00:02:54.000Was explicitly told by Austin, I will not fight you, dude.
00:02:58.000And when he walked towards him, according to one witness, before he even could put his hands on him to push him out of the tent, I want to be careful how I describe this because he didn't.
00:03:06.000Anthony stabbed him in the heart, killing him.
00:03:33.000But across the pond, over in Belfast, the riots have gotten so insane.
00:03:39.000My friends, I have not seen anything like this in a long, long time.
00:03:44.000Reports of potentially 90 plus buildings set on fire, men wearing all blackened masks setting migrant homes on fire, smashing out windows of refugees and illegal immigrants and migrants.
00:03:56.000Videos, there's a video of a black guy walking through the street blocking traffic.
00:04:00.000A guy just knocks him out and they start kicking him while he's down.
00:04:03.000There are videos of men in all black setting up checkpoints.
00:04:07.000Belfast is heating up, and I think people need to understand there are many people alive today who fought in the Troubles.
00:04:18.000If you want to get nitpicked, you can say it was much more intense in the late 80s, early 90s, but there are people who may be in their mid 50s to early 60s.
00:04:26.000Who literally fought in the Troubles and still hold that Ireland for the Irish mentality.
00:04:32.000This all started when a Sudanese man used a steak knife from a kitchen.
00:04:36.000I'm sorry for those that are a little screaming, but I got to explain this.
00:04:39.000To attempt to remove a man's head in public.
00:04:43.000Some say he may have even sawed this man's eyes out with the knife.
00:04:47.000That's how gruesome and brutal the attack was.
00:05:42.000I said, You're sending out activists to collect ballots from the homeless and from nursing homes and paying people to do it, which is legal.
00:05:50.000And the DSA on their website explicitly states if the individual wants a different candidate, tell them thank you and leave.
00:05:58.000If they say they support your candidate, fill out the ballot with them and drop it off for them.
00:06:14.000Today's episode, sponsored by the Freedom Trading Summit.
00:06:16.000When Left talks about affordability, they never seem to mention how costly, excessive Biden air regulations have been to American families.
00:06:23.000Under Biden, over 400 new rules were forced on Americans each year.
00:06:26.000All these excessive rules and laws placed a heavy $1.8 trillion burden on the back of hardworking Americans.
00:06:34.000Last year's admin cut more than 600 rules and regulations.
00:06:37.000While only introducing five new ones, he even signed an executive order that instructs federal agencies to eradicate 10 regulations for every new one they implement.
00:06:44.000On June 4th, the SEC officially acts something called Pattern Day Trader, the Pattern Day Trader Rule.
00:06:50.000This rule forced people to keep $25,000 in their account if they wanted to day trade.
00:06:54.000So, if you ever wanted to build wealth using the stock market, now is the time.
00:06:58.000But you've got to know what you're doing.
00:06:59.000So, you'll need someone to show you the ropes, and the perfect place to do that is at the special virtual event called the 2026 Freedom Trading Summit, Thursday, June 11th, 4 p.m. Eastern.
00:07:09.000It's hosted by Mark Wilburn, a 20 year stock market veteran.
00:07:12.000Well, we had him on the Culture War show last week.
00:07:15.000The dude knows his stuff when it comes to trading.
00:07:17.000So, go to freedomticket26.com, claim your ticket.
00:07:20.000It's going to, again, it'll be this Thursday, June 11th, and on Saturday, June 13th as well.
00:08:34.000Well, I just want to say, free Carmelo Anthony.
00:08:36.000I know that he stabbed a 17 year old in the heart, but slavery did exist, him.
00:08:41.000And I think this is all due to slavery.
00:08:43.000If slavery wasn't a real thing, then Austin Metcalf would still be alive today.
00:08:47.000We got a lot of analysis to break down on this one.
00:08:49.000I think it's going to get interesting because there are a lot of claims of Summer of Love coming up.
00:08:52.000And based on what we're seeing at Belfast, I think there's a big discussion about where we're going in terms of race.
00:08:58.000And I got to call it what it is, but I don't know if you describe it as like white racial awakening, but certainly there is a larger conversation with these Instagram videos, these TikTok videos.
00:09:34.000The New York Post says Carmelo Anthony sobs as he's convicted of murder for stabbing Austin Metcalf, and killer's angry supporters claim this whole thing has been racist.
00:10:35.000He says, Touch me and see what happens.
00:10:38.000Austin Metcalf, several witnesses said, told him, Dude, I'm not going to fight you at a track meet, dude.
00:10:45.000So, apparently, when you look at this big picture from all the witnesses, everybody under the tent was calm except for Carmelo, who wasn't supposed to be there.
00:10:54.000Witnesses said it was actually weird that he was there because no one's ever thought about going to another team's tent.
00:10:59.000He grabbed his backpack, reached in, grabbed the knife, and unfolded it, was holding it before there was any potential for a physical altercation.
00:11:10.000Finally, and actually, several witnesses said they were all warning other people to stay away from him because he was grabbing a weapon.
00:11:16.000Austin Metcalf, according to witnesses, they believe, we don't know for sure, he approached him to push him out of the tent.
00:11:23.000The reason I say we don't know for sure is because, according to witnesses, before Austin could even shove him, Carmelo pulled the knife and stabbed him directly in the heart.
00:11:34.000There was never a threat of force against him.
00:11:36.000His worst case scenario was that Austin was going to put his hand on his shoulder and push him out of the tent.
00:11:43.000That's not a threat of force or violence, that's barely even being escorted out.
00:11:47.000Carmelo decided to stab him in the heart and kill him.
00:12:25.000Are worse than it's ever been, in my opinion.
00:12:28.000Well, no, that's in my lifetime, I should say.
00:12:31.000Well, to be fair, because with the O.J. Simpson trial, where everybody was supporting O.J. Simpson, I think it was pretty obvious that he stabbed Nicole Bronson.
00:12:37.000I just want to clarify, I was being hyperbolic.
00:12:39.000I certainly think the civil rights era was way crazier and Jim Crow and slavery and all that.
00:12:44.000I'm saying in my lifetime, it's worse than I've ever seen it.
00:12:47.000And it all started around when Obama got in and we got this DEI stuff in social media and all this woke stuff.
00:12:53.000And then you started getting this like.
00:12:56.000I guess affirmative action policies were expanding.
00:12:59.000So, where we are now is the question of where are race relations heading in this country and will we see riots over this young man's conviction?
00:13:11.000I was joking, obviously, about the free Carmelo, and I think it was just obvious that he was going to be found guilty because he brought a knife to attract me.
00:13:59.000Look, if you go to a grocery store, let's say you're shopping in West Virginia, say Phil, Phil, let's say you're shopping in West Virginia and you go to Food Lion and you are strapped as a Phil would be.
00:15:15.000Maybe it was again, maybe it was possibly against the rules, school policy, but it wasn't illegal for him to have that knife.
00:15:22.000And the idea that this is a self defense case, everything that you hear that's come from all of the witnesses totally destroys that argument.
00:15:30.000Yeah, you have Bronco was here last night, and one of the points that he made, which is something that you hear if you go to self defense classes, you have to have reasonable fear of great bodily harm or death.
00:15:40.000And if, if Metcalf, if Austin Metcalf put his hand on him and pushed him.
00:15:44.000That is not reasonable fear of grape bottles or death.
00:15:53.000My point is ultimately this Dude reached into his bag, unfolded the knife, and gripped it ready to stab someone when there was zero threat against him.
00:16:02.000And you knew he was guilty because he ran away.
00:16:04.000If he was actually self defense, he would have stayed.
00:16:32.000And this is just what I'm hearing from coming up with this.
00:16:35.000So this is what made it initially contentious was that he didn't flee the scene.
00:16:39.000He threw his knife after stabbing him, stayed on the track, but went to the other tent, waited for the police to arrive, said he did it, was arrested, claimed, He put his hands on me.
00:17:06.000I'm going to say it like, because Phil gets it, dude.
00:17:08.000If you have a gun and you're going grocery shopping and there's a guy standing there with no weapons and you're gruffing him, you're mean mugging him, and he goes, Bro, I'm not going to fight you, and you shoot him.
00:17:44.000This is why I think he was defended so much he is kind of a clean cut black guy.
00:17:48.000If you kind of look at him, just on paper, at the end of the day, He stabbed and murdered a guy, and you know, it's just, it is what it is.
00:17:56.000I just don't understand what the defense was thinking.
00:17:58.000Like, they should have just taken the plea deal and been like, bro, you're going to jail for five years.
00:18:37.000That's what I'm saying, because given just how big America is and what The racial demographic was in that city, it's not the same thing as 2020 with George Floyd.
00:18:44.000Do you think January 6th has scared people from rioting?
00:18:47.000No, no, I think we're not going to, I think there's not going to be riots on this.
00:18:49.000When I say we, I say that we're not going to see riots because it would be a trap.
00:18:55.000Like, you know, Matt Walsh made a great point.
00:18:57.000Matt Walsh said riots are not organic.
00:19:00.000Like, people think riots just happen again.
00:19:04.000And the reason why they're not going to go against it, they're not going to riot for this one is that with George Floyd, okay, Chauvin was in the right.
00:19:10.000It was a tragic situation, but Chauvin was following protocol, showed up after the fact.
00:19:15.000George Floyd's already on the ground, already I can't breathe.
00:19:19.000Then Chauvin shows up having no idea what's going on and uses his knee.
00:19:23.000According to the defense's own witness in the Chauvin trial, Derek Chauvin was authorized under MPD guidelines to use a taser on George Floyd.
00:19:34.000In that moment, just right there, zap, and opted to use a.
00:19:41.000A physical, like, pin instead of the taser, meaning he chose a lower use of force on the continuum.
00:19:47.000But he took a lethal dose of fentanyl.
