A judge in Trump s hush money case raises questions about social media posts claiming to preview jury verdicts. Plus, a bunch of weird stuff, including a post from a family member of one of the jurors, and a possible conspiracy theory about MAGA crazies.
00:00:17.000A Facebook post has emerged where someone claims that they are family members with one of the jurors and they predicted the outcome before it happened.
00:00:25.000This seems like a silly, random, nonsensical Facebook post that matters to no one.
00:00:31.000But apparently the judge thinks it may be real, submitted a letter to both parties in the Trump trial—it's over already—showing this message, removing the MAGA crazies quote from it.
00:00:44.000And now many people are speculating that the judge, with insider information on the jurors, may actually believe this is real.
00:00:51.000Otherwise, why would they submit this letter to both parties?
00:00:56.000There's a million and one reasons why this may be the case.
00:00:59.000I have to wonder what the is going on.
00:01:01.000Some are suggesting that Democrats realized Trump's improving in the polls and making tons of money, so they're trying to undo this and walk it back.
00:01:08.000Maybe or maybe they're trying to trigger a mistrial to force Trump once again back to New York for another multi-week long trial to jam him up so he can't campaign.
00:01:26.000People are giving their reasons, so we'll talk about that.
00:01:28.000Plus, we've got a bunch of weird stuff.
00:01:30.000I mean, the Hunter Biden prosecution has rested.
00:01:33.000We've got left-wing activists calling for the extermination of Republicans in response to Hunter Biden being criminally charged for buying a gun while being a crackhead.
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00:02:25.000Joining us tonight to talk about this and everything else is Christina Urso.
00:03:46.000Dear Counsel, Today the Court became aware of a comment that was posted on the Unified Court System's public Facebook page and which I now bring to your attention.
00:03:53.000In the comment, the user Michael Anderson states, My cousin is a juror and says Trump is getting convicted.
00:03:59.000Thank you folks for all your hard work.
00:04:01.000The comment, now labeled as one week old, responded to routine UCS notice posted May 29th regarding oral arguments in the 4th Department of the Appellate Division unrelated to this proceeding.
00:04:11.000The posting entitled, The Appellate Division, 4th Department, will hear oral arguments this morning at 10, and the comment are both viewable, and then here's the link.
00:04:20.000And this is signed by Judge Juan Mershon.
00:05:28.000If this is a legitimate legal proceeding, then Trump's lawyers can now argue for a mistrial, I guess.
00:05:34.000I see this, I'd crumple it up, I'd throw it in the garbage.
00:05:36.000I'd say, people post stupid things on the internet all the time, what do I care?
00:05:39.000Some are suggesting Because the judge knows who the jurors are, that the judge has been able to verify that this person is in fact in some way related to one of the jurors and thus there's legitimate grounds for a mistrial.
00:05:51.000I don't know that's true, but the question then is why did the judge send this letter?
00:05:56.000There's something really funny about all of this being disrupted by someone's, like, semi-boomer-y relative on Facebook making a comment.
00:06:05.000I think he has to alert the jury of it to keep the idea that this is a legitimate and trustworthy court up, you know?
00:06:13.000The internet sleuths are never going to let it go.
00:06:17.000So if he doesn't—if Marshawn doesn't get out in front of it, it's going to look like they are actively suppressing something that could affect the trial.
00:06:26.000But again, like, watch out for your relatives on Facebook, man.
00:06:45.000Because even the emojis in the comment from- in the copy that Mershon sent out in the letter look different than the ones that are used in the screenshot we have.
00:06:53.000Is this like one guy's relative who's like commenting on all of these things?
00:06:57.000According to an article by Fox 5, it says the profile for Michael Anderson has little publicly available information, but the user identifies himself as a trans, abled, and professional s-poster.
00:07:27.000So what NBC News is saying, when a defendant who has been convicted by a jury but has not yet been sentenced learns of alleged jury misconduct, he can move to set aside the verdict under New York criminal procedure law.
00:07:37.000If a defendant can prove that jury misconduct may have affected a substantial right of the defendant, the remedy is a new trial.
00:08:07.000It's obviously been a huge fundraising platform for him.
00:08:11.000I guess the biggest issue is like if they have to go to retrial, what happens, you know, obviously with sentencing, being July 11th right before the RNC.
00:08:17.000That is sort of the big hang up for me right now in terms of how does this affect Trump?
00:08:22.000That seems to be where it could snare him the most.
00:08:24.000But, you know, if you can make a billion dollars off of a conviction.
00:08:30.000Politically speaking, do you guys think it was better or worse for him to be found guilty?
00:08:34.000Like, was he hoping for the jury to find him guilty so he'd be able to advertise and kind of have a rally around the flag effect?
00:08:43.000Not guilty is better because then he comes out and says they won't stop.
00:08:46.000But they got their guilty verdict because they're in a Democrat jurisdiction where the jurors are like, I ain't gonna be the one to stick my neck out.
00:08:58.000Because if it comes out as not guilty, then it may look like some impropriety with the Joe Biden administration, like weighing the scale one way or another, not being able to get a fair trial in his favor in Delaware.
00:09:35.000I don't know one way or the other if they thought it would look better for him to be acquitted because then it just looks like it's not a fair system.
00:09:43.000I think that everybody looking at Hunter Biden knows what he did.
00:09:47.000Uh, and I think that they want to see him face the same kind of justice everybody else would have to face.
00:09:53.000So I think it looks better for Biden if that happens.
00:09:56.000And then he says, oh, look, the system works.
00:10:04.000I mean, you know, because you have this documentary coming out about the Whitmer case.
00:10:07.000I think there are there's a certain level of people saying, You can't trust a jury anywhere or a judge anywhere because there's so much political bias in everything we do these days.
00:10:40.000Well, and I think that's sort of what Trump's campaign is capitalizing off of right now.
00:10:45.000People feel like they knew the system was not good, now they feel like they have this confirmation, and actually supporting Trump, donating to him, doing whatever, is the only way they can take action and sort of fight back.
00:10:56.000That's a really powerful sentiment to have at your disposal.
00:11:28.000Well, I think they could get to the bottom of this relatively quickly.
00:11:31.000I guess actually they'd have to get a search warrant or something, but they could find the information if they were to digitally have communicated this.
00:11:38.000Yeah, you just depose the person who wrote it.
00:11:40.000Yeah, but then they gotta subpoena Facebook.
00:13:05.000And then people were saying that because the judge had this letter, they believe that it is at least some circumstantial evidence the judge has looked into it a little bit.
00:13:16.000Argument being, one of the jurors' names might be like Rick Anderson or like Sarah Anderson.
00:13:22.000And so then getting someone of the same name and like, hey, it's my cousin.
00:13:25.000And she said, you know, the judge is like, uh, I think the letter is to protect himself.
00:13:30.000I think the judge is sending out the letter to say, like, look, we're aware of these things.
00:13:46.000Maybe or just that, like, he knows that there could be a conclusion drawn by the public and he wants to say, like, oh, I was proactive about alerting both sides.
00:13:53.000They're not even supposed to have the appearance of impropriety.
00:14:06.000Because it just seems like any conservative leaning person who's brought to his courtroom on any charge is now going to be able to be like, but we believe that there's bias in this courtroom.
00:14:15.000Democrats are giving this guy a promotion.
00:14:44.000Hunter Biden's daughter Naomi testifies about her father and his federal gun trial ending first week.
00:14:49.000I believe the prosecution has rested as well, right?
00:14:51.000Yeah, they rested this afternoon, and she was the second witness they called.
00:14:55.000So the prosecution called one of the clerks from the gun shop where Hunter Biden bought his gun to testify, saying, like, no, the form was clear.
00:15:04.000The other one is saying, no, there's a reason why it's not.
00:15:06.000Naomi's testimony I actually find really sad.
00:15:09.000So she's testifying about this time period in 2018 where she went to visit her dad.
00:15:14.000She brought her now husband then boyfriend with her.
