Louder with Crowder - Woke is Back: Chicago Bulls Cancel Christian Player for Anti-Gay Views Aired: 2026-03-31 Duration: 01:12:00 === Picard of Crossing Lights (03:56) === [00:00:00] This is Picard of Chong Lupigato. [00:00:02] This is Picard of Crossing Lighteus. [00:00:05] Energize Rohr Crossing Light years. [00:00:07] This is Picard of Crossing Light years. [00:00:10] This is Picard of Chong Lupiga. [00:00:12] This is Picard of Crossing Lights. [00:00:14] Energize Rocho Crossing Light. [00:00:19] Have you seen anything like that before? [00:00:38] Thank you. [00:00:56] Oh [00:01:44] It's just where I'm. [00:01:46] I won't let marry your own. [00:01:50] Gotta help your funny blue. [00:01:52] the background It's just webinar. [00:02:04] I won't let marry your own. [00:02:08] Gotta help your funny mood. [00:02:10] Talk about Grandpa. [00:03:26] Mics are live, Gerald. [00:03:27] We're on live. [00:03:32] I told you I didn't like it. [00:03:34] Two spiders in the pool. [00:03:35] I thought I had won the war. [00:03:37] I thought I had won the war. [00:03:39] My pool, as modest as it may be, it's like it's Constantinople. [00:03:43] It is ground zero where we have to, like, I have to take it back and hold it from the wolf spiders. [00:03:49] Glad to be with you. [00:03:49] Welcome to the lineup live here on Rumble. [00:03:51] You know the rest. [00:03:52] We're going to talk today about a few things. [00:03:55] Dogewalker. === Elites Versus Actual Viewers (04:50) === [00:03:57] There's more to that story. [00:03:58] You might be offended because we do have a seven plus one. [00:04:01] Basketball. [00:04:02] Apparently, you're not allowed to speak out against LGBTQ unless you want to be released from your team. [00:04:09] We're going to get into the demographics and kind of lay out why this is the elites versus the actual viewers. [00:04:15] Viewers don't care. [00:04:16] Also, the view wants you to believe, and this is the big feminist psyop, that kids are too expensive and it's irresponsible for the Republican Party and Conservatives to continue with the messaging that having a family and children is more fulfilling than a life of hedonism and may make you happy. [00:04:35] Also, Canada is banning Christianity. [00:04:37] So most importantly, how are you celebrating the Trans Day of Visibility? [00:04:41] Comment below. [00:04:42] We couldn't just skim past that. [00:04:44] And right now, what you're about to watch, two-minute teaser, long time coming, a decade in the works. [00:04:49] When I started Change My Mind, we always planned to, or I did, marry interviews, change my minds with the students, with some of the professors on campus. [00:05:01] 10 years, we had one dance instructor one time. [00:05:04] He was nice. [00:05:04] Black gentleman. [00:05:06] But that's okay these days. [00:05:10] What? [00:05:13] We were never able to accomplish it. [00:05:15] No takers. [00:05:16] We extended an invite to, I believe, 10 Ivy League schools, and we finally found one. [00:05:24] That's going to happen? [00:05:25] Well, you can watch this. [00:05:29] Hey, YouTube, what you're about to watch is a new segment we call Change My Mind. [00:05:33] Open campus, a college campus. [00:05:34] Sure, it's an open campus. [00:05:36] You can do whatever you want. [00:05:37] You can protest. [00:05:38] Any professor, you pick. [00:05:40] Any professor. [00:05:41] Yeah. [00:05:42] And, you know, or set up a dialogue how you think it would be best or most fair. [00:05:45] Forgive me, or your sources. [00:05:47] What do you usually read? [00:05:48] CNN, CNN, Twitter. [00:05:51] CNN, Twitter, and a lot of professors probably here. [00:05:53] Oh, I think you're somewhat parroting from what you've learned from your professors. [00:05:58] And so I don't think. [00:06:00] Well, I agree with you guys. [00:06:02] Data from CNN and Twitter and professors is wrong. [00:06:05] Liberal professors and students, you've seen it. [00:06:07] They start yelling. [00:06:08] What statistics are you reading? [00:06:10] The statistics of, according to the FBI. [00:06:12] 12% of women and 12% of men are raped on college campuses. [00:06:18] Incorrect. [00:06:18] We don't have any professors willing to debate. [00:06:20] Do you know professors here who'd be willing to? [00:06:22] We would be more than happy. [00:06:23] Honestly, no, I don't. [00:06:27] You've been failed as students. [00:06:29] You've been failed. [00:06:30] It's time to go straight to the top for the people who failed you. [00:06:35] When we started Change My Mind, the idea was back in 2016. [00:06:38] The more I went on campus, the more I saw the failures of the institutions. [00:06:42] And I want to be really clear about something. [00:06:43] This was never designed to mock, denigrate, or dunk on students who don't know any better. [00:06:50] It was always designed to highlight the failures of the institutions. [00:06:53] We're actually going to be starting formal debates with professors at schools. [00:06:57] Or we can have a civil dialogue and maybe get to the root cause as to why you've been failed as students. [00:07:09] Free speech and why you should give a damn, Jonathan Zimmerman. [00:07:14] Why should we give a damn? [00:07:16] Well, we should give a damn because free speech has been at the heart of every movement for change in this country. [00:07:22] Racial and gender and sexual contemporary perspective. [00:07:26] I discovered it was precisely the opposite. [00:08:14] Glad to be with you. [00:08:15] Oh, I do have a question for you. [00:08:16] Hey, how many of you, that is April 10th. [00:08:18] Do we have the ticket? [00:08:20] Or no, not yet. [00:08:20] We're going to get a little bit of a ticket. [00:08:21] We will put that out yes, so they can get tickets. [00:08:22] How many of you want to watch that live on a Friday night? [00:08:24] I know Friday night, you guys are probably busy. [00:08:26] Otherwise, we can do lot to tape, upload it Monday. [00:08:29] But if many of you want to stay in and watch it, the live debate, me and Professor Jonathan Zimmerman, I appreciate him. [00:08:37] Well, he'll say yes to anyone who will put a microphone in front of his face, which is a good thing, but it's just, it's amazing. [00:08:41] We're going to go through all of the other professors and their terms and conditions that they demanded. [00:08:46] What? === North Korea Leader Survey (07:06) === [00:08:47] There's only eight Ivy League schools. [00:08:48] Yes, we put it out to 10 schools. [00:08:49] We put it out to 10 schools, eight of which Ivy League. [00:08:52] UPenn's one of them. [00:08:53] Isn't that surprising? [00:08:54] I kind of thought it was Doug Joe. [00:08:56] I do not deserve that admonish. [00:08:58] I was the one who. [00:08:59] Well, you disrupted the flow, right, Tourman? [00:09:00] Yeah, he did. [00:09:01] He disrupted the flow. [00:09:02] Just disruption as we go. [00:09:04] All right. [00:09:04] Captain Morgan, CEO, we got to get moving. [00:09:07] So hello. [00:09:07] Hope you're well. [00:09:08] Friday, Saturday, April 24th, 25th at Comedy Avenue in Lawton, Oklahoma. [00:09:12] So if you're in Oklahoma, go and see Josh 24th, 25th. [00:09:15] If you are near Philadelphia, it's a small venue. [00:09:18] So once tickets are available, get them as quickly as you can. [00:09:22] April 10th. [00:09:23] You doing well? [00:09:24] Yeah, I'm good. [00:09:25] Good. [00:09:25] I'm excited to be in Lawton. [00:09:26] The inspiration for the myth of El Dorado. [00:09:29] That's true. [00:09:30] That's true. [00:09:30] Although that movie sucked. [00:09:32] Yeah. [00:09:32] It did. [00:09:32] I like the movie. [00:09:33] Really? [00:09:34] The Road to Eldorado, the Disney movie? [00:09:35] Yeah, it's cute. [00:09:36] It's fun. [00:09:36] It's got the Gay Fraser brothers. [00:09:38] I like the Emperor's New Groove because I like it when animals speak like adults. [00:09:43] Yeah, I know. [00:09:43] It's fun. [00:09:46] Before I get to anything else, just because we want to have a little