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Nov. 20, 2025 - Louder with Crowder
24:17
🔴Jasmine Crockett's Epstein Idiocy & the Absolute State of the Democrat Party 2025-11-20 18:37
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And then the other guy got mad and shot him right in the head, just right there.
Just right there, and then acted like it wasn't anything.
Was like, what?
What did I do wrong?
Yeah, and you were saying something earlier.
You're saying they might call it, they might call you Islamophobic or racist or whatever, because you have these views about that's that's not it.
Guys like me, we've been telling you guys this for decades, literally decades.
People have been in Afghanistan, Iraq, that area.
We've been telling you for decades what this culture is like, what it brings, and for decades we've been called racist for it.
And it's not.
It's just what we've seen.
It's not that I was born or raised Islamophobic or anything like that.
It's that I walked in and arrested a guy who was in bed with a child.
Right.
Yeah.
A naked child.
Like that, that's what it is.
You see with your own eyes.
You watch it.
You hear it.
Yeah.
That changes you.
Yeah, it's a preponderance of evidence.
To be fair, Afghanistan, I will say this.
I've been to a lot of places in the Middle East.
Afghanistan is one of the more regressive cultures of them.
And hey, give them credit.
New Taliban.
Yes.
They're letting ladies go to school and stuff.
Well, no, they were going to, and then they didn't.
Oh, okay.
Wow.
And they're like, well, maybe.
Probably not.
Is there a different Islamic Julia child?
No.
Hello.
I could go on for days.
That's kind of a broad question.
So many stories running through your head.
No, I remember you telling me that they just shot a guy in the lunch line over nothing, and it's just very...
Well, what happened to the guy that shot the guy in the head?
their culture.
Did you ever get any...
I don't know.
They took him away.
They took him away.
Okay.
Yeah, I don't know.
They took him away and took him somewhere.
Yeah, and he didn't even, what, his defense?
Like, what?
I just shot him.
What is this?
You figure out what you've done.
They're crazy.
They don't value human life the same way we do.
And this is, again, Afghanistan, it's not the same as everywhere else.
I get it.
Some of these cultures are a lot more progressive or progressed.
Advanced.
Civilized, yeah.
We went to a village one time and a big firefight.
IED cell leader, he got killed in the crossfire, and some other people got killed.
Livestock was killed.
And at the end of it, the village elder, who happened to be the father of the IED cell leader that we are after and killed, he was not pissed about his son being killed.
He demanded that we pay for his cow.
We killed a cow in the crossfire, and he was livid over this cow because that was more important than his son's life.
Maybe he recognized, hey, my son's an asshole.
He's blowing people up.
Fucking.
But my girlfriend.
Yeah.
She's my bullying girl.
Whose others will I shake now?
Yeah, it's a, I'm not an utter guy.
It's definitely a Can you milk me?
Jesus.
Yeah.
No, thanks.
No, I think it's a lot of people.
Yeah, people.
You get out of the city and you get into villages and it is run by village elders and you have to follow whatever the religion says, whatever Islam says, whatever the Taliban at the time, whatever they said, or whatever their leaders were saying.
And I don't have TVs and they don't have the internet in a lot of these places.
You know, the cities like Kabul, Candle, are they guys?
They got internet.
Got it?
Cool.
They're still being sell.
But yeah, a lot of these people out in the a lot of these people live in rural areas.
I can't say that word, rural.
It's a tough word.
Rural areas, yeah.
And they only get a radio.
If they have anything, they have a radio, and it's tuned to one station, and it ain't Joel Osteen.
No, it's not.
It's Billy Joe's greatest hit.
I want to know by now.
You want to know by no?
Who wants to play Salt and Hachette Fach?
Who's paying for my cow?
And they make their bread with their feet.
That's for us, too.
It tastes delicious.
Yeah, that's fine.
I mean, after that, it goes through the oven.
I will say this.
I went to experience this too, you know, where I went to high school.
lot of enough Muslims where they actually had classrooms that were dedicated to Islamic calls to prayer.
