On today's show, we discuss the latest in politics, including the latest on the Biden and Trump polls, and the near-death experience that almost killed John Fetterman. Plus, we have a call-in show where you, the listeners, get to call in and ask questions.
00:00:00.000A massive wave of right-wing populist victories in the EU is causing chaos, Politico says.
00:00:22.000AFD in Germany came in second place, and in France, the victory of Marine Le Pen's populist party was so pronounced that Macron has dissolved French Parliament.
00:00:32.000Many people suggest that the victories we're seeing in Europe are a sign of things to come in the United States.
00:00:36.000Donald Trump will win in a landslide victory, they say.
00:00:39.000You know, don't count your eggs before they hatch.
00:00:41.000We'll see how things go, but this is tremendous news for Europe.
00:00:43.000The people of Europe are furious over the failed policies that we've seen so far, these globalist policies, international policies, and immigration policies.
00:00:51.000So of course, people are voting, and they're winning.
00:00:55.000There are also riots happening in France, and some people are trying to act like that's related, but I gotta be honest, French people just riot.
00:01:02.000It's kind of the thing they do, and they're riding over a motorway, so, you know, it is what it is, but we'll talk about that.
00:01:07.000Then we got Joe Biden's approval rating hitting a new low, which is shocking.
00:01:13.000And Donald Trump's polling seems to be stable, although the media keeps trying to claim that
00:01:42.000After it happened, the progressivism left his body.
00:01:45.000So we're gonna talk about that, but before we do, my friends, tonight we are sponsored by the one and only MyPillow!
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00:02:08.000Mike says that when he started MyPillow, it was a one-problem, one-solution company.
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00:02:52.000We're big fans of his work, and I am grateful that he is sponsoring us and check it out Michael calm also Head over to TimCast.com, click join us to become a member, because we're going to have that members-only uncensored call-in show coming up tonight at 10pm, where you, as members, get to call in and talk to us.
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00:03:33.000I mainly focus on door-knocking for America First and libertarian-type Republicans, and this cycle I've been tapped to run the ballot-chasing effort in Pennsylvania, something we call the PA Chase.
00:03:44.000I'm going to match the Democrats at their own tactics, hire 120 folks, and try to run up the score in mail-in ballots.
00:04:54.000The far right is them saying, hey, we shouldn't encourage people to take treacherous journeys and risk their lives to come to a country where we don't have the tax base to support them.
00:05:18.000I think that's what's most interesting about sort of the rise of an interest in protecting individual nations in Europe, because Europe is, to scale, so much smaller than America.
00:05:27.000I mean, we are used to all the states having to have the conversation about immigration, but could you imagine if every state set their own immigration policy?
00:05:34.000That's effectively what Europe has to deal with, and especially with the EU.
00:05:40.000If the EU rules them in a way that says, like, well, we set the immigration policy and your countries have to deal with it, of course you're going to get people who are saying, well, then you're sort of abusing us and we don't want to put up with this anymore.
00:05:51.000It seems inevitable to me, but I guess I'm not a progressive from Europe.
00:05:55.000The idea that any of this is quote-unquote far-right is ridiculous.
00:05:59.000The only reason it's called far-right is because the phrase far-right has been programmed into people or conditioned into people to, for them to think, people have been conditioned to think the term far-right means just evil.
00:06:21.000And this goes to show you, again, this is something that we reiterate on the show all the time, the left doesn't have an argument, the left has emotions.
00:06:29.000The left doesn't make arguments, they don't try to make arguments.
00:07:00.000After announcing that he will dissolve parliament and call snap legislative elections in the wake of his allies crushing defeat to Marine Le Pen's far-right national rally in Sunday's European Parliament into elections.
00:07:09.000On a night that saw far-right parties make significant but far from conclusive gains
00:07:13.000in Europe, the RN won about 32% of French votes, more than double the 15 or so scored
00:07:19.000by Macron's allies, according to projections, with the Socialists just behind at about 14%.
00:07:25.000The first round of elections for the National Assembly will take place on the 30th of June,
00:07:31.000Macron announced an address to the nation in a huge gamble on his political future three years before the end of his second term as president.
00:07:37.000Now, some people are actually saying it's the honorable move to make.
00:07:41.000That by doing this, it's actually allowing Marine Le Pen to come in and win political power.
00:08:14.000There's state legislatures and representatives, and then there's the federal level.
00:08:18.000EU is effectively their version of the federal level Congress, and so they win in France.
00:08:25.000Macron then says, okay, we're going to have an election here in this country for our single French parliament, which we are expecting now the far right.
00:08:36.000Which is interesting because Marine Le Pen, I'm pretty sure she's anti-EU, what she wants out of the EU, she wants, what do they call it, Frexit?
00:08:45.000I don't think they'll get it, but it's starting to look like the, I don't know, the belt is buckling under the girth of the gluttonous global elite.
00:09:00.000Look, there was a time when countries were trying to be more independent, and that all ended, I think, after World War II, right?
00:09:10.000And now it's like, ever since it's like the UN, and now there's the EU, it's like we're trying to make all these different countries across the world enter into these, I don't want to call them PACs, but these organizations that are super national, right?
00:09:25.000And essentially, it's my opinion that, like Tim said, it's just You know, the global elite or the power brokers trying to consolidate as much power as they can.
00:09:35.000They want to... Most of these organizations, the UN, you know, the EU and stuff, they would like to have the ability to veto any of the individual nations' laws.
00:09:47.000Not their votes in the EU or whatever, but their individual laws in the nations.
00:09:52.000There are definitely people in the UN that would love to be able to veto you know, American state laws. But they, I mean, obviously
00:10:01.000we have the ability to stop them, but that's the ideal and that's the goal. And that's part
00:10:06.000of why you see all of the, I believe, part of the reason why you see all of the
00:10:10.000ecological stuff, the word is slipping, it's the dumbest thing that I'm, I can't
00:10:32.000No, I'm just saying, you know, with one government, right?
00:10:34.000Like as these different world governments are coming together, I shouldn't say one world government, but you know what I mean, when these NATO groups and, you know, I mean, even the hatred for like the World Economic Forum, you know, people, I think normal folks, you get to a point where there's too, I don't want to say too many people, but you don't want to just have one set of rules, right?
00:10:51.000When we talk about a national divorce or we talk about like, you get to a point where maybe The guys in New York City and the kids in Alabama that are working a blue collar job are not going to agree on all the same policies.
00:11:03.000And I think that's what you're seeing.
00:11:04.000And if you're a Democrat, or let me just say that the globalist elite type in the U.S.
00:11:10.000and you look and see these national elections, I mean, the trend is coming towards the populism.
00:11:55.000But if we get any kind of, short of, like anything less than a decade, And it's going to just be abject chaos.
00:12:02.000Yeah, no, once again, I'm not advocating for it.
00:12:05.000I just think at a certain point, the debt gets so high, like I said, the laws for everybody being one size fits all, I just think there's too much pushback.
00:12:14.000But that would be more indicative of when the system comes crashing down, no one's going to be happy with what it looks like.
00:12:20.000I think, you know, if you look at the fall of the Soviet Union, people need to – you can look to history, because history rhymes, and then figure out what's coming next.
00:12:27.000The same thing I would say is true for the EU in a different sense.
00:12:31.000The EU being relatively young, should this movement we see – and we have another story that we'll pull up in a second with Germany – should this movement result in states, countries, breaking away from the EU?
00:12:43.000They're still in a position to sustain themselves much better, but with Brexit, I think they tried to make Brexit as painful as possible, because once they took back control, they were like, let's burn it to the ground, make everyone feel the pain.
00:12:55.000I think the same thing's true with Biden in Afghanistan.
00:13:39.000Well, a guy shows up with a group of other dudes armed to the teeth, and they say, we want to talk to the boss of this meat processing plant.
00:13:47.000And he comes down and he's like, look man, I have no idea what's going on.
00:14:48.000But then, of course, I imagine the people who live in Nevada are going to be hungry, and they're going to not want to give up their homes, and they're going to want food.
00:14:56.000It's going to mean they're going to go out looking for food, and they're going to find it, and they're going to take it, however they have to.
