All Episodes
Oct. 29, 2025 - Louder with Crowder
01:03:55
Shutdown Backfire: Dems Are In Major Trouble While Trump Takes on the World in Asia
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
Welcome to the lineup live here on Rumble, 9 a.m. Eastern to 7 p.m.
Eastern.
Each show rolls into the next.
Rumble owns live.
YouTube's dead.
Rumble did it.
Figuratively, it's okay though.
We can make jokes about the dead because it's Halloween.
It's a spooky time, which brings me to, I forgot to tell you, we have the Halloween Spectacular this Friday.
We didn't do it last year because it was in the middle of election time.
I think this is the 10th one.
So you'll see a little rundown, a little video of that in the costume contest rules.
Gonna be a lot of fun.
Today, we're going to discuss something very surprising to Adam Enton at CNN.
Republicans are actually gaining during the shutdown.
Meaning, everything the left has tried is failing to a degree that honestly I couldn't have predicted.
I knew they wouldn't do well, but they may actually force themselves into the position of losing in the midterms.
That's almost unheard of.
Bill Gates is now saying, Hey, hey, hey, all that stuff about climate change and population control.
Like, actually, we shouldn't do that.
We should focus on economic growth in these other countries as opposed to the opposite, which I've done for a very long time.
So, we're going to call him to the mat.
And Japan, I'm going to make the case is our greatest ally.
Yep, even more so than Israel.
And I have a good reason for that.
And I'm not saying that, you know, secret Jew tunnels, but you know, I'll explain in context.
Next time with the show.
Yo, what up, fam?
It's your boy D-Day, aka D-Boy, aka D-Lish, aka D Spice, aka D Dog, the D Trigger, the D-Town Clown, the one and only D-Train, always in D-tention, always taking detours.
You just call yourself D-Day?
Do you know how disrespectful that is?
Feeling more like D-Cup.
Why don't you suck D's nuts, Dad?
Why don't you move out?
You know it's an unstable economy out there.
All kinds of messed up stuff.
Inconsistent interest rates, predatory loans, and such.
Daryl, call American Finance.
They can help you work around all of that.
I told you this like a hundred times.
And I told you a hundred times.
You better stop talking about me like that.
Stop calling me Daryl, you goofy bitch.
What did you just say to me, boy?
Nothing.
I didn't say nothing.
Call the pros at American Financing Today at 1-800-974-6500.
Or visit www.americanfinancing.net/slash crowder.
NMLS 182-334.
If you start today, you may even delay up to two mortgage payments.
Glad to be with you today on the annual Halloween spooktaker.
Gerald, you're Black Rock.
I get it.
Oh, Dylan Mulvaney.
That's the best one, and I don't like it.
Thomas the East Palestine tank.
A Korean paraguite.
I call this the tale of the show.
That's probably going to have a lot of problems.
Send in your Halloween costumes with your mug in the picture to me on Twitter.
Use the hashtag Spooktacto and you'll enter to win the costume contest.
That's a lot of work.
That is not too bad.
That's pretty good.
Donald J. Trump.
You're the drag queen of England.
Oh, the drag queen of England.
No wonder I look like Hillary Clinton.
What's this flag behind me?
Charles has it in his room.
That was familiar.
What's the mug in the front?
Remember what Gerald said, Steven.
It's like transgenderism.
It's not real.
Glad to be with you.
Uh.
I'm low on sleep.
The reason I'm running low on sleep is because last night I heard a knock at the door and there was no one there.
I'm not just saying this for Halloween.
I wasn't alarmed until I mean like this.
Like, not like a, ooh, just.
It can't be.
No one.
It was me.
So I just went out checked it.
I'm like, what happened?
And then I got my gun because I was alarmed.
Yeah.
But at first, so anyway, you guys ever had that?
Let me know.
Is it a demon?
I have no idea.
Also, what is the greatest Halloween candy of all time?
Since we're coming up on Halloween, you guys call them rockets.
In Canada, they're actually known as Smarties, which is no, no, no.
Smarties are.
Sorry, sorry, sorry.
What you guys know is Smarties, we call rockets.
Smarties are like an Eminem candy in Canada.
Don't admonish Canadians.
Let them know, right?
We have Smarties in Canada.
It's like a chocolate candy thing.
They're like dummies.
And then we call what you call Smarties rockets.
Those awful, those are the pennies of Halloween currency.
None of this makes sense to me.
Cap Morgan, CEO, not doing a good job.
Friday, November 14th at the Chalet Theater, Enum Claw, Washington, Mr. Josh Feierstein.
Hello.
It's Sixlets for me.
Sixlets?
Yes, Sixlets.
Do you know Sixlets?
No, I know Chicken.
They're like little, it's Eminem concept, but they're round, perfectly like a ball.
Yeah.
And they have a little chocolate, little candy-coated chocolates.
They come on a little sleeve, six of them.
No.
Sixlets.
No, we never had the.
The orange ones are flavored orange, like orange chocolate.
It's cool.
Do you guys have caramels?
Yeah, yeah, there it is.
Oh, they're so good.
It's the best one.
Underrated for sure.
Do you guys have caramel bars here?
Caramilk.
No, we probably call it something like Snickers.
No, no, no.
It's just a chocolate bar, and it's like, and there's caramel, but they're all like squares.
Anyway, Carmelo.
There you go.
Yeah, Caramello.
Caramello.
Caramello.
Now you guys are talking about Dominicans.
All right.
I think it's a basketball player, Caramello Anthony.
Is he a basketball player?
Carmelo Anthony.
He is?
Yes.
Did he beat up his girlfriend in an elevator with a butter dish?
No, but a guy with the same name and same skin tone killed a kid at a track meet.
Oh, that's right.
I'm getting it all.
You know, easy mistake.
Hey.
Weird start.
I have a question for you.
We're talking about Halloween because it's fun.
But how did you mark the end of the not fun holiday, Diwali, the other day?
I don't know if you know this.
This is not a one-time event.
They do this all the time, and they did it again in India.
Is it just the boys having fun?
Oh.
Yay!
Is that like mud?
All cultures are equal.
I would have got a haircut first.
I think.
I don't think life is your biggest problem, Josh.
That guy hit that man from behind with a mountain of poop.
At this point, why even wear pants?
Take us off to him.
I was born in crap.
Okay.
Was he a mushroom?
Oh my God.
Do they get diseases?
Ranga Swami.
Close.
Yeah, I mean, obviously, the poop offends Western sensibilities, but I also would note not a lot of major league pitchers there.
No, but they play cricket a lot, so maybe we'll get some soon.
that's the theory people if your deity is born in crap yes pick another one We are born in poop.
Yes.