And obviously why I didn't see terrorism, when I would discuss with them, they all reviled Jews.
That was a real thing.
And most of them thought that there was quite a bit of justification, for example, for 9-11.
So more than you would think.
Even ones who were nice, who I was friends with.
So I saw a lot that I didn't like that I noticed was quite different.
It doesn't mean all of them, but yeah, the devout Muslims.
And in Canada, again, because of multiculturalism, they go back to their house.
They go back to their neighborhood, which is almost entirely Muslim, which is kind of what we're seeing now in the United States.
That didn't used to be a thing.
And you would have entire areas that would be mostly Muslim.
And so they felt pretty comfortable.
They felt pretty comfortable with their enclave sharing these views.
Whereas in the United States, they knew they would have to lay low at least for a while.
Funny about the Jew thing up.
It didn't come up very often at all, really.
But a couple of my guys convinced an interpreter of ours that I was Jewish, that Feierstein was a Jewish name.
Well, it's not that hard itself.
You should have seen him.
Broke his heart.
He was like, as if in his head, I saw it and I was laughing because I was like, I'm just going to let him mess with this guy.
And then I saw it in his face, like, I've shared food with him.
He's reaching for his.
I rode in the truck with him.
I followed his orders.
I broke his heart.
My best ally is a rodent.
I had to reassure him.
Don't worry.
Don't worry.
Yeah.
Not Jewish.
Oh, thank you.
InshaAllah.
Inshallah.
This is so weird.
Yeah.
All right.
Next chat.
Oh, and by the way, I forgot to mention foundationdaily.com.
You said since you've been, your joints feel quite a bit better, right, Pop Scrotter?
They really do.
And I've been on it for a while now.
So yeah, I've noticed a big difference.
But, you know, I'm a geezer.
Well, that's the, no, curcumin is they've done clinical.
You can go on the website, look at the clinical trial studies that have done that.
You know, I'm not, you know, sitting around, and that has made a big difference.
Yeah, yes.
I didn't believe it.
It has a very similar effect as far as anti-inflammatory property to Advil.
They've studied it.
Advil, curcumin, this form of it, this dose versus placebo.
And it helps with pain and inflammation to the same degree.
And it actually makes, if you do take this, you can take a lower dose of Advil or Tylenol and help with your joints.
It'll be more effective.
So you get 40% of the time.
And I take none of that stuff, as you know.
So that's the control.
It's the only change.
Yep.
Well, I actually was able to stop taking Advil every night.
I literally for years have taken either two or three Advil every single night.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
I beat up my body.
And so like, I've got some neuropathy and stuff that I take something for.
But just, you know, soreness in my back and things just kind of wake you up.
And I've taken this and I don't have to do that.
What do you take for the CTE?
Depends on when I realize I have it.
What do you take for the AIDS?
Your family's towering in the corner.
Oh, I thought you were walking me into an abbreviation.
And then I realized it was AIDS.
Want to get AIDS?
Listen, they're going to do it to me.
You can't offer it to everybody.
You've got to create scarcity.
Otherwise, it's not worthwhile.
All right, next chat.
Next chat from Kibbles and Bits49.
Question for the LWC, whatever.
What do you say to people that say that Christians spread religion through crusades and Islam is spreading through peace and harmony?
Not you.
You can go back and watch.
I did the politically, know what I do.
I did the Crusades, the truth about the Crusades.
I did a whole thing on that in the Byzantine Empire, Constantinople.
So I'm not going to have time to answer it all, but I will tell you this.
The Crusades were a retaliatory action because of violent Islamic encroachment.
And so the left has been very effective making it about the, it's very much like a feminist would argue, right?
Disrespect, sometimes get physical.
And then when there's any type of repercussions, claim to be the victim.
That's exactly what happened with Islam and the Crusades.
It doesn't mean that anyone was smelling like roses all around on either side, but you need to understand the history of Islam.
And I mean, even just look at the history of Vlad the Impaler at the basis of the drink.
I'm just going to bring him up.
Yeah.
Who I guess might be somewhere down in my lineage.
