00:03:10.000Senator Lindsey Graham of the weekend passed away.
00:03:13.000Now, there's a lot of conspiracy theories.
00:03:16.000Some are falsely alleging that he was killed in a drone strike or a missile strike in Ukraine, but they're confusing these two different facilities.
00:03:24.000Interestingly enough, however, FBI agents are currently sweeping the home of the late senator, which is very strange.
00:03:33.000And Lindsey Graham's sister has been appointed to hold his office until the upcoming election.
00:03:39.000So, big news Donald Trump apparently has some kind of big announcement coming up today, and apparently another one on Thursday.
00:03:44.000We don't know exactly, but there are reports.
00:03:47.000That Trump and Bill Pulte are about to drop some big news pertaining to the 2020 election, which, oh man, everybody's speculating.
00:03:58.000People are saying Trump's going to announce he's suspending elections or some other weird conspiracy.
00:04:02.000You know, who knows what he's going to say.
00:04:05.000But there is some reporting that he's going to announce that at least two senators are illegitimate because they won through election fraud and then try to get them removed, which is just, it's getting crazy out there, boys.
00:04:25.000Today, we spend nearly 90% of our lives indoors.
00:04:28.000Almost 1 billion people are deficient in vitamin D, and chronic disease has become the leading cause of death and disability across the globe.
00:04:36.000So here's a question What if we're not getting sicker because our bodies are failing?
00:04:39.000What if modern life has disconnected us from the very things our bodies need to thrive?
00:04:45.000The good news scientists have spent decades learning how to harness some of nature's most powerful healing forces.
00:04:50.000One of these things is red light therapy, which I've got to be honest.
00:04:54.000Up until I had my kid, I had no idea that light therapy was a real thing because they do this for babies.
00:04:59.000They do blue light therapy, which is like you're in a hospital, they do it.
00:05:17.000So this is red light therapy and PEMF.
00:05:21.000Red light therapy delivers clinically studied wavelengths of light that help your cells produce more energy.
00:05:26.000For repair and recovery, PEMF sends gentle electromagnetic pulses that support healthy circulation, cellular function, and recovery.
00:05:34.000Together, they help restore the natural biological signals that modern life has taken away.
00:05:38.000There's all you know, I also think it's important to consider too.
00:05:41.000We used to wake up in the morning at the crack of dawn, the light would be coming up, and you'd get that red light hue on the horizon, also at dusk, and we don't get that anymore.
00:08:24.000Guys, I try so hard to be reasonable in how I report news and how we discuss these things, but how can we function as a society when CNN's doing things like this?
00:08:35.000Guys, this is an officer involved shooting with an allegation this individual was threatening the lives of the public.
00:08:43.000You don't have to call him a perpetrator, but you also don't have to call him a victim.
00:08:46.000You can say the individual shot by police.
00:09:03.000The shootings have reignited calls for accountability among ICE agents, which reached a fever pitch following the shooting deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretty.
00:09:10.000You know, guys, I think everybody's checked out.
00:09:13.000And the reason why is that we got some protests in Maine, but they were like nothing.
00:09:27.000And so when we got these riots and this fighting in winter, you know, I and many others who cover, who either cover or have covered riots, were like, oh man, if they're rioting in winter, summer's going to get nuts.
00:09:39.000And then summer comes along and nobody cares.
00:11:30.000Before the left started saying, oh, well, you know, ICE isn't legitimate and it's not legitimate to actually have borders and it's not legitimate to enforce the law.
00:11:40.000They're actually Trump's Gestapo and blah, blah, blah.
00:11:42.000It used to be generally the American people said, well, yeah, you know, and I understand there are people that, you know, that are libertarians and people on the left that have always been kind of anti police.
00:11:51.000But generally, people still look at ICE and they still look at law enforcement and they're like, yeah, we actually want police officers.
00:11:58.000You know, the DSA position of abolish the police, abolish ICE, like that is not a popular position with the regular Americans.
00:12:05.000And they're trying to like spin this up because they haven't had it.
00:12:48.000It's that his family's probably here illegally and they're going to hide from the media.
00:12:51.000Yeah, so it's just like it doesn't have the same punch.
00:12:53.000You know, it's like really get a riot that has to have some, like, again, I'll use the word, some aura around the shooting, some gravitas, some kind of energy to it.
00:13:00.000These, like, they go out with a whimper.
00:13:01.000They drive at a cop, get shot, and then all their family goes into hiding.
00:13:10.000You know, throwing a couple of cops in there.
00:13:13.000I understand the point you guys are making, but I do think that if this were to happen in February, it would have been people would have been purchasing in other cities.
00:13:20.000Guys, I think people are just checked out.
00:13:22.000Yeah, if this happened in 2016, oh my gosh, it'd be everywhere.
00:13:55.000I mean, I wonder if the real issue is just the purchase of CBS and the appointment of Barry Weiss.
00:14:00.000What I mean by that is when you have Trump allies buying up mass media, which I mean, we're talking about Paramount, we're talking about some of the most viewed television in the country, and they start removing the left ideology stuff, not all completely, and the reports start reflecting more of a moderate worldview, it's harder to muster up revolutionary leftists.
00:14:23.000So I'm not saying all of that media is gone.
00:14:25.000Obviously, CNN is still calling the man a victim and things like this.
00:14:28.000I'm just saying a percentage of woke media has been erased with TikTok being purchased by the Ellisons.
00:14:33.000I wonder if this plays a major role as well, as well as CBS.
00:14:37.000But TikTok, I think maybe is the biggest because what I'm hearing now from people who work in the industry is that they very much deprioritized all this activism stuff.
00:14:46.000Maybe the reason we're not seeing wackaloon lefties rioting is because they go on TikTok and they're not being fed this hyper political stuff anymore.
00:14:54.000I mean, if that's the case, that's a good thing for the country, right?
00:14:57.000Like, we don't want to be on a razor's edge all the time.
00:15:03.000And then also, additionally, again, kind of comparing and contrasting with the BLM stuff, like the black.
00:15:09.000Population of the United States has a very strong political lobby, right?
00:15:13.000You had like the Congressional Black Caucus, you had your Al Sharpton types, like they had this entire infrastructure built out.
00:15:19.000So, whenever there was an incident, they could you know spin everything up and it would be this huge media cycle, and you'd have congressional investigations.
00:15:26.000Al Sharpton go out and do his thing with illegal immigrants.
00:15:29.000They don't really have that, they don't have a media apparatus, they don't have like sort of this distinct narrative like black people had, like we've always been marginalized in this country.
00:15:44.000I mean, Van Hollen was a kind of rare exception, but generally speaking, they kind of want the news cycle to move along here because there's not that much incentive to like become a warrior for the illegal immigrant shot by ICE.
00:15:56.000But to be a warrior for George Floyd, that had huge, not just social incentives, but political incentives.
00:16:01.000I mean, Americans do think of black Americans as Americans.
00:16:04.000You know, if you've got someone that's like here illegally, Americans are going to be like, wow, you know, I mean, and I think that that's, you know, rightly they're like, look, if he wasn't here illegally, And wasn't fleeing from law enforcement, he'd be alive today.
00:17:04.000I mean, well, I mean, look, the DSA would love to be able to make political hay out of this, but there's still a small caucus in the Democrat Party.
00:17:16.000If you look at the way that the average.
00:17:19.000Quote unquote middle of the road, Democrat is signaling the things that they're saying.
00:17:24.000They're sympathetic to that because they know that the young people in the Democrat young people or the left up young people are far more sympathetic to that idea.
00:17:34.000You got to look at it from a Democrat's perspective how helpless they feel is.
00:17:37.000We're literally at war with a country that was in the World Cup and we could have played them.
00:17:42.000We have the Trump Stopo going around shooting illegal immigrants and the World Cup's still flying.
00:17:47.000It's like that's all anyone's talking about.
00:17:49.000So it's like, imagine being a Democrat where, like, 10 years ago, you could have, like, really turned that into a big thing and put pressure on various sponsors to pull out, et cetera.
00:17:58.000Where instead, you have 4 billion people who have their eyes on the United States right now and they're enjoying this spectacle that we're putting on.
00:18:05.000And, like, literally everything that the Democrats would have typically, the ammunition they would have to stir up, you know, make these wedge issues or whatever, no one really cares.
00:18:13.000And there's no, you know, there's no retribution.
00:18:58.000That's not a good thing for the country, but that doesn't bode well for your middle of the road Democrats that are like, oh, you know, we're, we, we, Still, we think that capitalism is good.
00:19:12.000There was an attempt by House Democrats to form like an organization or whatever.
00:19:19.000And they were just like, oh, you know, we're pro capitalism, we're pro America.
00:19:22.000And there were like 13 people out of the whole House of Representatives.
