00:02:38.000And we got a bunch of other smaller stories, guys.
00:02:40.000To be honest, When I saw the story that Jack Smith was spying on members of Congress and the Trump administration and things like that, it's like, yeah, I guess.
00:02:49.000You know, we get these political stories and we know.
00:02:52.000We got the story Seth Moulton, he's a Democratic rep, called on people to come and fight ICE to stop them from doing their jobs following the shooting in Maine.
00:03:02.000And for the life of me, I don't understand how the Democrats and liberals keep getting away with inciting people to violence and crimes and no one does anything about it.
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00:03:39.000It's kind of gross when you think about it.
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00:04:25.000Of course, the 4th of July may have passed already, but ain't nothing stopping you from whipping out that grill and having a great American burger or hot dog.
00:04:33.000Go to BackyardButchers.com, use promo code TIM.
00:04:35.000You can get the 30% off two free 10 ounce ribbies plus free shipping.
00:04:40.000And don't forget, you got to go join us at TimCast.com.
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00:05:26.000Joining us tonight to talk about this and everything else is Ariel Scarsella.
00:08:24.000I mean, I'm sure someone that's an expert on wildfires could probably chime in and explain this, but it seems like it only wildfires seem to only be affecting like left wing jurisdictions recently California, Canada.
00:08:36.000Like, you don't hear about wildfires in like Florida, Alabama.
00:08:59.000You hear people talking about it with California.
00:09:01.000They like to dunk on Gavin Newsom because they don't do anything with it.
00:09:05.000And once he builds billion dollar bus stations and nobody sits under it.
00:09:09.000And if I understand correctly, that was one of the arguments.
00:09:12.000And I don't think that this would actually turn out to be true.
00:09:15.000But one of the reasons people, or one of the arguments people bring about the Palisades fire is like, oh, these fires start because you look at the side of the road and there's all kinds of brush down and stuff.
00:10:32.000I was thinking that, you know, we got this big speech from Trump tomorrow.
00:10:36.000And, you know, we're going over the news for the show.
00:10:39.000And admittedly, I know that the wildfire stuff, people, you know, when we're doing shows, we're trying to figure out what the biggest story of the day is.
00:10:45.000And it's usually something cultural, political, because that's what people care about the most.
00:11:36.000When Trump announces that Warnock and Ossoff are illegitimate senators, He can actually just say, and aliens.
00:11:42.000And then when he sends in law enforcement to go arrest them and remove them from office, he'll just say, but they're aliens, like they're from outer space.
00:11:51.000So nothing in the Constitution bars me from this.
00:13:24.000You know, with this whole 14th Amendment thing, the Supreme Court ruled that people who are here are subject to our jurisdiction.
00:13:30.000Couldn't you argue that people who are not here are not subject to our jurisdiction?
00:13:33.000If the argument is you don't have to be a citizen to be subject to our jurisdiction, that our jurisdiction is simply the place in which you stand, then I would argue that somebody who was born to American parents but in Canada is not subject to our jurisdiction and therefore would not be a citizen.
00:13:45.000It's actually kind of cooked because we have people in the country that appear to not be under our jurisdiction, like a wide range of people that are scheming the government constantly.
00:13:52.000But then American citizens abroad are because they get double taxed.
00:13:55.000We're the only country on earth that taxes our citizens while they're overseas.
00:13:59.000So if you're an American doing your thing in France or Britain or wherever, You still got to file a tax return.
00:14:04.000And if you fail to do that, if Interpol doesn't pick you up, they'll just arrest you next time you enter the country.
00:14:17.000I mean, look, the federal government is very good at torturing American citizens.
00:14:20.000There's a boatload of things that U.S. citizens are subject to that no other country, you know, or the, you know, like U.S. citizens, like you don't have to show ID.
00:14:49.000Yeah, they fingerprint Disney World was an op by the government to just get everyone's biometrics, maybe, but you have to do that to get into Universal Studios and Disney World in Florida.
00:14:57.000And I used to, you don't have to do it to vote.
00:15:35.000And I thought that it meant if they scanned your fingerprints and took a picture of your face and took all your info, They just clear you through and you don't got to get searched or flagged or anything, or you'd like to do a quick walkthrough.
00:15:45.000And so then I sign up, I pay for it, and they're like, right this way.
00:15:49.000And they walk me to the front of the checkpoint, there's no line.
00:15:51.000It's literally not a single person in line.
00:15:52.000They walk me to the checkpoint and they go, and this way.
00:16:20.000No, you're exposing yourself here a little bit.
00:16:23.000You're, uh, this is only in the wealthier areas.
00:16:26.000If you go to like a porn, if you go to like a busier airport with like a budget airline, the security checkpoint that it depends on where you go because a lot of them have checkpoints that go anywhere.
00:16:35.000But if you're going to certain gates, then the TSA pre is empty and the regular line is full.
00:16:41.000But then, like, If you go to Jackson Hole, being a great example, the TSA Pre line is full and the regular line is empty.
00:16:48.000Because every single one of those people is like upper class, you know, TSA Pre, global entry.
00:18:03.000And it was a people posted in response to it was like a woman walking down the street and then like she got attacked by some, you know, black woman.
00:18:41.000The truth is that the leftists aren't.
00:18:43.000And if you want me, I could segue this into New York City stuff.
00:18:45.000But if you look at the people that voted for Mom Dhani that swear that they're all for minorities, for the black people, for the Hispanic people, whatever you want to call them, there's actually, like, if you go to Williamsburg, there's not that many black people.
00:18:56.000There's not that many Hispanic people.
00:20:18.000And then I come back a few years later and the restaurant's a Bank of America.
00:20:21.000And what happened is all those art students are now in their 30s and their salaries went up and they don't need some amazing little Mexican restaurant.
00:20:29.000Property taxes went up, rent went up, kicked out the restaurant, put into Bank of America.
