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So, now what we're going to do is take a look at this latest Tucker Carlson piece.
Now, there were a number of things I really liked about this piece.
Number one, he's branched away from the news vlog format or even the long form format, which we saw with his recent Andrew Tate interview.
And immediately, because this is short, well produced, it's even in the aspect ratio of, say, an Instagram, you know, trying to get more of the youth to watch it.
It was a six-month rush job, rapper Ice Cube and Tucker Carlson Bond in Bizarre Carpool interview in South Central LA.
Nothing bizarre about it.
Nothing, not one moment.
I go, wow, this is really weird.
No.
What I did find is that, first of all, there's a big revelation by the Tuck-ins that I don't think he said anywhere else and completely contradicts what I know I heard him say on air.
And that's that he didn't take the hate and lies shot.
Now, previously, when the rollout was there, he did say he took the shot on Fox News.
I specifically remember him saying it.
I would assume he's lying the way that he cackles when Ice Cube asks him about it and he goes, of course not.
Of course not.
So that may have been just like, again, one of those things that you have to say to stay on Fox News.
That was a big revelation.
Ice Cube on Politicians was brilliant.
The fact that he went through a number of presidents that ain't changed since this, ain't changed since that.
Big, big.
And what I also really love about the piece is that Tucker Carlson incorporates some of the interviews that Ice Cube did when he was finding success as a young man in NWA.
So without further ado, let's kick this off with the Tuck-ins.
As part of our ongoing, never-ending quest to find the few people in this country who are still willing to say what they actually think out loud, we wound up in Los Angeles recently with the rapper Ice Cube driving through his old neighborhood.
Didn't expect that to happen.
Here's how it went.
Dr. Dre came by this house.
I'm going to show you.
We're going to ride by.
He used to live down the street from me.
His cousin, his cousin moved on our block when I was 12.
He was 11.
And his name is Sir Jinx.
He became one of my producers when I went solo.
Sir Jinx, he moved on the block, and then Dr. Dre was his cousin.
So Dre came by a couple of times.
It was cool, you know, to be able to see somebody who was actually making records.
We were still amateurs.
Okay, not at this street, but the next one, make a left.
Get out there, you know.
Yeah, we're not getting out because I don't want my pops to be like, what the fuck are you doing?
These people coming by my house, won't tell me.
Oh, your dad still lives there?
Yeah.
Yeah, my pops still lives here.
How long has your family been there?
Man, since 1962.
These boys, they all grew up on this block, okay?
That's what I said.
Famously, now, if you look at this, first of all, Boys in the Hood stands up.
And this was an era where it seemed like every single rapper wanted to be a movie star.
Whereas Ice Cube's performance in what is an extremely powerful film about inner city life, especially Compton outside of LA, all that stuff.
It was an amazing performance.
Again, holds up to this day.
And now they're really going to get into the fact not much has changed in that area over the past three decades, despite promises.
One of the tougher neighborhoods in the city.
Today I didn't see anything.
So where are we?
Right now we're in Manchester.
Just right here.
That's a cemetery where a lot of people in this area laid to rest right there.
Anyone you know?
A lot of people I've known.
A lot of people I've known.
A lot of friends, you know, a few family members.
Out of all the kids I grew up with, at least 13 of them were dead.
And that's before they even reached 21.
I just turned 21, so, you know, thank God that I've even reached 21.
Manchester's Forgotten Trees00:03:03
I mean, in that clip, just looking at his eyes and the inflections in his voice, you could tell the guy, even at that point, is kind of wise beyond his years.
Just want to point that out.
This is the block I grew up on, right here.
Does this look the same?
It pretty much looked the same.
You know, but it used to be like more trees.
Like, every house had a tree in front of it.
And at some point, the city started cutting the trees out.
They said that the helicopters couldn't see people, so they start.
What, the police helicopters?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So in other words, okay, now think about this.
We promise you more law and order, but let's take away some of the natural beauty.
No, there's going to be more law and order.
There's going to be more accountability.
Let's just take some of the natural beauty away.
And did that happen?
Did crime go down?
No.
Did you lose your trees?
Yep.
So they start cutting the trees out.
Three decades and billions of dollars later, it's still a tough place.
How do you think politicians in Los Angeles have done running the city?
It's pretty much the same people running it the same way.
Politicians only really pay attention to the people that give them money.
Everybody else is kind of an extra in this movie.
We love you in the scene, but we can do the same without you.
Brilliant.
Brilliant to say.
You see what he said?
We love you in this scene, but we can do it without you.
