00:02:49.000Donald Trump signed an executive order limiting mail-in voting, requiring DHS to round up documents on who is a U.S. citizen eligible to vote.
00:02:58.000It's kind of a workaround to the SAVE Act.
00:03:00.000You can see that he's targeting this system because they're not passing the SAVE Act.
00:03:06.000And without it, Republicans are cooked.
00:03:09.000I think a lot of Americans really do want it.
00:03:11.000And the strangest thing is, despite it being one of the most popular bills, like literally of all time, Democrats and Republicans will not pass this thing.
00:03:20.000Now, Donald Trump, I'm just going to say he does not have the authority as president to just decree you can't have this mail-in voting and that only citizens can vote, despite it being common sense, I guess.
00:03:33.000So it's likely going to be challenged, but this is the first move Trump is making to checkmate.
00:03:38.000Well, not the first move, but right now, it is a major move he is making in this Save Act play to checkmate the Democrats.
00:03:46.000We can look at all the prediction data, all the polling.
00:03:49.000Sure, it looks like people are not happy with the war, but if Trump wins this fight, oh, it's over.
00:03:55.000Because as we all know, when it comes to elections, procedure is more important than popularity.
00:04:01.000And then, of course, my friends, Donald Trump will be attending the Supreme Court hearings on birthright citizenship tomorrow.
00:04:07.000The Supreme Court may once and for all end the insane practice of people coming here on vacation, having a kid, and then leaving, and that kid can be president.
00:04:58.000They're going to enforce collections through wage garnishment, bank levies, property seizures.
00:05:02.000That's where Tax Network USA comes in.
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00:07:36.000From CNBC, Trump signs executive order limiting mail-in voting ahead of 2026 U.S. elections.
00:07:44.000They say President Donald Trump on Tuesday signed the executive order cracking down on mail-in voting.
00:07:48.000The order will require DHS to compile a list of verified U.S. citizens in each state who are eligible to vote.
00:07:54.000It's almost certain to be challenged in court, which could block it from being enforced in time for the midterms.
00:07:59.000Quote, we want to have honest voting in our country because if you don't have honest voting, you can't have really a nation, if you want to know the truth.
00:08:05.000I love how he just adds that we call those wasted words.
00:08:09.000I'm not trying to be a dick, but we call those waiting.
00:08:12.000The list would be sent to each state, and the order directs the attorney general to prioritize the investigation and prosecution of election officials, individuals, and other entities that violate the law by issuing or distributing federal ballots to ineligible voters.
00:08:25.000The fact sheet says the Postal Service would be required to transmit ballots only to individuals enrolled on a state-specific mail-in absentee participation list.
00:08:37.000He can tell the post office: if you send mail-in votes to people who are not eligible to vote, you will be held to account for this.
00:08:44.000This is the workaround to the SAVE Act.
00:08:46.000If they're not going to pass the SAVE Act, this is the Trump gambit for now.
00:08:50.000Certainly, they will challenge him in court, but I actually think he might win enough to where they can't stop him in time for November.
00:08:58.000It's tough because, I mean, it's one of those things where with all these, you know, with all these orders, I mean, it's Stephen Miller's cooking these up somewhere in a dark room.
00:09:11.000So he's probably gamed this out, gamed out the strategy that now is the time to sign this because this could buy us enough time for November to actually deploy it.
00:09:18.000And because the SAVE Act's not going to pass something to get us across the finish line.
00:09:21.000He timed it specifically for how long it will take to be sued, then appealed, and then get to a federal court.
00:09:29.000And I think the strategy is they want to get an injunction or they want to overturn any injunctions just before the election happens.
00:09:38.000So I do think this is part of their strategy.
00:10:07.000Well, at the very worst, it's like just the whole point of it is to be able to withhold federal funding for states.
00:10:11.000So it's like you just withhold funding for a few months.
00:10:14.000They've already missed out on that money, the money that they would allocate towards, you know, holes in their budget and that sort of thing.
00:10:19.000So even if they eventually get it overturned at the Supreme Court.
00:10:22.000Well, I also think this is a massive win in terms of the court of public opinion because, like we pointed out before, this is a massively popular position among both Republicans, Democrats, and independents across the country.
00:10:35.000And I mean, mail-in ballots are obviously a massive loophole for that specifically.
00:10:41.000So, I mean, I think overall, this is going to bode well in terms of how the people are going to see it.
00:10:45.000I think that the administration kind of needs a win at this point.
00:10:49.000There's a lot of people that are pretty negative going into the, you know, into the midterm season.
00:10:58.000And I think that the more that the administration can do to limit any kind of fraudulent votes or anything, I think that is something that will, it's not going to make the Black Pillars happy, but it will help placate them.
00:11:12.000Look, if you can get people that are low-propensity voters to actually turn out, you know, then you might, the Republicans might have a chance of keeping the Senate.
00:11:23.000I don't think the Republicans are going to keep the Senate right now.
00:11:24.000I know that they still kind of, I think they have the edge in the betting markets or the prediction markets or what have you, but I don't think that they will.
00:11:31.000I think that the only way, and I've said this a bunch of times, the only way that the Republicans will keep the Senate and have a chance of keeping the House.
00:11:39.000This isn't to say they will, but have a chance of keeping the House, is if the economy is doing well.
00:11:43.000And I think that if the things that are going on in the Middle East pan out properly the way that the administration wants them to, you could see a boost in the economic activity in the U.S. You could see a situation where people are actually feeling better about their own personal situations, which would make them more inclined to go out and vote for the current administration for the Republicans.
00:12:08.000I'm just saying the conditions that are necessary for that to happen.
00:12:11.000I wouldn't be surprised if as we get closer to the midterms, Trump fires off several executive orders, which are increasingly, increasingly, what's the right word?
00:12:24.000I don't know what the right word is for it, but powerful, perhaps, meaning more impactful.
00:12:30.000He's telling the post office, you can't transmit these ballots.
00:12:33.000He's saying you got to collect information on who's eligible.
00:12:36.000I wouldn't be surprised if as we get closer to the election, he says outright, like, okay, no mail-in voting, no mail-in voting at all.
00:12:42.000And he sends in feds to certain areas.
00:12:45.000If the Democrats win and all prediction markets, everything is tracking for Trump to lose this, for the Republicans to lose this, Trump's cooked.
00:12:54.000Well, I think it's one of those, I think there's two things here.
00:12:56.000I think one, Stephen Edgingen made this point on Twitter today where he said it's kind of the Robert Moses strategy in a city planner in New York City, where no matter what any local opposition was, what any court said, he would just plow through different blocks in the city because it's like now when the courts have finally weighed in, it doesn't matter.
00:13:38.000The American people liked what he campaigned on.
00:13:41.000And he should be doing as much as he can to push through his agenda.
00:13:46.000Obviously, Congress, the Republicans in Congress should be doing whatever they can to support that because of the fact that he did win the popular vote and he won the swing states.
00:13:54.000And it was such a landmark kind of election.
00:13:57.000But still, he should be doing everything he can, exercising as much power as he can and let the courts throw injunctions at him.
00:14:07.000But he should still be moving forward at the maximum pace that he possibly can because that's the only thing that's going to make the people that are his base happy.
00:14:15.000Yeah, well, that's exactly what he was elected to do.
00:14:17.000He was elected to be an outsider to essentially be a bulldozer to the system to clean out the swamp and get the agendas actually pushed forward that the American people want, but Congress is too.
00:14:31.000I mean, we've been, I remember every single night in 2024, we were looking, I would look into the camera, I'd say, Trump, please bomb Iran.
00:15:29.000But we're, you know, fairly middle of the road here at Timcast because we're moderate individuals, right?
00:15:37.000Didn't vote for the war, don't want it, but certainly don't want America to lose, want to make sure that Trump finds a proper path out of this one.
00:15:42.000And I know that there will be great benefits if he succeeds.
00:15:44.000But it seems like it's obvious the midterms are coming and every dirty play is going to be played.
00:15:53.000So what is accomplished by creating these divisive MAGA posts?
00:15:57.000Well, there's prominent Trump supporters who are responding being like, here, here, yeah, screw those people.
00:16:02.000You throw in me and Jack Pesobic on that list in an effort to get us inundated with tweets being like, screw you're not MAGA.
00:16:09.000The idea I often bring up is if you don't offer someone a path forward, they'll take the other direction.
00:16:17.000So if someone does something wrong and your immediate reaction is, F you, burn, they'll immediately go to the other side because they have nowhere else to go.