00:19:25.000They got like 13 or 14 people that were like, yeah, I'm going to join this thing.
00:19:28.000It's like, look, man, Democrats generally do not like America at all.
00:19:33.000Like, you've got the far left that want to destroy it, but then the majority of Democrats, at least in the House, They're like, yeah, you know, America's got such bad problems.
00:19:43.000Maybe it's not a bad idea if we get rid of the electoral college.
00:19:47.000They all give lip service to getting rid of the electoral college.
00:19:49.000They all give lip service to, you know, to adding states, to expanding the court.
00:19:56.000The more extreme you get, then there are people that are like, well, we should abolish the Senate.
00:20:24.000I mean, they're going to be like, but you know, like the, like, first, I want to say is to your question about like, would you vote for a Democrat?
00:20:31.000As I think the main reason why a lot of well meaning, truth seeking, you know, patriots wouldn't consider it anymore is because there were Democrats in the past that were quite appealing to people that were maybe more like populist minded.
00:20:42.000Like Bernie Sanders had quite a wide range of support.
00:20:53.000And so, like, most of these Democrats that in the past were like, well, you know, he's reasonable.
00:20:57.000I don't agree with them on everything.
00:20:58.000But, you know, if it came down to it, I could maybe vote for him.
00:21:00.000They, if you give them a long enough time, they will just like expose themselves.
00:21:04.000The same thing happened with Roe Kahn, where a lot of people were interested in him.
00:21:07.000And to the second one with Mamdani, I mean, the mechanism that I outlined is I'm not really that afraid of what Mamdani is going to do to New York City.
00:21:13.000I think the sort of long term effect of his mayoral reign will be more vape shops and just, Continue decline.
00:21:20.000He'll manage to decline a little more effectively, maybe.
00:22:22.000To come out and be like, we need your money for stuff and we're going to drive up rents, but I deserve more.
00:22:27.000I'm like, just come out and say it, bro.
00:22:29.000Well, and like, you know, attacking pensions is really calculated because you got to think, like, okay, well, what is the profile of someone in New York City that's receiving a city pension?
00:22:37.000Well, it's typically like old ethnic whites, like your Italians, your Irish that worked in the fire department, worked for the garbage, et cetera.
00:22:44.000And he's like clearly demonstrated this whole time that he like despises those people.
00:22:47.000Like he really, those people get under his skin because still to this day, if you ask them from Japan or someone from Sweden or someone from, you know, Brazil, what do you think of when you think about a New Yorker?
00:22:56.000They think some like fat, greasy guy with like an apron on is, whoa, I'm walking it.
00:23:04.000Is the brand instead of like me, this like you know, wholesome, chungus brown guy, so that like, yeah, so that infuriates him, and so that's why he's attacking these pensions.
00:23:13.000But I wanted to make this point too is the main threat of Memdani as I see it again isn't so much as he destroys New York City because New York City was heading the wrong way for since de Blasio.
00:23:21.000Um, that being said, my main fear with Memdani is that he normalizes DSA politics in the Democrat Party where he has so much energy, he has so much enthusiasm, he has the activist space locked down that a lot of these blue state Democrats are going to look over at him and say, Well, Memdani's getting attacked so much by Trump, so much by conservative media, that he must be doing something right.
00:23:50.000And, you know, the anti Italian discrimination.
00:23:52.000The budget shortfall that they're experiencing in New York City, like, that's going to be made up by the state, state of New York.
00:24:00.000But New York City is where the state of New York basically gets all of their tax revenue.
00:24:05.000So what's going to end up happening is.
00:24:07.000Eventually, the feds are going to have to bail it out.
00:24:09.000So, it's going to be something the whole country is going to have to pay for.
00:24:11.000And I was reading too the average age of a millionaire in New York City is like early 70s, mid 70s.
00:24:15.000So, I mean, most of these people are old New Yorkers or, you know, people that moved to New York City a long time ago and they just can't quite say goodbye.
00:24:22.000Well, those people are going to die soon.
00:24:23.000They're going to die or they're going to go to Florida.
00:24:26.000What you're left over with is like Colombian immigrants wearing puffer vests and they have highlights in their hair.
00:24:37.000A lot of them, it's just their holdings or they were just in the right place at the right time.
00:24:40.000Not like, Not there's something very you know valuable about that, but like let's be honest here, it's not like these are industrialists or anything.
00:24:45.000No, no, and and they eventually they'll like you said, they'll either pass away or they will say, All right, I can't take it anymore because they're going to start, you know, the taxes are just too much and they're going to actually move to Florida.
00:24:55.000Yeah, well, New York City felt the pinch already in the middle class.
00:24:57.000So, like the big thing I was afraid of when Memdani was talking about these property tax increases and just trying to basically shake down and uh, bill call the New Yorkers is everyone was like, Well, it's these massive buildings in New York City, they're going to face the most like you know, economic strife with Memdani's proposals.
00:25:12.000I'm like, No, the real people that are going to feel the pinch.
00:25:14.000Are people in the outer boroughs who own their homes?
00:25:16.000So you're talking about these older New Yorkers who bought their homes in the 80s or 90s.
00:25:22.000Like they're part of the ethnic white class that people associate with New York City.
00:25:26.000You know, you're talking like, you know, Bayside, Queens or Howard Beach or, you know, Benson Hurst, Staten Island by and large.
00:25:32.000Those are the people that are going to feel the pinch from Mdani's proposals.
00:25:36.000I'm not saying they're good at all, obviously, but a lot of those people in New York City with massive property holdings, they're going to survive this.
00:25:42.000The people that aren't going to survive this are the people that, in many ways, kind of built the New York that we know today.
00:26:29.000The same, he wasn't taking the stock tips, yeah, yeah.
00:26:32.000So, I mean, I guess to like kind of put a bow on what I was saying is like, yeah, I'm not as worried about Memdani's proposals in action, I'm worried about his proposals, his policy platform getting adopted by the National Democrat Party because again, they view him as like he's under fire.
00:26:47.000Republicans really hate him, that's what they did with AOC.
00:26:49.000But we saw Tucker Carlson float launching a new party, yeah, and that's in line with exactly the rumors I've been hearing.
00:26:56.000Democrats in Illinois and New York are completely bifurcated.
00:26:59.000In Illinois, the progressives lost, in New York, the progressives won.
00:27:02.000It looks like the Democratic Party is fracturing.
00:27:04.000And guys, sooner or later, the Democratic Party ceases to exist.
00:27:07.000It's the oldest political party in the world.
00:27:09.000So it's not out of the question for the Democrats just to break.
00:28:51.000There was a bunch of streamers doing a thing where they were calling people, they were either halal or sabra because sabra is made by, I guess, Israeli or something like that.
00:29:09.000Like, generally, there's a very narrow group of people on the right and a little bit wider on the left, but that are really, really impassioned about it.
00:29:18.000And you'll see them on X whenever they want to complain about Trump, they'll say, oh, he's owned by Israel or what have you.
00:29:24.000But for the most part, your average person that goes to work and consumes maybe two or three hours of news per week, they don't have time for that.
00:30:00.000I think the majority of Americans are vaguely familiar with what's going on over there, but they don't really care that much.
00:30:05.000But the default position historically was pro Israel, where now under 35s, the default position is.
00:30:12.000So, even if you're apathetic, even if you really don't care that much, you're still going to tactically be like, yeah, I don't want to ally with these people.
00:30:18.000Like, that is now the default position of Zoomers and younger millennials.
00:31:10.000Especially Zoomers and certainly millennials are just completely allergic to it.
00:31:14.000And that's why the Iran war is such a crisis.
00:31:16.000People will talk about it, they'll bring up the foreign aid for Israel.
00:31:20.000And it's like, look, man, if you're actually concerned about the deficit and the debt, you're actually concerned with Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.
00:31:28.000That's the most money we spend every year.
00:31:31.000The amount of money that we spend in foreign aid doesn't even.
00:31:35.000If we ended all foreign aid, we would still be bankrupt.
00:31:40.000We could end all foreign aid, and all the countries that we gave foreign aid to in the past decade could give it all back, and we'd still be bankrupt.
00:31:50.000If we got all the money back from all the countries we've given money to, we would still not be able to do anything about the debt because of Social Security, Medicare, and Medicare.
00:31:58.000The economy is bad right now because all those USAID dollars were.
00:32:02.000Fraudulently propping up various NGOs that were spending money on things.
00:32:49.000But to your point, the NGOs are going to get bailed out because, like, boomers, when they start dying, because it's like in vogue right now to hate your kids, they're just going to be like, Yeah, that's like in vogue.
00:32:58.000That's like the trend from all parents, by the way.