It speaks to the whole Hollyweird sag after strike on a grandiose level, right?
You know, we'd love you to sign off and just do whatever we say, and then we're going to own your likeness in perpetuity.
But honestly, we'll just do it without you.
We'll find somebody else or we'll just create whatever we want.
And that is the attitude.
And that's another huge crossover for me via the entertainment industry and our political reality, which are very, very homogenized, which you're going to find out later in the interview with their influence.
Do you ever give money to politicians?
No.
What?
I don't believe in politicians.
Politicians have hidden agendas.
They owe a lot of people a lot of favors.
The more money you give them, the more you're listened to.
So you've never phoned for a politician?
I can't say that.
You know, I've had hope and dreams that this guy is going to be the guy.
What did you think of Obama when he got elected?
You know, for the first time, I felt proud that America took that step.
Yep.
I didn't think they would ever do that.
NBA's Business DNA00:10:55
And so that was the moment in time.
But then you look around, years go by, and not much change for people I know.
No, because hope and change was a slogan.
They wanted you to hope for the change that they promised you and didn't give you.
People I care about.
We've had six major race riots on the president's watch.
Race relations have plummeted to Lowe's Nuts and Terra King.
The Chicago toddler is now the latest victim of the city's deadly surge in gun violence.
But it didn't change with Bush.
It didn't change with Clinton.
It didn't change with other Bush, Reagan, Carter, and so.
You know, at the end of the day, it's still the same results.
So you're describing a symbolic victory?
Yes, in a lot of ways, yes.
And then came George Floyd and the beginning of what we were told was a second civil rights movement.
If there was going to be liberation in the wake of the Floyd riots, this is where you'd see the effects.
And no.
And again, great job by Tucker.
It has that Instagram feel.
It's got the filter.
But now he's popping in the headlines, all the big promises, all the big money.
And Ice Cube is very astute.
He's like, you know, a lot of the times these people pledge all this money and guess what?
They don't even give it.
They get the headline.
And then where's the money?
It don't happen.
They already got what they wanted.
Three years ago, a bunch of big companies pulled hundreds of millions of dollars into Black Lives Matter through them a lot of money.
Did that improve the neighborhood you grew up in?
Whenever you do that, most of the time it's a lot of people siphoning their money off the top.
And the kicker is a lot of people say they're going to give the money, but they don't even give the money.
They make the pledge, you never write the check?
Yeah, they just get the article wrote.
Everybody think they're great, and they never even give the money.
Big three.
These days, Ice Cube is in the sports business.
In a partner started a new professional basketball league called Big Three.
Strangely, this is one form of black empowerment that the NBA doesn't seem to like.
And yet again, another great thing about this piece is it's pointing out the utter hypocrisy of the NBA, right?
Because they don't want to compete.
The truth is, they're a business.
They don't want to be in competition with another league, okay, especially a league, you know, that's a half-court league.
It's got a lot of excitement.
It's got some of the old superstars and names.
And that's the bottom line.
They want to put this guy out of business or own a piece of it before they ever promote it.
It's not, it doesn't have anything to do with racial equality that they're always preaching, all that stuff.
So again, another great part in this piece.
Doesn't seem like the big, I'm not pitching your business, but it does seem like the idea behind it would be consistent with what the NBA says they're about.
Without a doubt.
You know, the NBA is full of great slogans and they, you know, they write Black Lives Matter on the court and they do all those things, but pretty full of shit when the rubber meets the road, you know?
Maybe that's why they put the slogans on the court.
So they won't have to deal with it.
Just a thought, I don't know.
I mean, you know, it's as easy as saying we're going to donate $100 million to, you know, it's like an easy thing to do.
All they got to do is call up the graphics guy and approve the comp.
So you're starting to make me think this could be a scam.
I'm just throwing that out there.
I'm just saying it's easy for them to put that on the court.
It takes a little more effort to really care to work with a league like the Big Three.
You know, you really got to want to make a difference.
The NBA is run by a cringing neoliberal called Adam Silver.
Quote, we're completely committed to standing for social justice and racial equality, Silver once announced.
It's part of the DNA of this league.
And honestly, it should be part of the DNA.
Like, the reality of it, it should be part of the DNA of that league because, really, yes, we've had professional baseball, but we've had football.
No more superstars, of my opinion, at least in my generation, of actual black people came out of the, no more than anywhere else, the NBA.
I can rattle off NBA players that were absolute superstars and had a huge cultural impact during that era like no other.
Obviously, Michael Jordan being amongst them.
But Charles Barkley, still making headlines today, also from that era.