00:19:51.000The reason why they riot for this one is that they had a video of George Floyd on the ground saying, Mama, Mama, and it generates, it is used to manipulate people.
00:20:33.000There were Facebook live streams of it while it happened.
00:20:36.000It's about as close to organic as you can get for something like that, where people were so mortified by what they saw.
00:20:41.000On top of the fact that people were literally at home because they weren't working because of COVID, and everybody saw this simultaneously.
00:20:49.000You're not going to see the kind of riots nationwide for anything.
00:20:56.000I can't think of anything that would actually spark that kind of riot in the United States nowadays because of the fact that you don't have people locked in their homes.
00:21:04.000The protests and riots were the only reason you were allowed to leave.
00:21:08.000Everything was closed, everything was shut down.
00:21:11.000People were getting stir crazy and stuff.
00:21:13.000So they're like, oh, I'm going to go out and I'm going to.
00:21:16.000Protests or whatever, it turned into a big party for you know 80 90% of the people that were at the protests and riots.
00:21:23.000They were just watching the small groups of people that were actually going to get buck wild.
00:21:30.000It says, As long as you don't touch me, we cool, as if that is in any way exculpatory.
00:21:37.000You cannot use a knife on someone's heart because they touch you.
00:21:42.000Yeah, so first of all, I will stress I believe Brenna Morello and uh, both Sarah Fields said no one ever said that, that was never uttered.
00:21:50.000I'm not entirely sure, but I'm pretty sure they said that's actually not from any of the witnesses.
00:22:13.000It's just not, for this, people are not going to approach it.
00:22:15.000I just got to say, man, they're like, oh, racial justice, sure, but like at 90 degrees, not 96.
00:22:23.000I've, I've, I, I, bro, if I was his brother, like if this happened to my family or my brother, this would not just be a news story about a criminal trial.
00:22:37.000I mean, I'd, I'll keep my language light, but like, be there and rumble, but be careful.
00:22:43.000Well, no, no, no, I'm not that kind of person.
00:22:47.000Well, it sounds like you're about to say something violent.
00:22:49.000Oh, no, That's what I feel like you're about to say.
00:22:51.000I was going to say something more Ozymandias.
00:24:34.000This is all to say nothing of like Carmelo Anthony's supporters doxing his mom and dad's houses separately, like several times and like slaughtering them or something like this.
00:25:29.000It's like, I think, what divides the left and the right.
00:25:32.000And the left turns into a race thing because they know it riles up these people who happen to be ethnocentric.
00:25:40.000I take a look at the issue and I understand why it becomes a race thing because of the baser liberal leftist worldview.
00:25:50.000There's probably a racial component to it, but.
00:25:54.000They're pretending like Trayvon Martin did nothing wrong.
00:25:56.000Trayvon Martin was ground pounding Zimmerman.
00:25:59.000And Zimmerman, like, you don't have to, like, you can be aware that Zimmerman was kind of dumb and, you know, kind of a crappy guy because the things that he did afterwards were kind of, you know, they were kind of uncouth.
00:26:13.000But that doesn't mean that he wasn't in fear for his life.
00:26:17.000It doesn't mean that Trayvon Martin wasn't on top of him punching him.
00:26:20.000And look, if you're in a position where someone's on top of you hitting you and you have a gun, you have to use the gun because if they knock you out or if they find the gun and get the gun, they're going to use it on you.
00:26:31.000So, real quick, the story of Zimmerman.
00:28:09.000Saying that they saw it not as a tragedy, but as an opportunity to increase their ratings.
00:28:13.000The complaint alleges the first altered call that NBC aired on March 29th included these statements Zimmerman, there's a real suspicious guy.
00:28:20.000Ah, this guy looks like he's up to no good or he's on drugs or something.
00:29:22.000Yeah, I'm there's another video I want to pull up as it pertains to race relations, and it's this one from uh Brandon Gill in the SPLC.
00:29:30.000Love Brandon Gill, he's actually one of the best congressmen.
00:29:32.000He is, and this clip is actually informative because he's actually talking to a black guy about something really interesting as it pertains to the bigger picture.
00:35:57.000I would argue that the fact that it's in McKinney, Texas, Collin County, it's a little different than Lib Tard, San Francisco, or Minneapolis.
00:36:05.000I think that is a big difference in this court case.
00:36:08.000Like, that speaks to what they were talking about earlier.
00:36:10.000Just the size of America means that you could be getting a very different trial.
00:36:14.000That's why they tried to move the Chauvin trial.
00:36:16.000It's like the January 6th change of venue.
00:36:18.000Every trial was in D.C., they all got found guilty.
00:36:20.000I think if you had those court cases somewhere else, they might have actually had a fighting chance, but they didn't because they got a liberal jury for every single court case.
00:36:29.000That type of jury is grounds for moving the case, whatever case it is, whether it be the Chauvin case or the January 6th.
00:36:37.000And to be honest with you, if you can't, and Tim's made this point, if you can't guarantee an impartial jury, the solution isn't be like throw them in jail.
00:36:46.000The solution is let them go because you're guaranteed an impartial jury.
00:36:50.000If you can't produce that, let them go free.
00:36:52.000During the Chauvin case, they brought up venue saying the jury's tainted in Minnesota, and the judge said there's no jurisdiction in Minnesota where you're not going to have the jury know about this.
00:37:54.000Well, I had a big First Amendment lawsuit where I sued the county judge, and I don't want to get all racial, but I'll just say this much.
00:38:00.000I had a First Amendment lawsuit against the county judge of Dallas, Texas, because they outlawed my speech.
00:38:06.000I was speaking there, I was talking about how he got arrested for doing a panty raid when he was in college.
00:38:10.000And they admitted on the jury stand they did not follow the proper procedure because how it would work is, A county commissioner, if they want to kick me out, that's who the county commissioner kicked me out, not the county judge.
00:38:19.000They admitted that they did not follow the procedures of their own meeting, but I had six people on the jury four Hispanic, one black woman, and one white guy.
00:38:27.000And trying to explain to them what the First Amendment was, they had no idea what the First Amendment was.
00:38:31.000They literally didn't understand the First Amendment, Second Amendment.
00:38:34.000So there is a possibility that you get a jury that is just so uneducated or has no idea what's going on that they're just like, you know, oblivious.
00:40:32.000If you believe in a federal constitution, meaning you want it, or a written constitution, meaning it's written to preserve its intent, conservatives and liberals both wildly disagree on what the intent is and what the founders actually wanted it to be, regardless of the amendments.
00:41:10.000And the only reason he got arrested is that he had a magazine that had 14 bullets in California that's illegal because you can't have whatever, a magazine with over 10 bullets.
00:41:18.000And he wasn't, he was like a Trump supporter.
00:41:21.000But I'm saying because of those weird laws.
00:41:24.000Let me say it like this so people understand.
00:41:25.000The Constitution, and I always give a shout out to Wade's thoughts because he had one of the best videos breaking down what.
00:41:32.000Constitutions are, they're a reference to the body politic of a nation at the time.
00:41:37.000The Constitution is what constitutes the body politic.
00:41:40.000Currently, there are two in the United States the liberal interpretation, or what we refer to as the multicultural democracy, and the conservative, which we would call the constitutional republic.
00:41:49.000The constitutional republic believes in the, it is a branching off, it is a descendant of the intent of the founding fathers, though it does deviate.
00:41:58.000The multicultural democracy is largely born from non citizens, migrants, and international influences on a population of the United States.
00:42:06.000These are two different constitutions.
00:42:07.000And I don't mean the physical U.S. Constitution, I mean there are two different body.
00:42:11.000Bodies politic that have wildly different worldviews on how a country should be run and what they have a right to do.
00:42:18.000So, for instance, the left argues that the First Amendment doesn't cover hate speech.
00:42:22.000And we would argue, of course it does, because what other speech would.
00:42:25.000However, the founding fathers argued the First Amendment didn't protect blasphemy.
00:42:50.000The initial states, and even to this day, still have laws in the books requiring you to profess a faith in a Christian God in order to hold office.
00:42:58.000And the funny thing is, so it was around the mid 1700s, these states started getting rid of these provisions requiring you to explicitly state a belief in a Protestant God.
00:43:08.000Maryland was an exception because it was a Catholic colony.
00:43:12.000And I believe Connecticut was an exception.
00:43:13.000Virginia was because Jefferson was a deist.
00:43:16.000There were different interpretations among the states, but the initial colonies required you to profess a faith in a Protestant or typically Protestant or at least Christian God.
00:43:27.000The reason why the founding fathers believed in a separation of church and state at the constitutional level was not because they expected Muslims and Jews and Buddhists to hold hands.
00:43:36.000It's because Protestants and Catholics fought each other.
00:43:39.000And so they were like, no, no, the federal government is not going to get into a fight between Maryland and New York and South Carolina over which Christian God is the right one.
00:44:53.000Well, 1789 at the ratification, and you say for the first president, let's use, I don't know, let's use a Buddhist, you know, Confucianist.
00:45:30.000So, anyway, that's my point on the Constitution.
00:45:33.000And I think conservatives have their own interpretation, the founding fathers wouldn't have agreed with.
00:45:38.000But, you know, most of it doesn't matter these days.
00:45:41.000Like, I've had discussions with friends that are very liberal.
00:45:44.000When I mention the idea of living in a constitutional republic, they actually laugh at that concept because, you know, it depends on how politically aware you are.
00:45:54.000But when they use the term our democracy, they're not talking about you, they're talking about people who believe their worldview.
00:45:59.000And when the Constitution is left open to interpretation, because that's what we're dealing with all the time, the Supreme Court is always making interpretations based on it.
00:46:07.000Obviously, they're just looking to push it a certain direction.