fun. [00:09:49] And what's more fun than the world's silliest nuclear power? [00:09:54] North Korea decided to release some footage regarding their special forces. [00:10:00] So this is actually a new segment that we like to call North Korea. [00:10:05] the fuck and when you watch the totally real clip that was released on sunday you'll understand And if this offends you, you know, you can send your feedback. [00:10:25] We stream live. [00:10:26] I'm easy to find. [00:10:27] Weekdays, 11 a.m. Eastern. [00:10:29] So here is footage of North Korea's special forces. [00:10:33] And boy, you know, I think that I think our just, I don't know how to describe it. [00:10:40] watch. [00:10:47] Oh, hell yeah. [00:10:48] He blocked the stick with his torso. [00:10:55] Oh, man! [00:10:57] This is worse than Sean Kong. [00:10:59] There's some drywall. [00:11:00] Damn, he's heading to it. [00:11:07] Are those nunchucks, or is it like a horsetail? [00:11:09] I don't know. [00:11:09] I don't know. [00:11:11] I think they're ponytails. [00:11:12] They cut them off. [00:11:12] Whoa. [00:11:13] Well, our guys can't do the splits. [00:11:14] Yeah, you don't see the SEALs doing this. [00:11:16] No. [00:11:17] Because you fight from that position. [00:11:21] Don't you love how they cradle it? [00:11:23] They slow down the throw. [00:11:26] Here we go. [00:11:27] Here we go, Colonel P.T. Barnum. [00:11:30] Oh! [00:11:32] Abs of iron. [00:11:36] You know what's great training when the training partner has to slow down his blows. [00:11:42] I think that said more about the axe than it did the guy's abs. [00:11:46] Oh my gosh. [00:11:47] He's going for his yellow belt. [00:11:51] Daddy's check cleared. [00:11:52] You're fine. [00:11:53] This is no, guys, this is really important. [00:11:54] This is what they call functional training in case you have to lay on a spike exclusively on your throat. [00:12:00] This actually, this situation came up a lot in Afghanistan, so that looks hurt, though, either way. [00:12:06] Yeah, you got to do the bicep breaks. [00:12:08] Yeah. [00:12:10] Ow. [00:12:10] I mean, yeah, that's just too good forearm strike. [00:12:13] Oh, my God. [00:12:14] He hit the guy. [00:12:18] You know what they won't do? [00:12:19] Hook them up to a punch meter. [00:12:23] Oh, more sticks. [00:12:27] Oh, slow-mo. [00:12:28] Nice. [00:12:28] It's music. [00:12:31] Those are pre-cut. [00:12:33] They did just pull the guy off the street. [00:12:35] It's pre-cut. [00:12:40] He's conquering his alcoholism. [00:12:42] Yeah, he is. [00:12:43] He's hell yeah. [00:12:44] Oh, and a kick. [00:12:47] Oh, this is fun. [00:12:48] Watch. [00:12:48] They just, now it's a power of gravity. [00:12:50] Oh, God. [00:12:55] Makes me happy. [00:12:56] They specialize in the dog pile. [00:13:04] One of those guys went home and they The guy that jumped in with his head is never going to be the same. [00:13:08] Who'd they bring in as a consultant? [00:13:09] The guy who keeps the Guinness Book of World Records? [00:13:12] No. [00:13:12] More, more, more, brick. [00:13:14] Oh, this would be awesome. [00:13:18] And Steven Segal. [00:13:20] I'm a special forces, and this is North Korea. [00:13:26] It's a culture that's entirely based on fakery. [00:13:29] Oh, great. [00:13:29] You can do all that. [00:13:30] Now try turn signals. [00:13:32] Come on. [00:13:32] I thought it was awesome. [00:13:33] Yeah. [00:13:34] It's a carnival trick. [00:13:36] It really is. [00:13:36] It really is a carnival trick. [00:13:38] And this is why the rest of the world doesn't take you seriously. [00:13:41] Also, you know, on average, like six inches shorter than all of the South Koreans. [00:13:46] Now, Kim Jong-un was actually watching. [00:13:48] If you watch the full, if you watch the full, and actually, we watched this clip originally, and we didn't realize that YouTube had its AI translator. [00:13:56] Its own translation. [00:13:57] And this is true. [00:13:58] And it was doing this Korean song. [00:13:59] It's like, Our Dear Supreme Leader. [00:14:02] And then the translation was just going, ah! [00:14:08] And I walked into. [00:14:09] You were in the office with Lane McGray. [00:14:11] I said, this is real, right? [00:14:13] This is a real thing. [00:14:14] Tell me it's real, guys. [00:14:15] Please. [00:14:16] Kim Jong-un was watching as he always does, you know, with either great admiration or displeasure, in which case you're going to disappear. [00:14:22] And they actually had a lapel mic on him. [00:14:25] We exclusively got the file. [00:14:29] Oh, I like how he hit his head. [00:14:32] Very fit. [00:14:33] Very tight body. [00:14:37] I hope he don't have indigestion. [00:14:41] Oh, his leg must be so hard. [00:14:43] Hard legs. [00:14:46] Yeah. [00:14:47] She stabbed her titty. [00:14:48] Oh, my God. [00:14:49] Oh, wow. [00:14:50] Splits. [00:14:50] Full spritz. [00:14:51] That must hurt ball. [00:14:54] Eat your heart out, Chris Kyle. [00:14:57] Yeah, I want to see more head spin. [00:15:00] More spinning of hair. [00:15:02] Yeah, you did terrible things to that cray. [00:15:05] Like the crate oh you money. [00:15:07] More sticks. [00:15:08] Oh, that stick didn't break. [00:15:11] Supreme leader, we stopped building 14 horses for these bricks. [00:15:16] Look like Super Mario in there. [00:15:19] I have a no, period. [00:15:22] They call it menopause. [00:15:25] Hey, I do that. [00:15:32] This has been North Korea. [00:15:52] They have nukes. === Menopause And Nukes (12:18) === [00:15:54] Oh, gosh. [00:15:56] But do they? [00:15:59] I don't know. [00:16:01] What would you say if we're doing a survey? [00:16:03] Would you say that turned out better or worse than we anticipated in Writer's Room? [00:16:07] Better. [00:16:08] Better. [00:16:08] I'd say. [00:16:09] Only one thing is when I was watching, we were clapping. [00:16:11] I was like, oh, we should have done. [00:16:13] Yes, we should have done. [00:16:15] Nine out of ten. [00:16:16] Yes. [00:16:17] Absolutely. [00:16:18] Yes. [00:16:20] 11 a.m. weekdays, guys. [00:16:22] If you want this to, hey, click that button, join Rumble Premium. [00:16:24] We sometimes, you know, take a risk. [00:16:27] Speaking of risky. [00:16:29] Nobody else is even trying. [00:16:30] No, nobody else is even trying. [00:16:33] You know who's not trying this next lady? [00:16:34] Yeah. [00:16:35] I know that many of you are going to be upset with this, but it's okay. [00:16:39] Yeah. [00:16:40] It's okay because I know a gay guy. [00:16:43] Oh. [00:16:44] Yeah. [00:16:46] Credibility. [00:16:47] Yeah. [00:16:48] It's cool. [00:16:49] I had lunch with a black one time. [00:16:51] Ooh. [00:16:52] Nice. [00:16:52] So everything here. [00:16:53] That makes everything you're about to hear and watch acceptable. [00:16:56] Yesterday, you guys have seen this, obviously, but I'm just going to refresh your memory, some footage from the No Kings protest, you know, one of their strongest warriors who's now become quite popular, the Doge Walker. [00:17:20] Now, I know you thought the story just kind of started and stopped there. [00:17:25] No, there's more to it. [00:17:26] There's more to this saga. [00:17:28] So this Dogewalker has a GoFundMe to support her protest activities. [00:17:33] And I looked online. [00:17:34] You guys can fact, I think she's like a fellow at the Guggenheim or something like that. [00:17:38] Like she's won art prizes. [00:17:40] She pays those people that are walking with her $500. [00:17:43] Something like that. [00:17:44] Really? [00:17:44] Exactly that. [00:17:45] It says it on her thing. [00:17:47] Well, I'll read from the GoFundMe. [00:17:48] It says, spring is on the horizon despite the blazing temperatures from Texas to the Carolinas. [00:17:53] And Dogewalker is preparing to step back into the streets. [00:17:57] I'm using that term a little liberally. [00:17:59] That one kind of looked like Sturgis. [00:18:01] Yes. [00:18:02] That last picture. [00:18:03] Yeah, it looks like she's got Sturgis. [00:18:06] Old lady on the