00:15:17.000They were like maybe moving some of his stuff using his truck and and she basically is saying like I didn't see any drug paraphernalia.
00:15:22.000I was really proud of him for like dealing with his addiction and stuff like that. And there's
00:15:25.000something about it to me that is just like, man, I'm so sorry. Like, I don't think the Biden
00:15:29.000family is, I think obviously there's a lot of skeletons in their closet and stuff like that. But there's
00:15:33.000a moment where like your daughter is having to come to your defense and be like, no, he was
00:15:35.000trying really hard. And then you know that he's like, actually sleeping with like your aunt who just
00:15:40.000lost her husband. He's wrecking that family. He's going to go on addiction again. Like he's just
00:15:44.000such a chaotic person. It makes me sad for a lot of kids in America who grow up with parents who
00:15:49.000are just completely consumed by addiction. Free Hunter Biden. Hunter Biden should not be
00:15:57.000And he should be criminally charged and investigated over Burisma and things of that nature.
00:16:01.000But it was one of our Super Chatters last night who made the point that the national instant background check system requires self-incrimination.
00:16:09.000It's a violation of the Fifth Amendment.
00:16:11.000And the only reason Hunter Biden is being charged is because he refused to self-incriminate.
00:16:17.000Well, and I really wanted to hear more from sort of the 2A gun rights community on this case, because again, it does seem like something they would be like, except for the fact that his last name is Biden, we don't think you're being treated fairly.
00:16:31.000It's interesting hearing Abbey Lowell, his defense attorney, one of his arguments is
00:16:36.000like well he did not think of himself as an addict and the form is phrased in present
00:16:42.000tense because Hunter Biden had just completed this 11 days.
00:16:45.000Yeah, no, but they had evidence that he did crack like that day or something.
00:16:48.000Oh yeah, and the texts say he was like searching for drugs, but the argument is like he was
00:16:51.000sober, bought the gun, then did some more crack, relapsed.
00:16:54.000Which is also sort of like that's your best defense?
00:16:57.000Like, during opening statements, they have—sorry guys, I spent a lot of time reading about this this week—they have, you know, the prosecutors played clips from his autobiography, which he narrated describing his life in drug addiction, and lol, his defense attorney was like, Because the book came out in 2021.
00:17:16.000His mindset at that state is not the same as his mindset in 2018.
00:17:21.000So he really didn't think of himself as an addict.
00:17:23.000And so when they asked him on this forum, it's a very weird defense.
00:17:28.000On principle, I kind of do agree that he shouldn't be charged.
00:17:32.000But if that is what the laws on the book show, then it's what has to go forward.
00:17:37.000Because then the double standard wouldn't be held if the shoe was on the other side.
00:17:40.000Well, I mean, peacetime Tim says you shouldn't charge him, but wartime Tim says I am for this and I think you should get life in prison.
00:17:49.000I think it was a similar strategy with how the Democrats were with the Stormy Daniel case against Trump.
00:17:55.000It was really a PR battle more than I think what it had to do with the actual charges.
00:18:00.000It's a PR and political issue for the Bidens and how they're doing this and how some of these details are being brought up.
00:18:07.000There were complicated dynamics on display.
00:18:09.000Haley Biden, who is married to Beau Biden, the president's elder son, was summoned by the prosecution to relive a portion of her life where she called it a terrible experience.
00:18:17.000She bonded with Hunter Biden over the tragedy of her husband's death in 2015.
00:18:21.000Yeah, and she says that he got him hooked on crack cocaine.
00:18:23.000She eventually got him hooked on crack.
00:18:26.000Yeah, so again, these are the details that they're dredging up that really is the issue for Biden.
00:18:33.000One other big picture thing here is this is in Wilmington, Delaware, where the Bidens are extremely popular.
00:18:38.000Joe Biden's been elected to Senate there like a dozen times or something.
00:18:42.000So the Bidens are extremely popular there.
00:18:44.000Jill Biden's coming to the courthouse there.
00:18:46.000It's tough to see how a fair trial would be given there, given the community's biases towards the Bidens, because the Bidens are a big name in Well, in Delaware.
00:18:57.000And Biden has said multiple times, but he just reaffirmed this during an interview when he was in Normandy, saying, you know, it's really simple.
00:19:05.000He just responded with the word yes, but he was asked, you know, would you pardon Hunter?
00:19:08.000Or is there no possibility that you would pardon Hunter if he were convicted?
00:19:51.000I'm not surprised Biden's proud of that.
00:19:53.000In 2020, Biden got nearly 27,000 votes and Trump only got around 3,500.
00:20:00.000So just trying to understand where this is, a jury of Biden's peers.
00:20:04.000How are Delaware and Rhode Island states at this point, you know what I mean?
00:20:08.000I had read this article or read this data from, you know, after the census every 10 years, they put out a thing being like, here's the ways that we have errors.
00:20:16.000And I think Rhode Island was supposed to lose a congressional seat, so they only have like one, but there was an error in the population, so they got to keep two or something like that.
00:20:25.000The trial of Hunter Biden, again, I don't feel like I know enough about gun law to be able to comment.
00:20:31.000It does seem like the kind of thing that people who are very pro-gun rights would be saying, this is unfair.
00:20:37.000And I think some of the questions that people are raising, while weird and sort of nitpicky, kind of makes sense.
00:20:42.000On the other hand, Hunter Biden openly admitted to being an addict.
00:20:46.000This has been a big part of his narrative journey.
00:20:50.000He's talked about it in his autobiography.
00:20:52.000And I don't know that the Biden family has ever really addressed this issue in a way that is sympathetic enough to the American people.
00:21:01.000I was honestly almost surprised that this prosecutor, you know, if we believe that Biden's pulling all the strings of the government, which I think it's mostly his staff, but like, how did this even get this far, where they were allowed to do this?
00:21:11.000Except for the fact that at one point, you know, he had this plea deal for tax evasion, Hunter Biden did, and also the gun charges, and they were trying to mold them together, and we had a Trump-appointed judge throw that out.
00:21:21.000It's just this weird clash of like, what are we allowed to do?
00:21:24.000He's the first child of a sitting president to ever be criminally charged like this.
00:21:30.000I know everyone's concerned about the 2A ramifications for this case, but for now, what we should do is lock up Hunter Biden, Joe Biden, Jill Biden, Hillary Clinton, Comey, Clapper, Yates.
00:21:46.000I don't want to read every name off the list, but we're only getting started.
00:21:50.000And so with this, I accept putting all of those people in prison for a very long time.
00:21:56.000At least until we figure out what the heck is going on.
00:22:37.000It's, you know, look, We're in a lawfare stage in this country, and if Republicans just keep sitting back and saying, well, I'll put it this way.
00:22:47.000Imagine playing a game of Monopoly where you are watching the other person just take cash out of the bank and stick it into their pile, and you're like, you can't do that, and they go, yeah, I can.
00:23:10.000So at this point, I'm kind of like, given what they asked for, free speech in due process for those who request it.
00:23:15.000For anybody who thinks there should be none, then we apply none.
00:23:20.000And this means that there's only a microscopic .0002% of people who I would be okay with putting in jail without due process, and it's the people who have advocated for jailing people without due process.
00:23:30.000You come to me and say, we should be able to arrest and jail these people.
00:23:37.000Look, the gun-controlled people Of all people defending Hunter Biden, I ain't playing that game.
00:23:43.000You can't come to me and say you shouldn't be allowed to buy a gun and then defend Hunter Biden when he's doing crack and buys a gun, okay?
00:23:53.000I think there's a relatable way, I believe, for President Joe Biden to talk about this.
00:23:58.000I don't think it's unique to Hunter Biden to be in the thralls of addiction.
00:24:02.000It really goes to show no matter how powerful and well-connected and privileged you are, you are not beyond the realms of becoming a drug addict and ruining your life.
00:24:10.000So maybe if Joe Biden talked about it like that, I don't know if that would be politically advantageous.
00:24:15.000But no other addict who had bought a gun under these circumstances would have been given the plea deal that Hunter Biden offered.
