In this episode, we have a special guest host, Libby Emmons, who fills in for Tim who is out of the hospital getting a hair transplant. We also have a panel of women who discuss the controversial issue of Pediatric Transgenders in the United States.
00:03:11.000guys see him, he's gonna have a full head of hair.
00:03:13.000I know it's been a while, but that hair, you know, it takes a minute.
00:03:15.000So Tim's gonna be looking like a superstar very shortly.
00:03:19.000But before we get into this tonight's show, we got a very special guest.
00:03:22.000We got, you know, some crazy women, some smart women, some beautiful women.
00:03:27.000I do want to shout out casprew dot com guys, go support the pimp on a blimp and Tim Poole and the whole crew here, Surge, Phil, the guys that work so hard, and go buy a little bit of this American made coffee.
00:03:38.000None of that Chinese bullcrap that probably has fentanyl on it that's gonna give you some sort of heart, you know, murmur.
00:03:43.000That stuff's not good, but we got the cleanest, purest, strongest coffee made this side of the Mississippi River.
00:03:48.000We're on the other side of the Mississippi River and I really encourage you guys to go to kasper.com and buy some.
00:05:30.000I'm a whistleblower from a pediatric transgender center.
00:05:34.000So this has been a really heavy week and I've been asked a lot of questions to kind of weigh in with my expertise, what I know about these kids who are being transitioned.
00:05:47.000from Missouri, shut down that clinic, then shut down all of those clinics in Missouri, moved on and have been testifying across the country to try to get pediatric transitions banned across the US.
00:06:07.000Okay, you know who we always have here, Surge on the one to two, but Phil DeBonte, you know, he's a badass lead singer and he's freaking, he's jacked up, Phil.
00:06:16.000And when I'm next to you, I feel a little, you just made me feel in a flow of testosterone.
00:06:20.000As I'm saying, I'm about to start taking TRT because the full beard is back and that's probably why.
00:06:59.000We're kind of tired of hearing, but there's different angles coming out.
00:07:03.000and of course we're talking about the transgender shooter that shot up the Catholic Church of Minneapolis.
00:07:08.000Now, obviously, this story is incredibly sad.
00:07:11.000I'm not pat myself on the back when I say this, but I did speak at a recent state Senate hearing in Texas and I got absolutely buried by the trans community because I made a joke about transgender being good for the military because they like to do mass shootings and if the rate of suicide is so high we could use them like the Taliban uses suicide bombers and I got absolutely buried but less than two weeks from that speech they hated him because he spoke the truth.
00:07:36.000I spoke the truth and I didn't like this.
00:07:38.000I don't like that I'm clairvoyant and these things are happening.
00:07:41.000So I guess my first person I want to direct it to is Jamie.
00:07:57.000Because I said this at a state senate hearing and it happened.
00:08:00.000And even before that, it was two days after the hearing.
00:08:03.000It was a story in the UK where a train conductor was misgendered and they threw themselves in front of a train.
00:08:07.000So I was right right right after I said it.
00:08:09.000And then I was sadly extra right about the suicide and the trans.
00:08:13.000I think we've seen over a five thousand percent increase in individuals identifying as trans in the young people population.
00:08:22.000It's close to three percent by some estimates.
00:08:25.000So yes, of course, we're going to see huge numbers of issues in the public when you have that large percentage of our population identifying into something that is rooted in a lot of mental illness.
00:08:39.000Yeah, I mean, obviously we have a serious mental illness problem, but I think you saw Charlie Kirk, everybody talks about it's not rude for us to figure out if this shooter was on SSRI.
00:08:48.000So where does the overmedication come into this, Kara?
00:08:52.000I think you were talking about that earlier, right?
00:08:55.000Yeah, it could come into play, especially because the fact that a lot of these young kids are being medicated with drugs that have never been tested in cross examination with each other.
00:09:06.000Like when you're on a cocktail of more than two drugs, there's just absolutely no way to know what kind of side effects those are going to produce, right?
00:09:15.000They haven't done any of those clinical trials.
00:09:18.000So yeah, I think that's that's really dangerous when you have a whole generation that has grown up economically shortchanged, obsessed with screens, getting all their romantic, quote, needs or sexual needs met through porn or Snapchat or social media.
00:09:35.000And then so obviously they're all going to be anxious and depressed because they're not really functioning in real life and going out and having human to human interaction.
00:09:44.000And so then they're all going to be put on all this medication and that's just going to inevitably make things worse for them because you've got into this like prescription cascade they call it.
00:09:52.000Well, I just want to say this quick statement.
00:09:53.000Howard Stern famously got cancelled for saying during the Columbine shootings that if these kids would have just gotten laid, they might not have done this.
00:10:00.000But you made that same argument right there, did you not?
00:10:03.000By looking at the pornography and stuff, the fact that these kids are online looking at all this demonic stuff, maybe if they went out and actually got laid, they wouldn't be school shooters.
00:10:18.000And so there was something about art, I don't know what your generation is, but going to the mall, sneaking the cigarette, hanging out with your friends, you know, doing things in real life, having those risk behaviors in real life and learning the consequences with your social peers in your group is actually how you become an adult.
00:10:36.000You're not going to learn how to become an adult by sitting behind a screen.
00:10:40.000The only way you are is by having your peers say, dude, you just did something that was ridiculous.
00:10:45.000I'm not, you know, I'm not hanging out with you right now.
00:10:47.000Like you learn how to adult through social pressure and the real way to do that is in real life.
00:10:54.000I just have to say, I don't think my message to two would be mass shooters is go out and get laid.
00:11:01.000I think at that point Yeah, but isn't that like my That might be like my fourth message to them?
00:11:06.000The first thing I'm saying is, you're not saying it, but you're not saying it.
00:11:10.000You're not saying it, just like I'm not saying it, but I'm not saying But you went to the porn thing, so I'm saying, like, you know, maybe if these guys went out there and they didn't have access to all this porn and they had to actually get it from a chick, maybe they'd be a little more suave, a little more self-aware and less likely to do something like this.
00:11:22.000I'm not saying you said that, but you kind of insinuated that, but Phil, am I crazy for that?
00:11:31.000But I think there's other stuff going on when we look at this is something I've been thinking about, right?
00:11:36.000Because we hear an awful lot about how we need more mental health care for people.
00:11:42.000And I have a lot of questions about what exactly mental health care is and what it does and what use it really is.
00:11:49.000I don't know about you guys, I've been to a therapist a couple times in my life, like different times that I've had questions and I'm like, I'm not going to bore my friends about this for a year and a half.
00:11:57.000I'm going to go talk to somebody and figure it out.
00:11:59.000And then you solve your problem and you move on, right?
00:12:01.000But you have people who are in therapy for years and years and years, and then they have a psychologist who they talk to and they have a ps clinic and then you see somebody else every other week or something like that.
00:12:14.000And it's sort of confusing and difficult.
00:12:16.000A lot of the mental health is like either outpatient or inpatient drug treatment, right?
00:12:23.000So you have a lot of this stuff going on.
00:12:25.000And I had an interesting conversation.
00:12:28.000At Turning Point a couple of years ago, I was doing a panel.
00:12:32.000And this woman asked a question that I found absolutely fascinating.
00:12:37.000So we were talking about God and religion and what place faith has in your life.
00:12:43.000And she said, how do you find faith if you don't know what it is and no one's ever told you you about it.
00:12:50.000She said, My generation, which is substantially younger than me, like Gen Z or whatever, she said, My generation, when we have problems, we're told that it's a mental health thing and to go talk to a therapist.
00:13:54.000Or it's it's all about me, me, me, and trying to figure out, you know, what, why, why I'm anxious and what happened in my childhood and who can I blame and things like that.
00:14:05.000I mean, Abigail Schreier wrote a whole book about that.
00:14:10.000But there are amazing people like Lauren Delano and Cooper Davis and stuff that are trying to create different models for mental health, things like peer to peer mental health.