back. [00:18:08] Right and bitch. [00:18:10] These are biker terms. [00:18:11] Yes. [00:18:11] These are biker terms. [00:18:13] She fell off. [00:18:13] So $4,600 out of $10,000 was raised. [00:18:19] And then in response to going viral, this lady, the Doge Walker, responded, releasing this video. [00:18:28] I keep getting a link to the Poles Refunding article. [00:18:31] That's a huge bitch. [00:18:32] The Doge Walker performance of the No Kings protest, and they are brutal. [00:18:38] I am getting like just brutalized online. [00:18:44] Imagine that. [00:18:46] You know, I'm used to it. [00:18:47] It doesn't bother me. [00:18:48] I have a really thick skin, but referring to me as a warrior is offensive on so many levels. [00:18:58] And I want to kind of break it down. [00:18:59] Well, one, I receive very little government assistance. [00:19:03] In fact, I received Medicaid, Which helps for my medical costs, which, you know, actually, the last time I totaled them up were about $330,000, $360,000 a year. [00:19:19] If you include my wheelchair, accessible van costs, like maintenance and whatnot, medical equipment, medicines that I take. [00:19:35] No one could afford that. [00:19:36] Nobody could afford that unless you were a billionaire or a millionaire because we want to work and we want to work more. [00:19:43] We want to be active members of society. [00:19:47] So what people don't realize is that the more that we have access to income, the more our highly costly medical insurance is threatened to be taken away from us. [00:20:03] Oh, so a job is a friend. [00:20:04] I'm going to make it out like I'm grifting. [00:20:06] No, Donald Trump is a grifter. [00:20:09] He's a grifter. [00:20:10] He's a snake oil salesman. [00:20:12] And a lot of people, unfortunately, bought into a lie in our country is being driven down. [00:20:19] It's basically insolvent right now, you know? [00:20:23] And we're on the verge of nuclear war. [00:20:27] So calling me a grifter is preposterous. [00:20:32] Yeah, just $360,000 a year in medical expenses that is threatened by a basic job. [00:20:38] Now, to be clear, I know people say it's incensive because as I understand it, she has something called, I believe it's like spinal atrophy type 2, which you're born with, which means that it's a nerve thing where you can't move your legs. [00:20:48] So she is in a wheelchair. [00:20:49] Obviously, she has use of her arms. [00:20:51] But I'm going to tell you something. [00:20:54] There are a lot of other people with this condition who aren't massively overweight and actually do like, here's the thing. [00:21:02] She could do some jobs. [00:21:05] She can't still qualify for her Medicaid. [00:21:07] Yes. [00:21:08] Yes, exactly. [00:21:08] There are plenty of jobs out there that she could do. [00:21:10] Like she could just, she could be a restaurant hostess. [00:21:14] Yeah, yeah, because you know how you always go to a restaurant and then there's nobody at the podium. [00:21:18] And then, well, they get out. [00:21:19] First of all, they get a smaller podium. [00:21:21] Right. [00:21:21] That's less money on a podium. [00:21:22] And then there's a please wait to be seated and there's no one there. [00:21:24] One less problem. [00:21:25] Just lock her wheels in place. [00:21:26] She's not going anywhere. [00:21:27] Like a grill. [00:21:28] Yes. [00:21:28] She's not going anywhere. [00:21:31] She could be a lawyer. [00:21:33] She could be a manager or a shift manager of anything. [00:21:37] Governor of Texas. [00:21:38] She could be so many things. [00:21:39] Here's the thing. [00:21:40] She could pretty much do any job that doesn't exclusively require use of your legs. [00:21:45] So pretty much any office job, any desk job, anything that doesn't require large amounts of running or walking. [00:21:53] She could literally be a nuclear physicist. [00:21:56] There's nothing stopping her. [00:21:58] Like there's no reason that she couldn't do exactly what Oppenheimer did. [00:22:04] Well, I mean, there are no. [00:22:06] There's nothing that's like, I guarantee you. [00:22:10] What's that IQ look like? [00:22:11] I mean, sure, but I'm just. [00:22:13] Mine isn't too high. [00:22:14] I'm just saying, you wasn't learning, you know, spooky Adam with his, like, with his toes. [00:22:18] No, no, that's true. [00:22:19] There are plenty of things that she could do, but that's a threat to the never-ending supply of your tax dollars. [00:22:26] And I know that many of you have disabilities as well, and you also work. [00:22:28] I mean, you know, governor of Texas, you had someone like Teddy Roosevelt who wasn't from FDR for crying out loud. [00:22:32] And that brings us to this week, seven plus one. [00:22:39] You forgot, Fifnin's a chamber. [00:22:41] Seven plus one potential jobs for Doge Walker. [00:22:48] Number seven. [00:22:49] Great name, by the way. [00:22:50] She could literally be Stephen Hawking. [00:22:54] Yeah, whatever. [00:22:55] She could be Stephen Hawking. [00:22:56] Whatever he does. [00:22:58] I am overjoying. [00:23:04] Number six, Josh, these are real jobs she could do. [00:23:06] This is a real job that exists. [00:23:07] We've seen it happen before. [00:23:08] Shrimp boat captain. [00:23:09] There you go. [00:23:10] There you go. [00:23:11] Lieutenant Doge. [00:23:13] But there's no legs, Lieutenant Dane. [00:23:16] She still has a legs. [00:23:17] See, she's got it. [00:23:18] She's one up. [00:23:18] Yeah. [00:23:19] There you go. [00:23:19] Yes. [00:23:21] Shrimp soup. [00:23:22] Number five, she could be CEO of Ladowith Crowder. [00:23:26] Matter of fact, that looks good. [00:23:28] She could literally do pretty much any job here. [00:23:32] Hey, not mine, for sure. [00:23:34] She could do it, is what I'm saying. [00:23:36] A lot of you guys just, you know, sit at your desks and wait for the sweet release of death. [00:23:42] Number four, Gerald, seven plus one Dogewalker potential jobs. [00:23:45] She could be a world champion cornholer. [00:23:47] That's true. [00:23:47] You're going to tell me it's harder for the guy with no hands. [00:23:52] If he can do it, she can do it. [00:23:53] She has whole arms. [00:23:54] Yeah. [00:23:54] There's a lot of fingers on her, too. [00:23:56] The point is, you just got to be creative and you have to believe in yourself. [00:23:59] Number three, Dogewalker, she could be a very good hungry, hungry hippo. [00:24:03] Because we already have two hungries. [00:24:11] She is a hippo. [00:24:12] Number two, Dogewood. [00:24:13] Come on now. [00:24:14] They're vicious animals. [00:24:16] Number two, a snowplow. [00:24:17] She could be. [00:24:19] Yeah, well, it's seasonal work. [00:24:21] That's just an attachment. [00:24:22] Yeah. [00:24:23] At that point, this one is straight down center plate for her. [00:24:26] Number one job she could do. [00:24:27] She could be a professional slap fighter. [00:24:30] Yes, I think. [00:24:38] That's definitely turned out better. [00:24:40] She's wearing protection. [00:24:41] She's wearing protection. [00:24:42] She's wearing her umpire's mask. [00:24:43] That's not fair. [00:24:44] And she's got give. [00:24:46] She's got more give in her chair. [00:24:48] And the plus one that she could be Dogewalker jobs. [00:24:52] Gerald. [00:24:52] RoboCop. [00:25:11] This is idiots. [00:25:12] This week's 7 plus 1. [00:25:19] You forgot Fifhan in the chamber. [00:25:22] I miss idiots movies. [00:25:27] So pasty. [00:25:29] No, they weren't. [00:25:30] You have 20 seconds to comply. [00:25:36] I need some apple pie. [00:25:39] The point is this. [00:25:41] Don't be afraid to believe in yourself. [00:25:43] That's the message today. [00:25:46] I should say a prayer now. [00:25:47] I have to ask forgiveness. [00:25:50] Walking is a microphone. [00:25:52] You obey the steps. [00:25:54] Measurable problems. [00:25:55] There are many jobs. [00:25:59] That's definitely worse than we pictured it in Ronesco. [00:26:07] Many jobs she can do. [00:26:08] She just lacks motivation. [00:26:10] What