00:33:48.000And also, the reason why the deodorant is locked up at Walgreens is not because of snobby rich kids.
00:33:53.000When I think about who is affecting my life negatively on a daily basis, I'm not thinking about a douchey kid who got some money from his dad.
00:34:19.000It's like kid proofed our entire society for these people.
00:34:21.000Yeah, it's like when I was a kid, there's paper towels in the bathroom, and now it's like a jet dryer on the wall.
00:34:27.000Instead of saying we are the 99% to mean we are the bottom in terms of wealth against the rich, we should say we're the 99% in terms of the functional, non criminal element.
00:35:02.000There are some rich people that I despise, and there are some poor people that I despise.
00:35:07.000Like, I'm tired of pretending like poor people are just innocent victims.
00:35:10.000Well, some are, and I don't blame the majority of working class people who are having struggles, but there are some poor people who are on drugs, who beat their wives, lock them up.
00:35:18.000Yeah, there's a guy like smearing poop all over the train.
00:35:34.000Well, no, there's somebody who's got medical.
00:35:36.000Yeah, but there's somebody's mom gets sick, and so they keep getting in debt and they're using credit cards to take.
00:35:44.000Some people who are chronically broke, it's their own goodness.
00:35:47.000No, a lot of them aren't because they're stupid.
00:35:49.000If you watch Caleb Hammer's show and he's sitting down with these people, I'm like, it doesn't matter how many financial courses you put these people through, they're so hard that they'll never understand.
00:35:57.000Yeah, I mean, look, there are people that fall in hard times.
00:35:59.000There are definitely people that have.
00:36:00.000To take care of family members and stuff.
00:36:02.000And that's, but I think that that's actually the exception to the rule.
00:36:05.000Because again, when I talk about chronically broke, I don't mean someone that goes through a decade of hard times because they had a family member fall ill.
00:36:12.000I'm talking about someone that was broke when they were 20 and they're 55 and they're still broke with nothing.
00:36:17.000I think a lot of those people, I mean, now the economy is hard, but there's a lot of people that cause a lot of problems.
00:36:22.000And it's like the argument liberals use where they're like, we need more like prison reform and prison re education.
00:36:27.000I'm like, no, these people are like predisposed to commit crimes.
00:36:31.000There's like, there's also a segment of the population that.
00:36:34.000The economy, the modern economy is just too difficult for them to comprehend.
00:36:38.000That's why you have like Somalis coming here.
00:36:40.000Do they have a, you know, are they predisposed to scamming or is it more likely they just, they're not, they don't have the cognitive function to participate in a market economy?
00:36:48.000If you have the, if you're smart enough to scam, you probably could seek gainful employment.
00:36:53.000But I think that when it comes to like Somalis or different cultures, I think that the culture that the United States has is really like because of the high trust society type stuff.
00:37:03.000It doesn't matter if you're an unintelligent Japanese person, which I'm sure there are.
00:37:55.000You got to go in there with a black leg to see what's actually going on.
00:37:57.000I got to give a shout out to the Capital One Lounge because they have like a parenting room for nursing and changing babies and everything.
00:38:49.000That's exactly what to hit on this point one more time to keep dunking on poor people because I don't get the chance to do this very often.
00:38:54.000Is the per like the whole personal responsibility thing that is true for a lot of people?
00:38:59.000Like, I'm not rich, so like that applies to me, but a lot of people are also like 10 years old, yeah.
00:39:04.000But a lot of people, I don't know, you have a watch.
00:39:30.000These people will just ruin everything.
00:39:32.000These are poor everyone across the board or just stupid people, et cetera.
00:39:37.000But now we have to kiddie proof everything for the lowest common denominator, the bottom 2%, as Trump pointed out correctly.
00:39:44.000And so everything just sucks now because Chipotle, I remember Chipotle used to be able to do a mobile order and then go pick it up off a shelf.
00:39:53.000Now, the shelf is behind the calendar, so I gotta wait for someone, flag them down.
00:39:57.000It's just like the little stuff like that.
00:39:58.000It's not because of the rest, it's not because of us.
00:40:01.000When we were in Vegas, there's a CVS that's, it's like, it's not downtown, it's like really close to the strip.
00:40:20.000Five hour energy that was locked up to jail the poor.
00:40:23.000No, seriously, it's like what we used to do in this country is we used to actually have like lower tolerance for this kind of stuff.
00:40:28.000Is like if you're stealing toothpaste, that's an indication that you probably have some antisocial behaviors and you should get to go to jail because jail is not about rehabilitation.
00:41:55.000So it's like, You're not going to get, you know, the same kind of, uh, Social disharmony that you get in, like a country like the United States, which has a bunch of different kinds of people with a bunch of different backgrounds and stuff, you know.
00:42:07.000And when I make this point about how prison is not for justice or for punishment or whatever, but it's for incapacitation, a lot of conservatives get really upset with me about this point.
00:43:02.000Well, and also, we understand this with certain functions.
00:43:04.000For example, the DMV understands this very well because you get one trap, you know, you speed once.
00:43:09.000It's like, okay, well, don't do it again.
00:43:10.000And then you typically learn, like, okay, well, I need to probably slow it down.
00:43:13.000But if you get five speeding tickets, you get points on your license.
00:43:16.000And in most states, you'll get your license suspended.
00:43:18.000So the DMV correctly understands that if you keep repeating behaviors, it's likely that you're going to continue repeating these behaviors.
00:43:26.000But for some reason, that correct model of society is like limited to the Department of Motor Vehicles.
00:43:33.000When you get five misdemeanors, that's probably, if you've stolen toothpaste five times, that's probably an indication to go to jail for a while.
00:43:40.000You need to get your driver's license revoked.
00:43:51.000You know, the whole thing, you know, we have to give people a lot of chances and oh, they didn't hurt.
00:43:57.000I mean, you listen to the people that were making arguments as to why Carmella Anthony shouldn't go to jail and they're like, oh, but it was his first offense.
00:44:05.000Brother, his first offense was murder.
00:44:19.000You can't minimize murder, but people will still have this idea that people should be treated with kid gloves and it's not good for society at all.
00:44:27.000Because imagine if you were going to CVS with your friends and then you watched one of them steal toothpaste, you'd be like, this is not a trustworthy person.
00:44:34.000But when it's someone you don't know, all of a sudden it's tolerable.
00:45:03.000The fake news is panicking after reports claim President Trump and acting DNI Bill Pulte are preparing a bombshell on documents related to 2020 election irregularities.
00:45:11.000We're also getting reports that Trump is going to claim, we've got this right here.
00:45:15.000Trump is planning to announce that Georgia's two senators, John Asif and Raphael Warnock, are illegitimate because of fraud.
00:45:21.000A well placed source in Georgia tells us the announcement could come as soon as tonight.
00:45:25.000What do you think he's going to announce?
00:45:28.000I suspect that it might be something Iran related because we've been seeing the buzz all day is that Congress is now informed that he intends to restart the war.
00:45:36.000We've resumed bombings and it looks like things are scaling up.
00:45:40.000We've established a toll on the street of Hormuz.
00:45:42.000Quick question for everybody listening Did any of you short oil?
00:45:47.000Or buy oil after the last time the war was ending?
00:45:50.000Because I've been, I'm not telling anybody they should.
00:45:52.000I'm just saying that we talked about in the show how Trump keeps yo yoing back and forth.
00:45:58.000And there are probably people that are, once Trump is like, the war is over, oil like comes down, then they buy a bunch of it up.
00:46:20.000And then at this point, if you've done it every time, even if you're wrong on which time the last time is, you still profit enough to not have to worry about it.
00:46:27.000Well, this is a weird one because this is the first, man, not the first instance, depending on who you ask.
00:46:31.000But this instance, it was the IRGC that kicked this back off because they decided to start bombing tankers.
00:46:40.000I think the primary reason was they had Khomeini's funeral and they're all fired up and they wanted some scalps.
00:46:44.000And so they said, well, we should be sovereign over the Straits.
00:46:47.000So we're going to start bombing all these tankers.
00:46:49.000And I think what's become increasingly clear with this conflict, et cetera, as time carries on, is the civilian government in Tehran does not have the IRGC under control at all.
00:46:59.000The IRGC, I'm not saying they're rogue, but they're clearly making decisions without any oversight from the Iranian government.
00:47:07.000Trump is going to, we heard the announcement that Trump would be giving a speech on Thursday.
00:47:10.000Apparently, The speech on Thursday will be, well, they're saying Trump's people will not focus on the elections.
00:47:18.000The Georgia Republican source adds that they were notified of a speech upcoming on Thursday.
00:47:22.000So this doesn't really clarify exactly what Trump is supposed to announce, but we are hearing that even MSNBC is freaking out saying Trump's about to launch some election task force.
