Timcast IRL - Tim Pool


Trump SLAMS South African Pres. For DENYING "White Genocide," Corp Press CRIES AMBUSH | Timcast IRL


Summary

On today's show, we discuss a man who was arrested for posing as a teen to enroll in an Ohio high school, a Tennessee state rep who made a video of an ICE raid, and a new piece of information about the Kennedy Assassination.


Transcript

00:01:31.000 Today, Donald Trump was hosting South Africa's President Ramaphosa, and he essentially, was it?
00:01:39.000 Ramaphosa, my bad, Ramaphosa.
00:01:42.000 And CNN is accusing Trump of spreading debunked conspiracy theories during his Oval Office visit.
00:01:49.000 So we'll talk about that.
00:01:51.000 We have a bunch of people talking about that, actually.
00:01:54.000 There's all kinds of...
00:01:56.000 There's all kinds of people that were all up in arms.
00:01:59.000 A federal judge blocks the Trump administration from removing criminal illegal immigrants to third-party nations in South Sudan.
00:02:06.000 So we'll discuss that.
00:02:07.000 We talked a little bit about people that don't have their countries of origin, don't want them back, and what the administration is supposed to do with them.
00:02:15.000 So we'll discuss that a little bit further.
00:02:18.000 We have a Venezuela man that was arrested after posing as a teen to enroll in Ohio High School.
00:02:25.000 He's an illegal immigrant and he was charged with forgery after enrolling in Perry High School as a 16-year-old.
00:02:31.000 The guy's like in his 20s or something like that.
00:02:33.000 So we'll discuss that.
00:02:34.000 More Democrat nonsense as a Tennessee Democrat state rep was bragging about interfering in ICE operations.
00:02:41.000 She made a video of it.
00:02:43.000 She put it on the internet.
00:02:44.000 Look, if you're going to break the law...
00:02:45.000 Don't make videos of it and put it on the internet.
00:02:48.000 But actually, in this particular case, I personally don't mind that she did because it's hilarious.
00:02:54.000 We have some information from Tim Bucharet about the Kennedy assassination.
00:03:00.000 Apparently, he was in a hearing and he has some new information that some people may or may not have heard.
00:03:08.000 It's alleged to confirm some theories that have been...
00:03:13.000 Gone around for a long time about this, but we'll get into that.
00:03:16.000 And then we'll also be talking about Gen Z and the millennial men in the U.S. are among the loneliest in the Western world and why.
00:03:25.000 Of course, the specific article that we have brought up and the study that was done, they're blaming things that...
00:03:34.000 Personally, I don't think are actually the root cause of it, but you can guess how the blame lands.
00:03:42.000 But before we get into any of that, why don't you head on over to castbrew.com and buy some coffee.
00:03:49.000 You know, we here at TimCast, we have castbrew.com.
00:03:54.000 Recently, we've come up with the...
00:03:56.000 We've got the...
00:03:59.000 The K-Cups, if you're a K-Cup user, they have Appalachian Nights.
00:04:02.000 You can buy that.
00:04:03.000 You've got Ian's Graphene Dream was recently released as K-Cups, and Ian's Graphene Dream is the most popular coffee that we've got, and there's a boatload of that in stock now, so if you want to head on over to casprew.com and get some of that, you can get it.
00:04:16.000 Of course, there's the regular bags.
00:04:18.000 You can get Focus with Mr. Bocus.
00:04:20.000 You can probably get some Sleepy Joe if you like the...
00:04:25.000 Decaf stuff.
00:04:27.000 So head on over to castbrew.com and get yourself some coffee.
00:04:30.000 And then head over to timcast.com and join our Discord.
00:04:34.000 You can join the Discord and that's how you get access to the after show and to call in on the after show.
00:04:42.000 After the normal two hours we go to the after show.
00:04:47.000 In the Discord, there's 20,000 people or so.
00:04:50.000 You've got a bunch of different...
00:04:52.000 Podcasts that have started in the Discord.
00:04:54.000 There's the Romination Podcast.
00:04:56.000 There's Tyler Today News.
00:04:57.000 A bunch of podcasts that are definitely worth your time.
00:05:00.000 Meet like-minded individuals and maybe you can meet a girl or something like that because there's people that have been married because of the Discord.
00:05:09.000 So head on over to that.
00:05:10.000 And also, why don't you head on over to Rumble.com and join Rumble and you can become...
00:05:18.000 You can join the after show on Rumble.com, the uncensored after show.
00:05:24.000 Tonight we're going to be talking about some news that I'm not even going to touch.
00:05:27.000 I'm not even going to give you a preview until the end of the show because it's that volatile.
00:05:35.000 YouTube gets very, very angry.
00:05:37.000 So smash the like button, share the show with everyone you know, and head on over to Rumble and join Rumble.
00:05:43.000 Tonight joining us to talk about this and so much more is AK Kamara.
00:05:47.000 Kamara.
00:05:49.000 Who are you and what do you do?
00:05:49.000 My bad.
00:05:51.000 My name is A.K. Kamara.
00:05:52.000 I am actually the Republican National Committee man from the state of Minnesota, a member of the vaunted 168.
00:05:59.000 I make content online and all around.
00:06:02.000 I just want to try and help stop this bleeding of liberalism coming out of the state of Minnesota.
00:06:08.000 So I'm trying to do my part.
00:06:10.000 Thanks for joining us.
00:06:10.000 Awesome.
00:06:11.000 We've got Raymond G. Stanley here.
00:06:13.000 Hey, what's up, guys?
00:06:14.000 Raymond G. Stanley Jr.
00:06:15.000 I am the resident blue-collar Timcast.
00:06:17.000 I like to think of myself as a common sense revolutionary.
00:06:20.000 I planted some trees yesterday, and you know what they say?
00:06:23.000 A great man plant trees for the shade they will never know.
00:06:26.000 What's up, Brett?
00:06:27.000 Oh, yes.
00:06:28.000 And as a fellow Minnesotan whose last name gets continually pronounced wrong...
00:06:33.000 Sovich, right?
00:06:33.000 It's Sovich, isn't it?
00:06:34.000 My name is Brett Dasvich.
00:06:35.000 Let's go.
00:06:37.000 All right.
00:06:38.000 I'm just playing.
00:06:39.000 We all know Brett.
00:06:40.000 We'll go with Sovich.
00:06:41.000 That's fine.
00:06:42.000 So Post Millennial is reporting.
00:06:44.000 CNN accuses Trump of spreading debunked conspiracy theories during Oval Office confrontation with South Africa's president.
00:06:51.000 CNN criticized President Donald Trump's meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, calling the interaction an ambush after President Trump presented evidence of the persecution and killing of white South Africans.
00:07:05.000 The meeting held on Wednesday at the White House drew attention when Trump showed Ramaphosa a video containing a violent political chants and statements by officials against Afrikaners, as well as footage of burial sites of white farmers.
00:07:18.000 Responding to a reporter's questions about the alleged genocide of whites in South Africa, Trump said, We have thousands of stories talking about it.
00:07:25.000 We have documentaries.
00:07:26.000 We have news stories.
00:07:27.000 Before playing video clips that included chants of kill the boar and statements such as, Killing is part of a revolution.
00:07:32.000 Trump also cited reports of burial sites with over a thousand white farmers and South Africans fleeing violence.
00:07:38.000 So, this is something that a lot of people that spend, you know, any...
00:07:42.000 Significant amount of time on X, political X, you'll see this kind of stuff fairly regularly.
00:07:50.000 There's talk of the term genocide, I think, is loaded nowadays, and I personally wouldn't call this a genocide.
00:07:58.000 I do think it's political persecution, but I don't know what you guys think.
00:08:02.000 Do you guys have a take on whether or not it's genocide?
00:08:05.000 I think you're right that when you use the term genocide, we have a historically accurate...
00:08:11.000 But ever since, obviously, Israel and Palestine, anyone that is anti-Israel, they're always saying that it's genocide, genocide.
00:08:19.000 And it's like, well, is it really?
00:08:21.000 And now, in this case, I think you're kind of having the counter to that.
00:08:25.000 Now, I know completely different situations, but there is an actual term.
00:08:29.000 I think definitions do matter.
00:08:31.000 And having people that are persecuted or hunted because of their ethnicity...
00:08:35.000 Does fall in that term of genocide.
00:08:38.000 So, you know, whether or not you say, oh, you know, how many hundreds of thousands or millions of people have died in South Africa?
00:08:45.000 I think that that's actually not what's at the heart of the issue.
00:08:45.000 It's not a genocide.
00:08:49.000 It's are people specifically being targeted with policies from a government that allows someone to be killed for no other reason other than the fact that they are this ethnicity or this group.
00:08:59.000 I think that's what is happening in South Africa.
00:09:02.000 Whether you're looking at the Uyghur Muslims, and there's so many other groups that actually have been targeted by the government.
00:09:08.000 That's why I honestly don't think that calling what's happening in Gaza a genocide is the same, because they're not specifically just trying to go after people that are of Palestinian descent.
00:09:17.000 They're trying to go after Hamas, and it's terrible, and I don't like any innocent life that is lost.
00:09:23.000 But I do think that there's going to be this back and forth where the left is like, oh, so you can call this a genocide, but you won't call this a genocide?
00:09:30.000 And I just think, again, President Trump and what he did to the president of South Africa, Ramaphosa, he kind of had him stuck because he's like getting him to acknowledge.
00:09:39.000 Look at all the things that are happening.
00:09:41.000 And Trump, I think, was careful to say, like, I'm not going to say it's this term, but let's hear what people from South Africa have to say and kind of letting the story tell itself.
00:09:50.000 But I think, again, if you look at the actual term of genocide, it's targeted action going after specific groups that is supported by the government for no other reason other than they are the specific ethnic group.
00:10:01.000 Yeah.
00:10:02.000 I mean, Brett, you were talking earlier about the definition of genocide and whether or not this meets the standard.
00:10:09.000 You can't deny that it's political persecution.
00:10:12.000 You have people being removed from their land, expropriation of property, and historically those types of things lead to...
00:10:20.000 I mean, if they don't lead to genocide, they definitely have led to terrible, terrible oppression.
00:10:26.000 Well, yeah, I think the most interesting part of it is that, you know, with American politics now kind of being a spectator sport, it becomes a bunch of people discussing whether the terminology fits the crime.
00:10:36.000 And a lot of times I find that that, in a lot of ways, ends up kind of...
00:10:42.000 Watering down the horror of it all in a lot of cases because it's a lot of us, whether it's even on here, in a way, when you're discussing it on a show like this or if you're talking about it on X, the people, at least what I saw from the clip from CNN, was them going after the terminology they're using.
00:10:58.000 But they're doing that as a way of obfuscating the discussion that's supposed to be had, which is about what's actually happening there.
00:11:03.000 And that's kind of a microcosm of how I see politics these days, which is everybody argues without actually knowing.
00:11:10.000 There's no shared terminology for anything anymore.
00:11:12.000 And you're talking past each other and very little gets accomplished because everybody's using their own language, their own ends.
00:11:18.000 And I find a lot of it to be very annoying.
00:11:21.000 Well, here's the thing.
00:11:23.000 It's nothing this parliament can do!
00:11:30.000 Both sides being so polarized, they're going to kind of stick to the thing that they think is going to help give them, you know, a place to stand politically to be able to make a move or an action.
00:11:39.000 And because we're becoming highly, like, we've had this whole racial identity or anything that's been kind of popping up again, kind of like a counter to Black Lives Matter, I think you're seeing a tendency of the right to want to glom onto things that are quote-unquote pro-white.
00:11:54.000 That's my perspective.
00:11:55.000 I'm not necessarily against calling out when bad things happen.
00:12:00.000 But as an American citizen, I genuinely say this, my heart goes out to people that suffer anywhere in the world.
00:12:06.000 But as an American citizen, why should I care about a genocide that's happening in South Africa or a genocide that's happening anywhere if it's not American interest?
00:12:16.000 And I'll be honest, I really don't from, again, a strategic United States perspective.
00:12:22.000 I don't really care that much.
00:12:24.000 I agree with you about the pro-American part, but as a human being...
00:12:28.000 It kind of sucks to watch countries overseas.
00:12:31.000 Getting so many people killed as a human being, you know what I mean?
00:12:34.000 That's because the internet is forced you to now have access to all that information all the time.
00:12:39.000 Human beings were not designed for that.
00:12:40.000 I was actually going to say something very similar.
00:12:40.000 100%.
00:12:43.000 We aren't designed, we haven't evolved to be able to process the amount of suffering that we have access to view nowadays.
00:12:53.000 If you lived in a village or in some kind of small tribe or whatever, A thousand years ago, you might see a terrible, you might see a war, you might see a slaughter in your tribe, but you most likely wouldn't see that kind of stuff happen, like, on a date.
00:13:12.000 You'd be plenty familiar with death.
00:13:13.000 I don't want people to misunderstand what I'm saying, because there was a lot more death.
00:13:17.000 Babies died, you know, in birth.
00:13:19.000 Women died in childbirth.
00:13:21.000 You'd be more familiar with death, but that kind of horror of, like, slaughter of people en masse, that kind of stuff, you didn't see.
00:13:29.000 See if you were a tribal person so much, unless you ran into another tribe or went into war.
00:13:34.000 And so the phenomena of like slaughtering people is in the way that we see it today, where it's constantly fed to you through, you know, through the internet or even through television.
00:13:46.000 Like that wasn't the norm.
00:13:48.000 I do think it's worth pointing out or listening to the way that CNN kind of...
00:13:55.000 Kind of framed the interaction, and I think we're going to go ahead and play the video that Donald Trump actually played for the South African president.
00:14:02.000 So, are you going to run it?
00:14:05.000 His best diplomatic self to this meeting, but nothing could have prepared him for this multimedia ambush that President Trump laid out with video, with printed out news stories.
00:14:17.000 This was a laundry list of debunked conspiracy theories.
00:14:22.000 Some South Africans are telling me this is AfriForum propaganda.
00:14:26.000 AfriForum is a white Afrikaner lobby group that's considered a white nationalist organization by the Southern Poverty Law Center.
00:14:33.000 Everything, almost everything that President Trump said in the Oval Office is not true, was inaccurate, has been repeatedly debunked.
00:14:42.000 Yeah, I mean, look, there's a couple things that are worth pointing out.
00:14:48.000 First of all, there's the point that we started making, how this is always going to be framed as white supremacy, because that's what the left does.
00:15:03.000 The political organizations in South Africa that are calling for the death of the white farmers and calling to push out people that own property and stuff, they're all Marxists, and they're basing their...
00:15:20.000 Their politics are based largely on anti-colonial, you know, post-colonial theory and stuff like that.
00:15:26.000 We're going to go ahead and play the video or some of the video that Trump played in the Oval Office today so you can get a sense of what they were talking about.
00:15:35.000 There's nothing this parliament can do with or without you.
00:15:39.000 People are going to occupy land.
00:15:41.000 We require no permission from you, from the president, from no one.
00:15:47.000 We don't care.
00:15:48.000 We can do whatever you want to do.
00:15:49.000 Who are you to tell us whether we can occupy land or not?
00:15:52.000 We are going to occupy land.
00:15:54.000 South African, occupy land.
00:15:57.000 That's who we are.
00:15:58.000 Do whatever you want to do.
00:15:59.000 You can withdraw my membership from this useless parliament.
00:16:05.000 Yes, honorable member.
00:16:06.000 must never be scared to kill.
00:16:10.000 A revolution demands that at some point there must be killing because the killing is part of a revolutionary.
00:16:19.000 Okay, so that right there is straight out of the, what's the, if it's Franz Fannin's book, The Wretched of the Earth.
00:16:30.000 So Franz Fannin wrote a book about decolonialism called The Wretched of the Earth, and one of the main tenets of decolonizing an area is you have to be violent.
00:16:41.000 Violence is part of revolution.
00:16:44.000 It's part of decolonizing.
00:16:46.000 And you don't get to have decolonization without the violence.
00:16:52.000 Yeah, revolution, nothing less.
00:16:53.000 That's the mantra that's constantly spouted by these Marxists.
00:16:57.000 So earlier, like I said...
00:16:59.000 In the United States, we can frame things of like, why does the left glom onto this?
00:17:02.000 Why does the right glom onto this?
00:17:04.000 And you can kind of see those.
00:17:05.000 But when you look at a bigger global picture, you're right.
00:17:08.000 All of these movements are founded in Marxism, communism, an idea of having a collective organization of people that need to have a violent revolution to overthrow the existing structure, all of it, whether it's economic or even just the way that a government is formed.
00:17:25.000 You have to have the revolution.
00:17:27.000 And you see it all throughout Africa.
00:17:28.000 My father's from Sierra Leone, West Africa.
00:17:31.000 We had a civil war in the 90s, right?
00:17:33.000 And if you actually strip it down and boil it down, guess what happens?
00:17:37.000 You had a movement of Marxists or people that were more communist aligned, and that's what you continually have happen all throughout Africa.
00:17:45.000 It's not an issue of whether it's colonialism or decolonialism.
00:17:49.000 It's about Marxism.
00:17:50.000 It's about communism.
00:17:51.000 And that's the reason why 80 years after...
00:17:55.000 Basically, the British Empire left and moved away from Africa.
00:17:59.000 You still have the issues that you have because they want to institute a system that is anti-human.
00:18:05.000 Communism is anti-human.
00:18:07.000 You cannot strip people's property and rights away and redistribute it willy-nilly.
00:18:12.000 People just don't stand for it.
00:18:13.000 And so you're seeing this, and that's really what's happening.
00:18:16.000 So when you go back to initially what that reporter guy was saying from Nairobi, he was saying, oh, President Trump is lying.
00:18:21.000 He's pushing all these conspiracies.
00:18:24.000 That's their framing from a Marxist perspective is you have to say reality and truth that you see it is a lie.
00:18:30.000 Don't believe your lying eyes.
00:18:32.000 And that's what this all comes back down to is that this is like just communism and Marxism in a different flavor.