00:14:19.000Because I think, like, as you guys were saying, like it was back in the day, people actually relied on their family or their pastors or their community.
00:14:28.000And there were certainly crazy people back in the old days.
00:15:15.000There is an adolescent study that showed if you could get these kids to actually get enough sleep, their depression and anxiety actually did.
00:15:23.000Okay, but if you diet, you exercise and you're getting sleep and then you spend all the rest of your time on Snapchat and 1000 words and talk.
00:15:31.000I don't know if that will really help.
00:15:32.000Well, this is the whole topic is a little bit more nuanced than just as simple as exercise.
00:15:38.000I think it's almost a big proponent of going to the gym and exercising.
00:15:47.000But there are genuinely very ill people that medication does help.
00:15:53.000If you're schizophrenic, going to the gym isn't going to help.
00:15:57.000You need to actually talk to a doctor.
00:15:58.000And I'm only saying this because there is a certain, almost a certain.
00:16:03.000There's almost an idea that people have that if you're depressed or if you feel some kind of mental illness, pressure or whatever, just go to the gym.
00:16:13.000But if all you're feeling like is, oh, I'm tired and I'm kind of bummed out, going to the gym and getting a good night's sleep a couple nights in a row will probably solve it.
00:16:20.000It's almost it's almost like growing annoyances episodic or something.
00:16:23.000It's super annoying how helpful it is to work out.
00:16:40.000But these kids, especially these kids who have this trans identification, though, this is they're beyond some of this because they have literally beaten to their brain that they ruminate on their own distress.
00:16:55.000They become stuck in this cycle of it's just rumination, rumination, rumination.
00:17:00.000And for some of them, I think we have completely created a culture of mental health though, too, where you go to school, even in kindergarten now, and the first thing you're being asked is to check in on your emotions and where you are and what you're feeling today.
00:17:18.000It's not like, what have you done today?
00:17:50.000You don't think it's a mental illness?
00:17:51.000Well, it used to be where, like, if someone had some kind of body image, body dysmorphia or whatever, they would be anorexic or bulimic and stuff.
00:17:59.000I think that modern transgenderism in women tends to be a manifestation.
00:18:04.000Do you know about big orexia where people want to be super big?
00:18:20.000Yeah, I think that and I think a lot of it is because the manifestation of body dysmorphia nowadays is not about whether they are large enough or small enough or thin enough or whatever.
00:18:29.000It's they feel like they're in the wrong body.
00:18:31.000Also people are like the whole idea of being overweight is not stigmatizing.
00:18:38.000Also when it comes to men, I think that when it comes to men that are transgender, that say they're transgender and want to be women, I think a lot of that is on autogynophilia personally.
00:18:50.000What were you going to say about that, Jamie?
00:18:52.000I don't know that there is anything that's truly trans.
00:18:55.000Yes, there is gender dysphoria still in the DSM 5.
00:19:00.000There is a checklist that has like nine criteria.
00:19:04.000And if you meet six of those nine criteria, you can fall into this category of having gender dysphoria.
00:19:14.000Most of the doctors in this country do not care about transgender.
00:19:16.000I don't care if you even meet that criteria.
00:19:19.000This has truly become an identification.
00:19:21.000If you say you're trans, you can be transitioned at basically any age.
00:19:26.000It's ridiculous that these doctors will just do it and then they tell the parent that the kid is going to harm himself if they don't do it.
00:19:31.000So do you think it's, you know, if the kid doesn't affirm their new gender that they're going to, you know, take their own life, which is ridiculous.
00:19:37.000But how much blame do you think the doctors have versus the parents?
00:19:40.000Because I think it's the parents that are probably causing a lot of these kids to be so confused.
00:19:44.000I think they take a lot of responsibility for even letting their kid like this trans shooter.
00:19:48.000So the younger the kid is, the more I would say it's a parental issue.
00:19:54.000So if you have a three year old that's claiming that they are trans, that is a parent issue.
00:19:59.000Or not even just non-binary or something.
00:20:01.000But often, you know, you have these two different categories of parents though.
00:20:46.000You're a boy or your girl, but for people that grow up to be gay adults, many of us just are very masculine little girls or very feminine little boys.
00:21:08.000So if Jamie's saying that trans that the whole trans social contagion is actually like erasing gayness because a lot of these people because of the social pressures are immediately labeled trans because they are non conforming in some way when in reality they're just gay.
00:21:24.000But because people are telling them they're trans, they're like, Oh, I must be trans.
00:21:27.000But if you're saying that you don't know your gender and you're non conforming or whatever, you're trans.
00:21:56.000It doesn't make you the opposite sex if you're a homo.
00:21:59.000No, but for a lot of gay adults, remember that when we were kids, we knew we were different, we knew we didn't fit in, and the way that we knew we didn't fit in is what we refer to as gender.
00:23:15.000And I do think, you know, correlation does, you know, causality does mean correlation doesn't mean causality or whatever the saying is.
00:23:21.000Like if there's a bunch of people that got sexually abused and then later in life they say they're gay and there's a pattern, like I think that there could be, it's like nature versus nurture.
00:23:29.000If you got abused, I think it's more likely you're going to be sexually confused than someone that didn't get abused.
00:23:35.000I think we would all agree that no child should experience sexual abuse.
00:23:41.000So if we work as a society to reduce that occurrence and we see a reduction in the the number of adults who identify or say that they are gays and lesbians later?
00:23:53.000A new study led by researchers at Vanderbilt, one of the best universities in the country, found that 83% of lesbian, gay, bisexual and queer individuals reported going through adverse childhood experiences such as sexual or emotional abuse.
00:24:27.000So if we have to think about as a society, we can accept that there are some people who are gay, lesbians, homosexuals, who need no medication for that, don't really bother you in any way.
00:24:40.000And I also What kind of medication, Viagra?
00:24:42.000What kind of medication do you need to be gay?
00:24:54.000If I trans asks of you to do something, it asks of you to change.
00:25:01.000Well, I would argue that you being a lesbian asks something of me, because like if I hit on you, you know, it would be misconstrued as if you were straight.
00:25:26.000But my point is, it being gay and being trans kind of asks something of me.
00:25:31.000It's like if I go to a gay wedding, how am I supposed to not laugh at two girls and I'm like, okay, but I think people then we just won't invite you to the weddings and you can stay home and they won't have to b to bake us a thing.
00:25:41.000Jamie is saying that when you're trans, you're like, you're requiring someone to recognize you as something different than you are.
00:25:52.000Versus if you're a lesbian or you're gay, no one would even necessarily know that because it's not a sexual preference, it's not an identity, right?
00:26:01.000Well, that's why I don't understand that the Pride flag is in elementary schools because all sexuality is when you look at the Pride flag, it's just celebrating who you have sex with.
00:26:10.000We're going to agree on so many of those things.
00:26:13.000There's absolutely no reason why a Pride flag needs to be in an elementary or even in a high school.
00:26:17.000Yeah, I mean, in any school, I mean, in college.
00:26:21.000When I think about what I need from my kids' school as a lesbian with children, the only thing I need is that when we have a teacher, parent teacher meeting, my partner gets to come.
00:26:34.000That doesn't seem like too much to ask.
00:26:36.000Yeah, that would be insane, because I don't need you, I don't need you to teach the whole classroom about gay penguins.
00:26:42.000Well, even Snoop Dogg got mad at that, in the latest Pixar movie that the two couples that had a baby were two women.
00:26:49.000I don't know if you saw that story, but it was interesting.
00:27:40.000You know that it was, oh sorry, go ahead.
00:27:42.000I was just going to say it's not only homophobic, but it's actually guilty of the exact thing that it wants to, that it claims to be against, which is gender stereotypes and traditional male female roles.
00:28:01.000Because it relies on those gender stereotypes in order to be trans.