00:24:21.000This is the conversation about the two-tiered justice system that I think really comes down to this moment.
00:24:28.000Again, I'm happy to have a conversation about whether the law that's in play is real.
00:24:33.000You know, to your point, if it's the one on the books and he violated it, then there is a level of like, he should be held accountable the way any other American would.
00:24:41.000It's hard to prove if you're a drug addict.
00:24:43.000And I think he kind of got screwed over in how they had the contents of his laptop leak.
00:25:09.000But how many crimes were committed like throughout those pictures like that were not prosecuted,
00:25:16.000Like Tim said, I think that there are so many things he should be prosecuted for, like Burisma, like financial crimes, and I think that this, that they're getting him for this, this actually shows the two-tiered system that if this was anybody else, they actually would have been hit with fraud charges and all this other stuff, but this is what they're giving him to make it look like, oh, nobody's above the law.
00:26:42.000This is why I'm saying, you know, Will Chamberlain talks about, and I think Jack Posobiec, peacetime conservatives and wartime conservatives.
00:26:50.000I don't consider myself conservative, though the left does because they live in Wally World.
00:26:55.000But I certainly believe in peacetime classic liberalism and wartime post-liberalism.
00:27:01.000That is to say, these people have shown their colors over and over again.
00:27:06.000They demand... It's a Mont and Bailey.
00:27:35.000I think that this is, again, I talk about it sometimes where there are people who are so committed to being Democrats and being part of the progressive part of the country that they don't actually think about their values or ideals.
00:27:47.000And so she doesn't care that it's a gun charge.
00:27:57.000I mean, even, you know, I think you could say the same thing.
00:27:59.000There are some accolades for Trump who would say, you know, he is You could never be touched by anything.
00:28:04.000But in this case, this is Joe Biden's administration that's in charge of this.
00:28:08.000Again, I'm sort of surprised that this was even allowed to be brought to trial.
00:28:14.000Maybe it's just that his crimes are so egregious.
00:28:16.000Maybe to your point, they're saying, oh, well, we'll let him get a nice little plea deal on these issues and we'll ignore all the other ones.
00:28:34.000Some of them are lich kings, meaning they are undead and cognizant of the world around them, and others are just zombies marching forward at the command of the puppet masters.
00:28:43.000These people have no idea what's going on.
00:28:45.000They don't understand any basic morality or moral philosophy.
00:28:50.000Their claims, their desires, their policies are non-existent.
00:28:54.000One day, women is offensive, so they say, Wemexin, I'm not kidding, with an X, and then the next day they say, Wemexin is exclusive because trans women are women, so just say women.
00:29:04.000There is no functioning logic behind their desires.
00:29:10.000I guess the issue here also becomes the weaponization of the DOJ, and once we start seeing Trump be indicted, we're going to see Democrat presidents in the future be indicted by ambitious Republican AGs.
00:29:22.000Trump allies have been sentenced to prison time, many of them.
00:29:28.000Trump hasn't been sentenced yet, but Peter Navarro, in the past Paul Manafort, Papadopoulos, Roger Stone.
00:29:34.000It's a long list, so if we see a sort of tit-for-tat escalation here is the real issue.
00:29:39.000If Trump seeks reprisals when he gets elected, which I think he alludes to sometimes in a kind tone.
00:29:45.000And then the Democrats, like, clutch their brawls.
00:29:46.000They're like, he's saying he would lock up his political rivals and opponents.
00:29:50.000Because what have you guys been doing since 2021?
00:29:53.000Can someone, like, you probably don't have enough characters to make this list, but could we get a list of all of Trump's associates who have been falsely charged and imprisoned?
00:30:02.000Well I think it's like a flimsy charge is what people really believe, because in Steve Bannon's case, contempt of court has happened in the past, but Steve, contempt of Congress has happened in the past, but Bannon's the one who gets sent to prison for it.
00:30:18.000I'm looking, the former Trump adviser... Allen Weisselberg?
00:30:20.000Four months after, yep, convicted of contempt of Congress for defying a subpoena related to January 6th.
00:30:27.000It's funny because there are really long lists of people, like Forbes has one, Newsweek has one, but they also stopped tracking them after a while.
00:30:33.000Like, if you Google this right away, which I just did, because I used to pull these names pretty regularly when I was reporting, and it would be like 11 Trump's associates, but that one is CNN from 2021.
00:30:42.000Like, they stopped updating their list because they just got so ridiculously long.
00:30:47.000Hillary Clinton committed a crime by having a private server where there was government and redacted files that she shouldn't have had on private servers and then destroyed all the evidence with software.
00:30:59.000They could have gone after her or they could have had her throw somebody under the bus if they wanted, but Trump chose not to prosecute.
00:31:05.000His whole campaign was about locking her up, chose not to go through with it in the idea of unity, I guess, but it seems as though the Democrats do not hold back in not only indicting Trump's allies, but Trump himself.
00:31:18.000Trump thought he was gonna... Trump thought, I won, I'm the president, now I can be in charge.
00:31:22.000And he had no idea what he was up against. He should have listened to Schumer.
00:31:25.000When Schumer said the intelligence agencies got six ways from Sunday from coming after you.
00:31:29.000Trump wasn't paying attention. And I think it's funny that, you know, people talk about Trump's hires.
00:32:26.000It's just, and there's like, look, there's zero logic behind it.
00:32:29.000I'm not a staunch pro-lifer, and this is not even the only issue, I am just trying to find the moral consistency and logic for the decisions we make and why we make them.
00:32:38.000So I talk to a conservative pro-lifer, they'll give me all the reasons, they'll hammer them down, and I'm like, I completely understand exactly what you're saying, I don't know that I agree, That would be the appropriate way to handle it.
00:32:49.000So the argument I would have with, say, any Ben Shapiro or Steven Crowder, is going to come down to, I understand what you're saying, but in the long run, will this result in a negative or positive outcome that we want?
00:33:01.000The left's argument is, we have no idea, you're wrong, we want to abort babies at nine months.
00:33:06.000No matter what logic you present or ask them, it's just, women can do whatever they want.
00:33:11.000The best example, of course, was when we had that liberal feller, Lance, From the surf song.
00:33:17.000And he said, a woman could abort whenever she wants her body.
00:33:35.000And so if we keep if you You can't walk up to a fire and ask it to kindly leave your home.
00:33:42.000And this is what I feel like a lot of conservatives are doing when they say things like, well, if the law says so, you know, well, fortunately we can't do anything because the law doesn't say.
00:35:44.000But I also feel like It's gotten so politicized and so polarized and crazy that people are also kind of tuning out of politics altogether.
00:35:53.000They're not interested in politics anymore, and I think that that's a good thing, because then I feel like the shift is now more people who see what's happening to our country and don't like it and want it to change for the better, and then there are people that see what's happening, they think it's a good thing, and they want more of that.
00:37:16.000And I'm sure there are Republicans who are signing on to this.
00:37:19.000Maybe they do want child welfare, but also they say we want to stop incentivizing Like, sending minor children across, we want to fight human trafficking.
00:37:27.000Like, there is actually a common goal in this even if they're maybe talking about different aspects of what the dangers are, if it's a burden for the American government, the taxpayers, things like that.
00:37:35.000So there are these moments where I'm like maybe there is some sort of realignment happening but it's just not enough on the political front.
00:37:48.000Instead of just paying attention to team politics is really how you would see the shift and the divide.
00:37:53.000I've also seen it, too, where, like, with the Republicans, they never really cared about, like, prison reform.
00:37:58.000Like, I just attended both of the BOP oversight hearings, and I felt like that was, for once, it seemed like that's something they can come together on, that both sides can agree we need to reform the prison system.
00:38:11.000No, because Trump did some prison reform and then got wailed on it for it because it was bad.
00:38:17.000I feel like Republicans in principle aren't the party of prison reform.
00:38:22.000They don't care about solitary confinement and it's crazy because we have the political prisoners.