00:18:39.000 Yeah, so I'm gonna go back to some other stuff that they were saying on the video Shoot to kill Yamasa Kill the poor, the farmer Kill the poor, the farmer Brr, pa, pa Brr, pa, pa Shoot to kill Yamasa Kill the poor, the farmer Kill the
00:19:08.000 poor, the farmer The mayor of DA in PE is a white man.
00:19:16.000 So these people, when you want to hit them hard, go after a white man.
00:19:22.000 They feel a terrible pain because you have touched a white man.
00:19:29.000 Not because Mashaba and Soli will not be touched.
00:19:33.000 They will be touched.
00:19:34.000 Don Juan.
00:19:36.000 But we're starting with this whiteness.
00:19:38.000 We're cutting the throat of whiteness.
00:19:42.000 Yeah, so, I mean, the argument that this isn't about...
00:19:50.000 Racially motivated retribution.
00:19:52.000 I mean, I don't think that anyone can seriously make that argument.
00:19:55.000 Yeah, not in a sane world.
00:19:57.000 I mean, the way that the left always tries to frame it, right, is that racism can only flow one way.
00:20:01.000 If you're white, you're racist to other people, but if you're black...
00:20:05.000 Because of oppression or whatever, and especially in the case of South Africa, they say, well, because of apartheid.
00:20:09.000 We can't be racist.
00:20:11.000 We're just simply getting our get back.
00:20:12.000 And it's like, well, no, from a technical term, you are discriminating against people on the basis of their race.
00:20:17.000 You are being racist.
00:20:19.000 But yeah, it's what to me is the most fascinating.
00:20:21.000 It's dead giveaway.
00:20:23.000 He's wearing a red beret.
00:20:24.000 I mean, red beret, dead giveaway, man.
00:20:26.000 You're coming, bro.
00:20:27.000 You should also be very weary of the way in which much of that language has already crept into Western Marxist.
00:20:37.000 whether it's decolonizing math or destroying or eliminating whiteness.
00:20:42.000 The worst part is, is there's a lot of useful idiots in colleges who take the, who don't get the full perspective from the people that are teaching these courses to them until they've been fully radicalized.
00:20:54.000 And then by the time they try to explain to you what that means, they can't really understand or explain to you what it means to decolonize math out of them to other than to tell you that it's, Too white, right?
00:21:05.000 But the problem is the language goes the whole way up.
00:21:08.000 It's top-down.
00:21:09.000 That language works at the top of that discussion.
00:21:11.000 It works all the way to the bottom when you're talking about something like whether your college classes have enough of one race or another.
00:21:18.000 Yeah.
00:21:19.000 Look at what they've done to colleges that don't allow enough Asian students in because they test too high.
00:21:25.000 They don't care.
00:21:26.000 There are people that will make the argument that, oh, these are sophisticated ideas.
00:21:31.000 And part of the problem is when you present sophisticated ideas to unsophisticated people, you end up with things like, you know, more racism.
00:21:40.000 But actually the ideas are good.
00:21:42.000 It's just that they've been...
00:21:46.000 Given to people in a way that they don't fully understand the ideas.
00:21:50.000 And I think stuff like this kind of debunks that because at the end of the day, the bottom line of it is just take their stuff because they're a specific race.
00:22:03.000 Because of power dynamics, honestly.
00:22:05.000 I think the race is actually secondary to the...
00:22:08.000 When it comes to Marxism, race is secondary to it.
00:22:11.000 It happens to be in...
00:22:14.000 In South Africa, that the white people were the people in power and the black people have historically not been the people in power.
00:22:23.000 But I don't think that that's necessary in the overall situation.
00:22:31.000 But it is functionally that way, and I don't think that you can deny that.
00:22:38.000 Yeah, I mean, if you just think about it...
00:22:41.000 Leftism, communism is always reductionist.
00:22:43.000 So let's say that they were able to accomplish their great goal.
00:22:47.000 They were able to get rid of whiteness in South Africa and they had all the control and they kicked all the white people out or made them slaves or whatever their dream is, right?
00:22:55.000 They're just going to now focus on the next ethnic group that they feel has created an oppressor versus oppressed because that's the trueness of Marxism and communism is they will find a reason.
00:23:07.000 There are plenty of, again...
00:23:09.000 All throughout the globe, plenty of the same people that have killed other people that would be discernibly no different to me, but they would say, oh, well, this is this group?
00:23:17.000 Yeah, you know, they have all of the farming technology, so they're oppressing us.
00:23:22.000 Or this group over here, they're doing this.
00:23:24.000 I mean, you look all throughout human history, especially during Stalin, right?
00:23:29.000 Like starving out the people that...
00:23:31.000 I can't remember the ethnic group or whatever, but in Russia, like they started...
00:23:34.000 It wasn't ethnic, it was kulaks.
00:23:37.000 Yes, yes, the kulaks.
00:23:38.000 Before they decided that, before word had kind of got around and people realized that capitalism works.
00:23:44.000 Yeah, yeah.
00:23:45.000 And so exact, exact example.
00:23:47.000 That also happened in Cambodia.
00:23:50.000 So the whole race thing is a rouge.
00:23:53.000 The same with gender ideology.
00:23:55.000 It's all a ruse.
00:23:56.000 If you look, whatever they believe, and by they I'm talking about people that believe in this communist Marxist ideology, they will find their wedge.
00:24:04.000 If it's about the environment, they'll use the environment.
00:24:08.000 So none of those things actually matter in the grand scheme.
00:24:12.000 It's all about...
00:24:13.000 What can they use as a wedge to induce the revolution?
00:24:16.000 I don't know why you guys don't believe what he's saying.
00:24:20.000 He said they debunked it.
00:24:22.000 What people say on the streets, debunked.
00:24:25.000 What you see in the videos, debunked.
00:24:27.000 Just like they say about masks, debunked.
00:24:30.000 There's a lot of power to a lot of people about being told something by a guy in a suit.
00:24:35.000 Right.
00:24:36.000 Like, that's very powerful.
00:24:38.000 He seems like he knows a lot of things with that suit there.
00:24:40.000 He's got a nice suit on.
00:24:42.000 They've got some great computer graphics on there.
00:24:44.000 He seems like he knows what he's talking about.
00:24:46.000 That's unfortunate, but it's true.
00:24:48.000 Alright, so I think we should jump to this next...
00:24:53.000 This next story, from the Postmillennial, federal judge blocks Trump administration from removing criminal illegal immigrants to third-party nations, South Sudan.
00:25:03.000 Wow.
00:25:03.000 I think that's kind of hilarious, like the idea of just sending to South Sudan.
00:25:07.000 Let's go!
00:25:08.000 We'll get into it.
00:25:11.000 A federal judge has ordered the Trump administration to maintain custody of criminal illegal immigrants who were allegedly flown to South Sudan.
00:25:18.000 Judge Brian Murphy held an emergency hearing Tuesday and issued an order instructing the administration to maintain custody and control of class members currently being removed to South Sudan or to any other third country to ensure the practical feasibility of return if the court finds that such removals were unlawful.
00:25:36.000 At least a dozen migrants were reportedly deported to South Sudan this week, including illegal immigrants from Myanmar, Vietnam, and Mexico, despite a standing court order restricting removals to third countries.
00:25:48.000 Attorneys representing the migrants told the court that immigration authorities have sent people from various countries to Africa, potentially violating a prior ruling that guarantees migrants a meaningful opportunity to argue that deportation to a country other than their homeland would endanger their safety.
00:26:05.000 I'm all for sending people back to their countries of origin.
00:26:10.000 But if their countries of origin won't take them, we've talked about this, where are they supposed to go?
00:26:15.000 Personally, I think they should go to Gitmo.
00:26:18.000 Yeah, Gitmo's good.
00:26:19.000 Because technically it's U.S. territory.
00:26:23.000 There's an indefinite lease on that property.
00:26:27.000 And it's nice there.
00:26:29.000 It's warm.
00:26:30.000 They don't have to worry about keeping it cool or whatever.
00:26:34.000 That's why Trump wanted Greenland.
00:26:35.000 Maybe he just wanted to ship them all.
00:26:36.000 Yeah, he wanted to ship them all that.
00:26:37.000 Well, here's the deal, right?
00:26:39.000 Greenland is harder than the Caribbean, though, because you have to heat it.
00:26:42.000 You don't have to keep the Caribbean cold.
00:26:44.000 So here's the deal.
00:26:45.000 When you think about what Trump is doing here, at least the way that I perceive it, is he's throwing out these flyers, these kites, right?
00:26:53.000 Saying, what can we actually do?
00:26:55.000 In this specific case, these...
00:26:57.000 People that were sent to South Sudan were all convicted of very heinous crimes in the United States.
00:27:05.000 And their reason was pretty simple.
00:27:08.000 They said, we have a history of these countries not wanting to take them back.
00:27:12.000 So if you can imagine, if someone was convicted of a Terrible, horrible, awful crime.
00:27:17.000 And they're like, we're going to send them back to you, buddy.
00:27:19.000 You're like, no, we're good.
00:27:21.000 We don't want them.
00:27:22.000 And so by using this, going around this federal district judge, which, by the way, I agree with what has been said on the show before.
00:27:30.000 I think it's unconstitutional that these district judges are putting these injunctions that are universal.
00:27:36.000 I think that that's garbage nonsense.
00:27:37.000 So I'm glad that the Trump administration is defying this federal judge and saying, all right, here's this test case.
00:27:45.000 These terrible, awful people...
00:27:47.000 South Sudan said they would take them.
00:27:49.000 It's way less expensive than sending them to Gitmo.
00:27:52.000 I like the idea of Gitmo, but it's expensive to operate Gitmo.
00:27:56.000 So I like this because it's like, all right, your move now.
00:27:59.000 Are you going to beg to have convicted rapists and murderers sent back to American soil?
00:28:05.000 I mean, we just saw the story of the 11 people breaking out of jail, right?
00:28:08.000 In Louisiana.
00:28:09.000 I mean, hey, would you want those people back on the streets?
00:28:12.000 They're not even American citizens.
00:28:13.000 I just love the idea of what Trump's doing here.
00:28:15.000 I saw people were betting on the...
00:28:17.000 Order in which they're all being returned.
00:28:19.000 Like five of them have been caught.
00:28:21.000 Oh, you're talking about the...
00:28:22.000 Yeah, the New Orleans.
00:28:24.000 The New Orleans 11. South Sudan, basically, they...
00:28:29.000 Police spokesperson said if they're not South Sudan, they're going to be deported back to their country.
00:28:34.000 So we're going to send them there, who just had a huge famine back in 2023.
00:28:38.000 Millions displaced, and then they're going to send them back to where they came from.
00:28:42.000 I'm sending South Sudan.
00:28:43.000 I mean, I don't understand why with the point of that.
00:28:48.000 Why'd the administration send it to that country?
00:28:51.000 Scare tactics, maybe?
00:28:52.000 I mean, maybe.
00:28:52.000 You know, you're going to go to a place with no food?
00:28:54.000 Maybe.
00:28:54.000 I wouldn't be surprised if we found out that there was some type of agreement, some type of handshake, saying like, hey, we're going to send these resources over or you do this for us, which I'm all for.
00:29:03.000 I mean, again, this is the purview of the executive office.
00:29:06.000 And I think that's why I like what Trump and the admin is doing, is they're testing the bounds and limitations.
00:29:13.000 And I'm all for it, man.
00:29:14.000 At the end of the day...
00:29:15.000 People are here without permission, legally.
00:29:18.000 And actually, after they've committed heinous crimes on American soil, to argue that they should be able to stay here for some reason is absurd.
00:29:26.000 So I think that ultimately, this is going to have to go up to a higher court, Supreme Court.
00:29:30.000 But I think that the Trump administration's moves on this make perfect sense, and it's within their purview.
00:29:36.000 But the South Sudan thing, I think, is just to be...
00:29:41.000 It's kind of like they're holding—it's in a weird way.
00:29:43.000 It's like they're able to hold the country hostage in a way.
00:29:46.000 So Mexico can hold the country hostage by having violent offenders who came here illegally then commit crimes here and then not take them back.
00:29:54.000 And then you don't have any recourse because you've made it a political issue in your own country and there's no good answer to any of that.
00:30:01.000 Well, Yemen is one of the— Least safest countries in the world.
00:30:06.000 So we can just send them there.
00:30:07.000 Yemen?
00:30:08.000 Yes, that's what it says.
00:30:09.000 And 2024 ranked as the most unsafe country.
00:30:12.000 Scare them, yes.
00:30:12.000 Unsafe.
00:30:13.000 Unsafe.
00:30:14.000 Yeah, there's a lot of...
00:30:15.000 We've got to send them somewhere.
00:30:16.000 We'll see rebels going on.
00:30:17.000 I don't think that's going to work out.
00:30:19.000 Well, go home or go to Yemen.
00:30:22.000 What do you want?
00:30:22.000 The thing is that their countries of origin don't...
00:30:26.000 Don't want them.
00:30:27.000 That's what I mean.
00:30:27.000 They're likely criminals and they don't care.
00:30:29.000 Suck it up.
00:30:29.000 You're going to Yemen, bro.
00:30:31.000 I don't know that the Yemenis would allow us to land, so we'd have to launch them.
00:30:35.000 We'll teach them how to fly.
00:30:36.000 We'll give them parachutes.
00:30:37.000 We shoot missiles at the Yemenis regularly, so I think that they might get...
00:30:41.000 Killed on the descent, you know?
00:30:43.000 I just looked up the most dangerous one.
00:30:45.000 Maybe what happens is the CIA starts taking really, really bad American criminals and sending them over the border to other countries, and they'll commit crimes there, and then we won't take them back when they try to send them back to us.
00:30:58.000 And then we'll say, see how you like it.
00:30:58.000 You think we're not?
00:31:01.000 Yeah, I mean...
00:31:02.000 Like I said, I've said this a bunch of times, I don't care where they go at all.
00:31:06.000 Get them out.
00:31:07.000 If you're a criminal, get them out.
00:31:10.000 I don't care where we send them at all, but I do think that the best option is Gitmo.
00:31:18.000 We got like 30,000 there?
00:31:20.000 About 30,000?
00:31:20.000 Sorry, I interrupted.
00:31:21.000 How big is it?
00:31:22.000 I don't know what the capacity is.
00:31:23.000 I have no idea.
00:31:24.000 This is also an issue to hold up any type of policymaking in America because of the kind of suicidal empathy of liberalism has now created an issue where the average person, and remember, like half this country doesn't vote anyways and doesn't pay super close attention to politics, and they look at something like this and they say, Trump is sending people to Sudan who aren't from Sudan, and it looks awful to people that don't understand what's going on.
00:31:51.000 So it is a way, in effect, to hold the country hostage by not allowing you to deport people who have proven themselves to be violent or a threat to the country.
00:32:01.000 Yeah.
00:32:01.000 I mean, look, society—the U.S. has the right to say, look, you— You are not just breaking our laws, but you are causing problems in our society.
00:32:10.000 You're violent.
00:32:11.000 You don't want to play by the rules.
00:32:12.000 You make it clear.
00:32:13.000 You look at the way that a lot of these immigrants, particularly the gang members, the way that they behave, the way that they flip off the camera when they get arrested, they swear that they're not going to be, you know, they're like, I'll be out and I'm going to blah, blah, blah.
00:32:25.000 They don't have any kind of desire for rehabilitation.
00:32:30.000 It's always just like, oh, when I get out, I'm going to do this and I'm going to do that.
00:32:34.000 You've got to do something with them, and like I said, I don't care where they go, but I think that, you know, forever in jail is perfectly fine.
00:32:44.000 Like, you can't let these people out if they're not, if they're, you know...
00:32:48.000 If they're swearing that they're going to continue to commit crimes and they're not going to do—they don't want to assimilate and they're going to keep doing this and that, you can't do anything with these people.
00:33:00.000 Yeah, and again, I think it's important for people to understand, though, that in this specific case, they're sending people that have already been convicted of heinous crimes in the United States.
00:33:09.000 And just from a functional standpoint, you send them back to their home country that doesn't want to take them, they're just going to release them, and then they're going to come back in the United States.
00:33:18.000 And then they're going to do the thing.
00:33:19.000 And again, long term, under this administration, they're not coming back to the United States very easily.
00:33:24.000 But there are people that still get through the border.
00:33:26.000 I know the numbers are way, way, way, way down, like 95% or whatever, but people still get over.
00:33:31.000 So it's like, why would we take someone that was...
00:33:34.000 Keep them on American soil and spend American dollars when we can just send them over somewhere else.
00:33:39.000 And that's, I think, what the administration's mindset is, is let's see how this can really play out that if there's an appetite by the American people, they say, yeah, we are supportive of this.
00:33:49.000 I think that we continue to do it more.
00:33:51.000 But if not, then we have to find other creative solutions.
00:33:53.000 I got a great idea.
00:33:55.000 You know how they're crying about...
00:33:57.000 The immigrants not doing the strawberries or picking the farms, we can put them in jails, of course, but during the day they can pick the farms and get the strawberries.
00:34:06.000 We put chains on their legs and bring back the chain gangs?
00:34:09.000 I don't know, man.
00:34:09.000 I just don't trust them.
00:34:09.000 Yeah.
00:34:10.000 It's all two problems at once.
00:34:11.000 Yeah, I just don't trust them.
00:34:13.000 I'd rather just get them out of here and hopefully, again, get some capitulation by some of these other nations.
00:34:18.000 I don't think people that are...
00:34:19.000 I think that the people that get to go into those jobs, like those people generally are not...
00:34:26.000 Yeah, they're low flight risk.
00:34:26.000 Low flight risk and all that.
00:34:27.000 They're not likely...
00:34:28.000 George Santos will go there.
00:34:31.000 George Santos should be free.
00:34:33.000 That's true.
00:34:34.000 He's way too funny.
00:34:35.000 The Republicans in Congress, by booting him, they made a terrible move.
00:34:39.000 They gave up a seat.