And we will die in poop.
So we need to pardon from poop to poop.
Your father was born in poop.
Your grandfather was born in poop.
And you will be born in poop.
That's true.
Yes.
You notice how Christians always go to the manger to play to honor Christ, right?
Yeah.
No.
Not the port-a-potty.
I don't think that wasn't the high point, okay?
To be fair, and here's the thing, because everything is international these days, now American films have retroactively had to be rewritten for the Indian market.
No.
Meanwhile in Toronto, because, you know, here's the big difference, I would say, and you can comment below.
It's not meaningless.
The big difference between the right and the left, and the right includes nationalists, includes conservatives, includes, right?
It's a big tent, is we want to separate ourselves from these cultures that we believe to be inferior.
The left wants to pander to them.
That's not a small difference.
Do you want to pander to a culture that throws poop at each other in celebration of a how does Christmas dinner look in 20 years?
Okay, if the left is in charge.
And I know you'll say that's hyperboli.
I'm fine.
We're dealing with people who throw poop.
They throw poop.
That's not a joke.
It's bad.
It's also odd that the timing of it kind of lines up with Halloween.
Yeah.
You know, like, what is the trick part of the trick-or-treat?
Just throwing poop at someone's house?
Yeah, is that what it's the treat?
Is it sort of egging the house?
It's like, what?
Oh, Kit Kat Mini, you're going to be covered in poop.
It's all treat for them.
I can't tell if it's trick-or-treat.
Okay.
What do you think we'll get at the next time?
I hope it's poop.
More cow poop.
More poop for me.
Every house on this street has poop.
Do you think there's just like one Indian in that?
He doesn't want to do it.
He's reluctant.
He's like one Indian.
Hey, hey, guys, maybe we should not be always fondling poop.
Like, shut up.
Shut up.
Oh, don't be such a nerd.
How damn.
Look at you.
Must be nice in your tower, always nasing everything we do with poop.
Never a good one to say about poop, this one.
In your ivory tower.
You mean my toilet?
It's porcelain, dumbass.
Decadence of the West.
Now.
So now we go to the left pandering.
You know, Toronto, one of my favorites ever, the mayor Olivia Chow, she marked the beginning of the holiday the only way that she knows how through gross uncomfortable pandering.
And not the rhythm.
Watch them, copy them, just like IPs.
Now she looks she starts punching.
She's doing Thaibo.
Why does she get away with bad appropriation?
We get flack for Taco Tuesday.
She's doing Thaibo for Diwali.
I think there's a scale.
How funny is your appropriation versus how crit, like it's so bad and so funny that it's like, ah, come on, give it to her.
I guess.
The Chinese lady's doing Jamaican things.
The Chinese lady's doing Indian things.
The Chinese lady's doing whatever.
Yeah.
Pelosi's kneeling with a Jamaican scarf.
That's too cringe.
Not funny enough.
No, you're right.
Yeah.
By the way.
I told her she can't dance.
Yeah.
Well, here's the thing.
she's actually been doing the same dance for decades.
Me so horny.
You keep lying through there.
Do you think they're going to let her throw out a first pitch in Toronto for the World Series?
Oh, no.
I hope not.
She's just dancing.
Oh, my gosh.
I hope so.
They should let her sing the Canadian national anthem.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then she'll be drawing her Taibo to it.
Yeah, that'd be great.
Do we have the clip, by the way, one of my favorite things ever, the Sidney Sweeney ad with Chow?
Yeah.
Let's play that.
Just so you know, this is not related, but she did the same thing with Carney Valle, I believe it was, Brazil.
And so she did the pandering.
And then we, this is just one of my favorite things we've ever done.
We somehow merged that with the Sydney Sweeney ad.
Just watch this because it's fun.
Sidney Stweeney, Hasbro Keynes.
That pancake ass gets me every time.
Sorry, I just died.
I'm sorry, guys.
The show is a mix, okay?
We provide all the references and we try.
Where's the reference to that, Steven?
It's just good, clean fun.
I think you gave the references.
You said Sidney Sweeney ad.
Yeah, yeah.
You can find it.
It exists.
Speaking of good, clean fun, let's go to unclean.
Zoran Mamdani.
Hey.
We are not the same, the right and the left.
No.
And this is something that a lot of not only liberals, but a lot of libertarians, they'd always talk about the prison-industrial complex.
I think we're kind of at the point now where we've lived the experiment and we've seen the results.
For example, we've gone the other way from the prison-industrial complex where we've just done catch and release.
Okay, people don't like it.
We've lived through the, hey, if we just throw enough money at the continent of Africa and they're more poor than the 80s.
We've lived through the LGBTQ AIP, same-sex marriage, and people.
You know what?
I don't think we're better off.
It seems, though, like the left and Zoran Mamdani, they're still stuck in those old talking points.
We're not the same.
Hear his thoughts about how prisons kind of shouldn't be a thing.
The way that prisons are set up in our society, I would argue that they do not work.
They do not make us safer.
The instinct is to just take that person, the source of that harm, the source of that issue, and then just throw them away, put them in a cage, and throw away the key.
That doesn't address the reason why that harm was created in the first place.
There are lots of times people who create trauma for others are those who themselves went through trauma earlier in their own lives.
I bring all of this up to say that, you know, again, like when we talk about policing, I don't think the system actually makes us safer.
I think what it does is it just removes problems out of view.
And here's the thing: we have a fundamentally different worldview, and I'll get to that.
But we've tried their way.
It was a really good talking point.
The military-industrial complex, and people are going, oh my God, they're making money off of jailing black people.
Okay, but is there another facet where a certain segment of the population commit far more violent crimes?
And what is the responsibility of government?
Is it to protect the law-abiding citizens from those who break the law?
And I'll just tell you: I'm okay at this point where I don't really host debates.
I want people to know where we stand.
There are some people with whom I could sit across from Mamdani.
We're never going to find common ground.
At the end of the day, it's okay.
So you believe that we should be softer on crime and that people who commit crimes actually are the symptom of society.
Therefore, we should change society.
I believe that we need a deterrence.
I believe that as it relates to foreign policy, I'm a non-interventionist.
I'm not an isolationist.
I believe that punishment should be intensely uncomfortable for those who harm their fellow citizens, for those who've decided to break the law.
I believe they need to be separated, and I believe it needs to be severe enough that it acts as a deterrent.
We can't fix all the root causes as to why someone might commit a crime.
It doesn't work.
The war on poverty hasn't worked.
And if you look at demographics, you notice that not all poor people, depending on their demographic, commit violent crimes at the same rate.
You're never going to nerf the entire world.
No.
So, should violent prisoners be behind bars and should it be uncomfortable?