00:28:05.000Like, you know, if you end up being a tomboy, if you end up playing, if you're a girl and you play with trucks, someone's like, Oh, you're trans, right?
00:28:13.000But that's just a stereotype of, you know, of boys.
00:28:37.000Yeah, she was super freaked out by it.
00:28:38.000She was like, oh, no, I'd tell my mom this.
00:28:40.000But could you imagine if she came out talking about that within the past few years?
00:28:44.000She would have been shamed into non existence for being like, I didn't immediately affirm my stepfather wearing my mother's panties, you know?
00:29:29.000It's funny though, they wear this T-shirt.
00:29:32.000The predictive programming of me, but look at this predictive programming, they kind of put this into the ecosystem, into our zeitgeist, into our collective conscious.
00:29:41.000And now, when I first saw that, like that T-shirt on social media, I actually thought it was a parody.
00:29:47.000Like I thought it was a conservative that was making fun of the T-shirt.
00:29:52.000Like I can't believe that that is actually It's worth noting that that's the lieutenant governor.
00:29:57.000That's the lieutenant governor of Minnesota.
00:29:59.000The lieutenant governor of Minnesota is wearing a shirt that is glorifying violence.
00:30:06.000Can you bring it back up for one second?
00:30:07.000I just want to make sure that I'm saying that's saying protect trans kids, which I refuse to even accept the argument that there are trans kids.
00:30:37.000This is the society that we live in has been so absolutely dec awful what has been done to the United States because I'll forget the two spirit.
00:30:53.000Oh yeah, I mean the whole the whole the whole the whole nine.
00:30:56.000That like I personally reject the concept of gender.
00:31:03.000Gender is a made up thing that is, I mean, and at the end of the day, what it comes down to, the only way that people can explain it is it is your sexual spirit and it's something that you should be teaching to kids.
00:31:20.000And then they replaced it with gender.
00:31:23.000And gender is all about worshiping yourself and turning yourself into God and saying that, you know, there's nothing bigger than you, that everything in the world revolves around you.
00:31:33.000And that's why we have these trans violence t-shirts.
00:32:24.000You get to hurt people apparently who disagree with your fantasy.
00:32:28.000And we also saw in 2023 as several states were bringing into effect laws saying you can't sex change your children.
00:32:38.000And this was considered violence by the trans community.
00:32:41.000So you had a whole advocacy situation of trans people.
00:32:46.000and like LGBTQIA plus, et cetera, groups getting together to learn how to use firearms to defend themselves against states that don't want trans kids.
00:32:58.000And this appeared on covers of magazines like the Eugene Weekly in Oregon, and it appeared on T-shirts, and people were masking up, wearing the T-shirts, going out to protest and hurting women, like attacking women.
00:33:11.000Look what happened to Kelly J. Keen in was it Australia or New Zealand?
00:33:35.000Just because I know the difference between male and female.
00:33:38.000Well, to your point though, there is a, I think there is like a more sinister thing, like you talked about hiding the existence of God in that a lot of this trans stuff is actually, you know, I'm a tin foil hat wearing conspiracy theories.
00:35:06.000They are the ones that also print things for the polygamists, Mormons, and that's the company.
00:35:12.000I mean, hey, listen, that's the company that I think is going to let us make some shirts.
00:35:18.000You got five wives, you need a lot of shirts, you know what I mean?
00:35:20.000Okay guys, so what's going on in New York City I think is very alarming.
00:35:24.000I know that we have a Jewish American princess sitting across from me and she's probably very threatened, but maybe this is good news because Mom Dani does not recognize Israel as a country and he is now currently in second place according to the most recent Tolchen Research poll.
00:35:41.000So I guess I want to start with the person that is probably most likely to be a target of Mom Dani's legislation.
00:35:50.000Karis, what do you think about a socialist terrorist, dare I say, your opinion of him probably becoming the mayor of New York City.
00:35:57.000I'm I live in DC, so Yeah, but you're Jewish, so he probably he doesn't recognize you.
00:36:02.000You think he wouldn't recognize you Don't look at me like I'm stupid.
00:36:06.000You know that he doesn't recognize Israel as a country.
00:36:10.000No, no, no, no, I'm gonna get mad because Caris is so annoying.
00:36:12.000She's one of the most annoying people because she's like she acts like she doesn't You talk about why he is a threat to Jewish people and then your answer is well, I don't.
00:36:42.000I live in DC, so I guess I don't have an opinion on it.
00:37:09.000But all I was going to say in response to what you said was that if I was a Jew who hated Israel, he absolutely would support me.
00:37:15.000And those are the people that he essentially leans on to gain credibility with the New York Jews, right?
00:37:22.000The fringe groups like the Jewish Voice for Peace or the Jews for Racial and Economic Justice, all of whom are funded, by the way, by, that Chinese guy, Neville, the guy who lives in China, Neville, Singham, whatever, and Soros.
00:37:44.000I don't believe a lot of blacks vote for Mondani.
00:37:45.000No, I think Mondani is a significant threat to conservative Jews, both political and religiously conservative Jews, but I also think he's just an absolute threat to the to New York City as a thriving metropolis.
00:38:04.000I mean, you're going to he literally says he doesn't believe billionaires should exist.
00:38:08.000I mean, you're going to have capital, you're going to have companies have already announced that they will leave New York.
00:38:16.000I mean, it's going to be an absolute disaster in every single way.
00:38:19.000We saw what happened in Kansas when they tried to open like city run grocery stores.
00:38:24.000So I think the threat here, there's no doubt we could talk about the threat to Jews.
00:38:28.000And as a Jewish American princess myself, there's nothing I would enjoy more than that.
00:38:33.000But I think that this threat is so much bigger than that.
00:38:38.000I mean, you were saying, wait, is this the is this the article that shows that talks about how Cuomo is like the only possible chance of success?
00:38:46.000If Eric Adams and Curtis Leewott drop out?
00:39:12.000But I remember because he was such he was such a radical during that time that even like the circles I ran in were aware of his name.
00:39:20.000And so it's really awful to have to pick between the lesser of two evils.
00:39:25.000But like when I'm thinking about, you know, the success of a city that I lived in for eighteen years, like the continuing success, I gotta go with Cuomo, right?
00:41:46.000You can't centrally plan from one part of the country for the other part of the country and think that you'll be able to make effective legislation.
00:41:59.000But there's also ways of cutting medication in a privatized system, like Well, speaking of medication, Mom Dani really went viral this week for struggling to do 135 pounds on the bench press.
00:42:12.000Now I know Phil is an avid bench presser, maybe a testosterone user won't admit it, maybe.
00:42:17.000But do you think if Mom Dani got on a little test, maybe a little windstraw, maybe a little Dynaball, maybe a little, you know, Codian kicker?
00:42:24.000i don't know what the boys are taking this day and age but yeah they can see it is mumdani needs trembling no look at this this is pathetic and and he's spotted the whole time the guy's doing all the lifting and he's such a fraud and this is one of the reasons that his pole takes off his jacket Did he know that was going to happen?
00:43:38.000I would say the one, if Mom Donnie wins, though, the one ray of hope in my mind is Stefanik possibly winning because she has a very good chance of becoming governor.
00:44:10.000One of Mom Donnie's big campaign policies, I'm not even kidding, you can look this up, is that when he becomes mayor, halal prices will go up.
00:44:18.000will go down because in New York they're only allowed to issue 571 vendor permits.
00:44:23.000And so a lot of the people that try to get into that halal business have to pay.
00:44:28.000They have to buy it on the black market.
00:44:30.000And so he says when he becomes mayor, he's going to immediately make 500 approved vendors and the prices of halal will go down because they'll be able to see like he's talking about.
00:44:40.000Are they only going to let the halal trucks, the halal food?
00:44:43.000Well, I'm sure you probably don't necessarily need to cook halal food, but this is a big part of it.