00:34:41.000 They should be ashamed of themselves.
00:34:43.000 They're all awful anyways.
00:34:45.000 But he did actually do what he was convicted of, right?
00:34:45.000 I hate almost...
00:34:48.000 Democrats wouldn't.
00:34:49.000 He was a naughty boy.
00:34:50.000 I mean, I'm bipartisan when it comes to scummy politicians.
00:34:54.000 I don't really care what happens to anybody.
00:34:55.000 No, I'm straight up whatever's going to make my side win now.
00:35:00.000 We're at that point.
00:35:01.000 I don't care.
00:35:02.000 I don't care.
00:35:03.000 The left literally embraced communists.
00:35:07.000 They've embraced leftists that will destroy the country.
00:35:09.000 So whatever we need to do to make sure that they lose.
00:35:13.000 Well, you better have gotten one of his cameos.
00:35:15.000 He had a cameo for a while.
00:35:16.000 You should have paid for it.
00:35:18.000 Happy birthday, Phil.
00:35:19.000 Cameo from George Sanderson.
00:35:21.000 If he's still got one in jail, I'll actually, I'll buy that for you.
00:35:21.000 I don't need that.
00:35:24.000 Hey, go check it out.
00:35:25.000 Great for the show.
00:35:26.000 Good content.
00:35:27.000 That would be hilarious.
00:35:28.000 Someone should get it.
00:35:29.000 Someone in the viewing audience should get a video from George Santos.
00:35:34.000 The day you have your kid, you're going to get a video from George Santos.
00:35:38.000 Oh, there you go.
00:35:40.000 Congratulations to the world, little baby.
00:35:42.000 That might be terrible.
00:35:42.000 That might be terrible.
00:35:45.000 So what do you guys think?
00:35:46.000 Do we just send them off to South Sudan and hope that they take them or hope they can stay or what?
00:35:52.000 Yeah, I mean, I think, again...
00:35:55.000 There is some type of agreement.
00:35:56.000 I don't think we're just going in under cover of night and just randomly dropping them off somewhere.
00:36:01.000 If we were, I'd still actually be in favor of that.
00:36:03.000 But I think that there's some type of agreement of like, hey, we're going to bring these people over here.
00:36:08.000 And I imagine, because this is how it went with El Salvador.
00:36:12.000 It wasn't just like, oh, we'll take them for free.
00:36:17.000 There's something in the deal for them.
00:36:19.000 And one of the good things is that it helps strengthen our relationship with them.
00:36:24.000 I'm for it, man.
00:36:26.000 I say send more of them, especially, again, unequivocal people that have been convicted in the United States for horrendous crimes.
00:36:34.000 Send them all, man.
00:36:35.000 Get them out of here.
00:36:37.000 Yeah.
00:36:37.000 Alright, I think we're going to jump to this next story here.
00:36:41.000 Venezuelan man arrested after posing as a teen to enroll in Ohio High School.
00:36:48.000 Illegal immigrant Anthony Labrador Sierra charged with forgery after enrolling at Perrysburg High School as a 16-year-old student.
00:36:57.000 Now, I don't think this is the guy.
00:36:59.000 I think this is the guy.
00:37:00.000 It's that guy with the blonde hair, yeah.
00:37:02.000 I mean, maybe he could pass for 16, but he's got a lot of dirt on his lip for 16. Anyways, a 24-year-old illegal immigrant from Venezuela was arrested in Perrysburg, Ohio, after he allegedly enrolled in a public high school using fraudulent documents.
00:37:16.000 Court records show that 24-year-old Anthony Emanuel Labrador Sierra has been charged with forgery and is being held on $50,000 bond.
00:37:26.000 The Perrysburg Police Department said it was contacted by the Perrysburg local schools on Monday about possible fraudulent activity involving one of its students.
00:37:34.000 After a preliminary investigation, a fraud charge was established and handed over to the department's detectives for further investigation.
00:37:43.000 Detectives worked with U.S. Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Labrador?
00:37:51.000 Yes, that's right.
00:37:52.000 It was a 24-year-old from Venezuela.
00:37:54.000 Investigators also learned Labrador Sierra used fraudulent documents to enroll in Perrysburg School and was posing as a 16-year-old student.
00:38:01.000 I mean, is that all they say about him, huh?
00:38:05.000 He's not...
00:38:06.000 You know how they say that when people come to this country and they don't know English, they'll watch American movies?
00:38:10.000 Maybe the only movie that worked was Billy Madison.
00:38:13.000 He watched it over and over and over again.
00:38:16.000 He's like, this is how I'm going to do it.
00:38:19.000 I'm just going to go to high school.
00:38:20.000 I was going to say this is Hollywood's fault.
00:38:22.000 This was Hollywood's fault for 30 years of movies where high schoolers are played by dudes in their late 20s and early 30s.
00:38:29.000 Here's what's even a little bit more horrifying.
00:38:31.000 It is kind of funny when you think about it.
00:38:33.000 How did no one know?
00:38:35.000 Hopefully he...
00:38:35.000 If he didn't have contact with any of the females that were children there, that would be horrifying.
00:38:41.000 But also, can I just point out, there's no way that that's his real name.
00:38:47.000 Labrador Sierra?
00:38:48.000 Like, that just sounds fake.
00:38:51.000 He's just trying to, he's just got a dare, and he's just trying to see how long he can get away with it.
00:38:55.000 It's insane.
00:38:56.000 But yeah, I mean, listen.
00:38:58.000 This entire idea that he is posing as a kid, there's a lot more questions.
00:39:03.000 Of actually what's happening in our school system.
00:39:05.000 Because we've had teachers back in Minnesota, Minneapolis.
00:39:09.000 Minneapolis Public School Teachers Union came out and said, basically, we're going to hide criminal aliens from ICE and everything like that.
00:39:15.000 They're 100% saying that that's what they're going to do.
00:39:18.000 I wonder if they did the same here.
00:39:21.000 Were there certain teachers that knew and they were like, okay, we're just going to let him pose?
00:39:26.000 Because like...
00:39:27.000 If he's acting as a 16-year-old, who was acting as an adult?
00:39:31.000 Does he have more people that came in?
00:39:34.000 Because you can't just show up at 16 and be like, I'm registering for school.
00:39:37.000 I'm by myself.
00:39:39.000 I think there's going to be a couple of questions.
00:39:41.000 He had a host family?
00:39:42.000 And basically his baby mama, Evelyn Camacho, contacted the Hulse family on March 14, 2025, saying like, yo, this guy's a 25-year-old and he's a father of my child.
00:39:51.000 There you go.
00:39:52.000 And then she gave documentation to the family and they're like, okay, this guy's nice.
00:39:54.000 He's not just a fraud, he's a deadbeat dad.
00:39:57.000 How did he get to the Hulse family?
00:39:57.000 That's a good one.
00:39:59.000 This is what drives me crazy.
00:40:01.000 So this guy was able to claim, like in the article here, he says he claimed fake asylum.
00:40:07.000 Basically, because he's Venezuelan.
00:40:09.000 So he claims asylum from all the Communist Party.
00:40:12.000 All this stuff that's going on, they're saying, oh, it's super dangerous for me to live in Venezuela.
00:40:15.000 But the issue, you talked about this earlier, when you were talking about Americans, why should Americans care about this?
00:40:19.000 I understand that, but Americans generally care for freedom.
00:40:23.000 Like Raymond said, you don't want people to die and everything like that.
00:40:27.000 These are fake asylees.
00:40:28.000 He's not claiming asylum from anything.
00:40:30.000 We are claiming asylum from a genocide that maybe is not happening right now, but it's...
00:40:35.000 We're getting pretty close when you have all these stadium people talking about, oh, we must go kill the boy.
00:40:40.000 We must go make sure every one of them dies.
00:40:43.000 It's crazy that that's even, like, if you put that on YouTube, it's like, oh, it's bad.
00:40:47.000 It's like, okay, well, then how are we supposed to say, like, yo, there are stadiums of people that want to kill all of us.
00:40:47.000 You can't say that.
00:40:51.000 And they may not have reached critical mass yet for it to be genocide.
00:40:55.000 It's like, I agree with that.
00:40:56.000 Maybe that's not the thing, but it's like, I don't want to just let it happen.
00:40:59.000 I'm not just going to stand idly by why I, as an American, coming from that country, I'm like, oh, yeah, I'm just going to let all these people die.
00:41:03.000 That would be crazy if I were.
00:41:04.000 It 100% shows, though, that our asylum system is so broken.
00:41:09.000 And whenever someone just makes, again, a fake claim, I'm glad at least the article reported that.
00:41:14.000 Like, I mean, Fox News, they do okay from time to time.
00:41:17.000 But yeah, I mean, this is happening for so many people.
00:41:20.000 So like I said, when you start to dig deeper, you ask, well, who approached the host family?
00:41:25.000 Like, there has to be multiple people involved in this.
00:41:28.000 But it's, like you said to your point, though, is like there are actual...
00:41:32.000 If we as American people say we do have an asylum system, I think I'm...
00:41:38.000 I'm at this table saying, I think we should.
00:41:41.000 I like the idea that if there are people that truly are suffering because God has blessed this great nation with more, that there should be a process to be able to allow us to be able to vet those people.
00:41:52.000 But the way that the last administration, Biden, was using it, it's just insane.
00:41:55.000 It's just like mass, like, oh, all of you are asylee seekers.
00:41:59.000 It's just like, that's insane.
00:42:00.000 I mean, that's a big part of the problem is the fact that they've abused the system.
00:42:05.000 And I'm talking about the administration, not the...
00:42:07.000 people that have come here, the administration abused the system so much that the American people are just fed up with it.
00:42:13.000 I just saw a poll today, even after all of the, you know, Maryland man and all of the left using the media to do their best to try to make all of the people that the Trump administration has been deporting, who are almost all criminals now, they're starting with the criminals, they're almost all hardened criminals, bad people.
00:42:35.000 The left has been trying to cast them as innocent victims and normal people that are just getting...
00:42:41.000 You know, brutalized by the Trump administration, even after all that, 66% of the American population, two-thirds of the people say, we want deportations.
00:42:51.000 Not, we want, we want to, you know, they're aware that the influx has stopped.
00:42:56.000 They're aware that the border is actually under control.
00:42:58.000 And they still want deportations.
00:43:02.000 This is not a situation where the American people are just going to be like, no, you know what, it's fine.
00:43:09.000 I really hope that that shows at the polls when it comes time for the votes in 2028.
00:43:18.000 You need to make sure that if Congress does not do the things necessary to deport people, that people that are up for re-election lose their seats.
00:43:31.000 They should be primaried.
00:43:32.000 They should lose their seats.
00:43:34.000 Democrats should...
00:43:36.000 Definitely lose their seats to whoever the Republican is because the Democrats are in lockstep and doing everything they can to defend murderers and rapists.
00:43:46.000 Also think about how deep the ideological rot goes for the teachers.
00:43:51.000 If you really think about it, you were talking earlier about the idea that teachers were shielding them from deportation or shielding them from ICE.
00:43:59.000 So you're taking somebody who you can't confirm any real facts about somebody Misrepresented themselves to you.
00:44:07.000 Put them around children and then want to protect them.
00:44:10.000 The kids should be your first and foremost, the thing that you care about the most, the thing that you protect the most.
00:44:16.000 Your children, the kids that you're in charge of taking care of while they're in your school, and they don't put them above somebody who has been misrepresented, is already a criminal because they're here illegally, and you're choosing them over the safety of the children in the school.
00:44:33.000 Yes, because...
00:44:34.000 I think the left has this huge blind spot and I always try and like delineate.
00:44:39.000 There's like the rank and file people that are like default Democrat left and then there's the people that are organizing that are part of the actual structure of the left.
00:44:47.000 Those that are organizing that are part of the structure, the majority of them understand that they have political goals and aims, and they know that they're not popular, so they always have to obscure and make things seem like they're not what they are.
00:44:59.000 Versus the average rank-and-file Democrat or person on the left, they just believe that, oh, someone comes to this country, it's because they want a better life.
00:45:08.000 Who are we to say that we shouldn't give them a better life?
00:45:10.000 And I think a lot of the teachers that are part of these teachers' unions that are happening all across America are the same thing.
00:45:16.000 They're like, why wouldn't we protect this family?
00:45:20.000 They're just here for a better life.
00:45:21.000 But they don't...
00:45:22.000 We don't recognize or even acknowledge that there are bad faith actors.
00:45:26.000 Evil exists.
00:45:27.000 There are people that are doing horrifying things.
00:45:29.000 And if we don't have a system that can even check that, you're actually not helping anything.
00:45:34.000 All you're doing is hurting the system.
00:45:36.000 Dude, if you look right here on the same article, you can see where it says the federal judge in San Francisco ordered the Department of Homeland Security to continue TPS status for Venezuela, even though it was said to not do it.
00:45:46.000 They disagreed with it numerous times.
00:45:48.000 It's like you said.
00:45:50.000 What are we supposed to do unless we start to...
00:45:53.000 At a certain point, for me, it's like, what are we going to do until we gut the system?
00:45:56.000 One of my friends who's like a lefty friend of mine in D.C. was like, I'm surprised.
00:46:01.000 He's recently just been having this hard Red Bull moment where he's like, well, I don't care who gets rid of the corruption and the nonsense.
00:46:06.000 It's like, someone has to do it.
00:46:09.000 If you believe in the government, you believe in the system at all, you're going to say, like, someone has to do it, you know?
00:46:13.000 So, yeah, I was going to call him a leftist.
00:46:15.000 He's, like, default them, but, you know, the same thing.
00:46:18.000 He's only realizing now that, like, oh, they lied to him about the shots.
00:46:22.000 Oh, they lied to him about all this stuff, and he's, like, realizing what...
00:46:25.000 He's having a Red Bull moment.
00:46:26.000 He's just having it happen, and he's kind of being forced by all this stuff, but...
00:46:28.000 I feel like that's something that I come back to a lot on this show, because so much of what we talk about is so deep in the weeds with politics that it's obfuscated by the fact that, look, a large...
00:46:39.000 You call them default Democrat.
00:46:41.000 I call it more just default liberalism in this country, which is like, maybe they vote, maybe they don't, but they see that, and it goes back to what I said about suicidal empathy, which is that being raised in America, you are raised to understand that you live in the greatest country on Earth.
00:46:56.000 You are among the most economically and socially privileged people on the planet.
00:47:01.000 It doesn't matter what race you are.
00:47:03.000 You were born into one of the most amazing places you could ever be from.
00:47:07.000 The problem is that's been twisted by Marxists, by communists, to be a bad thing that they have to then go against their own self-interest to prove that they are as good as they need to be to fit in within what society believes to be acceptable for Americans to believe.
00:47:23.000 You are not allowed to put your own self-interest ahead of anything else in that belief system.
00:47:29.000 It's because you were born here.
00:47:30.000 It's because you were born here.
00:47:31.000 Now, there's a difference.
00:47:32.000 Me and Philip talked endlessly about the idea that one of the things— And that kind of separates a lot of people who fall on conservative lines more than anything else, whereas people on the left who do fall into that category of suicidal empathy believe that there is one thing that can fix everything, And that's the head of their government.
00:47:56.000 And when it's not them in power, it's all about the revolution.
00:48:00.000 When they are in power, it's a weapon that is wielded against everyone else.
00:48:05.000 And the people who hold it up are those oftentimes.
00:48:22.000 And it's infuriating to see because you want to make them see it, but you can't.
00:48:26.000 They have to find their way to that answer on their own.
00:48:28.000 And most people won't be able to see it until it actually affects them or someone they know.
00:48:34.000 They'll feel like, oh, the government's just doing this because it's the right thing.
00:48:41.000 You know, the argument about, you know, free speech, like, there's the argument, oh, you have to be able to say whatever you want, etc., etc., and then when people are deported because they're saying things that are anti-American, they're, like, against America, it's like, well, he should have his free speech, etc., etc., and it's like, look, it's not a criminal penalty.
00:49:00.000 Being deported is not criminal penalty.
00:49:03.000 It's not like you're being prosecuted by the state.
00:49:06.000 The state can just say, oh, you don't get to stay.
00:49:10.000 So sewing that kind of unrest has actual, tangible, real world ramifications, and it tends to be to hurt the fabric of the country, the people that make up the country start to be.
00:49:25.000 And I think that maybe there are problems that we can't fix and maybe we do have to have some kind of significant change.
00:49:34.000 Maybe violence is acceptable and these ideas start creeping around.
00:49:37.000 I think that the left is susceptible to groupthink because they just have a tendency to want to believe in like this collective action thing, right?
00:49:45.000 And I think that's why people that end up sorting themselves into Democrat or liberal versus right or conservative is because they just have a tendency.
00:49:52.000 They're like, oh, I'm part of the collective group.
00:49:53.000 And the left, again, the folks that I would say are part of the actual structure of making policy, they understand that.
00:50:00.000 That's why they pound these narratives into your brain constantly over and over again talking.
00:50:07.000 Literally, we had our local newspaper, Minneapolis, the Star Tribune, they wrote an article about a Twin Cities man who's an Ecuadorian national who crashed while drinking and driving and killed an American citizen and ICE finally picked him up.
00:50:23.000 But that's what happens with the left is that those that are in power use this Desire and tendency of the left to be collective to lie and trick them.
00:50:32.000 And like you said already, it's until it's at their door that it has this very jarring cognitive dissonant moment where it's like, wait, wait, wait.
00:50:40.000 All these things that I've been told are not true.
00:50:42.000 And that's when you have like this great awakening.
00:50:44.000 And that's honestly what the mega movement is full of.
00:50:46.000 A bunch of people that used to be on the left and their values really haven't changed.
00:50:50.000 It's just they're open to seeing, oh, the things that I was being lied to just aren't true.
00:50:55.000 Phil, before you move on to the crazy ladies.
00:50:57.000 White pill moment is that still, even though with all the Maryland man stories, the Twin City man stories, all the lies from the media trying to get compassion for these criminal people, still 66% of America are like, yeah, get them to F. Well, yeah, I mean, it was popular before the election.