00:46:09.000The confusion about Jefferson Jefferson did take his oath.
00:46:13.000There was no historical record that he took his oath on a Quran.
00:46:16.000The confusion comes when Keith Ellison in 2007 used Jefferson's personal Quran because Jefferson owned a Quran.
00:47:10.000I mean, they came here, you know, for religious persecutions.
00:47:12.000I mean, for the vast majority of the first, what, 150 years or so of the country, basically the country was Catholics and wasps, and the Catholics took a lot of you would have been allowed to hold office if you were another religion.
00:47:27.000You just wouldn't have done so on the Bible or, you know, on the book of another religion.
00:47:31.000I don't think that it was probably not till the 60s where people like Muslims could become, could, would be able to hold office.
00:47:43.000I was looking it up because this came up like the last time we were talking.
00:47:45.000It says like January of 1775 when Francis Salvador was elected to the South Carolina Provincial Congress.
00:47:51.000And they say that first started holding office or were permitted to start holding office following the ratification of the U.S. Constitution in 1788, which prohibited religious tests of federal.
00:48:28.000The U.S. Constitution in 1787, Article 6, explicitly banned religious tests for federal office.
00:48:33.000This was revolutionary and allowed non Christians and non Protestants to hold national office, the first such national policy in the world at the time.
00:48:40.000It faced opposition from some who feared pagans or non Christians in power.
00:48:44.000The intent, however, was largely due to the Protestant and Catholic divide.
00:48:49.000The intention of the federal government was to say, we're going to remain neutral on this issue, but the states, because the federal government was supposed to be weaker.
00:48:56.000They did want a stronger federal government.
00:48:57.000That's why they made the Constitution, but it was supposed to be largely neutral in these affairs.
00:49:01.000A bastardization of the Commerce Clause and the necessary and proper clause of basically giving the federal government the power to do anything it wants.
00:49:09.000Well, I am in favor of states' rights.
00:49:11.000I feel like the states should have their own rights.
00:49:16.000Well, we don't have states' rights anymore, and I don't think anybody actually is, because then you'd argue the states have a right to ban guns.
00:49:36.000The federal constitution was supposed to apply only to the federal government.
00:49:40.000The Tenth Amendment states the powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution nor prohibited by it to the states are reserved to the states, respectively, or to the people.
00:49:48.000The purpose of which is basically that the federal government is constrained, the federal government is barred from doing certain things, the states can do their own thing within their states.
00:49:57.000There are certain constraints, like the Supremacy Clause and things like this, but the general idea was federal.
00:50:03.000Military or law enforcement, at the time they didn't have law enforcement, could not come and seize your guns.
00:50:08.000States could do whatever the states wanted.
00:50:09.000What would you say when someone brings up the Supremacy Clause then?
00:50:15.000Because the Supremacy Clause says it's a provision in Article 6 of Clause 2 of the U.S. Constitution that establishes the Constitution, federal laws, and treaties as the supreme law of the land.
00:50:23.000Which clause mandates that federal laws take priority over any conflicting state laws or state constitutions, ensuring that state judges are bound by federal authority even when the state laws are.
00:50:34.000Were different from what the interpretations are today, which ultimately results in how we enforce these laws.
00:50:41.000So, again, to the Supremacy Clause, the federal government's position, and the reason why this is the anti federalist position basically, they didn't want the federal government coming in and being tyrannical.
00:50:53.000With the famous line from the Patriot, why trade one tyrant 3,000 miles away for 3,000 tyrants one mile away?
00:50:59.000The interpretation was the federal government is constrained in these things, the rest is reserved to the states.
00:51:18.000We are no longer, after the Civil War, everything changed.
00:51:21.000Abraham Lincoln decreed a suspension of a constitutional right without the authority to do so, habeas corpus.
00:51:27.000And Congress, after Abraham Lincoln threatened with violence his enemies and arrested his enemies in Maryland, the members of the state house, He actually arrested them because it was a slave state.
00:51:42.000All of a sudden, now, with the southern states removed and the Congress only being his supporters, they retroactively approve his suspension of habeas corpus, despite the fact he never had the authority to do it.
00:51:53.000After the Civil War, it was no longer the United States are, it was the United States is.
00:51:59.000And at that moment, the states were largely meaningless.
00:52:02.000The federal government was the supreme authority over all states.
00:52:06.000People don't care about their state reps, their state senators.
00:52:54.000The Supreme Court heard a case about whether states could impose these laws because this is where the question becomes, and this is pre Civil War, the question began to emerge about what the authority of the federal government was to impose its will.
00:53:09.000When the purpose of the Constitution, the amendments, I should say the Bill of Rights, the Constitution itself sits the framework for the federal government, the Bill of Rights constrains government.
00:53:18.000Constraints the federal government can do.
00:53:20.000And then it very quickly transformed into it was a power of the federal government over the states, which is an interesting way to.
00:53:28.000Again, so the Bill of Rights were meant to constrain the federal government, correct?
00:53:34.000Now, I mean, within 60, 70 years, what was meant to constrain the federal government was used as a cudgel by the federal government to constrain the states.
00:53:43.000Do you think the federal government should step in and stop the Chicago Bears from moving to Indiana?
00:53:48.000I think Trump should send in the military.
00:54:12.000And I look back with a longing heart, seeing my city get destroyed, and you've got, they bring in mass migration, and now you have a body politic.
00:54:23.000What constitutes the people does not care for our traditions, does not care for the Bears.
00:57:36.000You're going to have people reach a tipping point.
00:57:38.000And apparently, when a guy is being attacked the way that I forget what his name was, attacked like this Irish guy was, they've decided that this is enough.
00:57:51.000The UK government has the power to change this, but they're terrified of being called racist.
00:57:57.000And you're going to see a lot of Western countries.
00:58:00.000Are going to have to decide that it's worse to have riots and lawlessness than to be called a racist.
00:58:08.000And until that happens, this stuff is going to continue.
00:58:17.000Rioters are breaking into migrant houses in multiple occupations, it's HMOs, houses in multiple occupations, taxpayer funded housing for asylum seekers in Belfast, setting them ablaze.
00:58:46.000I want to just stress this too because I need to give the context.
00:58:49.000I know we're already a few minutes in, but for those that don't know what happened, a Sudanese man was attempting to saw off an Irishman's head through the neck with a steak knife.
00:58:57.000And there are reports that he had suffered severe damage to his eyes.
00:58:59.000His eyes may have been sawed out with a steak knife.
00:59:14.000I mean, look, we were talking before the show.
00:59:18.000I wouldn't be surprised if there's, you know, all the IRA guys that have, you know, rifles stashed somewhere that never turned them in.
00:59:26.000And that is absolutely a possibility, you know, like this kind of stuff.
00:59:32.000If people don't feel like the government, who has the monopoly on violence, is going to take care of their population, if they're going to have preferential treatment or they're going to force a foreign population in that is brutalizing the local population, you're going to see the people decide we're going to fight back.
00:59:49.000Specifically in Ireland, who are not, you know, they're not strangers to fighting.
00:59:54.000They were fighting the English up until 98 or whatever.
00:59:59.000I mean, this is when I was a kid growing up, this is what we heard about all the time with the Troubles.
01:00:05.000To your point earlier, you were asking the question Do you think that they're rioting because they're more nationalistic than the US?
01:00:11.000Because the US kind of had that idea of the melting pot growing up.
01:00:15.000But at the time when that still passed in America, there was somewhat of a monoculture in which people who came to the country wanted to be Americans.
01:00:25.000They had to take the citizenship test.
01:00:27.000They had to, after a fact, they were seeking a life to become Americans, not to move to America and then ostensibly start their own communities and not assimilate into American culture.
01:00:38.000But the size of America makes that harder for that type of what we're seeing here to kind of come to pass because what's happening in Texas with Carmelo Anthony is vastly different than something going on in Florida.
01:00:49.000It's just vastly different than something going on in Minnesota.
01:00:52.000It's a much smaller population in Ireland.
01:00:55.000Well, Charlie Kirk said immigration without assimilation is an invasion.
01:00:58.000I think that's what's happening now in America, is that people are not trying to assimilate.
01:01:02.000They're trying to bring their culture over and try to turn America into little Somalia or little India.
01:01:08.000That's the discussion over a constitution.
01:01:10.000When you have in Minnesota Somalis who explicitly state in their campaigns, I will send American taxpayer dollars to Somalia, this is not the American body politic.
01:01:22.000They do not respect your constitution.
01:01:25.000And I guarantee you, if you were surrounded by a group of those people and they told you to stop interfering with their money transfers, you'd argue I have a right under the constitution to report the news.
01:01:55.000But I will say that it's actually kind of, this sounds bad, but watching these videos is entertaining because I actually like to see the people actually fight back.
01:02:04.000I feel like that's our problem is that during COVID.
01:02:40.000If the Irish have learned anything from Black Lives Matter, it was fascinating to see that the riots backfired initially and support for BLM traitered.
01:02:52.000However, politically, every institution became petrified of Black Lives Matter.
01:02:56.000They were firing people for saying naughty words because they were scared someone's going to come in with a crowbar unless they bend to the whims of the violent.
01:03:03.000As I love to say, do you think that Carl Benjamin would ever lead a bunch of classical liberals or post liberals with crowbars and pitchforks to XHQ because someone got censored?
01:04:12.000They were memes where it was like teenagers were saying, it was like a paintbrush meme where kids like being yelled at by the teacher for being white.
01:04:21.000And then he goes and hangs out with a bunch of white kids and they're like, you're racist.
01:05:48.000Young people are straight up like, yeah, we watch the news all day and we're watching, like, bro, we're watching what's happening in Ireland.
01:05:55.000We're watching the Carmelo Anthony stuff.