00:48:20.000I think that's unlikely, but I do think that you're going to see a ramping up of investigations.
00:48:25.000So, what happens if they go ahead and actually produce evidence and say, okay, look, these guys were actually fraudulently elected.
00:48:32.000We have to make sure that our elections are sound, and Democrats are doing everything they can to prevent that using the laws passed in California as examples.
00:48:44.000Well, Georgia's the reason Georgia is coming into focus here is because.
00:48:48.000Their state house and senate are amenable to Republican causes.
00:48:52.000So, uh, they're thinking that again, if they can like prove a smoking gun, you drag a bunch of people through senate, you know, and all these committee hearings, house committee hearings, et cetera.
00:49:02.000Um, the agencies do their thing, but then you should, in theory, have the state house and senate in Georgia go to bat for you as well if it comes down to crunch time.
00:49:10.000Like, there's a reason they're not, they could do this in California.
00:49:12.000Why aren't they doing it in Georgia out of all states?
00:49:13.000It's like, well, maybe because they haven't actually found the evidence they need in California yet.
00:49:18.000It could be, but also the California state and house would never let that happen.
00:49:21.000The senate and house there, they would.
00:49:23.000I think, as far as I understand, ultimately it would be up to them to start ejecting people.
00:49:27.000I mean, the agencies go and arrest people, but will they do that?
00:49:40.000Yeah, we, we, there, there's the right now, the states have the authority to decide how they do their elections.
00:49:47.000I do think that the Congress should pass some kind of legislation that says, look, you can run your own elections, but these are the parameters by which you have to do the election.
00:49:58.000But I, you know, Congress isn't going to do anything.
00:49:59.000Yeah, the Save Act would have solved a lot of those problems.
00:50:50.000Well, I mean, that's one of the things that I've been talking about on X a lot lately how absolutely broken people's brains are largely by COVID, right?
00:51:16.000We're getting close to the point where if there's not a video that corroborates the photo, Getty Images is going to be the only reliable source for photos.
00:51:25.000People are going to upload AI photos to Getty, and you're not going to know if it's freely available.
00:51:29.000You can also put the Getty watermark on it.
00:51:30.000I'm saying, insofar as one institution that can verify photos' authenticity, it's probably going to be Getty.
00:51:39.000And so, if it doesn't come from a video, right?
00:51:40.000If you don't have a video corroborating, okay, it's a screenshot from a Trump speech or something, then yeah, you're going to have to turn to.
00:51:55.000Yeah, but I mean, that's probably one clever coder away, or one clever code away from being able to fake the metadata as well.
00:52:05.000Because right now, if you prompted ChatGPT and then you saved the image and uploaded it to Twitter, Twitter scans the metadata and says made of AI.
00:52:12.000But if you just go and screenshot the photo you just made, it removes the metadata and then you can just upload it.
00:52:18.000It doesn't remove the metadata, but it skips through the filter that says made of AI.
00:52:21.000I imagine that it wouldn't be difficult for an AI to fake metadata.
00:52:26.000They could probably be like, all right, do this, you know, and yeah.
00:52:31.000If you can convince an AI to actually hack into the Mexican government's, whatever their version of social security is, And steal a bunch of information, you could probably convince an AI to, you know, create metadata for it.
00:52:49.000And I like how we, like, don't care about data leaks anymore.
00:52:51.000Like, ATT, like, it seems like every six months it was like, by the way, like, 500 million people's social security numbers are out there now.
00:52:56.000And you're like, okay, well, I have ATT, but I just don't care anymore.
00:52:59.000But, like, 20 years ago, it'd be like a crisis.
00:53:00.000And now it's like, yeah, Arby's just leaked your blood type.
00:53:03.000And it's like, oh, well, it is what it is.
00:53:06.000All right, well, it's all in the cloud.
00:54:47.000I think that that alone is valuable because Trump has had so much going against him when it comes to a lot of the policies that he's talked about or he's trying to implement.
00:55:00.000And look, there's a lot of people that are very critical of Donald Trump.
00:55:02.000Because of the fact that he's not able to get things done.
00:55:06.000Not that he hasn't been trying or what have you, but there's a lot of resistance to a lot of things that he wants.
00:55:11.000So if Pulte can actually help him kind of, you know, get the ball across the finish line or whatever you want to call it, you know, that's what's actually necessary because there's a lot of policies that Trump has been proposing that I'm extremely in favor of.
00:55:30.000You like low key, you kind of want a guy that's like independently wealthy like him who's getting, because like if the Democrats get in and they come after him, he can just skip the country.
00:55:37.000You kind of want a guy that's like a bit insulated from everything.
00:55:59.000It would actually be funny if he came out and he was like, I will arrest all of the Democrats right now, but you're going to get 60 year mortgages.
00:57:05.000Imagine redoing that scene from Home Alone where Kevin McAllister's just trying to like buy a toothbrush, but it's like 2026, and he's kind of like, That would actually never happen.
00:57:13.000They would never let the kid, like, no, no, they did arrest the people on the plane, turn the plane back around.
00:57:18.000When I went to California the last time, I went to CVS and I was like, I'll get some coffee and cream and stuff for breakfast.
00:57:26.000And then I was like, oh, you know what?
00:57:38.000A lot of the ice cream I've noticed recently, because I've gotten kind of an ice cream phase in my life right now.
00:57:43.000And I've noticed since my last ice cream phase, it's not all, but a lot of the tubs have like a plastic film now that you have to rival back.
00:58:01.000She opened it, licked it, and put it back.
00:58:03.000And then tons of people started doing it.
00:58:04.000But here's the thing one guy grabbed one, bought it, walked over to the shelf, pretended like he was grabbing a new one, licked it, put it back, and walked away, stopped, walked over, grabbed his ice cream again.
00:58:46.000I was like, well, then there was a bunch of other videos where people were cracking open drinks and spitting in them and putting them back and stuff like that.
00:59:10.000And what Gen Z political activists are doing now is just trying to clip farm because they know you're going to get 20 million views on the TikTok video and you're going to get 100,000 on the long form video.
00:59:21.000So all you have to do is just clip farm.
00:59:24.000So sit there, let them say whatever they want, and then randomly just start going, and then stop and go, I'm done.
00:59:29.000Should we all do that so that the show?
00:59:53.000I was literally explaining clipping and I was like, I could say something like, you know, Donald Trump called me before he criticized Marjorie Taylor Greene.
01:01:52.000Because, yeah, like 10 years ago, I mean, like de platforming, et cetera, was so big where now Candace, you'll get like a Pepsi ad before.
01:01:57.000Yeah, I mean, the whole Candace stuff, it's like, she's like, oh, you know, it was Israel that killed Charlie, and we're just trying to find the truth, blah, blah, blah.
01:02:07.000If that were actually the case that Israel killed Charlie, why are they letting her, you know, continue to say this, you know, over and over and over, just days and days and days and months?
01:02:34.000Like, do you really think you see these videos where the guy, have you guys seen the videos where the dude walks up to a woman and he's like, will you buy me a water?
01:03:17.000Nobody wants you to come to a roast and say something shocking and offensive.
01:03:20.000Yeah, I won't say which comic it was, but a guy did a whole video breaking down about how his crowd works all fake and he's just planting people.
01:03:28.000You get a good crowd work video, you're going to get millions of views, right?
01:03:31.000So why sit there crossing your fingers hoping you can be witty when you can literally hire an actor, write the joke out, and then be witty and never go like, whoa, he got him?
01:04:51.000And he's not even like someone that, if you were trying to do like a captivating deep fake to fool the world, like, no one even noticed until like two days after they got this.
01:05:17.000You know, like when it comes to talking to these like networks and agencies and all that stuff, they're sitting there being like, why would you spend money trying to make something interesting happen instead of just hiring the person to do it?
01:05:26.000Like, why would you gamble with having your show be interesting?
01:05:39.000Like, without calling anybody out, big political hosts, especially in this space, they will call somebody up and say, I'll pay you to come on.
01:05:47.000And then the person comes on and says what they're supposed to say.
01:05:50.000Or you can take a look at like some of these younger Gen Z guys who do politics.
01:05:54.000They're on the phone, they do call in shows where they're debating a mega guy, but it's like not.
01:05:58.000It's obviously just some extra who's pretending to be mega so they can make him sound stupid and get a clip.
01:06:03.000Tim, are you throwing shade at Brian Shapiro?
01:10:48.000Well, they were, I mean, there was a study that was talking about how.
01:10:52.000Alcoholism among women, or like the average amount of alcohol women drank, went down after the invention of the dishwasher because there was like less misery now.
01:11:00.000So we didn't need to drink as much to cope.
01:11:02.000You'd think it'd go up because they don't have the dishes to do.
