00:01:10.000House panel has ordered the Southern Poverty Law Center to turn over their communications to the Biden DOJ as the conspiracy runs deeper.
00:01:19.000And it's funny because we're seeing a lot of defense from these liberal groups and leftists saying they were just paying informants because they're ignoring the fact the indictment alleges they were providing money to an informant who provided transport for Nazis to some of these rallies like Unite the Right.
00:01:33.000Let me just break it down for you very simply.
00:01:35.000Conservatives would put together a peaceful rally, not for Nazis.
00:01:40.000Liberal groups would then pay Nazis to show up.
00:01:43.000Then these liberal groups and the media would say every conservative there was a Nazi.
00:01:52.000And it's what they've been doing for a long time, and now they're getting exposed.
00:01:55.000Interestingly, I've been talking about this all day.
00:01:58.000It's a conspiracy theory that Nick Fuentes and Candace Owens are in fact paid by the SPLC because on the same day, apparently, they both traveled to Italy at the same time.
00:02:08.000And many people are pointing out that they, as well as many others, stopped talking the moment this indictment dropped, which is not correct.
00:02:16.000Nick and Candace are funded by the SPLC or anything like that.
00:02:19.000But people are certainly wondering why this weird timing is happening.
00:02:22.000I also think a lot of it is just meant to smear them both.
00:02:26.000I think it's a lot easier just to accuse your enemies of being part of a secret cabal than to just acknowledge that maybe they have fans.
00:02:32.000But that being said, Matt Walsh has called this out, saying he predicted we would find there are a lot of convenient right wing personalities that have been funded all along.
00:02:42.000So we'll talk about that and a whole lot more.
00:02:44.000Before we do, we've got a great sponsor.
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00:03:51.000And I just want to give a quick shout out again.
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00:05:18.000In a letter to Brian Fair, SPLC interim president and chief executive, Jordan wrote that publicly available documents revealed how the DOJ partnered closely with the SPLC during the Biden Harris administration, including scheduling regular meetings, giving the SPLC early access to federal law enforcement data.
00:05:33.000And allowing SPLC employees to train federal prosecutors.
00:05:37.000The letter was also posted to social media.
00:05:38.000The chairman's demand came two days after a grand jury in Alabama returned an 11 count indictment alleging the SPLC had committed wire fraud, made false statements to federally insured banks, and conspired to conceal money laundering.
00:05:50.000I'm just going to go ahead and say I think the SPLC is a fed op.
00:06:19.000I'm really happy to see this going on because how many people have you spoken to that voted for Donald Trump for like redemption or, you know, cracking down on these?
00:06:27.000Corrupt groups that have been making conservatives' lives miserable, making their media miserable, everything like that.
00:06:34.000And people are finally actually seeing that here.
00:06:36.000There's a lot more to go, but this is a great start.
00:07:49.000You think there's a possibility that this private public conglomerate that has been running these ops could be paying right wing personalities, be it Nick, Candace, or anybody else?
00:08:59.000But specifically, the way she integrated herself in the conservative commentariat and the power structure, she was structurally part of this whole operation.0.98
00:09:56.000Literally, there's no point to doing that.
00:09:57.000So here's the thing the video with Nick was that he met gang leaders in Brazil and interviewed them, which is entirely easy and normal to do.
00:10:03.000But attacking that work as if to imply he fabricates things to attack his current work.
00:10:11.000Because she's an op, because she is meant to destabilize and destroy the right.0.70
00:10:16.000I actually look at it this way Trump weaponized the conspiratar right.0.88
00:10:21.000So, with like QAnon and all that, these people who believe in greater earth or flat earth or otherwise are flocking to Donald Trump to go for the deep state.
00:10:28.000Candace is capturing those people and pushing them away from Trump.
00:10:33.000I mean, Trump, you know, he rode the populist wave, he utilized populism.
00:10:37.000This is the downside of populism, is what we're seeing now is that at a certain point, And Orban realized this and he lost his race for that matter is like you can utilize it as a political vehicle for so long, but at a certain point, you have to have the institutionalized, you do have to intellectualize sort of the whole concept.
00:10:53.000And that, you know, there was a push for that to happen.
00:10:56.000But yeah, this is naturally going to happen in populism when it's like, again, let's just sort of advocate for the common man, advocate for, you know, the most popular seeming opinions.
00:11:05.000That maybe worked in the 20th century when in the 21st century, social media and everything gets derailed quite quickly, and you're seeing it now.
00:11:11.000I mean, again, where even whatever, you know, criticism you want to level up the Trump administration, A lot of what I'm seeing is just emotion.
00:11:18.000It's, um, there's not much, you know, there's not much analysis going on.
00:11:22.000There's not much like, okay, he did well here, but he did there bad there.
00:11:26.000They're just like very clutching, like the left's arguments.
00:11:29.000Yeah, it's like, it's like, no, no, I'm gonna stick with like my catchphrases and stick with things that are easy and I will not elaborate.
00:12:06.000I've even, you know, combed through some of these like self deportation numbers and I'm like, you know, I'm a little skeptical that we're actually pulling those things out.
00:12:26.000I'm expecting him to do a better job than the previous president, certainly, but to do a better job than any of the other Republican candidates.
00:12:32.000Because that's really how you would evaluate.
00:12:33.000It's like, okay, if you're done with Trump, if you feel betrayed, et cetera, et cetera, that's whatever.
00:12:37.000What's the more viable political vehicle that's currently being crowded out right now?
00:12:41.000He's the only show in town, as far as I'm concerned, at least for my political aims, my political goals.