00:16:24.000Me, I have a bit more mental fortitude than that.
00:16:27.000But this is what the operation seems to be, the coordination seems to be, attack as many people as possible that do support Trump.
00:16:35.000So it appears as though the Trump base is attacking you.
00:16:43.000Then these people will start attacking Trump supporters and you fracture the Trump base.
00:16:47.000I think it's also to essentially erode the opinions of the people that actually listen to you too.
00:16:53.000I mean, if they think that you're lumped in with these group of people, they're just going to start eventually assuming that you also hold the same opinions that they do.
00:17:02.000Or to basically generate algorithmic feeds where people who might follow this account are now going to have my name and Jack Pesobic as well, who's very pro-Trump, being lumped in with Candace Owens as if we hold similar opinions at all, which we don't.
00:17:19.000And then their algorithms will be built upon, they'll start seeing more and more of this AI slop that just, what are they going to do?
00:17:26.000They're going to see the 18th post where it's like, can you believe what Tim Poole is doing, what Jack Pesobic is doing?
00:17:32.000And then they're going to be like, wow.
00:17:33.000And then they're going to, I don't know where they're going to go, but it's fracturing MAGA intentionally, it would seem.
00:17:41.000Yeah, I think there's a contingent of the political, broadly right-wing sphere that wants to see you and wants to see Jack Pesobic lumped in with the Panikin class, for lack of a better word.
00:17:51.000mannequins well because because i'm the retard right The retard, right?
00:17:54.000Yeah, I mean, just like whatever you want to call them, because I think you and Jack specifically diverge on a few political points from kind of the rest of the right-wing commentariat.
00:18:02.000That's really inconvenient for a chunk of, again, the right-wing broadly, and they want to see you guys ejected and viewed in the same way as Candace or as, you know, here's what I think.
00:18:13.000As I've long stated, my friends, the play is to eliminate independent media.
00:18:19.000Take a look at the money being dumped into these moderate Democrat candidates trying to kick out the progressives.
00:18:26.000Take a look at the move they, I'll tell you why my name appears on this list, because I correctly called out the Stephen Colbert hoax with James Tallarico attacking Jasmine Crockett.
00:18:35.000Despite not liking Jasmine Crockett, the machine state is saying we want to eliminate these independent voices.
00:18:42.000So I've long argued that, you know, like Candace and Tucker, less so Tucker, but still to a certain degree, he's in a similar political space.
00:19:16.000I think the play is they're going to target any voice that is independent or outside their control.
00:19:25.000And of course, that includes people like Tucker, but it also includes people like Jack Pesobic or me.
00:19:30.000And then the play is going to be, you turn on Netflix, you turn on CBS, you turn on, you know, or Paramount or whatever, and there are the approved podcasts.
00:19:39.000Well, I think it's also too is like broadly independent media on the right is trained to be intentionally contrarian because like independent media really got its teeth during the Biden years during like the Biden winter.
00:19:51.000And so they basically trained the audience to say those four years were called the Biden winter.
00:20:01.000You should be inherently skeptical of any executive power.
00:20:04.000And likewise, the Republicans are exceptionally weak.
00:20:06.000The Republicans will always backstab you, et cetera, and whatnot.
00:20:09.000They basically trained an audience, primed an audience to be skeptical of any political power whatsoever.
00:20:14.000So as soon as Trump gets in, not perfect Iran war, I would say at this point, is an L. Still, 80% of things, best president of my lifetime by far.
00:20:23.000People are just like willing to freak out and panic and curse Denome husband themselves because they're just like losing their minds.
00:20:31.000And I think part of it is because the commentariate primed them for this.
00:20:34.000The commentariat primed them to be constantly skeptical.
00:20:37.000They almost like fetishized being backstabbed and betrayed.
00:20:39.000They're like, oh, Trump betrayed me again.
00:20:43.000I think it's also really difficult because for the common viewer, the news cycle now moves faster than it ever has before.
00:20:50.000So it's really easy for people to forget the actual wins that we have had under the Trump administration.
00:20:55.000Like it's very easy to get focused on Iran when it's happening in the moment, but it's really easy to forget all of the, you know, all the deportations and all of the other wins that we've had under the administration so far.
00:21:07.000Well, I think there's only one explanation, and it's that the people who are in control, the powerful people, the Apstein Island people, they're lizards.
00:21:16.000They're all actually lizards and they're in on it.
00:21:18.000And they're just like, you know, if you're not one of us, a lizard person, then you can't hang out.
00:24:08.000I'm comfortable saying, like you know, if we, you know, let's do a little trade here.
00:24:12.000All California communist, you know repetition, put all the Californians in Indiana.
00:24:15.000Yeah yeah, but like you ever see, you ever hear the thing that if you see a roach, you're not supposed to smash it because it splatters the eggs everywhere.
00:24:20.000Yeah yeah, if you put all the Californians in Indiana, it'd be like that.
00:24:23.000Yeah yeah, you just build a wall around it.
00:26:16.000They've got new instruments and new technology to scan the surface understand, you know the appropriate places for a potential moon base and they're going to loop around and scan basically everything so that they can make terminations on a moon base.
00:26:29.000And they said they're going to see parts of the moon that have never been seen before.
00:27:13.000I mean, the only actual comfort these guys have is that, you know, if there is some kind of failure, then the sound stage will just open up the door and let them out and they can use the bathroom to get back in and start filming again.
00:28:18.0005:30, July 16th, 1945, 13-year-old Barba Kent was on a camping trip with her dance teacher and 11 students when a forceful blast threw her out of her bunk bed onto the floor.
00:28:28.000Later that day, the girls noticed what they believed was snow falling outside.
00:29:34.000That's being blasted by ionizing radiation.
00:29:36.000Yeah, that's true, but like Buzz Aldrin lived to be a very old man before he passed away.
00:29:41.000He was like in his 90s, I think, when he passed away.
00:29:43.000So, I mean, it's not, it's probably not great, but at the same time, I don't think that radiation exposure is actually so bad that you're gonna get cancer when you come back, you know, 10 years later.
00:30:36.000And there's like whether you're going to tell Neil Armstrong, like, hey, you'll be cemented in history forever, the first man to walk on the moon, but you might get cancer at some point in the next 50 years.
00:33:24.000When you're in space and you look down, you see the earth, and then people have this profound experience of like everything is just right there.
00:33:31.000And it's very profound thinking about, you know, 7 billion people living their lives.
00:33:36.000But I can ruin it for you by reminding you that half of them are taking a dump right now.
00:34:09.000Oh, and so you go and you order coffee or a drink and you sit down and then the dogs just go crazy.
00:34:14.000Now, in the mind of the average person, you're imagining like a golden retriever comes up to you all happy and you pet him and he's like, and then you're like, oh, this is great.
00:34:24.000They run in and start running around full speed and they jump up on the table and try biting yourself and you're pushing them away and then they take a dump right there on the floor.
00:35:39.000I'll say one more thing, just because we're on the topic of space.
00:35:42.000You guys ever see the thing where they put the fake bird on the rock and then the real, there's like a bunch of fake birds and the one real bird came?
00:36:35.000I think the aliens, this is a joke, by the way.
00:36:37.000I think the aliens came to Earth and their ship crashed.
00:36:41.000And then the humans start messing around with it.
00:36:43.000So then the aliens basically are like, you know, we only did like light reconnaissance on this planet, but now they got access to our technology.
00:36:49.000So we have no choice but to like come down.
00:36:50.000So the aliens come down and they go to the president and they're like, look, you can't have this technology.
00:39:35.000And the liberals just go, like, they'll get made fun of, but they'll go, well, at least my side, we all acknowledge that we're all this way.
00:40:40.000If this dude wants to, you know, put balloons in his shirt and pout in the camera or whatever, just don't do it in public and don't call hookers and film yourself doing it, especially when your wife is a Trump admin official.
00:43:17.000But my point is largely just like, of all of the things that people do do, like, there are guys who are married to other guys.
00:43:26.000And so, outside of even knowing what they're doing behind the scenes, or assuming in public, they're outright telling you when they like put their arms around each other and show off their rings.
00:43:34.000You already, at the bare minimum, this is not the worst degeneracy that exists in society.
00:43:40.000And so that's why my point is: do you want to be freaky in the sheets or whatever, whatever, just not in public?
00:43:46.000Like, the fact that he's filming himself and he was sending these photos off, apparently, this is what happens to you.
00:43:52.000Don't keep your private life to your private self, and then we'll all just pretend you're normal.