01:11:04.000They put them in there and they could have a drink or two.
01:11:06.000Yeah, well, I think a lot of it was just like people weren't drinking recreation.
01:12:21.000By the time, if they release 50,000 wolves in Springfield, Ohio, by the time you get there to neutralize the situation, they'll have recipes.
01:13:31.000I mean, look, like I said, they were not like, Messing with it.
01:13:35.000See a lot of videos where people are like, Oh, there was a famous picture of a Japanese woman taking a picture with herself, and there's like some kind of big cat.
01:13:45.000It was like right up behind her, and she's like, Uh, and then you show the next thing is a slide of a video of people dragging her away because the cat mauled her.
01:14:24.000And you see that kind of stuff where people go and they like mess, they try and, you know, feed bears and the bear grabs the person's hand and throws them around and stuff.
01:14:30.000The dude that was, that got, you know, flung up in the air by the buffalo, he wasn't doing anything.
01:14:42.000But yeah, it's not something he's seen.
01:14:44.000We had bears in our yard, and turns out we had bird feeders out and suet.
01:14:49.000And turns out that's basically bear bait because it's all animal fat and it could smell miles away.
01:14:55.000I've lived at my house in New Hampshire for 13 years, and just this past fall was the first time that I saw bears.
01:15:04.000And there was a big mama and two very large cubs in my front yard, and I was like, oh, and I tried to get my phone, but because they are super skittish.
01:15:14.000I'm like, just come back one more time so I can get a video, and then please don't come back again.
01:15:18.000I was in my house and I was in my room, like probably 40 yards away, and I went and grabbed my phone, and by the time I got back, they'd heard me rummaging around or whatever, and they were gone.
01:16:19.000So there's no calling and reporting bears or.
01:16:23.000I mean, there's rumors of mountain lions having been around the area and stuff because mountain lions actually have all of North America as their range.
01:16:32.000They don't stop, they just go everywhere.
01:16:34.000So basically, anywhere in North America, if it's kind of in the woods or whatever, you could see one.
01:16:40.000And if you catch a picture of it, it goes to the Facebook group.
01:16:43.000People are like, yo, blah, blah, blah, blah.
01:17:52.000I think it's probably better to get attacked by a shark than by an alligator because a shark has very sharp teeth and they don't do the whole death roll thing.
01:19:25.000Look, I had a friend that had the same kind of heart attack and he survived, but only because he literally lived like 10 minutes from the emergency room.
01:19:35.000And so they, you know, he was in surgery for hours and hours and hours.
01:19:38.000That kind of heart attack where it ruptures, you're doomed.
01:20:08.000Every time you hear like theories regarding one of these things, I think the imperative question always have to ask is how many people have to stay quiet to pull this off?
01:22:19.000The Mayo Clinic says aortic dissection isn't very common.
01:22:21.000It usually happens to men in their 60s and 70s.
01:22:25.000Symptoms of aortic dissection may seem like those of other health conditions.
01:22:28.000This often leads to delays in diagnosis.
01:22:30.000Early diagnosis and fast treatment of aortic dissection greatly improve the chances of survival.
01:22:35.000But yeah, I mean, it's like the big aorta rips and bulges out and internal bleeding and.
01:22:42.000At that age, I mean, I think Cernovich was talking about it how, on daylight savings time, when they move an hour forward to lose an hour, it's when you lose an hour of sleep, there's a 25% increase in cardiac deaths following day.
01:22:56.000Because, like, little stuff like that when you're really old will throw your entire body out of whack.
01:23:01.000So, think about a transatlantic flight.
01:23:10.000A lot of travel in a very short amount of time for a 71 year old who, you know, God rest his soul, but like clearly wasn't taking great care of himself.
01:24:21.000There are very few people in the United States government that's more pro Israel than Lindsey Graham and the idea of Lindsey Graham changing at the ripe old age of 71.
01:24:35.000And even if he was like softening, I mean, I still think if you're Israel and you're looking at biggest culprits for the softening of support for Israel and the United States, I think Lindsey Graham, even if he flipped, It would still be very far down your list.
01:24:46.000You're like, ah, we wish that you were pro Israel still, but you know, you've done so much in the past.
01:24:51.000Because to your point, it's like the imperative question is well, why are all the super base people always calling out Israel, not like having any harm done to them?
01:24:59.000Like, why are your Candace's walking free?
01:25:01.000Why are your Thomas Massey's walking on like nothing's going to happen?
01:25:03.000I mean, look, these are the people that are supposedly the brave truth tellers telling everything, exposing their secrets.
01:25:58.000He's like, $7,000 actually sounds really good now.
01:26:02.000Well, yeah, it's just like the guys tap out, but to your point, you didn't even notice.
01:26:05.000Like, that's the point I'm making is like he tapped out, he stopped doing the I'm the brief truth teller routine, and no one noticed, and like no one cares.
01:26:13.000Like, most of these guys, like, we think they're a big deal because we're on Twitter and we see the average American, though.
01:26:18.000Any of these people are well, the only I mean, can't a lot of people think a lot of people think Tucker's still on Fox.
01:27:26.000To your point, though, like, there's a lot of people, like, I didn't know about that Lucas Gage guy, but there's a lot of people that were either agnostic or Israel critical that are like, man, the Juicebergs have made it to the point where I'm actually pro Israel now.
01:27:41.000That's what happened with the skaters and everyone started wearing vans and everything, and you're like, oh, now it's not even, you know, that's our thing.
01:27:46.000Mom started wearing vans, all of a sudden you're taking them off.
01:27:49.000Like all the OG, like anti Semite guys that were like super clued in, and now they're like, oh.
01:27:54.000Spencer's not particularly anti Israel anywhere either, right?
01:27:57.000We sang out with like Scott Horton and Dave Smith, and we were like, nah, nah, we hear what you're saying about Israel, like that's really cool.
01:28:01.000And now with like Candace and like Ian Carroll, we're like, oh.
01:28:33.000Israel's like, We need to get a bunch of retards to come out and scream at the top of their lungs to annoy everybody so they stop paying attention.
01:30:08.000It's like, well, you know, they're another country.
01:30:10.000I'm not particularly pro Israel, but like, constantly, my feed is constantly full of people that have, you know, pictures of me with the Israeli flag behind me or whatever it's like.
01:30:20.000I think it doesn't, like, reality doesn't matter to these people.
01:30:22.000But also, take a look at, you know, TikTok and Paramount, Paramount's merger, you know, the Battle of Warner Brothers.
01:30:28.000I think, It may be that Tucker, Candace are Pied Pipering the stupid people out into the ghettos of politics.
01:30:38.000And there's no reality in which the powers that be are really anti Israel.
01:30:55.000You go on Fiverr and you hire some Indian dudes to, if somebody makes 10 videos and one of them is about, you know, nine of them are about, like, Cooking recipes and one is about Israel.
01:31:05.000You tell them, I want 10,000 views and 10,000 likes and 10,000 comments on the Israel video.
01:31:09.000Then they go, Well, I'm getting all these clicks and views.
01:31:12.000So they go in that direction and you erase them from the political conversation.
01:31:16.000These, like the Jewtard people, they are not having an effect in the normal world.
01:31:22.000Like, this is not something that people follow every day because they're like, My gas prices are too high.
01:31:26.000And then someone goes, The Jews, and they're like, What are we talking about?
01:33:09.000No one really liked in the real world.
01:33:12.000Not that there's such a thing as a normie oracle anymore because everyone is touched by the internet to some degree now.
01:33:17.000But insofar as like, Political, like online politics, it rarely translates.
01:33:22.000I mean, I can't tell you the countless amount of like political parties or committees or whatever that I've seen created over the years that spawned out of a Twitter group chat or something that just like literally didn't go anywhere.
01:33:34.000Even Trump, I mean, it is true that I think it is fair to say the online right did play a large part and sort of his rise in 2016.
01:33:42.000He still tapped into something that was real and it was just unaddressed, which was, yeah, frustration over immigration and foreign wars and stuff like that.
01:34:36.000I mean, the country that you're inheriting looks nothing like the parent, the country your parents grew up in, certainly not the country your grandparents grew up in, where like, again, a lot of kids are going to schools where like no one speaks English or there's, you know, an increase in just antisocial behavior.
01:34:52.000The economy is not functioning properly.
01:34:54.000At least it's not sort of giving them any stake in the country economically speaking.
01:34:58.000So you just look at it and it's like, obviously, they're going to.
01:35:00.000Nihilist, I think it's actually the way around.
01:35:01.000I think the reason they're wearing Crocs with the socks is like, there's just nothing that why should I take myself seriously?
01:35:07.000Which is like, okay, to some degree, like I do agree, Zoomers hold some culpability and their underperformance, but you look around the world, all young people are underperforming in developed economies.