00:15:08.000I do think, you know, a major American city, especially like Nevada or maybe even Phoenix, to a certain extent, I'm not a geographic expert here, team, but they have benefited from the fact that we encourage interstate commerce and we encourage development that allows people to live where they naturally wouldn't have settled.
00:15:26.000I think, in contrast, Europe Because they are all actually their own countries and have their own economies, it's much easier for them to come to the realization that they could break away.
00:15:36.000I mean, there are parts of Europe that have different challenges, but for the most part, American businesses, in my opinion, American businesses and American state governments are used to a certain amount of interdependency, where that wasn't always the case in Europe.
00:15:48.000The story I was told from the Spanish activists was really interesting, how the EU just basically mutilated them.
00:15:54.000They said, so this is what the activists told me when I was in Spain back in like 2012, they said, before the EU, the currency was the peseta.
00:16:02.000And you'd wake up in the morning, you'd go to the local, you know, coffee shop or whatever, you'd grab a newspaper.
00:16:57.000German conservatives first, far-right and AFD second in EU election.
00:17:03.000Alternative for Germany beats Chancellor Olaf Scholz's Social Democrats, who had their worst result in a national election in the party's history.
00:17:11.000There's a crazy thing in the story that there was one guy, let me see if I can find this, he was convicted for saying everything for Germany.
00:17:19.000I guess it's not in here, I think it's in the New York Post story.
00:17:22.000But it's a crime in Germany to say everything for Germany.
00:17:27.000When you try to take over Europe, laws reflect that kind of ambition after you lose.
00:17:34.000So this is very similar to the French story.
00:17:36.000AFD, which is considered the right-wing populist party, isn't doing as well as Marine Le Pen, but they say, the conservative alliance of the Christian Democratic Union and the Christian Social Union finished first in Sunday's European election, winning 30.2% of the vote, according to a projection from German public television.
00:17:53.000While the conservative victory was expected, the real race in Germany was for runner-up.
00:17:59.000The far-right Alternative for Germany party was projected to finish second with 16%, a gain of 5 points, compared to the 2019 EU election.
00:18:08.000If the result holds, it will be seen as a big success for a party that has been beset by scandals in recent months.
00:18:13.000The party's top two candidates for EU election were implicated in a series of sensational allegations of misconduct involving suspected espionage and potential Russian influence.
00:18:21.000Yeah, I don't believe any of it, to be honest.
00:18:23.000Most recently, the party's lead candidate, Maximilian Krah, was forced to stop campaigning after he defended members of Hitler's Waffen-SS as not automatically criminals.
00:18:40.000Nationalists and populist parties are projected to make sizable gains.
00:18:45.000Nigel Farage is running too, so it just looks like... I think when you have unfettered immigration, illegal immigration, and you've got these insane videos of... I mean, I hate to say it, but there's crime.
00:19:00.000And sooner or later, there is a majority that will vote the majority.
00:19:06.000I've been saying this to progressives.
00:19:07.000I remember I was having a conversation like 10 years ago with some progressives, and I'm just telling them, like, you do realize unfettered immigration Mass influx of non-citizens results in a majority backlash.
00:19:23.000If you have immigration slow, measured, allowing people to assimilate, everything goes smooth.
00:19:29.000You bring in five million people in four years, and then you will get a massive whiplash.
00:19:35.000There you go, Donald Trump, he's coming.
00:19:36.000And it's all because a lot of governments, the people in governments, are essentially ashamed of their own countries and ashamed of the fact that they have a successful Western country and that the rest of the world doesn't have the same kind of success.
00:19:53.000There's different countries with different government types and different cultures and you're going to end up with different results.
00:19:58.000That's why different countries are good.
00:20:02.000The idea that we should get rid of that?
00:20:05.000Should just homogenize the whole world and have one country with one government, you know, the global government and one law for the whole world?
00:20:18.000Because what we're seeing in numerous countries that have tried multiculturalism is that two groups that don't like each other will end up fighting.
00:20:26.000So a tyrannical force then comes in and tells both of them to sit down and shut up and takes from them.
00:20:30.000You have a country of a shared culture.
00:20:47.000I mean, you say this with, like, Minnesota has laws on the books about female genital mutilation, right?
00:20:52.000Like, that wasn't just something that was born of the Scandinavian population that settled there.
00:20:56.000I mean, the other part is that there is nationalism or populist parties on the rise in, like, Italy, in the Netherlands, in Gre- like, it's happening- Greece not as much, but, like, Netherlands, Finland, it's happening all over the place again because ultimately I think it's this waking up of being, like, Instead of being told for generations, we need to be welcoming, you need to be tolerant.
00:21:18.000On the other hand, people are turning around saying, like, I think I need to put my family and my citizens and my neighbors first and realize that the thing that we have built for generations is special and worth protecting.
00:21:29.000makes promises, and then they don't actually produce the results they promised, then the population's gonna be like, we want a new government.
00:21:37.000It's the biggest failure of virtue signaling, politically, I think ever.
00:21:44.000Until these folks, right now, they still have sex, and by the way, I have no idea about this election, I guarantee you, the Social Democrat platform is not combating the idea that they need to close their border.
00:21:56.000And I think you're seeing that in the states.
00:21:57.000And I think until those people in the party realize the virtue signal is not going to win elections, that normal people are waking up saying, hey, you know, you're right.
00:22:13.000And it's crazy because the left still has that narrative and it still works for a lot of the base.
00:22:19.000Not to turn them out, but I mean, they control that narrative and they're not open to the idea of saying, listen, there's this rise in populism.
00:22:26.000And when I say populism, I mean, you know, being proud of your own country, right?
00:22:30.000Being able to say, yeah, America first, not because you hate other people, but because you want to have a great place to live.
00:22:37.000But I think until that bow breaks, And it's happening now, I think, across the country, across the world.
00:22:43.000There's still that sect and they're going to eventually realize you cannot win an election when you're pushing this idea that we have to have open borders all the time.
00:22:51.000I wonder, do leftists not have, like, a sense of nostalgia?
00:22:55.000Like honest question. They're afraid of being called a bigot.
00:22:58.000They're afraid. There's so much Past is bad. Yeah, any any anything because the uh leftists
00:23:04.000are thinking that I mean you look at the French revolution. They they restarted their calendar. You
00:23:08.000look at that china. They restarted their calendar. There's a when there is a new uh, when
00:23:12.000there is a socialist kind of government that leftist, uh idea they always want to start over with a day
00:23:17.000one and that's happened on a ton of stuff because they they look at the past and they see any
00:23:22.000of the failures and they're like this is all because of capitalism or whatever the organization was
00:23:28.000monarchy or whatever all of the bad things we have to wash all of that away wipe it all
00:23:31.000away and we have to start fresh day one new man and this go that that's what it really goes to it's
00:23:36.000it's restarting everything they want to restart man and I I think I think to the past and I
00:23:41.000remember all the good stuff I don't really think that much about the bad stuff.
00:23:46.000I mean, like, we want to get rid of it.
00:23:47.000We want to remember the good stuff, and we want to make more good stuff.
00:23:51.000And I wonder if, like, you, because Anna Claire, you're mentioning that the things that we have built over generations are good things.
00:23:59.000I remember waking up on Christmas Eve, It's sunrise, candles are out, but the Christmas lights are on and we're running to get the presents.
00:24:09.000And then I remember going to the breakfast place and they got the buffet with all the French toast sticks.
00:24:26.000And America, I find this particularly interesting because I think Americans take for granted the regional culture that we have.
00:24:33.000And part of that is historic immigration.
00:24:34.000Part of that is just like the fact that different people started doing different things.
00:24:37.000Like one of my favorite stories that I could be totally wrong.
00:24:40.000Somebody's happy to fact check me on this one.
00:24:42.000I had heard that the origins of Father's Day, which is I think coming up this Sunday, was actually from West Virginia, that there had been a mining town where there had been a very significant collapse.
00:24:51.000And so lots of fathers, grandfathers died and a church started it as a way to sort of like help kids whose fathers were gone.
00:25:00.000And I think that's really interesting, right?
00:25:02.000Now Father's Day is something we're all used to.
00:25:04.000People might argue it's corporate, whatever else, or maybe we're not supposed to talk about fathers because that's a gendered term.
00:25:10.000But these are customs that we developed because we had values that we wanted to reflect and pass down to our children.