Is New York better off with the soft on crime approach?
Should we apply that to the country?
Or should crime be punished severely?
Comment.
That's just my worldview.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
And listen, he's also very illogical in that statement.
He's like, I think what we've done is we've actually just, it doesn't make it safer.
It just removes the problem.
And in his statement, it removes the problem.
Yeah.
Yes, that's exactly right.
I'm not safer necessarily as a society just because of one, but I'm safer from that guy.
Yeah.
Or that girl.
Yes.
Specifically, it's not just out of sight.
It's keeping the problem away from people that could be harmed.
You're an idiot.
Well, not only that, if you just walk, let's walk this through.
And this is why Gen Z men are leaving the left.
Okay.
Let's walk through this.
All right.
Catch and release, cashless bail, IOU policy.
People have seen what happened with Zarutska there in North Carolina.
People have seen what has happened across the country.
We've seen the crime rates.
And then you're going to ask some white Gen Z kid who isn't even in the workforce yet.
You're going to ask him, someone who's never owned slaves, whose forefathers have never owned slaves, to foot the bill for people today, even though one of his forefathers spilled his blood and died to free slaves.
So now you're going to foot the bill because we have to right these historical wrongs.
Make the case.
Why?
Because his black neighbors are such model citizens that he owes them something?
The left wants us to be divided.
And here's the thing.
People will say that we're dividing or being racist by addressing the reality.
The left wants to divide and conquer by lying about the world.
They're fracturing this country by telling young white people that they should pay for the crimes of others, really by the original sin of their white skin.
And he's lying about how the prisons work.
Yeah.
He says, oh, we just, we just, our instinct is to throw them in a cage and throw away the key.
To who are we doing that?
Right.
Murderers?
Right.
Some?
Some murderers?
Some murderers get out.
Yes.
We don't do it to rapists, certainly.
We certainly don't do it to child predators.
We don't do it to thieves.
We don't even put some thieves in jail for any time at all.
We don't throw away the key ever.
We keep the key in our pocket.
We let them out immediately and they go kill a lady on a bus.
Right.
Exactly right.
And then they go, well, yeah, but really the real criminals are Wall Street.
Hey, I agree with you, but you want to lock them up for longer than someone who commits a violent assault and puts someone in a coma?
That's just a difference in worldview.
I think everyone should answer for their crimes.
I think violent crimes are a different level because it's indicative of a different kind of person.
That's my point of view.
But Mamdani is the poster child for Democratic Socialists of America.
Here are some of their demands.
Click the link for references.
This is directly from their site.
Defund the police by rejecting any expansion to police budgets or scope of enforcement while cutting budgets annually towards zero.
Wow.
So they want zero police at some point?
They want the budgets to be zero.
Yeah, just send in the social workers.
They had some tough breaks.
So crime without consequence.
Yep.
End the criminalization of working class survival.
Okay.
Does that mean stealing?
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
You mean it's survival, the people who, we just showed you the montage yesterday, threatening to beat shopkeepers up over the snap benefits lapsing right now during the shutdown.
Yeah, because that shopkeeper, that local grocer, that bodega owner, they should pay for the fact that this person has been not gainfully employed for 10 years and thinks that they shouldn't pay for their Fanta.
They also want freedom for all incarcerated people.
You know, for people who say things are really nuanced.
All incarcerated people?
You sure about that?
Traffickers, rapists, murderers.
Two of them.
Jeffrey Dahmer?
Bundy?
Like, it's just so sensitive.
I bet you they wouldn't want to give Trump freedom, though.
No, no.
He was convicted of 34 felonies of falsifying a document.
Right.
You've got to throw away the key.
Yeah.
Lock him up in the hole.
Yeah.
Yeah, for trying to pay less on property taxes while he paid the bank back with interest and they'd like to do another loan.
Yeah, no, no.
But the people who commit violent crimes and masturbate on you on the subway, they should be let out because you know what?
They probably had a dad who didn't hug them enough.
Demilitarize the police and colonial policing of our cities and neighborhoods.
Well, that puts an end to pilgrim patrol.
Yeah, that's just, I mean, you know, I get they have a point there.
Colonial policing.
Hey, what do you think happens?
Colonial policing.
You mean policing?
I don't know if you know this.
And also, that's intensely racist.
You know who has it toughest in a lot of these cities?
Black cops.
You know that?
In Detroit and Detroit Rice, black cops had to go home and unmarked cars because they had a target on them.
But let's say you remove all policing because it's something, something colonialism.
Okay.
You think there won't be policing in that neighborhood?
You think vacuums don't get filled?
It's going to be a warlord dummy.
Just look.
I'll give you.
Of course, you'll say, well, maybe it's not like Africa.
You can't point to Kony.
You can't point to the tribal warring.
Okay.
What's the closest example we have?
In other words, this little experiment existed for a very short period of time.
Seattle?
There you go.
There you go.
In Seattle, and you ended up with Raz Simone, a warlord, handing out AR-15s to minors.
Someone's going to take control.
They also want freedom of working class self-organization and democratic political action.
Great.
Do it.
And then, however it works out, we don't have to subsidize it.
Oh, that's right.
We can't do that either.
Invest in community self-governance and care, not cops.
Okay.
What?
So you want a blank check to run the neighborhoods like Chaz.
All right.
So you kind of want to return to the wild west.
Like you're going to have a bunch of white guys out there with guns protecting their families and other black guys, Hispanic guys, everybody.
And they're not going to be too concerned about Miranda rights or getting it right.
They're going to be concerned about making sure a threat is stopped.
You think that's better?
Yeah, well, you know.
I mean, more realistically, you're going to see things like a white guy walking through the wrong neighborhood and then the call to prayer is played because nobody's stopping that.
And you don't stop, so you get beat up.
Yes.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Because you're disrespecting Islam.
Right.
Which guy makes a caricature.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And all of a sudden he's hauled off and thrown off the Brooklyn Bridge.
Take this and add open borders.
Ah, do we have any examples of that, Aurora?
Yeah.
You don't think that cartels are going to see an opportunity?
Yeah.
Open borders, no cops and self-governance.
You guys know how MIDA's right turns out, right?
You guys understand that?
Because that's kind of what we see now only in some kind of a controlled or organized fashion where you have armed police to ensure that you don't just have lawless citizens with the most amount of might.
Keep in mind, too, this is very important because this is top-down.
This is not just someone has an opinion.
53%, right?
532,000 of funds that Mamdani raised in the last five weeks came from outside New York City.
There are external forces that want this guy to win.
Yeah, and I'm tired of seeing people saying, oh, it's just New York City.
If you don't live here, don't worry about it.