00:12:46.000And primarily for me, it's immigration.
00:12:47.000And I'm like, well, I mean, he is pushing on immigration harder than anyone in the Republican Party has, probably since Nixon, if not since Eisenhower.
00:13:15.000So, what, 2025, when they're still adding to all of that deportation infrastructure, they broke interior removal records by four to five times Obama's average.
00:13:47.000Because it is true that, like, you know, the supporters of President Trump, which include myself, by a long stretch, like, we are expecting transformational leadership.0.68
00:13:55.000And so to your point, I mean, it's like, Okay, we can do the whole, well, at least it's not Kamala thing.
00:13:59.000But I would have been saying that if it was, you know, I don't know, Jeb Bush, like, it'd be like, well, at least it's not Hillary.
00:14:05.000It's like, we do have the demand more.
00:14:11.000Let's realize, I mean, even Tucker, who's been like one of Trump's biggest attractors the last month, he said on a show, he's like, President Trump came into office and he started bumping up against interests that most presidents didn't even realize were there.
00:14:20.000That's why presidents often are quite like, they realize how rigid the system is once they get in.
00:14:25.000And there's not much you can do about that.
00:14:27.000President Trump, When you see the stuff like we're doubling the refugee cap, but it's still only for white South Africans, that indicates to me where their mindset is at on immigration.
00:14:35.000And I'm like, I am confident that they are thinking the same things that I'm thinking as far as what needs to be done.0.57
00:14:41.000And if you look at Stephen Miller, for example, and some of these other guys in the administration, the tactics that they're using, they're having to do so many workarounds because, again, there's just so much rigidity in the system.
00:14:49.000The system has been built to facilitate mass migration.
00:15:01.000So that's why you have all these judges.
00:15:03.000So, for example, in 2025, like last year, right?
00:15:06.000You had the Trump administration trying to push out as many activists out of this system as possible, where in March, I believe they brought on like 43 or so new judges.
00:15:16.000You better believe judges, you better believe they're all going to be conservative and are going to get the job done instead of battling every step of the way.
00:15:24.000Well, look at like the SPLC, that video that came out where they were showing around his house.
00:15:27.000This is the mindset of basically the entire political system for the last 60 years.
00:15:40.000He was celebrating watching the white population in the United States drop.
00:15:43.000That is the mindset of basically the entire political system, every single apparatchik that's operated in the deep state, but even on the state that we can see, because presidents would say that out loud.0.71
00:15:51.000Bill Clinton was like thrilled that the white population is the majority or minority of the country.0.61
00:16:03.000You have to admit that that's like hateful and bigoted.
00:16:05.000And those are the guys that have designed this entire system.
00:16:07.000So, yeah, I am going to cut the Trump administration a lot of slack here.0.54
00:16:10.000Again, if four years go by and then it's, I mean, we're still nowhere close to even getting the Biden, you know, migrants out, then that's a conversation.
00:17:22.000I think that a system that can condemn people to death will condemn innocent people to death, and therein lies a big challenge.
00:17:30.000The easiest way to argue it is when Kamala Harris walks up to you and says, Trust me, that guy deserves to die, will you say, Okay, Kamala?
00:17:40.000These are the kind of people that are telling you to kill other people.
00:17:43.000That being said, I do think there are crimes so egregious, these people are a danger to themselves, to everyone else around them.
00:17:49.000Sometimes you are put in a situation where Death is the outcome.
00:17:54.000What I mean by that is, when there is someone who is on the verge of killing, harming, or is a direct threat to another person, we recognize the legal right to defend yourself and others.
00:18:02.000That's when I understand that sometimes people do forfeit their lives, so it's unfortunate.
00:18:06.000That being said, the reason why I support this is that firing a lot of the games that we play in the death penalty, whatever your opinion is on it, lethal injection is fake.
00:18:16.000If you read about lethal injection, you'll know that they say, oh, people just pass, they peacefully just die.
00:18:23.000They inject you the paralytic agent so that you can't show pain and then you die an excruciating death.
00:18:31.000If you are going to have a death penalty, this is the way you do it.
00:18:34.000I don't understand why anyone would argue this is inhumane to just be like, we are going to shoot you and you will die instantly.
00:18:41.000These other methods, like the electric chair or whatever, are inhumane.
00:18:44.000The firing squad is actually one of the most humane ways to carry on an execution, though I will stress, I'm not a fan of the death penalty.
00:18:49.000I would like to see the numbers on how many firing squads have produced instant death.
00:18:53.000Death on the person and how often they fall down and suffer and bleed out and have to be finished off.
00:18:57.000Because it's like, I think a firing squad is a row of dudes and one of them has a blank in the chamber.
00:19:03.000So it takes away, it's like plausible deniability.
00:19:05.000Like maybe I wasn't the one that hit him.
00:19:08.000The whole purpose was to sort of abdicate guilt, you know, because no matter what, the executioner, unless they're a psycho, it's going to be in the back of their head like I just killed a guy.
00:19:15.000So the whole point of the firing squad is, yeah, plausible deniability.
00:19:18.000I assume I'm not supposed to aim at like a lethal spot though.
00:19:25.000Statistically, death by firing squad is near instantaneous, uh, as opposed to other methods like the lethal injection takes several minutes over a long period of time where you are consciously having the chemicals injected.
00:19:37.000And the argument that I've read, I've read about it, is they do three chemicals.
00:19:40.000The first paralyzes you, the next causes extreme and intense pain as the third one kills you.
00:19:46.000And I think the key word you use is forfeit life because this is my same take on a lot of these states now are passing laws where you can protect your property with lethal force.