00:25:17.000And I think that is something that if you look at everything in the past as if it were a threat to you now, you're never able to move forward and see what you're taking with you to build a better future.
00:25:30.000So, this is funny, because Wikipedia says Father's Day was founded in Spokane, Washington, in 1910.
00:25:38.000Sonora Smart Dodd, who was born in Arkansas, it celebrated blah blah blah, but then down here it says, a Father's Day service was held in 1908 in Fairmont, West Virginia, after a mining disaster killed 361 men, 250 of them were fathers.
00:25:52.000So, would that not... Leaving around a thousand fatherless children.
00:26:17.000But I just mean, like, ultimately, we want to take things and make them good to continue to have a structure and a culture.
00:26:25.000And I think that when we don't allow other nations to do – like, when Americans say, like, well, why would the EU not welcome all kinds of, you know, immigrants?
00:26:44.000He's considered a left-leaning populist and at one point he had gotten in trouble because he had said to the EU, well, we only want to welcome Christian migrants because we are a Christian nation.
00:26:55.000And they were like, fake it, bad person.
00:26:58.000But it's interesting because if that's part of the fabric of your culture, like, why wouldn't you prioritize?
00:27:03.000You know, there's another phenomenon, too, that people probably aren't thinking of.
00:27:10.000And that's the fact that a lot of the cultures that are going into Europe have a very different culture.
00:27:18.000And the Europeans, they don't have the backbone to stand up to them.
00:27:25.000Well, the people do, but the governments don't.
00:27:28.000So this effort by the people to change their government is literally an effort for them to protect them.
00:27:34.000Because if the government doesn't, if you don't have a government that can stand up to the whims of new populations, so if you get a lot of Muslims that want Sharia or want stuff like that, those things are abhorrent to Western Civilizations.
00:27:49.000You can't have Sharia law in a Western country.
00:27:51.000If you don't have a liberal government that's got the backbone to stand up and say, no, we're not going to have those kinds of things.
00:27:59.000Like Tim said, we're already having that stuff kind of here with the whole LGBT stuff.
00:28:04.000You'll see the same thing in Europe with a lot of Islam and stuff because the Islamic people, they won't tolerate the stuff that the liberals will.
00:28:13.000So the liberals have to at least have as much backbone as the people that are coming in.
00:28:18.000And if they don't, the people that are coming in are going to take over.
00:28:37.000Me and the homies, we get together, we order pizza and wings, and we play Xbox split-screen from back in 2006 on our old garbage backlit TV.
00:28:47.000And if you don't like it, you can leave.
00:28:48.000And I can't imagine, like, you do this thing because it's fun to do, it's fun with your friends, you enjoy doing it, and then what?
00:28:54.000You invite some people over and they're like, nah, we're here now and so now you have to do what we want to do.
00:29:01.000This idea that liberals have where it's like, anyone can come here and anyone can do whatever they want and then we're going to change the fabric of society for them too.
00:29:07.000Instead of putting Merry Christmas up everywhere, we're going to put Happy Holidays.
00:29:15.000Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, whatever they want to do, that's absolutely fine.
00:29:18.000But if we traditionally in this town celebrate Christmas, why should we change that?
00:29:23.000They can come and celebrate with us, and they can do what they want to do.
00:29:26.000They can have their celebration when they want to have their celebration, and we'll do ours.
00:29:31.000I think this is what's happening in Europe, is that people remember growing up as kids, they remember the things that they liked, and they want to transfer down to the kids that they're having, if they're having kids.
00:29:42.000And there are people who come in who don't share those things.
00:29:44.000And then their local towns say, well, look, 30% of the population here, they want to celebrate, you know, this different holiday.
00:29:49.000So they voted and we have to accommodate them.
00:29:52.000And that takes away from the traditions that people know, love, and enjoy for no reason.
00:29:58.000Cultural traditions, like celebrating a holiday, bring people together with shared experiences and helps strengthen a community which you need to survive.
00:30:31.000You know, it's good when it's good, but we do pizza and wings on Friday.
00:30:33.000I think one of the challenges, if you're asking people, you know, I'm pretty anti-immigration.
00:30:38.000I think that's pretty clear to everyone.
00:30:40.000But if you're asking people, so you have whatever amount of net migration you're saying, Please come to our country, respect our laws, and we'll try our best to help you acclimate to our culture.
00:30:49.000If we're saying, but actually we don't care about our culture and we're kind of getting rid of it and we'll really do whatever you're wanting, like, you're actually not giving anyone who immigrates the tools to become a part of your society.
00:30:58.000And I think that is, you know, it's this weird challenge between being like, well, we thought we were so welcoming that we just do away with everything that made us a country, which made them want to come here in the first place.
00:31:09.000And so now we don't know what we're doing and we're all kind of fighting for our power structure.
00:31:48.000Because when somebody makes a choice, and the motive's there, and there aren't enough people or governments or whatever pushing back, they're never gonna stop.
00:31:57.000The worst thing about it is that if we were like, it's Taco Tuesday, and it's like, this is what we do at work on Tuesday, we just order a bunch of tacos and stuff, and you know, because we like it, we like it.
00:32:07.000And a lot of people need to understand this, that like, tacos, burritos, as most people know, it's Tex-Mex.
00:33:45.000The more the left can destabilize your society, the more they're going to, because that's their Access to power when they can destabilize the society then you have riffs in society and you have people that have tensions and stuff They can find those those tensions and they can pick at him and pick at him.
00:34:03.000It's the dialectic you know, it's the whole like look for the problem and pick up the problem because essentially The idea in the ideologically informed leftist, I understand your perspective and some people don't consider the leftist to be all that philosophical or whatever.
00:34:19.000There is a core of it that comes from philosophy and it is that they believe the perfected society exists and all of these bad things have wrapped up around it and the more they pick the bad things away, the more that you'll be able to expose the good thing inside.
00:35:13.000Okay, for those that don't know, it's a reference to Beavis and Butthead, where Beavis, upon having a consuming psychoactive stimulants of some sort, because it wasn't just coffee, one time he ate pills, would pull his shirt over his head and then put his hands out like this and start walking around with his hands up.
00:35:27.000So this is an actual phenomenon that happens to people with dementia.
00:35:30.000They begin to experience it's called called called cornhole.
00:35:33.000Oh, hands where their arms are 90 degree angle and they walk around going like
00:37:17.000In a recent poll, 62% of Americans have said they would approve of mass deportation efforts in the U.S., including a majority of Hispanic voters.
00:37:30.000This is despite him taking executive action on the border, which reportedly will not stop at least 1.5 million illegal immigrants.
00:37:36.000Well, let me give you some, let me enlighten you on that one.
00:37:38.000It'll stop zero because they've created exceptions for all of them.
00:37:42.000And apparently the instructions from CBP is to do nothing.
00:37:46.000So even though Biden claims that he came out and did this, the actual legitimate response is keep doing exactly what you're doing.
00:37:55.000I think the left has an information problem because they're used to being able to solve these so-called problems where they're polling horribly by just relying on the mainstream media.
00:38:11.000They put this press release out and they think, oh, you know, there's a problem at the border, but Biden's handling now he's put something out.
00:39:46.000And I really think that this first debate is going to be the final straw.
00:39:50.000His approval rating is going to go to one.
00:39:53.000Could you imagine if he walks out there with the Cornholio hands and his eyes squinted and then all of a sudden his back just straightens out, his hands come down, his eyes open wide and he says, I'm here to debate Donald Trump and save this country from this man.
00:40:14.000I think this is becoming the thing that mainstream media is trying to point out.
00:40:18.000I watched this clip on Morning Joe where they have Biden being interviewed in Normandy and he's like, He's got this weird whisper now.
00:40:25.000It's like, you know, we can never, we have to stay and support our allies and like, they want to act like he's acting very serious, but actually he's just sort of like losing his voice and mind.
00:40:36.000But the next segment, they were like, well, Trump at this rally told this story about shark attacks, and it made no sense.
00:40:42.000He's clearly losing his mind and this, that and the other, like, because Biden is actually not doing well, and it's not even to be mean.
00:40:50.000Like, he does not seem to be performing at the level that he was during the 2020 campaign.
00:40:55.000He does not seem to be performing at the level that he was, you know, even two years ago.
