a mask.
01:12:39.000And my response to that was I sold my home on Long Island where my family was from.
01:12:44.000And I moved my family, my children across the country, my wife, my children.
01:12:49.000And we moved into a forest and we started a homestead and we did it all with no debt.
01:14:03.000I mean, I understand what you're saying.
01:14:06.000And I do think that Brett's got a point.
01:14:09.000Like the idea of rugged individualism, the idea that people can go out and do, you know, do things, that is becoming further and further, you know, or becoming more and more rare.
01:14:24.000People look to someone else to provide for them, whether that be, you know, having the mindset of having a job or the mindset of looking to government for some kind of support or whatever.
01:14:36.000It takes a special kind of person to say, I'm going to go out and do something.
01:14:47.000And it takes, like I said earlier, it takes a type of personality to do that.
01:14:53.000And if you don't have a society that fosters those people and tries to encourage them, which I don't think we do anymore, then it becomes even more infrequent and even more rare.
01:15:06.000And I would love to see the people that do go out and put the effort into do that.
01:15:12.000I would love to see them succeed and become millionaires or billionaires and what have you.
01:15:18.000But I think without that kind of mindset being held in high esteem, we're going to continue to have fewer and fewer people that will actually go out there and try to be entrepreneurs.
01:15:28.000There are people that believe that that's becoming more common in Gen Z as like, first of all, the main, like your typical job economy is gone.
01:15:37.000Kids want to be influencers and they want to go and create online, which is in line with that idea, maybe not in the same realm of like building your own orchard, but being your own boss, creating your own content, being the person who gets yourself, you know, ad reads and paychecks and things like that and not relying on a boss, but that's out of a sense of necessity because a job isn't going to provide for them the way that they feel like they can if they're going out and betting on themselves.
01:16:01.000So there is the possibility that down the line, perhaps that becomes more common, just not in a more traditional sense.
01:16:06.000Well, the other thing is that people haven't been having children, enough children for generations.
01:16:12.000And although we can't reach everyone, for example, you have Tim Cast and you have the people that are watching right now.
01:16:22.000And to convince those people that you can reject the materialistic life, because if you ever go to a nursing home, I've never been to a nursing home, spoken to an old person.
01:16:31.000They told me about how nice their bag was or how nice their car was.
01:16:38.000And by showing people that and convincing them to have more kids themselves and to raise their kids right, you could actually start to have this culture that brews from the grassroots level of young people who start to see their power.
01:16:54.000And with that, you get lots of people who don't feel dependent on the system.
01:17:18.000It's from Sean Padreg McCarthy, who says, Zorhan Mamdani, I'm thinking it's time to review those concealed carry permits for Barry Weiss's security.
01:17:32.000I think he's implying that perhaps Barry Weiss, Zoran Mom Donnie, would be happy if she was just walking around without any bodyguards at all.
01:17:41.000Why would that matter to these people?
01:17:44.000Why would they not want Barry Weiss to have bodyguards?
01:17:47.000Maybe they're just really big fans of Luigi Mangioni.
01:17:51.000No, he couldn't be implying that he wants to facilitate Barry Weiss's murder, is he?
01:18:46.000So if the argument is you can't make a clear and imminent threat, saying Barry Weiss should have her security's weapons pulled is a death threat.
01:18:57.000Okay, if we're going to play this game where we argue, no, no, it's innuendos, it's free speech.
01:19:01.000Okay, I hope y'all are prepared for what comes next because we've seen it happen before and it'll happen again.
01:19:06.000It is already, it's what's already happened.
01:19:09.000I mean, the thing is, the socialism is not the future of the Democratic Party.
01:19:13.000It's the present of the party right now.
01:20:16.000There was a crazy revelation after that on a, I think it was on Tucker's show, but someone who served with Gilbert, who had been the speaker, and Jones, said that Gilbert's kids were running around in the Capitol all the time and were hanging out.
01:20:31.000So Jones knew the kids who he was saying he wanted to see murdered in their mother's arms.
01:20:37.000$10,000 per day for Barry Weiss's security to run.
01:21:05.000I don't want to say too much about security stuff because you don't want to give away, but they're looking at like, what is it, six guys, high-skill, trained, elite?
01:21:21.000There's people posting online that they want the weight of government to assist to facilitate the murder of Barry Weiss.