00:20:34.000And now the art student's pushing his glass up, being like, well, I'm considering refinancing my condo.
00:22:40.000Like when I went there and I was exchanging my cash, I was just like, like when they were showing me the exchange rate, like you can go to Japan right now and just fleece them.
00:23:33.000Was USAID, I think the music industry was, I think the protests were, I think it was literally everything.
00:23:39.000Like they were funneling money into USAID for the purpose of generating culture and fabricating this consensus.
00:23:46.000I'm still, I still think that we need a little more time to kind of figure to nail that down as actually true, but it does seem pretty compelling, you know, like the fact that everything has changed so significantly since the end of USAID.
00:24:00.000And I honestly, I hope that it's true, you know, because then you'll see significant, you can, you'll hopefully see significant changes.
00:24:08.000Over the course of the next two years and stuff.
00:24:10.000And then, should a Democrat win in 28 and they reinstate this stuff, you'll have a real, you know, real clear view of whether it was, you know, whether it was at USAID or not.
00:25:01.000I do, I do feel like you know, even though it's not the big dramatic thing that that people were hoping for, we are moving in the right direction.
00:25:59.000And there's no people to do jobs, so we're going to end up with a bunch of Gary Indianas.
00:26:03.000I don't think that, I don't think we'll end up with a bunch of Gary Indians.
00:26:07.000Who's going to want to pay to maintain a house they can't use or sell?
00:26:09.000Well, the point that I'm making is once you've got a lot of boomers that are holding on to houses and stuff like that, you can increase the inventory of houses.
00:26:16.000You don't see a housing problem in Austin, right?
00:26:19.000They lowered the issues with, or they changed the issues with zoning and with, um, Regulation and stuff, and they were people went in and they built houses, and the cost of rents went down.
00:26:32.000So, the fewer people that are here renting, the more illegals you get rid of people that aren't supposed to be here, the more people that are scamming the government that you get rid of and get them back to the places they belong.
00:26:43.000You'll have the cost of housing go down, you'll have more jobs available for Americans.
00:26:47.000Now, I understand that young people are really facing a lot of problems.
00:26:50.000I understand, like, the stuff that you talk about is like that's real and tangible for young people.
00:26:54.000I do think partially young people kind of expect.
00:27:55.000The problem, though, for young people is they typically don't.
00:27:57.000And so they can't just like move to the middle of nowhere.
00:28:01.000And if you're trying to find a wife, it's going to be not.
00:28:03.000So, this is a really great example of what's going to happen in the United States.
00:28:06.000So, Japan is very anti immigration, very anti foreigner, and they recently started approving foreign investment into these, they're called the Kiyas, abandoned homes, because there's no young people.
00:28:17.000They have a birthing crisis and they have no migration.
00:28:19.000Now, I'm not saying bringing a bunch of Honduran farmers is going to solve any problems for America.
00:28:46.000In Japan, they're now saying, okay, let's bring in foreigners, but instead of bringing in, you know, like third worlders like we are, they're trying to bring in us.
00:29:00.000So what's going to happen in 20 years, America is going to be a bunch of Honduran farmers and Japan is going to be high skill, futuristic developers.
00:30:56.000Well, this is, I mean, this is part of the problem with the United States that Japan doesn't have.
00:30:59.000Is the United States, most of our cheap housing is locked up in like extremely dangerous areas.
00:31:03.000So, yeah, the United States, like for young people to live in cities, you're either competing in nice neighborhoods with boomers who refuse to downsize, or you're going into like black neighborhoods or Mexican neighborhoods where they'll just like saw your head off.
00:31:13.000Nobody wants to live in Gary, Indiana, bro.
00:31:15.000That's why when they're the Hammond Bears, it's just, it's not, it's not, it's not good.
00:31:44.000Is it like impossible to get a mortgage in Japan?
00:31:47.000It's impossible to get a Visa alone, a mortgage.
00:31:50.000Well, actually, so I wouldn't describe it, I've been reading a lot about it, I wouldn't describe it as easy, but apparently because of the IKEA, which means abandoned home, And Japan desperately trying to bring people in, this creates a door which makes it a bit easier.
00:32:06.000It's hard to get citizenship, but I watched this one video from a guy who was like, Why would I want to be a citizen?
00:32:12.000And think about the perfect scenario Japan's creating a bunch of middle class Americans coming and filling in holes in their economy with no right to vote.
00:32:24.000So you have to renounce your American citizenship.
00:32:26.000If you were to take Japanese citizenship, you're not getting it.
00:32:29.000It's not going to happen with white boys.
00:32:30.000It's pretty hard to be a Not even because of like xenophobia, like who cares?
00:32:34.000It's like, uh, you, it's a lot, it's a lot, it's because of sensible laws, it's sensible laws, but it's like difficult to access health care.
00:32:42.000My sister worked at a law firm there for like five years and she knew this one guy was like on his 10th year and they were gonna send him, he had to do one more year or something like two years back in America and then come back again before he could even qualify.
00:33:24.000Well, there's not a significant number of crackheads that are breaking in to you know, do drugs in there.
00:33:29.000If you have a remote job and you don't really care about having like friends or family nearby or like a church or anything really, then you could do this.
00:33:37.000But yeah, it should be pretty icy right here, dude.
00:33:38.000Imagine within a couple, within a couple years, you could make friends and stuff.
00:33:43.000I know, bro, you speak in Konnichiwa in two weeks.
00:33:48.000I know people that have lived in Japan and they're like, It's impossible to make.
00:33:50.000Friends with Japanese people because they just like are always going to be just like, Why would I talk to you?
00:33:56.000What you got to do is you got to dress up like Goku and then you walk around yelling Kamehameha and they're going to be like, You respect my culture and you're instantly friends.
00:34:04.000Actually, the joke is Americans' weebs go to Japan and they're creepy and like they walk around wearing like Naruto gear and like running with their arms back.