00:38:46.000There's a lot of You know, there's probably tons of stories of some dude who's in New York, L.A., or whatever, and they know that there's a politician who's doing something wrong, and the cop shows up at their house.
00:39:01.000I remember reading about Bakersfield in California.
00:39:05.000Some dude had evidence of police impropriety, and so they kept trying to find ways to get the crime on him and then lock him up, and they did.
00:39:21.000I think if you were to have a sit-down conversation on prison morality, private versus public, etc., you're going to get garbled, insane nonsense from the left and hypocrisy.
00:39:31.000I think prison reform sounds nice on paper, but let's be specific.
00:39:34.000When we're saying prison reform, you guys don't believe in lowering sentences for violent offenders, right?
00:39:40.000No, I think violent offenders get sent to an island.
00:39:42.000I mean, that sounds like prison reform the other way.
00:39:46.000I mean, like, fixing the Federal Bureau of Prisons, you have dilapidated buildings that are falling apart, you have a high suicide rate, there's a lot of problems in the prisons as far as, like, human rights issues.
00:39:56.000That is something that everybody should agree on.
00:40:27.000If you commit a crime that qualifies for a supermax or maximum security, you go to the island.
00:40:32.000And the island will just be one of thousands of different islands.
00:40:35.000So if you're a violent offender, we say, you have been excised from society for your violent offense through due process, through evidence, we prove beyond a reasonable doubt, and then we say, You're free to go to this island and nowhere else.
00:41:49.000So we gotta stop wasting money on these prisons.
00:41:52.000You know, a guy in a major city who joins a gang and then kills somebody, why are we being like, okay, now we're gonna go send you to hang out with your gang to learn more how to be a gangbanger?
00:42:02.000It's never made sense to me, and I do think to your point, like, Right now, because we don't have any alters, we don't have asylums, we sort of just lump a lot of people together and it creates these very crazy systems.
00:42:13.000I mean, when you talk about, you know, some of the violence data that comes out of it, people will always ignore it because they're like, well, the power structure in prison is very weird.
00:42:20.000But it's like, so then why is this what we're maintaining?
00:42:24.000If any of this, like, I agree, violent offenders, you know, You need to take it really seriously, but I also think that if the objective is to rehabilitate people, we're clearly not doing that.
00:42:34.000And so it seems like this is a system that everybody is pouring money into, the taxpayers especially, that we are not seeing results from.
00:42:41.000Like, there should be accountability there.
00:43:31.000Probably more humane than locking them in prisons where we joke about how they're gonna get raped.
00:43:35.000Now we can be like, your worst case scenario is, you have no access to our roads, to our clean running water, to our showers and air conditioning, to our stores.
00:43:43.000But you're free to live somewhere else, and if you call that Cannibal Island because that's what they end up doing, I don't see why that's our problem.
00:43:50.000Everybody who lives here has the opportunity to abide by the rules and they don't want to.
00:43:56.000Locking them in a cage where we joke about them getting raped by other people, where they could become hardened criminals and join gangs, or...
00:44:02.000Go live the way humans lived a thousand years ago.
00:44:24.000Yeah, which is a bad thing, which is why I'm actually against criminal justice reform.
00:44:29.000And then we see the way that it affects—in principle, again, it sounds nice, but then in practice, I feel like it always ends up going wrong.
00:44:36.000It ends up to things like bail reform and cashless bail that we have now in New York City, which again, in principle, sounds nice, but leads to more violent crimes happening on the streets.
00:44:45.000So like, on principle, I think it sounds nice, but in practice— Tell me how my prison reform would not result in a reduction of crime.
00:44:53.000It's just, it's used as a euphemism, though.
00:44:57.000The politicians who say they are for criminal justice reform are George Soros.
00:45:07.000If the ideas we're attempting to convey are, how do we fix the prison system, don't use the language of the left, and then We need law and order DAs.
00:45:16.000We need not DAs focused on... I don't think that solves the problem.
00:45:20.000I think the idea of taking a 17-year-old kid who murdered someone to join a gang, putting him in a prison where he then joins the gang, which is in there, and they say, here's how you work in the system, here's how you work outside the system, here's how our gang operates inside and out, part of the gang operates inside and makes money doing so.
00:45:36.000I'm like, there's a reason why These people don't fear prison because prison is just another component of how their gang operates.
00:45:44.000If the alternative is island, I'm with you.
00:45:47.000If the alternative is, which is what most people do when they talk about criminal justice reform, is only giving him 10 years or 15.
00:45:56.000How about bringing back, like, medieval forms of, like, they used to have the stacks, they used to have other things.
00:46:02.000We could really be creative about this.
00:46:05.000No, but for real, like, for people who were non-violent offenders or drug offenders, they throw them in prison, they don't get the rehabilitation that they need, why not do something different, more creative?
00:46:17.000I think the island is the most humane, and I think the island makes the most sense.
00:46:24.000The reason being, if someone is innocent, all you're really doing is saying, like, we're breaking up.
00:46:30.000Like, I'm not going to give you my stuff anymore.
00:46:33.000So the worst case scenario is, it does suck to get exiled, but if you're innocent, at least no one's putting you in the stocks or whatever.
00:46:40.000No one's locking you in a box where you might get raped.
00:46:42.000You just have to figure out how to make a fire and, you know, I do think, I'll clarify this too because I was talking yesterday, the island doesn't just mean a desolate island.
00:46:49.000I'm talking about very, very basic infrastructure.
00:46:53.000We figure out how many people can reasonably be sustained on it, and there's a big building
00:47:37.000Well, I suppose it's fair to say if you're a juvenile, there will be still some extenuating circumstances for, do we really blame the kid, but we cannot let that kid join the gang and go back to where they came from.
00:47:48.000So then I think the answer would be for juveniles who do these things, they get exiled to other parts of the country and they have no communication orders with those other people or something like that.
00:47:56.000But I think for any adult that's engaging this behavior, If you were to ask me, it's like, hey, you've been falsely accused of a crime, you can get locked in a box where people are going to joke about how you're about to get raped, or island.
00:48:11.000I will go fish, I will fend for myself, right?
00:48:15.000So the issue with medieval forms of punishment, which gets into the cruel and unusual, which I don't necessarily agree always is, Uh, is that sometimes there are innocent people that are wronged, but I'm not wronging you.
00:48:27.000I don't think our society is wronging you by telling you that you're not welcome here anymore.
00:48:31.000Like, if someone goes in your house and takes a dump on your floor, you can kick them out.
00:48:35.000It's like saying it's a privilege to be a part of our community, and if you abuse that privilege by violating our laws or, you know, attacking other people, you don't get to be a part of this.
00:48:46.000One guaranteed way to reduce crime would be to make the punishment for aggravated crimes, you are paraded around the city in a diaper, you are made to crawl and goo goo gaga and say, I'm a stinky baby, I'm a stinky baby, while everyone gets to film you.
00:49:32.000These guys would not engage in a crime if they knew the punishment was they're gonna be blasted out on TikTok and Facebook and Instagram in a diaper being made to crawl and told to beg in front of all the people pointing and laughing at them saying, Google Gaga, I'm a stinky baby.
00:49:47.000They'd be like, dude, I'm not getting caught, dude.
00:50:12.000I just think, like, there's a lot of young guys who, they want street cred, they go to jail, and they brag about what they've done.
00:50:20.000Ain't nobody gonna be bragging if they're like, I know what you did, goo goo gaga me stinky baby.
00:50:24.000Like, dude, you got no credit anymore.
00:50:27.000It's shame as a deterrent because otherwise you say, oh yeah, I did this crime and then I made it through prison and I'm so tough and what have you.
00:50:33.000You're kind of reinforcing this image that they have created for themselves and they need to project to be involved in, you know, criminal activity.
00:50:39.000For a lot of these people, going to prison is a point of honor.
00:50:42.000They get tattoos, they mark down how much time they've done and they brag to each other, you don't know what you're talking about, you haven't done time.
00:50:49.000Well, take away his time and put him in a diaper and see how much he brags about it.