01:21:28.000And then Republicans make the opposite argument, which is always like, whenever they want to take away your guns, you're saying, but you're protected by guns.
01:21:36.000And that's the Republicans' point of saying we need to empower the citizens by giving them the right to carry a firearm.
01:21:42.000Whereas when they talk about it on the left, they want to talk about disarming people so that people can be murdered.
01:21:47.000It really pisses me off how the left is allowed to carry the narrative.
01:21:52.000And what I mean by that is anytime there's a shooting.
01:21:55.000Literally every time the left-wing politicians and the media will come out and call for further gun control.
01:22:01.000And I don't know why the right wing doesn't come out at the same time and call for arming more people.
01:22:08.000Because the bottom line is you could talk all the bull you want, but you would feel more comfortable if your child was at a school in which the teachers were armed, in which there were armed security than if they were at a school in which it was a gun-free zone.
01:22:21.000And it's the most obvious argument in the world.
01:22:23.000And anyone who says they'd rather have their child at a school that's a gun-free zone is absolutely full of it.
01:22:28.000And the truth is that the truth will resonate more if you have the courage to get it out there.
01:22:33.000And I don't know why the right wing basically cucks every time one of these incidents happens.
01:22:39.000There was a, my brother had an idea for a video game that was, and then my brother had an idea for a video game.
01:22:49.000The idea was a school shooter video game.
01:22:53.000And the point was to beat, it was to make a political point.
01:22:56.000And I was like, I don't think people are going to understand the point you're making if you're just, it's a school shooting.
01:23:00.000And I said, the game that I wanted to make was you play a middle-aged mother, maybe not middle-aged, maybe like 38, and you've got like a 10-year-old son.
01:23:10.000And the game starts, I think we actually, we should do this.
01:23:14.000The game starts with you pulling up to a school and the little boy has got his backpack and the mom's like pops the door open and she says, okay, well, you know, I'll be here at 2.30 to pick you up.
01:24:33.000And when I had the opportunity after moving to vote on a ballot measure of whether or not there would be armed cops at the school, I was like, yeah.
01:24:44.000But to your point about the rights messaging on guns, I think a big part of it goes back to what you were talking about before, which is self-sufficiency, which is that a lot of people, they would rather imagine a world that's butterflies and rainbows where guns don't exist rather than the world we actually live in, which is a fundamental difference between the left and the right, which is that the left is idealistic to a fault to the point of utopian beliefs.
01:25:08.000And the right has to more often than not operate within the world that we actually live in and be more pragmatic.
01:25:43.000And it's fascinating when I talk to them.
01:25:45.000Now, Barry Weiss, as the head of CBS News, likely is going to be covering a lot of these issues.
01:25:51.000CBS will now have a shift in their culture.
01:25:55.000She's already fired the race and culture unit.
01:25:57.000If CBS News, as one of the establishment news sources, actually takes the approach of being critical of the weird woke left stuff, this could actually shift the perception of the normies and be beneficial for the fabric of this country.
01:26:12.000Now, I'm not saying Barry Weiss's opinions are all perfect.
01:26:15.000She's got some notoriously bad takes, like that clip from Joe Rogan, also several years ago, but she's a million times better than the establishment media.
01:26:23.000This is why she has $10,000 a day security, and this is why woke people want her murdered because she breaks the narrative.
01:26:30.000They also handled the Trump interview substantially better on 60 Minutes.
01:26:38.000They posted the entire transcript, you know, and they made sure all of it was publicized.
01:26:43.000Well, one of the things that's going on right now, CBS is Paramount Skydance, which is David Ellison, and Larry Ellison has a good relationship with Donald Trump.
01:26:50.000So one step further is like right now, David Ellison is aggressively looking to buy Warner Brothers, which is CNN. And let's go.
01:26:59.000And there's already, like, CNN already has like a rocky relationship because, you know, much like everybody has their boogeyman in politics.
01:27:35.000I don't like that idea, but I don't want more people.
01:27:37.000Well, if it crushes the woke corporate media apparatus, even if Barry Weiss is a tepid liberal, it is better than what we are getting with the lie machine.
01:28:21.000Police told the Post the same day he was due to report to prison ahead of his sentencing, where he faced 30 years behind bars.