00:36:24.000So there are challenges because I watched some videos where they were saying like they bought the house and they live there, but their temporary visas.
00:40:51.000It's just, I like learning about it in their land.
00:40:53.000It's like when I'm learning about it, when I'm trying to go to Costco and I'm learning the intricacies of, like, Gujarati culture, I'm like, not necessary.
00:41:13.000Imagine this, you know, we all moved to Niiga to Japan and we wake up and do IRL first thing in the morning, but for everybody else, it's at night here in America.
00:41:21.000And then, you know, everybody just buys one of these abandoned houses next to each other and we get a little enclave and we'll call it Little America.
00:41:59.000Their starting goalkeeper, Zion Suzuki.
00:42:02.000But the best part is, after we have this, you know, after we develop this, you know, community and we're growing, maybe in like, you know, 20 or 30 years, there might be 10 to 30, or maybe even 40,000 of us and our kids.
00:42:17.000And then what we'll do is we'll start lobbying that we should have the right to vote, even if we're not citizens.
00:42:21.000And then we'll start bringing in outside money to convince the Japanese people why it's important that we vote.
00:42:27.000And then once we start eroding their governmental base, we'll lobby more politicians to allow for more of us to come in.
00:42:33.000And then maybe in 100 years, Japan will be 87% white American.
00:45:37.000I assume they're saying that Maine will go Democrat.
00:45:40.000But the other thing, too, is with the SAVE Act got attached to the NDAA, which is the funniest thing ever because the National Defense Authorization Act is the military budget every year.
00:45:52.000But I think you were saying, Phil, the parliamentarians are going to try to block that.
00:45:55.000Yeah, it's not a funding thing, and the parliamentarians are probably going to pull it out, which is a dumb thing.
00:46:01.000I've seen a lot of people that are talking about, you know, if you get rid of the funding for Israel, then, you know, they would vote for the.
00:47:30.000Primary the people that vote the way that you don't want.
00:47:35.000Like, get rid of the people that are bad.
00:47:37.000And it's part of the problem is, and I think part of the problem is people don't pay attention off your elections.
00:47:42.000But if it's a presidential election year, you'll know it's coming.
00:47:46.000Everybody's pumped to vote for the president because they think they're voting for the king, anyways.
00:47:50.000So go and primary your bad politicians.
00:47:54.000I like so many people calling and they're like, oh, we can't do anything, blah, And I understand why people feel that way, but they miss their opportunity to primary the crabby people.
00:48:04.000I think we should seize the means of production from people who identify as communists.
00:50:12.000Like actual physical things, but also lifestyle wise.
00:50:15.000Like we go into the neighborhoods like Chelsea and Hell's Kitchen and Weehoe and like up the property value because we put work into things.
00:52:52.000Everybody's life would be better under monarchy in the short term.
00:52:56.000So, what tends to happen is that you get an autocrat because the problems become so intense, the political corruption runs so deep, one person takes over with a singular vision, it straightens things out temporarily.
00:53:07.000And then what happens is the reason why you get narratives of oppression from autocracy largely is because autocracy arises after conflict among a population.
00:54:16.000Well, China will vote on sanction packages on North Korea.
00:54:19.000The only reason China is so pro North Korea is one because it provides a buffer between them and the West.
00:54:24.000But additionally, it's because they're also trying to win influence over North Korea because Russia is also interested in North Korea as well because North Korea's been providing so much.
00:54:32.000Uh, you know, munitions and people for their war.
00:54:36.000So, again, North Korea doesn't want to be a puppet of China, so they have to entertain Russia, etc.
00:54:41.000But what I'm trying to say there is North Korea is this weird outlier where it's a total autocracy that has lasted quite a long time.
00:54:47.000I mean, China could just implement their system in North Korea very easily and still keep them as a rump state, but they haven't been able to do so because Kim Jong un is just like unable to fall apart.
00:54:57.000Things, by all accounts, have been improving.
00:54:58.000He seems to be consolidating power, if anything.
00:55:00.000Yeah, if I mean, if I understand correctly, a lot of it is because of the narrative that people believe, like they're so isolated.
00:55:06.000They really believe that, like, Kim Il sung used to eat and not go to the bathroom because his body was so efficient, he would use all the stuff that he ate.
00:55:29.000Like, people, there's, I mean, there's people that study North Korea for a living, and even they have trouble, like, deciphering, like, how committed to the bit are the North Koreans because.
00:55:37.000For example, they had a province in North Korea that was opened up to South Koreans for a period of time for family reunifications and just to hang out and whatever.
00:55:45.000And they found that the North Koreans knew a lot of the K pop songs and were broadly familiar with K dramas.
00:55:51.000And then, likewise, when the North Korean soldiers went to go fight in Ukraine, a lot of them knew how to use the phones already and were able to navigate the web quite easily.
00:56:00.000They all got addicted to porn right away, which is pretty funny.
00:56:03.000But they have their own version of the internet.
00:56:04.000They have their own version, but insofar as they are vaguely familiar with the rest of the world, apparently.
00:56:10.000So the question there is, Are they they kind of know what's going on, but they just are either committed to the bit like they think they do a job andor they're just afraid of missing a nice meal?
00:56:22.000That's because you it's most likely, yeah, you do a lot of weird stuff if you're living in fear, but it also is completely possible that they quite literally just think Kim Jong un's god.
00:56:31.000So it's like they also think that we're terrible and they have a whole different history of like what we did to them.
00:56:45.000But, yeah, what's interesting is about North Korea, if you were to compare North and South Korea just on paper, you would assume North Korea is the better system because their birth rate's positive, South Korea's is negative.
00:56:56.000So, when you expose Koreans to both forms of government, one exterminates the people and the other doesn't.
00:57:01.000So, like, if you look at it from that perspective, you know, maybe that's what then their heads are thinking like, hey, we're vitalists and et cetera.
00:57:08.000And the South Koreans are these idiots and they're going extinct.