she needs is a kick in the pants and a nice cup of coffee to kick her into gear. [00:26:18] Okay, one more, one more, one more. [00:26:21] What are you guys doing in here? [00:26:22] It was a long night, Gerald. [00:26:24] We're doing an acupuncture wake-up. [00:26:25] Yeah. [00:26:26] What? [00:26:26] Ancient Chinese remedy. [00:26:28] No, here, try this. [00:26:30] You guys are insane. [00:26:31] Strange animal blend coffee food. [00:26:33] Yeah, I know. [00:26:33] I'm the one who hand-selected these beans. [00:26:35] 100% Arabica. [00:26:36] It's all we drink in the office. [00:26:38] It's a medium roast, but with a bold flavor that everyone can enjoy. [00:26:43] That's what I'm saying. [00:26:44] Josh, load it up. [00:26:46] Load it up. [00:26:47] My hand. [00:26:48] Hold on now. [00:26:49] Josh. [00:26:50] Josh. [00:26:50] No, Josh, You're supposed to drink it, Josh. [00:26:54] You ready? [00:26:54] Drink it. [00:26:55] You can't drink staples, Gerald. [00:26:57] Yeah, because then staples will get on the inside, but staples are an outside activity. [00:27:00] It's an outside activity. [00:27:02] Yeah, with the beans, too. [00:27:03] Yeah. [00:27:03] Okay. [00:27:04] You ready? [00:27:05] Yep. [00:27:06] You know what? [00:27:06] You know what? [00:27:08] Have fun, guys. [00:27:11] All right. [00:27:12] Ready? [00:27:12] Yeah. [00:27:13] Okay. [00:27:13] Wait, We have a nail gun out back. [00:27:17] Right. [00:27:22] Actually, we need to take this and then we can hit Gerald with it. [00:27:25] Ooh. [00:27:26] Go to blackoutcoffee.com/slash crowder. [00:27:29] Use the promo code Crowder for 20% off your first order and try the new exclusive Strange Animal Brew. [00:27:36] Yes, I chose the beans. [00:27:38] It is the blend that we drink here exclusively, and now I'm making it available to you. [00:27:44] Think coffee beans are heavy enough to knock them out? [00:27:49] What? [00:27:49] Sure, I actually probably could use a little more coffee this morning. [00:27:52] So use the promo code Crowder for 20% off. [00:27:54] It is what we drink here. [00:27:55] Send us your feedback. [00:27:56] It took a while to do it. [00:27:57] It's very hard. [00:27:58] Coffee is one of those things that you have to. [00:27:59] Yeah. [00:28:00] Because it's seasonal, just like with wine. [00:28:01] You know, you say it in an affected, prickish way. [00:28:03] Terroir. [00:28:04] What do you mean? [00:28:05] Well, I'm saying the beans, they're different from year to year, so you have to make a blend so it's consistent, but there are always going to be variances. [00:28:10] Yeah. [00:28:10] These guys make great coffee. === Child Care Affordability Crisis (15:09) === [00:28:12] Yeah. [00:28:12] You know what else is expensive? [00:28:16] And by expensive, the view means you shouldn't have them. [00:28:21] As a matter of fact, it's irresponsible to do so. [00:28:24] And here's one thing I want you guys and gals to keep in mind. [00:28:28] Those who've listened to the left for their whole life, particularly the shrieking feminist left, if you have taken their advice, has any of it made your life any better? [00:28:40] You know, people have often talked about with the presidential campaign, are you better off now than you were four years ago? [00:28:46] Has any advice from the left made your life any better when they tell you that you're a marginalized class, when they tell you that you can't get ahead, even though we have more class mobility than any other society, when they tell you that you are a victim, when they tell you that degeneracy is freedom? [00:29:06] Has any of it made your life better? [00:29:09] Because this is a big one. [00:29:11] And this kind of advice is reflected in birth rates. [00:29:15] It's reflected in marriage rates. [00:29:16] And our society is significantly weaker because people have bought it. [00:29:20] But those at the view are saying this blatantly and the quiet part, kind of quiet part, out loud, don't have kids because they're unaffordable and it's irresponsible. [00:29:31] I think it's just really reckless to be suggesting that people should have children when you now know in this country there's this affordability crisis and for a two-person household, a married household, you need over $400,000 for child care. [00:29:47] Over $400,000. [00:29:49] Most people don't make over $400,000. [00:29:52] So people think this woman's smart. [00:29:54] For people to be born into poverty, people not being able to feed those children, people not being able to educate those children, and people not being able to house those children at the same time this government is cutting all of the services that would allow people to have families and big families. [00:30:09] $400,000 for the lifetime of the child or what? [00:30:12] No, no. [00:30:13] A year? [00:30:13] It's a year. [00:30:14] It's an annual income exceeding $400,000 to afford childcare. [00:30:18] And I'm going to add annual all over the country, according to lending tree analysis. [00:30:24] Listen to this. [00:30:24] No, it's not. [00:30:25] She's encouraging. [00:30:26] She's saying don't have any thought about what you're doing. [00:30:30] Yes, be thoughtful before you have a care. [00:30:33] Correct. [00:30:33] You should be thoughtful before you have a kid. [00:30:36] And Isabel, you want to talk to some of those red states about some of their laws about women because they're not really encouraging women to do anything except flee from them. [00:30:55] Oh, so you're saying red states are discouraging women from having kids by not allowing unfettered abortion? [00:31:04] It's almost like the policy prevents you from terminating your future child. [00:31:10] I don't know. [00:31:10] It's pretty tough to follow the logic on that one. [00:31:12] But you can't really fact check it because these are the kinds of lamentations that you only hear from the insane. [00:31:17] But key fact number one, because you just heard some stats there, go check the references. [00:31:21] We provide a bibliography every single show. [00:31:23] You, of course, do not need $400,000 a year to afford child care. [00:31:26] It's wrong on a multitude of levels. [00:31:29] So this is the study that the View was citing. [00:31:32] They misapplied this 7% of your income number, an affordability formula. [00:31:38] They misapplied it to the poorest families. [00:31:41] Well, it was really applying to poor families, and they applied it to all families across the United States. [00:31:46] Here's, let me break it down. [00:31:48] $28,000 a year average, right? [00:31:51] That's the most expensive, the most expensive childcare option for two children, okay? [00:31:57] In their own study, and they are suggesting that you should always be spending 7% of your income or allowing 7% of your income for childcare. [00:32:08] And that's how they get to $400,000 a year. [00:32:10] Does that make sense? [00:32:11] Yeah, that makes sense. [00:32:12] That's how they break it down. [00:32:13] It shows the highest average bracket there. [00:32:15] And then you should only max 7%. [00:32:17] It's like the engagement ring formula. [00:32:19] They're going, yeah, yeah. [00:32:20] They picked the most expensive one. [00:32:21] So you need to be making $400,000 a year. [00:32:23] And none of them just go, wait a second. [00:32:25] I mean, Ana Navarro, who used to be a Republican, kind of does. [00:32:29] She's like, wait, really? [00:32:30] And she's like, yes, good enough for me. [00:32:34] Go with your first instinct. [00:32:35] Now, keep in mind, 61%. [00:32:38] Yeah. [00:32:38] 61% of families in this country have no outside child care arrangements. [00:32:44] Only 8.4% use a daycare center. [00:32:48] To be clear, 2% bring their kid to work. [00:32:52] Now, yes, I'm not suggesting either. [00:32:58] Right? [00:32:58] You just split the difference. [00:33:02] And they'll try and tell you, like, yeah, well, those people are poor and therefore they're miserable. [00:33:06] And this is something you really do have