01:35:17.000And I just find it hard to believe that it's like universally there's something just magical about when you're born in the 21st century, there's something wrong with you.
01:35:24.000What do you think about the argument that the because the sentiment is you know for among Zoomers is like, oh, underperformance stuff.
01:35:30.000What do you think about the people that are like, oh, there has never been a better time for people that actually want to excel?
01:35:40.000I think like there's multiple ways I could explain that.
01:35:44.000I mean, a good way to explain that would be watching the show Clarkson's Farm on Amazon, where it's Jeremy Clarkson, he owns a farm.
01:35:52.000And that show, granted, it's in Britain, but America has a lot of the same problems.
01:35:55.000It exposes you to how much bureaucracy there is in business ownership.
01:35:59.000And what's so frustrating is Jeremy Clarkson's having all these problems trying to get his farm off the ground and get stuff built, et cetera, et cetera.
01:36:05.000But then you travel to London and there will be a vape shop in the center of London and they're clearly not following any of the rules on the books whatsoever.
01:36:13.000But Monday morning they're opening up at 8 a.m.
01:36:15.000So it's like, I think what's really frustrating is that there's this subconscious understanding that there's like two tiers of American society where I have all these problems.
01:36:23.000I have to go and get my car tested for emissions.
01:36:26.000But then you go down the street and there's these like junkers going down the street with legal immigrants in them or whoever.
01:36:31.000And they've clearly never even had an emissions test in their entire life.
01:36:33.000And then there's just this entire apparatus that ensures they can continue on this way.
01:36:37.000And then, likewise, they have a lot of frustration with the way boomers have sort of conducted themselves, like with politically and how they've operated in the economy and these sorts of things.
01:36:48.000And that creates a lot of frustration.
01:36:50.000So they kind of look around and, like, I don't know if there's any people that are acknowledging that, like, we are inheriting this country.
01:36:56.000And so they just tend to flounder often.
01:39:25.000So, it's like, Again, how are you supposed to explain to someone you're inheriting this country, you have stake in this country, et cetera, when they're not even, like, let alone kids, they don't even know if they're going to get married or have a long term girlfriend or whatever?
01:39:37.000Like, it's really difficult for young people right now to actually get their feet wet, like in life in general.
01:39:45.000And again, you may be watching this, you're older, and you're like, well, that's just something inherently wrong with them.
01:39:49.000And I'm like, again, just kind of look around at, like, again, just the various economic numbers that are floating around, again, some of the sociological developments that have occurred because of new technologies.
01:40:35.000I think there's a two primary culprits, actually, but there's a lot of secondary causes as well.
01:40:39.000It's like you're unraveling a massive, massive, massive.
01:40:41.000Do you think a lot of Gen Z men are looking at social media and being like, well, I can't afford to pay for like a girlfriend's lavish lifestyle?
01:40:48.000Because they're like, that is what is pushed in the algorithm.
01:40:51.000It's like these very bougie women that are like, yeah, getting their whole lives paid for.
01:40:56.000And it's like, well, I can't even afford to move out of my parents' house, let alone like float another adult.
01:41:03.000Implication, the largest sociological realities that's come out of the social media era is it alters your expectations in life.
01:41:11.000So, a great example of is actually India, where India has now gone sub replacement, or depending on the year, they're teetering on replacement or they're sub replacement.
01:41:19.000Most states in India, there's a replacement in India.
01:41:21.000And you may be asking, you know, the common understanding for why birth rates dropped was well, when you industrialize and infant mortality goes down, people don't need as many kids because they're not working on a farm.
01:41:30.000They're not worried about their kids dying.
01:41:32.000That's been completely eviscerated by India because India is, although they are urbanizing more and more, this is a country that should still be having sky high birth rates by and large.
01:41:42.000The explanation a lot of people are proposing, a lot of sociologists especially, are proposing is that social media is nuking the Indian birth rate.
01:41:50.000Because they are seeing beautiful European women on their Instagram feeds.
01:41:55.000And likewise, the women are seeing men on social media who are able to provide this, not even a lavish lifestyle, but just like an American lifestyle by and large.
01:42:03.000And so it inflates their expectations.
01:42:07.000So it inflates their expectations for what they're going to get out of a man who's in the bathroom.
01:42:13.000Did you know that in India, people will stand outside the bathroom and relieve themselves on the ground outside because the toilets are so filthy and disgusting inside?
01:42:23.000They'll walk into the door, turn around, and just dump right in there on the ground.
01:42:57.000Your local stable of women, you know, because they think they have more options than they actually do.
01:43:03.000And we're seeing this in America with dating apps where it gives you this idea that the amount of people available to you is actually a lot larger than it actually is.
01:43:10.000Well, did you see the viral post on Reddit where the woman said that she was dating her high school?
01:43:17.000And then once they moved closer to the city for work, she started to realize there were a bunch of other guys out there and that they were guys who made more money and were better.
01:43:25.000And she feels like she made a mistake settling so soon.
01:43:56.000But nowadays, you know, people are fed their Instagram feed and it's just.
01:44:01.000A continuous feed of like glamorous lifestyle.
01:44:05.000Even people that aren't, even people that don't like.
01:44:08.000So there's this one account where this woman and this guy, they constantly put up balloons full of shaving cream and water and they pop them on each other's heads, right?
01:44:15.000They like to walk in the room and shoot it with a dart and the thing falls and hits it.
01:44:22.000And they're, you know, what you would, they aren't like model people.
01:44:26.000It's not like, you know, you don't expect them to be living in Beverly Hills and stuff.
01:44:30.000But if you look at their house and you think, well, those are normal people with normal jobs.
01:44:35.000And look at their house, and then you're like, oh man, I got an apartment that cost me $3,000 and it's half the size, and blah, blah.
01:44:41.000So it makes sense that people are like, oh, I should have more because social media has been feeding people the idea.
01:44:49.000It used to be the only time you'd see things that were like extravagant is if you watch like Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous on Tuesday nights, you know?
01:44:57.000Like, I mean, think about the military, right?
01:44:59.000Like, think about the military in World War II.
01:45:01.000You had like the pinup dolls come over and they'd be like, oh, wow, this is amazing, whatever.
01:45:06.000Primarily because they didn't have a need for that anymore because they have phones and they have the ability to sort of still stimulate that side of their brain.
01:45:14.000Same with burlesque shows used to be huge and now it's not a thing anymore.
01:45:17.000Like the only place where there is, like, this sort of, I would almost say innocent sexual, like, sexuality, like, and that sort of thing, it doesn't really exist.
01:45:27.000Like, you have strip clubs now, but strip clubs are, like, inherently carnal.
01:45:31.000Burlesque shows were taken over by fat liberal women.
01:45:39.000So, yeah, you don't really have any of these, like, you know, I think there is some truth to the fact that, like, American sexualities are completely warped, where, like, the most carnal.
01:45:48.000I would say degenerate aspects of sexuality are still permitted and even praised, but then the healthier aspects, the nice aspects, are shamed.
01:45:55.000And I think the primary reason for that is because left wing people are in charge and they hate beauty.
01:45:59.000They just fundamentally hate beauty because beauty is inherently hierarchical.
01:46:02.000You're either beautiful or you're not.
01:46:05.000So again, the healthier, beautiful aspects of sexuality are now horrifying and corny or whatever.
01:46:12.000That's why Disney can't put out any touching romance movies.
01:46:15.000Like when you're a kid and you're watching Disney movies, there's obviously like romance occurring in the movie, but it's acceptable for a six year old because a six year old can.
01:46:22.000Conceptualize it and understand it, and the parents are fine at them watching it.
01:46:25.000But now, like, they can't even produce that anymore because sexuality has been so early.
01:46:29.000There was that Coco, was it Coco Melon?
01:46:32.000Where the little boy and little girl were sitting in the sand, and when the boy got up, his junk was imprinted in the sand or something.
01:47:22.000I don't know about that because the left is, it seems like it's very, very anti AI.
01:47:26.000And you've actually seen, interestingly, and, Polling that Republicans are now reversing their views.
01:47:31.000So, for the longest time, especially after Obergefell, Republicans softened on their opposition to gay marriage.
01:47:36.000But now you're seeing the disapproval of gay marriage go back up again because people are like correctly identifying that you give them an inch to take a mile.
01:47:42.000I mean, there was a, I just posted this the other day, but I know I said this before.
01:47:47.000A big part of the reason why conservatives and normal people are saying, no, we're not for the LGBTQ, whatever thing, is because the trans people start coming out and saying things like, well, I'm a you know, trans women, men come out and say, I'm a trans woman, so it's crazy to me that straight guys won't date me because that makes them a bigot.