00:50:53.000He's gonna be like, look at my Instagram feed.
00:51:01.000They'd be terrified for that to happen.
00:51:03.000And you gotta make sure you're changing it up.
00:51:04.000It's not always putting him in a diaper and making him crawl through the street.
00:51:07.000It's just varying things like that, you know?
00:51:09.000I think there's something about our justice system that we don't do cruel and unusual punishments, and we give people some basic rights, and even some of the worst criminals in our country, we're not willing to—we barely do the death penalty.
00:51:23.000Even in Guantanamo Bay, we don't even kill the people who we think are some of the worst criminals in our— Our whole jail system is cruel and unusual.
00:51:42.000As a society, people laugh about it online, shows that our system is cruel and unusual, it is in violation of the Constitution.
00:51:50.000If that's the case, I tell you this, which would you prefer?
00:51:53.000Ten years in a maximum security prison, or, you gotta put the diaper on, and we're gonna parade you around and you say, Goo Goo Gah, I'm a stinky baby.
00:52:00.000If, look, if you're in for murder and all you have to do is go around town in a diaper, in a stinky diaper... No, murder's different, murder's the island.
00:52:36.000If you think you're gonna get raped walking around the woods one day, then don't go to the woods.
00:52:39.000If we take a bunch of violent offenders and put them on an island, yeah, then you're going to have a bunch of creepy widows and violent offenders, but I tell you this, the people who are there for rape are probably going to not do so well because the rest of the guys are going to team up and be like, nah.
00:52:51.000So the reason I bring up the island thing is because there's already been research on it, and it's dramatically reduced criminal behaviors.
00:52:58.000When they forced violent criminals to re-adapt To survival, learning how to set up a fire, find food, and take care of themselves.
00:53:28.000When people have no choice but to work to survive, then it changes you.
00:53:34.000Because you're not gonna... On an island where there's like, let's say there's ten guys, and they're fishing.
00:53:40.000You can try and steal someone's fish, but then they're gonna fight you, and you're not gonna be able to do it.
00:53:44.000So it's like, now you're in this position where the only people who are around you are people who can fend for themselves, for the most part.
00:54:31.000So he doesn't want to pay 62% of taxes because he doesn't want to go from being $0.50 to $0.20.
00:54:39.000And I had to remind him that he was a black person.
00:54:42.000So he can't vote for Donald Trump and that he shouldn't be influencing an entire swath of people who may listen to him because he's worried about his own personal pocketbook.
00:54:52.000So I haven't heard back from him yet, but I am willing to, you know, seal the deal in more ways than one if he changes his mind and publicly denounces Donald Trump.
00:55:03.000I might be willing to go for another spin if you know what I'm talking about.
00:55:06.000There is nothing like wealthy, liberal, white women.
00:55:10.000I mean, she's completely wrong because we know for a fact that Biden announced a tax plan not that long ago that would spike almost all taxes through the roof.
00:56:02.000Can you imagine thinking this is going to look good if I say I had to remind my ex-boyfriend that he was black?
00:56:09.000What are you talking about, Chelsea Handler?
00:56:12.000Handler shouldn't have even had to come out.
00:56:14.000She didn't have to come out and say this because Trump's plan to attract black voters through different campaigns, including celebrities like 50 Cent, is Not going to work at all.
00:56:26.000So I don't know why Chelsea Handler has to kind of defend, you know, Democrats against from black people, because, I mean, it's not a good plan.
00:56:37.000So there's three officials within the Trump campaign to outline to Politico the former president's strategy to attract more black voters, mainly by using his legal troubles and issues of race in New York more broadly with immigration to try to attract more of them.
00:56:51.000Hey, well, nothing else worked, so why not?
00:56:53.000The theme is, like you, I'm unfairly persecuted by the criminal justice system, but I don't think this will be a play that works out.
00:57:01.000Trump famously pardoned many black rappers.
00:59:02.000Well, there are all kinds of border communities in Texas that became more red under Trump because they are actually tired of illegal immigration, right?
00:59:10.000Like, I don't know that Trump actually has to do anything gimmicky.
00:59:13.000Like, he could just keep on keeping on and it would be fine.
00:59:17.000I think that the worst part here is that probably someone on the Biden campaign, like, called Chelsea Handler immediately and was like, don't forget to point out these talking points.
00:59:24.000It's really important that we don't let people get excited about this 50 cent thing.
00:59:27.000I'm just so not sold on Trump trying to effectively reach out to black voters.
00:59:31.000In the past, he did all, we mentioned it earlier, the criminal justice reform.
00:59:34.000That was purely a play for black voters that didn't pan out.
00:59:40.000Maybe he should double down on other things.
00:59:41.000Maybe Trump and the Trump campaign and staffers know something that I don't.
00:59:46.000The rally that he held in the South Bronx was a smashing success, although I don't know how politically or electorally relevant that will pan out being.
00:59:55.000It was cool that he visited New York, though.
00:59:57.000The Bronx visit is just about the fact that Democrats haven't been there.
01:00:01.000That part of New York is taken for granted.
01:00:03.000When he's reaching out to the 20% of black people that vote for him, it feels like he's doing too much pandering to them and not rewarding his base enough, if anything.
01:00:13.000We need to solve the immigration crisis.
01:00:14.000I guess he is trying to tie these issues together, but I don't know how compelled black people would be when he says and talks about immigration swamping us.
01:00:25.000I mean, in this case, it seems like 50 Cent is saying, actually, it's the economic issues are what we should talk about more, which is really what they should do.
01:00:31.000Because Biden, if you push Biden on it at all, he's a bad record.
01:00:34.000This isn't even the most famous black rapper to come.
01:01:50.000That's a really pixely picture of her too.
01:01:53.000But either way, it's like, you know, I remember when she talked about how she wakes up, does drugs, masturbates, goes to bed, wakes up, does drugs again.
01:02:00.000And Ben Shapiro was like, she's miserable.
01:02:05.000I think she's very much in the moment and happy.
01:02:08.000But she's headed towards the epitome of nightmare scenarios for a human being.
01:02:15.000You know, it is sad, but it is reality that as you get older, you have less and less friends, relationships become harder to maintain, and friends and family begin to die.
01:02:28.000So, you know, everybody's gone through it.
01:02:31.000I don't know when the first time it happened to me, I think I was a teenager.
01:02:34.000I was like 18, when we found out one of our neighborhood friends had died from a drug overdose.
01:02:39.000And it's like a crazy thing when you realize you will never see them again, you will never hear them again.
01:02:44.000It's like, You don't really get it when you're a kid because you haven't been around, you haven't been alive that long to witness these things.
01:02:49.000Maybe you had a pet die or something like that.
01:02:52.000And then you get older and it happens quite a bit.
01:02:55.000And then you end up getting messages from friends be like, Hey man, how you been?
01:02:58.000Just want to let you know, uh, yeah, Rick passed away.
01:03:00.000Uh, a friend of mine, uh, had a, uh, he died in his sleep.
01:03:08.000You know, understanding these things, the one thing that is always there for the average person throughout human history is that they have families.
01:03:18.000Now, you may have been detached from your family, but everyone had a family.
01:03:21.000If you don't have kids, you will be the first life form in your entire genetic lineage to not reproduce.
01:03:31.000Chelsea Handler is very much going to end up as an old woman sitting in a house and the kids are going to be outside the apartment or house, that's old lady Handler's place.
01:04:30.000He died on my birthday, March 9th, when I was 10 years old.
01:04:33.000I didn't know who he was, but I remember hearing about it when I was a kid, and I'm just thinking, I don't know or care what that is or who that is.
01:04:52.000This woman is not going to relate to any Gen Z, or TikToker, Gen Alpha, Gen Beta, any of that stuff.
01:04:57.000She's gonna be an out-of-touch, uh, let's just call her, um, asynchronous, or, uh, you know, I don't know what the right word might be, but...
01:05:09.000It's a curse, I would not wish on my worst enemies.