00:51:12.000 It's the major reason why Donald Trump was elected.
00:51:15.000 They're not falling for the media lies.
00:51:16.000 And it is good that people are saying, I don't care that you're saying this about these people, or I don't care that these people are going to have hardship.
00:51:27.000 Like, people have hardships.
00:51:28.000 But we can't allow 20 million people that are here illegally to stay in our country.
00:51:34.000 It's also astroturfed.
00:51:35.000 Remember, Obama did campaign on illegal immigration, and that was a very popular idea for both sides for a long time.
00:51:43.000 And it wasn't until 2016 came around that that became something that became a no-go on the left.
00:51:48.000 You know, from 2016 until well into 2020, you would hear the leftists that were protesting Donald Trump or what have you.
00:51:55.000 They were protesting and saying things like no, no ice, no wall, no USA at all.
00:52:00.000 People heard that and they're like, oh, there are people in this country that don't even want the U.S. to exist.
00:52:06.000 And part of their method to dissolve the United States is to dissolve the borders.
00:52:12.000 So that way there's no delineation between Americans and people from other countries.
00:52:16.000 There's one thing that I want to talk about, the poll that that search put into.
00:52:21.000 It's 51-49.
00:52:25.000 Where do we send them back to?
00:52:26.000 Gitmo or back home to DC?
00:52:28.000 49% to Gitmo and 51% back home, I don't care where.
00:52:34.000 But the point is...
00:52:37.000 Their home countries don't want them.
00:52:39.000 So skip the question.
00:52:41.000 Just send them all to Gitmo.
00:52:43.000 One more thing, if you want to point out to what we were talking about just a little bit ago about those kind of good-hearted liberals who don't really understand their language is like when they have the sign in their yard that says no human being is illegal.
00:52:56.000 And you understand that that is a slogan.
00:52:59.000 It's a platitude.
00:53:00.000 It means absolutely nothing.
00:53:01.000 And if it was at their doorstep, they would absolutely understand what it means.
00:53:05.000 But they're not thinking.
00:53:06.000 That deeply about it.
00:53:07.000 So again, I think that a lot of times we get lost in the weeds and you kind of over-discuss something that they're just not ready to have a conversation about at all.
00:53:14.000 Martha Vineyard is a perfect example.
00:53:17.000 That's worse.
00:53:18.000 I think they actually know and they're just really awful.
00:53:21.000 That's just a nindy.
00:53:24.000 That's just a not in my backyard.
00:53:25.000 Alright, we're going to jump to this story.
00:53:26.000 The Post Millennial is reporting Tennessee Dems state rep brags about interfering in ICE operations.
00:53:33.000 We got our girl squad and we're bullying the ICE vehicles and state troopers, Rep.
00:53:38.000 Ben said in the video.
00:53:39.000 I can't wait to watch this.
00:53:40.000 Democratic Tennessee state representative garnered sharp criticism on Tuesday after uploading a video of herself attempting to interfere with a recent U.S. immigration and customs operation near Nashville.
00:53:53.000 In the video, Rep.
00:53:55.000 Afton Ben, Democrat from Nashville, can be observed following federal and state law enforcement officers in a vehicle where Ben stated she had been bullying ICE agents and Tennessee Highway Patrol officers in an effort to thwart a May 9th immigration enforcement operation in Madison, Tennessee.
00:54:12.000 This came while ICE had been conducting a week-long targeted immigration enforcement operation to take on significant public safety threats, which resulted in 196 people.
00:54:22.000 So clearly she did a terrible job.
00:54:25.000 This is Nashville State Representative Afton Ben.
00:54:29.000 She posted in a 15-minute video of her and a friend stalking the Tennessee Highway Patrol as they carried out official duties.
00:54:36.000 Openly admitting they were trying to stall law enforcement from stopping illegal aliens, wrote Republican Tennessee Congressman Andy Ogles on X, who was quick to condemn the rep's actions.
00:54:47.000 Let's be clear, the mayor of Nashville is enabling Nashville liberals to actively obstruct ICE and lawful...
00:54:53.000 Law enforcement operations.
00:54:54.000 This isn't just reckless.
00:54:56.000 It's aiding and abetting.
00:54:57.000 And yes, it is.
00:54:58.000 Let's watch her doing a crime on the internet.
00:55:02.000 Okay, this is great.
00:55:03.000 We've got our girl squad and we're bullying the ICE vehicles and state troopers.
00:55:07.000 So this is like, this is a win.
00:55:10.000 She has a bunch of caps.
00:55:11.000 Your favorite blonde state rep.
00:55:14.000 Her phone's always at 1%.
00:55:16.000 She's drunk.
00:55:17.000 I think my superlative is most likely to always have her phone at 1%.
00:55:19.000 At least give her a breathalyzer.
00:55:22.000 Oh, yeah, true.
00:55:23.000 She's got the SSRIs.
00:55:24.000 Okay, so we're waiting for my phone to charge.
00:55:27.000 Let me send this to Emily.
00:55:29.000 There we go.
00:55:30.000 Oh, she's got to be sauced up.
00:55:31.000 Yeah, she's totally hammered.
00:55:33.000 We live in deep, young, serious times.
00:55:37.000 Thankfully, she's only a state rep.
00:55:40.000 So they're probably running our information.
00:55:43.000 Nikki, tell us what's transpired tonight.
00:55:46.000 Margaritas.
00:55:48.000 Margaritas and Revolution.
00:55:50.000 I did not put makeup on because this was my plan.
00:55:53.000 Okay, then I'll put it back.
00:55:54.000 No, I mean, it's fine.
00:55:55.000 I've already seen it.
00:55:57.000 We found the ice and the THP people and then we followed them to the gas station and I took their spot at the gas station so I think that made them a little upset and then I tried to go to the bathroom but the gas station people would not let me go.
00:56:16.000 I told them I really had to.
00:56:18.000 And then when I got out, they were leaving.
00:56:21.000 So I left too.
00:56:23.000 And then they pulled into another parking lot.
00:56:25.000 And when I pulled into the other parking lot behind them, then they flipped their lights to pull us over and accused me of running around lights.
00:56:35.000 So there we are.
00:56:36.000 Tomato, tomato.
00:56:38.000 Help.
00:56:39.000 Okay, why do you think that they came up to my side, the State Trooper came up to my side of the window and not Nikki's window?
00:56:45.000 Why do you think that happened?
00:56:47.000 Also, she did not have to give her ID.
00:56:49.000 Am I correct?
00:56:50.000 I know I'm correct.
00:56:51.000 She's a girl boss.
00:56:53.000 So one, why do you think that the State Trooper came up to my window, not Nikki's?
00:56:56.000 Are you on the highway?
00:56:57.000 He asked for my ID and Nikki said that that wasn't...
00:57:01.000 And he said it's a lawful order.
00:57:03.000 It's a lawful order.
00:57:05.000 I'm pretty sure it is.
00:57:06.000 Okay, so...
00:57:08.000 So that's a crime.
00:57:10.000 Yep.
00:57:11.000 And she admitted that she's trying to inhibit the operations of ICE.
00:57:18.000 Her name is Afton with a Y. You don't need to take her seriously.
00:57:22.000 No, we need to take her seriously and throw her in jail.
00:57:25.000 Lock her up, man.
00:57:26.000 The seriousness is so that way you can...
00:57:30.000 Put her in jail.
00:57:31.000 If you don't take her seriously and say, oh, aren't you cute?
00:57:34.000 And pat her on the head and send her on the way.
00:57:35.000 Look at you being a little resistant.
00:57:37.000 Throw her in jail.
00:57:37.000 Throw her in jail.
00:57:39.000 Lock her up.
00:57:39.000 So a couple of things.
00:57:41.000 One, 100% because she's not driving.
00:57:43.000 So I retract.
00:57:44.000 You don't have to give her a breath alive.
00:57:45.000 She's not driving.
00:57:46.000 So at least she's drinking responsibly because she's in the passenger.
00:57:50.000 Number two, though.
00:57:51.000 Yeah.
00:57:52.000 Lock her up, man.
00:57:53.000 She's admitting that she's trying to obstruct them and even saying the things that she did.
00:57:58.000 Because when the story first came across, I was like, maybe she's just doing one of these things where she's saying she did it.
00:58:03.000 But in reality, she didn't.
00:58:06.000 And she's trying to be like, whatever, online activist warrior.
00:58:10.000 But, yeah, it seems like they actually are admitting to the things that they did.
00:58:14.000 Like, did it seem like they had a notebook that had some notes?
00:58:17.000 Like, the driver of the car was, like, referring to something that was written down or she was looking at something.
00:58:22.000 But, yeah, I say in this case, when someone openly, especially as an elected official, says that they are trying to impede with immigration services, lock them up.
00:58:34.000 This lady doesn't tip her Uber driver or her Uber Eats driver.
00:58:39.000 How can you tell?
00:58:42.000 You can just tell.
00:58:43.000 You can tell.
00:58:43.000 You can tell.
00:58:44.000 I'm super, you know, I love American and American people, but like Phil said, at some point we want to win back our country, so send her to South Sudan.
00:58:57.000 Well, she is an American citizen, and the process that is due to her is actually different than the process due to criminal aliens.
00:59:04.000 Yeah, I mean, I want to throw her in jail just for that first line of, we got our girl squad.
00:59:09.000 I'm sure she's got a coffee cup that says, keep calm and obstruct ice.
00:59:13.000 Something like that.
00:59:14.000 I bet she has a TikTok video of what is it?
00:59:17.000 What was it called?
00:59:19.000 Icy Boots.
00:59:20.000 Icy New Boots or whatever that trend was.
00:59:22.000 When they were like posting like, oh, this is where ICE is going to be and we're going to obstruct them.
00:59:27.000 And then people were making like violent threats towards ICE agents.
00:59:31.000 But I also do want to know whose vehicle that was.
00:59:34.000 Because did you see that it was custom interior, all pink?
00:59:37.000 Yeah, her friend had pink hair too.
00:59:39.000 Yeah, so it could be either one.
00:59:40.000 I hope it's hers though.
00:59:41.000 Like, you know she's made like a get ready with...
00:59:44.000 I'm about to go and stage a revolution.
00:59:47.000 Yeah, I see new boots, man.
00:59:49.000 You say take them seriously and I understand what you're saying, but when I see stuff like this, it's so satirical in a way that even movies couldn't have predicted.
00:59:58.000 Idiocracy probably couldn't even have predicted just how stupid things would be.
01:00:02.000 And also, not to be outdone, is the fact that these are the people who talk about no one is above the law and when they get caught doing something they're not supposed to do, they'll say that it's the Gestapo and it's the secret police and they're out to get them.
01:00:16.000 Committing crimes.
01:00:17.000 I'm caught between apathy, exhaustion, and annoyance.
01:00:23.000 Streaming crimes onto the internet.
01:00:25.000 Very proudly committing crimes.
01:00:28.000 And then again, just like you said, we'll say, oh, you know, it's the Gestapo and Trump's Stasi are out picking up people.
01:00:37.000 And it's like, well...
01:00:38.000 You're literally proud of the fact that you're committing crimes.
01:00:41.000 And to be honest with you, when they do get arrested, they're proud of that too because we do live in a civilized country where nothing significant is going to happen.
01:00:48.000 So she's actually going to be able to use this, put it on her Instagram, and it'll give her leftist bona fides and she will be able to be like, look at me, I actually went and did something.
01:00:59.000 Yeah, a lot of lefties, girl boss types are going to watch this.
01:01:03.000 She's going to get a lot of likes and a lot of views and everyone's going to do the same.
01:01:06.000 They're all going to follow the trend.
01:01:07.000 So the good people of Nashville are picking up the tab on her antidepressants in Merlot.
01:01:13.000 More than likely.
01:01:13.000 Oh, guaranteed they are.
01:01:15.000 In a more serious tone, I do think that something has to be done when, again, the level of someone that is in the know, they are a lawmaker in Tennessee, and they're willfully breaking, with intention, federal law, you have to throw the hammer on them.
01:01:33.000 They're going to get their badge that they're a freedom fighter.
01:01:33.000 And yeah, you know what?
01:01:36.000 But I hope that they actually press the issue and charge her with the highest crime possible.
01:01:40.000 And I would love to see her being purplocked and being like, it wasn't worth it.
01:01:44.000 I should have just served the people that elected me versus people that are here without permission.
01:01:49.000 And let's be very clear about this.
01:01:52.000 ICE has been going after, specifically, people that have been convicted of horrendous crimes.
01:01:58.000 So when they're blocking, did you block a rapist from being picked up?
01:02:02.000 Or someone that killed multiple people?
01:02:05.000 Like, who was it that you're blocking?
01:02:07.000 And so it would be funny to go and look at the 196, I think that's what the number is reported, and see which kind of people did they pick up.
01:02:14.000 And then for her to be like, oh, these are the people that I didn't want to get taken off the streets of the city that I'm serving the people of.
01:02:21.000 But her party, she is virtue signaling to the revolutionaries who want that, who want her to prevent rapists from being incarcerated or removed or the useful idiots who just think that everybody's here for a better life and don't understand that the people that are being deported right now are violent criminals.
01:02:38.000 Yeah, I mean, look, that was in the first paragraph that the people that were being picked up by ICE, they were significant public safety threats, 196 of them.
01:02:48.000 So you're talking about actual criminals.
01:02:51.000 So like, you know, hashtag I saved a rapist.
01:02:54.000 Exactly.
01:02:54.000 Good job, sweetheart.
01:02:57.000 Let's watch this video.
01:02:59.000 Rep.
01:03:00.000 Andy Ogles said, Is aiding and abetting illegal aliens to evade law enforcement a crime?
01:03:04.000 Secretary Noem says, Yes.
01:03:05.000 I will be formally requesting that the Judiciary and Homeland Security committees investigate Mayor Freddie O 'Connell and Nashville city officials for their repeated obstruction of ICE.
01:03:14.000 Instead of thanking you and your leadership and thanking the president, the mayor of Nashville criticized and attacked law enforcement verbally.
01:03:23.000 He then instructed members of law enforcement to report any communication with federal authorities.
01:03:28.000 He then directed the police community oversight board to direct citizens to file complaints against law enforcement if they cooperate with federal law enforcement.
01:03:40.000 Considering we've seen a 400% increase against federal law enforcement, do these types of statements and actions by a municipal leader concern you?
01:03:50.000 Yes, absolutely.
01:03:51.000 They perpetuate the violence against law enforcement officers.
01:03:54.000 And what happens many times then is that our agents within the Department of Homeland Security go into situations with no backup, with no local response of people who know the communities, know the routes, the roads, or the needs to emergency services that may be there.
01:04:10.000 So it absolutely makes them much more vulnerable to a situation to which their lives could be in jeopardy.
01:04:16.000 Yes, ma 'am.
01:04:17.000 And if a municipal leader is found to be aiding and abetting illegal immigrants to evade federal law enforcement, would that be a criminal act?
01:04:26.000 Yes, I believe it would, sir.
01:04:28.000 And if elected officials impede ICE or Homeland Security in doing their job in pursuing illegal immigrants, would that be a criminal act?
01:04:36.000 I believe so.
01:04:38.000 Madam Secretary and Mr. Chairman, I will be asking the Committee of Homeland Security and Judiciary to be looking into the mayor of Nashville.
01:04:46.000 In any collusion or impeding of federal authorities and conducting their work in the city of Nashville, I would also encourage this committee and judiciary to look at other leaders, municipal leaders across the country, as they obstruct this administration, this Madam Secretary, and her employees in doing their constitutional job, which is uphold the rule of law.
01:05:09.000 Madam Secretary, I thank you, and I yield back.
01:05:13.000 So, I mean, it would be nice to think that there's actually going to be some repercussions for this, but, I mean, what do we think?
01:05:19.000 Do we think that this is actually going to produce fruit?
01:05:22.000 It could be the very first time ever that I've been alive that the 80-20 or the 70-30 issue that the American people want gets handled, where it's 66% wants them to be gone, because the government doesn't do what people want.
01:05:35.000 This might be the very first time, maybe, if they just do it, crack down, arrest them.
01:05:40.000 Put him in jail.
01:05:40.000 Nobody cares.
01:05:41.000 You break the law, you break the law.
01:05:42.000 It'd be nice.
01:05:43.000 This is actually talking about city officials and going after the mayor.
01:05:47.000 Yeah, well, same thing.
01:05:48.000 Same, same.
01:05:49.000 Well, I mean, I don't know that the mayor actually was doing the obstruction.
01:05:52.000 Well, if they are, I'm saying.
01:05:54.000 Yeah.
01:05:54.000 I think it's a different issue.
01:05:56.000 But to answer the question, I think that this administration will probably be the only one, and maybe future, but that's a different conversation.
01:06:06.000 But be the only one that would actually try and hold people accountable.
01:06:08.000 I think this administration is all about that.
01:06:11.000 If you look at what they've already done, the question is, why don't we do more of it?
01:06:16.000 Now, there's the cynic that says, well, it's because everyone in the government is all dirty, all politicians are dirty, and it's all one big game and you're not in it.
01:06:24.000 That's one way to look at it.
01:06:26.000 The way that I actually look at it from a political standpoint is it's unpopular.
01:06:31.000 To go and arrest people if they can spin a narrative that you're attacking them for political purposes, right?
01:06:38.000 That doesn't really work well with the American people.
01:06:41.000 If they think that you are going after someone, even if you have a stack of evidence, the reality is it will seem like you're going after them for political purposes.
01:06:50.000 But I think that we don't need to care about that as long as truth is on our side to a certain level.
01:06:55.000 But there are trade-offs.
01:06:56.000 Because you can be the righteous warrior that has truth on your side and still lose power politically.
01:07:03.000 Thomas Sowell talks about this all the time, is that the reason why political leaders make actions that they do is because they don't have to stand up to the consequences as long as they're able to convince the people that this is good for them now.
01:07:14.000 And so there is a part of me that does believe that this administration...