00:19:54.000And everyone, you know, left wing people are like, You know, well, what you're killing someone for stuff, you value stuff over human life.
00:20:01.000And it's like, no, that person is the one that's putting themselves in that situation.
00:20:05.000That person is the one that is sort of sacrificing their life for my stuff.
00:20:09.000So that says more about them than it does about me.
00:20:12.000So, and that's kind of the same kind of take I have on executions is like, no, when they decided to commit this horrific act, whatever led to this charge, that was the moment where they forfeited their life.
00:20:22.000That's the moment where the death penalty was issued.
00:20:43.000It's an unfortunate reality that if a guy pulls a gun on you and is about to kill you or a child, we don't want them to die.
00:20:50.000But in that action, they have forfeited their lives because they're trying to kill other people.
00:20:54.000The problem with the death penalty is when Kamala Harris walks up to me and points to a guy sitting in a chair and says, he should die and I'm going to do it right now.
00:21:09.000The issue is there are instances where it's not.
00:21:11.000And that means there's going to be a percentage of people who are desperately pleading not to be murdered, and you're handing an axe to Kamala Harris to go kill somebody.
00:21:18.000Now, again, that being said, back to the firing squad thing.
00:21:21.000In extreme cases, some people survive for minutes after up to a minute after being shot.
00:21:27.000These are rare examples, though, that also exist in other forms of execution, like the electric chair and lethal injection, where they can be botched.
00:21:33.000However, typically with firing squads, they aim at the heart, you die instantly.
00:21:38.000And as anybody knows, ask somebody who's been shot.
00:21:43.000People who get shot don't immediately know they've been shot.
00:21:45.000There's like people watch movies, and a certain person gets shot, and they go, and they fly backward.
00:21:51.000Watch any of these body camera videos.
00:21:52.000There will be shots, and the cop will be like searching himself.
00:21:55.000And they'll be like, I don't know, I don't know, because you don't feel anything.
00:21:59.000For firing squads, when people get shot, they don't feel anything, they just die instantly.
00:22:05.000So I would say this ridiculous, modern, politically correct way that we approach these things like, we need to have a lethal injection.
00:22:13.000No, no, no, no, get out of here, get out of here.
00:22:28.000If someone, like, I'll put it this way if there's a guy holding a hatchet about to strike a child, we legally recognize everywhere you as a bystander can shoot and kill that person to save the life of that child.
00:22:41.000Jersey and New York might still put you in prison for it.
00:22:44.000However, what you are not allowed to do anywhere is shoot his legs out, walk up to him as he's on the ground bleeding, and then start digging your heel into his wound and shooting him in the stomach several times so he lives through the pain.
00:24:38.000But it's the unfortunate consequence that sometimes mistakes happen.
00:24:41.000So I just want you to imagine being that innocent person being walked to your death where people are screaming at you and calling you a murderer, and you did not do it.
00:24:49.000And no matter what you say, no one will believe you, and you're about to die.
00:24:51.000And then they say, Yeah, well, then you'll go to heaven because God will judge you.
00:24:54.000And I'm like, That is not solace for the innocent people, of which there are many hundreds who have been executed.
00:25:00.000So, again, I understand there is a big difference between watching a guy about to harm, abuse, or otherwise, you know, kill a child and stopping him from doing it and a guy you've never met that you are being instructed to walk to his death.
00:25:13.000These are big, these are very different.
00:25:26.000It's to say you've got blue states, largely, and don't get me wrong, there's red states that have done this as well, where some crackpot official is just like, don't know, don't care.
00:26:16.000If you do have the death penalty, having that is at least something good for the executioner, for sure.
00:26:21.000I think maybe it's Japan or somewhere.
00:26:23.000Maybe Japan doesn't do this, but there's a country where the electric chair and the lethal injection have three switches, where three people, like two of the buttons are fake.
00:26:32.000One of the buttons is real, and they all press the button, and nobody knows who actually did it.0.62
00:26:55.000But, um, and in regards to the death itself, as painless and quick as possible, like, you could, if you could instantly at light speed vaporize them, I would choose that.
00:27:04.000But as long as these, they probably have super high powered rifles with laser precision now.
00:27:46.000And so it's like very, I mean, the amount of evidence that you have to present to get the death penalty is overwhelming, where it's like more than obvious this person, like you basically have to be on footage killing someone.
00:27:55.000And we definitely do a better job at preventing that nowadays compared to, let's say, like in the early 1900s or something.
00:28:12.000I'm not really worried about innocent people being killed in this instance.
00:28:16.000This is something that I battle with too are we becoming a more moral and just, moral and religious people or less?
00:28:24.000And who is our system really designed for?
00:28:27.000I mean, when it comes to what I see the left turning into nowadays, dude, I wouldn't trust them with literally anything.
00:28:33.000I mean, look at their use of lawfare now as well, going after conservative groups, religious groups, protesters, going after Donald Trump, going after.
00:28:41.000I mean, it's stuff that's just like, So absurd, and it's only being done right now because they just don't care at all.
00:28:48.000So, if it's like, oh, well, it has to be proven, you know, beyond a reasonable doubt, way, way beyond a reasonable doubt, and it's you, Tate, they'll just make up a bunch of stuff.
00:28:58.000Well, I mean, that's the problem with governing in general is like, if you're the Trump administration, you have to govern like you're going to be in power forever because this is the same.
00:29:04.000And I'm not, you know, saying anything here.