00:44:01.000People just have a problem keeping it private.
00:44:04.000I mean, especially with the advent of the cell phone, the cameras and cell phones and stuff like that, people just love that you not have the ability to be like, no.
00:46:37.000But again, like, hold on, like, when I was first reading this and I was reading Bimbo Facation, like, I can understand the grammatic, like, breakdown of what that means.
00:46:44.000I'm imagining they're saying that here, like, her husband is into the idea that women are turned into overly sexualized big team women.
00:48:22.000And he's like, I'm going to outright steal a woman's clothing that she had specifically tailored for her, and I'm going to wear it on camera at the White House.
00:48:30.000He was also a beast, so it probably stretched it out quite a bit.
00:48:58.000You'd think he'd like get better at it, you know, stealing suitcases.
00:49:02.000Because every time you go to the airport, you're like, the last bastion of our high trust society really is the luggage carousel because there's nothing stopping you from just taking random suitcases.
00:49:18.000Well, you know what I love too is when like you'll check a bag and then when you'll get to your place of destination open it up there's a card in there and it's a DHS card that says we opened your bag and went through it.
00:50:33.000If there is one thing that has me begging, begging for the meteor of death, it's when you'll see an ad and it'll be like, you know, there's a bunch of commercials where you'll seek a little guy on a bridge and he'll be shooting his gun and then like zombies will be coming, but then he'll move over to the right and he'll shoot like a gun with a five on it.
00:50:52.000And when he shoots it, he gets the gun and it's and I'm like, oh, that looks pretty fun.
00:50:56.000And then there's like a gate coming at you.
00:50:58.000It says minus 10, but then he's shooting it and then it goes down from negative 10.
00:51:02.000It goes up to zero and then it goes up to plus 10.
00:51:12.000And then right when you start the game, you're this little guy on the bridge and you're moving left and right and you're grabbing the weapons.
00:51:17.000And I'm like, this is the greatest game I've ever played.
00:51:19.000And then once you do, it goes mission over.
00:51:21.000And then it turns into a world-building civilization game where there's timers on everything.
00:51:25.000And I'm like, no, go back to where I'm the guy fighting the zombies and you can't.
00:51:38.000There's also, no, there's another game where there's a king and he's, he's in, he's in like a tunnel that goes like this and then goes up and then falls into lava.
00:51:48.000And there's a bunch of blocks moving forward pushing him.
00:51:51.000And he's like, and he's looking all scared.
00:52:11.000I am going to find the studios that make that game and I'm going to knock on their door and I'm going to shake my fist in their general direction.
00:53:51.000So the AI systems figured out that his daughter was pregnant because of the Google search history she was doing.
00:53:56.000And so I think when you start posting, like, oh, hey, kid, when we start shopping for baby stuff, Instagram automatically will start recommending things that it thinks it wants you to see.
00:54:05.000And so it must be that new parents get glued to these stories about their kids dying because they're scared.
00:54:14.000And it's, so what happens is unintentionally, a news story will be like a seven-year-old kid fell into the ice and died, or like a three-year-old was hit by a car.
00:54:21.000And new parents stop and stare at that news story and watch the whole thing.
00:54:25.000So the algorithm doesn't know what it's showing you.
00:54:27.000It's just saying this video is loved by new parents.
00:54:31.000And it starts spam blasting these stories.
00:54:33.000The other thing it keeps doing is ping pong.
00:55:24.000So I'm like, I bet someone at Facebook was like, we're going to see if we can get Tim Pool to talk about ping pong in a positive light and be into it and promote ping pong.
00:55:33.000Well, I assure you, I hate table tennis, ping pong.
00:57:31.000Depending on what time they start, maybe I'll do like a live stream and we can just like listen in and do a listening session where I will explain why the people arguing for it are dumb.
00:57:43.000So everybody knows the arguments that we've gone over them a million, one times.
00:57:46.000The Supreme Court's going to hear the arguments.
00:57:48.000I do not, I'm sorry, there's literally no argument for it.
00:57:55.000Did the founding fathers think that someone from China could bring their kid here, could come here pregnant, give birth, that kid could be president of the United States?
00:58:06.000And so after the Civil War, did they think that someone from China should be able to come here, give birth, and that kid can be the president?
00:58:52.000But certainly we can reassess today based on modern technology and issue a new ruling and saying, well, based on the ease of access and the illegalities that are surrounding this, notably illegal birth tourism, at this point we can say it's over.
00:59:07.000Yeah, well, I mean, this is clearly not the intent behind birthright citizenship.
00:59:11.000Just on its face, anybody can see that.
00:59:14.000You don't even have to have half a brain cell to understand that.
00:59:18.000But to say that people can, yeah, just hop, skip, and jump across the border, take a flight over from China, have your kid, and that kid is automatically a citizen is a pretty ridiculous argument altogether.
00:59:29.000Yeah, and like it's consensus across the entire old world that, you know, it's citizenship by blood, right?
00:59:35.000You like to have to have some stake to actually become a citizen of the country, some like some level of heritage at some degree, whether it's parents or grandparents.
00:59:43.000Where in the new world, across all the settler colonies, we have birthright citizenship because like America's unique case with the slaves, but like the majority of these New World countries, I think Colombia is the only one that doesn't actually have birthright citizenship.
00:59:54.000It was because they were bringing in a lot of immigrants.
00:59:56.000We needed to settle the frontier as quickly as possible.
00:59:58.000Just give them the citizenship and send you on your way.
01:00:00.000Where we're not trying to settle a frontier anymore.
01:00:38.000When you say there's no more frontier, and I'm like, that was even when there were other countries, countries were like, I will take it from you.
01:00:46.000So that's my point is the sentiment has changed to where we're like, no, no, we shouldn't invade and conquer other lands anymore.
01:02:48.000When the European colonists came to like more so Central and South America, where there actually were the Incan and Aztec empires, big cities.
01:03:56.000And then in the United States, it's like 25% of all pregnancies end in abortion.
01:03:59.000So it's like for rates far lower than the rates that were aborting our children in the West, Spain just permanently exterminated pretty much all of them.
01:04:56.000It's like not a not a conquest in the sense of even prior Muslim conquests.
01:05:01.000Like Spain is just incomparable to what Spain is now, where Spain could literally just pass a bill to tell 80% of them to leave and they would have no choice but to leave.
01:06:25.000Yeah, that's the issue with birthright citizenship.
01:06:27.000And so the issue is when you say, if we had the willpower to do it, you can't have the willpower when the people who are coming to your home are saying outright, I get to vote too, and you, and I vote not to remove me.
01:06:39.000I agree, but it's just in the West, like at every turn from the United States to Britain to France to Germany have all voted less migration, less migration, get these people out of here.
01:06:47.000It's the government in and of itself, even these like right-wing parties, which are just like siphons basically for like actual right-wing energy.
01:06:53.000But my point is to actually carry this out.
01:07:18.000We have no great barriers that need to be trampled by armed men to raise a flag.
01:07:22.000They literally walked in the country with their flags.
01:07:24.000They drape their flags over them and throw Molotov cocktails at our police.
01:07:27.000And then our police go, we can't handle this.
01:07:29.000And the commissioner goes, listen, half of that guy's family voted for me, so don't do anything about it.
01:07:34.000Yeah, I guess the point I was making is like, I wouldn't equivalate what would be like a Hernan-Cortez level conquest to like what these people are doing now would be the equivalent to like a homeless squatter in Los Angeles in a decrepit building.
01:07:44.000It's like all they really did is show up and squat here despite clamoring.
01:07:48.000My point is Hernan-Cortez showed up and was greeted like a god.
01:09:10.000This is the problem of like the GOP electorate is majority white, but they don't behave that way.
01:09:15.000But because the politicians have Hispanic voters, Trump needs these, but they issued a mandate telling the Republicans to back off mass deportations because they were losing Hispanic voters.
01:09:26.000So that's why it's like, that's why people are frustrated at like the Myra Flores statement, for example, because it's like, if we just ran up the numbers in the white community, we wouldn't need to basically water down our message.
01:09:35.000Half of white people are in favor of mass migration.
01:09:38.000Well, no, the majority of Americans broadly, the general population, are in favor of mass deportations.
01:09:43.000If you isolated the white population, I'm saying liberals.
01:09:45.000Half of white people are voting in favor of mass migration.
01:09:49.000Yeah, whites, it was like, I think it was like 58, 42 for Trump.