No, no, no, no, no.
Because this evidence shows that this is not just one city.
This is an agenda to turn many cities and they're starting with number one.
Exactly.
And that's a very important point.
I think that New Yorkers, if they vote for this still at a certain point, are accountable for it.
They get what they vote for and deserve, but they are being misguided.
Mamdani, by the way, was hit with two criminal referrals for allegedly, because I hear he's litigious, accepting foreign donations.
So there you go.
There you go.
That's a stark contrast from America first, to be clear.
And it's where a lot of those on the left sort of line up with libertarians.
The criminal industrial complex.
I agree.
No one should be behind bars for life for smoking a joint.
That doesn't happen.
I think someone should be behind bars.
I think lock them up, throw away the key if they kill somebody.
I actually think they should be executed, right?
I think if you try to steal someone's car and then they try to stop you and then you beat the crap out of them, maybe you should get more than probation.
Yeah, yes.
And I don't think it's a good idea.
Like those guys are easy who beat up big balls.
Yes, exactly right.
Is this more comment below?
Is this more extreme?
I think we need to do away with all police budgets.
We need to bring it down to zero.
Okay.
That's their position.
I'm going to take the most extreme one possible.
Bring back the oubliers.
Let's do that.
Let me know what you think.
I know some people are going, what's an oubli?
Look it up.
You can also go watch Labyrinth with Bowie and you'll understand it as well.
No, thanks.
Hodgel explains it fantastically.
You know what this feels like?
It feels like a prequel to a Batman series.
Yes, it does.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And he's how Gotham became Gotham.
Exactly.
He elected a Muslim mayor and a socialist.
But don't, I mean, people may want to go like, oh, well, that's just the DSA.
Well, the DSA's backing him, so he's inexorably tied to them.
Oh, that's just an older video.
Okay, yeah.
Remember the undercover footage that we got of one of his high-up campaign guys saying, you're a police officer.
You don't have an opinion.
We know how they view cops, period.
This is coming.
Yep.
In Mamdani's New York, this is on the way.
And I saw Governor DeSantis of Florida basically said we have a $5,000 recruitment bonus for cops who don't want to serve under Momdani to move down to Florida and serve down here.
Great.
Good luck, New York.
And it's not just their view of cops, because I will tell you there are plenty of bad cops out there.
I've been very clear about that.
It's how they view the idea of a police force.
They couldn't be more wrong about the role of government.
Military?
No.
Police force?
No.
Coca-Cola on Snap?
It's a human right.
Well, at that point, you have to give them Coca-Cola on Snap because if you don't, well, then you have no police to control them when they just take it and do what they want stores and bring their cousin to the U.S. Oh, hey, really quick.
I forgot to tell you guys, you know how people take super chats like strippers?
We don't.
We do reverse super chats.
Time to give you stuff.
Do you get strippers?
And by the, well, no, but I'm really excited about this.
I know, you know, we've had the, actually, tariffs have really affected the coffee industry.
We've got a couple of coffee sponsors for the first time.
This is what I've wanted to do for a long time.
Blackout coffee.
Actually, I've worked with them to create my own blend.
This is exactly what I want.
It's what we drink here, where I was actually able to sit down with them and say, okay, can we tweak this?
Can we tweak that a little bit?
I personally use it for our drip coffee machines here and in an espresso machine.
So blackoutcoffee.com/slash crowder.
It's the strange animal brew.
Use the promo code crowder 20% off.
And we just gave out 50 Rumble Premium subscriptions.
Let me know what you think.
I am very, very proud of this.
I had to kind of find a balance because some of you would be like, I don't like this.
So it's a good all-arounder, but it's really good coffee.
Absolutely.
All right.
Enjoy your free crap.
By the way, I love that we just, I don't know if maybe this is me just coming to this conclusion, but like strippers were basically the first reverse super chats.
No, they were the first super chat.
Sorry, super chats where you just.
You paid them to get to talk to them.
Yes.
Yeah.
You're not supposed to talk to them.
Other stuff.
No, no, no.
I understand.
I'm saying, but you're not supposed to talk to them at all.
You're supposed to sit there and look nervous.
Also, too excited, but trying to hold it back at the same time and a little embarrassed.
No, that's everyone else, but not me.
They actually find me interesting.
Yes.
What?
Yeah, no, they care about my interpersonal relationships.
So do the waitresses at Hooters.
By the way, tariffs are not what's making coffee more expensive.
Might have a hand in it, but there's a shortage in Brazil.
Yeah.
And bad harvest, bad year.
Well, that too, but there also have been tariffs with Brazil.
Brazil passed Colombia as the main coffee exporter.
This is a blend of, I know, Colombian, Peruvian.
I don't know if we ended up putting something else in there, but it's really good.
It's what I wanted to do.
It could work.
It's a good blend in coffee and women.
Well, yeah.
I mean, it's tough to know, though, because the surgery they have in Colombia, they just take a laser machine and Shakira, here you go.
Yet they still have to move drugs.
I know.
I know.
Oh, they got to pay for it.
That's why they're above us on the healthcare rankings.
Yes.
Because of the drugs?
No.
No, because of the laser body forming.
We'll bring it up on Rumble Premium.
Have you seen it?
It's like an actual laser machine that carves a shape.
Yeah.
You can take one of those watch and reacts that we have with the Fat Pride models, give it a week, and they look like, what's her name from Modern Family?
Sophia Vargara.
You're like, how did that happen?
Lasers.
All right.
Are these Jewish lasers?
It could be.
I'm sure somewhere down the line, we can always bring it back to that.
So this is fun because the shutdown before this happened, everyone was saying, okay, what kind of effect is this going to have on the midterms, right?
Was this political suicide for the Republicans?
And really, it was a game of not just chicken, but who's going to receive the blame?
And I will tell you, it's actually surprising even to me, but it's really surprising to Harry Enton at CNN.
Day 29 of the government shutdown, some new polls.
I can't believe we didn't have a stinger before.
It's time for Enton surprise.
Look at the net approval ratings for Republicans in Congress.
This shutdown hasn't even been the Donald Trump support at all.
Look where we are now.
It's a complete flip.
I hadn't seen the stinger until on air.
I still thought it was surprised.
It turns out we went with shocker.
We did, yeah.
And here's the thing.
You know what?
It'll make sense.
Like, I actually, I still don't know this guy's methodology.
I don't care.
Yeah.
It doesn't matter.
I just, he's always very shocked.
And excited.
Yes, excited.
Like, like he's reading these results for the first time on air.
And it's like he's not even excited about what the results are showing.
He's just excited that there are numbers and statistics to show a thing.
Yeah.
He's just there for the show.