to deprogram yourself. [00:33:10] This idea that wealth equals better child rearing, that wealth, that having material possessions will make a happier family. [00:33:19] Or that if you don't have a lot of money and you start your family early, you're going to financially struggle forevermore. [00:33:26] It's not worth it. [00:33:27] It's reckless. [00:33:29] We have a bunch of stats to prove that that's not true as well. [00:33:32] So here's key fact number two. [00:33:35] First off, we have the data, lower income and single household incomes or households with single incomes, meaning one primary earner. [00:33:44] They have more kids. [00:33:45] So the number of births per 1,000 women, if they're making under $10,000 a year, 63. [00:33:50] 25 to 35,000 a year, 59. [00:33:53] 200,000 a year or more, 48. [00:33:56] And I know, I know a lot of people are going to say, well, see, that's why we need abortion. [00:33:59] And if you want to support eugenics, okay, fine. [00:34:01] But we're not just talking about folks on welfare. [00:34:04] We are also talking about people who may live out in the country, people who may be homesteaders. [00:34:09] The only American families, as a matter of fact, who are above replacement rates. [00:34:14] And to be clear, that's a much bigger threat than climate change. [00:34:19] Everyone is acknowledging that now. [00:34:21] The only people above replacement rates are single-earner households. [00:34:26] So let me give you the birth rates of working married women. [00:34:29] Full-time working married women, 1.9. [00:34:31] Part-time, 2.3. [00:34:32] Not working, meaning they stay at home and don't use a daycare center, 2.4. [00:34:38] It goes up when you have someone at home with the children. [00:34:43] And I want you to just think of this. [00:34:45] Let's take a daycare. [00:34:46] Let's use their number, $28,000 a year. [00:34:50] Okay. [00:34:51] You stay home. [00:34:53] You save that money. [00:34:55] Not only that, you have more control, more time with the most important people in your life, your children, and you actually get to raise them. [00:35:06] Also, if you're home, you're able to support the primary earner who can actually dial in his focus and typically earn more income. [00:35:15] That's how it used to work, you know, since the beginning of time. [00:35:19] It's okay if you want to work instead of have kids. [00:35:23] It's okay if you juggle both. [00:35:26] But this idea that you need to do that in order for your children to have financial stability is just not true. [00:35:33] And a lot of people have bought this. [00:35:36] Let's go to key fact number three. [00:35:38] Beyond daycare, homeschooling is incredibly affordable. [00:35:42] And we've seen it explode in popularity since COVID. [00:35:45] Why? [00:35:46] Because a lot of people were deprogrammed from that previous lie. [00:35:49] Well, you got to go to school. [00:35:51] People won't be socialized properly if they're homeschooled. [00:35:53] Then we found out that actually it turns out homeschooled kids, if done correctly and they have a good social circle of friends and you take them out to activities, they're not identifying as a cat with green hair and a nose ring. [00:36:05] That's true. [00:36:07] And you get to spend more time with your children. [00:36:11] The average cost of homeschooling, about $700 to $1,800 a year. [00:36:16] Now, half, a lot of people go, well, that's nice if you have a ton of money. [00:36:20] Half of the households that homeschool earn less than $100,000 a year. [00:36:25] And they have three or more children on average in most cases. [00:36:30] Again, the data can be different depending on the year that you take. [00:36:32] Here's the other thing. [00:36:33] Okay, so, all right, we just wiped out the daycare costs. [00:36:37] We just wiped out the private school costs. [00:36:39] Homeschooling has very similar outcomes, if not better. [00:36:42] They're better. [00:36:43] Certainly better than public schools. [00:36:44] Okay, so it's a wash, public school, homeschool, and it's still cheaper because public school is anything but free when you add up all the costs and you add up the books and you add up the field trips and you add up having to go there often, eat at the cafeteria, uniforms, right? [00:36:56] You end up saving money homeschooling. [00:36:58] And the academic metrics obviously are better. [00:37:02] But here's something that's even more important. [00:37:03] Homeschooled children, they have significantly fewer behavioral issues. [00:37:08] And by the way, it's true for all income levels, all socioeconomic backgrounds. [00:37:13] They're less likely to have behavioral issues. [00:37:15] They're less likely to have mental health issues. [00:37:17] They're less likely to get an STD. [00:37:20] They're less likely to be sexually active very young over the span of their life. [00:37:23] They have fewer sexual partners. [00:37:25] They're less likely to be a criminal. [00:37:27] They are more likely to have successful relationships of their own. [00:37:31] They are more likely to have long-term, healthy, close relationships with their parents. [00:37:37] So these are all the things that aren't just quantified as far as income. [00:37:41] And if you have one earner or two earners. [00:37:45] So it is better for the children. [00:37:47] Okay. [00:37:48] Far better. [00:37:49] Much better. [00:37:50] Here's the other thing. [00:37:51] Key fact number four. [00:37:52] It's better for you. [00:37:55] It's better for you. [00:37:57] People with children are happier than people without. [00:38:01] And by the way, this applies to often people who are, you know, step parents, adopts, just to be clear. [00:38:06] I know that not everyone can have children. [00:38:08] It's about purpose. [00:38:10] It's about something other than yourself. [00:38:12] Think of it this way. [00:38:13] When you go and do charity work or you do a good deed expecting nothing in return, right? [00:38:19] You feel better selfishly. [00:38:22] Kids force you to do that all the time. [00:38:25] The first step towards being more selfless is a spouse, a wife, or a husband. [00:38:30] Now take that and add complete helplessness. [00:38:34] Children, when they're little are surprisingly easy to kill. [00:38:39] Sound that surprising. [00:38:40] Yeah. [00:38:40] I could have called it. [00:38:41] So you have to take care of everything and think of someone other than yourself. [00:38:46] Parents, those who have children, have better relationships with their family. [00:38:50] They have better mental health outcomes. [00:38:52] They have higher happiness rates, fulfillment, satisfaction. [00:38:56] They have better physical health compared to those in the same age bracket. [00:39:01] Now, I know it's not really fair to compare a 21-year-old who's single to a 45-year-old with kids, but those who are parents take two 35-year-olds off the street. [00:39:10] One is still single, one has kids. [00:39:13] Guess what? [00:39:13] He's going to be healthier. [00:39:14] She's going to be healthier. [00:39:16] They're going to have a better mental state. [00:39:18] They're going to be happier. [00:39:19] And they're going to have closer, more meaningful relationships. [00:39:22] And your kids are going to be better off. [00:39:25] It's all predicated on this idea. [00:39:27] You look at New York, Bamdani saying, we are giving free child care, free daycare to all municipal employees. [00:39:35] The starting off point is you should give your kids to the state. [00:39:39] Right. [00:39:40] Look how benevolent we are. [00:39:42] The state will take your children for eight hours a day. [00:39:46] And people at the view, really any female commentator, any female commentator that you see has to parrot that, including those on the right. [00:39:55] Why? [00:39:56] Because they don't want to say, yeah, I'm doing it wrong and someone else is raising my kids. [00:40:01] The people who would be giving you the advice that would be in line with