00:57:10.000Well, I mean, I think that the phrase exterminates the people is a little bit of an overstatement when it comes to South Korea.
00:57:16.000I think America over exaggerated, but South Korea, like, They work their people to death.
00:57:51.000From the North Korean perspective, you could understand why maybe they would be slightly skeptical of Western reforms in their country because they might just be saying, oh, they're all degenerates that just have dogs instead of kids.
01:01:25.000If there's any publicly offered jean company, gobble it up.
01:01:29.000Because it's like their next earning reports are going to be going up for the next few months or next few quarters because everyone needs to get.
01:03:12.000Yeah, because if you're a Frito Lay, you own Cheetos, you own Doritos, you get the dust all over your fingers, they need to be buying up hand soap companies and then making the dust extra sticky.
01:03:21.000I've seen commercials that take the dust out.
01:03:23.000People that have like soaps for every part of your body.
01:06:34.000It's like there's a bunch of androids everywhere, but then they become sentient and then have a revolution and it's like a choose your own adventure.
01:06:42.000I thought it was an actual video game and then I played it and it's like a movie with like, You know, choose your own adventure or whatever, but it's okay, whatever.
01:08:25.000Like, The whole, like, the amount of the things that AI can do right now.
01:08:32.000In fact, I just saw, and I might have said this yesterday, but I just saw that there was an operation on a gallbladder removal, not from a human, but from an animal gallbladder removal that was done by a robot.
01:09:05.000You know, of these specific procedures, and then you're going to go and you're going to talk to a robot that's been in service for 18 months, but there's you know 5,000 of them around the world, and they've all done so many.
01:09:18.000And they're going to say, and they yeah, they all link, and they're going to say, Well, we've done 362,000.
01:09:23.000Which one are you going to pick or something, right?
01:09:25.000Yeah, which one are you going to pick?
01:09:26.000You're going to pick the one that's done 360,000, you're going to, and everyone's going to go to robot doctors and stuff like that in the future.
01:09:32.000There, there might be people that are overseeing them, but even now, doctors.
01:09:37.000They're taking x rays and they're looking at stuff and they're feeding it into AI and they're getting, you know, hey, this is probably what it is.
01:09:44.000And then obviously, humans in the loop, but that's only going to last for so long, you know?
01:09:49.000So I was researching this a little while ago and actually, the best investments, not advice for anybody, I always say this because, you know, it's not my fault if you lose your money, not Tesla or human robots.
01:09:59.000It's the actuators and the electric motors.
01:10:02.000So the companies that supply those to Tesla, Tesla's doing like the framing and the coating.
01:10:08.000But these companies that make the components are going to be selling to everyone.
01:11:45.000When labor saving machines came out, Europe decided they're going to go with the free time that they provided in the United States.
01:11:51.000They decided they were going to double their productivity.
01:11:54.000When the car came out and the price of gas used to be prohibitive of people driving, when the price of gas dropped, people didn't save the money and drive the same amount.
01:12:04.000The amount of driving went through the roof, the size of vehicles increased.
01:12:09.000You think we're going to do more stuff?
01:12:40.000One of the only jobs that's actually disappeared because of technology, and I'm sure there are probably more, but one of the very few that I know about is the elevator operator.
01:12:50.000Used to be where the guy would stand there.
01:12:51.000There's a lot of jobs that are gone due to technology.
01:15:00.000So if you choose to hit and someone else doesn't, then they'll just leave your hand as it is on the screen, and then they'll pull another card out for all players.
01:18:45.000And you wouldn't have access to any of that stuff.
01:18:47.000So you had to go to a person and say, how do I?
01:18:49.000Like, if you wanted to fly from New York to Hawaii, you'd go to an agent who's going to be like, let me figure out the flights for you that will get you to Cal.
01:18:56.000And then they'd be like, okay, so I got this travel plan.
01:18:59.000Here's when your flight's going to be.
01:20:15.000I don't think it's fair to say candle makers are gone because there are factories that mass produce candles because people still want candles for intimate settings.
01:20:39.000You know what the bad thing about that is?
01:20:41.000I feel like it's always going to be the.
01:20:42.000It's going to sound weird, but part of the beauty of music is that even when somebody is singing a song, it's always slightly different if it's live.
01:21:07.000I was watching, I think it was MSNBC or something, and they were talking about when Jose Canseco did the national anthem, but he like did a little twist on it.
01:21:59.000Anacreontic song, but these things weren't like institutionalized, it was just like people would know the melody and then they put lyrics to the melody.
01:23:06.000If I give you a Van Gogh painting, if I literally had the ability to make every single stroke, when I say every single stroke, perfection, exactly the same as Vincent Van Gogh, which one do you think people will buy?
01:23:22.000Well, people would buy the Van Gogh because of the history with it.
01:23:36.000When you're talking about live artists now, the idea of not having perfection from the vast majority of your big acts, most of them are using Auto Tune Live.
01:23:53.000And, you know, if you're talking about like the really top performers, like Taylor Swift, when she's preparing for a tour, she doesn't just sing all the songs, she sings all of her songs on a treadmill.
01:24:06.000Yeah, she can do all the stuff when she's running.
01:24:09.000So, like, you're talking about the top kind of, when you're talking about A list, top, top tier artists, they've got everything that you could possibly have working in their favor.
01:24:52.000And it's also worth noting that, like, when you've got, and I said this before in the show, like, when you've got music that's being released that's literally perfect, right?
01:25:10.000When they hear things that are not on the grid, when they hear things that aren't perfectly tuned, they start saying, That just sounds bad.
01:25:15.000Bro, remember back in the day, if you wanted to record a song, they'd bring all the dudes into the studio room at the same time, balance the mics, and they would all play the song, actually play it in the studio live.
01:26:00.000And because Haley Williams is the, like, probably the most notable female, it just, I was saying this the other day that Amy Lee and Haley Williams probably got to sue these AI companies because they're.