00:29:05.000I'm just saying this is the same argument people use with like the DHS funding and the big beautiful bills are like, well, what happens when a Democrat comes in charge and now they have the GDP of an EU country for DHS?
00:29:14.000They're going to be able to weaponize that against right wingers.
00:29:18.000That is true, but again, we just have to govern in a way that we wield power confidently.
00:29:23.000And that's kind of my thing when we start second guessing, well, what happens if they come back into power?
00:29:26.000It's like govern so well that we don't have to worry about that.
00:31:43.000In Maryland, you're allowed to defend yourself only after fleeing into your home and they try to break in.
00:31:49.000West Virginia, if they present a threat on any part of your property, you can kill them.
00:31:54.000Now, the important thing to understand is in West Virginia, you can't just shoot a random person walking around in your property because property is big, expansive.
00:32:01.000And if someone's walking through your lands, you got to say, hey, you got to get out of here.
00:32:04.000If they're threatening you, you don't got to wait to find out.
00:32:08.000The reason why this is this way in West Virginia is that people own large acreages.
00:32:11.000So if you got 50 acres and your house is in the middle and you're standing to the front of your property and a guy is on your property walking towards you, threatening you, the idea that you're going to run full speed to your house while a guy's got a gun and threatening you is ridiculous.
00:32:23.000I had a question about the Texas law and now potentially the Tennessee law.
00:32:27.000So assume you're not at home, you're out at Starbucks, you're walking around, and some guy tries to take your backpack.
00:32:34.000So let me clarify under Texas Penal Code 942, you're allowed to use.
00:32:38.000Force, some may be deadly, but to recover your property, if you believe deadly force is necessary to prevent the person's commission of arson, burglary, robbery, aggravated robbery, theft during the nighttime, or criminal mischief, right?
00:32:53.000You are literally allowed to use force, not deadly, but you are allowed to use force that may be deadly if they're going to commit mischief.
00:33:12.000Prevent the person who is fleeing immediately after committing burglary, robbery, aggravated robbery, or theft during the nighttime from escaping with your property.
00:33:20.000You can use deadly force if they're attempting to flee your property with your stuff.
00:33:29.000It says you have to believe the property cannot be recovered by any other means, like calling the police, or using non deadly force would expose you or someone else to substantial risk, death, or bodily injury.
00:33:40.000So if they steal like a gun, And they're running away.
00:33:46.000This sounds like if they are walking by you on a street corner, they grab your cell phone and run, and you have the right to shoot and kill them and recover your phone.
00:34:13.000And I'm explaining having a weapon is aggravated.
00:34:15.000If a person robs you at gunpoint and then tries to flee, they're saying you can kill him because that person armed threatened to kill you and may kill someone else.
00:35:31.000Sometimes I'll be driving and I'm like, oh.
00:35:33.000I'm still confused because it sounds like robbery, even if they don't have a weapon and you can't get the thing back unless you do something about it.
00:36:50.000It applies to when you're at your lawful residence, you are not engaging in any crimes, and you reasonably believe deadly force is necessary to prevent arson, burglary, robbery or aggravated robbery, aggravated cruelty to animals.
00:37:02.000And there is an imminent danger to you or a third person of death.
00:41:56.000And so, a lot killed, 115 New York bar fired.
00:41:59.000So, to clear by the point, because Ian doesn't understand what macro level politics means, the likelihood of Seamus Coughlin robbing anybody.
00:42:17.000Now, joking aside, the point is Ian, because he refuses to accept standard arguments on statistics, and you make stupid caveats because you refuse to answer a basic question.
00:44:10.000It's when you look at what kind of stats do you want to look at?
00:44:13.000You want to take a city and say, hey, this year, 98% of thing was done by person type.
00:44:19.000So why do you keep bringing up anecdotes?
00:44:22.000Because you can't comprehend outliers to macro level stats.
00:44:26.000They don't say that this is how it always will be.
00:44:29.000Ian's the kind of guy who doesn't have a fire extinguisher in his house because he's like, well, you don't need it because sometimes there's no fire.
00:46:20.000Well, like a good example is like in Iceland, when people go into the grocery store, the mothers leave their babies in their trolleys like outside, they just leave them there.
00:46:28.000If they had to pass a law that said no stealing babies from in front of the grocery store, women would stop leaving their babies outside because they say, Well, there's a reason we had to pass this law that must mean that some people had to start getting their babies kidnapping is legal in Iceland.
00:46:40.000No, but it's just it would never occur to them to develop a law that granular in this instance because, again, there's no instance of that occurring.
00:46:45.000They just have very base laws like no murder because if someone murders, we need to use that.
00:46:48.000But the United States has very granular laws like this.
00:46:52.000Because now there's instances of this occurring, therefore the legal system is to react.
00:46:55.000Is it not like a sign of good protections for gun owners to secure their property, though?0.87
00:47:01.000Because I kind of like to think of this as a win.
00:47:04.000You did not need this law 200 years ago.
00:47:07.000Everybody understood if you took someone else's stuff, you'd die.
00:47:11.000In fact, 200 years ago, if a thief came to your house and stole something and you shot him in the back with a musket, none of the villagers or townspeople would blame you for it.
00:47:23.000In fact, In the 80s, if a dude came into your neighborhood in New York and was pushing people around, he would get stomped out and not a single cop would intervene.
00:47:33.000You didn't need to write anything down.
00:47:35.000They said, Don't mess with our community.
00:47:37.000We all know who we are, but hold on.0.79
00:47:39.000What if someone in that community went and punched a chick in the face?0.99
00:48:14.000In your house with your family, you can leave your wallet on the coffee table because it's high trust because it's a small, tight community.