01:48:07.000It's like, look, you're never gonna get, you're never gonna get normal dudes to be like, Yes, I will date a trans woman and you know, have a sexual relationship with her because to a guy, that is a homosexual relationship, yeah, like that.
01:48:21.000Whether or not they like it, doesn't matter.
01:48:23.000And that was, in my opinion, that was the line that made people go, Hold on a second here.
01:48:29.000I'm not a bigot because I won't date a trans woman.
01:48:35.000And so the idea that I'm going to be treated as if I'm some kind of hateful monster because I won't S the girl D, it's like, give me a break.
01:50:38.000And they're waving trans flags in Charlestown.
01:50:41.000Like these people are out of their gourds.
01:50:42.000And it's like, again, it's just so obvious to a neutral observer that it's black people killing white people at really high rates, not the other way around.
01:53:18.000Tate and I were discussing earlier that I looked at my 23andMe family tree thing and I found out that I've got family that goes back to like 1633 in South Carolina.
01:54:32.000Clint Russell had an open invitation to come on the show whenever he wanted and then claimed we weren't inviting him because he's a liar.
01:54:38.000He then made a video, said Israel derangement syndrome debunked, where he falsely framed my criticism of Israel and what Israel derangement syndrome means.
01:54:47.000He's now posting things saying, like, Lindsey Graham visits a drone factory, is dead a day later, and Russia bombs that very same facility.
01:54:54.000Put on your tinfoil hats, even though Russia bombed Aerodrone and Lindsey Graham visited Skyfall, which are different facilities.
01:55:03.000And there's a lot more than I can say, but I don't want to violate people's trust.
01:55:07.000But yeah, behind the scenes, the things that he's saying to people, dude, he can come on the show and we'll roast him for all of his lies and manipulations to his face.
01:55:15.000But dude's crossed the line a long time ago.
01:58:59.000And I went to Times Square and I was like, I'm going to ask people questions and then we're going to get a bunch of doofy answers and make a funny video.
02:00:05.000There's a couple of these young guys that go out and not Nick Shirley, but a couple of these young guys, they do Man in the Street and you can tell they're real because the answers they get are pretty average.
02:00:18.000They'll ask like some activists and the activists will give them a general answer and then like walk away or something.
02:00:24.000Every time I've done Man on the Street for Tim cast, like when I was at the King Charles visit or whatever, you know, I've seen, so I'm expecting these people to have like some funny things to say or they like wouldn't know who he is or anything.
02:00:45.000I was like, I could have just highlighted that.
02:00:47.000But so here's what happens you're either going to go out and talk to 300 people to get three clips or you're just going to cast extras, tell them, Here's what we want to see, and then have them give their doofy answers.
02:02:10.000Of the, you know, I had a similar experience.
02:02:12.000I tried out for the voice and they brought, like, after we all waited in line for like six hours, they brought 10 of us into the room and did exactly like, you go.
02:02:20.000We picked like the best part of the song and just start there.
02:02:22.000You couldn't bring your phone in, so you didn't know what key it was in.
02:02:29.000I auditioned for America's Got Talent and I had like a speed pass that they were giving out to like some of the comedians that, like, I don't know.
02:02:35.000I don't know actually how I got this pass, but it's like, I didn't go through to like, To the next level, because they really are looking for somebody who has no arms or legs, who has full body burns.
02:02:46.000Like, you have to have the saddest human life story.
02:04:53.000It's like, yeah, if you're a gay guy and all, like, you're like a normal dude who works in an office and wears a suit and tie and all that, but then when you go home, you bang a dude, but you don't really talk about it, you keep it to yourself.
02:05:11.000If you're like a regular, if like, I knew a bunch of dudes in the 2000s that were gay, but they didn't go around shaking their hips and doing this with their hand.
02:05:19.000And I knew this one guy who was like, he's like, man, I can't stand all this weird activism stuff.
02:05:23.000He's like, I just like guys, you know?
02:05:41.000That's how you can tell the left now if they have like weird color hair.
02:05:44.000There's a slot machine that they, a new one where it's like three trains or whatever, but the conductor is a purple haired woman with feather earrings.
02:05:51.000And I was just like, is this like the queer train game?
02:07:59.000You can literally walk into the high limit slot room, wait until you see the cart lady, sit down and put a fiver in the machine, and then say, Hey, let me get whatever, you know, and then say, Here's what I want.
02:08:48.000Like, you could bring a woman to the high, like what Tim is saying, like the high limit slot machine, get her drunk off, like expensive booze.
02:11:13.000Because my understanding, there is one of the reasons why I really despise college is just because for the most part, it was just people partying.
02:13:13.000And then I'm just like, bro, all of these people I know, They were on student loans and they had money in their accounts and they go out on Friday night for drinks.
02:15:43.000In my opinion, I was a huge fan of McGregor back in the day.
02:15:47.000And I love the fact that, you know, he was all for his people, Ireland, and all the stuff.
02:15:51.000But ever since he got his hands on a shit ton of money, I've never trusted.
02:15:57.000His supposed comebacks and all his stuff with his new, you know, he was coming back and then he brought out his whiskey or whatever the fuck that was.
02:16:04.000So, my question is was that fight fixed?
02:16:07.000I think there was something weird about it.
02:16:10.000And so, I just thought I'd ask you guys what you guys thought about it.
02:16:35.000And I'm calling shenanigans because the moment he fell down in the first second, they should have stopped the fight and they should have said no fight and canceled the ticket.
02:17:16.000But some people think that starting the match with a charging flying roundhouse was intentional to make it look like he was injured so he could stop the fight and then go out without getting beat up.
02:18:52.000So, my first question on Twitter, again, I don't have any followers, so I don't give a shit, but I posted just for cathartic, you know, whatever.
02:19:00.000I put out, how much did he get paid for this fight, win or lose?
02:19:04.000Because if it's the 30 million they're talking about, well, there you go.
02:19:07.000There's a huge incentive for why he did what he did.
02:19:10.000Yeah, so the theory is that he knew he had an injured knee, but it's not incapacitating.
02:19:16.000It's just going to cost him the fight.
02:19:18.000And he didn't want to cancel the fight because he'd lose 30 million.
02:19:45.000And so the couple times when he started to come back, and it was like for his whiskey, and then he came back for this, and now it's like a fight.
02:20:01.000Once that happens, you can't come back to that level.
02:20:04.000So, yeah, I'm watching a video of the fight.
02:20:10.000I mean, look, the way that the kick landed with his foot outward and then you see his knee move inward, it's possible that he actually injured it.
02:20:30.000They try all different tactics, but like the way his foot landed, maybe it was already injured, but if it was injured and he wasn't actually trying to get out of the fight, it does seem like a really bad idea to go and start with a left kick and plant your right foot the way that he did.
02:20:47.000To Chrissy's point, I think that's exactly the point is that if you're 21, 22, 24, full in piston vinegar, well, yeah, okay, are you going to do that a bunch of times?
02:20:58.000And then you open these fights with massive.
02:21:01.000Uh, massive whatever you know, forays into the fight, but at your age, with the condition you have and things like it's a stupid way to go out.
02:21:09.000And if he did that on purpose, then it's it's you know, uh, it's haphazardly done, it's stupid.
02:21:16.000And uh, if you're gonna try to get a fight out of people and you want to show that you're coming back, I'm sorry, but you start on your feet and you pound it out, you know, I mean, you you but you box it out.
02:22:17.000You know, but like, you know, so I get your body does get, you know, you get older and your body, you know, doesn't always cooperate with you the way that you think that it should or the way that it would have, you know, five or 10 years ago.
02:23:20.000Look, just because I stopped stage diving, the point that I'm making is your body, like you do, when you get older, your body does like get, it is like it doesn't recover the same way, but 37 isn't old.
02:23:33.000Now, granted, in the fight game, it's, you know, a little different, but at the same time, it's like, You're not like a 51 year old is way different than a 37 year old, you know?
02:23:45.000So, and again, I'm not saying that he didn't, you know, that he made a smart move or that he definitely didn't throw it.
02:23:55.000I'm just saying that, you know, I think that, like I said, I'm watching the video here.
02:24:53.000Thank you for taking my call this evening.
02:24:57.000I had recently been reading some scientific.
02:25:01.000Journals and had thought to bring up a study that I saw recently where scientists have recently created biological computing chips using neural organoids, which an organoid, when you break down a cell like from blood, you can get the DNA and then use it to create stem cells that create new types of cellular structures.
02:25:24.000And they would use these neural chips to run AI systems.
02:25:30.000And the funny story was that they were using it to play Doom very poorly, but.
02:25:37.000So, what do you see as the fundamental difference between a biologic AI versus your traditional silicone or mechanical AI?