01:07:18.000 Is actually doing it.
01:07:20.000 They're doing the work, but there's a way that you have to assuage it.
01:07:23.000 And I think that all of this, when you put it in its greater context, you go after the people that are dirtbag criminals that are here illegally.
01:07:30.000 So you can set the framing of like, this is why we're going after them.
01:07:34.000 And then you look at the polling and it shows that the American people still...
01:07:38.000 Do support this deportation.
01:07:39.000 And then you do the other little carrots out there that are like, hey, we just had our first plane ride of people that self-deported.
01:07:48.000 Do you guys see that?
01:07:48.000 Yay!
01:07:49.000 When they were out there pumping that up.
01:07:51.000 So all of those things I think are all part of it to be able to say that.
01:07:56.000 The American people want accountability, and I think in the case of this state rep, not necessarily the mayor, I don't know all the details behind the national mayor and what they've said or done, but this state rep, I think that they have enough of them admitting it that you should be able to arrest, and it's not going to be like, oh, you're just going after her because she's a Democrat.
01:08:12.000 But that, to me, is the way to look at it is the action doesn't happen if politically it can be very disadvantageous to us on the right.
01:08:21.000 Yeah, I mean, I think you're right.
01:08:25.000 I think I said this last night.
01:08:28.000 Public opinion really does a lot to cover for whether or not a specific...
01:08:37.000 Policy is actually legal or not.
01:08:40.000 If you have the backing of the people, the government is absolutely able to do things that are technically illegal.
01:08:47.000 If you don't have the backing of the people, even doing legal things is really, really, really hard.
01:08:53.000 The Patriot Act.
01:08:54.000 Yeah, I mean, there you go.
01:08:56.000 Well, Tim talks about that, right?
01:08:57.000 Like, he said it before numerous times.
01:08:59.000 The law doesn't matter.
01:09:01.000 It's about social enforcement.
01:09:02.000 Is the society going to stand for it?
01:09:05.000 If the answer is no, it doesn't matter how many laws you say are being broken.
01:09:10.000 Does society accept it to be a thing or not?
01:09:13.000 But that's why I think ultimately the reason why we don't see the type of arrest that all of us on the right want to see is because societally...
01:09:23.000 There are people that are just like, nope, that's a fascist move, and we have to convince enough people, man.
01:09:29.000 Well, and a lot of it is historically taking place in deep blue cities where they're going to get a lot of pushback anyways, right?
01:09:35.000 The people that are voting for it are not the ones living in those cities, so you're going to come into a bunch of pushback the second you go in and try to do that, and it's going to be seen as a show of force, and people are not going to like it.
01:09:47.000 Yeah, I mean the localized effects of your local government and just the mindset of the local people.
01:09:53.000 Like if you have policies in New York, as much as we talk about – we were just talking 66 percent of Americans want to see deportation.
01:10:02.000 Well, who are those – If you try to round people up in New York City, like that's going to be tough because the people that are localized in the area that you're actually carrying out the operation – And then you end up with a situation where people are filming, you and the police and the people fighting, and then it...
01:10:25.000 It looks bad for the police and that's all kinds of bad press.
01:10:28.000 So it's tough to do that.
01:10:30.000 It's another reason why the Democrats work so hard to have the media on their side for as long as they have, right?
01:10:36.000 Because like you said earlier, does truth even matter these days?
01:10:40.000 A lot of times I would argue that it doesn't.
01:10:42.000 Practically speaking, it doesn't matter to a lot of people because the truth is whatever the video clip they see in front of them tells it.
01:10:49.000 You know, tells them that it is.
01:10:51.000 Very funny people hoax.
01:10:52.000 Yeah.
01:10:52.000 Like the fact that you're still battling that years later.
01:10:55.000 And there's the fact, look, a lot of people, when that one came to light for me, that was very eye-opening early on for me.
01:11:02.000 But there's a large swath of the population still where, and I think that's kind of a diagnosed phenomenon psychologically, which is like when you're confronted with...
01:11:12.000 You know, facts that disprove what you believe, people just tend to believe it even more.
01:11:17.000 Yeah, cognitive distortion is very painful.
01:11:20.000 When someone believes something to be a thing, and then you shatter their worldview for something that they've believed for so long, it's physically painful for people.
01:11:29.000 Like, they've done all these studies on it.
01:11:31.000 You mean cognitive dissonance?
01:11:32.000 Cognitive dissonance, yeah.
01:11:33.000 I said distortion.
01:11:34.000 Yeah.
01:11:35.000 So ultimately, though, to your point, I think that when you're talking about...
01:11:39.000 Does the truth matter?
01:11:40.000 There is the game that has to be played if we're just being realistic.
01:11:45.000 Being the person that's all idealistic and you say, this is what I want to do, this is the right thing to do, that's great.
01:11:50.000 But in a world where we have a democracy from an institutional standpoint where people cast their vote for their elected official, I know we're a constitutional republic, but we have democratic institutions, you have to be able to convince people enough.
01:12:03.000 And I think if you look, again, Take a stand back and view everything that the Trump administration is doing.
01:12:09.000 They're doing these issues that are 80-20 issues, right?
01:12:12.000 Or 60-40 or 70-30.
01:12:14.000 And they're getting buy-in from the American people.
01:12:17.000 And they're seeing like this.
01:12:18.000 We know what the right thing is to do.
01:12:20.000 But can we convince enough people that it's the right thing?
01:12:23.000 And I think the administration so far has done a great job.
01:12:26.000 But that's why they're doing the self-deportation push.
01:12:28.000 They're going after the worst.
01:12:29.000 And they're defying these federal judges, which I believe they need to continue to do so they can.
01:12:36.000 I have a question for you then.
01:12:38.000 So you're talking 80-20 issues.
01:12:41.000 And I think 80-20 issues are bolstered by the media coverage that they get because they're polarizing by nature.
01:12:46.000 A lot of times they lead to discussion online.
01:12:49.000 People go back and forth.
01:12:50.000 Are we kind of past the days where the type of bread and butter issue for like a blue dog Democrat, which is like, you know, your regular everyday issues are just no longer...
01:13:07.000 I don't think that they're not relevant, but I think that it's hard to get the coverage of them that...
01:13:17.000 People actually want, because people respond to things that make them emotional.
01:13:22.000 If you talk to someone without showing them, like, Donald Trump was this, or the Republicans did this, or the Democrats did this, if you don't put something in front of them with a fiery headline and just say, hey, what are the things that matter to you?
01:13:39.000 They'll talk about what...
01:13:41.000 We tend to be kitchen table issues.
01:13:43.000 In polls all the time, it's like the most important thing is the economy.
01:13:47.000 The most important thing is the economy.
01:13:49.000 Everybody believes that all the time.
01:13:52.000 Consistently in polls, people say the economy is the most important because everybody has to be able to pay their bills and everybody has to be able to...
01:14:01.000 To take care of their families.
01:14:02.000 But the stuff that gets traction is not economic reports.
01:14:06.000 Unless they're economic reports tied to Donald Trump is the monster.
01:14:11.000 Donald Trump's screwing you out of money.
01:14:13.000 Or the Democrats are screwing up this blah blah blah and here's the economic report that shows it.
01:14:18.000 Those economic reports will get traction because they manage to tie it to an emotion.
01:14:24.000 But when you ask people in a...
01:14:27.000 You know, a normal manner, ask them in a poll or whatever.
01:14:30.000 They're constantly going to tell you, kitchen table issues are what's important to me.
01:14:34.000 But they react emotionally.
01:14:38.000 To things that are not kitchen table issues.
01:14:40.000 Yeah, I think the issue that you bring up, like, are yellow dog or blue dog Democrats, do they still exist?
01:14:44.000 The answer is yes, at a local level.
01:14:46.000 But because things have become so national, like, it's crazy.
01:14:50.000 So in Minnesota, you know, the way that our legislature is compromised, we are perfectly split in power in our statehouse.
01:14:57.000 We have 67 Democrats, 67 Republicans, right?
01:15:00.000 So if you look across the state, that means that we're kind of close on a lot of issues.
01:15:04.000 But when you actually see what the left has done, they've come together and they've decided that they're going to be this woke, nonsense, mass hysteria, anti-human party that's going to say abortion up to nine months.
01:15:17.000 Let's give criminal aliens healthcare benefits.
01:15:19.000 Let's give criminal aliens free tuition.
01:15:21.000 Let's give them driver's license.
01:15:23.000 When that's the issue, that's going to override everything else.
01:15:26.000 I would argue that within the Democrat caucus in Minnesota, we call them DFL, that there are plenty of Democrats where if you got them in a room separate and you said, hey, where are you at at this issue?
01:15:36.000 They'd be like, I'm with you.
01:15:37.000 But the cult's voting this way and I want to stay in power, so I've got to vote with the cult.
01:15:41.000 So to answer your question, I think, yes, they exist, but they are afraid because the cult has taken over the Democrats and until they get rid of the cultiness, which, good luck.
01:15:51.000 Because now that they're entrenched and they're in power, it's going to be very, very brutal for them to separate themselves.
01:15:56.000 They're going to try.
01:15:57.000 I don't think that they functionally exist anymore because it doesn't matter.
01:16:00.000 It doesn't matter if on 90 issues, they might be with us.
01:16:04.000 It's the big issues.
01:16:06.000 Abortion on demand, criminal aliens, funding everything regardless of how much income, taxing the rich.
01:16:12.000 These are the things that the cult has decided.
01:16:15.000 Black people are oppressed.
01:16:16.000 Anti-racism is good.
01:16:18.000 If you don't align with the cult, you know, boys can be girls and girls can be boys, then you're not a Democrat.
01:16:23.000 So it doesn't matter if all the other issues, you actually would vote with Republicans.
01:16:27.000 How does such a tiny, tiny, tiny viewing of life, like what are they, like 4%, 10% of everything, how do they have such a huge grasp?
01:16:39.000 Because they're the ones that are activists.
01:16:41.000 So loud?
01:16:42.000 Because they're the ones that are activists.
01:16:43.000 They're the ones that are going to decide who's going to be in the primaries.
01:16:47.000 So, like we were talking about this the other night, whoever, the Democrats have a real bad problem because they have to have someone that's extreme enough to win primaries, so that has to be able to appeal to the progressives and the leftists, and then they have to be able to win a general election.
01:17:04.000 And it's normal, it has historically been normal for, you know, Politicians to have to cater to the base a little bit during primaries to win the primary and then to slide to the center some to win your generals.
01:17:20.000 The Democrats are so far left, and the far leftists are the ones that have control.
01:17:27.000 So it's going to be really, really hard to find a Democrat that can actually satisfy the far leftists and then slide enough to the right to make your moderates and your centrists think, okay, this guy actually does have my needs in mind.
01:17:43.000 They're going to beat you into submission.
01:17:45.000 They're going to show up to your house.
01:17:46.000 They're going to do all of these crazy activist things.
01:17:48.000 They threaten you.
01:17:49.000 That's why they're able to do it, man.
01:17:51.000 If the right adopted the same exact techniques and tactics, we'd be successful.
01:17:58.000 But that's kind of antithetical to who we are.
01:18:00.000 We're not going to show up and say that we're going to shut you down when you disagree with us on something.
01:18:04.000 We'll have a robust debate about it.
01:18:06.000 They also don't get the cover from the media.
01:18:09.000 That the most extreme on the left do.
01:18:10.000 Also, but they have Gavin Newsom.
01:18:12.000 He's like, watch, I can destroy this country just like I destroyed California.
01:18:15.000 Well, like, I brought up Ro Khanna last week and you and Tim shut me down because he's not extreme enough.
01:18:19.000 Well, I don't think that he's extreme enough.
01:18:21.000 A lot of the situation with the left is like, look, the things that the people that are...
01:18:26.000 On the far left believe, do not align with reality.
01:18:30.000 And they don't align with what most people think.
01:18:33.000 Most people do not believe men can become women.
01:18:36.000 You just can't do that.
01:18:39.000 And there was a time when people that were Democrats would say, well, you know, maybe we can just say, well, you know, call them by the pronouns they want, and then go ahead and, you know, we'll make sure that they have somewhere to go to the bathroom, and that'll be okay.
01:18:54.000 We can figure it out.
01:18:55.000 But the extremists on the left, the far left, are like, no, you know, S the D, or you're a bigot.
01:19:02.000 Like, if you're a man and you won't date a trans woman, you're a bigot.
01:19:11.000 So that's the mentality that the far left has, and that's the problem that the Democrats are dealing with.
01:19:17.000 It's not just that they're far left on issues, it's that they believe things that are unreal.
01:19:25.000 They believe things that normal people don't believe.
01:19:29.000 So, we're going to move on to this little clip here from Tim Bucharet.
01:19:36.000 Burchett, right?
01:19:37.000 Burchett?
01:19:37.000 Burchett.
01:19:38.000 Oh, whatever.
01:19:38.000 Bucharet?
01:19:39.000 Tim Burchett, he had some things to say about the Kennedy assassination, so take it away, Tim.
01:19:48.000 Hey everybody, Tim Burchett, returning from an oversight committee.
01:19:53.000 We were talking about John F. Kennedy, President Kennedy's assassination in 1963.
01:20:01.000 Just some incredible testimony from the attending physician in the emergency room.
01:20:10.000 He told us the way the bullets entered, where they came from, and they came from two dadgum different directions, and there were four bullets fired.
01:20:22.000 It was just incredible.
01:20:25.000 Anyway, big cover up, of course.
01:20:27.000 Will we get to the bottom of it?
01:20:29.000 Probably not.
01:20:33.000 You always got a patsy, and it's obviously Lee Harvey Oswald was a patsy.
01:20:41.000 He might have pulled the trigger on one of the bullets, but I don't think on all three, and that would have been a bolt action.
01:20:47.000 Which is a Manlaker carbine.
01:20:50.000 It's an Italian carbine.
01:20:52.000 I got one somewhere.
01:20:54.000 It was written up in a magazine one time.
01:20:58.000 It's the only gun that never won a war.
01:21:01.000 Oswald could have walked into a Western Auto and bought an M1 with a scope for under 50 bucks at that time.
01:21:09.000 It was just literally a Western Auto.
01:21:12.000 But he chose a...
01:21:14.000 Mail order, Italian car.
01:21:16.000 The whole thing is just crazy.
01:21:18.000 Anyway, we're digging into it.
01:21:20.000 Thank you all for sending me here.
01:21:23.000 I think he might be my new favorite politician.
01:21:25.000 Tim's solid, bro.
01:21:27.000 So, is the going theory now that one of the shooters was Israeli?
01:21:34.000 Wait, wait.
01:21:35.000 Maybe they curved a bullet like in Wanted.
01:21:38.000 Well, you know, I mean, if it's not, if it wasn't just a single shooter, maybe one of the shooters was Israeli, right?
01:21:44.000 I didn't know that was on the table.
01:21:45.000 Mossad, right?
01:21:47.000 Or the mob.
01:21:48.000 Well, one was the mob, and one was Mossad.
01:21:50.000 So it was Lee Harvey Oswald, a guy in the mob, and then somebody from Israel.
01:21:56.000 Okay.
01:21:56.000 Oh, okay.
01:21:57.000 So we're going to go to this here clip, I guess.
01:22:02.000 Do you want to go to it?
01:22:03.000 No?
01:22:04.000 Oh, no.
01:22:04.000 It's an hour long.
01:22:05.000 Never mind.
01:22:05.000 Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the overtime.
01:22:07.000 The government lied to us about the Kennedy assassination.
01:22:11.000 Yeah, I was just pointing out where it says underneath there.
01:22:13.000 It says the truth about JFK and RFK, the CIA, Mossad.
01:22:16.000 It's like the first.
01:22:17.000 What'd I tell you?
01:22:18.000 You're right.
01:22:19.000 What'd I tell you?
01:22:19.000 No, no, no.
01:22:20.000 Number two.
01:22:21.000 He gets brought up immediately.
01:22:22.000 Listen, I love Congressman Burchett.
01:22:23.000 I think if you watch him over the years, he says it like it is.
01:22:27.000 That's probably why he keeps on getting re-elected.
01:22:30.000 A lot of the stuff with the...
01:22:31.000 The UFO UAP hearings that he was coming out and saying are, again, amazing to watch.
01:22:37.000 Some of me wonders, like, does he do it because in the caucus, because like the way the government all works, the Republicans have a caucus, they have a leadership structure, and they're like, go ahead, man, you just go out there and say what you want to say.
01:22:51.000 And that's kind of what I think because he's also made some claims.
01:22:54.000 Like, do you remember when there was the fog and everyone was like, oh, I can taste metallic or taste whatever?
01:23:01.000 He literally said that there were Chinese drones.
01:23:06.000 Off the East Coast that had motherships.
01:23:10.000 The mist happened?
01:23:10.000 That's what he went on.
01:23:12.000 Yeah, was the mist and then with the drones as well.
01:23:16.000 Remember all of that was all happening?
01:23:17.000 Yeah, it was.
01:23:18.000 Yeah, but with all the drones.
01:23:20.000 All the New Jersey drones, right?
01:23:22.000 And he literally said that there was a Chinese mothership that had like 20 mini drones in it.
01:23:28.000 He made that statement.
01:23:30.000 You gotta take it with a grain of salt, man.
01:23:32.000 I don't know.
01:23:33.000 I hate politicians by default, but this guy's...
01:23:35.000 He's alright.
01:23:36.000 He's one of the good ones.
01:23:37.000 I mean, I'm kind of curious.
01:23:39.000 I mean, he said he's got...
01:23:40.000 He's talking about the rifle.
01:23:41.000 He's like, I got one of them somewhere.
01:23:43.000 Why would you lose a rifle, man?
01:23:45.000 Maybe he did it.
01:23:46.000 He's got so many, I'm sure.
01:23:48.000 He's from the woods.
01:23:49.000 He's also, like, he's Hollywood-coded as a Republican politician.
01:23:53.000 Like, every Hollywood depiction of a Republican is exactly this guy.