00:40:59.000They are now trying to shift the narrative to be like, well, Trump is the one who's losing his mind.
00:41:04.000And I don't know how you feel about this.
00:41:05.000Like, I wonder if during the debate, the strategy from Biden's team is going to be just try and make Trump mad and have him talk about his record.
00:41:14.000Because I think the most powerful thing Trump could do is to push Biden on where we are as a country under his leadership.
00:41:20.000I think my advice to him is to be the Trump of 2016 in the debates, not the Trump of 2020.
00:42:05.000We thought caffefe was bad, but now we've got them verbally.
00:42:07.000Caffefe was funny, because that was clearly just sausage fingers on the iPhone, you know what I mean?
00:42:12.000Taking a crap, and he's like, what am I doing here?
00:42:14.000You know, it's funny, there's this tweet from this woman, and she's like, Even though they've now confirmed the Hunter Biden laptop is real, and that it's actually his laptop, serial number and everything, we still don't know chain of custody, so it has all the hallmarks of a Russian disinformation campaign.
00:42:30.000And I was thinking about it, and I'm like, there is more evidence that Joe Biden pooped his pants than the Hunter Biden laptop is part of a Russian disinformation scheme.
00:42:39.000Like, we have a video of Joe Biden making an awkward movement, which doesn't prove he pooped his pants.
00:43:12.000But while you are correct, Hannah-Claire, there is a certain point where when you lose cognitive function, it's Joe Biden sitting there in his chair and they're like, Joe, the jury has begun deliberations.
00:43:35.000I'm sorry, a good example is if you ran to someone and screamed that there was like a sulfur hexafluoride burst from a main and we fear that the contamination is expanding.
00:43:51.000The average person is going to be like, uh, do I run, climb?
00:44:09.000If he's got an ice cream in his hand, you take it from him and then you're really driving him into the gutter.
00:44:14.000Yeah, my prediction, I'll make it here on your show, I think he craps his pants at the debate, and they use that, maybe not literally, but I think they use this debate as the reason to get him off the ticket.
00:44:22.000Now, he's going to have tons of legal problems, you know, who is the Democrat, how do they get ballot access, etc.
00:44:28.000But I'm telling you right now, guess what?
00:44:40.000So I was talking about this last year, the scenario where Joe Biden is doing a rally in California and he's like, we're going to bring America back.
00:44:48.000And then he just grips his chest, keels over.
00:44:53.000Gavin Newsom throws off his jacket, rolls his sleeves up, starts doing chest compressions, saves the president's life.
00:45:00.000He was having an episode, they call it.
00:45:06.000And Joe Biden then, incapacitated, says, you know, Gavin Newsom, you know, what a good guy.
00:45:12.000He goes on this press tour where they're like, you saved the president's life.
00:45:15.000And that's how they get in Gavin Newsom, right?
00:45:17.000Kamala Harris comes in as acting president, but says she does not want to run again.
00:45:21.000She's not seeking, you know, I cannot campaign because I'm here to help this country as acting president, as my duty, and I will hand the torch over to someone else.
00:45:29.000What if, at the debate, the same thing happens with Joe, but it's Donald Trump who throws his jacket off, saves Joe Biden's life, and they're like, Donald Trump just saved the president.
00:45:41.000Well, it reminds me of this argument that everyone is saying he should pardon Hunter.
00:45:45.000If Hunter Biden's convicted, Donald Trump should pardon him.
00:46:50.000I felt like when he campaigned in 2020, he was sort of signaling that he was going to be a one-term president, that he was sort of the last of the old Guard of Democrats and he was ready to usher in this new era of Democrat leadership.
00:47:01.000Like, I felt like he signaled that way.
00:47:03.000And so I think if he really honestly had only been planning to serve four years, he could have pardoned him.
00:47:09.000And then, you know, Democrats collectively would have won points.
00:47:14.000It would go against the narrative that everything Donald Trump does is so bad, we must take desperate steps to stop him before he, you know, I don't know, ends the world or whatever they think Donald Trump is going to do.
00:47:24.000It would be, it would have been interesting, but I think he only would have done it if he wasn't running for re-election.
00:47:33.000You think that he would have- I think he only would have pardoned Trump if he wanted to be a one-term president.
00:47:37.000Oh, I don't think that- I think that's a- that's a- I mean, I think it's a silly notion.
00:47:41.000I think that- I honestly think that Democrats are far too aggressive and far too- too believing of- like, they're drinking their own Kool-Aid.
00:47:50.000Like, they believe Donald Trump's a threat, so.
00:47:52.000Yeah, a lot of people are suggesting jail time is the goal.
00:47:57.000There's a bunch of pundits that are popping up in news articles saying, for the crimes that Donald Trump is convicted, you have to have jail time.
00:48:05.000We're talking about 34 felony convictions.
00:48:08.000There's no scenario where you give someone anything else.
00:48:13.000And the reporting is that prosecutors are going to seek jail time.
00:48:16.000And also, back to the Biden pardoning thing.
00:48:20.000Biden I'm sorry, I lost what I was going to say.
00:48:26.000It was talking about Biden pardoning and boosting his polls.
00:48:29.000I think it's a really interesting concept.
00:48:32.000I'm glad you brought it up because the question is, what was the function of Biden's presidency, right?
00:48:37.000If it was for the Democrats to sort of regain the White House and then potentially, you know, stop electing old white men and have a new More colorful leadership or whatever like then he could have done a lot of things differently if he was only planning on being a one term president.
00:48:52.000But I really think that Biden or Biden and the structure that is propping him up is power hungry and they wanted to stay in the White House.
00:48:59.000And I think that changes the way you behave.
00:49:01.000You're not not acting for party anymore.
00:49:04.000And I think the Democrats care about keeping power, period.
00:49:06.000Now, if that means Biden gets one term and they realize we can't keep power with this guy, we're going to move to somebody else, or if they think he's our best shot, they move in that direction.
00:49:26.000And I think each of those points Polling might tell me I'm wrong, but I think each of those have backfired on the Democrats and have helped him in each way alone.
00:49:35.000Now, their base gets riled up, don't get me wrong, but I think—I mean, look at how much money Trump's raised, right?
00:50:04.000I don't know what Joe Biden spent, but the Joe Biden campaign in 2020 was weird.
00:50:09.000But I don't think Trump has spent He spent his own money on this stuff.
00:50:15.000I don't know his finances, and he says a lot of stuff, so I'm not going to go ahead and make comments about what actually happened.
00:50:19.000But I know that he didn't spend nearly as much money as Clinton or Obama did, and a lot of that reason is because of the amount of coverage that he got from the news.
00:50:29.000But having $400 million tucked away to run ads and use PAX... He already had $400 million in cash?
00:51:18.000So people were saying Trump raised $200 million because he had $100 million in donors, like literal people going to the website donating, and then you had Miriam Adelson being like, I will commit $100 million, but she wants the West Bank annexed, by the way.
00:51:31.000But if you look at trends, I mean, I have to tell you, the 25% number of new donors, that is mind-boggling.
00:51:37.000People making their first-time contribution.
00:51:57.000And so I think that to me was the craziest.
00:51:59.000Yeah, the big dollars are great, but when you start locking in new people... I had plenty of people that are not really political texting me.
00:52:16.000Let me see if I can get... Washington Digest was reporting the $400 million.
00:52:19.000Trump announced at a Turning Point action event in Phoenix, Arizona that they had raised $400 million since the New York City guilty verdict.
00:52:30.000So that likely includes the Adelson numbers.
00:52:33.000Let's jump to this story from ABC3340.
00:52:47.000This was a meme that Fetterman was this progressive guy, suffered a stroke, and then it snapped him out of it, and then he became sort of just like this normal Democrat.
00:53:26.000Oh, he's pulling a left, left me, huh?
00:53:27.000He credited his recovery from his stroke for giving him freedom to speak his mind, adding the near-death experience taught him he no longer wants to be afraid of it if there's any kind of blowback.
00:53:38.000Quote, There's not going to be any kind of way how the Democrats are going to be able to reply to that.
00:53:44.000I really decided early on that I believed that was going to be the right side with Israel throughout all of that.
00:53:49.000And I knew Democrats would continue to peel away and kind of walk away from standing with Israel on that.