01:05:12.000She's developing a parasocial relationship with an audience.
01:05:16.000She's going on these late night talk shows.
01:05:18.000I'm sure she has Instagram friends, but very sad.
01:05:22.000Tim, there's something that struck me about what you said in there, a particular part of it, and it was that the first person that you knew that died was from a drug overdose.
01:05:31.000It's really sad because that's the first person, it was a drug overdose that killed them.
01:05:35.000And the first person I knew who died was also of a drug overdose.
01:05:40.000And I feel like that's an extremely common thing, the opioid crisis and drug crisis in our country that we kind of overlook constantly.
01:05:46.000But for young people nowadays, it really is the first person who you knew died was somebody in your high school or something overdosing from God knows what.
01:06:09.000And, you know, a lot of people do have someone where it's like a kid had a medical issue, but it's like young people don't die at the rate older people do, but not once you're in your 30s.
01:06:18.000And I know everybody listening, they know it.
01:06:20.000Some of you might've got a message, you know, recently, a week ago, a month ago, where they're like, Hey, it's Rick from back home.
01:06:46.000The word I was thinking of was anachronism.
01:06:49.000She will be an 80-year-old woman, and there will be no one to listen to any of her cultural references because they won't care.
01:06:56.000The cultural references and what is relevant culturally to young people will be dramatically different, and she will be a weird, anachronistic personality.
01:07:04.000I would not wish this curse on my worst enemies, but it's coming for the liberals, because this is the world they choose to live in.
01:07:10.000I think she embodies what she was preached to when she was a young woman, and things obviously changed.
01:07:15.000Feminism and the way we treat women in our society has obviously changed, and their role in society has obviously changed, and it seems she completely bought into the liberal of feminists.
01:07:26.000I mean, but there were feminists who had families.
01:07:27.000Real quick, this is an important distinction.
01:07:29.000This video is going viral now, but it is an old video.
01:08:45.000It's about the self more than it is about the community.
01:08:47.000And, you know, I think conservatives talk more about this than I feel like left-wing causes do.
01:08:52.000Left-wing causes will say like, oh, it's good for the community, but what they really mean is the individuals that make up this collective group that sort of think they have something in common.
01:08:59.000Whereas I think when conservatives talk about community, it really is about this thing that you are actively participating in and contributing to.
01:09:56.000Wasn't the story like it's like the world, like a war happened and the human population was decimated.
01:10:02.000It's war, but also, like, the fertility rate collapses, from what I know about it.
01:10:07.000People stop being able to have children, and there's an idea that it's, like, environmental issues, which, like, the Gilead Society ultimately ends up kind of seeming to solve.
01:10:27.000But in the general idea of a fertility rate collapse, population decimation, and humanity on the verge of extinction, any civilization that condemns the idea that women should have kids in that scenario deserves to go extinct.
01:10:48.000Yeah, the baby ones are absolutely cute.
01:10:51.000Dude, if a species won't reproduce, the species ceases to exist.
01:10:54.000I love those videos where it's like the giant mom panda, we say you're holding its baby and then a caregiver will come like handed an apple and they'll be like, wow, steal this child.
01:11:04.000Like, yeah, you guys are not doing great here.
01:12:59.000And especially for Japan and South Korea, which are really, have a strong sense of culture and identity that is passed down through your family and through your community.
01:13:07.000Like, if you don't produce people, you're literally everything about your culture that's unique goes away.
01:13:16.000I think when people talk about, you know, like, oh, it should be women's choice of kids and whatever else, like, I don't want people who hate children to have them.
01:13:22.000On the other hand, like, it matters if your country is having its own children.
01:13:27.000South Korea is 0.81 births per woman as of 2021.
01:13:32.000I think we're going to have a reckoning and have to deal with the consequences of technology and the consequences of feminism that we might have initially thought were good things.
01:13:41.000For example, things like birth control obviously make less babies around, the ubiquity of abortion, things like that, birth control.
01:14:05.000People don't end up having children or as many children as they would have had down the line.
01:14:10.000This is why I think that the decades-long attack on the family is such a bad thing.
01:14:14.000Like the idea that the government would sort of make social services that replace the role that the father traditionally used to have.
01:14:19.000The idea that we would tell women, actually, it's really important that you're in the workforce and the labor that you do at home is not as important.
01:14:26.000I mean, remember, we had a Bureau of Home Economics at one point because we believed that the home and the family unit was central to our economy.
01:14:33.000And instead, we've made it about the individual and about keeping women and men in the workforce with as few dependents as possible.
01:14:39.000And I just think that that was obviously not about the welfare of our culture.
01:14:57.000We should make family first, be her initiative.
01:15:00.000We should talk about how important it is to value and cherish your family because it's part of our culture.
01:15:05.000And that includes having children, but also like being there for your grandparents, being there for your parents as they age.
01:15:10.000Like we should stop making it about ourselves only.
01:15:14.000It should be about the community, which I think I really, really believe starts with the family.
01:15:18.000We've really come on such a turbulent time socially, culturally, with how the genders view each other.
01:15:24.000Some people don't even know what gender they are, and the consequences of that... We just have lost people who need strong families to guide them through life.
01:15:31.000Lack of religion, religion decreasing in our society, women out... not out-earning in all cases, but women matching how much men make, make marriages more difficult for whatever reason that we could dive into, but there's so many of these small things.
01:16:12.000I'm conflicted because in and of itself, many of these things aren't bad.
01:16:16.000Women graduating at higher rates than men isn't necessarily a bad thing, but some of these unintended consequences that we're seeing as a result of them leading to the decline in births, which is, I don't think, something that we thought was a problem 30 years ago.
01:16:31.000is the issue and then how to deal with that.
01:16:33.000Because again, I guess we don't want to, you know, there's no way to put the ketchup back in the bottle or something once this is out of the bag.
01:16:54.000We were talking about this this morning and we talked about the culture war.
01:16:58.000If society is showing young women all the movies are women doing masculine things.
01:17:06.000You've got either men as the heroes or women as the heroes but even when women are heroes they're doing things associated with masculinity.
01:18:19.000And the insulting thing to me is that feminism destroys femininity.
01:18:24.000It tells women that the female role in society is a bad thing.
01:18:30.000And so they internalize it and they view it that way.
01:18:33.000So when you bring up gender roles and you say something like, women should be, you know, at the home with the family, they're like, how dare you say that?
01:18:43.000Why is it a negative to say that the women are more apt than men for protecting the family and men are good externally and women are good internally?
01:18:53.000Did you see this thing with Jason Kelsey's wife?
01:18:56.000Someone referred to her as a homemaker and he came out and was like, we're equal partners of the home.
01:19:10.000I don't understand why feminism was able to convince generations of women that being told the things that you are naturally inclined to do, the things you are interested in, actually was somehow saying that you were stupid or weak.
01:19:20.000Like, I just don't understand why women bought that other than the fact that they tend to be deeply insecure.
01:19:25.000And I don't think that they were raised by women who were able to say, like, the natural traits that you have are positive and they contribute to society in a great way.
01:19:34.000You should like yourself the way you are.
01:19:35.000It's similar to what I think is one of the long-term effects of birth control, which is that it trains women to treat their bodies like the enemy.
01:19:43.000that their hormones that are naturally supposed to occur are actually this big inconvenience and
01:19:47.000they stop you in your tracks and whatever else. Like all of these things, these two different
01:19:53.000things, the cultural but also the medical intervention on the things that women naturally do
01:19:57.000told women that they are supposed to operate differently in society than they are trained.
01:20:00.000No wonder they're all anxious and depressed.
01:20:02.000Everybody at Timcast knows what happens when Allison's out of town.
01:20:10.000It's like, I order cheeseburgers and... I'll come into the studio and Tim will be like, yeah, I ate, you know, crackers and a can of tuna for dinner.
01:20:21.000So it'll be like, I'll be like, hey guys, a big food order is coming.
01:20:24.000And then they're like, oh, where'd Allison go?