So Shaquille O'Neal, a little bit after those guys, but a huge cultural impact.
You know, the NBA really just, I would say, you know, it normalized a lot of race relations in the fact that so many kids, especially from my generation, looked up to these people.
Period.
Didn't matter what the color of their skin was.
They happened to be black, but we cared how they played basketball.
We enjoyed the commercials or the off-kilter humor or getting a Gatorade.
You know, that's what we were sold on.
You know, the idea that my generation somehow, you know, had a bunch of racial inequality.
That's just fiction.
That's just fiction.
You could feel it.
Growing up in the 80s as a kid and then developing from a boy to a man in those years, you saw it.
The 90s, just the cultural loan of NWA.
I saw Ice Cube perform 1998, 1998, the Family Values Tour on tour with corn.
This is even before I was really into anything hip-hop, NWA in particular.
You know, I just started listening to that.
Wu-Tang clan, kind of find my footing in what I did like in that genre of music, right?
But to me, that was an era of coming together.
They never talk about that.
And the NBA felt like a part of that to me.
And now that's been utterly and completely destroyed.
Utterly and completely destroyed.
And, you know, obviously with the LeBron James Sun News, which we'll get into in a minute, which it kind of like dovetails into more of this piece, also extremely important to talk about.
Okay, because LeBron James is that next level, like that bridge of superstar where it all started to change again.
And all of a sudden, it felt like it wasn't about inclusion.
It was about division.
Just my opinion, of course.
And yet, according to Ice Cube, Adam Silver has done his best to strangle the black-owned big three in its crib.
When people think basketball, they think Silver, don't you think?
Adam Silver, he kind of embodies the spirit of basketball.
yeah you know yeah was he a what team did he play on during his career I think he played on the New York Lawyers.
I mean, again, the Daily Mail wants to tell you this was a bizarre interview.
No, this is a brilliant piece of media they put together.
Gonna go mega viral.
This is 100 million view plus for sure.
They don't like that.
Starting forward on the New York Lawyers.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, I mean, he rode the bench.
Come on, man.
He rode the bench.
Come on.
He wasn't no starting forward on the New York Lawyers.
Come on, that smile right there is infectious.
Road the pine.
Water boy.
You can see why Ice Cube is considered one of the least obedient entertainers in L.A.
It's a trip.
I used to walk these streets.
Well, that's you.
Yeah.
This was a trip.
See how these stars?
No.
Nah.
Unless they're going to give us a little money from the hood tour life tours.
You know what I mean?
Break us off 20%, man.
The world's most dangerous group.
Yes.
So I noticed this about every year or two.
I read some story about you, and the subtext is always the same, which is, you know, stay in your lane.
I wouldn't be here if I stayed in my lane.
That's right.
That guy is a true pioneer in entertainment on so many levels.
And by the way, I do want to give a shout out to Snoop Dogg, who just recently canceled a performance because he's standing by all of the SAG actors, okay?
The Screen Actors Guild actors and writers.
And honestly, I hope more people in the music industry also stand up because they're about to be under attack, too.
Just want to let everybody know.
I just never wanted to have that life.
You know, I never wanted to be controlled.
How many times have you been pulled aside by people who are trying to control you?
What they usually do is go talk to people that's in my circle and try to get them to try to convince them that they need to convince me that I need to take a different position.
Vaccine Controversy00:02:56
So that's kind of how I get it.
On what topics?
You know, it's been on, you know, the vaccine.
The Hollywood Reporter says actor Ice Cube is saying no to a $9 million payday because he won't say yes to the COVID vaccine.
And by the way, this to me is the most impactful, important part of the segment for so many reasons.
Now, again, this is when the Tucking said that he didn't take the shot.
That kind of reverses the position he put out there on Fox News.
Something to keep in mind.
But there's just so many things to respect about what Ice Cube has to say, and especially when he's speaking about his children.
The act Jordan Robert was sent to co-star in a new comedy, Oh Hell No, alongside Jack Black.
But when producers requested all cast members get a COVID vaccine, Ice Cube backed out.
Why wouldn't you take the vax?
You had a direct order to take it.
You were forced to take it.
Yeah, I'm not real good with direct orders, but on a whole nother note.
But it was a command.
I mean, they told me, I'm sorry, they told you.
I mean, they couldn't have been clearer about it.
Yeah, it was pretty clear.
Did you take it?
Of course not.
Of course not.
First time I've seen that.
Maybe I'm wrong.
Somebody tell me.
But first time I've seen that.
Yeah, no.
It wasn't ready.