00:53:54.000Marr then asked if some liberals came to support Hamas, when they'd historically been strong supporters of Israel.
00:54:00.000And Fetterman acknowledged many Democrats have begun to overlook what Marr calls a gender apartheid in the Middle East.
00:54:06.000There are no rights for women, and they certainly don't embrace the LGBTQ lifestyle, Fetterman said of many Middle Eastern countries.
00:54:12.000Queers for Palestine blocked the Pride Parade in Philadelphia, and I just never saw that on the bingo card.
00:54:22.000We saw this coming because I think it was in...
00:54:25.000I don't know the UK counties or whatever, it's like Birmingham maybe in the UK or something, I don't know.
00:54:29.000But there was this big story six years ago where a bunch of LGBTQ activists showed up to a bunch of Muslims who are protesting LGBTQ curriculum in schools.
00:54:40.000And you've got women in full, like, niqab, is that the right word?
00:55:00.000degeneracy and like other really bad things that these people it's like it
00:55:04.000was plainly obvious to everybody that the whole conservative religious
00:55:08.000institution of Islam is not going to abide by the LGBTQ stuff. Fetterman
00:55:15.000saying I didn't see on the bingo card that explains why he was a progressive
00:55:19.000for as long as he was and then he saw the bingo card and now he's figured it
00:55:23.000The only thing that Jews and religious Muslims have in common is they're not really all that fond of the West, and they hate the Jews.
00:55:38.000The idea that you can have a population in your society that's dictating religious laws In a liberal society, it's like we were talking about earlier, this is not going to work, right?
00:55:50.000You're not going to have a situation where the population is going to say, OK, we're OK with LGBT stuff or the incoming population that has committed religious goals or committed religious convictions.
00:56:07.000But like, you're not going to get them to say, oh, Well, we believed our religion before, but now that we're inside this geographic area, we're gonna go ahead and loosen up that stuff because we're here.
00:56:35.000What I actually was thinking when you're talking was there are cities that have been asked for permission to play the call to prayer because they have such a significant Muslim population at this point, which is interesting, right?
00:56:46.000Maybe it's up to the city to decide whether or not they want to do that.
00:56:49.000But again, if theoretically, the city was a Christian nation, that's not something that's traditionally there.
00:56:55.000So the society is changing to accommodate this cultural practice.
00:57:00.000I think Fetterman's comments are really interesting because what he's saying is like, I am not going to go along with what my party is saying, and especially for, you know, a pretty new member of the government.
00:57:15.000That usually there's a period where everyone's sort of falling in line and wanting to curry favor with the more senior members.
00:57:22.000In some ways, I feel like I did give Fetterman, I feel almost bad that I gave Fetterman a hard time because for a while there he was just like really out of it.
00:57:30.000It did not seem like he was going to be able to stay in office at all.
00:57:33.000And now he seems to be becoming sort of the most interesting part of Congress right now.
00:57:37.000He's definitely the most sane Democrat.
00:57:39.000One thing on this, I call these privilege point debates and I love watching them.
00:57:46.000But privilege point debates are what I would call these.
00:57:48.000And as a white male, I sit back and let these groups argue it out with each other.
00:57:52.000But like, yeah, the Philadelphia Parade, I mean, when those two groups are going at it, they're trying to tell and signal to each other, what is the priority?
00:58:01.000What is the priority of our virtue signaling groups and who gets to be the standard bearer?
00:58:16.000And I just like to sit back and let them argue because most people are like, wow, this is insane.
00:58:20.000I mean, you're making me think of all the protests where you see, you know, pro-Palestine people clashing with Pride March people.
00:58:25.000And you're like, you would have thought you were all the same team, except I never thought you were the same team, but you guys sort of did, and now you're fighting.
00:58:35.000Fetterman's funny, though, in PA, my home state of PA, people always ask, you know, how'd you guys elect John Fetterman?
00:58:40.000And it's like, the one thing he has going for him, and I can get in trouble for saying this, is he is, like, a very normal guy, and I don't mean that, like, mentally, I mean, he just interacts, he's a normal guy, and that's kinda his shtick.
00:58:51.000That's why he does the hoodie and the shorts.
00:58:53.000Oz comes in from New Jersey, they got Snooki to do the video, blew up Oz, whatever.
00:58:58.000Oz didn't want to do ballot chasing, that's for another day, my little plug there.
00:59:01.000But Fetterman, I think it's funny to see this break between the whole donor class and the activist class, and he's just like, to hell with you guys, I'm doing my own thing.
00:59:11.000This is a mistake that the people on the right made with Fetterman.
00:59:15.000They started attacking him for the way he dressed in his campaign.
00:59:18.000I said, you will lose because of this.
00:59:19.000Because there's going to be some blue collar Democrat guy who wears a hoodie and shorts and is going to be like, these stodgy uptight dudes are insulting me.
00:59:27.000It's the same thing with Trump and the well done steak with ketchup.
00:59:30.000Donald Trump orders a 30-day dry-aged steak.
00:59:40.000And they mocked and belittled him and laughed at him.
00:59:43.000And I knew that there was some middle-class dude who had just got back from his local save-on or whatever, with a couple of T-bones, frying him up on a pan, looking at the TV, looking down at his food, looking at his kids, and being like, What are you yelling at me for?
00:59:58.000He's like, well, I mean, it's medium well, but still, you know, like, it's like small things like that.
01:00:02.000You pair that with Oz in the grocery store that he like had this big gaff where he talked about, was it crudite?
01:00:32.000You need to understand the depth of human consciousness on average is relatively low.
01:00:39.000People are just thinking like the average person is just thinking about what they need to get through the day.
01:00:43.000They're not sitting there having some deep moral philosophical conversations over tax policy and the percentage increase in the interest rates.
01:00:50.000All they're doing is saying, look man, I come home from work, my kid says, Dad, I'm hungry.
01:00:56.000I say, we're going to go grab some food.
01:02:13.000We have to put a little fence around them and then...
01:02:17.000I think the first time I ever heard of Fetterman was I'm going to totally be clear on how much estrogen I have right now.
01:02:24.000First time I ever heard of him he was on a relationship podcast with his wife and they were talking about how they met like giving their love story and this was a I think it was either in 2019 or 2020.
01:02:35.000A lot of people do this when they're about to enter, you know, another level of politics that they sort of soft launch with like a book or they've got a documentary or like whatever.
01:02:44.000But it was really interesting because it definitely led with like a, I am just a local boy who does these things and I support my wife while she does whatever.
01:02:52.000Like it was much more about being relatable or about the relationship as it was in its current state than about, you know, Seeming like it was an insight into sort of a glamorous lifestyle that you're not a part of.
01:04:45.000He had a tough life, you know, and I think when you look at those things, I think those stories and focusing more on those issues than like the policy issues of trying to pick somebody that, oh, well, Tim Scott is his policy record.
01:04:57.000No, what's the story and how do you connect with people?
01:05:02.000Let's jump to some boring foreign policy and then make it not so boring, I guess, because Russia is sending a naval fleet to Cuba and people are concerned about Cuban Missile Crisis 2.0.
01:05:14.000This is basically part of Russia's threat to the West because of what's currently going on in Ukraine.
01:05:19.000And I love this because the way the media is reporting it, Russian military exercise in the Caribbean.
01:05:27.000The media could have absolutely pounced and made a story about World War III, Russia, keep it... Ah, they don't want to.
01:05:35.000Now that it's coming home, now that the funding into Ukraine is coming home to roost, the last thing the corporate press wants is to scare the American public who has blindly supported this.
01:06:19.000You can't imagine that Biden picks up the phone.
01:06:21.000I mean, if anything, just having Trump being able to have a conversation, you know, some people are like, he's going to fix all this and he's going to end at day one.
01:06:28.000But just having the ability to call them and say, listen, Let's talk about this.
01:06:32.000Let's figure out how we get to a solution.
01:06:34.000Or listen, here's what's going to happen.
01:06:35.000Joe Biden doesn't even have the ability to pick up the phone and call them, let alone... He's strong.
01:06:55.000The Russian warships are expected to arrive in Havana on Wednesday and stay until next Monday, Cuba's foreign ministry said in a statement.
01:08:41.000If this doesn't stop, if we don't get the off-ramp, if we don't have a legitimate way for the U.S.