01:05:57.000We warned about this, but you were saying, Phil, you think they want it to happen.
01:06:03.000I don't know that they want it to happen.
01:06:05.000I think they would prefer it if white people just had white guilt forever so they could lose.
01:06:11.000Yeah, the goal is to awaken a critical racial consciousness, right?
01:06:15.000The whole critical race theory stuff that didn't go away.
01:06:18.000The goal was to make people aware of their race.
01:06:22.000And they wanted, they sure they wanted as many people that are white to feel bad about it and to basically do what your awfuls are doing and start voting in ways that are progressive.
01:06:33.000If you look at the way that women are tilting to the left, it's all because of this kind of critical race theory stuff.
01:06:42.000You see young men not going the same way.
01:06:45.000Because young men are far more comfortable being disagreeable.
01:09:10.000So, you, Jimmy, and Nick all lived within a three mile radius?
01:09:14.000Me and Jimmy Doar lived three blocks away in Chicago, and Nick was about three miles away in the western suburbs because I was on the southwest side.
01:09:22.000So, just you were on Archer, First Avenue, and then you can get to LaGrange.
01:09:25.000And I know exactly what Nick saw and why he says these things because I grew up two blocks from the LeClaire courts, famous gang territory in Chicago, all black.
01:09:37.000So, we understood there was a racial divide.
01:09:40.000That when the people from north of 47th came south into the white mixed area, you knew they were not coming to be friends with anybody.
01:09:48.000You knew it was, we are against you, and they'd mug you, they'd rob you, or there'd be gang violence.
01:09:53.000And if you walked over there, the cops would arrest you and they'd say, the only reason a white boy comes up here is to buy drugs.
01:09:58.000So, imagine being Nick and growing up only a few miles away from this.
01:10:01.000Everybody in the neighborhood knows this.
01:10:03.000Nick starts making videos pointing out what tons of these young white people are seeing and being told they can't say.
01:10:10.000So, you got to understand growing up on the south side of Chicago with racial division, maybe due to redlining or whatever you might want to argue.
01:10:20.000Literally, if a white person goes into a black neighborhood, you're facing violence and threats.
01:11:16.000My point is this if you are a young person and you are a leader in your generation, let's say you're 20 years old, and it's not that you command hordes of 20 year olds, it's not that you have a big Instagram following.
01:11:26.000I'm not saying that because obviously, if you did, you'd already be rich.
01:11:29.000I'm saying that at 20 years old, you are trying to build something.
01:12:08.000His fans have jobs and careers and more skills and are making more money and are contributing to and promoting his show.
01:12:15.000Nick Fuentes is going to be in his 40s with a net worth of $100 million, which you guys got to understand about a net worth of $100 million.
01:12:21.000I'm not saying he's going to have that cash liquid.
01:12:22.000I'm saying from now, him being a millionaire, he's going to start buying things.
01:13:47.000Like you see him, like all the memes that you talk about on Instagram, you can't scroll through Instagram without seeing some kind of, you know, cut with Nick saying something or whatever.
01:13:57.000So, I mean, he's going to have an outsized influence on the culture.
01:14:02.000And I think that most people kind of have to, Come to a reckoning with that, and that's one of the reasons why I say you're going to see a lot of people looking at being called racist and they're just not going to care anymore.
01:14:15.000I've been saying that we're saying all this, though.
01:14:17.000I really, you guys are gonna call me crazy.
01:14:19.000I think it's a strong possibility we get a vice president AOC and President Gavin Newsom soon.
01:14:24.000So, like, we act like everybody's gonna don't.
01:14:41.000Here's a story from the New York Post.
01:14:43.000Bombshell photo unveils damning Nithia Rahman link with homeless voters as fury erupts over LA ballot count.
01:14:51.000So you got this image where Nithia Rahman signed off on a grant as a district council member, $600,000 to a homeless shelter that the New York Post claims registered 185 voters to its address or had 185 homeless registered voters.
01:15:07.000Now, I don't think that 185 voters changes anything, and I don't think she gave the money to them to get voters.
01:15:13.000I think if I were to make an assessment, she gave the money to them either because she's dumb as a box of rocks or evil.
01:15:19.000We call this the homeless industrial complex in LA.
01:15:21.000They funneled taxpayer dollars to shelters with no beds, to shelters that don't help people.
01:15:26.000And I don't trust her for two seconds that she did not know this because it is a check from 2023.
01:15:32.000And everybody in 2011, when I was working down there, 2010, when I was working down there, knew exactly what was going on.
01:15:38.000And the shelters were lying, claiming they were full when nobody was in them.
01:15:43.000Ultimately, the point is this they are cheating, but we were just talking in the previous segment.
01:15:49.000You said, Alex, that we might get a vice president AOC and a Gavin Newsom.
01:15:52.000The reason why I say I don't think so.
01:15:54.000Is because California has been shocking to the conscience for a lot of Americans.
01:15:59.000More prominently is Watson v. RNC, which is going to be ruled on in a couple of weeks.
01:16:04.000And this, if ruled on by SCOTUS narrowly, everyone agrees SCOTUS is likely going to rule in favor of the defendant, which is that you cannot count votes after Election Day.
01:16:15.000Even with the post date or whatever on June 2nd, that day.
01:16:42.000I think at least there is a decent probability.
01:16:44.000I would lean towards, and I'm crossing my fingers on this one, they rule more broadly and argue that early voting and mail in voting violate the law because they extend voting day into voting month.
01:16:53.000And if voting day can be only one day, a day is prescribed, then ballots can only be issued day of.
01:17:01.000And if that happens, Democrats never win again unless they dramatically moderate and become so akin to what MAGA is that MAGA Republicans are like, oh, Democrats are now calling for deportations, no trans in the kids.
01:17:50.000Then you ask them to vote three times.
01:17:52.000Then you explain why your candidate is the one they have to vote for.
01:17:56.000Then you fill out their ballot with them.
01:17:59.000Then you take their ballot and drop it off.
01:18:00.000And here's the best part these people are getting paid to do it.
01:18:03.000I don't know if the DSA is funding it.
01:18:05.000But there are organizations that pay a salary to activists in California to go and literally fill out the ballot with them and bring it in for them.
01:18:16.000Tim, James O'Keefe literally just did a story where they actually charged the woman that was doing this, where they were paying people like $2 to $3.
01:18:23.000And they would just get a ballot, get them to register.
01:21:25.000Primarily focused around payment for signatures, a violation of that California Elections Code 18603, claiming they had, quote, offered or gave money or other valuable consideration to another in exchange for his or her signature.
01:21:38.000So we found it particularly ironic that two police officers sitting nearby weren't even aware that this was a state or federal crime.
01:21:47.000Instead, Officer Maravilla of the LAPD dismissed it as a, quote, civil lawsuit.
01:21:53.000Do you know a lot of these people here?
01:21:56.000That are making homeless sign petitions and paying cash for it?
01:22:25.000Because what then happens is some of these are voter registration.
01:22:28.000And then a mail in voter arrives at a homeless shelter, and then they can come and have the address that they put on there, and it's their address.
01:22:41.000Maybe if they promise them something and they don't get it, it would be like a civil lawsuit kind of thing.
01:22:47.000The law enforcement officers sitting nearby on Skid Row every single day don't know the California laws and plead ignorance.
01:22:55.000It begs the question what are they even doing?
01:22:59.000And directly across the street from all of this is a homeless shelter called the Wine Guard Center, a quote, comprehensive human services organization committed to removing barriers that keep people from housing.
01:23:11.000The 990 tax return shows the Weingard Center received $112 million through various grants in 2022, their latest published return, and that they have over $800 million in net assets.
01:23:25.000The Weingard Center also pays their executives between $400,000 and $600,000 a year.
01:23:32.000Weingard has been missing their audit deadlines by an alarmingly large and increasing margin 21 months late last year with eight negative findings.
01:23:41.000An article in LA states, That one of LA's biggest homeless service providers has been awarded over $100 million in taxpayer funds while failing to comply with federal audit mandates.
01:23:52.000The audits show multiple failures by Weingart Center to properly account for taxpayer money that were not remedied from one year to the next.
01:23:59.000One of Weingart's primary funding sources is LASA, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority.
01:24:05.000We couldn't help but wonder what people that work for LASA would say about this voter fraud in Skin Row when directly asked.
01:24:13.000We attended this special commission meeting to find out.
01:24:19.000We spoke to Kathy Linga, who says she's seen the people petitioning for money and teaches the prospective fraudster on how to use plausible deniability and to practice ignorance of the law as an excuse.
01:24:32.000And see if there's people out there with good points.
01:24:35.000With good points, and see if they give him the cash for the petition.
01:25:23.000Another Wine Guard employee, intake coordinator Jason Warren, tells our undercover journalist exactly where and when to find the petitioners who are breaking the law.
01:25:33.000I wanted to see if we can get where the petitions that are being signed to get cash so he can get some couple of dollars.
01:25:55.000Most likely be right across the street under that tree.
01:25:59.000You can check with them Monday through Friday.
01:26:01.000Warren also claims the petitioners have to gather a certain amount of signatures and then provide proof to show that they aren't stealing the money, which is apparently provided to them by a higher authority, according to Jason Warren.
01:26:14.000But I don't want him to get into any trouble or anything.
01:26:18.000Is that okay for him to accept cash for signing the petition?
01:26:24.000It's okay because they're not going to go through the Spencer Pratt needs to be sharing this clip right now.
01:26:38.000Spencer Pratt needs to get involved with this.
01:26:39.000Shout out to James O'Keefe, consistently hitting it out of the park.
01:26:59.000Have you seen the latest Inside Elections breakdown?
01:27:02.000Inside Elections is considered to be one of the most accurate pollsters.