01:23:58.000 He's got a Tibetan nanny.
01:23:59.000 Very specific.
01:23:59.000 He's never paid.
01:24:04.000 He's had a tough...
01:24:05.000 All names today.
01:24:05.000 All the stories are just a bunch of tough names.
01:24:08.000 I'm just saying.
01:24:10.000 Not talking ish or anything, but it's fine.
01:24:12.000 It's fine.
01:24:13.000 Wait, so, okay, who did it then?
01:24:15.000 Oh, yeah, yeah, back to the story.
01:24:17.000 Look, man, apparently, multiple shooters, so we can spread the blame around.
01:24:22.000 Yes.
01:24:23.000 That's fair.
01:24:24.000 Everyone kind of, like, they drew straws.
01:24:26.000 They're like, who are we going to, like, officially blame?
01:24:29.000 Yeah.
01:24:29.000 I am interested, though, to see, like, do we actually ever get an answer?
01:24:34.000 Well, I mean, look, the files came out, and everybody that had an opinion...
01:24:38.000 Read the files and their opinion was confirmed.
01:24:41.000 All the different opinions.
01:24:42.000 They read the files and they said, see, I was right.
01:24:47.000 That actually happened.
01:24:48.000 Also, anybody who's watched the X-Files knows that the cigarette smoking man was actually the one who killed both JFK and Martin Luther King.
01:24:56.000 Can we not talk about cigarettes, please?
01:24:58.000 Andrew here at work, he has some kind of cool tech IT thing, you know what I mean?
01:25:02.000 I don't know anything about that, but he can look up the whole files.
01:25:07.000 It's 14,000 crazy amount of papers that he could do a search.
01:25:11.000 We should ask him to look up two shooters.
01:25:14.000 Yeah, like a special program for her.
01:25:16.000 I mean, I don't know much about it.
01:25:17.000 I'm not an IT dude.
01:25:18.000 I use a hammer.
01:25:19.000 Andrew, if you're watching...
01:25:20.000 He knows?
01:25:21.000 So he knows who did it?
01:25:22.000 Come on!
01:25:23.000 Search the word Israel.
01:25:27.000 Bring it to your guy.
01:25:29.000 Honestly, like I said, with all of the release and all that, everyone has their own theory of...
01:25:35.000 All these subjective things.
01:25:37.000 Just tell me what actually happened.
01:25:40.000 And if you say that you don't and this is our best theory...
01:25:43.000 Someone shot JFK.
01:25:43.000 Right.
01:25:43.000 That's what happened.
01:25:44.000 But who it was and what it was, I'm okay with it.
01:25:48.000 It's happened so far, like so long ago.
01:25:50.000 I'll be honest.
01:25:51.000 I don't really care.
01:25:52.000 Agreed.
01:25:53.000 I really don't.
01:25:54.000 I just find it interesting to hear all the different theories.
01:25:57.000 The only thing that I would care about would be if the CIA did it and then...
01:26:03.000 All of those people just got away.
01:26:05.000 I would care about that.
01:26:06.000 But then again, I'd say, well, yeah, it's the CIA.
01:26:09.000 They've been doing insane things for a long time.
01:26:12.000 No, they've been trying to do insane things.
01:26:15.000 They have not been particularly successful.
01:26:17.000 There are a few things that they got away with that are big names.
01:26:20.000 But the most common name that I've heard for CIA...
01:26:28.000 When it comes to people that actually work with CIA, like people in the military, is clowns in action, right?
01:26:32.000 And the best evidence that they really aren't this omnipotent, you know, can do whatever they want whenever they want organization is the fact that Castro lived so long.
01:26:43.000 Sure.
01:26:43.000 They went after him.
01:26:45.000 They tried a boatload of different ways, clandestine ways.
01:26:48.000 They tried the Bay of Pigs.
01:26:49.000 They tried all kinds of stuff.
01:26:50.000 And Castro was just like, nope.
01:26:53.000 And Castro was stuck on an island 90 miles off of Florida.
01:26:58.000 CIA, they've done some stuff.
01:27:00.000 They did Northwoods.
01:27:01.000 They've done a lot of PSYOP operations.
01:27:04.000 But when it comes to actual, like, guerrilla stuff or, like, secretly murdering people, I don't think that they're all that successful.
01:27:12.000 Like, they're not batting a thousand at all.
01:27:15.000 Yeah, well, it's a PSYOP to the PSYOP.
01:27:17.000 To the PSYOP.
01:27:17.000 Yes.
01:27:18.000 Well, I mean, they're successful.
01:27:20.000 Successful when it comes to, like, fomenting displeasure in countries.
01:27:24.000 They're successful in...
01:27:26.000 In, you know, getting money to people that don't like the current government and getting those people to fight the current government.
01:27:33.000 They're successful.
01:27:34.000 They were successful in giving money to...
01:27:36.000 What?
01:27:36.000 Like propaganda?
01:27:37.000 Like propaganda-wise?
01:27:38.000 Yeah.
01:27:39.000 I'm talking about like the Mujahideen.
01:27:39.000 Well, not just that.
01:27:42.000 Well, not just that, but like the Mujahideen, right?
01:27:44.000 So they got...
01:27:45.000 They were successful in getting stinger missiles to the Mujahideen in Afghanistan, right?
01:27:50.000 And they didn't get busted for it until...
01:27:52.000 Or they didn't get busted for it until after the Soviets were gone.
01:27:56.000 So they were successful in that.
01:27:58.000 But the idea of them doing a whole lot of assassinations, I don't think they're particularly successful.
01:28:04.000 And I think the best evidence for that is the fact that...
01:28:07.000 Yeah, but what's Israel's track record on assassinations?
01:28:11.000 Now Mossad!
01:28:11.000 Mossad!
01:28:12.000 They know how to blow dicks up.
01:28:15.000 Maybe if JFK had his own Iron Dome, this would have never happened.
01:28:19.000 The Golden Dome.
01:28:20.000 Golden Dome.
01:28:24.000 Like, if USAID had helped, then it would have been some type of PSYOP.
01:28:28.000 Yeah, so, I mean, look, there are definitely clandestine organizations that are good at stuff.
01:28:33.000 Like, you know, Green Berets actually, they actually go in and teach militants how to actually fight, and Delta, like, they...
01:28:42.000 They're door kickers, and those guys are doing that job.
01:28:44.000 But too many people think that CIA does everything because they're so clandestine.
01:28:49.000 They're just like, oh, CIA did this, and CIA did that.
01:28:51.000 They do PSYOPs mostly, and there's not a whole lot of direct action guys.
01:28:55.000 There's a handful, a small unit that's like the ground branch guys that actually do security, and sometimes they'll go with the army guys to go.
01:29:05.000 Get into gunfights and stuff like that.
01:29:07.000 There was a CIA guy on Neptune's spear.
01:29:10.000 That was the raid to kill Bin Laden.
01:29:12.000 There was at least one CIA guy that went in with them that was all kitted up and stuff, but he wasn't with them.
01:29:17.000 He was actually CIA, but he was there mostly to do Terp stuff.
01:29:23.000 And identify things.
01:29:25.000 That sounds like what a CIA guy would say if he was the front man of a band.
01:29:29.000 I am not CIA.
01:29:30.000 Traveled all over the world multiple times, Phil.
01:29:34.000 No, not me.
01:29:35.000 So we're going to jump to this story.
01:29:37.000 Gen Z and millennial men in the U.S. are among the loneliest in the Western world.
01:29:42.000 Here's why.
01:29:43.000 Spoiler alert, they got it wrong.
01:29:45.000 From Fortunewell, young men in the U.S. are among the loneliest in the Western world a new Gallup poll has found.
01:29:51.000 Those between the ages of 15 and 34 reported feeling lonely more than their counterparts across 38 higher-income Democrat countries ahead of countries including France, Canada, Ireland, and Spain, and surpassed in loneliness only by young men in Turkey.
01:30:07.000 This demographic is also one of the loneliest of all in the U.S., with 25% of men in this age group saying they felt lonely a lot of the previous day, significantly higher than the national average of 18, and the total for young women also 18. That amounts to one in four men under 35 feeling lonely.
01:30:28.000 And loneliness, which was declared a national epidemic by the former U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy in 2023, has been found to increase the risk of developing depression, anxiety, diabetes, heart disease, dementia, and stroke, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
01:30:45.000 Only three of the countries in the poll, the U.S., Iceland, and Denmark, have a loneliness rate among young men that is higher than it is for other adults.
01:30:52.000 In Iceland and Denmark, though, 15% of younger men reported daily loneliness versus 10% and 9% respectively of the rest of the population.
01:31:00.000 The gap is wider in the U.S., where 25% of young men are lonely as compared with 17% of all other adults.
01:31:07.000 What do you guys think?
01:31:08.000 Do you guys have an inclination as to why this is?
01:31:14.000 I would go with the social media.
01:31:19.000 Everyone's away from each other more than they should be together.
01:31:21.000 Back in the day, you used to go out and see people.
01:31:23.000 Nowadays, they don't see people.
01:31:25.000 You just see people online.
01:31:26.000 You sit at home and you watch your movies.
01:31:28.000 You play your video games.
01:31:29.000 You don't get out.
01:31:30.000 And it's just probably really depressing.
01:31:31.000 I don't know any young people like that age that they don't get out.
01:31:36.000 So I think the media disconnects us.
01:31:39.000 It doesn't connect us as much as we think it does.
01:31:41.000 Nope, it's Andrew Tate in porn.
01:31:44.000 No, I'm just kidding.
01:31:45.000 I think you're onto something.
01:31:47.000 It is a lot of social isolation because we can jump on an app and we can feel like we're connected, but I don't think that that is a great actual analog for human interaction and connection.
01:31:59.000 There are studies out there that talk about actually needing physical contact and touch.
01:32:02.000 So I would just say to young men, go find yourself a lady.
01:32:05.000 The problem is that the young ladies today are insane.
01:32:07.000 I've been married for 20 years.
01:32:09.000 Shout out to the Shmoopy.
01:32:11.000 I'll be 21 years in July.
01:32:12.000 And so I don't really know what that's like.
01:32:15.000 But I will say that looking at different studies that have been done, that social media has a lot to do, especially with men that are in this age demographic where you're looking at Zoomers.
01:32:26.000 Social media has been destroying people's brains.
01:32:29.000 And I would say that...
01:32:30.000 When we're talking specifically about loneliness, you just got to find more groups that actually physically meet up and do physical things, whether it's sports, hiking, whatever it might be.
01:32:40.000 But yeah, man, I mean, it's a real problem and we better figure it out because we're talking about the progenitors of our society, right?
01:32:47.000 These are going to be the people that are going to be having kids going forward.
01:32:50.000 And if they're all lonely and they're not even hooking up, that population cliff is even more drastic than what we're looking at right now.
01:32:58.000 Yeah.
01:32:59.000 It's not just men.
01:33:00.000 It's men and women.
01:33:01.000 This was primed.
01:33:03.000 Jonathan Haidt wrote the book about not just coddling in the American mind, but what was the other one?
01:33:07.000 Exist Generation.
01:33:09.000 Basically talking about how social media was primed to destroy young women.
01:33:12.000 First, right?
01:33:13.000 So it destroyed the self-worth in the image of young women.
01:33:16.000 Men have been destroyed by social media in their own way, and it's not something that can be fixed, at least not something that can be fixed in the traditional sense, because we are only going to become more and more reliant on technology as a society.
01:33:30.000 And it's much in the same way that we have the discussion that having an argument about politics is very different in person, as opposed to arguing with someone on the internet trying to court somebody of the opposite sex.
01:33:41.000 It's also very different in person as it is on the internet.
01:33:45.000 And a lot of women talk about how men just – they won't approach them because most – like up to a certain range, like a lot of young men, they've never approached a woman in person in their entire lives because they've read the stories about how when it – when some guy comes up and approaches a woman and she takes poorly to it and they get labeled a creep, something like that.
01:34:06.000 Now, those stories, however – how common they are, I don't know.
01:34:09.000 But a lot of times, just like everything – We talk about politics.
01:34:12.000 That's the stuff that gets clicked.
01:34:13.000 Stuff that sells well for the people who write these articles.
01:34:16.000 And a lot of these problems aren't going to be fixed by anything like that.
01:34:20.000 Dating apps have lifetime options where you can buy the dating.
01:34:24.000 You can buy a lifetime.
01:34:25.000 Really?
01:34:26.000 Yeah.
01:34:27.000 The whole point of it is supposed to be that it gets you off the app.
01:34:27.000 Imagine that.
01:34:30.000 Isn't that more of a feature of hookup culture, though?
01:34:34.000 That's what I'm saying.
01:34:35.000 That doesn't bode well for actual human connection if the whole point of it is to get married.
01:34:40.000 Because all hookup culture is going to do is get you vapid, one-time interactions that doesn't go anywhere.
01:34:48.000 That doesn't help society if you're really talking about making changes culturally.
01:34:52.000 That's just the same thing that was happening at nightclubs, but with none of the actual camaraderie that might come with going out with your friends at night.
01:34:59.000 Yeah, like going back again.
01:35:01.000 When you talk about Jonathan Haidt, I've read every single book that he has.
01:35:05.000 I think it's fascinating talking about moral foundations theory.
01:35:08.000 But Anxious Generation is the most recent book that he wrote.
01:35:12.000 And earlier today, quite literally, man, I was having this conversation with my younger brother because he has a nine-month-old baby girl.
01:35:18.000 And he's talking about like, hey, man, I don't want to have any screen time.
01:35:22.000 And I was telling him, like, these studies show, like, it's damaged.
01:35:27.000 Our Generation Alpha and also the Zoomers, it's damaging them because we've moved from being a play-based society to a phone-based society.
01:35:36.000 And it's creating little anxiety-filled narcissists.
01:35:41.000 It's horrifying.
01:35:42.000 And luckily certain states have already made moves to get rid of it.
01:35:46.000 But the one thing I would say, if you've got a kid under the age of 16, don't let them use social media.
01:35:50.000 As difficult as that might be, it's destroying them and it's making them feel anxious and lonely.
01:35:55.000 The idea of schools putting screens in front of kids all the time now, which is, it's bad enough that you've got...
01:36:04.000 There are a lot of parents that are just like, well, the screen can babysit them.
01:36:08.000 You put whatever on and that'll keep them busy.
01:36:10.000 But nowadays, kids, as soon as they go to school, they're doing things on screens and stuff.
01:36:16.000 I'm not doing that with my kid.
01:36:19.000 Homeschool your kid, man.
01:36:20.000 Homeschool your kid.
01:36:21.000 I'm going to have my first in October and I'm not putting screens in that kid's hand and I'm not sending them to school because I don't want them...
01:36:29.000 I don't want their face to be shoved in a screen.
01:36:32.000 That's terrible for a child.
01:36:35.000 And I said something about that on the internet today.
01:36:39.000 This was in a reply to someone.
01:36:41.000 Not even posting on my own.
01:36:43.000 But in a reply to someone, I was like, yeah, we're going to homeschool.
01:36:47.000 And there were a lot of people that were like, oh, your kid's going to have all these problems.
01:36:51.000 Your kid's going to be awkward.
01:36:52.000 I'm like...
01:36:53.000 If I keep the screens out of my kids' hands and they don't go to school where they are interacting with all the crazy people, all the kids that have been...
01:37:04.000 Basically raised by a screen.
01:37:06.000 What makes you think that my kids are going to be the ones that have the problem, you know?
01:37:10.000 Yeah, because again, social media, like honestly, the suicidal ideations that have increased for both men, for males and females, is through the roof.
01:37:20.000 And I would just say if someone's like, oh, why would you want to not socialize your kid and send him to homeschool?
01:37:26.000 There's so many different homeschool alternatives that exist to this day.
01:37:29.000 I understand not everyone can do the homeschool thing, and I get it.
01:37:32.000 It's like not shaded.
01:37:33.000 But if you can, you should.
01:37:36.000 And there are, like, pods that exist in homeschool networks of the different parents.
01:37:40.000 They'll even rotate through and say, like, you take the kids for this to go and do this activity and things like that.
01:37:45.000 It's growing all across the nation.
01:37:47.000 But I would just say the pushback is, yeah, I might homeschool my kid, but I'm able to make sure that they're not using social media so they're not sitting there looking depressed, having depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation.
01:37:59.000 I saved their life.
01:38:00.000 I think that that's a fair tradeoff.
01:38:02.000 It's a little bit socially awkward, but who isn't these days?
01:38:06.000 Well, also, look, it's not just good advice for kids.
01:38:09.000 As an adult, my fiancé definitely has to remind me to take my eyes off the phone from time to time as I tend to be there.
01:38:18.000 Whether it's because of work, which is my excuse most of the time that I'm working and things like that, you have to also disconnect from your phone and re-engage in the world.
01:38:26.000 And a lot of times for us, it's like no phones at dinner, something like that.
01:38:30.000 It seems...
01:38:32.000 It's weird to have to say it, but sometimes you have to force yourself away because the technology is just so easy to get stuck in that you have to remind yourself that you need to reconnect with the people around you.
01:38:46.000 The tools you learn in sobriety have worked with me in this, which is partly like I can tell myself, I can feel when I'm getting more anxious or more annoyed because I'm on my phone more.
01:38:57.000 And you have to be able to notice that, catch it, and then disengage from what you're doing.
01:39:02.000 Go outside.
01:39:03.000 For me, it's go skating.
01:39:04.000 For other people, it's go workout, run, whatever.
01:39:07.000 But that technology isn't just dangerous to kids.
01:39:09.000 It's just as dangerous to people our age or, like you said, the people in their mid-20s who aren't.
01:39:18.000 I know you've got to get the super chats, but just on Brett's point right there, gentlemen, I get notifications monthly.
01:39:24.000 Like, hey, you've been on your phone this much.
01:39:26.000 And I got recently, it was like, I've been on the phone less than the previous month.
01:39:30.000 And it was like, a dopamine hit?