00:45:03.000So this is why New York is going to be saved because now people are going to be able to get a little Baba Ganush for about two dollars cheaper.
00:45:10.000We don't have Baba Ganush at those trucks.
00:45:14.000You can make a Christian and Rice with some hot dogs.
00:45:16.000I'm not going to do this right now and have another Baba Ganush debate because I'm already losing it over there with a Jewish American princess.
00:45:22.000So let's just talk about how we've already talked enough about this Pritzker thing, but he did make a We didn't talk about Pritzker at all.
00:45:27.000No, but we talked about the trans stuff, excuse me.
00:45:29.000But we could talk about the other stuff.
00:45:31.000Pritzker now is saying that he's setting up a hotline where transgender people can get legal advice on how to change their name and affirm their gender.
00:45:39.000Libby, you seem passionate about this.
00:45:41.000Why is this phone line not being pranked called 24/7 into Oblivion?
00:46:25.000You see cities like Chicago, then you see this, you know, martial law, the federalization of the military in DC.
00:46:32.000Like, I'm kind of worried that that could be used in places like Chicago, then they're going to come to Austin, then they're going to come to Dallas, and all of a sudden I can't go to McDonald's unless I show them my vaccine card.
00:46:44.000No, so the, so like the federalization of the military to become police in DC sounds good on paper, but it could be, well, DC is different because they have, there's laws in DC.C that can federalize it.
00:46:57.000And that makes sense because, you know, it is not a state.
00:47:29.000You know, a lot of them are a lot of them they went on this island called Little St. I played a game called Little Saint James with this guy named Jeffrey, and he was a hell of a hell of a businessman.
00:47:37.000He was he started off as a primary school, high school teacher and became one of the richest men in the world.
00:47:42.000And he had three passports from Israel.
00:48:05.000It used to be worth going down to watch the Oriels play the Red Sox because you could never get to tickets to Fenway because Fenway is so small, but the Baltimore Stadium is significantly bigger.
00:48:16.000You could jump on a flight from like Hartford or from Boston down to Baltimore.
00:49:20.000I mean, the problem isn't just that they don't arrest people or that they're not arresting enough people.
00:49:27.000It's that the DA and the judges don't prosecute and actually put people in jail.
00:49:31.000This is a conversation that we've been having around the table here for the past couple of weeks because of the National Guard in DC.
00:49:37.000If the DA refuses to bring in the National Guard, but the National Guard can arrest someone, but if it's the DA and the prosecutor, you're still going to have the same problem.
00:49:47.000The National Guard can't arrest anyone.
00:49:48.000So what's going on is that when Trump talks about bringing in the National Guard, like when he did in Los Angeles, right, he brings the National Guard in essentially to in LA to protect immigration and customs enforcement.
00:50:03.000So ICE officers were out there going out into the community arresting people because they have to, because that's the only way way you can arrest people because law enforcement in California will not cooperate with federal agents.
00:50:14.000Do they send him the big booty Latina pictures to say who?
00:50:39.000It's kinda like, you know, in New York City, Kathy Hochul put 250 National Guard troops on the subways.
00:50:46.000Everybody in media, all the leftists, everyone cheered for her putting 250 National Guard troops on the subways because subway murders were up so much and attacks on conductors and everybody were up so high.
00:52:10.000And if crime is down, then it is good.
00:52:12.000And but I'm just saying it's a lot of a culture issue, especially Baltimore, you know, predominantly African American, and the culture there is young people getting their hands on guns and not enough good guys have guns to shoot back.
00:52:23.000Okay, well, listen, we've been talking a lot about dang Baltimore talking about the federalization of all these cops, but let's talk about what everybody wants to hear about taxes, tariffs, Trump's tariffs.
00:53:06.000I think they're good if they're targeted.
00:53:08.000I don't think overall just general tariffs are good as long as there's an income tax.
00:53:13.000There was a time when tariffs were used to fund the government before the income tax.
00:53:18.000But if you have a broad based tariff, generally the American people tend to pay that, right?
00:53:24.000The cost of goods goes up because of the tariffs.
00:53:28.000The people that are receiving the merchandise pay the tariffs and then they increase the cost when they and they pass that cost increase on to the people.
00:53:34.000So if you get rid of the income tax tariffs may be a way to supplement it.
00:53:39.000I don't know that I have a strong preference as to if there's, you know, if there's benefit from Trump's tariffs now.
00:53:46.000I think they've worked out fairly well so far, but it's thirty billion dollars.
00:54:30.000Did you see that Twitter person screaming at you for interrupting me?
00:54:33.000But I was trying to get you to expand on your idea.
00:54:38.000So the point being, there has been some inflation, not significant and not bad inflation, but there has been some and it looks like that will continue.
00:54:47.000But it's not going to be like the ten percent that we had when Biden was in office because it's a totally different context.
00:54:52.000But the actual price does get paid, passed off to the American people.
00:54:57.000I bought 100 green dildos on Amazon and it was three times as much.
00:55:16.000The price of plastic is through the roof, but we're not going to stop throwing them.
00:55:19.000I mean, I'm not part of that, but people are not going to stop.
00:55:22.000I honestly think that this tariff thing is so much bigger than trade, and that's why I fully support it.
00:55:27.000And I fully support Trump using it as a negotiating tool in areas that are apart from trade, like foreign policy, national security.
00:55:37.000I think it's a national security issue.
00:55:38.000I think we've been under this illusion of this, like, yeah, it's like libertarian in the sense that it's based on free market capitalism, but it's also leftist, this illusion of free trade in the sense that it's like very utopian because it ignores the fact that it only works if people play by the rules.
00:55:55.000And when you have a country like China that is not playing by any of the rules and we have literally gutted our entire domestic industrial base and seeded it over to our greatest adversary who's now producing like over eighty percent of our generic medicines, then this does become a national security issue.
00:56:16.000And the only thing that you can do in order to bring back manufacturing and industry to America is to have these targeted tariffs.
00:56:24.000And I agree that they should be a temporary measure.
00:56:27.000And I agree that there could even be some downsides short term.
00:56:32.000But whenever you're trying to do like a massive overhaul like this, like, I mean, some people are going to get hurt.
00:56:38.000Look what Trump's trying to do with the gutting the bureaucracy.
00:56:44.000But I really think that it's what needs it's the only thing that really can, can bring back like America as a flourishing, like manufacturing base.
00:56:56.000Well, Trump says the February tariffs against China and Canada and Mexico were appropriate because those countries were not doing enough to stop the illegal fentanyl trade from crossing the United States borders.
00:58:24.000They were, you know, creating trans comics in Peru and sending condoms all over the world and providing abortions in Rwanda.
00:58:32.000But they were not actually taking advantage, you're right, of what that soft power would do.
00:58:36.000One thing that Obama did and Biden did a similar thing is they would come to the table saying, Okay, we're going to negotiate with you, so we'll give up these things.
00:58:45.000And then the other side would be like, Okay, now that's baseline, you idiot, you know?
00:58:56.000And, you know, if you're lucky, you get some crumbs.
00:58:59.000But I also think Trump is incredibly fair about this.
00:59:04.000I don't think he's I don't I think no, I don't really care how he's doing for the rest of the world.
00:59:11.000Well, no, but I think that he wants he wants good he wants good relationships with other countries and that that gets that there has to be some sort of mutual benefit to that.
00:59:21.000Yeah, he brings them to the White House gift shop.
00:59:23.000He gives them a Trump 2028 hat and everyone's hat.
00:59:26.000Now, Libby, I like how you kind of up the ante and how you're sliding trans into every single topic.
00:59:32.000So I'm going to like try to keep paced.
01:00:01.000But even the executive orders that I really supported, every single one of them has been jammed up in the courts.
01:00:07.000So part of the problems with these things is we can't actually see, you know, what could come of it because the courts often are what's stopping things.
01:00:15.000So I'm not against any of the actions that Trump has taken.