00:48:21.000As it gets bigger, the nature of society is getting larger, you need law because you don't have the tight knitness.
00:49:01.000Oh, no, Because when you integrate different populations, it disrupts the culture.1.00
00:49:15.000Therefore, there's going to be different culture or different crime patterns in different areas because of the new populations that have come into the country.1.00
00:49:22.000And those police are of that group.0.50
00:49:24.000So, even though it's written down in that culture, they say, we don't enforce against that.
00:49:30.000Same thing is true for putting a pie on your windowsill on a Tuesday in Boston or whatever, or skydiving on a Sunday in Florida, which is apocryphal, but blue laws nobody adheres to.1.00
00:49:39.000It is illegal in West Virginia to cohabitate with a woman.0.76
00:49:43.000No one's going to arrest you for it.0.95
00:49:45.000The point is, when we start writing these things down, it's because there is an impact between different cultures that disagree on what should be.
00:49:52.000So we put up a notice saying, We've decided, therefore, because we exert authority through police and law enforcement, you all can't do the thing we don't want you to do anymore, which doesn't exist.
00:50:02.000That law is meaningless as soon as a new group of people come in and have a different moral worldview with each other.
00:50:09.000Laws being written down indicate that you need to inform.
00:50:14.000People doing that thing to stop doing it.
00:50:16.000You don't have to do that in a high trust society.
00:50:18.000So, back to the main point you set up a town of 1,000 Seamus Coughlins.
00:51:16.000Those that did chose to eat, but the men all died first.
00:51:20.000They sacrificed their well being for the women.0.60
00:51:22.000Then there were people who refused to cannibalize and died, and then there were some people who did, but it was largely the females who survived for a variety of reasons.
00:52:18.000Well, like the whole argument with that is that, again, if the Constitution begins to be perceived as restrictive, that indicates that we're not in the same country anymore.
00:53:17.000The Constitution outlines the structure of the U.S. government.
00:53:20.000The first articles literally just say Congress will do this job, the legislator will do this job, the judiciary does this job, and then you have the Bill of Rights after the fact, which is where they said, let's make sure the government can't do certain things.
00:53:33.000The Constitution itself and its core literally just say, here's the nature of our government.
00:54:31.000I guess what I'm saying is that that structure makes sense because of the specific people that framed it as.
00:54:35.000And we've given that constitution to Liberia, for example, and they've had a drastically different outcome.
00:54:40.000So, again, the constitution, all of our founding documents were a snapshot of a people at a time, indicating how they sort of agreed.
00:54:47.000I mean, I do agree there was like stuff that had to be debated or structured, but generally speaking, this reflected the population that existed at the time.
00:55:39.000And so the issue is two Protestants walk up to each other and they go, I don't want to be condemned for eternity, so I'm not going to wrong you.
00:55:47.000And then they have to worry about it that much.
00:55:50.000Today, you've got so many competing interests.
00:55:54.000Everybody is trying to twist the words of the Constitution as a weapon against the other.
00:56:38.000I mean, obviously, something dynamics have changed, but generally speaking, the idea of the prenup was because there was a slight bit of distrust.
00:56:43.000There was a slight bit of something could go wrong here.
00:56:45.000Therefore, I need an extra mechanism that I can execute on if this goes south, where most couples would just enter a marriage and they wouldn't feel the need to put a prenup in there.
00:56:54.000That means that there's something else at play that could potentially derail this marriage.
00:56:57.000Therefore, we need to add that extra layer to it.1.00
00:56:59.000You'd imagine that obviously things have changed, but you know, with a lot of these laws, you'd imagine that mass importing tens of millions of third worlders will.1.00
00:57:08.000Just result in more and more and more laws because we didn't know that we had to make laws about stuff that we never had a problem with 10 years ago, 20 years ago.1.00
00:57:53.000I mean, Singapore gets away with it because they don't have completely disparate cultures.1.00
00:57:56.000But yeah, if you start bringing in other religions, people that come from countries with a very specific ideology, that's when you have problems on an extra level.0.86
00:58:05.000The United States, the only way, like, basically the question is do you want more diversity, which will mean more authoritarianism, or less diversity, which means more of a high culture?0.58
01:00:09.000No, but the 99 Seamuses have to go to the French guy and look him in the eyes and say, We have written down what you cannot do when you're here.0.93
01:00:42.000But the cool thing was, because it had two, like a way in and a way out, I actually, like, during parties, I had multi access to my room from different parts.
01:00:55.000So it was kind of like having a portal that no one else could go through but me.
01:02:14.000So we would go into like the city quite, quite a bit, you know, quite often.
01:02:17.000And I remember one time we were playing this team, all the families, they like asked everyone to come to the middle of the court for like, I don't know, speech or something.
01:03:07.000That was the first, like in the United States, the First instances where we started seeing like crime syndicates pop up was like at the end of the 19th century, cocaine became really widespread.
01:03:15.000So you literally had these crack fiends robbing pharmacies.
01:03:17.000And that was like the first instance that really shocked the conscience of Americans as far as street level crime at like a high volume.
01:03:23.000I think we need to bring the mafia back, you know?
01:03:25.000They did a good job in a lot of the neighborhoods in like Philadelphia and just think about the values of the mob versus the crime and the gangs that we have today.
01:03:33.000So it's like there was that 19 year old girl in New York who was surrounded by a bunch of young black kids and they stabbed her, killed her.
01:03:44.000And it's just like, yeah, I mean, that's bad.