You know, it was six-month, you know, kind of rush job.
And I didn't feel safe.
And see, look, that's not true that it was a quote-unquote six-month rush job.
This is, you know, a decades-plus plan.
The mRNA hating live shots in particular, the DARPA run, Operation Warp Speed in particular.
How they rolled it out with their talking points of safe and effective.
Well, they told you it was safe, and he brings that up.
But there was no rush to what they knew what they were doing.
This is 100% pre-meditated.
It's not mistakes.
It's not oops.
It's not experimental in the sense they're talking about.
But boy, were they running experiments.
But they told you you were safe.
I know what they said.
I know what they said.
And I heard them.
I heard them loud and clear.
But it's not their decision.
There's no repercussions if they're wrong.
But I can get all the repercussions if they're wrong.
Was it a tough call for you?
No, it wasn't a tough call.
Nothing Worth Your Health00:05:33
And I wanted to be an example for my kids.
You know, really make sure they didn't take it either.
Show them that, you know, I want to stand on my convictions.
And that's huge, man.
I respect that so much.
He's like, I don't want my kids to take it.
And by the way, you know, his son played him in the NWA picture.
He's, you know, a grown man.
He's a grown man.
So it's not like, you know, these are just young children where you say, no, we're not doing it.
He wanted to set that example that, hey, nothing's worth your health.
Hey, you know, take a step back.
That's a pretty big message when you turn down almost $10 million.
Just saying.
And I love it.
Wasn't a tough decision at all for me.
He's like, look, anybody could use another 9 mil.
Don't get it twisted.
But is that worth the cost of my health or my child's health?
Now think about LeBron James's son right now.
First of all, Elon Musk goes on Twitter, suggests it could be the vax.
Oh, you think?
You think it could be the vax that his teenage son just had a heart attack?
Or should have you, in retrospect, would you want to be more like Ice Cube?
And now that you know, you know, one of the things that does upset me is that Cube goes on at the end here, talks about how, you know, he was going to make the vax thing a personal decision.
He didn't want others to know that he'd taken it.
But then he talks about the fact that he knows people that have been injured from it and to not be silent about it.
Well, that's the whole thing.
You got to be vocal out the gates.
Vocal out the gates.
It's not a leak thing.
Same thing with you, Jamie Foxx, right?
I'm sorry, everybody who's sitting there going, that's a clone or Johnny or that's a deep fake.
No, that's him.
That's a guy that just spent a long time through a tough medical period, lost some weight, looked a little pale.
All of his birthmarks are there on his nose, around his eyes.
I've seen people try to do the side-by-side comparisons.
I'm just like, my God, people have fallen.
But Jamie, come on, man.
Let's save some lives after the fact.
Let's expose some evil after the fact.
That's a big part of this.
We need to do that.
That has to be a part of it.
Okay, so let's continue.
And that I was willing, you know, to lose $9 million and more because we've probably lost more, you know, since then.
The idea is that people who stand on their convictions are heroes.
They're brave.
They have principles.
You know, they're the people we look to for inspiration.
But in this case, with this decision and these principles, you were not hailed as a hero.
No.
You were attacked.
Why won't you get the vaccine, man?
Hey, look, man.
I'd just rather be myself than take that vaccine like you other 3 billion bugs.
I never told anyone not to get vaccinated publicly.
And honestly, more people should have.
I unapologetically, on every show I went, said, under no circumstances, no matter who you are or what your situation is, to take it.
In fact, I'm interviewing Allison Morrow tomorrow, who's a former mainstream journalist, has made her way in the alternative field.
I really like her work.
She's very measured, does really great interviews.
And I remember being on her show, and she was sitting there talking about, well, you know, if they have got the, they're older and the pre-exist.
And I go, no, Allison, no, under no circumstances.
And I just kept repeating, none of this is going to stop transmission.
And I go, they're telling you that you're going to have less of a hard time with it and you're not going to be hospitalized.
That's all Johnny nonsense.
They've gamed the system.
And I would explain to her how they wouldn't even consider you vaxed until two weeks after.
And there was like a short window of between 45 and 60 days that they would game anyway before you got your second shot, whether you were fully vaccinated.
You had to wake another 15 days.
They gamed the system.
They killed people, injecting them with hate and lies.
They misdiagnosed COVID many times over and told you the flu disappeared from the hemisphere of the planet.
Then they told you there were no drugs that actually worked, demonized ivermectin, demonized hydroxychloroquine, and it was a vent and remdesivir for you.
That's reality.
And that's why you can't wait to stand up.