01:00:19.000I think that it's fine that he's trying all these things, but it is worth noting that Congress is supposed to actually.
01:00:24.000be actually the ones that decide whether or not there are tariffs or not.
01:00:28.000So legitimately, it's constitutional for Congress to do it.
01:00:31.000Technically, it's unconstitutional for Trump to do it.
01:00:33.000So that's why he gets jammed up sometimes.
01:00:36.000But again, I'm not against him trying this stuff, but by the letter of the Constitution, it is supposed to be Congress that does this.
01:00:42.000But Congress doesn't like to do its job.
01:00:56.000And the Supreme Court was like, yeah, EPA wants to do all this stuff.
01:01:00.000They say that they're they have the power to do it because they don't want to do it it because they were created by Congress, but Congress is the one that has to legislate all of this.
01:01:07.000And Congress is like, no, we don't want to use that as a tool.
01:01:10.000Congress doesn't want to go on some more junkets.
01:01:12.000But what do you want to take August off about?
01:01:14.000I mean, doesn't if they hold the purse strings and if they have the power, are you guys saying they don't want to.
01:01:20.000The reason they don't want to is because then they have to face their voters.
01:01:23.000If you can go as a congressman, they have to what?
01:01:31.000They don't want to ever have to take responsibility.
01:01:33.000It's much easier and better for the individual congressmen to pass it off to a bureaucratic agency, let the bureaucrats take it because they they don't have to be voted for.
01:01:42.000They just get they get appointed and then when a new administration comes in, they get a cushy job somewhere on K Street or something like that.
01:01:49.000And then when a friendly administration comes in, they go back into the administration.
01:01:54.000It's easier that way for both the people in Congress and the bureaucrats.
01:02:14.000You know, I guess my personal opinion when I look at this, there are some., I guess, legal loopholes that Trump tries to use that probably aren't necessarily legal, but I think he does have America's best interests, so I probably don't necessarily disagree with him.
01:02:26.000But I don't think they're loopholes, as much as he's testing the norms and he's testing some laws, right?
01:02:33.000But he's really testing the norms, because a lot of things that you see the Democrats and Leftists getting upset about saying that Trump is destroying democracy, what they're really saying is he's not doing things the way that we've done them for the past twenty years.
01:02:50.000And even though it's not illegal, it's different and we don't like it.
01:02:53.000And this is the same batch of people who keep screaming every four every four years about how they want change, but they don't actually know what they want to change from what into what.
01:03:02.000They just know that they don't want Trump.
01:03:06.000And so what I think is most interesting about all of these court decisions that keep coming up, this appellate court now, what is this federal circuit?
01:03:14.000You have appellate courts all over the country striking down Venezuelans getting deported, striking down the elimination of TPS, which is so stupid.
01:03:23.000And that's because at the end of Biden's term, he prematurely extended it for a whole other term, which, you know what that is?
01:03:42.000And so I wonder how far can the courts push their stupidity and demand that people like Kilmar Obrego Garcia get come back or like you can't deport people to Uganda, even though Uganda was like, what, send them in, you know, to Honduras.
01:03:56.000Like what happens when the courts go too far and everyone's like, screw you.
01:04:02.000This goes to a point that I was making the other night.
01:04:04.000There is only so much that the president can do if he doesn't have the popular support of the people.
01:04:10.000And exactly, but if he has the popular support of the people, the president can get away with a ton of stuff.
01:04:17.000And this has been demonstrated on both sides of the aisle.
01:04:20.000But like if Obama got it, got away with the Chinese president.
01:04:24.000George Bush got away with the Patriots.
01:04:25.000The president has great, great power that he can exercise as long as he has people that agree.
01:04:32.000And I was making this point to Mary and I forget who else they were, I forget who else what it was, but they were like he should do more to deport people and blah, blah, blah.
01:04:38.000And the argument I was making is it's bad to have ICE grabbing grandma, abuela and grandpa and throwing them into cruisers to take them off because that makes Karen upset.
01:04:50.000And Karen goes out in the street and she yells at ICE people and then you get video videos that Karen took and she puts up these videos on Facebook and on Instagram and then popular support starts to diminish.
01:05:02.000So it's better not to have to use ICE to grab people off the street and throw them into vans to deport them.
01:05:09.000It's better to make it difficult for people that are here illegally to stay, make it difficult for them to find housing, make it difficult for them to keep their jobs, punish the people.
01:05:18.000Give away the three thousand dollars a month.
01:05:21.000But the point that I'm making is he can do things.
01:05:24.000The president can do things as long as he has support.
01:05:27.000But things that are bad optically will lose support.
01:05:30.000But when it comes to things that are, you know, whether or not.
01:05:32.000it's constitutional, that's really a gray area as long as he has popular support.
01:05:37.000Is there a way that we can, like I've heard certain political appointed in the Trump administration say that what the district courts are doing, involving themselves in these federal affairs, is actually illegal.
01:05:56.000If that's the case, then are there practical steps that can be taken other than ignoring their rulings?
01:06:04.000That's the reason why we're never going to find out about Jeffrey Epstein because he was probably connected to intelligence, not just for America, but probably for Israel.
01:06:11.000And so when they have classified levels of information and judges can protect it and, you know, even a president can't veto that, you know.
01:06:41.000Like, so they can take whatever he wants.
01:06:43.000I was just wondering if there's any practical steps.
01:06:46.000I was just wondering if there's any like practical steps.
01:06:48.000so that can be taken against the district court?
01:06:50.000So I think so hold on, Libby, wasn't there a case that was just decided by the Supreme Court that said that these nationwide injunctions are not constitutional?
01:07:11.000And so, yeah, so the court was saying that for the individual cases, the individual people, the moms who brought the case and said, My baby gets to be a citizen, those cases are separate.
01:07:26.000You can't make a decision on those cases and have it apply to everyone.
01:07:29.000But what was interesting about that is under the Biden administration, when you had, I think it was Moms for Liberty and some other groups brought cases about some education stuff, they got a nationwide injunction and it had to stop across the country.
01:07:46.000But yeah, they said no nationwide injunctions, which the ACLU got mad about because they really wanted to bring just one case and have it applied to everyone.
01:07:55.000And now they're back to having to bring individual cases in every jurisdiction where there's, you know, an illegal immigrant who wants their baby to be an American.
01:08:04.000Well guys, we've talked about a lot tonight, but I want to talk about a subject that is.
01:08:08.000That is very serious, something I'm very passionate about air travel.
01:08:11.000I flew up here, I flew to DC and sadly this year there was a very famous collision that happened with a military helicopter and an American Airlines passenger airline that crashed right here in DC, arguably, you know, a first world city, but we can't even get our planes to land without crashing into each other.
01:08:30.000But sadly, we see that there are people potentially going to use AI to help stop this.
01:09:01.000They were right above each other, so they must have had the same coordinates in the plane because they have special coordinates like roads that we have and streets.
01:09:08.000Wait a second, can we go back to that picture?
01:09:38.000Don't they have windows in the cockpit?
01:09:40.000I mean, look, you don't really have a window that's looking up or down.
01:09:44.000You've been in, you've seen what the cockpit is.
01:09:45.000You really are reliant, you're really reliant on, you know?
01:09:48.000When I was a kid and I used to fly back and forth between my parents in Boston and New York, sometimes the pilot would let me look in the cockpit and he would give me a little set of wings.
01:09:56.000Yeah, and those are, like, it's kind of narrow.
01:10:08.000If they can't see, they don't have rear view mirrors.
01:10:10.000Sometimes at 737 they have cameras which can look all around them.
01:10:13.000But the point is, to what Phil was saying, is like they have special coordinates at certain elevations.
01:10:17.000They have to go in certain directions.
01:10:19.000So this can only happen if their coordinates are together.
01:10:22.000So that's why AI, this is why this is a bigger issue because they should have not, the computers should have never been set to where this could even be possible because it's incredibly dangerous.