01:03:47.000But like, I'd rather have a House of the Rising Sun style speakeasy run by the mob where people are like drinking and gambling than kids running around with knives stabbing people and stealing their stuff.
01:04:00.000It just shows how bad things have gotten.
01:04:02.000Because if we went to the 1920s and they're like, man, we really need the mafia back, they'd be like, well, how bad are you guys living in a super villain world?
01:11:04.000So the AI generated robot is taking the W. He's taking care of the W. I'm saying if those hogs turned around and like jumped, I mean they could take him.1.00
01:13:56.000So he's just in a Betty, it's a smoothie and a cheeseburger, and then his body just fixes itself.
01:13:59.000was yesterday i was using brock and i was probing it i was asking it a question about ebt and then it just said who's ebt you're like we're good we're good you don't know nothing yeah we're Yeah, we got those locks.
01:15:43.000This would be a better remake of Terminator is like, you know, Sarah Connor's walking down the street, and then, like, you know, Arnold shows up, and then he, like, grabs a shotgun and she screams, and then a bunch of just, like, refugees, migrants, and homeless people grab him and start pulling parts off of him, and he's, like, being ripped apart, and they all run off with it.0.79
01:16:00.000Yeah, like, literally, can you sell them?
01:16:01.000They deploy one to Haiti, and they're just eating the robot.0.96
01:16:05.000Terminator shows up, and they just strip them for parts and then sell them.0.97
01:19:15.000They walk up and say, please come take a hot shower with clean running water.
01:19:18.000Imagine going back a thousand years and telling a king, you know, we, we, We give even the poorest people, actually, we try to make them take showers.
01:19:26.000He's going to be like, I have a shower once a month.
01:20:35.000You know, that's a type of work, and it will distract you from a lot of other types of work.
01:20:40.000I think we're simultaneously the most bored era, but also the least bored era, because part of the reason is like, when was the last time you were actually bored?
01:21:07.000So, this guy, Robert Raymond, says, Damn, can you imagine being a human during the Paleolithic age, just eating salmon and berries and storytelling around campfires and stargazing?
01:21:16.000No jobs, no traffic, no ads, no poverty, no capitalism caused traumas, just pure vibes.
01:21:22.000And Phil said, Can you imagine your child and mate both dying in childbirth?
01:21:25.000Can you imagine getting a cut and dying of infection?
01:21:28.000Can you imagine breaking your leg and being eaten by a saber toothed cat?
01:21:31.000Can you imagine being filled with parasites?
01:21:33.000Can you imagine poverty being universal?
01:21:35.000The funny thing is, when he's like eating salmons, who got the salmons for you?
01:21:44.000Like, these people are literally retarded.1.00
01:21:48.000Yeah, he probably got that from a video game because there are times in the game where you know you already hit the rocks, you built the house with nine clicks, and now you just get to sit and enjoy the digital fire.1.00
01:22:22.000The thing is, you could do this probably for 20 days a year now, easily, your average person, if they could manage it maybe 10 days a year on a vacation up into the mountains.
01:22:30.000Back then, they might have experienced that, but they spent 99.9% of their time trying to survive and create the environment to be able.
01:22:37.000And even then, you're looking around because animals can be in the dark.
01:22:40.000They don't have lights, street lights, there are no streets.0.98
01:22:43.000Like, Capitalism derangement syndrome just has people saying the most retarded things.0.93
01:22:48.000But it's easy to get locked into it.0.93
01:24:07.000Well, now they use gravity generators, is the easiest way to do it.
01:24:10.000You have a high gear ratio and you have a rock tied to a string, and when you lift it up and you crank it, when you let it go, gravity pulls it down and it spins a very high gear ratio, which turns the light on.
01:25:20.000It's that functional, as far as we're concerned, perpetual motion is entirely possible.
01:25:25.000And what I mean by that is when you see these videos of like a wheel that keeps spinning, we all know there's a battery in there.
01:25:30.000And then everyone argues perpetual motion is impossible while ignoring the fact that we don't live in a vacuum and that external energies will act upon whatever mechanism we produce.
01:25:38.000Thus, people have produced things that look like perpetual motion, but it's actually just solar power.
01:25:42.000For example, You can have wheels that solar heat, like the sun will heat the system, introducing energy to it, which causes an expansion, which can cause it steam pressure or can make it rotate.
01:25:55.000Functionally, as far as we're concerned, we did not put energy into it.
01:25:59.000We built a system that seems to just go, but it's actually just absorbing ambient energy.
01:27:18.000But so I was thinking about this on the drive over, like, We still live in the oil economy.
01:27:23.000It's an excellent control mechanism for geopolitical force, for just interpersonal force.
01:27:27.000You know, one guy can't blow up, it's hard to get a lot of fuel.
01:27:30.000And so the next step, like I, it was, I was like a truth serum guy, everybody learn everything, and the next, the best will rise to the top.
01:27:40.000And now I'm like, how long do we compress technology and society to force them to use oil as the main fuel source?
01:28:05.000So we have control, not we, but the powers that control the oil control the world, essentially.
01:28:10.000Yeah, with a major shift going towards LNG right now.
01:28:13.000So it's like that's going to be the majority.
01:28:15.000And if we start moving towards gravity powered things or fusion powered things, we lose that power, that manipulative force that the American military machine has provided for 70 years.