01:09:53.000So, yeah, I mean, it's, but if you like, again, it's a difficult thing because it's just like at a certain point, the problem more so is like a procedural issue.
01:10:03.000It's like, if we keep voting for the less immigration party and then we get more immigration, then at a certain point, you have to question the entire system at large.
01:10:10.000Okay, is democracy capable of delivering a result that would hurt the stock market?
01:10:15.000That's basically the question at play.
01:10:22.000And migration up until like literally five minutes ago was kind of a cheat code for the GDP because you just brought in like excess spenders, people that were going to spend money, consume money.
01:10:31.000And now that's starting to like trickle.
01:10:34.000Yeah, that's not the case anymore, though, especially when you're talking about.
01:10:37.000I mean, it's about until like five minutes ago.
01:10:39.000And now some of these governments like in Denmark are starting to react accordingly.
01:10:42.000And they're saying, okay, this is just stupid.
01:10:44.000And they can literally people leave when you eliminate a lot of these economic incentives.
01:10:47.000Because the majority of these people aren't like noble conquistadors.
01:11:14.000And if you distill the white population for groups that would be considered kind of the heritage American population, it's an even much higher proportion that's voting Republican.
01:11:24.000Like the group in the United States that votes the most Republican is English Americans.
01:11:29.000And that's, you know, would be considered kind of the core group.
01:11:31.000So like the further out you get from like that Anglo-Protestant core of the United States, as like Warren McIntyre would put it, the more unlikely you are to see voting patterns that would indicate like protecting the border, you know, implementing like Christian values in society and these sorts of things.
01:11:45.000Well, I mean, it's pretty wild to watch like the NBA stuff where they booted that dude from the team and then you had that football player came out and defended him.
01:12:44.000They'll go ahead and they'll say, oh, well, you know, the companies have the right to do that.
01:12:48.000Would you want this person with this bad opinion?
01:12:50.000And of course, he said, would you want a communist or a Nazi working for you?
01:12:53.000And because you go to the most hyperbolic answer you can come up with.
01:12:57.000And it's like the point isn't about whether or not they have the right.
01:13:03.000A company, of course, has the right to decide this person should or shouldn't be contracted with us or what have you.
01:13:09.000But the point is, do you want to live in a society where someone that expresses their own religious opinions loses their job because of it?
01:13:19.000Yeah, well, and also that's essentially that company deciding what opinion is and isn't correct.
01:13:26.000And also on top of that, I'm sorry, we had to endure as I mean, NBA fans rather, and the players have to endure them celebrating Pride Month and painting BLM on courts and kneeling during the national anthem.
01:13:40.000There's no problem when people do anything of that sort, but the second that a Christian defends his faith, then it's a problem.
01:13:46.000And again, it was something that was so mundane, so inoffensive, just saying, look, this is something that I don't agree with.
01:14:00.000And again, I'm not saying that companies must, you know, should be forced to hire people that have views that don't align with the company's, you know, whatever their brand or what have you.
01:14:12.000But at the same time, like we do have a First Amendment that protects not only your right to speech, but your right to express yourself and have your religion.
01:14:21.000So, where is that same kind of defense for the First Amendment?
01:14:27.000Again, and if this, like I said, this guy's a friend of mine, but I know that if it were some speech that he didn't agree with, in fact, he's actually probably more wishy-washy on the freedom of speech than at least anyone in this room.
01:14:42.000And they would never say, oh, you know, this is bad speech.
01:14:46.000You know, they would always be like, oh, you know, if it's bad speech, this is something that we should definitely, you know, we should limit what people can say on the internet or we can, you know, he's made similar comments to that.
01:14:57.000And it's just, it's, it's so transparent that it's all about the fact that, well, I'm on the left and this guy is what I consider a Christian or what I consider someone on the right, you know?
01:15:09.000Well, and it's so interesting because it's not like he was, I mean, I understand that he's a athlete, a public figure.
01:15:15.000So social media is like an extension of you, but it's not like he was on the court saying all this.
01:15:20.000He wasn't dragging it into the workplace.
01:15:22.000It's not like he's a Walmart employee screaming at people to accept them because they're whatever.
01:15:28.000You know, like he's not dragging it into the workplace.
01:15:30.000He's not shoving it down the throats of his teammates or, you know, anything of that sort.
01:15:35.000But that's how it's just taken and accepted.
01:15:38.000And he's punished for it for essentially no reason.
01:15:41.000And also, like, I think part of the reason you're not seeing like a lot of Christians go to bat for this guy is because Christians have gotten really soft on the gay, the LGBT issue, like in the last 10 years.
01:15:51.000Because Christians are, especially evangelicals, are really sensitive to like how they're perceived by the world because they're ultimately evangelicals are like trying to bring people into the church.
01:16:02.000So it's actually kind of a healthy tendency as they're like worried about putting, like, turning people off.
01:16:07.000The problem is this issue is so out of step with like what the current consensus is from the world and the country by and large.
01:16:12.000So yeah, as soon as you say like, yeah, maybe two gay guys getting married, I don't actually view that as a marriage.
01:16:17.000It doesn't matter how left-wing you are on every other issue.
01:16:19.000You're going to be perceived as like a right-wing bigot, et cetera.
01:16:22.000I think the reason you're not seeing a lot of these Christians speak out, again, is because that is the one issue that makes Christians really uncomfortable when they have to speak out on.
01:16:30.000That's why every time you see a pastor go up to give a sermon over like a passage that discusses homosexuality, they give you like a 15-minute preamble about how they don't hate homosexuals and they apologize for how Christians have treated homosexuals in the past.
01:16:42.000That's why you see whenever you see the deconversions, right, where people have this like reckoning and they realize, I'm not a Christian anymore.
01:16:50.000I'm so out of step with like my church, et cetera.
01:16:52.000Typically the issue you see them cite is how the church treats homosexuals.
01:16:56.000I mean, Rhett and Link comes to mind where Rhett and Link had this like video series.
01:16:59.000It was so long ago now, but they were like, I can't be a Christian anymore.
01:17:03.000And the main reason they cited, out of all the problems people could have with Christianity, out of all the critiques, all like, even if they go through like, you know, the history of the Bible and maybe where they think there's like they could try and poke holes, et cetera, Rhett and Link were like, I had a gay friend and I realized I couldn't hug him anymore.
01:17:17.000Like if I were like to be true to my Christian colleagues, I couldn't even hug him anymore.
01:17:23.000And that just kind of shows you how strong this, like the homosexual issue is and how much pressure there is from the LGBT kind of lobby or community, whatever you want to call them, because Christians are absolutely petrified on this issue.
01:17:33.000And then in addition to that, people leave the church because they're so afraid of being perceived as a bigot, because that's like, what is the one thing in America that you cannot be above all else?
01:17:45.000Granted, a lot of people on the right are now just like, I don't care what you call me anymore.
01:17:48.000But the reality is the vast majority of people, people aren't watching this show, but the vast majority of Americans are still really concerned with how they're perceived.
01:17:54.000They want to be like, you know, normal.
01:17:57.000Let's pull this story in light of this conversation.
01:18:01.000Supreme Court sides with therapist in challenge to Colorado's ban on conversion therapy.
01:18:07.000So this was big news that dropped today.
01:18:09.000Course, the only person who didn't agree was Katanji Brown Jackson because anyway, the Supreme Court on Tuesday's in a challenge to Colorado's ban on conversion therapy treatment intended to change a client's sexual orientation or gender identity for young people back to the lower four young people back to the lower courts for them to apply a new standard by a vote of eight to one.
01:18:28.000The justices agreed with Kaylee Chiles, the licensed counselor challenging the law that ban the ban discriminates against her based on the views that she expresses in her talk therapy.
01:18:38.000The federal appeals court, Gorsuch wrote, should have applied a more stringent standard of review and under strict scrutiny to determine whether the law violates the First Amendment.
01:18:47.000But the Supreme Court also strongly hinted the ban would fail that test.
01:18:50.000Gorsuch stressed that in cases like Chiles, Colorado Chiles, Colorado's ban censors speech based on viewpoint.
01:18:57.000Because the First Amendment reflects a judgment that every American possesses an inalienable right to think and speak freely and a faith in their free marketplace of ideas as the best means for discovering the truth.
01:19:06.000Gorsuch continued any law that suppresses speech based on viewpoint represents an egregious result on both of those commitments.
01:19:13.000Katanji Brown Jackson was the lone dissenter.