better outcomes across the board, out of necessity, don't have a public platform because they're focusing on their family and their kids. [00:40:13] But let me ask you this. [00:40:14] I want you to think of every woman who you've known who's been inspiring, where people go like, oh man, they don't make them like that anymore. [00:40:20] She was a really strong woman. [00:40:22] Is it a boss, babe, or is it usually grandma? [00:40:25] Is it usually someone who took care of the family? [00:40:27] Is it usually someone who bent over backwards to help other people in the family? [00:40:31] Is it usually someone you went to when you needed a listening ear? [00:40:36] Yeah, those are the women we admire. [00:40:38] Those are not the women who you are going to hear from on the view or really anywhere with a video, video, podcast, stream, Twitch, whatever it is. [00:40:47] So it becomes really hard for that message to get out, even though the facts do not lie. [00:40:52] They are irrefutable across the board. [00:40:55] The totality of evidence is undeniable. [00:40:57] Please go check out the references and we provide them every, you know, every weekday, 11 a.m. Eastern. [00:41:01] Yeah, what you'll see if you watch the rest of the video, the video they were commenting on, they completely missed the point. [00:41:05] Right. [00:41:06] The video they were commenting on, I think was from CPAC. [00:41:08] It was a roundtable or like a panel of people where they said, basically, like, don't wait until you can afford it. [00:41:14] Or I think she said have kids even when you can't afford it because you can afford it. [00:41:19] You just don't think that you can. [00:41:20] Don't wait till everything's perfect. [00:41:21] It will never be perfect. [00:41:22] You're ready. [00:41:22] It's fine. [00:41:23] You're married and you guys ready to go. [00:41:25] Go. [00:41:26] Don't let anything prioritize family. [00:41:29] That was the message. [00:41:30] Work your life around family. [00:41:31] I'm not speaking from a position of privilege. [00:41:34] I don't have my little card I'm going to hold up. [00:41:36] I had a dad who worked and a mom who stayed home. [00:41:39] We were very poor. [00:41:40] We moved 10 times before I graduated high school and we weren't in the military. [00:41:43] And it wasn't by choice. [00:41:45] It was out of necessity. [00:41:46] I had an amazing childhood because I had my mom at home. [00:41:50] It wasn't like we were earning tons and tons of money and just rolling in the dough. [00:41:54] It turns out kids can be very happy and families can be very happy without being wealthy. [00:41:58] Poor people around the world have children all the time and don't make $400,000 a year. [00:42:03] What you're missing, the 7% is like, don't ever let childcare be above 7%. [00:42:08] In fact, you know, it would be better if it was zero. [00:42:11] Yeah. [00:42:11] Zero would be better. [00:42:13] That's what Lending Tree was trying to tell people in their article. [00:42:17] And you guys took it like, wow, I got to make $400,000 a year. [00:42:20] Let me just do some math for you ladies really quickly. [00:42:22] If you make $80,000 a year, your take-home pay and this child care number will roughly be about $30,000. [00:42:27] Split it up, right? [00:42:28] $28,000 turns out to be about $40,000 before taxes. [00:42:32] That's what you're getting paid. [00:42:33] Let's double that. [00:42:34] You're trading, getting your child up before they're ready to get up because you know when they're early, early on in life, they don't want to get up by 9 o'clock. [00:42:41] They want to get up at like 10. [00:42:43] They want to get up at 9.30. [00:42:44] They don't want to get up at five so that you can take them and drop them off in a stranger's arms and then go to work, come back at five o'clock, not having seen their parents all day long, getting indoctrinated by God knows what from who knows who you can afford. [00:42:57] And you come back in to their life for a couple of hours every single day for $28,000 a year. [00:43:05] No kid signs up for that. [00:43:06] Why the hell are we doing it? [00:43:07] And that's an 80,000. [00:43:09] That's not doing poorly. [00:43:10] That's doing very well. [00:43:12] Why are we not encouraging women to do the most fulfilling thing that you could possibly ever do? [00:43:18] You've been given the gift of producing life. === Prioritizing Family Over Career (06:46) === [00:43:21] Yeah. [00:43:22] Cherish it. [00:43:24] It really is. [00:43:25] And I'll tell you, I bought the lie. [00:43:27] I thought I had to wait because I was in media. [00:43:30] I thought it was. [00:43:30] I was like, oh, well, yeah, you don't have to have to. [00:43:32] I don't want to do a disservice to these kids. [00:43:35] And you know what else too? [00:43:37] It's important because if men heard this messaging, if they felt like they had teammates, they'd probably be less scared to have kids earlier as well. [00:43:46] Because a lot of men out there, if they're young men, their fear is being missed your mom right away, working all day, coming home, and then it's, ah, you're home. [00:43:53] Here you go. [00:43:53] I'm off duty. [00:43:55] You both have jobs. [00:43:56] If you have one earner and one person staying home, those are both of your jobs. [00:44:01] And I know people say, well, yeah, I don't get to check out. [00:44:03] I'll hear that a lot. [00:44:04] We don't get to check. [00:44:05] We don't get a day off. [00:44:06] No, but you do get breaks when the kids go play a soccer game. [00:44:10] They can take a nap when they're young. [00:44:12] You can have them watch a movie. [00:44:15] If you have more than one kid, they can play with each other. [00:44:18] That man's coming home where he gets maybe 30 minutes for lunch. [00:44:21] And you know what? [00:44:22] Yeah, you support each other, but understand you both treat it like a job. [00:44:26] And why would you treat it any less importantly than a job? [00:44:30] I remember being in school one time, and this was junior high school, I guess, or middle school, we call it in Canada. [00:44:36] And I remember we had this kind of this class. [00:44:40] I don't know what you call it, syllabus. [00:44:41] I think it was either Father's Day or Mother's Day. [00:44:43] And I remember my homeroom teacher saying, because the most important thing is, you know, family. [00:44:48] And in the place where I went Centennial, sometimes your homeroom teacher, you'd have homeroom, and they could teach anywhere from two to three of your classes. [00:44:54] So I remember I'd be in front of this teacher maybe three, four hours a day. [00:44:58] And I'd go to school, it would start at nine. [00:45:00] We'd only be out at about four. [00:45:02] She said this, and I remember thinking, I see you more every day than I see anyone in my family. [00:45:11] So it seems to me like family isn't the most important thing. [00:45:15] Most important thing is school because that's how my whole day is laid out. [00:45:20] And I was fortunate in that, you know, I had parents who kind of shifted back and forth between who was working more hours, but they always made it a priority to be there when I was done with school. [00:45:30] And I had friends who would, okay, from depending if it was grade school, 8.30 to 4,000, then 9 to 4, then they were at daycare until 6 or 7 o'clock. [00:45:39] I did it once or twice when there were some emergencies and I stayed at daycare. [00:45:42] It was kind of fun. [00:45:42] It was kind of an event. [00:45:43] It was a novelty. [00:45:44] But I remember thinking, man, they're never home. [00:45:47] Yeah. [00:45:48] Half hour. [00:45:48] They're family. [00:45:49] They have a half hour with their parents. [00:45:50] Eat, do homework real fast, hour, go to bed. [00:45:53] That has never been the case throughout all of human civilization until really the 1960s. [00:46:00] And that is the problem. [00:46:01] Right. [00:46:02] The solution isn't make it free so everybody