Debbie's Dignity Fight00:15:36
That's just the way it is.
That was never my message to the world.
I didn't even want people to know whether I got vaccinated or not.
I was pretty upset that that even came out because I was just going to quietly, you know, just not take it and deal with the consequences as they came.
Can't be quiet.
Can't be quiet.
That's the whole thing.
You know, and I'm glad you're being vocal now.
Thank goodness.
It's never too late, right?
It's absolutely never too late.
Do you know anyone who was injured by the vaccine?
I do.
And they suffer every day.
And it's hard to watch.
Suffering in silence is not the answer all the time.
You know, sometimes you got to let people know what's going on so you can actually move the needle.
Choose to be vocal.
If it's true, why can't I say it?
Well, you can't say it because it is true.
There it is.
Now, that's the problem with the world today.
There's no penalty for lying.
No one's ever punished for lying.
It's only telling the truth.
It gets you in trouble.
Ain't that something that's true?
Yeah, that is so true.
Thinking something is not a crime.
Saying it is not a crime.
You know what I mean?
So I just tell what's real.
You know, if the truth hurts, say ouch.
Awesome piece.
Awesome piece.
Just really well done.
Must watch, in my opinion.
Now, we're going to go to a not so awesome deal.
A lot of people are playing the clip of Joe Biden talking about curing cancer.
Now, it's more of a ramble.
He doesn't really know where he is.
He doesn't know what he's doing.
This is the second thing that he had to do that day.
He had the Emmett Till Memorial.
No, I actually watched the Emmett Till Memorial start to finish.
It was like 22 minutes, and I think they let Joe ramble for just under 10.
He looks dazed.
He looks confused.
He's out of it.
He's no way coherent.
It's terrible.
And when I saw the clip about cancer, it was obvious to me that he was trying to bring up cancer moonshot again.
Okay.
He didn't actually believe that he had cured cancer.
He just can't speak because he has dementia.
He's constantly looking up to the sky.
His mouth is like cringe to the side.
It's over.
It's over.
And, you know, he had Kamala embarrassed with the Till case.
And by the way, a memorial to Emmett Till, who was lynched, I'm fine with that.
However, the idea that Joe Biden is some kind of hero because he made lynching a federal crime, murder is a federal crime.
Right?
Like, you lynch somebody, you kill them.
And whether it's racially motivated or not, you should all, if you did this, be charged and convicted of first-degree murder.
And the idea of something that happened, you know, decade upon decade upon decade ago being, you know, finally righteous Joe Biden's making it right.
That's a joke.
It's a bad joke.
Just like Joe Biden, okay, is going to save us with this healthcare thing.
You know, they have this woman speaking before him that's introducing him right now.
But there's another woman before even him that's just full of lies, man.
Just full of lies, talking about how great the health care system is.
And how we have all these choices and how they care about the poor or the lower middle class and their access to health care.
No, they don't.
No, they don't.
And again, that should be apparent after the COVID-19 4 nightmare where they restricted medication from people.
And that's the danger of socialized medicine.
That's the danger of allowing collectivism to infiltrate the health care system.
Because they're going to act like it's free, but it ain't free, man.
You sign up for that stuff.
You're beholden to these people that don't give a flying F about you.
That's the reality.
So, without further ado, let's get to Zombie Jombie J right here.
Here he is.
Behold Mighty Joe Old.
You know, you remember Mighty Joe Young?
Yeah, the other King Kong.
It's Mighty Joe Old.
Holds on to that hug.
Barely talk.
Here he comes.
Old man Biden.
There's that little cringe smile.
Please have a seat.
Rochelle, thanks for the introduction and the courage it takes to stand up on national television for all these people and tell your story.
But your story is the story of millions of people all across the country.
And, you know, one of the things that the pandemic demonstrated, there's a need for a lot more help.
Over a million people dead from COVID.
That's estimated to mean 8 million people left behind who are close to them.
How many mornings people get up and go for dinner and there's an empty chair?
Same exact thing he used to say before he said what?
It's going to be, you know, a dark winter of death and severe illness.
And by the way, he can barely talk.
He's like whispering right now because he can barely speak.
The same lines, the same talking points that have been regurgitated for him for how long?
The impact on people's lives is profound.
But and you were paying insurance every month.
You know, you shouldn't be your own, well, you shouldn't have to do what you had to do.
I mean, you shouldn't.
He doesn't know what he's talking about.
He can barely speak.
It's embarrassing.
It's a bad ramble.
Going through one of the hardest things in life.
And by the way, Debbie, Debbie, Debbie, God love you.