Like, there's a reason those people think of him as a hero, even though he put human beings on spikes to the point of human cornfields and would allegedly the rumor, right, the legends that he would dip his bread in their blood so that if people, if the if these Islamic soldiers were coming in, they would have to walk through rows of their friends and see this sadist.
And he said it was the only language they understood.
Yeah.
Vlad the Impaler was basically, I'm trying to remember if he was sold or as part of a trade as kind of like collateral where he had to live with an Islamic royal family and his brother sort of assimilated.
Yeah, it was like a royal thing.
It was like an arranged thing.
And he just, his hate grew and grew and grew because of the barbarity.
So you need to understand the barbarism that people live through.
And that's the reason for the Crusades.
Go watch that video.
It's part of the thing.
Well, there's a God of power, and that's what they understand.
Yeah.
It's not a God of love.
It's not what we're taught.
It's all about the hierarchy of strength, of power.
How long were the Crusades, roughly?
I always forget, like between the first and last, what is it, 100, 200 years, something like that, 300 years?
I don't remember.
Okay, so a handful.
he's got this one incident throughout history let's look at and i agree with you a hundred percent it The Crusades are not what people think.
How has Christianity spread since the very beginning in almost every single case?
Is it through people coming in and by violence of force doing any of that?
No, absolutely.
In fact, most of the time, it's at the cost of people's lives, especially in places like Japan and China.
Obviously, in Rome early on, they were burning Christians at the stake just for being Christians.
That's not coming in and doing it through violence.
That's coming in and doing what Paul said.
Like, do something that makes people around you want to ask you a question about what you believe.
That's how you spread Christianity.
Make it appealing to people and become Christian.
By the way, that's why I always say go back comparing Jesus to Muhammad, right?
Founder of the Feast, Jesus Christ.
If all your neighbors were Jesus Christ, how do you think your neighbor would be?
Mo Beda.
If all your neighbors were Muhammad.
And then you understand why Christians, you know, it was a known entity.
You were persecuted.
You were executed for being a Christian.
They were being, in some cases, boiled, in some cases, thrown off of rooftops.
They were martyred, and they still grew the faith, not through violence.
Islam, there were no known oppressors.
It was a new thing.
It'd be like a new cult springing up today.
And people are like, what?
What are you talking about?
And they chose to spread it through violence upon its inception.
Very, very different.
That's all very informative and a lot of great history.
And truth is always great.
And learning from history is always great.
But we could also say, when was the last crusade?
Right.
That's true.
When did that happen last?
Right.
Okay.
And when was the last time you watched 4,000 people die on live TV?
Right.
What was that, Noodles?
1291, rather.
So.
Yeah.
Excuse me if I don't call it the religion of peace and harmony.
Yeah.
Well, if you disregard the Crusades, excuse me if I disregard.
I didn't watch it on national TV in seventh grade.
Yep.
Not to mention plenty of American soldiers in their barracks when people talk about Iran and on bases.
Do you think that what goes on to Christians in these Islamic countries right now?
Do you think it's any less violent or grotesque than the Crusades?
And that happens within their country today.
So I'm sorry.
Just what people go, yeah, your side's not perfect.
Okay, fine.
Eat a dick.
Next chat.
And research also pointed out they are linking the Crusades video in the description.
Oh, great.
Next chat from Amaya Kata.
Question for the crew.
If corrupt judges stay in power, how can we fight getting undesirables like Muslims and other parasitic groups slash terrorists out of America?
That's where an ounce of prevention is worth 10,000 pounds of cure.
You want to keep these judges out, and you want to be aware.
You want to be vigilant before that happens.
The left is hoping that you are not.
I've got to figure out.
Maybe I'm just too ignorant to the subject, but there's a lot of judges who are not voted upon.
They are appointed.
And I'm not sure the reason why or if it's possible to remove that practice.
Yeah, it depends on where you go to higher courts.
You go to the Supreme Court and then there are district courts.
So George Degree could probably explain to you.
A lot of them are.
And a lot of them, like, for example, in areas of Texas, you have someone who's technically voted on, but they're the only judge on that ticket.