01:20:26.000And then, uh, see, I would only admit this because Allison is here, but, you know, she went to go visit family, and for dinner I was dipping, uh, I was dipping, uh, daled bacon in cheese sauce.
01:20:37.000I took the cheese sauce out of the fridge, I microwaved it, I pulled the bacon out, and I was just dipping it.
01:20:41.000And so I have no problem pointing out that when it comes to reading the news and pulling up stories and putting the show together and all that, I do a really great job, apparently.
01:20:51.000And when it comes to, you know, the house, I don't.
01:21:35.000It's just the fact that there are countries that will just cease to be as we know them.
01:21:40.000They will just not be there because ultimately their populations decided that maintaining being a population wasn't worth it.
01:21:47.000I think a solution here is that conservatives or some conservative-minded women need to reclaim feminism.
01:21:53.000I believe in the past it wasn't always completely defined by leftism, to the point now when I think of feminism, I'm thinking of people who believe that sex work is real work, like that seems to be their top of issue mind, and that all women are real women, and that trans women are real women.
01:22:10.000That seems to be this, I don't know, second, third, First, second, or third, or fourth wave feminism, but in the past I believe feminism was claimed by the women in the temperance movement or something like that.
01:22:26.000I think you're right, but I think we should only just keep doing what we're doing because liberals are effectively removing themselves by choice from modern politics.
01:22:39.000It looks like they're removing everybody.
01:23:04.000And I'm just like, I'm pretty confident that we win just based off of multiplication.
01:23:10.000And so if, right now, conservative women already want to be moms, recognize these issues, accept the arguments, and have good relationships with their husbands and their significant others, then you don't gotta do anything.
01:23:23.000Like, you're not going to go to a liberal and shame her on having kids.
01:23:26.000Right, well, I think the other part that, you know, conservative women should be happy about is, like, typically if you're a conservative woman and you're dating a conservative guy, he values the fact that you want to have kids and also he wants to be a dad and have children.
01:23:36.000Like, one of the messages that I think a lot of young women get is like, oh, well, you'll be doing it by yourself and he's going to be off doing whatever, playing video games, not being helpful.
01:23:45.000And, like, the reality is, like, all of the nice, helpful families that I know, like, It's – it is an equal partnership between men and women.
01:23:53.000They just don't do exactly the same thing and I think especially conservative men recognize like the work that goes into raising children that they don't necessarily do because they're outside the home.
01:24:02.000I think it's really dysfunctional couples that – but by this lie that like ultimately men – I mean if you're dating like a man child, like of course he's never going to step up.
01:24:12.000But that's kind of on progressive women who opt into those relationships.
01:24:18.000I will go out and I will drag an elk back by its neck and lay it before my family and the mother will be there protecting the children while I am fighting the elk.
01:24:29.000In all seriousness, I'll go to the grocery store and pick up some fresh elk and bring it home and then we'll have dinner together.
01:24:34.000My family in Canada, my aunt was a forensic psychiatrist for a long time.
01:24:38.000She's really successful and she tells this story about how her sons and her husband went out hunting and they killed a deer or something and then they brought it back and they're like, mom, can you clean this?
01:24:48.000And she's like, because she's got a medical background, she's an actual doctor, like she literally cleaned and cut up the deer.
01:24:54.000This is actually how a lot of families function for a long time now.
01:24:57.000Obviously this was just like something they were doing not necessarily for food but it's like there's a relationship between the two things that these people contribute and I think that's like what we forget and what we were told especially because the narrative is that men and women are enemies like this is what's invaded our culture.
01:25:15.000I read this thing that said the reason women or at least the reason why there's a trope that women love shopping is that it is gathering.
01:25:25.000Women going together to a place and looking at the brightly colored things and then picking the things out that they bring back to the home they're excited for.
01:25:33.000And men are goal-oriented, dopamine-triggered, jumping off of buildings and running and playing sports because that's the hunt.
01:25:40.000Well, I think it's all – I mean it's – we're wired to do different things and so naturally some of the ways it works out in modern society.
01:25:46.000Like with Allison, like yeah, she's good at managing the home but also like she wants you to be healthy and be able to work hard.
01:25:51.000So of course she's worried about what you're eating.
01:25:53.000Like there is a reason that men and women are complementary.
01:25:58.000Like the stereotype – we always saw a video where it's like the guy walking around, the internal monologue is like exits and creepy guy and whatever else and the girl is like da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
01:26:07.000That works because she relies on him to contribute something that, like, in the home she might contribute differently.
01:26:11.000Like, it's supposed to be a symbiotic relationship.
01:26:15.000I think it's weird that this is some sort of threat to feminists out there, that your natural tendencies would be weaponized against you.
01:26:22.000That's what I'm saying, like, conservative women don't need to be told any of this.
01:26:25.000They know it, they live it, they feel it themselves.
01:26:27.000There's no guy who's going to come to them and explain it to them.
01:26:29.000They're going to be like, uh-huh, and?
01:26:30.000Liberal women will reject it outright.
01:26:33.000So it's just like, okay, let's just have more conservatives have more kids, and then in 20 years, in 40 years, this country is going to be conservative.
01:26:39.000I think the one factor that we've been overlooking here is...
01:26:43.000Religiosity, level of religiosity is what I believe is most closely correlated with the number of children you have.
01:26:49.000And we've been decreasing in religiosity by a ton over the years.
01:26:53.000And even if you call yourself religious today, you're less religious than somebody who called themselves that a decade ago, or 20 years ago, or 30 years ago.
01:27:01.000And I don't think we're seeing that trend turn around.
01:27:04.000And as long as that is the case, yes, conservatives may have three kids on average instead of the one and a half that liberals may have.
01:27:11.000But it's not the five, six or seven that's really thrusting us forward and not just making us just past the line of replacement.
01:27:22.000So until we have a reckoning too with that, because even in my understanding, I live next to a very Jewish, Hasidic Jewish community.
01:27:37.000One of the fastest growing communities in our country.
01:27:42.000Religiosity is what's heavily linked here, and we need to deal with that reckoning, because people are only becoming less religious, and I don't think it's stopping.
01:28:02.000My grandmother, we have like this picture of her, and she's got 78 people.
01:28:07.000It's our cousins, grandkids, her kids.
01:28:11.000Um the whole family and I just feel like that's not going to be a thing anymore of like a a woman like matriarch with her whole family of 78 people behind her and like families with 10 kids 7 kids except in these communities that you're talking about.
01:28:25.000Well they'll be kids who grow up without cousins right?
01:28:28.000They'll be the only kid that maybe all of their their parents and their like siblings had like that that's so strange to me.
01:28:33.000My cousins were a huge part of my life growing up.
01:29:41.000Do you feel like the conversations for women about having kids or getting married have changed in the time that you've, you know, been growing up?
01:30:47.000Take away your phone and see what you do for two days or what you want to do.
01:30:51.000I think the difference is 50 years ago, you're in high school, you go to prom with your date, you knock up your date, she doesn't abort it, you shotgun marry her, and then have four more kids.
01:31:02.000Nowadays, you go to prom with your date, she's on birth control forever, if that doesn't work, then she aborts, and then you both go to college.
01:31:40.000Based on the fertility rate numbers between liberal conservatives, to calculate how many of those births that were just born were liberal or conservative, give me the number, I then said, assuming the fertility rate remains static, how many children will be born of each group in 20 years?
01:31:59.000I then said, I asked, what is the average age at which a person is having children?
01:32:07.000I said, considering that, calculate the next 20 years with the cumulative effect of the next generation having additional children based on these fertility rates.
01:32:16.000And the calculation is within 40 years, there will have been 76.68 million conservative births to 58.87 liberal births.
01:32:49.000And I think, I mean, it doesn't, just because you were born to conservative parents, it doesn't guarantee that you'll grow up conservative.
01:32:53.000On the other hand, you know, what a culture... Incredibly likely.
01:32:56.000It's more likely, but also, like, what a cultural shift if you have more people having children and saying, like, I want a society that supports large families, people who have children, people that value family.