You're the best, Debbie.
You really are.
We wouldn't be here were it not for Debbie.
I've served together for a long time in the Senate, and I've never known you not to be a significant advocate for this very issue.
And I want to thank Acting Secretary Sue and everyone in the Department of Labor and HHS and Treasury for working to improve insurance coverage for mental health care in America.
And folks, you know, I don't know what the difference between breaking your arm and having a mental breakdown is.
I do.
Okay.
So whoever wrote this for him, because he doesn't write any of these things.
You don't know the difference between a mental breakdown and a broken arm.
Let me clue you in.
Let me clue you in.
Depending on Your physical shape and how bad the brake is.
A brake will heal over time once you set it.
All right.
Obviously, if you're younger and stronger, it's going to heal quicker.
If you're older, it might take a while.
It will heal.
You know, given the proper medical care, it will heal.
Mental illness is totally and completely different.
It is across a broad, broad spectrum of different issues from the chemicals that are put into our body, all right, via food, air, water, the environment that we're in, what we've learned, okay?
And then just inherent biology also has a point, a point to it.
When I say chemicals, also, what kind of SSRIs are you putting them on?
Mental illness isn't like setting a broken arm.
Whoever wrote that, maddening, insanity.
But again, Joe's not really there, is he?
Joe's kind of donezo, isn't he?
It's health.
There's no distinction.
It's health.
Yvek Murthy, who's our surgeon general and I talk about this issue a lot.
You don't, first of all, no, you don't.
You don't talk about issues with any of your staff or administration a lot because you don't run anything, Joe, at all.
Zero.
You run zero.
You know, in the last two State of the Union addresses, I've laid out what I call the unity agenda.
It's made up of four big things that we're going to do together as a nation.
One of the things I'm always asked is: you know, why Americans have sort of lost faith for a while on being able to do big things.
If you could do anything at all, Joe, what would you do?
I said I'd cure cancer.
They looked at me like, why cancer?
Because no one thinks we can.
That's why.
We can.
We end cancer as we know it.
Deliver on our sacred obligations to veterans was the second thing I think is it.
See, again, you're seeing like a nine-second clip.
He's talking about ending, we're going to end cancer as you know.
We were promised that when I was a kid, that we were going to cure cancer.
Instead, cancer's exploded.
Again, it's the post-world truth world on display.
It's the inversion of reality.
This whole cancer moonshot thing they're talking about is next level eugenics.
It's next level eugenics.
That's all it is under the guise of them saving you.
Critically important.
Thirdly was Betiopio epidemic, which we're still fighting very hard.
And fourth was to tackle mental health crisis, which is why we're here today.
You know, we can all agree mental health care is health care.
It is health care.
It's essential to people's well-being and their ability to lead a full and productive life.
It would be if we treated it like a real issue, that you couldn't just take a pill that causes what?
Well, if you read the side effects, sometimes can cause what?
Suicidal thoughts or actions, behaviors.
That's not health care.
All right?
That's insanity.
That's insanity.
That's the plan.
That's the Huxley-esque reality that we all live under at this very moment.
Frightening.
To find joy, to find purpose, to take care of themselves and their loved ones.
It's about dignity.
Think about this.
My dad used to have an expression.
He loves dad and dignity and pride.
Everybody's got a right to dignity, Joey.
Everybody's got a right.
Everyone's entitled to be treated with dignity.
Imagine being a parent, looking at your beautiful child you adore, needing help and know you can't do a damn thing about it if you don't have the wherewithal.
You can't talk about stripping a parent of their dignity, their inability to help their child or their husband or their wife.
They do it all the time.
They do it all the time, mercilessly.
Joe Biden's done nothing, nothing at all to empower parents to help their children when they have, when they've been diagnosed with a terminal illness or a critical illness or something that's going to be difficult.
Joe Biden's done nothing.
I mean, Joe Biden's the company man when he was Joey B for the establishment, okay, for the military industrial complex, for the medical industrial complex.
And now he's the zombie puppet on parade putting out the agenda, acting like the benevolent old man.
I want to puke.
Or their mother or their father or someone they adore.
Right now, for millions of Americans, mental health care and treatment for substance abuse is out of reach.
It's out of reach.
In 2020, less than half, less than half of all adults with mental illness diagnosis receive care for it.
Less than half.
Now, to me, again, this, to me, is them coming out and saying, we want to drug more of the populace.
We want more people on our SSRIs.
I am inundated with mental health ads on social media, on YouTube when I watch it.
Start, oh, you know, I got this person on betterhealth.com, and I'm just thinking.