01:26:39.000It's just because when the AI is training on this data, it's getting insane amounts of samples from these prominent artists and it's making those voices.
01:26:49.000If it's not training exclusively on those people, it's training on people that are emulating them in there because they sound They sound like.
01:27:08.000And I'm not saying it's a good thing, but if I take 10 sounds from 10 pop artists and alter them, combine them, you cannot say that's your song anymore.
01:27:48.000So when an AI takes all of these different pieces and makes a new song, even if it sounds like some of these other artists are songs, it's just transformative.
01:31:08.000I think it was still made by Akira Toriyama, but they like, I don't know, it's like 15 years ago, they were like, let's just pretend that whole thing we did in the 90s never happened and then just do a new series where people actually liked the show.
01:31:22.000Because when you think about it, like, there's a funny post where someone wrote Han Solo is like the Darth Vader must think Han Solo is the most badass guy in the universe.
01:33:43.000I also love there's a post where it's like, because in Revenge of the Sith, Anakin meets Grievous for the first time, in the Clone Wars series, the writers had to twist themselves into knots to make sure Anakin never met the protagonist of the whole series.
01:38:09.000People on the left are perfectly fine with, you know, All kinds of hormones for trans people and stuff.
01:38:17.000The idea that it's a problem for men to take testosterone when they're in the military, especially if you're talking about infantry guys or whatever, you want those people to be able to have the fastest recovery you can.
01:38:33.000They give them all kinds of caffeine and stuff to stay awake, giving them testosterone to help recovery time and help build muscle.
01:39:13.000I mean, like I said, there's a lot of dudes, especially the guys that are, The reason I say this though is because there's going to be some like scrawny soy boy guy feminist who's going to be like, I don't want it.
01:39:21.000And as soon as you give him that one shot, he's going to be like, Trump.
01:39:57.000If you're someone who's willing to do the work to improve yourself, you are not going to be persuaded by somebody who's like, but I don't want to do work.
01:40:04.000It also, let everybody else handle it for you.
01:41:14.000And another thing about going to the gym and exercising and stuff is like, there's a lot of people that, as soon as they feel some kind of stress, as soon as things get a little hard, they're like, oh, and it's like your body, when you're like trying, you're like at like 40%.
01:41:28.000You've got a whole lot more in the tank.
01:41:31.000Discomfort is where you start actually making progress.
01:41:34.000And that's the same whether you're trying to learn an instrument like playing guitar or playing piano or whatever, or if you're lifting weights or whatever.
01:41:40.000Discomfort is where you actually start making changes.
01:41:45.000If you're not uncomfortable, you're not doing enough.
01:41:48.000You're not getting those, what are they called?
01:42:22.000The only thing we got to watch out for, though, is like a woman in a Dago with a sledgehammer who might run in and throw the sledgehammer at the TV that everyone's watching.
01:42:41.000What if you were sitting at home, like all your friends were watching Tim Castellar, and some lady came in, just threw a hammer at your TV?
01:42:45.000You're at like a World Cup watch party in the final, 90th minute penalty, and then all of a sudden just a lady comes with a sledgehammer.
01:44:11.000So they put like a drawing out, like a raffle.
01:44:13.000They said, hey, if you have a baby in Barcelona, if you win this raffle, he can be in a photo shoot with Messi and it'll be this fun thing he can grow up looking at.
01:44:20.000Well, it turned out that player is now the star player for Barcelona and Spain's star player.
01:44:40.000Well, I guess we'll see who wins and then we'll know.
01:44:42.000But I don't, you know, I was rooting for Argentina today against England because England is the oppressive monarchy and Argentina is the rebellious former colony.
01:45:25.000See, Brazil won, Italy won, Spain, Germany, France, Argentina in 2022.
01:45:29.000And it says 2026, Argentina is going to win.
01:45:31.000And if they got the rest of them right, that proves it.
01:45:33.000And then also, Spain will win in 2030, but 2034, 38, and 42 will be canceled due to nuclear explosion, tanks, and then there may not be a world.
01:45:43.000And then the Iberian Union wins in 46, Southern Cone in 2050, Greater Germany in 2054.
01:45:52.000The Netherlands win three World Cups in a row.
01:48:25.000There was some Mexican guy that was waving the Mexican flag at one of the protests, and someone said something like, You know, why are you trying to be an American?
01:52:14.000They got whatever shock value they got out of it, whatever wiggle room they could use to leverage their, What they believe instead of you know, Republicans, they used it now, they have to move into something else.
01:52:24.000Yeah, I think that the fact that political division has been so intense for so long, I think people are kind of burnt out on it.
01:52:32.000Oh, yeah, you know, the left doesn't have the same kind of you know, fire that they used to, and the average person doesn't care, right?
01:52:42.000They really, in 2020, after the George Floyd thing, like the average people, your average non politically aware people, kind of were like, Oh, this seems terrible, right?
01:53:52.000There's going to be humanoid robots that are indistinguishable for the most part.
01:53:57.000I think we're still a long way from being indistinguishable, but speech wise, Getting the point to where the movements look like an actual human is tough.
01:54:07.000But in terms of speech patterns and everything, it's going to be indistinguishable within a few years.
01:54:11.000And then people are going to be like, I want to marry a robot.
01:54:24.000Most of the motors are in the forearm, similar to a human being.
01:54:29.000And it's got like almost this, it's got like 25, like the human hand has like 27 degrees of.
01:54:35.000Of articulation, and this has like 25.
01:54:38.000They showed it screwing in a light bulb, and then they broke the light bulb to prove that it was a real light bulb.
01:54:44.000I think that it's just a few years away from being movement like a person, actually, not just movement like a person, where they will be able to move like a person if they want.
01:54:56.000But like Elon Musk was predicting, look at some point in the very near future, you're gonna need a strobe light to see these things because they're gonna move so fast.