can do this. [00:46:05] The solution is burn it down. [00:46:07] Yeah, make sure. [00:46:08] This is when I'm an accelerationist. [00:46:09] 100%. [00:46:10] Burn it down. [00:46:11] I'm sorry. [00:46:11] It's unaffordable. [00:46:12] Think about people that are making 50K a year. [00:46:15] A woman making $50,000 a year going, okay, because I'm making that $50,000, I now have to spend $28,000 of my take-home pay after taxes on childcare. [00:46:24] They're making like less than $1,000 a month in take-home pay. [00:46:27] Not $28,000, though. [00:46:29] No, I'm saying just that number. [00:46:30] It's like, you know, it can vary from. [00:46:32] Yeah, but it's still $50,000. [00:46:34] It's averagely. [00:46:35] It's used for an infant and a four-year-old, and that's the metric they used because infants are more money because they take more to take care of. [00:46:41] It's between $10,000 and $20,000 is the national average for that. [00:46:46] Well, and you know what else? [00:46:47] Still a lot of money. [00:46:48] Yeah. [00:46:48] It is. [00:46:48] Yeah. [00:46:48] It's a significant amount of money. [00:46:49] You know what else? [00:46:50] If you are homeschooling your kids and if one of you is staying home, that means you probably come from a familial culture where the grandparents did that and you probably have grandparents who would love to spend time with the kids. [00:47:03] You probably have relatives. [00:47:04] Think about every movie that we watch as kids. [00:47:06] It's like, I just want to get out of this town. [00:47:08] I just want to get out of this small town and spread my wings. [00:47:10] Let me get away from my family. [00:47:12] Let me get away from stability. [00:47:14] Let me get away from this support structure. [00:47:18] Why? [00:47:18] Like, that's the exact opposite. [00:47:20] I mean, I'm not saying that you have to be like a Bangladeshi where you have 16 generations living in a bungalow. [00:47:25] No, even one is bad enough. [00:47:28] It depends. [00:47:29] Yeah. [00:47:30] I got to push back on that a little bit because my parents both work. [00:47:35] Those would be my kids' grandparents, both in their 60s, both work, both have to work. [00:47:39] My wife's parents both at around 60, both have to work. [00:47:44] Sure. [00:47:45] But the question is why? [00:47:46] And there's a lot of reasons that are very legitimate. [00:47:48] Pay their bills. [00:47:49] No, but why? [00:47:51] Why do we have the bills that we have? [00:47:52] Why do we have the lifestyle that we have? [00:47:54] That's the question that a lot of, and listen, I get it. [00:47:57] Like, trust me, I came from a family where we just did without a whole lot to be able to make that work. [00:48:03] But my parents prioritized family to me. [00:48:06] And I'm not saying you're not if you're doing it because, you know, my sister works and her husband works. [00:48:10] I get it. [00:48:11] They both work. [00:48:12] My mom and my dad worked for a very long time after we were in school and after we were more out of the house. [00:48:17] We went to public school. [00:48:18] Like I totally understand that. [00:48:19] I mean, I have a lot of compassion for that. [00:48:21] You can't fix this if you don't prioritize from a very early position. [00:48:26] Prioritize family. [00:48:28] So make all of your life decisions based on wanting to have a family and being able to stay home if you can. [00:48:33] And there are situations where maybe you can't. [00:48:36] That's the thing. [00:48:37] I agree, Josh. [00:48:37] I'm just saying like. [00:48:38] I will say both my parents and my wife's parents are divorced. [00:48:42] So they got divorced different times. [00:48:44] But they are all single. [00:48:47] Yeah, except my dad. [00:48:48] They're all single. [00:48:49] Yeah. [00:48:50] That makes sense. [00:48:51] So yeah, they have to provide for themselves. [00:48:52] And that does make it more difficult in situations or, you know, whatever doesn't, that's not important. [00:48:57] Think about anytime you sit, you have a board meeting, you have a company retreat, or probably sending in the military, right? [00:49:01] You go, okay, what are the priorities? [00:49:02] You should have a chart or you have a triangle or maybe you have primary objectives and you have secondary objectives, right? [00:49:07] You start off with what is most important. [00:49:08] Okay, you're starting a family. [00:49:10] What is most important? [00:49:11] People are going, how to support it financially? [00:49:14] Most important should be the family. [00:49:16] You want to be a family. [00:49:18] You want to remain a family. [00:49:19] You want to prioritize family. [00:49:21] Time in a relationship is most important. [00:49:23] And everything else supports that. [00:49:26] Instead, we go, okay, well, this is my life. [00:49:28] How do I fit family into it? [00:49:30] Right. [00:49:30] And then wonder why it doesn't work. [00:49:32] Because it does require work, but it's also incredibly rewarding. [00:49:38] It'll always be more rewarding than anything else you do, by the way. [00:49:41] Literally more rewarding for the vast majority of people than being a billionaire. [00:49:45] It wouldn't be rewarding if it was no work. [00:49:48] Right. [00:49:48] And you were just sitting around all day, you know, trust fun baby or whatever. [00:49:52] Yeah. [00:49:53] You don't have to do anything all day. [00:49:54] I mean, you get bored. [00:49:55] Yeah. [00:49:56] Yep. [00:49:57] You got to do something. [00:49:58] Yep. [00:49:58] And if you have a, you have a family, even if you're poor, you're going to be happier, healthier, and have longer relationships that are more meaningful. === Biblical Aspect Of Pride (14:55) === [00:50:07] Those are the stats. [00:50:08] Go check the references. [00:50:08] And speaking of being healthier, hey, the only other company they've ever created, Foundation, it's a daily multivitamin with clinically effective ingredients at the clinically effective doses. [00:50:18] Everything on the label is transparent, lab-tested, where what's on the label is exactly what you get. [00:50:22] You can go read the clinical data on the website. [00:50:25] I've been taking these things for a very long time. [00:50:28] Most supplements are complete and total crap. [00:50:30] We have a bunch of people who come to us and say, hey, will you run an ad for this? [00:50:33] The answer is no, because it's complete and total crap. [00:50:36] What's in here, you actually have to probably take all these. [00:50:39] It's got multivitamin, vitamin D, vitamin K2, magnesium, cure cumulum, which is anti-inflammatory, and garlic for heart health. [00:50:45] And it's all proven and affordable. [00:50:47] You can actually subscribe now at foundationdaily.com and get 40% off for life. [00:50:53] This is the only other company, and I don't need to sell you a bunch of other random supplements. [00:50:56] If you have a perfect diet, you don't need it. [00:50:58] Do it. [00:50:59] Don't be gay. [00:50:59] It helps. [00:51:00] All right. [00:51:02] Next one here. [00:51:03] Now, you know that I don't know a whole lot about basketball. [00:51:05] It's okay. [00:51:06] So I wasn't super familiar. [00:51:07] Well, you played. [00:51:08] You play street hockey on basketball courts. [00:51:10] So there's your connection. [00:51:11] My deducts, you're good. [00:51:12] Yes, that's right. [00:51:13] Okay. [00:51:13] Because we all know that black kids in South Central are playing street hockey. [00:51:18] Yeah, yeah, yeah. [00:51:19] Revolutionizing hockey. [00:51:20] Yes, that's true. [00:51:21] Yeah, with the knuckle puck. [00:51:22] The knuckle puck. [00:51:22] They revolutionized it the way that North Koreans revolutionized combat training. [00:51:26] Do you have one of those hockey pucks that had the wheels on it because you don't have any snow or ice? [00:51:30] Yeah, it's called street. [00:51:31] It's called a street puck. [00:51:32] Yeah, we didn't really use it on the street, though, so