There's also magistrates who make judge decisions like a regular judge would, but they're not a judge, not even a lawyer.
They don't pass the bar.
It's like a nurse practitioner.
Yeah, but at least they went to school for it.
Yeah.
I don't fully understand how it works, but I do know that you have a lot of sway in your local judges and your circuit courts, and you can vote.
And vigilance is more important, prevention.
In other words, if right now, I don't know that you'll fix Minneapolis.
I don't know that you'll fix Dearborn.
I don't know that it's possible.
So you have to prevent that from happening because unfortunately, once, and this is the playbook of Islam, once they overrun you population-wise, in the United States, being a freedom-minded country, we don't really have the mechanisms in place to retroactively fix it.
That's why you've got to stop it from happening.
That's the George Washington ideas is to prevent your enemy before he posts.
Yep.
Because it's nearly impossible to remove him once he does.
That's why I just showed up one day on Christmas.
He's like, fuck you.
I'm crossing.
Yeah, they're like, what?
What?
I thought this is kind of an unwritten agreement.
Christmas, we don't.
We're sleeping, mate.
What are you doing?
He's like, yeah, well, you can sleep when you're dead.
Christmas is sent to you already.
God, George, your teeth.
Are those wood?
Last thing you'll ever see.
All right, final chat.
All right, final chat from Rumble Forskin.
I want the criminal illegals out first.
Do you think the small fish illegals raids and are training exercises while ICE builds up its forces before going after large gangs?
Well, I don't know what you mean by first because I didn't say that we need to deport Muslims who are natural-born American citizens.
So I want to make sure I'm not misconstrued on that.
I think he was just kind of almost like a switch of topic for me.
I don't even think this is about Muslims.
I think this is about.
Okay, well, I'll make this, and then we'll make one more chat after this.
I will say, I don't know, and I do think that sometimes, if you look at it, there is an argument to be made that the deportations in some cases or where they sort of ignore sectors where it may be warranted, and that can be because of some leverage or lobbying.
People talk about that, like in the big tech sphere, we sort of have gone into H-1Bs because that would be something that could be easily rated because there's so much fraud.
But I'm with you.
I think that we should deport all of them.
And I hope they're training exercises.
Those numbers need to be pumped up.
We need to deport anyone who is here illegally.
Certainly immediately anyone who has committed a crime.
And I think that it could be sped up.
Now, I don't necessarily know exactly what's going on on the ground and what's preventing that.
I do know that they're doing more than the previous administration.
I do know that the border is far more secure.
So I will take that as a win.
But I agree with you.
Every illegal alien deported and get in line with the rest of legal immigrants who are trying to go through the process.
And even then, it should be limited where we pick the cream of the crop.
Otherwise, no.
Final.
It's like a draft.
Exactly.
Final chat.
All right.
Final, final chat from Deeg Adkins.
Question for the crew.
Do you think the redistricting effort of Texas and other states will eventually question?
Usually we want to go on like an inspiring question as a final chat.
I don't want to talk about redistricting.
I don't know.
All right, here we go.
I don't know the answer.
I don't know.
But I'll address it next time.
All right.
Kendo Extendo asks, question for the crew.
You guys have a fun time at work, but obviously it's hard work with long hours.
What do you guys do for fun?
Do you hang out outside of work?
Black tar heroin.
Perfect.
Gerald?
Cocaine.
Yeah.
Selling black tar heroin and cocaine.
You'd be surprised.
Wealthiest man here.
I do a lot of stuff at home.
I mean, I'm a comedian, so I'm on the road a lot on the weekends, but when I'm not on the road, I just hang out at home with the kids and I do housework, yard work, play sports with the kids and video games with my kids.
What about you, Pop Scrotter?
What do you do?
I'm going to go see Josh Comedian.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Tonight, I. You don't do that every day.
No.
You know, I'm kind of a fitness freak for my age.
That's kind of a thing I do.
Playing with the grandkids, chasing after them.
I love that.
It's a whole new time in my life.
It's an absolute blast.
Yeah.
Gerald?