01:55:21.000You know, they're the capabilities of machines.
01:55:25.000It's going to be completely, people are totally unaware and they're totally unprepared for it.
01:55:30.000Like I said, I just impressed the crap out of my manager because my AI agent went through a contract and found all these points and was like, hey, this is actually really, really, really good.
01:55:48.000And it depends on what kind of contract, right?
01:55:50.000If you're, if someone's offering you a kind of deal, like a deal, like a record deal or whatever, yeah, now you want to have a regular lawyer look at it.
01:55:57.000But in two or three years, not going to need it.
01:56:00.000You're going to, the AI is going to be so good because it's your option to sign or not.
01:56:03.000Just be like, you know, you don't have to have, there's not someone else involved in it.
01:57:24.000And then there's one dude who's just like, because they're all hive minded and they'll do whatever he says, he's just banging all these women.
02:00:48.000When I worked for, I guess that's kind of similar how like when I leave New York and I see another New Yorker, I like just know, I don't know how to explain it.
02:01:14.000And it's like all the Black people hung out with each other, all the Latinos, and the white people just floated around and just didn't really care.
02:01:34.000Everybody was friends, but it's pretty wild that when you walked in the main break room, it's like all the black people were here, all the Asians were here, and all the Mexicans were over here.
02:01:40.000And they were like, white dudes just walking around.
02:04:51.000I saw somebody on X posted, they're talking about Jewish supremacy and they were like, They have a war that literally means everybody else.
02:04:58.000Like they talk about themselves and then they have goyum for everyone else.
02:05:34.000One of a race which, with the Hotinos and Bushmen, inhabited South Africa.
02:05:39.000They inhabited the country north of Cape Colony, the name now being specifically applied to the tribes living between Cape Colony and Natal, including the Ponda, Zosa, Timbu.
02:06:18.000N word in the United States, but you can say Kaffir.
02:06:21.000Well, because it's funny because like coloreds in South Africa is the name of an ethnic group, but in America, we're like deeply horrified.
02:06:26.000So there's a brewery in Charlestown called Abolition Ale Works.
02:07:06.000Well, that was like, it was a big thing in Canada when that Simpsons episode called them, they're calling them the people from Newfoundland that are calling them Newfies.
02:07:13.000They like tried to make it like, oh, there's a slur.
02:07:16.000Can we make up like a new racial slur?
02:08:18.000I had a professor in college and he was like in his 90s and he was in the Korean War and he would just casually like admit to like literal war crimes.
02:12:15.000They really, no, they really leaned into, like, like Guido's and we like they made a whole well, yeah, yeah, but they made they figured out how to capitalize off that.
02:12:23.000Everyone else was tiptoeing around it, yeah.
02:13:06.000Like, once you're like two generations in, you're white.
02:13:08.000So, I mean, look, anyone, I get why black people get really pissed if you're called a nigger, but like hearing someone say the word, like people get mad about that.
02:14:17.000I called in about digital ID and I had my re education moment thanks to the Discord.
02:14:24.000I just wanted to answer my question Is it time for the right to go full board and adopt similar tools like this to crush the left?
02:14:34.000The let passion of hope and sanity that we've seen relied upon within the Supreme Court, they've been seeming to betray the gains from this administration, and Congress and the Senate aren't willing to act.
02:15:07.000People expect like a revolution or something, and it's like that's just it's in 2026, it's just very unrealistic in a liberal democracy to have like a revolution because it's like who's gonna fight the revolution?
02:15:17.000Like a bunch of 60 year olds that are like posting all day.
02:15:20.000It's like probably that's going to have to be young people.
02:15:22.000Young people aren't interested in having a revolution.
02:15:25.000Like they need to be pushed to the brink in order to like really crash out.
02:15:28.000And if you're looking for something to focus on for political change, like voting is still the most realistic.
02:15:34.000And instead of getting mad about, I've been preaching on this a lot, but like instead of getting mad in November, like get mad November the year before and primary the person that you don't want.
02:15:45.000The things like Scott Pressler is doing obviously.
02:17:05.000Short form content isn't translating to political victory.
02:17:08.000We see it over and over and over again where like guys are immensely pop.
02:17:10.000James Fishback's going to find this out where he's like immensely popular on social media, but the problem is he's winning over young voters like Thomas Massey did, but that doesn't translate to political victory because young people don't vote.
02:17:24.000I would say yes and no because I think part of the reason AOC does so well and, and, and, The part of the reason Mamdani did so well is because of their social medias.
02:17:31.000Well, that's because I think it depends on where they are.
02:17:34.000I should say for Republicans, because Democrats have younger voters.
02:18:10.000It takes getting active, especially in primaries when you're able to change the people that are running in the party that is, you know, the party that you intend to vote for or you would hope to vote for.
02:18:20.000Like, I'm an online political commentator and I'm shouting into a void, basically, where I was like deeply disturbed by Vivek Ramaswamy's comments and everything.
02:18:29.000But then when the, uh, the, The Putsch campaign started going out and like talking to the voters in Ohio, and they were like, This was like their golden goose.
02:18:36.000They're like, This is what we're going to use to take down Vivek.
02:18:39.000And they were like, Isn't this terrible?
02:18:47.000So, like, people just get reality checks really quickly of like what we think the base is like is way different than what they're actually like.
02:18:54.000So, got anything you want to add, or are you going to follow up questions?
02:19:00.000Just a couple things to add, maybe a little pushback.
02:19:03.000Just with the recent revelations from Justice Amy Coney Barrett talking about how the fear of her family and influencing her decisions, do you think the left still has the reins, or is it sort of a last ditch effort?
02:19:20.000No, I think Amy Coney Barrett's a coward because, look, there's always been political violence in this country.
02:19:26.000People in the 60s and 70s could have said that same thing, and you'd be like, yeah, that makes sense.
02:19:29.000There's a lot of political assassinations.