And, you know, the one really upsets me that it's, you know, some 20-something black girl talking about how she's happy that she could pick her therapist and that her therapist was black.
Like, I can relate to her better.
What?
Like, that's, can you imagine, like, a white woman in her 40s being like, you know, I'm so glad I could pick my therapist so I could pick another white person.
It's like, okay, I want you to feel comfortable with your better help or whatever, but why is everybody so hooked on this idea that they're mentally unstable?
What happened to be mentally strong or dealing with your issues, right?
Or that, you know, depression was something that is really in passing in most of the time.
Is that okay to say?
Or it should be.
If you keep getting depressed over and over and over and over and over again, no matter what the situation is, ask yourself if the pills they gave you are really helping.
Just point that out.
Children, the numbers are even worse.
Nearly 70% of our kids who seek care for mental health or addiction cannot get it.
Or addiction.
Since when are mental health and addiction put together?
Now, don't get me wrong.
Mentally unstable people are often addicted to things.
But is this just another reason to try to get them on other types of opiates, right?
To keep them dependent on the system?
Mental Health Parity Push00:10:53
Look at that cringe-worthy face.
My God.
70%.
Talk to parents and teachers.
Talk to the school nurses and counselors.
Talk to young people.
They'll tell you there's a serious youth mental health crisis happening right now in this country.
We must fulfill the promise of true mental health parity for all Americans.
Now.
Now.
And really what they want is forcible psychological exams.
So anybody that questions the establishment or opposes their agendas, they can just be labeled, okay?
And their activity can either be criminalized or it can be used to say, well, you can't have a gun.
You're not allowed to arm yourself.
Those type of things.
That's what this is really about.
And all these zombies out there, these zombie worshippers, just clap away.
I might know parenthetically, if we do, it saves the country billions of dollars.
The idea is called, it saves.
Here's what it means.
Almost 15 years ago, the bipartisan mental health parity and addiction equity act became law.
It called for health insurance companies to cover mental health care and treatment for substance abuse at the same levels of physical health care.
Because just like when you break your bone or you have a heart attack, when you're having a mental health crisis, you should be able to get help.
Again, I mean, ridiculous.
You're having a heart attack, you better get immediate attention.
And I'm not saying that if you're having a mental health issue, you don't need immediate attention, but you can get over it.
Heart attack, you know, those are the type broken bones, heart attack, trauma.
That's what you want an ER for.
That's what you want.
Like, if you're going to be in the hospital, those are the issues, you know, that they can stop that type of trauma and save your life.
What you probably don't want is if you've had a bad day, week, month, year, is to listen to somebody who wants to pill you up.
And now we're at the point of the speech where Biden's speeding it up and he's kind of shouting a little bit as he tries to read the teleprompter because he's getting frustrated.
That's right, Jack.
I ain't kidding you.
Medical help, professional help.
During the Obama-Biden administration, we worked hard to put this law into effect.
And the result, by some important measures, there is greater parity, not nearly a greater parity today than in the past.
Look, there's lower co-pays for mental health care, getting rid of some arbitrary limits on the number of times you can see your therapist each year.
Plus, for the first time ever, the Affordable Care Act made mental health care an essential service, which means many health plans must cover it.
That means many health plans must cover.
He can't talk, right?
He can't talk.
He's having problems talking.
He can't read to the beat of a rhythm.
He doesn't run anything.
81 million votes, most popular president in history right here.
That's what you're gaslit to believe.
But there were many important, these were important steps, but they weren't enough.
We're still not where we need to be.
We're still not there.
Insurers still make it far too difficult to get mental health care.
Their networks of providers are badly inadequate with far fewer psychiatrists, therapists, and other mental health professionals compared to all other medical specialties.
Now, as a result, even with private insurance, patients are often forced to seek out-of-network care at significantly higher cost if they can find it.
Of course, they are.
That's the system.
You helped set this system up.
You don't want an actual socialized health care system, a Medicare-for-all system, where people have choice over their coverage, where mental health includes somebody saying, hey, you need to get some exercise.
Hey, you need to set some career goals.
Hey, you need to take some self-responsibility.
No, it's pill, pill, pill, pill to pill.
You got some pills.
Take some more pills.
You're on seven pills.
How about 17?
That's where we're at.
Seeing a therapist can cost 200 bucks a visit or more.
That's $800 a month if you have a session every week, which is often what patients need.
Many families, significant number of families, cannot afford that.
Well, often what patients need, I can't read.
I don't know what's going on.
And by the way, think about, think about just how difficult it is to begin with to say, I need help.