01:28:27.000Instead of coming in to take account for what has occurred here, we have been informed and we have confirmed that the father took his own life last night.
01:28:35.000Confusion apparently ensued after he failed to appear for the hearing where he'd been directed to hand himself over to police.
01:28:40.000The despicable dad, who had a known habit of leaving his kids in the car, pleaded guilty in October to second-degree murder and was expected to be officially sentenced to between 20 and 30 years this month.
01:28:51.000His death comes more than a year after his young daughter Parker was found dead in the driveway of their Murano home outside Tucson on a scorching July afternoon in 2024.
01:29:01.000When the temperature soared to 109 degrees Fahrenheit, he claimed to have left the toddler in the car around 12:30 p.m. for 30 minutes with the air conditioning on because he didn't want to wake her up from a nap.
01:29:11.000But court records later revealed he left the little girl in the car for over three hours and even admitted knowing the car would shut off automatically within a half an hour.
01:29:19.000He was inside watching porn, playing video games and drinking beer while his daughter roasted to death.
01:29:24.000His older kid from a previous marriage told investigators he would leave them in the car when they were kids, while his younger daughters with Parker's mother, Erica, reported their dad regularly left all three of them strapped in the car when he went inside.
01:29:36.000Parker's roasting body was found by her anesthesiologist mother came home around 4 p.m. with body cam footage from responding police showing Schultz break into panic while insisting he'd left her outside for no more than 30 to 45 minutes.
01:30:14.000Now, there's a lot I want to say about the story, and the reason I wanted to get into it is for the most important part of this.
01:30:21.000Let me start by saying, what a horrifyingly tragic story.
01:30:27.000The guy was clearly neglectful, should not have left his daughter in that car.
01:30:31.000And for that, he was charged with second-degree murder, pleaded guilty, and was facing 30 years in prison.
01:30:38.000In the meantime, there are people on the East Coast and places like North Carolina who have been arrested for violent crimes, aggravated assault with deadly weapons, who have been released time and time again and are allowed to murder.
01:30:52.000So I see this story and I am mad at this guy for being a retard and letting his daughter die.
01:30:59.000And he was going to go to prison for 30 years and he killed himself.
01:31:03.000Yet these people in major cities like in New York or the story everyone knows with Arena Zarutska, these recurring violent criminals in major cities are let out slap on the wrist over and over again.
01:31:18.000There is something wrong with our justice system.
01:31:23.000Sure, I don't believe he deserved 30 years, even though I think it is insane that he left his daughter in the car while he watched porn and played video games.
01:31:33.000There are people who deserve more than 30 years who are getting slaps on the wrist.
01:31:37.000So innocent people die every day because our justice system in these Democrat cities let criminals go.
01:31:47.000I mean, the fact that the justice system is broken is directly related to the actual, like, your DAs and your judges.
01:31:58.000And so those people need to be, you need to, you know, have DAs get fired or have new DAs elected.
01:32:06.000And you need to have judges, you know, impeached, get them off the bench.
01:32:11.000That's the only thing that's going to fix that.
01:32:13.000This guy, I mean, I don't want to say anything because I'm afraid that I might violate TOS. So this guy deserves punishment for what he did.
01:32:27.000But there's an important distinction between a neglectful retard and intentional violent criminals in Chicago, New York, in D.C., who they keep releasing over and over and over again.
01:32:41.000Now, by all means, the man deserved punishment, and that's not for me to decide, but he was going to get it.
01:32:46.000Why, in this case, is it swift and easy justice?
01:32:50.000It's unfortunate and sad that he killed himself.
01:33:52.000They also, I mean, I disagree too, but they also have a situation where they think that government is God, right?
01:33:57.000I mean, we remember what Tim Kaine said like a month or so ago.
01:34:02.000Tim Kaine was saying that rights come from the government, not from God.
01:34:06.000So these judges that release repeat offenders, people who have been arrested, what, like 40 times, they have literally 40 mugshots that can be posted that you can see.
01:34:17.000The judges who release these people think they are meant to be the benevolent God and that is their job to give forgiveness and grace and not punishment.
01:34:30.000I mean, I mean, that being said, like this guy, I'm not sure that he deserved 20 or 30 years in prison, but I don't know how he would live with himself for another five minutes.