02:19:34.000It's like, no, if you're not willing to take the risk of being a Really, you thought everyone's going to like you being a Supreme Court justice?
02:19:40.000If you're not willing to do your job, then step aside.
02:20:40.000And to Tate's point, I mean, in 1970 to 71, there were 2,000 bombings in the United States, political bombings, when the height of the weather underground and the weathermen.
02:20:50.000That video of Clarence Thomas being like, if they're going to kill me, they're going to kill me.
02:21:00.000Because if you look at how politics used to be, when senators, congressmen broadly, Supreme Court justices, people would say, thank you for your service.
02:21:07.000And you're like, hearing that now, and you're like, well, these guys are all like, Pussy.
02:21:09.000So it's like, why would you ever thank them for their service?
02:21:11.000It's like, because back then there was this understanding that, like, oh, you could just die.
02:22:34.000And then lastly, Bill, if you want, I can teach you about the Coriolis effect later if you want to improve your marksmanship.
02:22:40.000Well, I tell you what, I do very, very, very little.
02:22:45.000Long range shooting, most of my stuff is just practicing with a handgun because that's the most realistic, practical application that I'd ever use.
02:22:55.000I don't even think I have a gun that could really reach out.
02:22:57.000I've got a 308 that could probably hit a thousand yards, but like, actually, yeah, a 308 could hit a thousand yards, but like, that's like, I don't have any big stuff.
02:23:08.000Like, I don't have any Creedmoor or anything, or Lapu or anything cool like that.
02:23:47.000And I wanted to, I was trying to call in, what was it, after the primary, after Mila Kiros won.
02:23:54.000And just wanted to speak to that aspect.
02:23:56.000But interestingly enough, since then, I have actually gotten in confrontations with, like, Overt Denver communists.
02:24:08.000They've got the merch, they've got the table.
02:24:10.000I made some posts on my socials, but my question kind of goes in line with confronting and being on the ground and being involved and, you know, making no peace with evil, ceding no ground to these communists.
02:24:25.000So my question is I can tell you that Malat Kiros is a blend of AOC that meets Mandami and her policies are completely insane.
02:24:34.000What is more telling is the voter turnout regarding the primary and showing that.
02:24:40.000A not even 35% of Colorado voters showed up to vote in the primary.
02:24:46.000So you're getting radical DSA members based on a majority of the minority of the total votes.
02:24:55.000And I know, Tim, you hate that line, but it's true when you look at people voting.
02:25:01.000I just feel like right now we're seeing that we don't necessarily have a communist problem in place, but a lack of voter participation and the level of apathy.
02:25:42.000Yeah, I mean, I think you're seeing further and further apathy where the Republican path to 28 is looking pretty easy.
02:25:50.000I mean, especially if the Democrats do nominate, you know, DSA, you know, adjacent.
02:25:55.000Even Kamala, I mean, Kamala was holding court with Zoran.
02:25:58.000She clearly thinks there's some magic there, which is what I was saying was the big worry with Zoran is that he's going to, like, sort of be seen as, you know, what we should emulate as Democrats.
02:26:09.000But in actuality, it might just make her even more unpalatable, too.
02:26:12.000That's worrying at the congressional level, but.
02:26:15.000At the national level, it clearly just gives us more ammo as Republicans.
02:26:28.000Yeah, I mean, I do understand on a federal, national, state level.
02:26:33.000And not only that, but you're seeing this fracturing of the left in itself.
02:26:40.000So you can actually see the oppositions be like, oh, wow, they're actually fucking nuts.
02:26:45.000That being said, on a local level, in the counties and in the districts and in these House seats that I'm working actively with in Colorado, I mean, our margins are between 2,000 to 5,000 votes.
02:28:13.000No, well, I'm not speaking for everyone, but there is a majority ethnic base that does side with socialist policies.
02:28:22.000And that's the problem, is that when the government offers everything to these people, You know, migrants, they're going to vote for that every time.
02:28:29.000So we have to, like, I'm trying to break this spell.
02:28:32.000I'm trying to break this reluctant communist spell because they're all a bunch of like brain rot fed retards that can't understand that, like, taking other people's money is not going, like, eventually you run out of other people's money.
02:29:05.000But, you know, people like Savannah and I and, you know, like Rob Smith still comes to New York occasionally.
02:29:11.000Like, there's a bunch of people that refuse to leave and refuse to let their city be taken over by these crazies.
02:29:18.000You know, even though it's still kind of happening, there are a good majority of New Yorkers and a good majority of people in general that do not want to see this.
02:29:39.000You don't know what the majority is thinking.
02:29:43.000When I quote left the left, I hate saying that now because it was so long ago, but when I did that, I genuinely didn't know what the hell was going to happen with my career.
02:29:49.000And it turns out the majority of people follow my content more now than compared to before because I think the majority of Americans are still on our side.
02:30:00.000You just have to resonate with them, and I agree with you.
02:30:02.000Like, you, like, I think most people forget we don't have a two party system or even a third party.
02:30:08.000We don't talk about the libertarians, but like, a majority of people just are the disaffected voter.
02:30:15.000How do we convince them to be engaged again?
02:30:18.000And that's kind of where I'm sitting, yeah, you know, trying to pull that in, you know.
02:30:22.000And I think you're doing a great job too.
02:32:35.000I'm saying if I were to take the van down to like DC and put up a table and say, we're going to film an episode here and get a couple security guys.
02:32:57.000So there was one guy in the video that like came up to us and knew who we were.
02:33:01.000But I think if I brought two security guys with me and had the van behind me and we had a table set up in front and we just filmed and talked to people, I think.
02:35:53.000My question tonight is so I'm a black guy, fun fact, but I've been like red pilled since high school.
02:35:59.000And it started Barack Obama's first term.
02:36:03.000One thing I was always noticing was a lot of my peers were just supporting him because he was black.
02:36:09.000And when I would ask them questions like, hey, you know, he supports.