You break your arm, you have no trouble going to her and say, I need help.
You're having a mental crisis.
It's hard.
Third reference to an arm break or a broken bone, just really hammering that point home.
It's hard to say, I need help.
I need help.
My child needs help.
And this is happening to millions of people.
People with insurance are twice as likely to have to go out of network for mental health care compared to physical health care.
And that gap has only gotten wider.
As a result, folks with depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress, bipolar disorders, eating disorders, addiction, and other illnesses often go without care, period.
You know how that ends many times.
They try to power through and hope they can manage on their own.
Or they pay whatever it takes, spending down their savings, racking up credit card bills, or taking out second or third mortgages to get the care for themselves or their children.
Folks, it shouldn't be this way.
It doesn't need to be this way.
I've heard from mental health professionals across the country describing a system that's falling short.
One therapist wrote me who primarily treats teenagers, including some who are having suicidal thoughts.
So here we go.
First of all, Joe Biden doesn't read anything.
Anybody wrote him.
Some teacher wrote him.
I mean, this feels like sandbaggins.
There's no way to check this, by the way.
But they know this.
Again, this is written by staffers.
And he said, when his patients need to be hospitalized to save their lives, insurance companies often deny the claims, often deny the claims.
And that's real.
Other clinical psychologists wrote me and described getting calls from desperate people who've called 20 different therapists looking for help but can't find it.
This therapist says, and I quote, I try to create time that I don't have to see more patients.
End of quote.
So at the same time of them saying that, you know, these people don't have time to see mentally ill patients, what are they pushing?
They're pushing robots.
They're pushing the automation AI takeover of health care.
That's where this goes, by the way.
You know, mandatory AI mental health care.
That's what they want.
All right?
I'm often the only person, he went on to say, who is able to call them back.
They never even get calls most of the time.
And I've personally received letters from family members whose loved ones are suffering from mental illness who describe how difficult it can be to help.
One woman wrote me went on to say about her mother, a retired teacher who has a bipolar disorder.
Her daughter wrote, quote, too often insurance companies dictate the standard of care when it actually needs to be care providers and family members who have more to say.
Well, you let them write the Obamacare bill.
You let that, I mean, that's part of it.
Your whole Obamacare thing was that the insurance companies wrote the bill.
Of course, they're going to dictate your care.
That's the deal.
They hate you.
And then you forcibly wanted people to buy that, and you wanted to penalize them on their taxes if they didn't.
That's where we're at.
Meanwhile, you'll just give free health care to those that aren't even from the country.
Like the whole system is one of the inversion of reality.
It is a reflection of the post-truth world we live in.
Please advocate hard for the most vulnerable among us.
Well, that's exactly what my administration is trying to do.
Today, my administration is announcing new steps to dramatically expand access to mental health care in America.
Our plans would require health insurance plans to identify the gaps in the mental health care that they provide.
For example, they'd need to measure how many mental health providers are in their network, how much they are paying these providers, how difficult it is for someone to join their network.
And that's the crazy thing about quote-unquote health care.
There's an insurance price and then there's a cash price.
Did you know that?
Hmm?
I mean, anybody who's dealt with the medical system on a level of needing a surgery or needing a procedure or needing an MRI, any of those things.
You know, most people just slide their insurance.
They don't realize the game and the system and that they're being gamed by the system.
I mean, we need mega reform.
I mean, mega reform when it comes to health care.
How often doctors have to get the so-called prior authorization before they can treat a patient?
Some of you have dealt with this more than once.
You get referrals to see mental health specialists, but when you make the appointment, they say, I can't see you until your doctor submits the paperwork and gets special permission from the insurance company.
Well, I mean, some people won't even see you unless you either have A insurance or a primary.
Mega Reform Failures00:01:08
All right.
With my vertigo thing, I had to go through five different people with a self-diagnosis of BPPV, which was correct, before I actually saw somebody that got rid of it in 20 minutes.
That's the broken health care system.
Folks, we have come to an end.
We've come to a run out of time.
Now, the third hour, of course, is going to be a little bit more Jason Burmese from the premium side.
I do want to remind everybody that I am a documentary filmmaker and that my films are free.
I think they are important.
I hope that you will check them out.
They are Loose Change Final Cut, Fabled Anemies, Shade the Motion Picture, and Invisible Empire: A New World Order Define.
Remember to consider redvoicemedia.com/slash uncensored for those two interviews, two interviews every single week that are exclusive.
And remember, they run it here all the way till 8:30 p.m. 8:30 p.m., man.