So here he is with the results as to how badly Democrats are thinking.
They're the ones who are being blamed for the shutdown and Republicans.
They're making gains.
You might think, given that the Republicans are in charge of both the House and the Senate, that a government shutdown might actually hurt the Republican brand.
But in fact, it hasn't.
If anything, it's even helped a little bit.
Take a look here, the shift in net popularity versus pre-shutdown.
When we're looking at the Republican Party overall, that brand actually up two points.
That's within the margin of error, but clearly it hasn't dropped.
Come over to this side of the screen.
Look at the net approval ratings for Republicans in Congress.
It's actually pre-shut down.
So what we're seeing here is the Republican brand in Congress has actually improved somewhat compared to where we were pre-shutdown.
It's contagious.
He's like, look, wowza!
I wish I was excited, that excited every day about everything.
I know.
It's like, it's a five-point.
I mean, it's good, but he's like, what?
Can you believe it?
Well, we kind of can, but now you make me feel like I shouldn't.
And I'm excited again.
I feel like the other guy's taking it away from him, too.
The other guy's not nearly as excited.
He's not excited at all, actually.
No, he's just very stoic.
He's just standing there.
It's like, come on, dude, get in the game.
High five.
Well, he tries to get his shirt off.
Yeah, he tries to be a buzzkill.
And he's like, well, what about you even see?
He asks a follow-up question, and Enton is having none of it.
He's still like, I'm so glad you asked.
There's two groups that it's so important to keep an eye on.
All right.
Changing the Republican Congress's net approval rating versus pre-shutdown.
It's rallying the base for sure.
Look at this, the net approval rating.
Look at this.
12 points versus pre-shutdown.
But it's not just with the base.
It's also with the middle of the electorate.
Look at this.
Among independents, it's up eight points as well.
Indeed.
We've got a situation here where Republicans with the shutdown are actually rallying their faith, but it's also something that's not hurting them with the folks in the middle.
Anything that's helping them with folks in the middle.
Jimney Willikers.
Yeah, he does out of the 50s.
And then he does have another question from the co-host, again, the buzzkill.
And it's actually, so it's good for Republicans.
Yes.
It's good for Republicans with independence, which is pretty pivotal in these midterms.
And it's actually bad for Democrats.
He gets into these numbers when prompted.
So how do Democrats, how are they in position right now?
Yeah, so I mean, look, the generic congressional ballot, which traditionally Democrats have done really well on.
And if you look at this point back when Trump was president the first time around, Democrats were up 11 points.
Look at where it is now.
Democrats are ahead, but they're actually only up three points.
This is, in fact, the worst position Democrats have been on in a generic ballot at this point in midterm when there was a Republican president in the last 20 years.
And this is no different from pre-shutdown.
So Republicans aren't losing on this metric either.
They become more popular.
And they're actually in a pretty good position for them historically when it comes to the generic congressional ballot.
That guy is so unhappy.
He's like, oh, you do a Democrats who speak words of comfort to me, Enton.
I have nothing to give.
Look at this.
Look at this.
It gets worse.
They're more popular with doing nothing.
Nothing.
But wait, there's less.
Democrats are way down here.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
I want Harry Enton to host the Thanksgiving Day parade.
Yes.
Oh, and look at this.
Oh, it's Santa Claus.
Oh, my gosh.
Look, he's five times fatter than last.
Look at this.
Look at this.
There's a hole in Kermit.
Look at his Garfields off his strings.
He's flying through the city.
His father was a golden retriever.
I bet you they don't like him at CNN.
And I would like him.
He'd be the guy to be hanging out in the green room.
Like, no, he's cool.
Yeah, in the green room.
Yeah.
You guys got to get in here.
That guy's saying the N-word.
Look at this.
Look at this.
They're punching me.
Two black eyes.
Whoa.
Look at this.
I said it five times more this week than last week.
He's just, I can't stop.
He's just contagious.
I don't care his political affiliation.
I enjoy what he does.
And he no doubt will be unemployed sometime at CNN.
Let's offer him a job.
Absolutely.
It doesn't help Democrats at all that they look really stupid and they look like they're playing political football when they're asked about the government shutdown.
You'd think they'd have an answer.
They never have.
Shutdowns are terrible.
And there will be things that are going to suffer.
We take that responsibility very seriously.
But it is one of the few leverage times we have.
They have had months to negotiate.
And you reopen the government and we lose our leverage.
What we're doing is saying simply we want to keep the government open and we want to work with the Republicans to have a bipartisan agreement to keep this government open and health care is at the top of our agenda.
But are Democrats demanding health care for illegal aliens?
Yes.
Democrats are demanding health care for everybody.
Republicans control the house.
So All Lives Matterhouse?
Frankly, this is our only moment of leverage.
And although a very unpleasant tool to use, whether it's a shutdown, whether it's all of this, they want us to blink first.
Well, please, AOC, for the love of God, blink for once in your life.
It's a problem.
Look at this.
Look at this.
Get a hamster.
Wow.
The eyes just follow you no matter where you go.
Yeah, exactly.
Like in dracula castle.
The eye of Sauron sees all, dude.
And we're going to get to some other really quickly bad news for Democrats in the shutdown.
But please, you can download the Rumble app, follow me there.
That's the best way to stay in touch.
If you're watching or subscribed anywhere else, Rumble is the place to be, and you'll know when we are live.
Here is kind of the rest of the story.
I am amazed that this has happened.
Like the Democrats have really, really had to screw up to get the American Federation of Government Employees calling upon the Democrats to reopen the government.
Like these are federal employees who should be in their pocket, and they're placing the blame on Democrats.
Democrats themselves, I don't know how this happens.
Comment below.
Because I will tell you, I'm the guy who says, we shouldn't have snap at all.
Do away with it.
And Republicans basically want some kind of work requirements for a lot of these social safety net benefits.
So you would think that they would be blamed for at least that.
Democrats have been so bad at political strategy that it is the Democrat Party being blamed for the lapse in SNAP benefits.
Think about that.
Do we have that collage there?
No, do we not?
Jones is just here thinking about life.
Collage A1.
Look at this.
I'm moving too fast.
Wow.
Think about that.
The Democrats are blamed for the shutdown in government.
They're the party of big government.
The Democrats are actually being blamed when you look at the data for the lapse in SNAP benefits.
What that means is that even though Democrats are the big government party, the American public just believe that they're completely inept at running government.
That's a really good thing because then you can segue into, okay, so the party that wants humongous government has proven to you that they can't run it.
What do you do?
Yeah, I don't know.
Like, Republicans historically have not done very well with government shutdowns.