01:19:16.000She argued the majority's opinion could be ushering in an era of unprofessional and unsafe medical care administered by effectively unsupervised healthcare providers.
01:19:25.000It was always the craziest thing to me that they made conversion therapy illegal.
01:19:28.000If an individual is gay or trans and decides they want to go to a doctor to stop that behavior, that is their choice.
01:19:37.000But also, what is therapy if not some sort of conversion?
01:19:40.000You're clearly going to therapy because you find there to be something wrong with your mental state or physical state even.
01:19:47.000You're going to therapy to intentionally change or fix that.
01:19:51.000That is some sort of conversion, is it not?
01:20:13.000And then people develop a dependency on this social affirmation.
01:20:19.000Well, and I think it's also the rise in therapy has coincided with the rise in things like social media that have taken human interactions out of your daily life.
01:20:35.000Like this is in conversion therapy is just stupid on its face as a ban.
01:20:41.000But for you to not be able to tell a little boy that he's a little boy under the guise of you're going to hurt somebody's feelings or hurt somebody's perceived ideology is just ridiculous.
01:21:13.000We went to Frederick because we were like, we had to do some like administrative stuff in Maryland because we saw the properties over there.
01:21:19.000And then on the way back, I was like, oh, we should go to the liquor store because we used to stop at this liquor store in Brunswick that has the craziest booze.
01:21:24.000That's where we got all the Pappy and stuff.
01:21:27.000And then, you know, my wife's like, yeah, she's like, I'll get a great wine and you got, you know, I'll get a nice wine.
01:21:32.000And I was like, well, nobody drinks anymore.
01:21:35.000And I was like, there was a point in like 2022 where we had this shelf in the old studio with tons of booze, like really expensive stuff, like $2,000 tequila.
01:21:46.000And when guests would come in, I'd be like, make yourself a drink.
01:22:43.000It feels like, and again, I know, like, maybe it's just us, but whatever, but I've experienced this at restaurants, the places we used to go hang out in Frederick.
01:23:02.000Like drinking for the most part is a social, that's something you do when you're socializing.
01:23:07.000It's more of a, it's not an upper per se, but it's something that you do to, you know, let loose and get a little rowdy, for lack of better words.
01:23:15.000I feel like this is correlation to the rise in, you know, smoking and vaping and things like that, too, which are, I mean, pretty anti-social behaviors.
01:23:36.000We need scattered EMPs everywhere that wipe out the grid and send us back to the 1800s so that we're forced to have community again and then we'll be happy.
01:23:46.000Yeah, what if there was just like a virus that mass uploaded to every piece of technology?
01:24:12.000Like liberalism in and of itself, specifically for young men, which have like the highest depression rates as far as like reporting, clinical depression.
01:24:21.000The reason for that is because it eliminates all things that young men are supposed to be doing, which is at least pursuing greatness in the sense of pursuing some way of cementing yourself in the history books.
01:24:30.000It was like Sam Hyde had a joke about how 100 years ago, an autistic dude would be going through his town and documenting every beetle in his town.
01:24:38.000And he'd be like this great, you know, like documenter of beetles and that sort of thing.
01:24:48.000It's because every avenue for a young man that would typically be there that would allow them to do great things has been completely shut off.
01:24:54.000Likewise, every empire throughout history, every civilization that opened the most doors to young men to be able to do great things.
01:25:35.000So one of the things I see with a lot of the, a lot of the people that I know from like back home, like where I grew up, who are still there, some of them have kids and are miserable, don't get me wrong.
01:25:46.000But a lot of people that I know from all walks of life who are in their mid to late 30s with no family feel, I see like this minor depression.
01:25:54.000And I'm like, I think it's because humans are supposed to have families.
01:25:58.000And it was this old trope that when you got older and had kids, you didn't have friends anymore.
01:26:41.000And he's the guy who solved DNS cash poisoning.
01:26:44.000And I'm thinking about like five years ago, 10 years ago, the adventures, the crazy stuff that was going on.
01:26:51.000And I was thinking, you know, it's not so much that great people are retiring or dying or checking out.
01:26:57.000It's that there isn't this passionate older generation like millennials who are excited to pass on what they've learned to a younger generation because there's no younger generation.
01:27:09.000Yeah, well, and also when you take away the aspect of family and children, what exactly are you living for to a certain extent?
01:27:17.000If you're essentially just going to die off, and then, you know, at some point, you're literally just, you know, people are living for the weekend.
01:27:23.000Like you go, you go through, you go through life, ah, work this, that, the other.
01:27:27.000I can't wait until Friday night where I can be a degenerate and do whatever.
01:27:36.000And also, like, specifically with young men, is you're seeing this weird situation happen, specifically with like conservative men, where it's the same problem, but the solution is what we think we want to hear from young men.
01:27:48.000Is they're pursuing family and like marriage and children, but they're pursuing it so hard that it's like that is the goal in and of itself.
01:27:56.000Where it's like a family, having a family should be an outcome of a great life.
01:28:04.000Pursuing it creates this problem that's like scarcity mindset, where you like you start to approach life with this scarcity mindset and you'll just take whatever I can get.
01:28:13.000And what that's resulting in is a lot of men and also women, like, because I know a lot of young women that are desperate to get married.
01:28:19.000And the problem is when you're desperate to do something, you're just going to take what's available to you.
01:28:24.000And the problem is now you're ending up with these men and women.
01:28:26.000Young people I know are ending up in really horrible situations where they're married and it thinks they married the wrong person.
01:29:27.000Millennials and Gen Z men have been raised to be told, you should not be a mother, you should be a CEO.
01:29:32.000Yeah, young men and young women have split completely opposite directions.
01:29:36.000Whereas, yeah, women have been become hyper-masculinized, like in terms of their goals being a career, putting off family, I mean, maybe forever.
01:29:45.000And certainly they're not aspiring to have kids as much as they should.
01:29:49.000And now young men are reverting back to traditionalism, to conservatism, to religion.
01:30:10.000And there's not really, this is, this is the black people.
01:30:12.000There's not really like a solution for it outside of like drastic measures that probably won't happen in our lifetimes, like banning the internet or something.
01:30:18.000And so like part of the problem that you're seeing is there are young men and are young women, sorry, there are young men and are young women who would make great husbands, would make great wives, and they're out there and they're like longing for a spouse.
01:30:30.000They just can't find each other because all the institutions that would have facilitated them meeting are dead now.
01:30:34.000The churches, by and large, I mean, I know there's like the headlines in the New York Post, like men are flocking back to Christianity.
01:30:39.000If you look at the data, Zoomers are like the least church generation.
01:30:44.000Like schools, a lot of people are opting out on college or people are having pretty miserable college experiences.
01:30:48.000So they're not really meeting in college.
01:30:49.000The only ways these people are meeting are like bars or like the dating apps, which is the overall majority are dating apps.
01:30:54.000The problem is the people that have the temperament to be like a really good spouse are really put off by dating apps.
01:30:59.000They hate dating apps and they're miserable on there.
01:31:01.000That's why leading to even more depression, more black pillars.
01:31:04.000That's why what you do is you go to the supermarket and you know, you're like, you're walking and there's like, you know, there's a woman and you're like, you know, I want to meet her.
01:31:24.000The problem is, to your point, where, and this is the point you make all the time, and it's true, is like, this is the smallest generation, you know, of the modern world.
01:31:31.000Well, not Gen Z. Gen Z is the same size as Millennials.
01:33:21.000Gen Z has access to a lot of classic rock stuff too, but the Gen Z artists will not resonate with millennials the way that millennial artists will.
01:33:30.000And that means Gen Z artists are going to market only to Gen Z, whereas millennials have access to basically every market.
01:33:39.000To put it simply, a stadium promoter, he goes, the stadium says, like, hey, who should we book for the stadium to play music?
01:34:49.000There's 80 million millennials, and the promoters go, listen, if we're going to book a stadium, let's take a look at like the millennial market's 80 million, the boomer market's 60 million.
01:35:02.000And they're saying, eh, we can get Gen X and Millennials on Smashing Pumpkins.
01:35:06.000So we're not going to Sabrina Carpenter.
01:35:08.000In 10 years, there's going to be microscopic Gen Alpha, Gen Z, and they're going to say, Look, we can get between Gen X and Millennials, 100 million people to sell tickets.
01:35:54.000So for the first time in the past 100 years or 200 years, culture is stagnating intentionally because there's not enough individuals in the younger market to buy into new culture.
01:36:05.000Well, I think we've probably had this discussion before, but I think a lot of it is because tastes are democratized now.