01:34:44.000And that's why I look at this and I'm like, the guy was how do you face yourself?
01:34:50.000The issue is that he didn't, in my view, is he didn't intend to murder his daughter.
01:34:55.000No, he's just a total clown of a man who was driven by his own desires and very clearly led his family directly into ruin because he was so obsessed with what he wanted to do and so obsessed with what he thought was important to get himself off that he didn't care who he led down the garden path right into hell and so the question is what is the purpose of sentencing him to 30 years oh i don't know is he going to kill again um i don't i mean he might leave other kids in the car he left them all in the car
01:35:25.000plenty of times it turns out so so the answer is there should be some penalty because probably shouldn't be alone with the kids he should have restriction to these other kids or something that effect and i think prison is is appropriate my problem is by all means if you think 30 is appropriate you're allowed to my problem is this guy his his risk of killing again based on these circumstances is relatively low yeah and they can easily throw him away all these other guys in all these other cities it's like the the the likelihood there what was the story recently where
01:35:55.000the guy said it was the woman who killed that kid she stabbed the three year old she said if you let me out i'll kill and they're like okay free to go and then she went and murdered a child yes and yeah and then she like laughed in court she was like cool with it isn't there something too it's like um the majority of crimes are committed by the same handful of offenders well yeah i mean we talk about this when it comes to the you know cleaning up streets like the police in your in a in a city they know the people that are going to be a problem they know the offenders that keep repeating they they
01:36:25.000know who are the basically the shitbags right they know the guys that are causing the problems and if you wrap up a couple thousand people you basically solve Solve your crime problem because it's not like people just, it's not like a lot of people get into an economic bind and they're like, well, time to turn to a life of crime.
01:36:45.000If you're, if you're, you know, you have a predisposition towards criminal activity, you don't respect the law.
01:36:52.000These, and again, this goes back to the idea that, or the fact that I don't believe in the blank slate idea, if you have a predisposition to do things that are outside the law, you're going to continue to do those whether or not you're caught for them or not.
01:37:07.000I mean, look at look at Carlos Brown, right?
01:37:09.000The guy that killed Iriana, Iriana Zarstruska, like he'd been arrested like 14 times or something like that.
01:37:16.000He was criminally insane, but he was continuously let go because the left doesn't believe that people actually have agency.
01:37:26.000They believe that they're products or they're their society.
01:37:40.000But it turns out he had been reported by his teachers for being like totally bizarre and anti-social and violent.
01:37:47.000His family thought that he was going to kill their dad.
01:37:50.000You know, I mean, repeatedly, he had come into contact with people who thought that he was going to be a problem, and then he murdered a bunch of little girls.
01:37:59.000Throughout history, when larger countries would conquer smaller countries, or when Marxists would take power, they would put a small minority group into a position of power, and then they would allow certain minority groups to commit crimes against the majority group in the country.
01:38:24.000And what it does is it allows the host population to be terrorized and live in fear and to feel defenseless as if there's nothing they could do to fight back.
01:38:34.000So when you have Daniel Penny on a train in New York City and there's a crazy madman who is threatening children and threatening women, and Daniel Penny steps up and, I mean, statues should be built for the guy, right?
01:38:55.000And what that tells the next guy is that if something's going on in a train and you try to defend the innocence, you will be prosecuted.
01:39:05.000And I think what we're seeing in America, especially from the left, is this type of anarcho-tyranny, which is designed to turn the host population of the United States of America into a modern form of colony for part of the bigger globalist agenda.
01:40:11.000They were very active in New Jersey doing Chase the Ballot, Chase the Vote things there.
01:40:18.000They did a lot of rallies for Chitterelli.
01:40:21.000Yeah, I think Tyler Bauer is doing a really good job with that.
01:40:25.000Let's go to your chats and Rumble Rants, smash the like button, share the show, but also click the link in the description below and pick up your tickets to the Culture War podcast live this Saturday.
01:40:39.000Oh boy, is that really only in three days?
01:40:44.000Oh boy, we got some big announcements.
01:40:46.000We've got Alex Stein, Myron Gaines, Brian Shapiro, Jessica Misitano, and Farah Khalidi, a feminist only fans model who will be on stage debating modern dating.
01:41:01.000So this naturally will get pretty spicy.
01:41:03.000I think we're just a little bit more than half sold on the tickets.