01:28:59.000So I'm changing the subject, I guess, because I was just thinking about something like, you know, Gen Z is just internet people.0.99
01:29:05.000But the things they're consuming online are just Indians.1.00
01:29:08.000So I was just imagining a future where it's like, it's true.1.00
01:29:12.000So we know about how they spam X with fake accounts.1.00
01:29:15.000We've got Bangladeshis, Pakistanis, and Indians trying to make money off all these systems.0.95
01:29:19.000There's that story right now that's going around where an Indian guy made a fake AI woman who was MAGA and then started selling OnlyFans to get guys to pay.0.99
01:29:27.000So you've got all these Indian dudes that are just ripping off Gen Z because Gen Z is too stupid.0.96
01:29:57.000Did you see that video where the Indian guy had the fake AI filter and he was talking to the guy and he's like trying not to move his head?0.88
01:30:03.000And the guy's like, hold three fingers up in front of your face.0.79
01:30:06.000Well, Tim, to your point, I mean, we already kind of are seeing this with like, Third culture kids, as in kids that are raised in non Western countries but go to international schools.0.93
01:30:13.000They used to universally have British accents, the English accent specifically.0.96
01:30:17.000And now most of them have American accents.
01:30:19.000And the reason for that is because those kids are consuming the only interaction they're getting with the English language is their parents, which is, you know, varies.
01:30:27.000And then through media, social media, et cetera.
01:30:29.000That's the social media manipulation culture war that I think we're winning as Americans.
01:30:33.000So it will get to a point where we can let go of the military dominance and just have a cultural dominance.
01:31:33.000Like, why don't we do it first and just say, because then if everyone is fusion, then we can draw that's the whole idea with AI.
01:31:38.000Yeah, you could draw a comparison to AI right there.
01:31:41.000Yeah, that's why the common argument from like the AI proponents is look, we are agree that there are some worries about where AI is going, but the problem is China's putting their foot on the gas anyway.
01:31:50.000So if not us, who's you might as well have the most benevolent in our eyes, the most benevolent power.
01:31:54.000We have the best talent, we have the best technology, exactly, utilize it, even if.
01:31:59.000That's kind of the that's the step that they're taking right there.
01:32:53.000I thought plutonium was a fuel, but uranium isn't.
01:32:55.000But we would be utilizing it as a fuel by powering our electric grid, which will power electric vehicles, presumably, if that's the way things move.
01:33:01.000You could put fuel in a base station, but.
01:33:04.000It's still fuel that you would be able to take and carry around.
01:33:06.000Whereas, like, fuel to Hawaii, unless they build a nuclear reactor to then power electric vehicles, I guess that would be the question.
01:33:12.000Fuel is just defined as any material that can be consumed or used to generate power.
01:34:04.000Because you can imagine that, like, no, greater earth is cool because it means there's more continents and places you've never been to, and there's things to explore.
01:34:12.000The reason why people like Greater Earth is because it means the Earth is not totally discovered yet and there's still things to find and do.
01:34:19.000Whereas right now it's like everything's been done, you know what I mean?
01:34:23.000There's rainforests as well as you know deep in the ocean that we still need to explore.
01:34:28.000That's very exciting when they'd use those LiDAR to detect under the Amazon and they see all these things.
01:34:32.000Every time, you know, everyone always says that they're like, oh, we've only explored like seven percent of the water, but then when you get the video from what's going on down there, it's just like weird looking.
01:34:40.000It's like, oh, you're not getting the right footage.
01:34:54.000Yeah, if there's a guy down there, you know, or something, but it's just like, every time I see the videos, it's like, oh, people get crushed because of the pressure and then there's like goofy looking fish.
01:35:01.000What's the rainforest that only like 30%?
01:36:13.000It's like there's something going on there where every time I watch that show, there's guys going deep into the Amazon just because they can't pull anywhere else.
01:36:58.000Well, I don't think they wanted to.0.99
01:36:59.000Make it about sex, but they wanted to like show that they were male hookers pretending to be women.1.00
01:37:04.000They should make a story about the one woman that could handle it.0.99
01:37:06.000Why could they not breathe up there?0.57
01:37:08.000The thing is, though, like when you hear that story in my mind, I'm imagining like two just ripped hairy guys and one guy puts on lipstick and goes, I'm the woman now.0.95
01:37:14.000But in reality, it's probably just ladyboys.0.64
01:39:27.000Isn't that where they all like are incesting each other?
01:39:30.000The HMS Bounty, uh, the HMS Bounty, a bunch of maroon sailors landed on Pitcairn, so all of the descendants of like 12 men live on that island, and it's all incest.
01:39:38.000There's a lot of inbreeding because they have no choice because there's only like 12 men on the whole island, so they all have, and it's still owned by the English, but it's rapidly depopulating.
01:39:44.000So the British government has set up a scheme.0.84
01:40:23.000Well, yeah, it was settled by these mutineers, the HMS Bounty.0.99
01:40:27.000And then what's fascinating now is they're running out of people because, as soon as people can, they leave the island because there's nothing going on there.0.97
01:43:14.000Honestly, pick any of these islands and just go live on it and document your entire thing, run it, start, you know, whatever, build stuff on it.
01:43:38.000Yeah, and like they ban people from visiting, but there's like the problem is there's islanders there that live there, so like they're just like in a they're frozen like the 80s.
01:47:53.000If you go up a little bit, that Holy Ascension of Our Lord, Russian, that's the first Orthodox church in the entire United States, but it was built by the Russians and it's fast.1.00
01:48:00.000They use like whale bones and stuff.1.00
01:48:03.000Dude, have you guys seen those Catholic churches or those old Christian churches where it's all made of Bone of their conquered enemies.0.72
01:48:09.000You could pull up images instantly of these crazy tricks.
01:48:12.000That's how Trump should build the arts.