02:25:46.000And where do you think the advantages, limitations, ethics, or long term potential for each of those?
02:27:20.000Yeah, I mean, I don't know what the, what the, I mean, I guess you could make an argument that if you can make a biological cell interface with an AI, then you could expand that to making brains interface with AI.
02:32:29.000My original question when I originally called you guys was do you think this is something Democrats are just testing here and going to do elsewhere?
02:32:38.000But now that we know for a fact that there's foreign money involved, what do you think that this means for America and our?
02:32:47.000Self sustainability, if things like this get passed kind of under the radar because people don't know what they're voting for.
02:32:55.000Yeah, I remember I looked into this because I remember I saw something on the timeline a few weeks ago about this.
02:33:02.000It's not going to go anywhere because it's too broad.
02:33:04.000They're effectively outlaws hunting and fishing, which, you know, initially to your point, where people just see the name or they see it's about animal cruelty and they're like, oh, yeah, sure, I'd sign up for that.
02:33:14.000You know, I'd vote yes to, you know, make that into law.
02:33:18.000As soon as messaging comes out on what it's actually going to do, I don't think it cracks 30%.
02:33:24.000But to your point, I mean, yeah, obviously, I think China, Russia, some of our other global adversaries would be quite excited if we neutered our farming industry.
02:33:35.000I mean, I think that there's a lot of incentive for other countries to do whatever they can to just spread disharmony in the United States, right?
02:33:47.000Like, they know that there's a lot of people that are generally pretty self sufficient, especially in a state like Oregon, right?
02:33:53.000You've got Portland, which is. kind of controlling the whole state, but it's a big state and that most of the state is rural area.
02:34:01.000So if they can, you know, sow disharmony and at the same time, you know, inhibit farmers and people that want to be self sufficient from being able to do that, you know, they're going to.
02:34:16.000That is a good thing for the left because the left wants to control, well, actually, no, the left has to control those kind of things if they're going to actually bring the population to heal.
02:34:26.000And in a state like Oregon, that Like I said, has so many people that live in rural areas that have some amount of self sufficiency.
02:34:34.000Maybe they don't live totally off the grid, but they go to the grocery store for certain things, but a lot of their food they get from farmers' markets or from local areas.
02:34:44.000The best way to exert control is to control the food supply.
02:34:49.000There's the Oregon Trail, which is kind of dangerous, I've heard.
02:35:19.000A couple years ago, it was like a scare.
02:35:20.000There were, it's, it's, I was getting scared because it seemed to be there were a lot of farmers that were like getting incentivized to like kill off their own livestock.
02:35:41.000One was there's some sort of bovine disease.
02:35:43.000And the second one was they were concerned about like overgrazing, which you hear that and you say, okay, that makes sense.
02:35:49.000But obviously there's a bit more of an angle there.
02:35:51.000But you also have to remember like, I'm going to sound like the biggest normie here, but these governments don't want to like destroy their food supply.
02:36:00.000So with Oregon, for example, I mean, this would completely destroy.
02:36:05.000Not just hunting and fishing, but like the ranching industry and stuff.
02:36:07.000Like, I don't think the state Democrats are going to get behind that just because they can still read a spreadsheet.
02:36:12.000I know we're talking about Zoran and whatever, but they don't want to rely on federal dollars right now.
02:36:17.000They don't want to be in that position.
02:36:19.000So you'll see when the screws start getting turned on a lot of these states, like California, for example, we started turning the screws on their DMV because they were issuing CDLs willy nilly.
02:36:31.000Once we started threatening federal funding, they just got in line.
02:36:34.000So when it comes down to money, these states do behave a bit better.
02:36:39.000And I think if they're looking down the barrel of a food crisis destroying all their industries, they could risk alienating voters.
02:36:47.000You know, state elections, you'll still see blue states vote for.
02:36:51.000I mean, Vermont had a Republican governor, Massachusetts, and then likewise, Kentucky has a Democrat governor.
02:36:56.000So, like, at the state level, people are a bit more fluid with who they'll vote for.
02:37:00.000The presidential election is like locked in now.
02:37:02.000Like, you know, we're never going to get any big flips anymore.
02:37:05.000But, like, Oregon, it was like a 14 point spread for Kamala.
02:37:08.000But again, they could potentially vote.
02:37:10.000They voted in a Republican governor not too long ago.
02:37:21.000And so I am in the largest fishing community on the coast in Oregon.
02:37:29.000Like, I live inland, but it would destroy our community.
02:37:35.000And I know that the local Coos County Democrats have said, like Kate was mentioning, they've said that they're not going to vote for this because of what it would do to our community.
02:38:23.000I mean, I'm not going to stop farming.
02:38:27.000Um, raised chickens, uh, eggs forever, and uh, yeah, if uh, uh, there's a guy here in Oregon, um, I met him once at a turning point event, but his name is Geyer Digital.
02:38:43.000Uh, he's been doing a lot of investigations into this IP28 and all the petitioners and everything like that, so I want to shout him out.
02:39:23.000Just to hit quickly on the trad gay thing that y'all mentioned earlier, I straight up have a co worker who's like, For it's like late 30s old, uh, Californian gay guy, and he makes fun of me for being friends with Taylor Wins' ex wife.
02:39:38.000So, like, even the gays make fun of you being friends with a trans person, or at least the trad gays.
02:39:44.000Um, uh, are there any plans for the Tim Crash crew and the unsubscribed crew to become closer in the future?
02:39:54.000Um, I'm kind of looking at like where/slash who we can kind of find the next uh reliance uh in this political fight, maybe.
02:40:02.000Cultural fight is a better way to word it.
02:40:04.000But out of all the people I watch online and such, I kind of find them to be very honorable men.
02:40:10.000Willing to come back for each other and such, and I'm curious if, like, y'all are maybe getting closer or if y'all see potential allies in other, um, kind of parts of the internet.
02:40:20.000Parts of the what parts of the internet, it's all fake.
02:40:31.000I don't know about them, I just know that the big podcasts are all there, it's all staged.
02:40:34.000It's like if you see a big show get somebody and you're like, wow, this interview is crazy, it's paid not all the time, but typically.
02:40:42.000So, like, we, we, uh, Had an agency talking with some of the big, let's say we were talking to some of the big agencies and they were like, What's your budget for guests?
02:40:51.000And we were like, None, we don't pay guests.
02:40:53.000And they were like, Oh, well, so, you know.
02:40:59.000And then if you pay someone to appear, they're going to say whatever you want them to say.
02:41:05.000Well, I kind of had the thought of like, you've talked about before trying to get into other, just branch out a little bit from just politics.
02:41:28.000So I would love to, you know, have events here in Texas, but y'all go hang out with them, then go hang out with other buddies that are in Austin, like Michael Malice or whoever.
02:41:45.000I really do think this is one of, like, the only real shows on the internet.
02:41:48.000But, I find that with just a few others, they're like diamonds in the rough.
02:41:52.000And I kind of want to see those people come together because, again, most people are fake and gay.
02:41:56.000So it'd be kind of cool to see the non fake and gay hang out more.
02:41:59.000It's just depressing when you're like these private meetings, they're explicitly telling us, like, oh, yeah, this stuff that they're doing, like the Israel stuff, it's on purpose.
02:42:08.000It's just what's hitting right now, and they're tracking for it.
02:42:29.000But that's one of the reasons why I like him is because, like, I've made the joke to other people.
02:42:34.000There's this episode where he has a wine glass that's sitting on the couch and it literally just spills onto his pants.
02:42:40.000Like, and I was like, Brandon's literally fulfilling the meme of like the guy I'd want to have a beard with, you know, because he left, he's not afraid to like all those guys are not afraid to be made fun of.
02:42:50.000Brandon always makes the joke, he's like, y'all are going to say that with me, like, right in frame and like, It's Donut Operating saying he doesn't like the minorities or something like that.
02:42:57.000But, like, their podcast is pretty based and they're willing to talk about whatever.
02:43:01.000Obviously, they expose this stuff in Buffalo and they just come to bat for each other.
02:43:20.000I mean, I'm pretty friendly with actually, when with all those guys, the Black Ruffle guys, I lived in Austin for, well, actually, it was Bernie.
02:43:28.000For like a year in 2021, and I got to hang out with those guys some.
02:43:35.000Um, it's just a matter of trying to get together, like, you know, they've all got stuff going on.
02:43:40.000We're here every night, so um, but yeah, it's like, you know, Angry Cops has been on, uh, Donut has Donut been on, nope, no, and a lot of those guys are, you know, they gotta come skate, yeah.
02:43:53.000I mean, Donut's got a shop, you know, like a skate shop, and and so yeah, I mean, we've had a lot of uh.
02:44:01.000Actually, I think the Nick, the fat electrician, he's been on, right?