01:36:12.000So the thing with Zoomers is not only are the palettes, if they're more diverse, they're able to access that music more easily because of Spotify, because of streaming.
01:36:19.000You don't just buy the album, you don't listen to the radio anymore.
01:36:21.000You just go and listen to whatever you want to listen to.
01:36:22.000So people diverge and their interest and their tastes.
01:36:24.000You don't build cult followings like you used to.
01:36:26.000You don't build cult followings and the radio can't dictate who a star is.
01:36:43.000I don't know anyone that listens to like top 50 hits in Spotify.
01:36:45.000When you go into a rental car or in a Tesla, when you pick up the radio station, it's got the modern hits streaming and you have to select something else.
01:36:53.000I think most people are doing their own thing, though.
01:37:33.000And a point, well, and a point everyone misses on this issue specifically is like the reason why, and people, this is going to be controversial, but it's true.
01:37:40.000A large reason why genres like rock are supposedly dying out is because it's a conspiracy to shut down our people's music.
01:37:46.000Well, no, that, but that's kind of actually the point is that, yes, Zoomers are like the most diverse generation in history, like half non-white.
01:37:54.000So that's why, again, like Latin artists are huge.
01:37:57.000It's not just, it's not, it's actually organic.
01:37:59.000Like Zoomers, a large proportion, the largest proportion so far of Zoomers, it's like 30% of Zoomers are historically.
01:38:05.000No, I think while your points about ethnicity and birth and all that stuff are true, the fact that in movies, in order to hit a certain tone, they have to use rock songs proves that rock actually is the dominant popular culture, but is being suppressed.
01:39:04.000It's appealing to the globe, and that's why I see a lot of people.
01:39:06.000What I'm saying is in terms of a soundtrack that captures an emotion, when you have a robot jumping out of the sky and he's about to slam onto the ground, they're playing Guns N' Roses.
01:39:15.000When he starts fighting, it plays Welcome to the Jungle because the statement, Welcome to the Jungle, resonates with a robot punching other robots.
01:39:21.000Yeah, and I think it's just, I mean, yeah, I think it's primarily because it's like a culturally American movie.
01:39:30.000If that was the case, rock would be on the top of the charts all the time.
01:39:34.000So that's my point, is that the majority of Gen Z isn't culturally American anymore.
01:39:38.000So then I think you're missing my point that when they make a new movie for young people, but they put Guns and Roses in it, they're saying that the emotion required in this is rock, but then for some reason, they won't put new rock songs on Apple's default player.
01:39:51.000Yeah, because I think because the movie is culturally American, Apple player is not.
01:39:58.000Yeah, because the movie's for Gen Z. What are we missing here?
01:40:01.000They made a movie for Gen Z and for little kids.
01:40:13.000Yeah, because people like people of California.
01:40:16.000Why do the movies use 80s and early 90s rock and Apple and Spotify won't put rock in the default in the default modern hits?
01:40:24.000Because culturally American sells like in Hollywood.
01:40:27.000Hollywood is still like, that's like, that's the preeminent culture in the movie is like this kind of American culture where Apple music is just trying to figure out who's listening to what and the majority of American culture.
01:41:19.000I mean, like, the Black Panther soundtrack charted after that movie came out because the movie was wildly popular, and everyone clocked that as like, this is a culturally by Spacehog.
01:41:27.000I'm pretty sure Spacehog never charted as high as they did in the 90s with their one hit until Guardians of the Galaxy 3 came out.
01:41:35.000So you have a 90s song hitting the charts because a movie put it there, made a billion dollars, and everyone loved it.
01:41:44.000And then the music industry is like, we will not play these songs.
01:43:06.000But it's not a conspiracy because they like literally during Black History Month at the very front of Spotify be like amplifying black music.
01:43:12.000And same thing with like whatever the Hispanic month is like amplifying Latino voices.
01:43:15.000So it's like, no, it's not a conspiracy.
01:43:17.000They actually do admit like, hey, we're prioritizing these artists over what mainstream typically likes the kind of the nostalgia is in right now.
01:43:25.000The nostalgia is harkening back to a time where America was a lot wider than it is.
01:43:29.000That's why most of the music in it is like white-coated.
01:43:33.000I think the Running Up That Hill thing, like, how many weeks did Running Up That Hill chart after Netflix after Stranger Things?
01:45:51.000Well, there's also, there's also this thing that happens where like modern society needs a soundtrack.
01:45:56.000The modern world needs a soundtrack, and eventually that hits capacity.
01:46:01.000Christmas music, this happened to it 20 years ago, where like maybe early aughts was like the last few songs made it in, and then boom, shut.
01:47:04.000So he was sitting there giggling as every album, all the greatest albums ever made ever were released.
01:47:11.000The 90s were an amazing time for music.
01:47:14.000Like you, you couldn't have a band like Primus nowadays.
01:47:17.000Whether or not you actually enjoy Primus music, like Primus really was a very fresh-sounding, different band.
01:47:26.000There's a lot of bands in the 90s that had a really fresh and new style.
01:47:30.000Because also in the 90s, you could be serious about things and still be perceived as cool, where with Zoomers, everything has to be with a degree of irony.
01:47:37.000So if you actually try to be serious and produce something serious, everyone thinks it's cringe and gas.
01:47:42.000I know we went over this before, but Throwing Copper Live was 1994.
01:48:58.000Because at the beginning of this year, everybody, yeah, everybody at the beginning of this year was like, are we going to channel 2016 energy for 2026?
01:49:07.000Well, that's when the Large Hadron Collider Turned on, you know, at CERN and warped reality for the worst.
01:49:13.000Yeah, and there's like certain music that takes me back to 2016.
01:49:15.000Like the Fuse album by Drake, when I hear that, I just think about summer 2016.
01:49:19.000And like, you're cringing, but like, Zoomers may be able to actually communicate that to their children, and then it could turn into Hotline Blink could turn into like kind of the hotline album.
01:49:28.000I'm sorry, like, do you know the song 1979?
01:49:42.000We're going to go to the Rumble Ransom chats and all that, but all these MTG woke nerds are really mad because I pointed out that magic is a game of chance and skill and that it's never been subject to.
01:49:56.000We've been talking about this gambling stuff.
01:49:57.000And so this like, this guy says he can beat me at magic.
01:50:02.000And I'm just like, the first thing I point out is I love human beings because humans have this great capability to assume they are stronger, smarter, and better than literally everybody, no matter what.
01:50:14.000Like here am I, a guy who's played magic for 30 plus years.
01:50:18.000It's 32 years now, with a half a million dollar Magic the Gathering collection, a ridiculous amount of magic cards, winning tons of tournaments and playing very seriously most of my life.
01:50:29.000And this guy's just like, I could take him.
01:50:31.000And it's like, bro, like, by all means, you can say, I don't know, maybe I could.
01:50:39.000But my favorite part, and the reason I bring this up, is that this woman then tweeted something like, right-wing chuds think they're good at magic or whatever as a cope.
01:50:46.000And then my response was just like, you know, the craziest thing to me is that I was winning tournaments before you even existed.
01:50:53.000That's like, I'm not saying to be a dick.
01:50:54.000It's just kind of a crazy thought to me that like she was 26 and I was like, man, I had actually already been playing for like five or six years when you were born.
01:51:05.000Like you were literally in the hospital screaming and I was winning like tournaments.
01:51:16.000But it is kind of weird to me that we're not doing new things.
01:51:20.000And I think it has to do with the fact that there's no babies.
01:51:22.000Yeah, but I also, it's very interesting because both your points on the music are the fact that we're like yearning for nostalgia and what we grew up with.
01:51:42.000But there was an article written about this that Gen Z is experiencing like anachronistic nostalgia.
01:51:48.000Like they were born after the 90s, but long for the 90s.
01:51:52.000But, you know, I think like people have always experienced that.
01:51:55.000I mean, I think like our parents, my parents at least, like they watch like the Andy Griffith show and they find tremendous nostalgia on that, but they were alive in the 50s and 60s.
01:52:05.000I don't counsel Zoomers, but I think that has existed.
01:52:08.000The things that in my mind, I'm like, those are the days are the phone rings and me and my brother running full speed to answer the phone before the other could because we just wanted to answer the phone.
01:52:18.000Thursday night, the new episode of The Simpsons comes on and my dad yells, it's on.
01:52:23.000And then we all run into the living room, like The Simpsons, to watch it.