01:41:06.000So there's still plenty of room for you guys.
01:43:35.000That's really hard to do and not something that we can actually afford.
01:43:41.000And so we live, we're in West Virginia, as everyone knows.
01:43:46.000Tucker Carlson, I believe, is in Maine.
01:43:48.000He moved out to the middle of nowhere.
01:43:50.000Increasingly, more and more prominent individuals have begun to prepare to bug out, and they're not disclosing when or where they're going.
01:44:00.000I've just started hearing rumors about this.
01:44:02.000Some of the most prominent individuals you may watch on a daily basis are gearing up to start isolating, much like Tucker did.
01:44:09.000Because among all these people, as much as it's fair to say, many of them are pointing this out, I don't think people understand how seriously prominent conservative personalities are taking this.
01:44:24.000I've heard some rumors about some prominent individuals that you guys probably watch and whether or not they'll keep doing this in the future.
01:44:32.000I will also say, seems like Steven Crowder's going completely in the other direction.
01:44:36.000Didn't someone just like attack one of his staff?
01:45:06.000I was actually somewhat surprised at who I heard the rumors about, several people, but I'm not surprised it's happening because I've publicly talked about the threats are getting so insane that I'll put it simply for you guys.
01:45:21.000Prominent conservative has children and cares more about his family and kids than the amount of money they make doing a show.
01:45:28.000And they've got more than enough to live off of more than enough to live off of the time being.
01:45:33.000And they want to reduce their footprint in the space as death threats escalate.
01:45:38.000I'll just stress, we literally have a post from a guy who's calling for the murder of Barry Weiss.
01:45:43.000It's like we are at that point where Jay Jones is AG. And the conversations that are happening now, I'll just give you full disclosure.
01:45:56.000And immediately the security assessment is this is a very serious cause for alarm and threat and it's time to start increasing your security spend.
01:46:03.000And I'm like, okay, who are we firing and what are we shutting down?
01:46:07.000And that's the reality of the cost it's going to take to keep going on like this.
01:47:30.000Except this made up 6% of the voting voter base.
01:47:35.000So if none of them voted, Mamdani still would have won.
01:47:40.000So certainly there is an issue with their ideology, but there's many, many more issues.
01:47:46.000Shergall says, I forgot where I learned this, but there's a stronger correlation to success with holding a job for at least six months versus getting a degree.
01:48:01.000Ms. Fitbrad says this is the perfect time for Islam to invade.
01:48:05.000Half the right is questioning Israel and pretty much all of the psychotic left is against Israel for Palestine.
01:48:09.000They are welcoming this with open arms.
01:48:13.000And I think the people who are the Israel first people, which goes both ways, pro and anti, the anti-Israel people think Israel is the nexus of all problems they've ever faced because they're stupid.
01:48:25.000And the pro-Israel people will fervently defend Israel without giving any legitimate or strong reason.
01:48:32.000I'm not saying there aren't people who have good reasons.
01:48:34.000Arguments, I'm saying there's this cohort of people on X, largely DeSantis voters, and they're just the worst at supporting Israel.
01:48:43.000They just come off as cringe and smug.
01:48:45.000And these people care more about Israel than they do about the internal problems.
01:48:49.000And it's another reason Republicans don't win.
01:48:54.000Smith says, Timmy, forgetting about the one successful revolution in the U.S. history, the Battle of Athens, Tennessee, where a town led an armed revolt against their corrupt town government.
01:49:44.000So I think communists could take power whether women vote them in or not.
01:49:47.000Listen, to be fair, men let women vote.
01:49:50.000Everybody that thinks that repealing the 19th Amendment, everyone that thinks that repealing the 19th Amendment is a good idea, you're totally wrong.
01:50:27.000I mean, even if, even if you went with just property owners, like, you know, it talks about in the Constitution, a lot of women own property now because we are past the 70s.
01:50:37.000Like I said, it's not about women to me, but just repealing the, like, even if you got rid of 50% of the people that vote or women, that's not enough.
01:50:45.000What do you think about the Voting Rights Act and where the Supreme Court's headed with that?
01:52:09.000And the reason it closed was because they said it was time to move and be closer to family.
01:52:13.000And it's really interesting that I keep hearing this from a lot of different people that what I think is happening is economic turmoil combined with political conflict.