01:27:06.000According to Inside Elections, Republicans only got to win one toss up to maintain control of the House in November, largely because of the redistricting efforts.
01:27:14.000So if you look at, let's, what is this?
01:27:19.000Why am I not getting the, where's that stupid thing?
01:28:53.000So listen, if you filed a lawsuit against California over mail in votes and it was California v. RNC or whatever, they would fight really hard.
01:29:03.000They would use all of their resources to go to war.
01:29:05.000Mississippi is going to go, oh no, our lawyers are just so dumb, we made a mistake.
01:29:10.000And SCOTUS is going to be like, no more mail in votes nationwide.
01:29:14.000I spent a lot of time in Jackson, Mississippi, and Oxford, Mississippi, and that makes sense.
01:29:56.000Earlier today, I actually had, I put 100 bucks on Republicans to sweep and 100 bucks on Republicans to control.
01:30:03.000I sold those positions before putting up my videos today because I did not want to influence the prediction markets.
01:30:11.000So I sold my position so that I could not benefit from it and I took a loss because I'm like, When this hammer drops, those are going to skyrocket in value.
01:30:20.000I don't want to see any profit from that.
01:30:21.000So I'll take a loss now, full disclosure, because I think people are going to start buying for Republicans with this Watson v. People don't know about this case.
01:30:32.000No one's been talking about the fact that they're about to rule on shutting down mail in voting.
01:30:50.000If SCOTUS really has, these conservatives decided to join the fray, they are going to intentionally draw this out as long as they can just before the midterm so that Democrats have no ability to pivot.
01:31:23.000But here's the challenge what if they say, fine, but that's federal elections and primary elections, state elections, we can do however we want?
01:31:33.000The Supreme Court still could go nuclear and say, With respect to state primaries, they must follow the established law of a single day for elections.
01:31:53.000With Watson VRNC, Trump and Thun and all them might be sitting there being like, we don't have to move until we know what the SCOTUS is going to do.
01:32:03.000And SCOTUS very likely is going to rule in our favor.
01:32:05.000The media is going to go into overdrive and how they're going to paint it in the most negative way possible.
01:32:38.000Oh, the screwworm's bad, but actually, there was some doctor that said there's some really cheap, like, over the counter cream you can put on, and it.
01:33:38.000Literally, he was sitting in a DM saying that every time he posted it, he said that every time that he was in a porta potty and he smelled the blue aroma from the whatever, the blue pea sauce, whatever you call it, y'all said he wanted to rape guys.
01:34:27.000Well, he's eating like barbecue now and he was accused of being a vegan.
01:34:31.000I mean, he's so fake, but I, you know, a lot of people, I'll say this.
01:34:35.000Ken Paxson does have a little bit of baggage.
01:34:36.000I like Ken, I'm friends with Ken, but he has much more baggage because I think there's been now three different staffers that worked for Tallarico that said that they had a sexual relationship with him.
01:34:45.000So the guy, he might look like a little twerp, but he's a horn dog.
01:34:48.000So I mean, Tallarico is much worse than Ken Paxson if it comes to like sexual baggage.
01:34:54.000Well, yeah, I don't know what his exact quote is.
01:34:55.000Ken Paxson has accused him of flip flopping.
01:37:03.000I don't know if you guys saw the movie The Blind Side where, like, see, that was America was a great country when you're the rich family and you adopted the black kid and try to make him a good athlete, right?
01:37:12.000Like, try to get him to the NFL or NBA.
01:37:39.000I feel like for the most part now, people just, it's the same thing when they accuse, like, literally, like, well, if they're in Hollywood, they're a pedo.
01:37:46.000Just by definition of being in Hollywood.
01:38:18.000Folks have questions about how Charlize Theron is raising her adopted son.
01:38:22.000Because she put him in a dress and said he was a girl.
01:38:25.000I feel like this bitch is doing some weird science experiment on this kid, trying to do the whole nature versus nurture thing like they did in the 60s, which failed.
01:39:03.000No, The horror movie that would win an Oscar is a woman adopts two black kids who ask to be trans, so she gives them the shots, and then an evil mad scientist says, No, I'm going to take these away and kidnap you and make you be boys.
01:39:25.000It's kind of a scary movie, like, you know, where this, you know, abusive mom, where I think they could, you know, extrapolate that, where you have Charlize Theron transing her kids.
01:39:33.000But I will say, The nature versus nurture argument is correct, but then when it comes to Carmelo Anthony, went to an affluent neighborhood school, you know, Frisco Memorial, and still stabbed a guy in the heart.
01:39:56.000Like, people are born with predispositions.
01:40:00.000Obviously, you can affect those predispositions by the way they're raised and stuff, but if you've got a short temper, That's something that you're born with.
01:40:11.000If you have, like Jordan Peterson talks about this stuff all the time.
01:40:15.000If you have high conscientiousness, that's a born in trait.
01:40:20.000You're not going to learn how to do that.
01:40:22.000Or if you do, it's going to be something that you are an adult, you realize that you don't have high conscientiousness, and you're going to put a lot of work into changing your habits.
01:40:30.000But it's not something like the idea that you can just be born and, you know, I think it was the Moody guy, the first trans doctor or whatever.
01:41:10.000They argue that, how yeah, because they took a boy who identified as a boy and forced him to live as a girl, proving.
01:41:16.000That people have innate gender within them, and that people who know that their gender is a girl being forced to live as a boy will result in suicides, just like in the John Money case.
01:41:25.000It's that's well, with Chloe Cole, that is and it's just not her story, but that is constantly what the doctors do.
01:41:30.000If the parents are against their kids transitioning, they say, Oh, your kid's gonna commit suicide.
01:41:34.000That's like the number one manipulation tactic to get parents to what they're really saying is spay and neuter your kids.
01:41:40.000And that's actually that's like the overall conspiracy is they want us all sexually confused, they want everybody on cross sex hormones so that they have atrophied penises so that we keep the population down while you know why.
01:41:52.000It's because the Asgardians or Nordics, as people refer to them, or some call them the Arids, who live beyond the ice wall are like, look, the.
01:42:16.000Listen, I'm always going to hear about Antarctica, but I do think that you see, like Bill Gates during the pandemic, say, oh, we need to reduce the population by 15% because of climate change.
01:42:25.000These people are so sick, they actually want us to not procreate as much because they actually think that that would be better for the climate.
01:43:09.000It does actually kind of work out if you're somebody at that level of wealth who can afford to have a beachfront property but not have to worry about whether it gets washed away or not.
01:43:38.000The Georgia Guidestones were created around the time there was a fear of a nuclear apocalypse, and a bunch of wealthy donors got together to say, if we all die, how does civilization restart?
01:43:47.000Let's build Guidestones to tell them what to do.
01:43:50.000And that being said, the ideas on it to keep the population at 500 million or less, I think, is a hint towards they want less people.
01:43:59.000But again, the purpose of the Guidestones was.
01:44:01.000Built out of fear of a nuclear apocalypse.
01:44:04.000That's why it had like mathematical equations.
01:44:16.000And then, you know, they say, well, you know, if you watch documentaries on it, it was Ted Turner that, you know, paid for it to get built.
01:44:21.000But you know why it got destroyed, right?
01:44:23.000Well, I think people were going there and like, you know.
01:44:25.000The people, the reason it was destroyed was because the powers that be don't want us to have access to translations and basic math.
01:44:33.000If they EMP blast us back to the Stone Age, it's also why they're not going to teach your kids cursive.
01:45:14.000The powers that be have underground bases, space stations, and they're experimenting with going to Mars and doing these things.
01:45:20.000They've got Mount Weather, Raven Rock, and that's just what we know about.
01:45:23.000They have likely created situations in which if there is a great flood that lasts 40 days, they'll have no problem to survive and maintain technology.
01:45:30.000They don't want you, survivors on the surface, to have access to basic information.
01:45:34.000So the Guidestones get destroyed because the Guidestones had on them basic translation and basic math and star mapping.
01:45:44.000Like everyone remembers the rules where it's like keep the population under 500 million.
01:45:47.000But on it, it was like a Rosetta Stone for various languages intentionally.
01:45:52.000If the flood happens, they want us confused and unable to communicate and work with each other.
01:45:58.000Well, the Georgia Guidestones, too, you are right, though, how they had like you could see the North Star from any angle at any time of the day.
01:46:23.000I think talking with Ben Davidson about the Adam and Eve theory, this dude, we've interviewed him several times.
01:46:30.000He is not some flat earth conspiracy guy who makes weird arguments and like, you know, ice wall.
01:46:37.000He's just tracking solar weather patterns.
01:46:40.000I interview him, and everything he says is actually rooted in mainstream science.
01:46:44.000He just has a different view of what it would result in.
01:46:46.000So, to exemplify, there are people who are like, you know, there's a great ice wall, and you can't go there because the military will block you.
01:48:34.000And, you know, I was friends with Jeremy and you're friendly with Jeremy, but just he, you know, gets Hannah Claire, does this, you know, he's always like, I know, and you're happy that Hannah Claire's got a gig.
01:49:12.000No, I don't know what you're talking about, dude.
01:49:14.000They've been going after Jeremy saying that they have evidence, which I don't agree with, Jeremy, that your wife and they have a bull and that he pays some black guy to bang his wife.
01:50:51.000If even Klein loses this, it means that we will be able to go on Timcast IRL, title the episode I Hate Marvel, and play Avengers Doomsday in full.
01:51:34.000The streamer watched his documentary in full, and even apparently, according to the case, said, Don't give him views, watch here instead, or something that affects.
01:51:43.000His argument was watching the full thing with commentary or otherwise and telling people, Don't give me views is literal market infringement, which is not fair use.
01:51:51.000Fair use, people need to understand this, is copyright infringement, but it is protected copyright infringement for a variety of factors.