We do hang out sometimes out of work.
I want to address that part of it.
Like, sometimes we do, but we spend a lot of time together at work.
This job is very demanding for that setup.
The lines get blurred when you were friends before you worked together.
Yeah.
That's right.
You know, especially if we're doing like a stream, like a nightly stream where we're here till 2 a.m.
Hanging out together.
Yeah.
As far as for fun, man, like I, again, the dad of three young kids, and so you spend a lot of time with your family, and that's a lot of fun.
Like, I think a lot of people have this view, like, oh, your life ends.
Now, man, it begins.
So true.
Like, it's so much fun.
You get to work later, but it's a lot of fun.
People look at you.
If you don't have kids, people look at you if you're pretending to be a dinosaur.
Yeah.
If I got a kid with me, I could do it all day.
Dude, no one bats an eye.
It's such a good life.
Yeah.
Like, I can go watch his toy story, and it's totally fine now.
Oh, you can go see the toy story as a single adult.
I don't care.
People are like, what's that guy doing over there?
Oh, he's a pterodactyl.
That makes sense.
I thought it was retarded.
I see the kid.
He's a retarded pterodactyl.
Sorry, retarded.
No, same thing.
I mean, I'm, yeah, we all do hang out to varying degrees because we're here.
And then sometimes even you're done with work, but then you'll just find yourself in a chat.
I mean, I'll see very often, you know, Toolman, Gerald, or a group of people in this studio gym here.
As far as personally, if I'm not hanging out with people from work, you know, that's one thing that I've struggled with a little bit since the surgery, the elective cosmetic surgery of three titanium rods through my chest.
Yeah, I can't do jiu-jitsu or any of the actual athletic endeavors beyond training, and even that's limited.
And it kind of took that away from me because that was something I was always pretty passionate about, pretty enthusiastic about.
And, you know, sometimes you have injuries and you have to stop.
But usually I was really for the last good few years, either jiu-jitsu or boxing, whichever one I could do, depending on the injury at that point in time.
I don't have as many hobbies as I used to because generally speaking, my hobbies, kind of like Pop Scratch, have been all-encompassing, right?
The gym, obviously.
I don't really do that that often.
I will say the lines also get blurred where I really like learning.
So, you know, I could be on my phone or I could be on my computer and I'll be doing something for work and I'll go, oh, you know what?
That's right.
I wanted to brush up on this.
Like I talked about recently, Stalin and Trotsky.
And then I realized I've wasted a huge swath of time because it's two assholes fighting the end.
So that's something I've always been passionate about.
I also think it's because there was such a void because I learned zero American history in Canadian public schools and very little about global history if it related to communism because I was raised in a socialist province.
So learning is something I'm always pretty passionate about.
I will say I've been going to the range more because I'm like, well, if I can't really do grappling or any of the combat sports, hey, at least I can get better at shooting a gun.
There you go.
And the problem is everyone has a different technique.
I'm like, that one's dog shit.
Do this one.
You're like, oh, I posted fun ones.
Yeah.
Just squeezing a, just doing a mag dump after a long day.
And oh, that finger discipline sucks.
Yeah, just slap it back or just rack it.
I'm like, yeah.
I'm just playing around.
I'm just having fun.
Also, I hit the target 17 times.
No, that's exactly right.
For a living.
Well, same thing.
Some people, like, recently people are like, oh, if you don't use red dots, you're living in the Stone Age, man.
If you don't use Red Dots on your pistols, now I use optics on my rifles, but I don't like them on my pistols.
And then you got a guy who goes, oh, using red dot?
You'll just go with the iron sights?
Actually, I would say this.
It's very few in the gun hobbyist community.
They all are like, you're taking your life in your hands if you don't use a red dot.
And with a lot of security we have, a lot of these people are, you know, have been high-level military.
It's been my experience that the significant majority of them prefer to not have dots on pistols or at best think it's a wash, but on rifles, absolutely, it's a huge advantage.
So that's a thing.
And then, of course, obviously, like most of my time is, I'm a homebody.