01:10:32.000And we've already had an aviation disaster where two people collided and a bunch of people died.
01:10:37.000There have been a bunch of, like, near misses.
01:10:42.000The Newark, New Jersey, there's ex workers that literally said that.
01:10:46.000They're aviation workers and they said they would not fly into Newark, New Jersey if their life depended on it.
01:10:52.000But there's also people that Boeing whistleblower said that he went in the new Boeing factory in Seattle when they made the 737 Max 8 jet, and there's actually hidden camera Project Veritas style interviews where people are like, man, I wouldn't fly on this plane.
01:11:05.000Yeah, well, I suggested that other article because my friend wrote it recently and sent it to me, the one about AI.
01:11:10.000And it was so interesting because it was saying how like most of these near misses or even accidents are the problem of human error.
01:11:18.000and air traffic controllers, which are now very understaffed and very overworked.
01:11:24.000And that's why this conversation about AI is becoming more and more prominent.
01:11:28.000But there's a lot of, like as much as AI can apparently help with being able to spot certain things ahead of time, apparently it's very limited when it comes to unpredictable situations, like things that are not on historical flight maps or anything like that.
01:11:49.000And so there's also a lot of questions.
01:11:57.000using AI, because you'll have to do it in conjunction With actual, like, analog and human, like, you're going to have a human always controlling that.
01:12:07.000And the question is, is whether having that AI is going to make air traffic controllers let their guard down even more than they are and be overly reliant on the technology.
01:12:20.000So there's just a lot of like, up in the air questions.
01:12:22.000And people who are in this industry have, I mean, the article is so interesting because different people just have such opposite opinions on it in the industry, but very firm opinions, like, either pro or against the AI elements of it.
01:12:37.000Well, I mean, you know, obviously there could be back doors, maybe it could be hacked, maybe it could be used, like you said, where people become too dependent on it and they become lazy because like there's Uber East drivers that have been driving the same city for five years and they don't even know where they're at because they're so dependent on these apps and AI.
01:13:40.000A lot of people get sick flying into Reagan because they make you do those hard turns.
01:13:43.000But this is where I get worried about aviation.
01:13:45.000Like the Max 8 plane, that's the Boeing plane where the whistleblower was talking about, that was having a computer problem where the pilots were just totally fine and the plane would just start nosediving in a couple of.
01:13:55.000the pilots weren't able to correct in time.
01:13:57.000So it's like there's also an argument to be made that DEI is caused that because they're using cheap Indian coders to make this, you know, software for Boeing.
01:14:05.000And I don't know if that's necessarily true, but it's weird that the highest technology, the computer is what's messing up.
01:14:41.000It works best as a tool for something that has a person in the beginning and a person check the work.
01:14:47.000So you have someone that's really good at coding.
01:14:50.000AI makes them insanely good at coding.
01:14:52.000You get someone that's good at, it's essentially just a tool, right?
01:14:56.000AI has been a terrible tool in what I do though.
01:15:00.000As an advocate and like working on the T issue, I mean, we cannot use any of these, at least the chat, the Google Gemini, like they're all totally un language captured.
01:15:17.000It like, will straight up tell me like, you're being a trans.
01:15:21.000Well, Grock turned into Nazi Grock because of people.
01:15:24.000Like, well, a big problem is that the AI, as it exists now, is being trained on woke, liberal, leftist media and content.
01:15:34.000So these AI companies don't see a reason to train their LLMs on conservative media like the PostMillennial or, you know, the New York Post.
01:15:46.000I mean, and so you have like, I have like.
01:15:48.000I've read like AI advocates who are conservative trying to advocate for these companies to not be regurgitation machines for leftist ideology.
01:16:00.000And it's really been tough for them to get that through.
01:16:03.000And that's not just, it's not just ChatGPT, I mean, Grock too, right?
01:16:09.000I mean, every time it would, I wouldn't necessarily have to say to it.
01:16:12.000No, but again, that it would affect what Jamie said.
01:16:57.000It's like they've done AI where they asked it like who won the 1974 World Series and it's like the Texas Rangers versus this and that the Rangers weren't even a team.
01:17:04.000But you're telling me that it can't even find that out, but I'm supposed to trust it to find out.
01:17:16.000Language is not the same as a new model.
01:17:17.000Yeah, a large language model is not the same thing as, say, your chess game, right?
01:17:24.000Chess is when you play against a computer, you're playing against an artificial intelligence.
01:17:28.000Yeah, it's like we haven't found a cure for the common cold that we can, we can perform the most, you know, intimate spinal surgery or whatever.
01:17:36.000And so like when you're talking about, like, so for instance, we use this, this, uh, this, this, this example all the time.
01:17:42.000The testless full self driving is artificial intelligence.
01:17:46.000It is a totally different type of artificial intelligence than a large language model.
01:17:51.000It's taking, it's actually identifying things in the world, it uses cameras to see the same way that humans do, and it identifies things and it can actually drive.
01:18:00.000I have a Tesla and I just drove out to Loudoun County today, the entire way was full self driving, the entire way back was full self driving.
01:18:09.000There was one time that I had to turn it off because it doesn't, for some reason, it doesn't like toll booths.
01:18:14.000It just wants to keep going through them.
01:18:16.000But for the most part, other than toll booth, it was perfectly fine.
01:18:20.000There's something so interesting to me in that.
01:18:22.000So you're telling me that it works when it happ's having to recognize the reality around it and operate within reality, but language is all about control.
01:18:33.000And part of the problem I have with it is it wants to control our language.
01:18:38.000I understand what you're saying, but when you use the word it, you're specifying, you're not specifying which one.
01:18:46.000You're talking about AI as all of them.
01:18:52.000A full self driving algorithm or the AI in full self driving is a totally different machine, totally different algorithm, totally different thing from a large language model.
01:19:02.000We use this phrase AI as a blanket term, and it's not really functional anymore.
01:19:09.000The way that AI is, the way that these technologies are evolving, it's not correct to say AI is all the same.
01:19:18.000Large language models are not the same as full self driving, which are not the same as the AIs that will generate video or audio.
01:19:27.000It's not the same as, you know, there are all these different types of AI.
01:19:30.000And what people tend to think is all the AI is kind of going towards what you would call AGI, which is artificial general intelligence., and you're not really, they're not really 100% sure or there's differing opinions on whether or not AGI will ever actually be a thing.
01:19:49.000Well, regardless, the problem with, and obviously you heard Phil talk about how he was in his Tesla and he didn't have to do anything.
01:19:55.000And the problem there is that there are some negative side effects, like they're saying that these pilots that rely on AI are not able to basically handle a stressful situation because they don't have any experience because they're always on autopilot.
01:20:08.000And I think that's when we talk about the negative side effects, that's one of the major ones because we don't Oh yeah.
01:20:13.000You were trying to talk about taxi drivers earlier.
01:20:15.000There's actually research studies that showed like old school taxi drivers.
01:20:18.000Drivers like the parts of their brain that had to and yeah, that was mapping the city around them was actually you have to challenge your brain to make it remember things.
01:20:42.000But I mean, you know, if I if you move to a new city and you don't have GPS, you're actually forced to use that part of your brain to help like spatial.
01:23:00.000I know you guys already covered it, but I think the flag burning, I really don't like it.
01:23:04.000But at the same time, if they made it illegal to burn a flag with the Star of David, then I think it should be illegal to burn an American flag too.
01:23:10.000But, you know, I believe in freedom of speech.
01:23:12.000What about it being illegal to burn the Progress Pride flag?
01:23:33.000But I totally understand why people personally I would never burn an American flag, but I made the argument that the ninth amendment covers burning the American flag.
01:24:47.000As for the ninth Amendment, the Ninth Amendment reads the enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
01:24:57.000So the Bill of Rights is simply a list of things that the federal government cannot do.