01:52:00.000One of the most important questions is Does this infringe on the market of the content producer?
01:52:07.000The way it was historically taken to be.
01:52:09.000I cannot show a clip from Star Trek on this show because Paramount licenses clips from Star Trek.
01:52:17.000So they would argue the reason that's not fair use, even if it is commentary or in the public news and public good, because it infringes on our market to sell these clips to people who do want to make these shows.
01:52:31.000So I've actually had YouTube take hard copyright block.
01:52:35.000One of my videos on the Tim Pool show, because I was talking about American culture and I showed a clip that was like 20 seconds from Star Trek explaining why the 90s were good and the message was being brought and it was culturally relevant and they flagged it, locked it.
01:52:50.000It said, if I want to, they rejected the appeal, then said I'd have to sue.
01:52:54.000I consulted with counsel and they said, you will lose against Paramount because they licensed this content.
01:53:00.000And that means that it's not fair use because now you are directly infringing their market, which is, To sell you a license to use the content.
01:53:07.000But with the Ethan Klein case, if this gets set, then precedent, then it's out the window, and we're gonna watch some Avengers doomsday game.
01:53:16.000It's not gonna matter because you might have a legal team, but the average everyday YouTuber doesn't have a legal team.
01:53:21.000They're gonna file the copyright claim and they're not gonna be able to fight it because.
01:53:25.000It does matter because the streamer that was sued by Ethan Klein also doesn't have a legal advisory and filed on her own behalf and was a small streamer.
01:53:34.000But what matters is if she wins, I don't care about the small creator's decision to watch Age of Ultron or some other Avengers movie.
01:53:41.000It means bigger shows can now play feature length films in their entirety so long as you post it with some critique.
01:53:48.000It will get copyright claimed by the company.
01:53:51.000And it will lose in summary dismissal, is the point.
01:54:10.000They'll file a suit and I'll file a summary dismissal, and they'll got to pay my court costs if precedent gets set.
01:54:16.000The precedent may change for bigger creators, but for the people that exist on YouTube that don't have that infrastructure, that's well, I mean, because it matters to people who do create in space.
01:54:32.000I would argue that actually Paramount should want people playing their content and reacting to it because more people will see it.
01:54:36.000I know they might lose money from that, but it's the same, like, well, you actually want people reacting to your content even if they're saying negative things about it.
01:54:42.000This is the important thing to understand.
01:54:44.000There's an app where People could put a movie on and all hang out together and watch it.
01:54:48.000And they had to get licenses for these films.
01:54:51.000We had talked about in the past, it would be great to do a show that was like Mystery Science Theater 3000.
01:55:06.000If the argument for the judge stands and there's no appeal or anything, then it's not yet precedent, but it's the beginning of setting precedent where we would be able to do a Mystery Science Theater for any feature length film.
01:55:18.000And listen, I'm going to tell you why it's going to happen.
01:55:20.000You want to know why it is going to happen?
01:55:23.000Because this was the playbook the whole time for AI.
01:55:26.000Jack Dorsey, Elon Musk have advocated for the end of intellectual property rights.
01:55:32.000When these courts issue these rulings, the big companies are going to go, oh no, oh geez, oh no, what, oh, oh God.
01:55:39.000And then they're going to buy up control of the AI generated video platforms.
01:55:44.000They'll have access to all intellectual property under fair use transformation, and you'll be able to make Spider Man fight.
01:55:52.000And when Sony tries claiming that's our IP, say no, it's transformative because now Spider Man is fighting an alternate universe character and we're commenting on it.
01:56:01.000See, what I want to do now is I want to just have every day do watch alongs with some copyrighted content.
01:56:07.000And I'm like, I don't care how much of Tim Pool's money I have to spend to keep watching these movies and commenting.
01:57:02.000Yeah, for those that don't know, you know, I have this thing where I do not engage in political controversy with people who are my friends.
01:57:11.000So I have long mentioned I have many liberal and progressive people that I consider friends.
01:57:15.000There are some progressive activists I have known literally my whole life since I was a teenager that I am still friendly with and still talk with despite our very serious disagreements.
01:57:23.000I always find it funny when I go on social media and I'll see like my friend post this crazy far left trans.
01:57:28.000Kids' activism, and then I'm posting the opposite.
01:57:31.000But when it comes to us being friends, we do not attack each other over these things because we kind of understand politics is politics.
01:57:36.000That being said, Milano Weintrub decided to actually make a statement to me when I commented on one of her posts.
01:57:42.000I've commented on her posts periodically throughout the years because we used to be friends.
01:57:46.000And for those that don't know who that is, she's Lily from the ATT commercials.
01:57:48.000She's also in Project Hail Mary, and she's been campaigning for Nithya Raman.
01:57:54.000And so she made a post about it, and I commented, How do you, I said something like, How, uh, How do you think she was able to pull ahead of Karen Bass?
01:58:04.000Pull ahead of Karen Bass and late mail in votes in a single jurisdiction?
01:58:09.000It's like, because I intentionally do not antagonize or even on my show name the people that I've been friends with for a long time who are progressives.
01:58:57.000And I'm married with a kid and she knows this.
01:58:58.000So, clearly, the incel thing, all just lies.
01:59:02.000And I think this is a perfect example of the left right divide.
01:59:05.000And that's why I thought, you know, I'm going to talk about it.
01:59:07.000I thought about it for a while because I'm like, in all the years that I had known her and all the things she had said and all the press of activism she does, because again, she's a celebrity, I never said this.
01:59:19.000You know, Milano Vine Troop, look how big she is and look what she's advocating for.
01:59:59.000I have no problem texting a progressive that I've known for years and having a conversation or inviting him on the show or anything like that.
02:00:07.000The response they give is You have defied our orthodoxy.
02:00:13.000And so my response was This shows exactly what kind of friend you have always been.
02:00:18.000So I will just say this many of my early videos on the Timcast channel are at her house.
02:00:23.000Like hanging out with her in LA, and she let me crash there.
02:00:26.000And I will say this too she said that I changed.
02:00:29.000And I want to make sure this point is absolutely clear to everybody because it exemplifies, again, the culture war.
02:00:34.000When I was at her house, and it was, I hung out with her for years, and over a period of years, I should say, and I stayed at her place when I was in LA.
02:00:46.000We all had very nice, cordial conversations about Trump, Trump supporters.
02:00:50.000And there was one great conversation where I was sitting down with her and a bunch of her friends, and they were talking about Trump supporters being racist and all that.
02:00:56.000And I said explicitly, I think it's like 2017 or 18.
02:01:48.000So, for her to now say that I'm a greedy, humorless incel who's changed my views for money, what she's really saying is over time, our lust for power has come to preclude the likes of you and my willingness to have a conversation with you.
02:02:22.000We disagree on all these things, but he exemplifies what is good in people who actually may have disagreements.
02:02:29.000And I would much prefer that people like Brian, despite him being vitriolic in these Piers Morgan debates, I would prefer the left to be him where He will actually still come to dinner with you and say, No, no, look, we disagree, and I'll call you names, but I can hang out with you.
02:03:39.000At any point in time when she said, I don't like what you're doing, she could have called me and said, like, what's happening?
02:03:44.000Like, I watched this video you did, and we could have talked about it.
02:03:47.000And likely, I guarantee what happened is she watched a fake video from some lefty that was clickbait garbage.
02:03:52.000And instead of saying, Is this real or what's going on?
02:03:55.000She just decided to say, I now hate you, which says to me, I don't think we're ever really friends.
02:03:59.000I think her world is just accumulate power through social connections.
02:04:04.000And I think the difference between whatever it is we do, I'm not saying every Trump supporter is like this, but the right tends to be a quest for truth and functionality with an assertion of a moral worldview.
02:04:14.000And the left tends to be a moral worldview desperate for power.
02:04:18.000Again, Curtis Yarvin puts it, Very, very well.
02:04:22.000The right treats power like a wine snob treats alcohol, and Democrats treat power the way an alcoholic treats alcohol.
02:04:29.000I'm going to go a little bit like I was rambling, and we got to get some of your rumble rances, which it wouldn't be fair if I didn't get them.
02:05:09.000You said the state constitutions aren't meant to defend against federal tyranny.
02:05:11.000I don't think that quite makes sense when, for instance, the Pennsylvania constitution specifically outlines how they vote in Pennsylvania, it has nothing to do with the federal government at all.
02:05:21.000So let's grab a couple of the YouTubes, a couple of the YouTubes over here.
02:07:16.000That's my point, is like, Brian will go online and post crazy things, and then he'll be like, Well, look, man, like when we hang out, we can kind of chill out.
02:07:24.000He does say he doesn't like trans and women's sports.
02:07:28.000My point is between like Brian and Milana, Milana doesn't like my politics, so she calls me an incel humorless, despite the fact that we had been friends and I've known her for over a decade.
02:07:39.000Brian goes online and says crazy, vitriolic things and starts fights with people, but says, Well, I'll hang out with you if you ask, and I'll be nice to you if you ask.
02:07:46.000And like, he's like, to Rachel, if you wanted to grab dinner with Brian and ask him to be polite, he would say yes.
02:08:23.000I said, I posted on Instagram something like, How do you think she was able to do so well in early voting, surpassing Karen Bass in a single jurisdiction ballot?
02:08:44.000Here's the reality I think Milana knows full well they are cheating.
02:08:49.000I think she knows exactly that if she answered that question, it would expose what they are doing.
02:08:54.000So instead of saying we dispatch activists to go knock on nursing home doors, ask people who they're voting for, and if they're against us, we ignore them and leave.
02:09:03.000And if they're for us, we collect their ballot and we get paid to do it.
02:09:06.000I think that would kind of be bad for your political worldview.