I don't know if you remember, but every single time in the last, I don't know, 10, 15 years that there's been a government shutdown, Republicans, no matter what, seem to get the blame and they would walk right into it.
And it's only natural because they believe in limited government, so it would make sense for people to blame them.
Right.
This time, it's like the more Donald Trump seems not to care about this and not address it at the very least.
Cares about some of the issues caused by it, obviously.
But the more that we're just like sticking to our guns, the more it seems like they're becoming more popular, even though Snap McGedden is on, what, Saturday?
Right.
Yeah.
Well, I think I think what's happening is people are finally, because the government shutdown has been 29 days now.
So people are like, oh, I've had time to actually look into this.
Right.
That's a good point.
And I'm hearing this.
Oh, it's the Republicans' fault.
It's the Republicans' fault.
What do they do?
Well, okay, well, they voted.
They have the House.
They have the Senate.
Okay, so what's going on?
Oh, there's this thing in the bill that they refuse to take out and they're denying that it's even in there.
Right.
And I can go look at it myself and see that it's in there.
Yeah.
And then they go, well, okay.
And then they gaslight them and go, no, no, no, that's not Republicans.
Right.
They own the House.
They own the Senate.
Why can't they vote on it?
Well, because they want you to take that crap about the illegal aliens of healthcare out.
Yeah.
And that's an 80-20 rule.
Right now they're having to defend this 20% position where they're going, like, no, no, no, no.
Yeah, it's worth the shutdown to make sure that illegal aliens get healthcare benefits.
But the Democrat voters aren't buying that.
No, they're not.
You know, they got their pocket that love this, but for the vast majority, they're like, that's when I can, I can, I can live with that.
I can live with the illegals not getting free health care.
And I know this is more roundtable today, but just look, this is something that's really important.
We now have the playbook.
And I've been here for a long time and I've been screaming since 2008.
Like, you're doing it wrong to Republicans.
We know now.
They used to say, like, hey, you know what?
We got to push the diversity thing.
You don't want to appear to be racist.
No, no, no.
If you just don't care, if you say, no, no, no, we're going to say, we're going to say what we actually believe.
We want a society that, by the way, actually has reverence for our Christian roots and European heritage.
Yeah, we're not afraid of that.
If you say, you know, you know what?
No, no snap at all.
They say like, well, we don't want to turn off that voting base.
Remember Mitt Romney when he said 47% about people who didn't pay federal income tax?
Because he looks like such an elitist.
But now you go, no snap.
How about that?
People respect it more.
And I've seen it with Christianity.
I would see this because early on in sort of YouTube, there was, there were no conservatives, but they were atheists.
It was pretty much by default liberal atheists.
And there were some Christian apologists.
And it was too easy to debunk the sort of modern whitewashed Protestant Christianity where they would go, well, God is love.
And you know what?
The atheists would go, yeah, but you don't even believe that because your God has killed millions of people.
That's true.
That's true.
And so the approach, and I was like, yeah, yeah, yeah, we do serve a God who has killed millions of evil people.
And he talks about exalting the righteous.
We're not saying that we serve a pacifist God.
Let's be honest about what the Bible says.
Let's be honest about what our beliefs are.
Yep, Second Amendment.
It should be across the board.
What about dead kids?
Well, you take far more lives than you save with your gun control policy.
No snap whatsoever.
What about people who've had some tough breaks?
That is a very, very small percentage.
And now, thank God, we have TikTok and people are saying out loud themselves what we have known to be true.
Snap, EBT, government programs.
If you were just to throw a pin on the list of names collecting these benefits, throw a dart, you would most likely end up with someone who could work but chooses not to, who is fully able-bodied but claims they are disabled, who is obese and it's their own fault and they still want you to pay for their snap, their EBT.
This is just own it, guys.
Republicans, own it.
That's the winning play.
And you even see it now with this next topic, Bill Gates.
He is now aligning himself with what people like me, and I'm not the only one, I've had guests going back to 2011 on this, what we have been saying for a very long time.
He's walking back his climate change prescriptions, not descriptions, his prescriptions, which were zero emissions.
It's catastrophic.
It's impending doom.
I've been saying for a long time, it's not, right?
You were a climate denier.
Well, now that's mainstream.
Actually, back then it was global warming denier.
Then they switched it.
It's not.
And I would say, you know what, actually, this is going to hurt people.
And it's probably going to be worse for the environment because you're going to keep these other third world countries thrust into poverty with these policies.
Turns out now, Bill Gates agrees.
Here's him referring to himself in the third person as a legendary philanthropist.
Potek Mogul and philanthropist Bill Gates says resources used to fight climate change should be shifted away from that issue and used to combat other major global problems.
It's a stunning claim given the current state of the climate crisis.
The other big story, Bill Gates, a legendary philanthropist in the climate space, of course, in the global health space, putting out a 5,000-page memo basically extolling his fellow billionaire class and investors to focus less on the existential threat of climate change and more on poverty and global health.
I thought that was Bill Gates referring to himself as legendary.
It looked like the B-roll clip of Bill Gates looked like it matched the voice for a second.
It fooled me too, but it's not Bill Gates referring to himself.
Okay, can you play that part again, just the Bill Gates part?
Because it looks like he's saying Bill Gates, legendary philanthropist.
Yeah.
Okay, play it.
Legendary philanthropist in the legendary Bill Ghana.
Okay, all right.
My apologies to the Gates family.
Bill and Melinda.
Legendary philanthropist.
Why is it me that gets a price like me?
Billy.
Anyway, he's not a legendary philanthropist.
He's an evil, evil person.
And I don't mean it's like some weird demonic possession.
What I mean is he is actually pushing evil.
He's pushing an anti-god, anti-human race, religion, effectively.
And by the way, 5,000 pages is a lot, to be clear.
But Gates enlisted some help from an old friend.
Hi.
It looks like you're trying to memory hole your climate change health agenda.
Need a hand.
Do you think Bill Gates sees how advanced AI is now?
He's like, man, I'm glad that I came to this early because I would not have had a shot.
That bent back paperclip was useless.
Useless.
It was fun.
They paid a guy to come up with that.
Yeah, I know.
The guy came up with like 300 characters.
Someone's like, hey, can we put a spell check in this?
Okay, hold on.
I'll come back to you if he comes back three weeks later.
How about like a paper clip that's annoying?
It has eyes.
He like roasts you.
Like, what is this?
All right, put it in.
Can you make the program faster instead?
Yeah.
No, no, no.
What is this going to be good for us?
This brings us to then and now.
So let's go to back then.
Bill Gates was saying that climate change was going to be catastrophic for humanity.
He says going to zero means eliminating all greenhouse gas emissions or else.
If they wait 100 years to do this.
It's way too late.