01:52:23.000And people are saying, I just want to be about my family.
01:52:26.000And so they're basically saying, I'm done with all this.
01:52:28.000I wouldn't be surprised if in California, a lot of the legacy farms shut down and just say, look, we've got more than enough for our nest egg.
01:53:03.000Yeah, it's not correct because even Trump's point, it's called being underleveraged.
01:53:08.000When inflation is high, but growth is better, then inflation may be going up, but individuals' purchasing power increases, and that is possible.
01:54:23.000I am not being cute, and I'm not saying every single woman everywhere.
01:54:27.000I'm saying there is a mathematically visible phenomenon where women, a certain percentage and a great percentage, skew towards wanting a murderer.
01:54:44.000Plenty of people are not go back in time 2,000 years, and you have a man and a woman, and the man says, Look, I don't want to get into a fight.
01:55:44.000Basically, what it looks like is when women are sitting around each other, none of them want to admit they are attracted to Luigi Mangioni for being a murderer and physically attractive because they're concerned what the other women might say about them if they deviate from the social social order.
01:56:02.000Is this just what you were doing talking with all the girls recently?
01:56:37.000So the point is: if you go into a, if you bring a group of women who don't know each other and say, how many of you want a man to beat you while he does you?
01:56:47.000They're all going to be like, no, oh, oh, oh, I never.
01:56:50.000And then if you say, how many of you bought 50 Shades of Grey and fantasize about the book?
01:57:31.000I got a summary because I don't actually know.
01:57:34.000And so this may be wrong because AI is usually wrong.
01:57:36.000But 21-year-old Virgin meets a 27-year-old billionaire who makes her sign a slave contract so that he can do whatever he wants and she lets him do it.
01:57:46.000And that was like, women were like, this is the best book ever.
01:57:49.000The next big thing that's going on with women is the Minotaur, Glory Hole.
01:58:33.000Because in a world where there are Minotaurs that need to be milked, there's also student loan debt.
01:58:41.000The only reason the Minotaur ended up existing anyway is because the king of Crete refused to give Neptune his bull after Neptune let him helped him win the war.
01:58:52.000And so he bewitched the queen into being hot for the bull.
01:58:58.000These women know anything that you just said.
02:03:01.000And so you make a sexy picture of a guy, and then you, you can even AI generate this, but you write a short, maybe you only need 100 pages, where he talks about how he has an urge to kill, but not you.
02:03:35.000My story, then what you do is you put it on Amazon, self-publish, and then you make an advertisement for it called The Sexy Serial Killer with a sexy cover.
02:03:45.000And then you figure out what your price point is.
02:03:48.000How much does it cost in advertisements to sell one book?
02:07:12.000I've grown tired of the increasing incivility and plain nastiness that are now common from some element of our American community.
02:07:18.000Additionally, recent incidents of political violence have made me reassess the frequent threats against me and my family.
02:07:23.000He said the killing of Charlie Kirk and other violent acts influenced his decision.
02:07:27.000A retired Marine said he and his family spent last Thanksgiving in a hotel room after a threat against their home.
02:07:33.000Again, I'm willing to bet it's the left.
02:07:35.000Yeah, I mean, I would agree the left are where the violence kind of lives.
02:07:40.000No matter what the media tries to tell you, the left has been where the violence in the U.S., political violence in the U.S., has come from for the past five, six years, almost exclusively.
02:07:53.000And maybe even, maybe even 10 years, because I just saw someone talking about talking about the future of the United States is nationalism versus socialism or communism.
02:08:05.000And this was something that I was predicting back in 2016 when the left started saying, oh, it's okay to punch a Nazi.
02:08:12.000I was like, that is a very illiberal thing to say.
02:08:15.000It is not okay to say punching Nazis is okay.
02:08:19.000Historically, in the United States, we've protected even the rights of Nazis to speak.
02:08:24.000That was the whole Skokie, Illinois, you know, Supreme Court case.
02:08:29.000And that's something that for a long time, people in the United States had taken pride in: that we would listen to even the most horrible and we would hear their argument so that way they wouldn't fester and so that way you could argue against them.
02:08:46.000And that has totally disappeared with young people today.
02:08:51.000I mean, I think that a lot of the studies that have come out recently show that leftist political violence has been on the rise for about a decade.