01:08:46.000to stop funding Ukraine and stop having American military weaponry being fired into Russia, we are going to end up in a conflict with Russia.
01:08:56.000That's why I think about Joe Biden's comments in Normandy over the weekend were so... They are something you need to take note of.
01:09:02.000The fact that he was like, well, we never abandoned an ally.
01:09:05.000You know, in this case, he's talking about two different skirmishes happening on geopolitical fronts.
01:09:10.000Joe Biden is not prepared to end anything, no matter what any international governing body decides, no matter what the people in America want.
01:09:17.000He is signaling that he is going to continue to fund conflict abroad.
01:09:21.000And I don't think that that is actually a well thought out policy.
01:09:25.000I'm not worried about some major strike.
01:09:27.000I'm worried about what you said, which is a slip up, right?
01:09:30.000When you start to put yourself in a position where something happens or some mistake, and I'm not even saying that it would be intentional, but we could easily spin it that way.
01:09:38.000And I just think, you know, this is a nuclear world we live in.
01:09:42.000And when you put yourself in a dangerous position or when you allow things to happen because there's no plan, there is no off-ramp.
01:09:49.000I mean, even from the right, these people that are supporting this money to Ukraine, it's like even they can't tell you what the solution is going to be or how we get there.
01:09:56.000Even if Trump gets in, right, they're not really putting that out there.
01:10:00.000And I just think we're putting ourselves in a position where bad things can happen.
01:11:14.000didn't have the military bases there, It wouldn't be U.S.
01:11:17.000territory, and it wouldn't go back to the Hawaiians either.
01:11:19.000Those islands will never be the Hawaiian, like the property of just the Hawaiian people.
01:11:25.000The Chinese will come in, the Russians will come in, some other big power's gonna look for that little spot in the center of the biggest ocean on the Earth, because that is extremely valuable.
01:11:36.000For that matter, could you imagine a national divorce scenario?
01:11:54.000If you're up in, like the natives in Alaska, they're doing their thing.
01:11:59.000I think the rest, we talk about national divorce and I say this all the time, I think what the rest of the world will do should there be a national divorce or some kind of civil conflict in the U.S.
01:12:08.000that would stem from an attempt at a national divorce, it's totally unpredictable.
01:12:12.000And I think it's almost a guarantee that it's chaos.
01:13:16.000Well I guess I think that people from other countries that have or other places that have seen that kind of strife are probably more along the lines of well why wouldn't it you know we've seen crazy things we've seen you know our country or neighboring countries there's been conflicts and etc etc those those kind of things are normal in global history so I imagine there's a significant portion of the world population that would be
01:14:52.000I mean, Russia can easily take back Alaska.
01:14:55.000And I'm talking about a national divorce scenario where federal forces, national military are split, weakened.
01:15:03.000That instantly becomes World War III, as Phil was saying.
01:15:08.000So uh you know just hope everybody is uh lots of chickens.
01:15:13.000I think that energy is going into this election.
01:15:15.000You guys probably think this too but you know I feel like so many people outside of America but especially Americans are like we are on the brink of something crazy and it feels maybe more tense than other years.
01:15:26.000I don't know how you feel about it because you're kind of on the ground with with all this stuff.
01:15:30.000Yeah, I just think that you hear the it's the most important election of our lifetime every time.
01:15:57.000And I just think this trial, once again, when he goes to jail, if and when he goes to prison, I think that is going to be, once again, the next moment that we will all remember.
01:16:47.000So we live most of our lives like, you know, Desert Storm in the 90s, and you know, for people who are younger than that, they weren't alive.
01:16:52.0009-11 is a huge major historical moment.
01:16:57.000But these past couple of years have been major tumult, where we're getting historical moment after historical moment.
01:17:04.000When we write about the history, when we read about the history, in a general history book of like, you know, late 20th century, 21st century United States, you'll get Very little out of the 90s.
01:17:45.000There's gonna be 12 pages based on just the week of the election in general.
01:17:50.000Because I don't think people realize, you know, they were talking about in 2020, like right-wing groups showing up with guns at various polling stations to watch and things like this.
01:18:06.000Because, especially with the narrative around ballot stuffing and things like this, you're gonna have, like, every ballot box everywhere is gonna have two or three dudes standing there watching everybody.
01:18:22.000We are never going to know who won the election.
01:18:24.000Yes, but I'm telling you, like, the idea that these things are won, and this is something that I don't agree with, right, but it is the current rules we have, you have to know that these are going to go to the courts.
01:18:35.000for so many of these different rule changes, and they're going to be fought again.
01:18:39.000And I just think the people need to be prepared for that.
01:18:41.000We will not know on the night of the election.
01:19:55.000I grew up, there was one election day, right?
01:19:57.000But the problem is when they change the rules in a lot of these states, They don't say your ballot has to be in a week beforehand and then they can count them and then on election night you just have the total and you match that to the election day votes and then you announce it.
01:20:10.000And so what happens is they batch them in different groups.
01:20:13.000They're like, hey listen, these came in but they didn't have a date on them.
01:20:16.000These came in because they're in an envelope, right?
01:20:40.000And this is why Republicans go nuts, as they should, and then they wait to see what they need, and then if they want, Democrats are ready to go to war.
01:20:50.000So they push all of them to be counted because they win so heavily on the mail-in ballots.
01:20:54.000And so the courts just, they don't want to disenfranchise voters, so they do it.
01:20:58.000And so that's why you get these situations where they're not reporting out.
01:21:02.000And Republicans, and I'm guilty of this, you know, after 2020, we said, well, we don't want to do the mail-in stuff because there could be fraud.
01:21:09.000After 21, we said, let's do it in the courts and fix it.
01:21:12.00022, they said, let's do it through legislation.
01:21:14.000And 23, they looked in the mirror and said, holy cow, we got a problem.
01:21:17.000And so now, I mean, that's like what I'm doing is in Pennsylvania chasing these ballots.
01:21:24.000But I need to tell people you are still going to have the law in this country, the judicial system, is going to have to make all these decisions and we got to be prepared for it.
01:21:33.000I worry about the violence, not just with the election.
01:23:19.000And then the media is going to report, in a cutting response, Joe Biden slammed Trump's claim that Mexicans were rapists and called for humanity.
01:23:27.000Because what the media does is they translate the gibberish into what they want him to have said.
01:23:33.000Or they got the transcript from the deep state saying, here's what we wrote for him.
01:23:35.000He didn't say it, but you know, and then you look at the White House transcript and they scribble out, like, they just change it.
01:23:43.000Instead of being like, this guy just slurred on his word, they'll say inaudible.
01:23:46.000But they act like, oh, it's a mic issue.
01:24:11.000This guy in the Fed, he's got something he's talking about.
01:24:14.000But I worked for Rand, and then after the 2016 race, jumped over to Trump and decided I wanted to start door-knocking because I felt like that was the only place we could compete when it comes to money.
01:24:26.000And pretty much from 2016 through 2022, just been trying to elect America-first, libertarian-type Republicans at the state level by using these door-knocking programs.
01:24:37.000Because in Pennsylvania, I mean, we were having races where we'd have trouble because of this Fetterman-Naz thing, down ticket, because nobody was focused on the mail-in ballots.
01:24:45.000They hired zero ballot chasers in Pennsylvania.
01:25:14.000I think the Senate race can be flipped.
01:25:16.000And to me, I mean, The one thing we need to do is be able to compete with them at what they do, which is knock on those doors and chase the ballots.
01:25:23.000So how do you guys recruit door knockers?
01:25:25.000So we have people right now on the ground for a lot of Freedom Caucus types.
01:26:20.000Do you think that conservative people are likely to volunteer for these things or do they think default, oh, the only way to support politicians I want to see elected is with my dollars?
01:26:32.000No, I think you'd be surprised how many people, I mean the conviction even itself, look, people look at the fundraising, you should see the interest we're getting.
01:26:39.000You know, people are like, look, we want to get out there.
01:26:41.000A lot of people, they say, where do you find these guys at, right?
01:26:43.000And it's like guys and girls are either taking a gap year from college or they just graduated or they're working a job that's, you know, not meaningful to them and all of a sudden it's like, wait, I can go flip Pennsylvania, you know, and try to win this thing?