01:52:25.000And then commercial break, you run in the kitchen, grab the Doritos, going to Blockbuster Video on Friday after school to pick out the video game to rent for the weekend.
01:52:47.000I was like, you know, I was born in 75, so I was only a teenager for a couple years.
01:52:51.000But I think a lot of this is like rejecting, or like rejecting the internet, rejecting the things that we recognize, even though we're not willing to give them up, but the things that we recognize actually degrade society, degrade culture.
01:53:05.000And we're recognizing that that is superior art.
01:54:51.000When you go into the 80s apartment and you rent it for however long, there's a phone on the wall.
01:54:56.000When you turn the TV on, it plays television from that time.
01:55:01.000So if it's a Friday, we will pick a period like 1984 on a Friday and have the actual television where you can change the knob and put on whatever TV shows we're on.
01:55:11.000And when you want to order food from like Domino's or Pizza, whatever existed back then, they will show up in the appropriate uniform carrying the appropriate things.
01:55:40.000Whenever we bring this up, the concern is some middle-aged dude who got divorced seven years ago is going to go to the 90s room and he's going to sit there in the bedroom with like all the posters from all the bands from when he was a kid, start crying, and then take his own life.
01:56:08.000To be fair, would it not be the greatest thing ever to book like two nights at a hotel where as long as you're in this phone is on the wall and like it's a it's a 90s experience?
01:56:51.000I honestly think, based on that big thread, one of his strategies may have been to intentionally shut down the Straight of Hormoose because it puts tremendous pressure on a whole bunch of other countries and locks.
01:57:01.000So long as he says, we're done with these campaigns.
01:57:03.000We're going to keep some troops in the region just for stability.
01:57:06.000And then he intentionally lets straight-inform moves be closed.
01:57:44.000But if there's someone who's been living here and they're 30 years old and they've only ever lived here, and the guy's name is like, you know, you know, let's say his name was Juan Gonzalez, and he speaks Spanish, but he also speaks English and he likes the Yankees.
01:58:07.000I'm pretty aggressive on remigration policies.
01:58:10.000Like, I think they should evaluate entire communities that have refused to assimilate.
01:58:13.000I think it's like if you have any loyalty to another country, what, three, four generations at that point, your citizenship is just paperwork primarily.
01:58:20.000I mean, again, this is the truth: a lot of those Somalis are here legally.
01:58:24.000They got all their paperwork, and a lot of them were born in Somalia.
01:58:29.000Actually, the majority of those people in Dearborn were born in Michigan.
01:58:32.000So it's like the denaturalization, it just doesn't feel good because it's like, well, they like a lot of the same cultural things that I do.
01:58:37.000But really, when you drill down to like what's actually important to you, how do you evaluate the world?
01:58:46.000So it's like, I think, I think you got to get aggressive.
01:58:49.000I think you've got to like really evaluate entire communities.
01:58:52.000And I mean, there could be room for exceptions, obviously, as there always is, but no, exceptions don't disprove the norm, and you've got to really get a little aggressive with these types of things.
01:59:08.000Well, Priya, what was your take on that last one?
01:59:10.000Because that's an interesting question.
01:59:11.000Oh, no, I was just going to say, I completely agree.
01:59:13.000I mean, we look at places like Little Mogadishu in Minnesota, and these people are completely defrauding our country.
01:59:20.000They're literally ripping off our country and, you know, and the American taxpayer, and they're not benefiting the system at all.
01:59:26.000I don't really care if they're here legally or not.
01:59:29.000There has to be a line that we draw in terms of you're either a benefit to this country and you assimilate and take on our cultures and norms and value them, or you get the hell out.
01:59:42.000I think that the more we can do to make sure that the people that are in the United States are here because they actually care about our society and care about the values that we have, the better.
01:59:53.000You're not going to make America worse by getting rid of people that hate America.
02:00:20.000This is why Democrats go after the most vital parts of American society.
02:00:24.000This is why you look on the Christianity side.
02:00:26.000That's why they targeted the Episcopal Church first because it's like, what could what epitomizes American Christianity more than the church that like 32 presidents were a part of?
02:01:11.000That's what I mean because America, that doesn't disprove what I'm saying.
02:01:13.000I'm saying American culture is the envy of the world.
02:01:15.000Of course, people are going to emulate American culture.
02:01:17.000And what we've seen from the Japanese posters is when they think of American culture, they're not thinking of like black or Hispanic culture.
02:01:23.000They're thinking of like, my name's Mike, Mike Stevenson.
02:01:26.000And I'm, and it's like blonde, like blonde flower.
02:01:28.000Did you see the list of uh, there's a Nintendo game where a Japanese uh programmer had to create a bunch of American names, right?
02:01:52.000It's again, it's like it's not to say anything.
02:01:53.000It's just to my initial point, like the Sleeve McDichel, Anson Sweeney, Daryl Archideld, Anatoly Smorin, Ray McScrit, Mick Sriff, Glenn Allen Mixon, Kevin No Gilny,
02:02:10.000Tony Smerick, Bobson Dugnut, here's Dean Westri, Mike Truck, Gwigat Rortugal, Carl Dandleton, Todd Benzalez.
02:02:40.000Hroldren says, we need to make ballot harvested ballots have a stupid process involved for it to be considered valid to make it so that only the people that care will vote that way.
02:03:06.000My friends, smash the like button, share the show, and all that good stuff.
02:03:09.000The uncensored portion of the show will begin in just a moment, and we're going to say naughty words and tell jokes that are not so family friendly.
02:03:15.000It's going to be at rumble.com/slash Timcast IRL.
02:06:39.000Instead, they go, How about we give you $100,000 in streams?
02:06:43.000So here's something interesting I saw the other day, and I think I quote-tweeted this or retweeted it or something, but it was like Jack, the original Twitter guy, maybe bought title and said you can now upload and sell music as in like a band camp type of thing.
02:07:26.000And maybe some older people will buy it as well.
02:07:29.000The idea that you'd be like, we know we can make $100 million on a rock album because older people would buy it and younger people would buy it.
02:07:36.000Let's make weird gay shit where a black dude sucks the devil's dick.
02:07:40.000Because I think rock music requires, like, I made this point in the show: is I think rock music requires a level of sincerity that Zoomers aren't willing to engage with.
02:07:48.000I don't think it has anything to do with Zoomers.
02:07:51.000It has to do with an industry choosing not to sell to make money.
02:07:56.000The music industry no longer accepts sales as a metric of success.
02:08:00.000It's like they're intentionally trying to remove it because Tom McDonald sells records like fucking hotcakes.
02:08:07.000And if they track that, he'd be number one all the time.
02:08:10.000I know he's hip-hop and rap, but he does some rock stuff.
02:08:13.000The point is, independent music is iced out.
02:08:17.000If they produced a Gen Z rock band and they put it on rotation, millennials and boomers and Gen X might be willing to buy or listen to those songs.
02:08:45.000The music, the record label should say, Gen Z are insincere, sarcastic, and dejected, so they probably won't care for anything.
02:08:54.000The label should say, okay, well, to be honest, if we take a Gen Z rock band and we promote this on the streaming platforms, how many Gen Z will buy?
02:11:46.000Currently now, well, no, because, I mean, like I said, there's bands like Architects that get paid, that are considered a new band.
02:11:54.000Bands like Sleep Token that are considered a new band.
02:11:57.000And look how popular they are despite not getting the promotion and they're not getting, they're not being treated the way massive bands of yesteryear would be treated.
02:13:01.000And like, we are an underground being like, here's new rock.
02:13:04.000And like, because it wasn't getting any prominent promotion.
02:13:07.000I mean, our, our, our, like, the songs that we had that were in the top five at rock radio and like our number ones and stuff like that, they were, they were all in, I think our first one was in like 2008.
02:13:17.000We had a song that went to number that broke into like the top 10.
02:13:20.000And then we had multiple songs and made it into top five between 2008 and 2012.
02:14:32.000And then he gets struck by lightning, which they make up some sci-fi reason, which pauses her aging, which doesn't make sense, but who cares?
02:15:27.000I'm like, I felt like it was 1997 and I was at Vidim Park again.
02:15:31.000And the fucking teenage girls wearing their hot topic shit were back.
02:15:35.000And I'm like, for the love of, I'm kidding, by the way, but for the love of all is holy, I'm like, why are these 16-year-old girls dressing like it's 2001?
02:16:08.000Like when you were growing up, imagine when I see kids today dressing like it's the 90s, that would be like you guys growing up with people dressing like it was the 70s or 80s.