02:36:13.000Stuff that you physically told me you don't align with, they would say stuff like, You worry about the wrong thing, we're gonna fix the economy.
02:36:18.000And I'm like, Okay, well, you guys are retarded.
02:36:21.000So, um, fast forward till now, I mean, I'm married, my kids are mixed, my wife is white.
02:36:26.000And one thing I've been noticing with like the Carmelo Anthony fallout and then this new kid that died overseas is it seems like there's like this extreme hyper focus and trying to like pit white people against black people on a massive scale that's even bigger than what I've even seen.
02:36:46.000Back in a way, and throughout my young years, my 36 years of life.
02:36:51.000And so, is there, you guys think there's a reason why it seems like people are kind of like ignoring this and not like bringing more, more like light to this thing that seems pre manufactured?
02:37:02.000Because it's easier to believe that you're a victim and that everybody else is the problem.
02:37:06.000It's easier to believe that it's easier to convince black people that they're the issue.
02:37:11.000I'm sorry, that they are, that they're oppressed.
02:37:12.000It's easier to convince, it's, it's because white people don't want to be called racist, they don't want to be called transphobic, homophobic, whatever, all these things.
02:37:19.000They're, What was the comic we were talking about before?
02:37:22.000I'd rather be racist than dead or whatever.
02:37:27.000A lot of these people have gotten to the point where they're so afraid to be called a word because it, not necessarily now, because now it's become the boy who cried wolf, the they who cried wolf.
02:37:38.000People were losing their jobs, they were losing their friends.
02:37:41.000I lost a ton of my friends because people were calling me internalized homophobia and biphobia and transphobia.
02:37:47.000It's easy to make, it's very easy when people are afraid.
02:38:29.000So to instill fear in them, you know, certain people are going to, for black people, I guess, the way, the easiest way to make them afraid is you're going to go back to slavery.
02:38:39.000You're going to get, you're going to, you're already oppressed.
02:38:52.000It's never actually, most of the time, it's never actually something that's going to happen.
02:38:56.000Well, and like the red pill too is that like post racialism is likely impossible just because it's human nature.
02:39:01.000I mean, if you go across the world, if there's a group that outperforms another group, typically the group that is falling behind will have, they'll try to, you know, secure welfare from the state.
02:39:12.000I mean, this is like the situation in Malaysia, for example, where the Chinese are actually a minority in this instance, but they outperform the Malays economically, et cetera.
02:39:21.000And so the Malays have a bit of a grudge towards the Chinese or skeptical of them and they demand the state passes massive, you know, welfare benefits along to the Malay population.
02:39:31.000So it's not a uniquely American issue, really.
02:39:35.000Any country that has like two sort of native groups, like America, white and black Americans are both, you know, native, been here since the start of it.
02:39:45.000Like, if one, you know, pulls ahead of the other, economically speaking, they'll, that's just a very natural reaction.
02:39:51.000And yeah, post racialism is like a liberal idea, like the MLK vision of the country, like, oh, you know, we can all just like, it's only skin deep, but like, you know, we'll just move on and it's beyond that.
02:40:20.000I'm saying people will self segregate, but like people will be polite to each other in real life.
02:40:24.000Like, you know, if a black and white person meet, like they'll be polite to each other.
02:40:27.000Like they probably don't even really think about the racial differences that much.
02:40:30.000But I'm just talking about the macro level, like how politics works is racial divisions will always, there's going to be political divisions because there's also some biological, there has to be some kind of biological reasoning behind that.
02:40:41.000Yeah, because it happens in prison too.
02:40:43.000Yeah, well, so you feel safer around people that look like you.
02:41:07.000But like generally speaking, people do still like marry within their same ethnic group just for familiarity or, or, Maybe there is some sort of pressure within their group.
02:41:15.000I mean, I know like Asians have a lot of pressure to marry within their group, but like, yeah, generally at the macro scale, like post racialism is just, it's not really possible.
02:41:25.000I mean, I'd like that, but that's just the reality of human nature.
02:41:32.000I do agree that like the media and politicians, et cetera, do put their thumb in the wound, but that wound does exist and it has existed and it'll always exist.
02:41:40.000Like, they're exploiting a division that already exists.
02:42:51.000So, as a black man, I know I don't speak for all black people, but I will speak for my sect of black people in the South.
02:42:56.000Everything you guys are seeing, like on social media about people acting crazy and yelling at cops and all that crap, that is such a small percentage of the black population.
02:43:07.000And I just don't know what it would take for the black conservative voices or the people that have a lot more sense to like speak up and to be like the forefront and like let everyone know hey, this sect of this population, that is not us.
02:43:22.000Like, what do you guys think it would take to get that demonetization?
02:43:27.000Well, yeah, honestly, honestly, people making money off of it, it's gonna happen.
02:43:32.000Well, that, and I mean, the Democrat Party courts the black vote really hard and the white, and they're just gonna keep promoting that that's their right.
02:43:39.000Well, they court them like philosophically, but also like monetarily.
02:43:42.000I mean, like, the majority of black Americans understand that like voting for the Republican Party means less wealth transfer from whites to blacks, so they're just not gonna sign up for that.
02:43:52.000So, I mean, like, unless you are able to truly, like, I get uh, you know, move on, so to speak, as a group, I mean, I don't see a Situation in which the Republicans ever cracked 15% of the black vote, just because the Democrats understand that's a reliable voting base.
02:44:08.000They make sure that they're taken care of.
02:44:11.000Obviously, as a black conservative or as a conservative myself, we would disagree that they're being taken care of.
02:44:16.000We would argue that no, you should be ultimately your own individual autonomous person, et cetera.
02:44:22.000But on the macro scale, people respond to that.
02:44:24.000And so, again, unless the Republican Party is willing to embrace welfare and these sorts of massive government programs, it's unlikely that the black Vote really truly moves away from the Dark Party in like significant numbers.