01:26:55.000So it's interesting to find the motivations, but to me, the ideological folks, that has to be the part of it.
01:27:02.000But I think, you know, I got to go out there and raise $3 million to pull this off, right?
01:27:30.000Trump himself, in the last two months, you know, has been coming out, we're supporting the chase, you know, we're supporting all these ballot efforts in these certain states.
01:27:39.000Because when I got into this, you know, and I said this to the guys at Turning Point, I said, look, if we're going to do this, I said, I can't have us do all this work, and then Trump's like, do not vote by mail.
01:29:21.000The last note on this, when you have 1.5 million people that have voted for Joe Biden in 2020 in PA by mail before the last seven day window, talk about the resources you're spending.
01:29:34.000Now all of a sudden you're only targeting another million voters, where the GOP is still targeting 2.5 to 3 million.
01:29:41.000So you're spending twice as much on mail, twice as much on digital ads to target folks.
01:29:45.000And so the whole cultural thing, whether it was intentional by the Democrats or not, I think it was, but they realized that they could make these rule changes and the culture within their own party would benefit from it.
01:29:58.000Do you think—so when you're talking about people have to have the ideological fire, basically, to chase something, this is one of the things that I've always think the Democrats sort of have cultivated their own natural advantage.
01:30:08.000They tend to be controlling of academic institutions, so they get the, you know, new voters, the 18-year-olds, but they also have the college-age students, they have the grad students, you know, who get summers off and things like that to sort of be on the camp—or on the trail with this ballot-harvesting effort.
01:30:23.000I wonder if One of the interesting things, like I've heard Scott Pressler talk about he's setting up at like gun shows and being like, you guys are here, please let me register you to vote.
01:30:34.000Do you find that you tend to get people from, you know, is all of your recruiting online or do you ever set up at like college campuses or gun shows or whatever the equivalent is.
01:30:45.000Yeah, so Scott is a patriot and he's, like, literally moved to Pennsylvania.
01:30:49.000God bless him for doing that because we need him on the ground.
01:30:57.000Right now you have to request a ballot.
01:30:59.000So he's out there registering voters, requesting for those low propensities.
01:31:02.000And then our phase, phase two, is the chase, right?
01:31:04.000Actually going to the door of the people that have requested it.
01:31:08.000The point I'll make, though, because I get a lot of pushback from folks that say, well, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh are just going to cheat and they're going to do what they do.
01:31:15.000There are Republican votes in Republican counties where Republican clerks count the votes.
01:31:22.000They're at like 70, 75 percent turnout.
01:31:47.000So to me, it's like, when I got into this, if those numbers didn't line up, I'd have been like, you know, I really don't want to spend my time on this.
01:31:54.000There is a path to victory that involves just targeting Republicans, not going into Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.
01:32:01.000Well, I mean, it's almost a guarantee that Joe Biden will not get the number of votes that he got last time.
01:32:06.000Just because there aren't extra votes, first of all, and he's done a bad job.
01:32:12.000So if there were other votes that they could round up, maybe, but because of the fact that, I think that's something we've neglected, or at least I've neglected to identify, is that because they do have such a good game of get out the vote, they maxed out.
01:32:28.000There's not going to be a significantly larger amount of people that will vote for Joe Biden this one.
01:32:33.000It's like, whatever he got last time, that's the top that he can get.
01:33:11.000I am 100% sure that January 6th is a bigger issue for people to get over, to say that they're going to pull the lever for Trump, than the indictments, than anything post-January 6th.
01:33:24.000It's just, what happened on January 6th?
01:33:39.000These are the people who make society function so that you can live in your house so that you don't die when it's too hot or your grandparents don't die when it's too hot or too cold.
01:33:48.000And they're just thinking, look, I'm going to go there.
01:34:09.000I think that's why the Biden campaign focuses so much on, you know, the past, right?
01:34:15.000They don't want him to talk about the way the country is right now.
01:34:17.000They need to be like, well, Trump did this bad thing one time a long time ago and whatever else to maintain, to basically deflect from everything that's going on right now.
01:34:26.000I think It's so interesting to hear you say that, you know, Pennsylvania is up so far in terms of voters since the conviction, because I do think that in some ways that to me, obviously with the amount that the Trump campaign raised, was this big call to action.
01:34:41.000It's sort of, how do you get, like you were saying before, Bob to turn in his vote?
01:34:44.000Well, that seems like a very dramatic step for New York to take if you're a Pennsylvania voter and you, if you were sympathetic to Trump at all, you might say, well, I have to do something now.
01:34:54.000I don't know if you feel like that with the conversation.
01:34:55.000I think everything, all the moments of history you're mentioning, I think everything has trended in the right direction for Trump, at least over the last six to eight months.
01:35:04.000I just don't see anything that is like a Biden win.
01:35:07.000And when the numbers are where they're at, and the trends are going in the direction they're going, I just, I don't, I don't really see like, I mean, it's really up to Trump to keep it clean, keep it tight, rock the debate.
01:35:20.000And I just, I mean, if the election was held tomorrow, I think Trump wins in a pretty large fashion.
01:35:39.000I think he helps Trump much more than people think with the right demographic.
01:35:44.000I think there's a weird sect of certain voters, but not in states that matter.
01:35:48.000I think the old school, right, let me talk about like, you know, my family, like pipefitters, steamsters outside of Philadelphia, lifelong Democrats, some have broken off, some haven't.
01:35:58.000There's a population, I'd say, of 70 plus white women.
01:36:55.000If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to the channel, share the show with friends, head over to TimCast.com, click join us to become a member and support our work directly.
01:37:01.000Because this show is made possible thanks in part to viewers like you.
01:38:07.000There's like one where there's a woman on the ground and she's like staring at the floor.
01:38:10.000There's a video where there's a bunch of French people in a room and you can hear the announcer announce that they've lost and they go, oh!
01:38:42.000My favorite memory after that, I was doing a lot of campus work back then, recruiting these doorknockers and the campuses that would host these like, sit in with us in peace and like they would have therapists they provided.
01:38:54.000And that's when I was like, there's something going on in this country.
01:38:57.000One of the fraternities at my school got in trouble because after the election they put, they like had a big Trump banner and they got told they had to take it down, but like the Multicultural Student Center was allowed to keep their like, well also, I don't remember what the slogan was at the time, but like we're all in this together thing up.
01:39:12.000But there's no bias, you know, everyone's treated equally.
01:39:15.000Barrett1313 says, can confirm Tim does know how to play poker.
01:39:28.000Yeah, because I guess guys think, you know, women, she's gonna call and play weak hands, and then she always has the best hand, you know, and so I'm like, as soon as I see her make a bet, I'm like, I'm folding, because she's gonna have aces or something.
01:39:42.000And then she uses that to her advantage, she plays well.
01:39:44.000And then she ends up winning tons of money from these men, they call it the manslayer.
01:39:51.000What you're basically admitting to is that I have successfully fooled you.
01:39:55.000And I am better at poker than even you are willing to admit.
01:39:57.000For those that don't know, luck box refers to a person who just gets lucky all the time and just always makes it.
01:40:03.000And they've got a bad hand and then they just play it and then all of a sudden they hit it.
01:40:07.000But depending on how you're playing, when you're playing poker, I'm not going to show when I'm bluffing unless I want them to know that I bluffed them to piss them off.
01:40:17.000If I have a good hand and I don't hit, and I make a continuation bet and I win, I'll just throw the cards in the muck.
01:40:24.000Then when I have a bad hand that I play for odds, and I get lucky, I make sure to flip it over and show everybody, because they're like, this guy keeps getting lucky!
01:40:31.000Then, when I have a bad hand, or my hand doesn't make it, I can make a big bet and they go, he's getting lucky again!
01:42:22.000And, like, when he tells the stories to Tucker about, like, how the inner workings are, I just, I think they're, the more with alternative media and the ability to tell their stories, I just think so much of Congress is a protected class.
01:42:34.000I mean, even how they have the cameras.
01:42:35.000You guys remember when there was no speaker and like they changed the whole camera setup and like they gave them freedom.
01:42:40.000And now, now we're back to the staged downward angle because there's nobody in the chamber and they give their fierce speeches and we're going to send the Democrats and then they say the Republican and then they all go to lunch.
01:42:50.000And I just think when Massey tells those stories, it kind of humanizes it a little bit so we get to peek behind the curtain.