01:25:02.000There is no limitation in either the Constitution or the Bill of Rights on the American people because the American people are and ought to be free.
01:25:16.000These things in the Bill of Rights specifically are prohibited from being legislated by the federal governmental government can do, but these things we specifically said.
01:25:30.000The ninth amendment basically is saying, just because we didn't specifically say that the federal government cannot legislate that, doesn't mean that the federal government is only prohibited from legislating those things.
01:25:44.000And the ninth amendment specifically says for people that would say, well, it doesn't say in the Constitution that we can't do that.
01:25:51.000The ninth amendment is the specific refutation to that argument.
01:25:55.000If you say, show me in the Constitution where it says that we can't do that, the ninth amendment.
01:25:59.000The ninth amendment says that you can't just go ahead and pass whatever law you want.
01:26:04.000And then, furthermore, the tenth amendment goes on to reinforce the ninthh amendment.
01:26:09.000So the argument that there was an argument that I and Jack Posoba were having, I said, you have the freedom, the freedom of expression.
01:26:17.000And Jack was like, tell me where it says the freedom of expression in the constitution.
01:26:21.000And you're saying the ninth amendment blanket covers all freedoms that are not specifically enumerated.
01:26:26.000Yeah, it basically says the American people are and ought to be free, which undeniably was the opinion of the founders.
01:26:35.000You can get into the minutiae about what should or should not be legislated.
01:26:40.000Jack went and said, well, you know, it should be the states that would decide whether or not it should be legal to burn the national flag.
01:26:46.000And I think that that's a bit of a cop out.
01:26:48.000That's a bit of taking an exit ramp away from the actual point.
01:26:52.000But he was comparing it to Roe, which I thought was interesting.
01:26:55.000Well, I would argue that we don't have the First Amendment because in their states in Florida, like, you can't even speak ill about Israel.
01:27:02.000And I'm very pro-Israel, but isn't that weird that they do limit?
01:27:24.000So basically that basically says that a boycott divestment.
01:27:27.000So it says that if you're a business that's receiving government funds and as a business entity or an organization that's receiving government funds, you decide to boycott Israel, then the government is no longer going to fund you, just like it doesn't fund, just like it's now threatening funding from, you know, against like universities that are like not protecting Jewish students or not protecting women, Title IX protections and stuff like that.
01:27:53.000That's what BDS laws are, and they're very strong in Florida.
01:27:56.000Which is bullshit because we should be able to boycott anyone we want.
01:28:34.000Well, we have a lot of super chats, but before we get into that, I want to talk about something that is very, very sad for me, obviously., you guys know that I'm a big booty Latina connoisseur.
01:28:43.000I know Jamie, the resident lesbian, obviously loves big booty Latinas too.
01:28:47.000Lesbians love him more than heterosexual men.
01:28:53.000That's why Salma Hayek is still relevant because of lesbians and we love lesbians, but TikTok star 32 years young is found dead along with her husband and her two children, seven and thirteen years old, in a truck, sparking Mexican cartel murder fears.
01:29:11.000Esmeralda Ferrar Gaboret, or Garabe, excuse me, I can't even read that.
01:29:16.00032 years old and her husband, Roberto Gil Lacea, 36, died alongside their son Gail Santiago and their daughter Regina.
01:29:24.000Now authorities are saying that this TikTok fashionista was shut down by the cartel linked to some sort of nefarious drug movement here in Guadalajara, Mexico.
01:29:38.000And this is why it gets sad because if she just would have had amnesty here in America, this would not have happened.
01:29:44.000And this is why I think amnesty for big booty Latinas is so necessary because she was not a cartel member.
01:29:59.000So my point is, I don't want the cartel to take out all these big booty Latinas, whether in Guadalajara or they're in Washington, DC.
01:30:06.000So I guess my point is, Phil, you don't you don't yeah, you don't agree with this statement, but could you imagine she would still be alive today if you would agree with my policy of amnesty for big booty Latinas?
01:30:16.000And don't you feel like you're responsible for her death?
01:30:18.000You have to break a few eggs when you're making an omelette.
01:30:20.000I don't think she applied for amnesty though.
01:30:22.000I know, wasn't that her biggest mistake?
01:30:24.000So she probably wasn't going to get amnesty.
01:30:26.000Do you know like most of my laws were in place, Levi, she would have had immediate amnesty.
01:30:31.000If it was Bill Biden and Chuck, if it was trans, she.
01:30:35.000Or LGBT or really anything because he had affirmative v action, so and you definitely didn't have to wait in Mexico.
01:30:42.000So maybe she had applied for amnesty and she was stuck there.
01:31:26.000She's been, you know, she takes a strong stance against Trump because Trump actually will go after the cartels and she has to say those things, whether or not she actually would do anything to try to prevent the United States.
01:33:05.000See, this is why this, this abroad is so stupid because this is just open, this is just open information.
01:33:09.000No, it's not, it's not from Candaandice.
01:33:10.000No, it's not from Candice because when Robert Maxwell died, he was never in the Israeli military, but he got to go back to like, let me go back to the game.
01:33:18.000Shut up, shut up, let me finish talking.
01:33:20.000Of course she's going to use her Jewish magic to try to cancel me.
01:33:23.000No, no, no, let me finish what I'm saying.
01:33:24.000Ghislaine Maxwell's father, Robert Maxwell, when he died and he fell off a boat in a very strange way.
01:33:30.000So when he died, he got an official Israeli IDF heroes funeral.
01:33:36.000The funeral that only a certain person that even lost their life in the line of the government.
01:33:41.000Was Esmeralda Farmer Galbray involved at all with the government?
01:33:45.000No, listen, don't try to derail me from this.
01:33:47.000I'm trying to talk about serious stuff.
01:34:24.000But when you look at Jeffrey Epstein and you can look this up.
01:34:27.000When they did a search of his house, they found that he had not just an American passport, he also had an Israeli passport.
01:34:33.000So if you really do not think that he was not connected with our intelligence agencies and the intelligence agencies of the woman that he was working with to sexually traffic kids, whose father has so much evidence that he was part of Israel's Mossad agency, you're the liar, you're the one that's not connecting the dots when it's so obvious.
01:34:52.000So I get frustrated when you just sit there and lie and say there's no connection.
01:38:10.000I just get emotional because you can't defend it.
01:38:13.000Like you can defend how Benjamin Netanyahu just lied and said when Tom Alexandrovich just got arrested for doing a pedophile thing in Las Vegas that he wasn't actually arrested.
01:38:21.000Do you think that's cool that he lied about that, protecting another pedophile?
01:38:25.000I think the fact that you tie pedophiles to Israel and not a country like I didn't do that.
01:38:30.000The pedophile that works for the cybersecurity division, he's the one that did it.
01:38:33.000I'm not the one that did it to the kid.
01:38:38.000And do you think that's cool that Netanyahu lied and said he wasn't arrested?
01:38:41.000If Netanyahu lied about some pedophile, then I think that he should be accountable for that lie.
01:38:51.000But without looking into some sort of accusation that you're leveling at BB Netanyahu, who I'm not even a fan of, like I can't stand BB Netanyahu.
01:39:07.000Yeah, you don't Yeah, I mean, look at when it comes to Netanyahu, like I know, I know the way that the media frames Netanyahu because I've been privy to the way that they framed Trump.
01:39:18.000And Netanyahu is the same type of figure internationally like Trump was.
01:39:23.000And so I find myself having to defend this guy that I don't even like because I know that certain things that people are saying about him is not true.
01:39:31.000But when it comes to the recent thing that just happened with the pedophile, I haven't actually cared enough to look into that, Alex.
01:40:14.000I'm just saying I'm allowed to get a little emotional about it because I feel like I'm so emotional about it because I feel like I'm getting gaslighting.
01:40:33.000I just wonder, like, why are you not so emotional about, like, Sudan or Yemen or something?