Then the natural ecosystems will have failed.
The instability, you know, the migration, you know, those things will get really, really bad well before the end of the century.
Jeez.
And then in 2020, he even said, we need to act with the same urgency that we have for COVID-19 on climate change.
It's funny that he talks about migration due to climate change because that brings us to now.
Well, Bill Gates says, we'll probably be fine.
He says, like, yeah, climate change is like, it's a real problem, but it's not going to be the end of civilization, like I said for years.
He says, although climate change will have serious consequences, particularly for people in the poorest countries, what you mean is your proposed policy, it will not lead to humanity's demise.
People will be able to live and thrive in most places on earth for the foreseeable future.
Oh, glad we dodged that bullet after billions of dollars spent on your propaganda bullshit.
I'm not kidding.
Thanks, Orson Welles.
Well, let's go back to then.
Bill Gates.
And here's the thing.
People will be like, oh, you know, I'm glad that he's making.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
Don't let him out of this.
No.
He said that emissions and the temperature rise, those were the key threat.
And of course, proposed policy that would kill many people and result in hundreds of billions of dollars of waste.
If you want to get to zero, you don't get to skip buildings or agriculture or industry or electricity or transport.
You don't even get to skip planes or boats.
You know, you've got to have it all.
As long as you have emissions, sadly, because CO2 stays in the atmosphere for thousands of years, the temperature just keeps going on up.
And that's why zero is what we need in terms of avoiding the unknowns of what it's like to get certain temperature increases.
You know, we have to get to zero emissions.
Now, just to be clear, Was everybody's interpretation of that that we have to get to zero emissions because he said zero emissions?
Yeah, he said zero, not even planes, trains, cars.
You got to do all of it, right?
Not a tree, not a yeah, yeah.
He said because as long as there are emissions, you're going to have a temperature rise.
So zero emissions because of temperature rise.
So just to be clear, that was that was all.
That was everybody's impression, right?
Yeah.
Zero.
Okay, that brings us to now, where Bill Gates says that actually temperature emissions are really not the most important way to measure climate progress.
He said, this is a chance to refocus on the metric that should count even more than emissions and temperature change.
Improving lives.
You mean improving lives by forbidding them from using planes, trains, and automobiles?
We're going to hold you to it, Bill Gates.
I mean, in some countries, it makes sense.
Like if in India, if you took out the trains.
That's a lot of deaths, so avoiding selfie deaths.
No more predators, you're fine.
Yeah.
This brings us, it's always been, and I've been saying this, it's always been anti-people.
And now they realize what has gone too far, and people are rejecting it because they're having to deal with the consequences.
Stick to your guns.
Give them no quarter with these.
Just say, no, no, I don't think you should be dictating.
I don't think you should be dictating what people drive at all.
I think that people should be allowed to innovate.
I think that people should be allowed to transport themselves.
I think people should be allowed choice.
And you know what?
That's how we actually innovate our way out of climate change if we believe that it's catastrophic.
Let's go back to then.
Bill Gates called for, and you can admonish me because I said hundreds of billions, trillions of dollars, really, to be spent on zero emissions.
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, right, it cited the famous McKinsey report, which states that capital spending in the net zero transition between 2021 and 2050 would amount to $275 trillion.
What?
By the way, global GDP is $111 trillion, so no idea how they'll generate that.
There aren't enough digital paper clips in the world, you bitch.
That brings us to now.
Actually, spending on health and prosperity for the human race.
That's actually the best defense against climate change.
That's what he's saying.
He's saying that economic growth is going to cut climate deaths in half.
He wrote, as countries get wealthier, they use more energy.
And as they use more energy, they get wealthier.
Oh, sorry, logical fallacy alert.
Time for a logical fallacy alert.
Contradictory premises.
Let me read you the definition.
Contradictory premises, kind of self-explanatory, involve an argument that draws a conclusion from inconsistent or incompatible premises.
Kind of like as country, as countries get wealthier, they use more energy.
As they use more energy, they get wealthier.
And that's our biggest solution to climate change.
But by the way, we have to get to zero emissions.
This is, okay, so.
So hold on.
Let me understand this.
The best way to solve climate change is to cut down on deaths.
Okay, great.
And as they get wealthier, they'll use more energy and they'll use more energy as they get wealthier.
And we also need to cut energy use basically down to, because energy use equates to some kind of emissions, unless it's nuclear energy, zero.
How does any of this work?
And by the way, everyone outside of Bill Gates and the climate change, the religious zealots have been recognizing this for a long time.
I know.
Well, and look, you've been actually saying this for a couple of years now, at the very least, many years.
Okay.
Come let Zoltar tell you more.
I'm going to have the next pitch ball right past the flight.
We're going to win the game, I guarantee you.
Hey, maybe the Mexican government could have given those children the 60-plus million that they actually spent on this conference.
No, that's just crazy talk and wouldn't make headlines.
But of course, that in a nutshell is how going green affects third world countries.
They won't have the chance to pull themselves out of poverty as we have here in the new world.
And with fewer and fewer countries being exempt from emission standards, it's going to become increasingly difficult.
But see, the environmentalism movement today is pro-Mother Earth, and human life is often seen as nothing more than a byproduct or a nuisance.
Who's most affected by the Green New Deal?
Who's most affected by the Coda Protocol, which would skyrocket energy costs, which for us is mildly inconvenient because you drive a crossover?
But for someone in Zambia, or honestly, you don't have to go that far.
For someone in Mexico, if you can wander out of your Cancun Booze Cruise resort, they work all week just to get enough fuel so they can heat a can of beans on an old ironing board in a drum.
Who do you think is most affected by your green policy?
It's inconvenient for us.
It kills people in the third world who make $2 a month.
So they don't really care about the most vulnerable among us.
Based on the premise of climate change, the reason for these heat waves, a false claim, you have the left advocating reducing or outright getting rid of air conditioning, right?
Because of CO2 emissions.
Makes sense.
And when you understand that that kills people to the tune of thousands, many, many, many thousands in the first world, then you understand how many people die in the third world that we aren't necessarily even able to quantify because those records are not kept.
They're not tip-top.
They're not airtight with their records in the world that is third.
Come let Zoltar tell you more.
I'm going to let the next pitch ball right past the flag.
We're going to win the game, I guarantee you.
And look, I want to make one point here.
You can go back to also 2014, 2013, and see interviews that I've conducted.
Also, the reason I was shirtless, that was the last time I ever did any work with a nonprofit National Center would pay for some videos.
I was at Fox News.
It was a Cancun Climate Summit.
We got a press pass, but I couldn't actually record at the conferences.
So we're like, I guess we'll just have to tape, like record what we saw and heard at the resort.