02:09:09.000So instead, it's you're a humorless, greedy incel and you've sold your soul, blah, blah, blah.
02:14:10.000I said it was ungentlemanly to call her the C word, and I should have made an argument that I could articulate more.
02:14:17.000But here's the thing the way the internet works is that the amount of people who hit me up after I called her a cunt, because they don't actually care about the argument, they want the emotional satisfaction.
02:14:28.000I had Jews walking up to me like crazy.
02:14:30.000You were a hero to a lot of people, a lot of Jews.
02:14:33.000I just thought it was out of character because, Tim, you are a passionate guy, but at the same exact time, like when you're out in the public, you're the nicest guy.
02:14:39.000I don't want to bring this up, but when Tim tips people, he's a very gracious tipper to strangers.
02:17:06.000Actually, there's 54 because there's two jokers.
02:17:08.000If you draw the ace of spades, you win $2,500.
02:17:13.000And so the dealer who dealt me the high hand, so it's, if you get a hand that's aces full of twos or better, if you don't know what it is, is or whatever, he dealt me four queens.
02:19:24.000If I show up to the World Series, which I will be at, they want people to believe that I'm a fringe right wing who doesn't tip, who hates dealers, and is a snooty elitist, when it's the complete antithesis of what I do and what I believe in as a populist.
02:19:38.000They do the same thing to me when it comes to the band.
02:19:40.000They're just like, oh, nobody likes them, blah, blah, blah.
02:19:43.000And it's like, look, man, you can go to our Spotify.
02:19:46.000We got a million and a half monthly listeners.
02:19:47.000And it's like, that's one of the bigger metal bands out there.
02:20:23.000But my point is they're creating a false picture of me to claim that conservatives, people on the right, hate the working class, don't tip, they're stingy, people with money are evil.
02:20:34.000This is how they lie about everything.
02:20:38.000Reddit is the worst place for that, though.
02:20:40.000And it's the first line of defense for something like this because.
02:20:44.000Everybody could go to like any of the Boonies things and see you skating and know that that's not true, but they're just betting on a lot of people not doing any research into it and just taking their word for it.
02:21:53.000What I said was there's going to be some 13 year old kid who watches a skate video with me and some pro skaters, and they're going to see a Gadsden flag in there.
02:22:00.000And they're going to like our skate videos and they're going to like what we have to say.
02:22:03.000Then they're going to go to their school and their teacher's going to say, the Gadsden flag is white supremacy.
02:22:07.000And the kid's going to go, no, it's not.
02:22:10.000Like my favorite pro skateboarders fly that flag.
02:22:25.000They want a 15 year old kid who just got into skateboarding to hear on a forum Tim Pool's a fake skater who's trying to steal and trick skaters.
02:22:33.000Then, when we try to sell the board, they're going to be like, Aren't you that fake skater guy?
02:22:37.000And then I'm going to land a Nolly Hard Flip, Late Flip, and they're going to be like, Oh.
02:22:40.000But they have to control the culture and the narrative.
02:24:23.000So I think that's kind of like the reason why people aren't tipping is like now, like I said, the example that I used, DoorDash and Uber Eats, they're saying that their tips are like two out of 14 people on average.
02:24:35.000There's a bunch of Instagram videos and TikToks, whatever you want to call it, of DoorDash drivers talking about how now they do not get tipped very much.
02:24:43.000Have you seen these fake videos where the driver walks up and then it's a fake driver and he's like, I got your DoorDash, but you didn't tip, so I'm leaving.
02:24:55.000Have you seen the video where the guy's walking down the stairs and it says, uh, when you don't realize you're 40, he's walking down the stairs and then he jumps down the last three.
02:25:04.000And then the next scene is him as a silhouette, like as like transparent.
02:25:08.000And he looks at his hands and turns around and his body's all twisted and dead on the ground.
02:25:11.000And he goes, and it's like you're not 18 anymore.
02:25:14.000I have seen that fucking video 7,000 times recreated over and over again by fucking retards.
02:25:21.000That's what they do burn it down, burn it all down.
02:25:26.000I should actually start just saving the URLs to these so that I can just line them up and be like, this is what social media is.
02:25:33.000It's people just recreating the same videos over and over and over again because the idea is if the joke already went viral, I don't need to be creative.
02:26:23.000There's this trend, and I don't even want to shout it out, where they say, This girl's like, Oh, I was sleeping with this guy, I cheated on my husband, and they're like, But I took a spicy cube.
02:26:47.000One thing you said to me that you said online the other day that really stuck with me the worst thing in the world is get ready with me makeup videos.
02:27:05.000To be fair, to be fair, I can't remember who responded almost as bad as dudes playing video games.
02:27:09.000Because what guys do is they'll put the camera on and they'll be holding the controller and they'll be like sitting there going, like, so the camera's right there and they'll be looking at this.
02:28:12.000So, I have a question for Alex and the panel.
02:28:15.000A lot of us have been doing this for a while.
02:28:17.000We have seen the repetition and the way that this constantly cycles through with the rage baiting.
02:28:22.000And it seems like right now we're in the race level of leftism, like we started to see in 2018.
02:28:27.000And there are influencers, and I'm actively seeing it on social media that are trying to quietly push into our algorithms, you know, accepting trans culture again and things like that.
02:28:38.000I'm surrounded by a largely mixed race of Republican and Libertarian people who are not afraid to speak up.
02:28:44.000And so I hope I'm not in a biased bubble here.
02:28:47.000So, I ask, do you think that there are enough dissenting voices that are willing to speak up and stop this nonsense before it starts?
02:28:54.000Now that we seemingly have won the culture war, I don't know.
02:29:08.000Sammy's my friend, though, but Sammy, I do kind of agree because I feel like I catch myself, like I'm almost having culture war fatigue, right?
02:29:15.000Like it's not like I'm not passionately against the trans stuff, which I am.
02:29:19.000But it's like, gosh, we're just arguing about these same topics over and over.
02:29:26.000And I, like Tim just said, I almost get over it.
02:29:28.000But that is not the right position to have because we're constantly fighting this, right?
02:29:31.000And as soon as we get complacent, that's when we're going to get overwhelmed and then it's going to take over.
02:29:34.000So it's kind of like this hard tightrope to walk.
02:29:38.000But I think that, Sammy, though, is the problem that we're facing is that we're almost getting tired of fighting the same battle over and over in the culture.
02:29:44.000I think that once, I think that there are, I don't think that there are enough.
02:29:52.000I think there are way more now than there were, say, 15 years ago, 10 years ago.
02:29:58.000And I think that when woke does gain steam again, which it will, there will be a lot more dissenting voices and they're not going to be as, they're not going to cow the way they used to, right?
02:30:10.000You've got a whole generation of Gen Z people that, largely Gen Z men, right, that just will not care.
02:30:20.000They're going to go harder in the paint than Fuentes ever did.
02:30:24.000And it's going to be, I mean, it's going to be, there's going to be a lot of pushback.
02:30:29.000But I don't think that there's ever enough because we have enough when woke doesn't have any, you know, has no ground at all.
02:30:48.000So like because our guy's in power, we've kind of won.
02:30:50.000So it makes us maybe more complacent because of that.
02:30:54.000So I feel like, believe it or not, I don't want a president AOC, but if we had a president AOC, that would actually bring the conservatives together to come together and fight the conservative culture war.
02:31:14.000I hate it, but it feels like even just culturally, you know, and I'm around a lot of young people, Gen Zers and stuff, because I'm part of the YRs.
02:31:23.000And I see, you know, that they are very outspoken, they're very informed, very, you know, they educate themselves and, um, I'm just hoping that there's enough of a voice as I see kind of the stuff creep back into the algorithms or they're trying to race beta and all this.
02:31:37.000I mean, even my board mostly are not white and they're all young Republicans.
02:31:42.000So I'm hoping that we see pushback this time and we don't just allow our country to go back into that.
02:31:47.000There will be more pushback than there was before, but it's going to be, there will, the woke stuff is going to come back.
02:32:31.000Blasphemy was technically illegal, but it was only tried at the state level, and it was written because it was a common law carryover from the Christian society from England.
02:32:40.000And it was very much treated at that time like defamation or libel as a judgment of moral character.
02:32:45.000Because how can we trust somebody to take an oath of office that they swear on on a Bible if they don't believe the Bible oath?
02:32:51.000And that was the cultural reality at the time.
02:32:53.000The states keep their own constitutions alongside federal limits, blah, blah, blah.
02:32:59.000So state constitutions are incredibly important, even though earlier you were saying people don't care.
02:33:04.000That's actually what's happening right now in Florida.
02:33:07.000We just passed property taxes in the legislature, but they passed it as a constitutional amendment for the people to vote on.
02:33:14.000To relieve them of the property taxes.
02:33:17.000And then the voters will go decide in November.
02:33:19.000But if states put things in their constitution that are federally against the federal constitution, say like taking guns away, it should get challenged in the Supreme Court of the state and then taken federal.
02:33:37.000And that is exactly the purpose of the Supreme Court, both state and federal.
02:33:42.000And this is why paying attention to judicial elections and appointments is.
02:33:45.000Very, very important, which most people don't.
02:33:48.000And many early founding fathers were deists or skeptics who kept doubts private and separated from personal beliefs without tearing down the system.
02:33:55.000And I urge you to look at Thomas Paine's Common Sense in the Age of Reason because he championed natural rights and liberty of conscience in the 1700s.
02:34:04.000So, I think that's a good rebuttal to some of the arguments I made in support of the argument that the Constitution is effectively non existent.
02:34:16.000So, With or without those, without getting into an argument, I don't think any of that changes or rebuts my principal argument that is, the Constitution does not functionally exist as anyone actually thinks it should or does.
02:34:31.000An example being Abraham Lincoln in 1861, actually, suspended habeas corpus without the constitutional authority to do so.