01:33:06.000I mean, just the process of absorbing this change is incredible.
01:33:12.000Oh, that's a good question, Tim, right there.
01:34:05.000So Christian births will be 92.36 million to unaffiliated at 39.96.
01:34:09.000But the reason for that is this is a predominantly Christian nation, so there's already a 3 or 4 to 1 advantage among Christians for having kids.
01:34:18.000So it's not just that their fertility rate is higher, it's that there's substantially more of them as it is.
01:34:24.000So long as you instill your values in your children, there will be a whole lot of Christians in the next 40 years.
01:35:07.000But on Friday and Saturday, the tourists come in to see the shows, and these people don't know how to play poker, and they basically give their money away.
01:35:15.000All the all the rounders, they call them.
01:35:18.000The people who make a living playing poker know that Friday and Saturday nights the best time to go down because some dude's gonna be drunk and be like, I don't care.
01:35:25.000And they're gonna throw their money and you're gonna win it and then you're gonna pay your bills.
01:36:21.000Now they can come out and claim it's a technicality and this is BS and Trump's only- he's a convicted felon, he only got out because of a technical glitch!
01:37:03.000That's assuming he can think straight and doesn't have TDS.
01:37:06.000Or, if that is true, and they use this to effectively nullify and Trump can't be tried again, that would be a power play by them.
01:37:15.000Because they're going to come out and say, we know Trump's guilty, but because of a technical error, they can't try him again, but we know he did it.
01:37:25.000So HR 8081 is denying infinite security and government resources allocated towards convicted and extremely dishonorable former protectees act, which is it's trying to strip service secret service away from Trump upon conviction.
01:38:47.000The resupply is likely coming to Hamas through Egypt, which has many sympathizers from the Muslim Brotherhood, but we could save all the Israel chat for another day.
01:38:57.000Israel needs to completely invade Rafah, take care of Hamas, and honestly, look up north to Hezbollah, where there seems to be tensions rising.
01:40:07.000Although, unfortunately, I think what... Who's going to end up as... So who's going to be the governor and who's going to be the new senator?
01:41:14.000He rolled in, and you can tell that Riley was probably super good when he was younger, but he's like a dad now, and he's a state treasurer.
01:41:21.000But he did what's called a fakie no-slide, or I guess you... I don't like calling it a half-cab no-slide, but he slid.
01:41:41.000He's probably the only member of Congress who can actually skateboard.
01:41:44.000But I was talking to him and I was like, yeah, but it's kind of obvious it's going to happen because millennials who grew up skateboarding are now at the age where they're entering politics.
01:41:52.000So it's unsurprising that we'll start to see more of this.
01:41:55.000The Skateboarders Caucus is going to be crazy then.
01:41:57.000Oh, dude, shout out to Mikey Taylor, one of the greatest skateboarders ever, who is a Republican city councilman in, I think, Thousand Oaks, California.
01:47:09.000Emacs Tactical says, as much as I loathe the Bidens, as someone who is an ammunition dealer right outside of Pittsburgh, PA, the 4473 form as a whole fails each and every constitutionally check there.
01:47:59.000All of the gun groups file briefs on his behalf and join his appeal under the argument that federal background check forms are a violation of our constitutional rights.
01:48:14.000The Supreme Court agrees making someone who has not been convicted of a crime self-incriminate and then charging them for it is a violation of the Constitution.
01:48:24.000Therefore, the National Instant Background Check System is hereby dissolved.
01:48:29.000That would be the greatest thing ever.
01:48:47.000Trump should absolutely come out and say, and I think all the two-way people would cheer for him if he said, we're not here to argue anything Hunter has done in terms of foreign business dealings.
01:48:57.000We're not here to make political arguments about my previous rival's family.
01:49:02.000We are here to talk about the violation of the Constitution and how Hunter Biden was forced to self-incriminate, and when he refused to do so, was imprisoned for it.
01:49:13.000For that reason, I am calling on the Supreme Court to make the right decision for advocacy groups to file the lawsuits, but in the interim, Hunter Biden will be pardoned of this crime for that reason.
01:49:22.000It's funny because Trump or Biden wouldn't be able to say like, oh yeah, I'd also pardon my son.
01:49:25.000I'm just trying to imagine what sort of like passive aggressive statement that Biden would put out.
01:49:29.000What if Biden pardons him for that reason?
01:49:34.000Trump should have promised to pardon Biden instead of Ross Albrecht at the Libertarian Convention because Hunter is the new face of the Libertarian Party.
01:50:13.000So they get this wacky party of crazy ideas, because it's basically a party of people saying, why can't I do this thing that is currently illegal?
01:50:21.000They're fighting for their right to do things they want to do.
01:51:12.000I think we know why people like complaining about the Adelsons, but I think they're doing a great mitzvah with the amount of money.
01:51:18.000I think these are some of Trump's biggest donors across multiple campaigns.
01:51:22.000So instead of being thankful, we're complaining about some of Trump's biggest donors.
01:51:26.000So where do you line up on the West Bank thing?
01:51:30.000I think we need to annex all of Area A. Area A. So I have a question.
01:51:34.000Because you know Camp David Accords, if we're getting into it, all of Area A. And also, people are right when they accuse Israel of ethnic cleansing.
01:51:41.000Israel ethnically cleansed all the Jews outside of Gaza.
01:51:44.000That is the only ethnic cleansing Israel has ever been responsible for.
01:51:47.000I mean, they removed the Jews from Gaza.
01:52:47.000Because I think the Adelsons believe that the Republicans would just be more pro-Israel writ large, and that's why they would try to get the Republican elected over the Democrat.
01:53:25.000So in the Camp David Accord, it would be better if you asked GBT, but Area A is Israel has complete sovereignty and Palestinians still live there.
01:53:34.000Area B is where they have civil control.
01:53:36.000Area C is where they have total control.
01:53:38.000And the West Bank is kind of divided into three parts.
01:54:03.000Tim, I think Wikipedia would be doing a good job if you did, like, Camp David Accords, Area A, B, and C. Yeah, ChattyPT is like, I am not getting involved in this.
01:54:10.000I will say, as far as Sheldon Adelson goes, I don't like Jonathan Pollard flying back to make a liar on Adelson's private jet, which he did, knowing the damage he did to U.S.
01:54:33.000I believe it was for money and then Trump ended up pardoning him and he was greeted as a hero within Israel despite being a traitor to Israel's greatest ally in America.
01:55:32.000Where the woman goes, she says something like, you know, there's these secret agencies, like you've got Mossad, so when it comes to Israel, and he goes, no!
01:56:01.000Area A and Israel first are regions of the West Bank where the Palestinian Authority has full civil and security control.
01:56:05.000The classification stems from the Oslo Accords, which divided the West Bank into areas A, B, and C, with different levels of administrative control.
01:56:13.000Area A includes major Palestinian cities and is meant to be under Palestinian administrative and police authority, while Israel retains control over security matters in other parts of the West Bank.
01:56:35.000Yeah, because area A, B, and C are very clearly defined.
01:56:39.000Um... I bet it's gonna be a weird nonsensical map that's like an AI-generated not, like... It's gonna be like a... It's like the map for the Barbie movie.
01:58:57.000Area... I was thinking Area A was Area C. Area C is where Israel has its administered, B is administered by the Palestinian Authority where Israel's security control, and Area A is totally administered by the Palestinian Authority.
02:00:08.000So while it's doing that, I guess we're going to start winding down.
02:00:10.000So if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to the channel, share the show with your friends, head over to TimCast.com, click join us, become a member to support our work directly, because we rely on you as members to make the show work.
02:00:20.000You can follow me on X and Instagram at TimCast.
02:00:25.000Christina, do you want to shout anything out?
02:00:26.000Yes, my ex, we're calling it ex now, we're officially not on Twitter, I guess, is notradix, N-O-T-R-A-D-I-X, and the documentary ex account is kandkfilm, like the letter K, because...
02:00:43.000I didn't want to get a website that was kidnapandkill.com.