01:43:19.000It's a European Parliament one, so we're waiting for the French parliamentary elections that are going to be on the 30th, and very well Marine Le Pen's party may win, and we'll see what that means for her.
01:43:32.000Jennifer Benge says, our local skate park, airborne skate park and shop in Corbin, Kentucky is facing imminent closure because they can't recoup operation costs.
01:43:40.000I hope this super chat will bring in more Kentucky skaters to help.
01:46:00.000He's back for only a few days, so I think he might be on this week a couple times?
01:46:07.000And then maybe he'll pitch his coffee.
01:46:08.000I gotta talk to him and Alex about their contest, because we set up the contest for him.
01:46:13.000We haven't yet started it, but if you go to casper.com and you buy Ian's Graphene Dream, and anything else, and use the code VOTEIAN, you get the other one half off.
01:46:24.000And then if you buy Alex Stein's Primetime Grind, and any other product, it's buy one get one half off.
01:46:31.000And that's VOTEALEX and VOTEIAN are the promo codes.
01:46:34.000And then we're going to pit them against each other in an epic battle of, you know, I don't know, whatever.
01:46:39.000So Alex said the money that he gets from his coffee is going to a cat sanctuary.
01:48:19.000No, but the truth is, listen, when you go to run, the establishment, if you're really running a campaign as an anti-establishment candidate, they have money.
01:48:27.000Typically, their playbook is they'll put $2 million against you in the final week to two weeks of the campaign, and you just can't compete.
01:48:35.000You know, everybody's worried about making dinner for their kids, right?
01:48:41.000But when they spend $2 million in broadcast television and there's 10 mailers a day for 14 days in a row calling you a monster, it's tough to combat.
01:49:06.000So if someone were to run for Congress simply to just get their name out there, they're going to get a free $2 million ad buy with their name on it.
01:49:24.000Well, I mean, you look at Congress, a lot of people in Congress, like, go into Congress and they'll be in there for a little while to build themselves a name and then they'll go ahead and get out and get some kind of cushy job.
01:49:32.000Politics or government is oftentimes a road to other employment.
01:49:38.000Tazewell says, has Cliff ever been told he's a Shane Gillis doppelganger?
01:52:23.000I think that's one of the things we actually don't talk enough about as a culture, the effect of sleep and how important it is for your overall health.
01:52:32.000You know what, I wonder if they make sleep chambers, like sensory deprivation chambers, but not really, where it's like, I saw this ad for like an airport thing, where you lay down inside of it, you've seen those, and you pull the thing down, and I'm like, I wonder if they've got something you just buy at your house, but it's better than that?
01:52:48.000And then, but what it needs is, it needs to have a sunlamp slowly start sunrising at the right time for you.
01:52:55.000Because the, uh, I always, I lose it when, like, I go to a friend's house and there are blackout curtains or whatever.
01:53:03.000Like, I get it if you work night shift and you're trying to sleep, that's fine.
01:53:07.000Because when the sun starts rising and the light comes in while you're asleep, it starts affecting your hormone levels as you're waking up.
01:53:14.000And I know too many people who wear blindfolds and black out their windows and they don't understand why they can't get good sleep and they're tired all the time.
01:53:20.000And I'm like, okay, well, look, always talk to your doctor, but I'm telling you.
01:53:24.000It's because if I'm in a hotel with blackout windows, I'll sleep forever.
01:53:33.000And a lot of people screw up their hormone cycles, and I'm not talking like testosterone or whatever, I'm talking like your general body hormones when you're hungry, when you're not hungry, when you're tired, because the light's not coming in.
01:53:43.000That's why people in Alaska have blackout curtains.
01:53:45.000Because there's, like, summer is all day.
01:53:46.000And then you have sunlamps, because... And this is why people in Seattle get seasonal affective disorder, because it's always cloudy.
01:54:00.000But I would love to get, like, a chamber you can sleep in.
01:54:03.000And then, at the right time, the sun... The lights start turning on me, like LED strips.
01:54:08.000Then you wake up, you open it up, and then...
01:54:11.000Your comment about society, not talking about it.
01:54:14.000I got invited to this really cool event that Peter Thiel put on where they just like, it's kind of like a guided conversation, but they allow you to pick certain topics.
01:54:22.000And I was like fascinated because I'm like this blue collar kid coming in here and there's a lot of like big wigs.
01:54:26.000But the two topics that like the whole thing I was surprised everyone talked about was sleep.
01:54:31.000And the ability to live, you know, eternally.
01:54:34.000Like those are like the two things that like these, you know, they're like diving in and spending all this money just trying to figure out those two things.
01:54:40.000And it just, it was fascinating to me that that was like the topics that are of interest.
01:55:07.000But I've heard that basically, because when you're sleeping, your brain is actually maintaining a certain level of activity because of threats.
01:55:16.000I was reading how if you sleep in hotels a lot, you're only getting half of your REM and deep sleep because you're in an unfamiliar place and there's this instinctive thing that humans do where their brains don't fully go out when you're in an unfamiliar place because of potential dangers.
01:55:32.000So you have to be familiar with where you sleep to get good sleep.
01:55:36.000So your body's accustomed to it, it feels safe, and then you can shut down.
01:56:04.000I do about 200 different hotel rooms at night.
01:56:06.000Or a year 200 nights so that it's funny you say that cuz like I never you know I've been doing it for like two three years now with fundraising and just recruiting and That makes a lot of sense now that you say it like that, you know, yeah that that Awareness of the same place maybe a good pillow Would you know about pillow familiarity?
01:56:24.000I know that Mike Lindell just sponsored us You know, so my pillow comm promo code Tim.
01:56:40.000You know, I was thinking it'd be funny if we did, like, a pillow-off, where, like, he came here and said promo code Poso, but it's not fair, because, like, my show would probably do really well and his show would probably do really well, so it wouldn't really work.
01:56:51.000Do it here and then do it on his show.
01:56:53.000We're just doing it because he came on the show and he's a good dude and they're doing a new promo and they asked us if we'd be interested and we might.
01:57:00.000We're looking for sponsors for the events that we're doing and so this is a trial run to see if it works and then when we do the monthly events in the Martinsburg building, we need sponsors.
01:57:11.000We're setting up RNC shows and it's so insanely hard.
01:57:17.000Because we had to be there all week, the RNC is all week.
01:57:29.000And it might be, you know, we might come in slightly less, you know, we're not gonna make money on it, but we wanna be in, we wanna be there.
01:57:37.000Not the DNC, because we don't have a death wish.
01:58:08.000There was that kill switch, whatever it was, the kill switch bill they were trying to put through, I don't know if that actually passed or not, but you know that's coming to cars.
01:58:22.000Says, Phil, Divine is one of your best songs, but nothing tops that one you sang that went, it's been two weeks since you looked at me, cocked your head to the side, and said I'm angry.
01:59:06.000No, you don't worry about other songs with that name because the topic of the song tells you.
01:59:12.000One thing that I learned from, well not learned, but one thing that Jamie Josta from Haperead told me that I have since embraced, no matter what you want to name the song, you always name the song whatever is the most audible, articulate word in the chorus or phrase in the chorus because they're going to come up to you and they're going to say that anyway.
01:59:31.000You can name it whatever you want, but they're gonna come up and be like the one with the you know the memorable
01:59:36.000chorus This happened with the movie edge of tomorrow. Mm-hmm
01:59:39.000They put the posters up that said live die repeat and then everyone started calling the movie live die repeat
01:59:44.000I thought it was live die repeat for the for the longest time and I loved the movie. Yeah, so
02:00:14.000You can follow me at TimCast on x and Instagram.
02:00:17.000Cliff, do you want to shout anything out?
02:00:19.000PAchase.com, anybody that wants to help out, whether you want to sponsor a student doorknocker, or if you want to come out and chase ballots with us.
02:00:27.000And that big shout out to Rick Becker, tomorrow's primary in North Dakota.
02:00:30.000I know we've got thousands of people in North Dakota watching the show right now, but Rick Becker, America first, liberty-minded patriot.
02:00:54.000We're gonna be on tour this summer with Megadeth and Mudvayne on the Destroy All Enemies Tour starting August 2nd, finishing up September 28th, I believe.