02:34:40.000And then after he excised his opponents, his sycophants in Congress just agreed with him and ratified what he did.
02:34:47.000So, Stressing the point, the founding fathers have never agreed with the president unilaterally suspending a guaranteed right.
02:39:27.000Anything you want to add or anything you want to shout out?
02:39:31.000Well, I think that, given the recent cycle that happens in the UK where somebody dies and then there's obviously it turns into a race riot, and this cycle has happened multiple times, I think it's getting to the point where.
02:39:47.000It's becoming inevitable that something is going to happen.
02:39:51.000And I'm kind of concerned that that is going to result in more death.
02:39:57.000I think that the United States recently coming out and saying that, like, this is a two tier justice system is a form of using soft power to benefit that stuff.
02:40:07.000And I agree with you, Phil, that, like, the CI getting involved in certain panels and stuff like that is espionage as well.
02:41:39.000Another 17 year old that stabbed another 17 year old, and we'll never hear about it because it's black versus white.
02:41:44.000It's the number one story on all over the news, and it's meant to divide us because it's the old theory.
02:41:50.000If we're fighting with each other, then we're never going to actually go after the people that are in power and actually get anything solved.
02:41:55.000So, like, that is part of the psychological operation is to pin us against each other, whether it's, you know, accidentally or purposely, like these cops standing down during a protest in Minneapolis when Jake Lang's getting beaten up or whatever it is.
02:42:08.000There's a countless amount of examples of cops standing down and not doing their job.
02:42:13.000To piss off people like us that are actually paying attention and because they want to create a response from us, like they want to push our buttons.
02:42:28.000Yeah, it's like much more sinister than we like to give it credit for.
02:42:31.000It's not just like insubordination or, you know, because they're just oopsie poopsie, they don't care anymore.
02:42:37.000Like it's almost done on purpose, where it's like racial profiling, but the opposite of that, you know, it's like, Like I said, they want to pit us against each other.
02:43:01.000So in the UK, I would argue too, they want a white guy to go burn down a house of migrants and then it makes the white guy look bad and then there's a race war.
02:43:10.000They would love that because it would distract us from actually solving the problems that we need to focus on.
02:44:15.000Anthony Bimba was charged in Brock, Massachusetts for blasphemy under a law pastor in the time of the Southern Witch Trials, blah, blah, blah.
02:44:28.000He said, evolution is true, the Bible's a lie.
02:44:30.000He was not permitted to testify in his own defense.
02:44:34.000The judge then dismissed the original charge, replacing it with one of distributing obscene, slanderous, and scurrilous literature.
02:44:39.000He was convicted, fined, and served most of a 26 day jail sentence.
02:44:44.000While this is technicality, he was jailed because he was obscene in his offense, but they argued, well, you can't get after him for blasphemy, so we'll call it obscenity.
02:44:55.000However, again, going back to the 1789 Constitution, we had dozens, if not hundreds, of blasphemy convictions during the constitutional era.
02:45:05.000They ratified in 1789, and from that point, people were consistently being jailed.
02:45:10.000Commonwealth v. Nealand, the Commonwealth of Messages upheld his conviction.
02:45:15.000So the founding fathers existed well into their twilight years in a world where the First Amendment did not protect your speech if it was blasphemous.
02:45:25.000Anyway, let's go to the next caller, and we'll bring in T-Bone.
02:46:01.000So my question is: So you've gone viral confronting people at Pride events before, with reports that some cities canceling Pride over safety.
02:46:11.000Economics and others still pushing family friendly drag shows.
02:46:17.000Where do you draw the line on what's appropriate for kids during Pride events?
02:46:34.000Well, you know, it's funny because there's this guy, it's like Hank Wilkerson.
02:46:38.000He's a local news host in Detroit and he's friends with.
02:46:42.000I played high school football with this guy, Matt Stafford, and he's a quarterback for the Los Angeles Rams.
02:46:46.000I know I'm kind of confused, but this story's confusing, but this guy did a podcast with my friend's wife, and he recently posted that he took his adopted daughter to Pride.
02:46:54.000And I commented on Instagram, I'm like, dude, why did you take your daughter to Pride?
02:46:58.000Like, you know, it's just, that's not cool.
02:47:00.000And he's like, well, I'm trying to show her, you know, blah, blah, blah, gay pride, gay people exist.
02:47:06.000I would just argue this the only difference between a gay person and a straight person is their sexual preference.
02:47:11.000So the whole entire thing that a Pride Parade is celebrating is your sexual preference.
02:47:16.000If a kid is old enough to talk about sex with, then I guess they could go.
02:47:20.000But if a kid is too young to talk with them about sex and they shouldn't go, like that should be the limit.
02:47:24.000So, 17, 18, I guess you could argue that they could go.
02:47:28.000But, like a 12 year old, should we be talking about sex with a 12 year old?
02:47:31.000Should we be talking about sex with a 13, 14, 15?
02:47:41.000We're celebrating people's sexual preference.
02:47:43.000So, if you don't want to have a sexual conversation with a kid, if they're not old enough to have that conversation, they shouldn't be at a pride parade.
02:47:48.000I think that's where we draw the line.
02:47:53.000Yeah, I mean, I actually tend to agree with Alex.
02:47:57.000Like, back when I was a kid in high school, there were still arguments about whether or not, you know, what kind of sex education should be taught in school.
02:48:07.000And the reply was, you know, it's something that parents should teach.
02:48:11.000And honestly, I kind of think that that should be the situation.
02:48:15.000If you want to teach sex education as biology, that's one thing.
02:48:19.000But when you're talking about sexuality as like, The way that they would teach it in the humanities in college courses, I don't think that that should be taught to high schoolers at all.
02:48:29.000The birds and the bees should be something your parents teach.
02:48:32.000And the argument, oh, well, some parents don't teach their kids properly, blah, blah, blah.
02:48:36.000First of all, who's to say what's properly?
02:48:38.000Second of all, it's worked fine for all of human history.
02:49:19.000Yeah, I mean, like, I think we're actually probably on the same page, but like, what are you saying?
02:49:24.000Like, we should outlaw pride parades totally?
02:49:26.000You're allowed to talk to children about sexual relations to a certain degree as it pertains to reproduction and as a natural cycle of human existence.
02:49:34.000But when you get into the gay stuff, you're getting into kink stuff.
02:49:38.000So I actually think there is a difference between the two.
02:49:42.000If there is like a 10 year old, maybe 10 might be appropriate for a child when you start getting into the birds and the bees.
02:49:47.000I actually think people need to understand we've had conservative rural folk talk to us about how there is no conversation on the birds and the bees when you live in the country because little kids watch cows bang, they watch chickens bang.
02:49:59.000So you're a little kid, you're watching a donkey walk around with his dick flopping around, then he mounts the mare and he fucks her, and the kid just grows up seeing these things, and it's just a natural part of.
02:50:09.000But for people who live in cities who aren't exposed to any of this, they're like, how do we tell the kid it's happening?
02:50:15.000So I actually think you find that time.
02:50:18.000And when it comes to heterosexual relations, it's younger than homosexual relations because homosexual relations is kink gratification and heterosexual relations is the propagation of human existence.
02:50:31.000And the argument they used to make for teaching sex ed in the schools was that, you know, when they started implementing those programs and teaching them about safe sex and about condoms, that People who suddenly didn't know about these ideas had access to them, and unplanned pregnancies have gone down.
02:50:46.000I don't know how accurate any of that was.
02:50:47.000I just know that that was the approach that they took back then.
02:50:50.000But then they kind of shoehorn in, or they start to Trojan horse in, for lack of a better term, stuff that has to do with LGBTQ stuff, which is just kind of all flying under the same banner.
02:51:01.000And it's kind of the same type of blurry outline that you see when people talk about pride, which is like, you know, to a generically liberal person, Who doesn't look at it with malice?
02:51:13.000Like they're teaching you how to be proud of who you are, no matter what it is, who it is that you love, right?
02:51:18.000And that's the general opinion of the liberal person who doesn't have any malice toward a pride event, but doesn't actually know what's going on there.
02:51:26.000They're assuming what's going on is that people are celebrating the fact that, hey, I'm different than other people and that's okay.
02:51:32.000But we know that now that it's a very different thing.
02:51:35.000As you were mentioning, the stuff that's happened or been exposed in San Francisco or these other places.
02:51:41.000And the challenge there is finding a way to explain this to people.
02:51:45.000Who may not be politically initiated, but are willing to be open to the idea of hearing more about it.
02:51:50.000It's like when you have to try to tell people about what were you mentioning earlier?
02:51:55.000The family friendly drag shows and stuff like that.
02:51:58.000Explaining that to a person who's not politically initiated is very, very difficult.
02:52:02.000And it's the same thing that's going to happen when talking about sex ed classes in school.
02:52:06.000They're not going to think about gender discussions or gender ideology in a negative or malicious light.
02:52:13.000They're simply going to assume that they're going into it with good faith.
02:52:16.000And the conservatives have an argument to the contrary.
02:52:18.000Well, and to what Brett said, though, I think that is a good point because I remember Sex Ed, and the thing that they focused on when I was going through Sex Ed was they had a book and they showed you all the STDs and they showed you like a penis with gangrene, and it was almost meant to see where it happened to you.
02:52:33.000Yeah, they're like, if you have sex, yeah, you can get age.
02:52:36.000You can get, you know, your penis can fall off or whatever.
02:52:38.000And I remember specifically learning like, you can't get an STD from a toilet seat, but you can get it from blah, blah, blah.
02:52:44.000So my point is, I don't think we should be teaching people about how to have anal sex with a dude or how to scissor a girl.
02:52:49.000But yeah, maybe Sex Ed teach them that you can get an STD.