02:16:19.000Well, because like the 2000s or the aughts, I think it's what they're supposed to call it.
02:16:23.000It's like the last decade that had like a defined culture.
02:16:27.000Like that's why that's why Zoomers love the Y2K stuff because it was the last time that there was like an identifiable culture that you could engage with.
02:16:34.000Like the 2010s, it's kind of difficult to pin down what it was.
02:16:44.000Do we not then agree that the preferable circumstance would be the powerful networks regain control of cultural hegemony, hegemony, and then YouTube, Spotify's platforms wane in power, and then it's just five streaming services, and everybody laughs at Big Bang Theory, 30 million views.
02:17:06.000Everybody loves the same music, and they all hold hands and sing songs.
02:17:10.000You go to the bar, and the new hit rock song comes on that just premiered last night on the amazing new Star Trek written by, you know, the original writers from the 90s.
02:17:21.000In terms of the culture that we consume when it comes to, for lack of better words, like pleasure and that kind of stuff, yes, but I think that it would have negative effects that trickle down into like exactly what we're doing now, like engaging in, you know, political discourse and things like that.
02:18:12.000I think some of the viewers might, it's an anime.
02:18:14.000But like the general idea is they live in this reality where they believe that they've been alive for a long time and that there's a history, but they actually are on a computer program that only existed for 20 years.
02:18:25.000My point is the truth is, my friends, Earth was created in the year 1990, and all of your memories prior are fake.
02:18:34.000And the reason why everything's breaking down is because the simulation started with a bunch of high-level individuals pre-programmed in existence.
02:18:42.000But as time goes on, the generations are degrading.
02:18:46.000They were like, how many generations until you no longer have a Michael Jordan?
02:18:49.000That is what's happening is we're like reaching the end of liberalism.
02:18:53.000Like this is actually what happens at the end is like everything, even the great parts of it, the parts that we've enjoyed, begin to break down and fall apart.
02:19:01.000That's all we're seeing is everything is just on fumes.
02:20:29.000We've heard not stop for five weeks now that Trump isn't keeping his word and starting a new 20-year war in the Middle East at Israel's behest.
02:20:36.000What are they going to say now, if true?
02:21:06.000I still, you know, I'm still of the opinion that there is no appetite from the American people and no desire by the administration to have a long, drawn out occupied war.
02:21:19.000First of all, second of all, even though there have been some assets moving to the Middle East that look like there might be some ground operations pending, that is not the same as the buildup before the Iraq war.
02:21:31.000The buildup necessary to invade a country like Iran would be larger than the buildup that was used for Iraq because you don't have a bunch of desert that you're going to drive tanks over.
02:21:43.000You have mountains that you have to get over.
02:21:46.000You're not like, and I've said this a bunch of times as well.
02:21:49.000You don't send in regular infantry unless there's a trailer behind them with a McDonald's, right?
02:21:56.000Like they, they, that is the way that our logistics, yeah, that's the way our logistics works.
02:22:00.000Like when you send troops in, the military can set up literal towns right behind them and they do all they can to make sure that the forward deployed have as many of as many comforts of home as they possibly can.
02:22:15.000And that does mean things like fast food.
02:22:18.000Those things are contracted through the military.
02:22:39.000I mean, I think examples of that can be seen even today outside of this particular announcement with the Twitter battle going between Thomas Massey and Dan Bongino.
02:22:49.000I don't know if you guys have seen this.
02:22:52.000But that is wild how Massey is just ratioing Bongino nonstop with every point he makes, where he's literally calling out all the reasons why Bongino had to resign, not wanted to resign, not could have resigned, but had to resign.
02:23:10.000Yeah, I'm so like over the Twitter drama between all of them.
02:26:36.000There was literally an entire, there was an entire rebellion because a guy claimed, like Western missionaries finally penetrated the interior of China and one guy was just convinced by a missionary that he was like the son of Jesus Christ and then declared a cult and then it got so large that it caused like they literally rebelled and like we're trying to like take all of China and it killed like 20 million people.
02:27:55.000The joke is, in Futurama, Zap Brannigan famously defeated the killbots in the killbot war and he goes.
02:28:01.000The secret was, I discovered the killbots had a preset kill limit, so I sent wave after wave of my own men at them until they hit that limit and stopped.
02:30:24.000So if this was a profoundly Christian nation, then why would Adams sign the treaty of Tripoli?
02:30:33.000That was when they were having the war with the Barbary Pirates.
02:30:35.000And in Article 11 of the Treaty of Tripoli, it states, the U.S. government is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion and has no innate hostilities towards Muslims.
02:30:48.000Why would they sign that if they're so devoutly Christian?
02:31:14.000But this was debated by the Senate and read out loud in the Senate, and this was unanimously ratified.
02:31:22.000If they were so devout, why would they sit there and come back and say, okay, we're going to go ahead and sign this saying this is not a Christian country?
02:31:29.000Well, also, like, they're not trying to make a philosophical statement about American society.
02:31:34.000They're trying to provide diplomatic reassurance to a Muslim nation.
02:31:37.000So it's like, you can't really pluck an article out of a treaty to then therefore like retroactively apply that to all the evidence that would say leading up to the American Revolution and then throughout the Constitution, how the Constitution was framed, that there wasn't concerns over sectarianism among like Christian denominations.
02:31:56.000And then all that is completely overridden by the fact that, again, in a treaty, when they're negotiating with Muslims or trying to provide them reassurance, you say, okay, well, we're not like explicitly founded as a Christian nation, which I don't think anybody really disagrees with.
02:32:09.000But again, the federal government was like, we're not going to get involved in internecine conflict.
02:32:15.000This country, like the federal government stays out of these issues.
02:32:18.000The states explicitly had requirements that you pronounce a faith in a Christian God in order to hold office.
02:32:27.000And then around the time of the ratification of the Constitution and the formation of the government within the revolutionary period, they started to back off from this and not because of Christianity, but because of Protestantism versus Catholicism.
02:32:55.000That was considered like a rogue, renegade Christian sect back then, or a religious sect broadly was like Baptists were seen as like out there.
02:33:03.000So that is why, like leading up to the foundation, the difference between Anglican and Presbyterian was like enough of a problem during like the colonial era that the U.S. government just felt it would be worthwhile to, again, not implement a state church.
02:33:16.000They didn't anticipate the fact that we would have like Hindus and Muslims and Jews and like all these groups like really exercising power and lobbying for their own interests.
02:33:26.000If they anticipated that, they would have said, okay, we'll just keep like an Anglican church and power or something like that.
02:33:32.000You don't think that maybe like slavery, kind of how they kind of just used that to kind of get the southern colon to kind of fight in the Revolutionary War, that maybe they designed other things in there so that way that we didn't end up as a total theocracy?
02:34:11.000Again, they didn't want to see, you know, inner Protestant, like literally 100 years before, like in the 16, 15, 1500s, we literally had Oliver Cromwell, the Glorious Revolution.
02:34:51.000The Tripoli thing isn't discussed enough, but that was, and then I believe in the Arabic, in the Arabic edition, it doesn't include that line.
02:35:35.000Yeah, Catholic masses were banned in like 11 states.
02:35:39.000Like they were very, they were very ardent on into like, what was it, like 1828 or 18, no, was it like 1830 or whatever, the last blasphemy case?
02:36:46.000And I'm willing, I'm willing if all Indiana residents, which are all patriots by and large, get to occupy the beautiful Southern California landscape and then we ban.
02:36:55.000I think we're on the same, I think we would enjoy that.
02:37:44.000I was trying to make a joke in a tough crowd, dude.
02:37:47.000The astronaut you so disrespectfully described as sitting in the cuck chair during the Apollo 11 mission was Command Module Pilot Michael Collins.
02:38:03.000He was disrespected Air Force test pilot.
02:38:05.000He eventually retired with the rank of Major General.
02:38:09.000That's two stars for people in the peanut gallery.
02:38:15.000By the way, the cosmic cuck chair, by the way.
02:38:28.000Anyway, during the mission, he was accurately described as the loneliest man in the universe because when he was orbiting the far side of the moon while the other two guys were down on the lunar surface, he was cut off not only from his crewmates, but from NASA, from Mission Control, from Houston.
02:39:28.000And also the British, there's a lot of pamphleting from the time of the Revolution where they referred to the American Revolution as the Presbyterian Revolt.
02:39:35.000And so that continues all the way into the Apollo missions.
02:39:39.000And Michael Collins is a total patriot.