01:39:32.000 Because I was like, yeah, let's go.
01:39:34.000 I'm not on my phone as much as I was before.
01:39:35.000 That's paradoxical.
01:39:36.000 I know, I mean, I'll take it.
01:39:38.000 So I'm hoping for next month.
01:39:39.000 I want next month to be less and less and less.
01:39:42.000 And if not, then you will fall into a...
01:39:44.000 Very deep depression.
01:39:45.000 It's a corresponding dopamine hit.
01:39:47.000 It's higher for...
01:39:49.000 Someday it'll be zero.
01:39:51.000 That's impossible.
01:39:52.000 Never mind.
01:39:53.000 When you have your narrow link in, it won't even track that because you'll always be connected with a narrow link.
01:39:58.000 Me and my girlfriend are talking about when the baby comes, phones just stay somewhere else and possibly I'll have a computer and I'll use the computer, but having the phone on you all the time is going to just teach the kid.
01:40:12.000 That, you know, this is what you're supposed to do.
01:40:14.000 You know, we'll have TV, but I don't want, you know, I don't want, like, Miss Rachel raising my kid.
01:40:19.000 You know, I don't want the standard TV shows that kids watch to be the thing.
01:40:26.000 Oh, come on!
01:40:27.000 Yeah, I don't, like, I want my kid to, like, listen to people talking normal.
01:40:31.000 And if you look back, the way that children used to talk, like, when they used to learn how to speak, it wasn't, you know...
01:40:39.000 It was like Mr. Rogers would speak slowly, but it wasn't like weird noises.
01:40:44.000 And if you listen to the kids' shows nowadays, some of them don't even speak.
01:40:50.000 The Teletubbies never talk.
01:40:52.000 And I know that they're not new nowadays, and there's probably more modern stuff that kids watch, but they don't actually speak.
01:41:01.000 And I'm like, the reason why a lot of kids...
01:41:05.000 Don't speak well now and they can't articulate themselves is because they don't hear adults articulating properly.
01:41:12.000 They get baby talk.
01:41:13.000 They hear shows that have baby talk or don't actually have words.
01:41:18.000 And that's their entertainment.
01:41:20.000 It affects the way that they learn.
01:41:23.000 Kids need to hear normal conversation.
01:41:25.000 And I know that...
01:41:27.000 This may sound crazy, but I'm going to put on the normal stuff that I watch, which is a lot of podcasts and a lot of news and stuff like that, and my kid's going to hear a lot of that.
01:41:37.000 I don't know what it's going to actually be like when the kid's around, but I tend to have...
01:41:44.000 You know, stuff going all the time, and I'm not going to put on just something for the kid to stare at, especially when the kid's, like, you know, really small, you know?
01:41:51.000 Yeah, and I think that there's different phases because all that's good at, you know, very, very young age, but the key is, that Jonathan Haidt talks about, is that you've got to teach your kid how to go and play.
01:42:01.000 Be a kid.
01:42:02.000 So they can actually problem solve.
01:42:05.000 The reason why there's so much depression and anxiety is because you can block people, you can gang up on them online, and you actually don't have to solve any problems.
01:42:13.000 It shuts down your ability to actually solve any type of group dynamics, which causes more anxiety because we're social creatures.
01:42:20.000 So if you no longer have the ability to have the tools available to solve problems by interacting with other people, you will fold inwards and you'll be like, wow, this really sucks.
01:42:30.000 I'm isolated.
01:42:31.000 And so, yeah, I mean, everything that you said, Phil, I think there's actually empirical evidence to show that that's the way you should do it.
01:42:37.000 And then the key to all of that is that when they get to the age where they can play with other children, make sure that they're doing that and they're not just, like, playing online.
01:42:45.000 That they're physically going and playing and problem-solving together as children and they're going to learn the social dynamics and that's what will actually allow them to have proper brain development and group dynamics.
01:42:56.000 Have you seen the videos where a parent turns on Cocoa Cocomelon, and the kid hears it from the other room and starts running.
01:43:04.000 It's like a Pavlovian response.
01:43:06.000 Bro, it's like baby brain crack.
01:43:08.000 That's what it is, dude.
01:43:10.000 Phil's going to turn on Lex Friedman for the kid.
01:43:10.000 I don't want that.
01:43:14.000 He's first going to put the kid to sleep like that.
01:43:15.000 Yeah, the kid will sleep.
01:43:17.000 Sleep right through it.
01:43:19.000 All right, so we're going to go to Super Chat.
01:43:22.000 So smash the like button, share the show with all your friends and stuff, and we are going to find out what kind of nuggets the chat has left for us today.
01:43:34.000 Let's see here.
01:43:35.000 Whoa, that's real big.
01:43:38.000 There you go.
01:43:41.000 Let's see.
01:43:42.000 Let's see.
01:43:46.000 Uh...
01:43:46.000 Um...
01:43:48.000 Bright Results Media says, give it up for President Trump calling out the president of South Africa to his face.
01:43:53.000 It was really interesting to see, you know, Donald Trump not only, you know, contradict him, but have that video put together for when he arrived, too, because they knew what was coming.
01:44:09.000 You don't see that kind of behavior from a president very often, and it is actually nice to see.
01:44:15.000 Well, before we started the show, we watched the clip of him in the White House.
01:44:19.000 It's like a six-minute clip.
01:44:21.000 And it's funny because he even asks him, he's like, so what do you think?
01:44:24.000 And then the president's like, you'll find out from having people here, people that are in my cabinet.
01:44:30.000 And then President Trump's like, well, actually, and you can see Elon in the back looking over his shoulder, we got some video to play for you.
01:44:37.000 And then the president of South Africa, his face is just like...
01:44:40.000 Oh man, I am effed.
01:44:42.000 And I love that about Trump because he's like, hey, I'm going to give you a chance.
01:44:47.000 If he would have came out and said like, hey, we got some real issues.
01:44:49.000 But he knew he probably wasn't.
01:44:51.000 So he had everything queued up.
01:44:53.000 And that's just a boss move, man.
01:44:54.000 Trump's the man.
01:44:55.000 Has this guy never seen a police procedural?
01:44:57.000 They always come in with the TV and they're like, actually, we have evidence right here.
01:45:02.000 Eric.
01:45:03.000 Erica's America says, Y 'all pour one out tonight for our rooster.
01:45:07.000 Not-so-mean Gene.
01:45:09.000 He protected his girls until the end.
01:45:11.000 He loved me, his favorite tender, and kept all the hens in line.
01:45:14.000 He was the best boy.
01:45:16.000 RIP Gene.
01:45:17.000 Condolences.
01:45:18.000 RIP.
01:45:19.000 Yeah, RIP.
01:45:20.000 Condolences, Erica's America.
01:45:23.000 Let's see.
01:45:24.000 Jacob Jones says, Kent State is refusing to remove a mural on campus of Trump's head on a pike because of free speech.
01:45:31.000 Well...
01:45:33.000 That seems like a bad idea.
01:45:36.000 Is that calling for violence-ish?
01:45:38.000 I don't know if it's calling for violence.
01:45:40.000 It's definitely...
01:45:41.000 Yeah, I mean, look, the fact of the matter is, if it was anyone other than Donald Trump, there would be all kinds of outrage.
01:45:49.000 True.
01:45:50.000 So, I mean, I don't know...
01:45:52.000 I don't know if there's going to be anything done of it, but I think that it's obvious that if it was any other politician, or definitely any politician on the left, politicians on the right, they would probably make the exception because that's just generally because we live in a leftist society, even though people don't realize it.
01:46:11.000 If you're going to Kent State right now and you're watching the show, right next to that mural, go ahead and do one of your favorite leftist politician and see how that works.
01:46:19.000 Yeah, do it.
01:46:20.000 With them right next to each other.
01:46:21.000 Yeah, that's what I mean.
01:46:22.000 Right next to each other, literally.
01:46:23.000 This is art.
01:46:24.000 Yeah, I mean, listen, I'm not a free speech absolutist by any stretch of the imagination.
01:46:28.000 I think a bunch of speech should be censored, like porn and stuff like that.
01:46:32.000 But if someone wants to not specifically call out a threat that says, like, oh, I want this to be done to President Trump, I'm kind of like, it's stupid as long as it's not federal dollars going to it or anything like that.
01:46:44.000 And I guess, like, stupid college kids.
01:46:47.000 Make weird things imitating the president's death, I guess.
01:46:51.000 I mean, I think they should be ostracized and shamed.
01:46:55.000 I think that's pretty powerful.
01:46:57.000 People should say, like, what is wrong with you?
01:46:59.000 And when you apply to a job, it's like, oh, you're the guy that, like, fantasizes about killing the president?
01:47:04.000 Like, you're a weirdo.
01:47:05.000 You shouldn't work here.
01:47:06.000 Maybe the feds shouldn't give them any money.
01:47:08.000 That's some weird stuff, man.
01:47:10.000 If you're like, oh, what can I do?
01:47:12.000 Oh, I'm going to draw a grotesque.
01:47:15.000 Sculpture of the president being killed or whatever.
01:47:18.000 You're like, bro, you got some issues, man.
01:47:20.000 I don't think you should work here.
01:47:22.000 Most of your colleges get federal funding.
01:47:26.000 So, you know, if they're getting federal money and they're allowing that kind of speech, maybe they shouldn't get federal funding.
01:47:33.000 I'm for it, man.
01:47:34.000 There's no law that is being passed against the speech, but there's no reason why the feds have to give them money either.
01:47:41.000 A lot of things that the federal government funds come with string Yeah, Tim Wall sucks.
01:48:01.000 He's terrible.
01:48:02.000 He lies.
01:48:02.000 He is actually one of the people that I dislike the most in American politics.
01:48:07.000 And the reason why is because he will lie and create a version of himself to keep power in any way, shape or form.
01:48:15.000 You go back and you look at all the elections that he has won and he's been very successful.
01:48:19.000 Him losing on the ticket with Kamala Harris is the first political loss that he has suffered.
01:48:24.000 And it's because he lies all the time and he gets to the right.
01:48:27.000 I'm this affable guy.
01:48:30.000 The truth of the matter is Tim Walls will do whatever it takes to stay in power.
01:48:35.000 You cannot trust what he believes?
01:48:37.000 Because I actually don't know.
01:48:38.000 I think he's a leftist.
01:48:41.000 He loved Mao back in his college days when he was touring all over China.
01:48:45.000 But he's a terrible human being.
01:48:47.000 And the only way that he will lose power will be if the American people, and specifically the people in Minnesota...
01:48:55.000 Realize that he is a liar.
01:48:58.000 I like him.
01:48:58.000 That's the only way that...
01:49:00.000 I know you like him because you want him to run for president.
01:49:02.000 He knows how to talk to me.
01:49:03.000 He's one of the few politicians who knows how to talk to me as a white guy.
01:49:06.000 As a white guy.
01:49:08.000 With his jazz fingers.
01:49:10.000 Jacob Hawley says...
01:49:12.000 Our Congresswoman, Tammy Baldwin, is holding a town hall, and I S you not, she was complaining about no tax on tips bill and was telling her constituents how a smaller paycheck is actually better for workers, corporatists.
01:49:27.000 Is Tammy Baldwin a conservative or a Republican?
01:49:30.000 No, no, she's a Democrat.
01:49:32.000 Yeah, she's a senator.
01:49:33.000 She just won re-election in Wisconsin.
01:49:35.000 Eric Hovde ran against her.
01:49:37.000 It doesn't shock me that a Democrat wants to tax your tips.
01:49:42.000 Isn't that Tammy Buckworth, the lady in the wheelchair?
01:49:44.000 Or no?
01:49:45.000 No, no, that's different.
01:49:46.000 Okay, there's a couple Tammies out there.
01:49:48.000 There are a few Tammies, and they all suck.
01:49:50.000 Sorry if you're a Tammy on the right.
01:49:52.000 This is my mom's name, bro.
01:49:54.000 Sorry, Mom.
01:49:54.000 Oh, man.
01:49:55.000 Mad disrespect.
01:49:56.000 Yeah.
01:49:57.000 She's dead now, so, but thanks.
01:49:59.000 My mom, too.
01:49:59.000 R.I.P., man.
01:50:01.000 back.
01:50:01.000 R.I.P.
01:50:03.000 Let's see.
01:50:07.000 Concrete Haiti says, with all these countries refusing to take their criminals, I can't help but think about certain former world leaders who had a real solution to that problem, like Pinochet.
01:50:18.000 Like Pinochet?
01:50:20.000 That wasn't a solution.
01:50:22.000 No, I mean, it was a type of solution, not one that people that want human decency...
01:50:27.000 That wasn't even, like...
01:50:29.000 That's a totally different context, so I don't know.
01:50:34.000 You can really blame Pinochet for making sure that Pedro Pascal ended up an American citizen and now every time you have to see him in a movie, that's his fault.
01:50:43.000 Like every movie.
01:50:44.000 Every major movie.
01:50:45.000 Pinochet's helicopter tour says, in a state like Massachusetts, I believe every penny stolen from taxpayers and spent on illegals should be taken out in property, destruction of homes, and property of prominent Democrats.
01:50:57.000 Man.
01:50:58.000 You people are just vicious tonight.
01:51:02.000 I disavow.
01:51:03.000 He actually is OG, too, man.
01:51:04.000 He's been here for a minute.
01:51:06.000 Disavow.
01:51:07.000 I'm going to get away from the rumble rants because you guys are just wiling over there.
01:51:10.000 Oh, that's what's...
01:51:10.000 Okay.
01:51:11.000 Makes sense.
01:51:14.000 Kane Abel says, We are not going to war with South Africa.
01:51:18.000 We are letting asylum seekers into our country.
01:51:20.000 Also, it is in America's interest to bring farmers to the USA that know how to farm.
01:51:25.000 I don't know that we were...
01:51:27.000 Discussing going to war with South Africa?
01:51:30.000 I agree with you.
01:51:33.000 We're not going to war with South Africa.
01:51:35.000 I don't see a reason to go to war with South Africa.
01:51:39.000 They don't actually threaten the United States.
01:51:42.000 Imagine how terrifying that would be if you're the president of South Africa and Trump turns and goes, look, we don't want to go to war with you!
01:51:47.000 Whoa, that was on the table?
01:51:49.000 See, I was raised in Devil's Lake, North Dakota, and so we actually had a lot of South African migrant farmers to become and they would help during the harvest season and then they'd go back and some of them stayed.
01:52:02.000 You'll run into a lot of them in North Dakota.
01:52:05.000 Listen, I'm still, as an America First guy, I want Americans to have jobs.
01:52:11.000 I don't believe in just trying to bring in people to fill in the gaps.
01:52:15.000 But if we do bring people, and they are asylum seekers, and I do think that the South Africans do fall under this, the Africaneers, or however you pronounce it, I'm cool with it.
01:52:25.000 But as long as we're like, let's have some bounds and some limitations.
01:52:29.000 We've got to make sure that Americans are able to work.
01:52:32.000 As long as we can do that, then yeah, man, we can walk and chew gum at the same time.
01:52:35.000 Yeah, bro.
01:52:38.000 Danny Archer says, Just an FYI, white South African soldiers were hired as mercenaries in Sierra Leone to get rid of the communists.
01:52:47.000 Imagine what would have happened if they decided what was going on in Sierra Leone wasn't in their interest.
01:52:53.000 Look, man, to be flat out honest with you, I'm not totally, I'm not very well versed on what happened in Sierra Leone or the politics of Sierra Leone.
01:53:03.000 But I like the idea of not having communists.
01:53:06.000 Yeah, it happened as well in Angola, and a lot of my family was involved in that.
01:53:11.000 A lot of my family friends were involved in Angola, which was just basically Cuba and communists taking over another country in Africa, exactly like you were saying, AK.
01:53:18.000 It's the same thing.
01:53:19.000 And they were basically hired as mercenaries by Sierra Leone to go up there and fight commies again, which is something that we've done for a long time in the 90s because of apartheid.
01:53:29.000 It's apartheid.
01:53:30.000 Again, not apartheid.
01:53:31.000 It's apartheid.
01:53:33.000 They didn't want to support us, so we built a lot of stuff.
01:53:36.000 We built the MRIP, which became the de facto vehicle for Afghanistan for IEDs, because America wouldn't help us build stuff.
01:53:44.000 They wouldn't give us any of their tech, so South Africans built a lot of our own stuff.
01:53:48.000 But yeah, that's true.
01:53:49.000 I'm surprised Danny knows this CLP.
01:53:51.000 I don't know.
01:53:52.000 What is CLP?
01:53:53.000 It's the money he's gave here, but yeah.
01:53:55.000 Donkey, man.
01:53:56.000 Thanks, man.
01:53:57.000 Sweet.
01:54:01.000 Remember, the Quantum Strange Quark says, remember when the Bosnian genocide took place in 92 to 95 and the officials kept denying it?
01:54:09.000 Same energy here.
01:54:10.000 Deny, deny, deny.
01:54:11.000 That's fairly standard when it comes to a government targeting some of its people.
01:54:19.000 I mean, I'm pretty sure that China denies that there's any kind of abuse of Uyghurs.
01:54:25.000 Oh, yeah, 100%.
01:54:26.000 Like, to this day, they're like, oh, you know.
01:54:29.000 We're helping assimilate them into Chinese culture because they've got these weird beliefs being Uyghurs.
01:54:35.000 But for the United States, was that what the Super Chat was about?
01:54:39.000 Or was it about South Africa denying?
01:54:42.000 Or was it about the United States denying it?
01:54:44.000 Bosnia.
01:54:44.000 During the 90s.
01:54:46.000 Albanians and all those guys?
01:54:47.000 Yeah, but that's what I'm wondering though.
01:54:49.000 Are they saying that United States officials denied it?
01:54:52.000 He says, remember when the Bosnian genocide took place in 92 to 95 and the officials kept denying it?
01:54:58.000 Same energy here.
01:54:59.000 And he's referring to the South African government denying, denying, denying.
01:55:05.000 That's how I understood it.