01:48:13.000The arts should be with like the bones of our vanquished enemies.
01:48:18.000We got to get the questions from the Discord.
01:48:20.000So if you guys want to throw your questions in right now while we're exploring Google Earth and wasting time, we'll get your questions going.
01:48:39.000That'd be so nice to get a Bay named after you.
01:48:41.000By the way, I know it's a little off topic, but I just saw a Rick and Morty clip where Morty's dad is a wooden guy and he sails down the river and gets eaten by beavers.
01:48:59.000It says Tim, in regards to the point you made of bullets being almost instantaneous death as a firefighter and former paramedic, I've seen several cases of that not being the case.
01:49:06.000Perhaps exception, not the rule, but one guy after killing his wife put the gun in his mouth and blew the back of his skull off.
01:50:11.000Comedy here, we don't want to make it.
01:50:13.000It's like you could get a snapshot of their face right before it hits, and then that could be like on the what if they just fill your cell with carbon dioxide in the middle of the night?
01:50:22.000Poison gas, they used to, but I think it takes a while.
01:50:25.000Oh, no, no carbon monoxide during sleep is one.
01:50:28.000I mean, honestly, it's humane, there's no pain.
01:51:19.000Dude, I got half a million views on my fake greater earth little gag thing on Instagram.
01:51:25.000And there are people being like, stop making fun of flat earthers, Tim.
01:51:28.000People have so much information right now that they're just getting, and not even to address like this specific point right here, but just in general.
01:51:37.000So it's like, and then they don't really have anybody that's like an authority figure that is maybe well read on it or has a strong opinion about it to really push back.
01:51:45.000So they can just go develop any opinion that they want, really.
01:51:48.000Make a YouTube or a post and then that gets 100 likes and they're like, wow, there's a people that like this idea.
01:53:29.000Framework of psychotic nonsense that results in awful things.
01:53:32.000Some of it has to do with that, obviously, and probably most of it.
01:53:36.000And then there's also a massive area where you're having to watch these stupid HR videos that are forced to be there from left wing groups that want to indoctrinate people in the corporate world as well.
01:55:09.000If you guys started a hostile environment training company, you'd have contracts for days.
01:55:12.000Just put up a flyer outside of like Vice HQ or whatever, and you'll have 50 requests, and all the rich kids will be like, I really want to do it.
01:55:20.000Just get like five vets with basic combat training to give them a weekend of combat training courses and some LARPing, and they're going to pay you out the ass.
01:55:29.000But yeah, it's all everything we do here that we don't want to do, it's because we're required to by law.
01:55:35.000So, like, it's funny, people will chat, be like, Did you know that Tibcast has NDAs?
01:57:17.000And 100%, it's all insurance companies.
01:57:20.000And what likely is, is that their errors and omissions, their insurance company for all of their copyright stuff, errors and omissions or otherwise, says, if you accept submissions, we will not insure you.
01:57:31.000And then if you don't have insurance, you're not going to be able to get on any platform or on the radio.
01:57:35.000So, yeah, I was just going to say really quick, I guess what I was saying, the training, maybe I didn't mean training so much as, um, Making these corporations adopt kind of an ideological framework or ideological, like, let's say, it's not, it's, it's, so the Civil Rights Act created wokeness.
01:57:53.000When the moment they said, you cannot discriminate on the basis of these things, you immediately opened the door for legal precedent to sue for those things.
01:58:01.000So now you will continually get more and more of it.0.76
01:58:03.000The company then says, we don't want to get sued, so we have to tell people that white people are bad.0.86
01:58:50.000Then someone sues and says, that proves they're racist because shouldn't there be one black person, one woman?
01:58:55.000So then they go, okay, we don't want to get sued, put a woman on.0.98
01:58:58.000Then what happens is I end up working in an office where they bring a woman on the team because they're scared of getting sued for being sexist and the woman's a fucking retard.0.99
01:59:05.000And then I'm like, why is this person here?1.00
01:59:07.000And then she goes, how come no one will listen to me?
01:59:32.000From all your street interviews lately, what's the most common moment where someone's entire position collapses when you just ask them to explain it?
01:59:39.000Explain it simply or give a specific example.
01:59:41.000Do you see that happening more often now than a couple of years ago?
01:59:48.000And off the top of my head, honestly, it probably has to do with immigration, mass migration, talking about, you know, if you have them unpack a basically A position that they hold.
01:59:59.000I guess I could give several examples, but we'll do one of their favorite ones is like due process, and they really don't know what within due process is missing.
02:00:08.000And so they think that illegal immigrants are entitled to basically due process that somebody would get if they committed a crime in the United States for a criminal case.
02:00:16.000But the act of immigration is a civil process, it's an administrative process, and they don't understand any of that stuff.
02:00:25.000So basically, having them break down exactly what they're getting at when it comes to What due process is missing for illegal immigrants?
02:00:33.000That's probably one of the biggest ones that we run into.
02:00:43.000Vash says, Ian, when y'all were talking about some sex airport island in the Antarctic about eight minutes ago, you said it was all water before the flood.
02:02:07.000I know we were largely goofing off, having a good time looking at Google Earth, but I think we need it.
02:02:13.000I think people are burned out on the same stories over and over again.
02:02:16.000It's a slow news day and it's slow because everyone's tired.
02:02:19.000You know, you've got like the Iran stuff, you've got the SPLC stuff, and we talked a bit about it.
02:02:23.000But I'm sitting here like this morning, I did a live stream because I'm just like, dude, I am not going to make the fifth segment about people fleeing New York City.