Might as well go shirtless in the pool.
Well, go for it.
I didn't.
But I will say, I'm not an expert.
I'm very clear about that.
So how did I get it right?
If nothing else, change my mind.
Providing these references.
I want standing your ground.
I want sticking to your guns to be so easy that all of you can do it.
How did I get that right?
It's not that I'm anything special.
How did we get COVID right?
It's not that we're anything special.
It's that this information was available and it was being suppressed.
And now Bill Gates acknowledges it was true.
If we just trusted the experts, well, we would have spent more than the world's GDP on getting emissions to zero.
This is not without consequence.
This is not hyperbole.
If Bill Gates had his way, all the while I was expressing the view that he now espouses, if he had had his way, it would have destroyed the world.
It would have entirely destroyed the world and thrust us into darkness.
Yeah.
He acknowledges that now.
Yeah, this has been an evil, this has been a truly evil thing since the beginning because developing countries need cheap energy to get going and then they develop better ways to get energy, cleaner ways.
And that's how you build their economies.
Except we've shut that valve off for all these developing countries that he claims to care so much about.
But it's not just that.
As I was watching this, I was just thinking in my head, like, why now?
Why the about face right now?
I don't think it's because the climate change narrative has lost too much popularity.
It's just not in fashion right now.
But there's not a movement against it publicly, right?
Not a movement firmly against it.
What there is a movement for right now is more power.
There's more power needed for AI.
Massive amounts of energy are needed for AI.
Microsoft is one of the top five most valuable companies in the world.
I think north of $4 trillion in market cap.
They are one of the leading players in the AI game.
Okay.
Is it possible that it's just a money thing for him right now saying, well, I can't be against power that is necessary for the future.
And maybe we can just innovate our way out, which is what we've been saying from the beginning.
And my problem is that he's known this for a lot longer than most people have.
Right.
It's a theory.
It might be crazy, but it just seems like this is just money and power.
This isn't about caring about environments or developing countries at all.
It never has been.
I've had people come on the show and go, well, you're a climate denier.
I've said, no, no, no, no.
I'm a denier that the international policy that is proposed, which would cripple economies and destroy modern humanity's way of life, I'm anti that they would even be able to solve the problem of a temperature rise of 1.6 degrees.
I don't think it would make any discernible difference.
And so I'm not willing to kill tens of millions of people through this policy.
Well, now Bill Gates agrees.
I think it could be an intersect of money.
And he also sees the writing on the wall, the polls where people are like, yeah, okay, climate change, but we certainly shouldn't actually abandon.
Maybe this tipped him over the edge.
Yeah.
Right.
Because it's really hard.
Like if you need power, there's going to be emissions.
Well, let me be on both.
Let's poll the audience.
Why do you think the switch?
This is not just kind of a modification.
It is a 180.
It's a 180.
I'm glad that he's got that idea now.
But what I want to see is an actual acknowledgement of being wrong.
An actual acknowledgement of, hey, what I said before was wrong and it was dangerous and I'm sorry for that.
Right.
I'd love to see that.
Yeah.
Not going to see that.
If you look at the Green New Deal proposed by AOC, the one pager?
I think it was 10 pages?
It was dim.
Yeah.
She was reciting Bill Gates' talking points.
Now, imagine if someone like that actually had power to get it done.
I just ask that you guys kind of mark the people who've been at the forefront of this for a very, very long time.
And I know that many of you, you listening, watching right now, you may be one of them.
Pat yourself on the back.
Stick to your guns.
You don't stop compromising where a compromise isn't necessary.
If you know you're right and you know the left is lying, like let's use COVID as an example.
If you know you're right, stick to your guns, just give it time.
Here we are now.
Climate change, the Kyoto Protocol.
Now, I believe it's the Paris Agreement.
There's the Paris Accord.
There was the Montreal Agreement, the Kyoto Protocol, Paris Accord.
Same thing.
You know that you were right.
Stick to your guns.
LGBTQ AIP, Slippery Slope is going to come for the kids.
You know you're right.
Just give it time.
Same thing with socialism, democratic socialism in the United States.
Just give it time.
Don't compromise when it's not necessary.
Also, Gerald wants me to say, don't compromise on style.
Go to crowdershop.com.
Support us in style today.
And Lane the Brain is going to lose his mind because this is like, you know, he loves anything Asian.
And this is a big segment.
Well, I'm asking him if he wants us to do it in my club or if he wants us to do it tomorrow.
No, now.
So.
Okay, we'll do it today.
Yeah, we'll start it.
Okay.
So Japan.
They're our greatest ally.
Let me just state that.
Lane and I are in agreement on that.
Yes.
I don't exclusively find Asian women attractive, but that's just a preference for them.
Now, Asian adjacent works for him.
That works too.
I mean, like Singapore, which is kind of anyone's guess.
So who do you think is America's greatest ally?
And this is one area where I would agree with some people who folks might say are on the fringe right.
I think there are some people who are anti-Semitic who think the Jews are the cause of all ills.
I disagree with people who say that Israel is our greatest ally.
They're not big enough.
They're not super trustworthy in some ways.
And, you know, it's a region that isn't as important as the Indo-Pacific.
Canada, it's gay.
The UK, too many Muslims who want to kill us.
India smells like farts.
This leaves us with one logical answer.
One.
And it involves a pretty cool chick who used to play in like a rock band, who is now the prime minister.
She's in charge of, and I don't fully understand their system, but you know, she's the one in Japan.
What's her name again?
Takaichi.
Takaichi, Donald Trump, her U.S.-Japanese alliance.
This is a good thing.
The first female prime minister in the history of Japan.
Madam Prime Minister, please say a few words.
It's for the state of the pie.
It's for the state of the.
Thank you very much.
A great man.
Great man.
On behalf of our country, I want to just let you know anytime you have any question, any doubt, anything you want, any favors you need, you can do to help Japan.
We will be there.
We are an ally at the strongest level.
She can't get away from people who tuned in late, that makes no sense.
Rewind.
It'll make even less sense.
And by the way, we're running late, and I want to do right by Tim Poole.
If you're not a Rumble Premium member, you're going to be whisked to Tim Poole.
Again, it's all free.
But if you want to continue with us on the segment, click that button, join Rumble Premium.
You can try it for $9.99 a month.
Or if you want to be like the OGs with this wonderful hand-etched mug, you join for the year, $99.
You get 100% more show, everything ad-free, as well as a catalog of content for premium members that you couldn't watch in a lifetime.
We're going to continue with this.
The meeting actually went so well that Takeichi even gave President Trump a pretty special gift that used to belong to Abe Shinzo.
Thank you.
Export Selection