And then with the, you know, with the kids, family, anytime we can do that, like pretty much goes from work, boom, home, family.
And then I'll just watch, you know, a movie or read something that that is informative and inspirational.
And the crazy thing is, like, a lot of people, this is one thing, too, I've thought about this where you'll get a lot of, I would say, particularly in the era of Instagram and TikTok, like women, like, look, I want to travel.
Look at how turquoise this water is.
It's just not me.
Like I hate traveling.
I have traveled quite a bit.
Of course, I like going out with family or a nice dinner.
But if you think about it, people throughout all of human history, like if you could be comfortable and not have to be out hunting all day and you didn't have to be nomadic and you had a healthy family and you had healthy children and you had food on the table and you also were able to engage in joyous, like think of Christmas.
That was supposed to be the ultimate.
What was it?
People had a duck and some family members around a table with a fire and they might play some board game that usually consisted of some kinds of wooden blocks that everyone would leave with splinters, right?
And that was considered like the ultimate.
This is great.
And now that's frowned upon as, oh, well, that's boring.
I guess I'm really just kind of happy being boring.
I actually prefer it and I've always been that way.
And I don't think there's anything wrong with boring, provided you're still, you know, sharpening your tools physically, mentally, spiritually.
That should be the dream.
Yeah.
My dream of a boring life.
Yeah.
It is.
But you've always been a maven of information ever since you were little.
But definitely as a college dropout in the internet age, you do deep dives and things.
And you get, I watch you get into a subject area and go and you're a PhD in six months and you move on to something else.
It's crazy.
It's obsessive.
But you've always been that way.
You love information and you research the heck out of it and then you move on.
And then I'm also scared.
I'm also scared where it's like, well, man, this is probably important.
Every now and then I'll come in.
I'm like, I should probably know like everything about this.
That's what happened with Stalin and Trotsky recently.
And then I was just one point kind of reading and understanding like, okay, so Trotsky just sort of disagreed with the mechanisms in place and basically thought, and then I was like, no one gives a shit about this.
I was like, these are two communists, and they basically were arguing over whose communism was better, and they both suck.
And so sometimes you can go down a rabbit hole and it maybe isn't productive.
Now, I'm glad that I have that knowledge.
I don't know how much I'll retain because it's tough.
If I don't, there's no side that I can like emphasize.
There's no hero villain.
It's just two villains.
And no matter what I would read, I'm like, I hope both of them die horribly.
Yeah, maybe dysentery.
Yeah, I don't know.
It could be, you know, and then I was like, oh, well, I guess Stalin had pockmarks because that's good.
So at least, you know, he went through some suffering.
I'm happy with that.
So people made fun of him, you know?
Yeah, he didn't clean his pipe.
So his lungs were probably all tarry.
So I can feel good knowing that he suffered.
And I can feel good knowing that I pretty much just live a boring, simple life.
And I think, hey, people often say what's most important is your health, family, faith, family, health, and down the list.
And most people don't live that because they'll say that.
Then they'll go, ooh, I want to go on another trip and post it for the grand.
Well, that doesn't seem like you're placing your focus on family.
And I think a lot of people out there, a lot of young men in particular, feel that there are these expectations and being boring means you're uninteresting or means that you're unambitious.
I don't think that at all.
As a matter of fact, I will say most of the hyperly ambitious people that I know, when they are not sort of in their purpose, honing their craft, doing their business, they're almost all uniformly boring.
And I have no problem with it.
And I'm always glad to hang out with people here.
It really is much closer to everyone says that.
Like it's like a family, but we are much closer here because you know we're really kind of been forged in the fire and it's much more meaningful.
Like there are easier places to work than here for sure.
If someone is here beyond that six-month mark, it's not because it's the easiest job, they're here because they believe in it.
And that goes a long way, and that's why we all hang out with each other.
And we're happy to spend that time with you.
I want to let people know who they're going to Devori or Devery Devery Darkens.
If you're watching, we're going to send you over to him and we'll see you tomorrow, especially because you're OG Rumble Premium Mug Club tomorrow, Friday show, just for you.
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