01:40:38.000Why the fuck do I care about Sudan and Yemen?
01:40:40.000I mean, I don't see them bombing hospitals on No, what are you talking about?
01:40:43.000There's literally like, like, there's like 87,000 children that are, like, being starved right now.
01:40:48.000I guess the Palestine, they're just doing such a good marketing campaign that I just can't even pay attention to Sudan because my telegram is the truest thing that you'veve said this entire time about Israel.
01:40:59.000I think that's what it is because there's just not consistency there.
01:41:02.000Well, when you look at our politicians and 88% of the politicians that are currently in office are all being funded by APAC, I think that you could see that it's a little bigger of a threat APAC than it's funny that you talk about APAC but you don't talk about those being funded by the Qatar Foundation and you don't talk about those being funded and you don't talk about those being funded by NIAC.
01:41:22.000I would be hard if you thought that Qatar has more influence than Israel.
01:41:25.000I think that you are slow in the brain.
01:44:26.000And I, I don't know if there's, I don't know what, what kind, I know that there's evidence, but I don't know if the AG will actually pick it up or not.
01:44:33.000And I think that he's worried about the revenge aspect of it.
01:44:36.000I don't know if he's worried about the age aspect of it, because I think he shared another nude picture of someone to a third party.
01:44:41.000He's done, he's done it multiple times.
01:44:43.000Like, and so there was a person that he shared nudes with or shared nudes of that I'm not sure if she gave them to him or if they were photos that he took to a mutual friend, I think.
01:44:56.000Yeah, and he showed them to someone else and there's evidence that he was sexting, sending illicit messages, sexually oriented messages to a 17 year old.
01:45:09.000I mean, I think the, you know, the state of Florida should look into it if it's a pattern of behavior, if this is kind of the stuff that he does.
01:45:49.000I think that you're not going to be able to convince conservatives that they are actually liberals.
01:45:54.000I don't think that you're going to be able to convince liberals that they are progressives.
01:46:00.000And there are progressives out there that will swear up and down that what are called liberals are just conservatives.
01:46:08.000The argument over semantics will probably never end, and you're going to have to actually judge behavior.
01:46:15.000So if you're saying, Oh, I don't think that property rights take primacy, I don't think that individual rights take primacy, that's definitely an illiberal perspective, but I think that you're going to see, still going to see a lot of people that would call themselves liberals say those types of things.
01:46:33.000Well, I just think the concept around language is so interesting, but the thing from my advocacy line from what I see is that trans and other similar parallel issues have totally, like, for me, shaken up who's even in which party anymore.
01:46:50.000Like, I think that we're going through this massive upheaval.
01:46:54.000Basically, everyone I know are former dems.
01:46:57.000Like, we don't even like, we're disaffected former dems with nowhere to go.
01:47:02.000Up to that point, would you consider yourself like a MAGA person?
01:47:05.000I don't personally, but there are absolutely a ton of people that I know because of trans issues and women's rights issues right now that are completely like lost and they do talk about MAGA.
01:47:22.000So I don't even know if we have, I don't know, I don't even know that we have two parties right now.
01:47:40.000Well, yeah, I mean, I guess it is a big tent, but I do see like now, though, you know, to the topic we're just kind of getting so heated about though, the right is kind of eating its own with the woke right stuff, you know, the pro-Israel, anti-Israel stuff.
01:47:51.000So I feel like you might like to No, I'm just saying it's kind of causing a lot of tension., I think.
01:47:57.000Do you want there to be a big tent though on your side?
01:48:27.000Like, you do have this really big tent, but at what point do you assert red lines when it comes to, like, actual conservative values, right?
01:48:38.000One of the biggest conversations that is occurring right now, I will say, in the LGB is if we continue, do we continue to try to get the left and the dems to shift on trans or instead do we pivot and focus to the conservatives and get you all to adjust I don't know if you're not all, it's more like a Missouri all but Ad MAGA conservatives.
01:49:00.000Yeah, but I mean, or do we shift and try to focus on MAGA conservatives just saying that marriage is off the table?
01:49:20.000Well, the problem is that the Obergefell ruling really opened up, it really opened up that's the Obergefell is gay marriage, the Supreme Court ruling.
01:49:33.000But yeah, the problem with it is that it really opened the door to a lot of crazy things.
01:49:39.000Like in Somerville, polyamorous marriages are recognized, Somerville, Massachusetts, and there are other places where this is happening as well, where essentially what we used to call bigamia or polygamy and say that's bad for women, you can't do that, now is being recognized as legal in some places because of the Obergefell ruling.
01:49:59.000And I think that kind of thing is probably not great for children and also probably not great for, you know, civilization.
01:50:10.000Well, it's sort of is because anything is legal.
01:50:50.000If you look at interracial marriage, if you look back at the loving decision, which was essential so that marriages could be legal across state lines, which of course it has to be.
01:50:59.000So but it's a very interesting situation.
01:51:01.000And I think that it would be very difficult.
01:51:03.000My point basically is that I think that it would be very difficult to get all the conservative world on board with gay marriage and on board with the Obergefell ruling because you already have people in the conservative Protestant realms saying that they want Obergefell to be abolished.
01:51:21.000And you've had some politicians saying, Yeah, I would support the abolition of Obergefell.
01:51:24.000So I don't know if you could I don't know if you could get it with that ruling.
01:51:30.000It might have to be a different kind of ruling.
01:51:34.000I had this gay roommate, my sophomore year of college in New York.
01:51:41.000And I at that point had just started flirting with my political identity.
01:51:47.000I just, I didn't really know who I was at that point, coming from the Bay Area.
01:51:50.000I had assumed I was a Democrat, but a lot of progressive stuff didn't sit well with me.
01:51:55.000But this roommate I thought was so interesting because she was a lesbian who was against gay marriage.
01:52:00.000And her argument was that she basically was like, you know, I go and march in gay pride parades because I want to be recognized as different and special because I am.
01:52:11.000I'm like, and she's like, and so I want a different institution set up for gay people.
01:52:17.000She's like, I don't want to be put in this traditional religious construct of like man and woman.
01:52:23.000She's like, I want, she's like, as long as I have all the same rights.
01:52:27.000that I would get in a traditional marriage.
01:52:29.000I don't need you to call it marriage because I don't want to like blend in with everyone else.
01:52:34.000One of the things that queer activists, and I'm using the term as the, you know, politically queer, one of the things that queer activists have, an objection that they have, is that if you make marriage legal for gay people, for gay, lesbian and queer people, and then they start doing the heteronormative thing just with another, a person of the same sex, you actually are killing queer people, they say.
01:53:01.000You're, you're, I don't understand that.
01:53:03.000So if you're, if you're politically queer, politically, like, queer is a political stance.
01:53:07.000It's a way of being, as opposed to being heteronormative.
01:53:11.000If you're a heteronormative person, Oh, so it's what my It's the it's kind of your roommate.
01:53:58.000And you know, the highest occurrence of headaches are actually women and that's proof that dating, you know, lesbians, they can't even date each other.
01:54:05.000So like the divorce rate in lesbians is so incredibly high.
01:54:08.000How high is the divorce rate in lesbians?
01:54:10.000So what I'm going to say is this is the reason why marriage matters.
01:54:28.000What it's about is that for decades, if my partner was dying in a hospital room, Exactly.
01:54:36.000I couldn't go in that room to be with them in their dying moment because I was not legally recognized as their significant other.
01:54:45.000I think many gays and lesbians don't care about the cake or the suits or if you want to laugh at it.
01:54:52.000All we are asking for is some level of that basic dignity that if our loved one is dying, we have the right to be with them in the room at the time.
01:59:55.000At least with the guy, I could kind of seduce one of the players, maybe I was with, like Vasilia Thomas, but if they're lesbian, then they have no sexual interest in me.
02:00:00.000He said, then I have no redeeming qualities.