02:09:45.000That after 9-11, there was a point in which George W. Bush threw out the first pitch at Yankee Stadium.
02:09:53.000And anyone could go look up this video.
02:09:55.000And he got a rousing round of applause.
02:09:58.000And public opinion polls at one point showed that he had a 90% approval rating in the United States of America, which to think about that today, right?
02:10:07.000Like a Democrat or a Republican could have a 90% approval rating is really insane.
02:10:15.000And then as the years passed after that and people started to learn about the lies and then the WMDs in Iraq lie and the invasion of Iraq and all that.
02:10:32.000And then there was the big, the great script flip.
02:10:36.000Because for years, they had told us that the number one threat to all of us was radical Islamic terrorism and that there were these guys putting bombs and shoes and doing all this crazy stuff.
02:10:47.000And that before you went to a concert, you had to check the alert level.
02:10:51.000And if it was renowned to go to that concert because it's probably going to get blown up, you're probably going to die.
02:10:59.000And then Obama comes in and does a complete 180 and says, no, no, if you have any negative thoughts about what they're saying is radical Islamic terrorism, then it's because you're filled with hate.
02:11:12.000So to take this 180-degree flip, right, it completely splintered the country.
02:11:19.000And then everything after that became about race.
02:11:23.000And it really created a boiling point where by the time Trump came along and he said, listen, we need to secure the border, that was all the left needed because race had become everything under Obama.
02:11:37.000That was all the left needed for the country to just explode.
02:11:43.000And the right to be viewed as hateful when in reality, if you're, and this kind of goes back to what you were saying before, what right-wing America started to figure out is that we do have to get back to nationalism.
02:11:56.000We do have to get back to putting America above everything else.
02:12:15.000Well, I say that like it's obvious, right?
02:12:17.000But the whole point is that when you followed legal immigration process, you had to spend a lot of money, a lot of time, and put in a lot of effort to come here.
02:12:24.000And it ensured more often than not that they were going to be amenable to American values.
02:12:29.000And they were actually proud to live here, which is why there's still a bit of a gap between people who think it's one of the reasons why their language is so nefarious when they refer to immigration rather than referring to it as illegal immigration, right?
02:12:43.000Because when Americans thought about the idea of the, you know, the great melting pot, that was something where you could look completely different from your neighbors, but you coalesced around the idea that you loved America and you loved what America stood for.
02:12:54.000Now you are all going to behave properly in public.
02:13:06.000The world that you were born into no longer exists.
02:13:08.000It's been fundamentally drained and bled dry by politicians over the last 20 years.
02:13:14.000And it did start, you know, I mean, I would say even around the time Bush was in office and earlier.
02:13:19.000If you went back to the early 1900s, employees of Henry Ford had to go through what was, I believe it was called the Henry Ford Americanization School.
02:13:29.000And they would go through this elaborate schooling process where they were forced, if they wanted to work for Ford, they were forced to study the Constitution, study the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights, understand American values.
02:13:46.000And at the end of this elaborate schooling process, they had a ceremony in which they would start on one part of a stage with their natural flag, whether it was from Italy or Ireland or wherever they were from.
02:14:03.000They would walk across the stage and they would pick up an American flag.
02:14:07.000And then everyone would celebrate that they have now embraced America.
02:14:10.000And there was this idea, this wasn't unique to Ford.
02:14:14.000There was this idea that if you wanted to come to the United States of America, then you owe it to the people that are Americans to assimilate into this country.
02:14:24.000And that has been so lost that even legal immigration now is a threat to the people of the United States of America.
02:14:33.000Because if you're bringing people from different parts of the world, from different cultures who don't value 1776, they don't value the American Revolution, and you're not, not only are you not forcing them to assimilate, but you're using American schools to teach their children that the host population of America, their history is rotten to its core, then the end result of that is going to be people who turn against the Declaration of Independence and turn against the Bill of Rights.
02:15:02.000So back in 2016, the Trump base felt that.
02:15:06.000And yes, they said illegal immigration, but the bigger thing was immigration.
02:15:11.000And the bigger thing was, do we have a right to our own country?
02:15:15.000And I think that's really a major part of the battle, whether it's we have a right to our borders, whether it's we have a right to being the main influence over our politicians.