01:55:07.000 I went there in 98 in the Marine Corps and it was just crazy.
01:55:10.000 There was no windows anywhere.
01:55:13.000 All the buildings where I was in Kosovo, everything's blown up.
01:55:15.000 It was a weird place, and everyone had a satellite dish on their roof.
01:55:18.000 It was weird, but they had no windows, and it was freaking cold out.
01:55:21.000 It was just a crazy time.
01:55:23.000 Ian Kenny says, Raymond G. Stanley Jr., do you still watch ABL?
01:55:27.000 You should get him on the show for an episode.
01:55:28.000 I haven't watched him in a minute, man.
01:55:30.000 I love ABL.
01:55:31.000 I'm a big fan of Anthony Brian Logan, by the way.
01:55:33.000 That's his name.
01:55:34.000 He's on YouTube.
01:55:34.000 I used to watch him and rock out on Saturday nights in the chat.
01:55:37.000 So, yeah, I think he's a great recommendation.
01:55:40.000 He's definitely America dude.
01:55:41.000 He's part of Brexit for America, or Blackset, I guess, with Candace Owens and them.
01:55:45.000 Yeah, ABL's solid.
01:55:47.000 I agree.
01:55:49.000 Lisa, if you're listening, send her a message in Slack.
01:55:52.000 I will.
01:55:53.000 Isaac Vanderbilt says, all of my blue-collar job places have been filled with non-English-speaking visa workers.
01:55:59.000 Removing the illegals is not enough.
01:56:01.000 They're destroying unions.
01:56:03.000 Look, man, I think that anybody that hires an illegal immigrant, they should lose their business if it's found that they intentionally hire illegals.
01:56:16.000 And honestly, if any unions allow illegals in, the union should be disbanded.
01:56:21.000 Any, in my opinion.
01:56:22.000 Like, I'm not a fan of unions at all.
01:56:24.000 I mean, I feel like that'd be impossible.
01:56:24.000 What?
01:56:25.000 Why?
01:56:26.000 I don't know.
01:56:27.000 Unions are super strong, no matter what they are.
01:56:29.000 I mean, unions definitely have a lot of influence in D.C. because they're, you know, just corrupt machines.
01:56:36.000 Yeah, yeah.
01:56:38.000 But yeah, like, look, the point is, if you are breaking, you know, immigration law, there has to be significant ramifications for it.
01:56:51.000 That's part one.
01:56:52.000 And part two is, if illegal immigrants can't get work because they won't be hired by a business or they can't get into unions, those kind of things, any kind of obstacles that we can erect to prevent illegal immigrants from finding work is also a deterrent for more illegals to come here.
01:57:12.000 Yeah, and I think specifically the Super Chat was about visas that were handed out to nine...
01:57:17.000 English speaking, because he said going after illegals isn't enough.
01:57:20.000 Now, I do agree that when we look at taking people into this country, we should have criteria that make sense, right?
01:57:27.000 Like, highly skilled.
01:57:28.000 If we're looking at labor jobs for the specific purpose of like, oh, we just want to have someone that will come here to fill the grunt work, I still think that there's a lot of Americans.
01:57:38.000 I think that...
01:57:39.000 It's been debunked a bunch of times even though it's like the conventional wisdom.
01:57:43.000 Americans won't do these jobs.
01:57:45.000 It's like 100% they will do these jobs.
01:57:48.000 And they'll do a lot of them.
01:57:49.000 It's just that ultimately it's not marketed that way.
01:57:53.000 And the truth of the matter is that the majority of these visas that are given out are given out on...
01:57:59.000 You know, temporary basis, which is a problem with this mass asylees that were being assigned under the Biden administration, when they're like, yep, all the Venezuelans get temporary work visas.
01:58:08.000 Like, they shouldn't have been given, A, the temporary status, and B, should not have been given those temporary visas.
01:58:14.000 And I think that it's a worthwhile discussion about how many we let in.
01:58:18.000 I think all of that should be on the table.
01:58:20.000 But to your point, Phil, yeah.
01:58:22.000 E-Verify, man, we've had it on the books forever.
01:58:25.000 We just need to start enforcing that.
01:58:27.000 Getting those people that are hiring illegals, they need to be punished too, man.
01:58:31.000 Like, yes, go after the criminal aliens, but any of the institutions that are propping them up, go after them as well.
01:58:37.000 no American that I know of is going to be going to Southern California and Oxnard, Ventura County, Oxnard area is going to be out there and picking strawberries 12 hours a day.
01:58:37.000 A.k.a.
01:58:47.000 I cannot imagine an American doing that.
01:58:49.000 And here's what I'll say is that...
01:58:51.000 If you set a standard where you're like, yeah, no Americans are going to do it.
01:58:56.000 Well, if you want to have a job and let's say that there's minimum work requirements, you're going to take a job.
01:59:01.000 So this is one of the things that is being discussed right now.
01:59:04.000 Having work requirements for able-bodied adults, right?
01:59:10.000 If they get health insurance, they might do it.
01:59:12.000 Right.
01:59:12.000 But that's my point.
01:59:13.000 So the problem is that people will have this idea like, oh, I would never do that job.
01:59:17.000 Listen, man, if you build an infrastructure and more specifically a culture around it, people will do it.
01:59:23.000 In my hometown, Devil's Lake, North Dakota, there are people that are working at jobs that are making $16, $17, $18 an hour.
01:59:29.000 But the cost of living in rural North Dakota is significantly lower and they're able to live a decent life.
01:59:35.000 So there's plenty of jobs like that that exist.
01:59:37.000 But I agree that...
01:59:38.000 It's going to take, there's a curve.
01:59:39.000 Like right now, today, could you get a bunch of people there?
01:59:42.000 But if you're like, hey, this is the truth.
01:59:42.000 Probably not.
01:59:45.000 We need to have people here, so we have to incentivize and grow infrastructure around it.
01:59:48.000 If you're a company that grows strawberries and you want to attract people to pick your strawberries, you've got to do some things to incentivize them to come and do it.
01:59:55.000 But I think that they eventually would do it.
01:59:58.000 It's just you have to create an incentive and a structure for them.
02:00:00.000 There's no incentive as well to, like, because strawberries and fruit like that are really difficult to, like, because this is why they don't have, like, mechanized.
02:00:06.000 People often ask me, like, why aren't there mechanized systems for it?
02:00:09.000 Strawberries bruise really easily.
02:00:10.000 I didn't grow strawberries in my life, but they bruise easily.
02:00:13.000 That's why they have hand pickers for anything that's hand picked usually.
02:00:16.000 But the problem is there's no incentive for people to go and make a robotic solution to this, to make a mechanized solution for this.
02:00:21.000 And, you know, there's a cool question about whether that's taking away labor for people trusting my families in farming.
02:00:26.000 I understand the whole issue with mechanizing farming.
02:00:28.000 But in this specific instance where it's really labor intensive, there's no pressure to, like, modernize it in any way at all.
02:00:34.000 And that can be so easily done.
02:00:36.000 I mean, come on.
02:00:36.000 It's picking strawberries.
02:00:37.000 Like, we can mechanize crazy stuff and we can't do strawberries.
02:00:40.000 The only people that will tell you that is people that want to pay royalties.
02:00:48.000 Those are the people that will tell you, oh, we can't do this.
02:00:51.000 It's just the same crap we've heard a thousand times of with all the robber barons from 100 years ago.
02:00:57.000 Druish AF of Christendom says, Brett and Phil cast my favorite dudes for DaGongo.
02:01:04.000 Yes, there is a female genocide in DaGongo and we need to raise awareness.
02:01:09.000 That's where we're going to ship all of the...
02:01:11.000 Illegal immigrants who committed crimes.
02:01:13.000 So they can commit crimes in the gongo?
02:01:15.000 I thought we were trying to save the gongo.
02:01:18.000 We'll have an open-air prison out there.
02:01:21.000 There you go.
02:01:22.000 They're going to be picking strawberries in the gongo.
02:01:24.000 Picking strawberries in the gongo.
02:01:26.000 Alright, perfect.
02:01:28.000 Dylan Brown says, feminism is destroying men's confidence.
02:01:32.000 You can ask to buy a woman a drink without being called a creep.
02:01:35.000 I think he's meant you can't ask to buy a woman a drink without being called a creep.
02:01:39.000 Then when women get hurt, bad guys.
02:01:42.000 Well, then when women get hurt by bad guys.
02:01:45.000 I'm not sure if that was supposed to go longer or whatever.
02:01:48.000 But yeah, I mean, look, there is a degree of truth to that.
02:01:52.000 The cost of a man asking a woman out is significantly higher now.
02:01:56.000 Women will, you know, women could, not will, but could, you know, do more than just say no and bruise your feelings.
02:02:05.000 Like, they could say, oh, he was creepy, he was weird, you know, they might put it on the internet, blah, blah, blah.
02:02:10.000 So it is, but still, like, fortune favors the brave, right?
02:02:15.000 Like, you do have to, you know, put yourself out there in...
02:02:20.000 Pretty much every context if you want to be successful, whether it be making music that people want to check out.
02:02:26.000 You have to put music out there and risk people telling you.
02:02:29.000 Actually, guarantee that people are going to tell you it's bad because the first stuff that you put out isn't going to be great.
02:02:35.000 So yeah, you do have to take that kind of risk.
02:02:41.000 But we're going to wrap it up, so why don't you just smash the like button, share the show with everyone you know.
02:02:46.000 Head on over to TimCast.com and join the Discord.
02:02:50.000 If you join the Discord, that's where you can get access to the After Show and you can call in from the Discord.
02:02:56.000 So you can meet like-minded people.
02:02:58.000 We also want you to join Rumble and you can watch the Uncensored After Show.
02:03:03.000 On the Uncensored After Show tonight, we are going to be talking about a New York Post piece that says, the headline is, Biden officials knew about potential COVID-19 vaccine risks and took steps to downplay them, scathing Senate report.
02:03:18.000 Now, we can't talk about this because YouTube is still very sensitive about these things, but we're going to get into it on the After Show.
02:03:25.000 So if you join, become a member on Rumble, join Rumble, you can watch the After Show.
02:03:31.000 But that's going to...
02:03:33.000 We'll wrap it up for us.
02:03:33.000 AK, do you have anything you want to shout out?
02:03:35.000 Yeah.
02:03:35.000 Follow me on XRealAKKamara over on the Chinese spy rap known as TikTok at AKKamara.
02:03:42.000 Want to shout out The Fall of Minneapolis.
02:03:44.000 This was an amazing documentary.
02:03:46.000 For those of you that haven't watched it, there's been a lot of news recently that there's a potentiality that President Trump could pardon Derek Chauvin and the other officers involved.
02:03:55.000 So go and watch that movie.
02:03:56.000 Also want to give a shout out to Hotep Jesus for even getting me connected with people.
02:04:02.000 And shout-out to all of you in this room because, you know, this has been a fantastic time.
02:04:06.000 I've been a fan of the show, like, quite literally.
02:04:08.000 I'm in the Discord and everything like that.
02:04:09.000 I'm just not super active.
02:04:11.000 And this is fantastic, man.
02:04:12.000 I loved it.
02:04:13.000 So, yeah, shout-out to all of you.
02:04:15.000 Awesome.
02:04:15.000 I had a blast, too, with you here, sir.
02:04:17.000 Always a good time.
02:04:18.000 Always a good time with yourself when I meet you.
02:04:20.000 These two gentlemen, and search, press the buttons.
02:04:22.000 My name is Raymond G. Stanley Jr.
02:04:24.000 Follow me anywhere in the world.
02:04:26.000 Under Raymond G. Stanley Jr., I planted trees.
02:04:29.000 Like I told you, great men do things like that.
02:04:31.000 Brett?
02:04:31.000 Guys, if you want to follow me, I'm on Instagram and on Twix, at Brett Dasvick on both of those platforms.
02:04:38.000 But what you should do is watch Pop Culture Crisis.
02:04:41.000 We are live Monday through Friday, 3 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, noon Pacific.
02:04:45.000 YouTube at Rumble.
02:04:46.000 See you there.
02:04:46.000 I am Phil that remains on Twix.
02:04:48.000 I'm Phil that remains official on Instagram.
02:04:50.000 Today, my good friend Nick Nocturnal released a song that I performed with him.
02:04:54.000 The song is called Scarlet.
02:04:56.000 You can check it out on the whole internet.
02:04:58.000 His name is Nick Nocturnal.
02:05:00.000 You can search Spotify, and I think it comes up when you search All That Remains.
02:05:05.000 But yeah, Nick Nocturnal, the song is called Scarlet.
02:05:08.000 Go check that out.
02:05:10.000 You can check out my band's new record called Anti-Fragile on Spotify, Apple Music, Pandora, the And stick around for that after show.
02:05:19.000 We will see you tomorrow.
02:05:21.000 tomorrow.
02:08:00.000 Thank you.
02:08:28.000 The New York Post is reporting Biden officials knew about potential COVID-19 vaccine risks and took steps to downplay them, scathing Senate reports says.
02:08:41.000 Top federal health officials actively took steps to delay warning the public for months in 2021 about the potential risks of heart-related complications from receiving mRNA COVID-19 vaccinations.
02:08:55.000 A scathing interim report from Senator Ron Johnson's office alleges.
02:09:01.000 Starting in February 2021, federal health agencies had been alerted to large reports of myocarditis in young people who received the Pfizer vaccine, but waited until late June that year to adjust the vaccine labels to make that side effect known.
02:09:15.000 Even though CDC and FDA officials were well aware of the risk of myocarditis following COVID-19 vaccination, The Biden administration opted to withhold, issuing a formal warning to the public for months about the safety concerns, jeopardizing the health of young Americans, the 54-page interim report said.
02:09:36.000 Myocarditis is an inflammatory condition of the heart muscle, while pericarditis entails the inflammation of the lining sac around the heart.
02:09:44.000 Myopericarditis is a combination of the two ailments.
02:09:47.000 Most patients who suffer from these side effects eventually experience resolution of symptoms, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
02:09:56.000 Well, thank God they cleared that up.
02:09:59.000 Due to the time it took health officials to adjust the labels, doctors who warned about the potential risks of myocarditis among those who took the vaccine were subject to censorship, suppression, or accusations of peddling misinformation.
02:10:11.000 Now, this is something that actually, I mean, around here, It's not a surprise because this is kind of common knowledge.
02:10:20.000 You know, everyone in this space, you know, in the kind of alternative media space, everyone is like, well, yeah, I mean, this is something that we've known about.
02:10:33.000 But it is worth pointing out that for your average normie, you know, the person that has a 30 to 45 minute news diet per week.
02:10:44.000 This is news.
02:10:45.000 And they didn't believe, you know, if they did hear these stories, they didn't believe them.
02:10:51.000 Yo, shout out to my fellow purebloods real quick.
02:10:53.000 Purebloods!
02:10:54.000 So here's what's funny.
02:10:56.000 So myself and my wife, both of us, when the vaxxers first came out, I did a bunch of studies.
02:11:02.000 Like, I read a bunch of studies.
02:11:03.000 I saw what the upside and downside...
02:11:05.000 The thing that caught me, I've had, and I do have some medical issues, and more specifically...
02:11:12.000 My mother at the time was in a nursing home, and I knew that they were going to be like, you can't see your mom unless you're vaxxed or whatever.
02:11:21.000 And so after doing the research, I didn't feel pressured.
02:11:23.000 I was like, you know what?
02:11:24.000 We're going to do the mRNA.
02:11:26.000 Because I thought the idea of using genetic manipulation to basically get your body to do these things could lead to some really good things.
02:11:33.000 I know some people want to poo-poo mRNA altogether, the technology.
02:11:38.000 I'm not that guy.
02:11:39.000 I think that the technology is amazing of what the potentiality could be.
02:11:43.000 However, I knew that when I took it, I knew that there were already studies out that showed that these are potential things that it could damage the heart muscles.
02:11:51.000 I already knew that.
02:11:53.000 But I do agree with you that most people didn't.
02:11:56.000 Because why?
02:11:57.000 What's the phrase?
02:11:59.000 Safe and effective.
02:12:00.000 Safe and effective.
02:12:02.000 Your heart suddenly stopping because of myocarditis or pericarditis sounds safe or effective.
02:12:08.000 It sure doesn't.
02:12:08.000 So yeah, this red pilling feels almost by design because it's so far removed, a lot of people kind of forgot.
02:12:16.000 And especially the normies that have moved on with their life, they might see a headline like this, but it's not going to be talked about on a large scale.
02:12:23.000 And this is what they do as a control, not to be conspiratorial.
02:12:28.000 But if you, on the back end, cover yourself by saying, oh, we told you.
02:12:33.000 No, read the fine print.
02:12:36.000 It's in there.
02:12:38.000 Yeah, I mean, moderating your...
02:12:58.000 Even if you think something like Peter McCullough was saying, if you think everyone's going to kick off, you might want to be like, look, man, there's a chance.
02:13:07.000 Yeah.
02:13:07.000 As opposed to being like, this is going to happen.
02:13:10.000 You're all done for.
02:13:13.000 I think moderation is probably good when it comes to catastrophic predictions.
02:13:17.000 Be like, look, there's a chance of catastrophic results.
02:13:20.000 There's a chance.
02:13:20.000 You know, maybe.
02:13:22.000 I do feel bad, though, for all the people that were fooled, bamboozled, didn't understand what the risks were.
02:13:28.000 But I think that that was a calculation.
02:13:30.000 Like, I honestly think that there are government officials that are like, we know that it's this.
02:13:35.000 We don't care.
02:13:36.000 Oh, yeah.
02:13:37.000 We don't have to deal with the consequences anyways.
02:13:40.000 American people don't have the appetite to lock us up.
02:13:42.000 But that's also why I do think that we do need to have – I know people said like a Nuremberg-style trial.
02:13:47.000 But like we need to have accountability for people of who – what did they know?
02:13:52.000 When did they know it?
02:13:53.000 And should they be criminally liable?
02:13:54.000 And I think the answer is yes.