much because you kind of need to use it on a more even surface. [00:51:36] Smooth. [00:51:37] So we had the orange ball. [00:51:38] We had the sterilizer. [00:51:39] Noodles knows what I'm talking about. [00:51:41] The ball. [00:51:44] Yes. [00:51:44] I took out a bank window with one of those. [00:51:46] Dang. [00:51:47] Jeez. [00:51:47] Yeah, I took out a basement apartment window with one of those. [00:51:50] I remember shaking going to my grandfather. [00:51:52] Was the land. [00:51:53] He was the super, and he was the one who had to inform Monsieur Simal, who was a drunk. [00:51:57] He would come out, wax his car, and just drunkenly yell at kids. [00:52:00] Oh, you didn't have to admit to anything. [00:52:02] That guy, he's clueless. [00:52:04] He might have thought he did that. [00:52:05] Yeah. [00:52:06] I was drunk. [00:52:07] Yeah. [00:52:08] I remember one time he was so drunk, my dad asked me, he's like, he's like, yeah, I was taking my lunch. [00:52:14] Oh, yeah, what'd you have? [00:52:17] Hamburger. [00:52:20] So we quoted that for a decade. [00:52:22] Hamburger. [00:52:23] He was such a drunk. [00:52:24] I remember as a kid being like, no one's going to. [00:52:26] This is a drunken old man yelling at kids. [00:52:28] One time he took my hockey stick off the ground and he chased me with it. [00:52:31] I'm like, this is scary. [00:52:36] I love the idea of your dad watching and just laughing. [00:52:40] He'll never get it. [00:52:42] He's just drunk. [00:52:43] So I've told you this. [00:52:45] A lot of people who think, like, hey, the woke left, the progressive left, it's conquered. [00:52:49] And so everything's the same now. [00:52:50] And let's burn it all down. [00:52:51] It's not dead. [00:52:52] It's really just kind of in a zombified state. [00:52:55] It's like the movie Flatliners. [00:52:57] It's going to come back. [00:52:58] And it'll come back with a vengeance if you don't stay on top of it. [00:53:01] So right now, we see more proof positive of this. [00:53:05] And you kind of have to look to the sort of microcosms. [00:53:08] If you want to speak up, for example, in the NBA, where it seemingly would make sense, you're just going to get banned. [00:53:15] If you want to speak up, you're getting banned now. [00:53:18] You got a worldview other than woke. [00:53:21] And you get banned. [00:53:23] We didn't demand you. [00:53:24] You are dancing. [00:53:27] All right. [00:53:30] Another childhood classic ruined. [00:53:32] All right. [00:53:34] So the Chicago Bulls, as happened yesterday, they fired, released their combo guard, Jaden Ivey. [00:53:40] Now, here's what's important. [00:53:41] I know people out there, you're going to start changing the dialogue and say, well, he wasn't that good or he had other issues. [00:53:46] Yeah, but this is why they released him, according to their own words. [00:53:51] This is the reason listed. [00:53:52] So we need to address that. [00:53:54] They said that it was, quote, conduct detrimental to the team, detrimental to the team. [00:54:00] I don't know what you're thinking. [00:54:01] Like, ah, he beat the hell out of his girlfriend in an elevator or like tried to stab his baby mama with a butter dish, whatever it is. [00:54:07] He won't pass to his teammates. [00:54:08] Right. [00:54:09] He's constantly fouling people. [00:54:10] No, it was an opinion that he expressed. [00:54:12] And here is the vile rant/slash opinion in question. [00:54:19] The world can proclaim LGBTQ. [00:54:24] Canceled. [00:54:26] Right? [00:54:27] They have, they have, they proclaim Pride Month and the NBA. [00:54:33] They proclaim it, They show it to the world. [00:54:39] They say, come, come, come join us for Pride, for Pride Month, to celebrate unrighteousness. [00:54:51] They proclaim it. [00:54:57] They proclaim it on the billboards. [00:55:00] They proclaim it in the streets. [00:55:02] Unrighteousness. [00:55:07] So how is it that one can't speak righteousness? [00:55:10] How is it one that, how are they to say that you, man, this man is crazy? [00:55:18] Now, you may disagree with his opinion. [00:55:21] Fine, but let me ask you, is that egregious or hateful enough that warrants him being released? [00:55:26] Right. [00:55:28] I said not. [00:55:30] Exactly. [00:55:30] And that's how you know it's coming from the top down. [00:55:32] It's not coming from the fans. [00:55:33] It's not coming from the viewers. [00:55:34] Well, this guy has to go. [00:55:35] So according to some inside sources, comes from ESPN, they said this is a long time coming because Ivy was outspoken about his religious beliefs in Detroit, but his intensity ratcheted up during his tenure in Chicago, which agitated some team staff members who described him as preachy around the locker room. [00:55:51] His social media rants often lasted nearly an hour and ventured into a variety of topics, including depression, about how he also used to be wicked and how he's been redeemed and a Christian. [00:56:02] And of course, he discussed abortion. [00:56:04] And in this case, though, the straw that broke the camel's back is he's against Pride Month, which this is how you know the left will never stop pushing. [00:56:14] If you were to just in the 90s, the 80s, go speak with the MVPs, the all-stars of the NBA, and say, yeah, people are going to be fired for not celebrating a homosexual month. [00:56:28] Yeah. [00:56:30] I go, what? [00:56:32] But how is this jump shot? [00:56:33] Yeah. [00:56:34] You also, I guarantee you didn't want to hear their opinions on LGBTQAIP, very much like you don't want to hear the opinions of almost any black man in America, but we just ignore that kind of like the left ignores Islam itself, because when opinions are inconvenient in the marginalized class, you just sort of skim over it. [00:56:51] So the coach for the Bulls, Billy Donovan, again, this is the reason they said that he was let go. [00:56:57] He tried to kind of sidestep it, but here you go. [00:57:01] Here's him addressing it. [00:57:02] Everything that building, it's always been, I think, who's been from the top. [00:57:08] Like, we're all going to work well together. [00:57:10] You know, we're all going to basically take care of each other. [00:57:12] We're going to accept each other. [00:57:14] I think we're going to be hardworking. [00:57:16] We're going to be accountable. [00:57:17] And we're going to be respectful. [00:57:18] And we're going to be professional. [00:57:20] I know some of the things that he put out there. [00:57:24] You know, I think it's a situation for him where, you know, it's on his own personal Instagram. [00:57:30] I don't want to get into what he put out there, but certainly I hope for him, you know, he's okay. [00:57:37] I don't know, you know, like I've had conversations with Jaden and stuff, and he's been always about reheaving his knee and trying to bring the court and what to play. [00:57:46] But I think organizationally, there's certain standards I think we want to have as an organization and try to live up to those each and every day. [00:57:52] Ah. [00:57:53] Live up to it. [00:57:54] Yes. [00:57:54] Non-answer. [00:57:55] Certain standards. [00:57:56] Yeah. [00:57:57] Standards that didn't result in someone's release. [00:58:00] Jackson Hayes, 2021, arrested, pleaded no contest for domestic violence. [00:58:05] Short suspension. [00:58:06] No punishment from the NBA. [00:58:07] 2022, Kyrie Irving suspended eight games for anti-Semitic film that he promoted, Hebrews to Negroes, which sounds bad coming out of my mouth. [00:58:17] 2022, Miles Bridges served only 10 of a 30-game suspension, again, for domestic violence. [00:58:22] I think you're noticing a trend. [00:58:23] 2023, John Morant, who was suspended after flashing his guns like a couple of times on Instagram live. [00:58:31] Multiple times. [00:58:32] Multiple times. [00:58:33] A lot of trouble did it again. [00:58:34] Yeah. [00:58:35] And here's how you also, I want to run some other clips here. [00:58:37] You just saw the coach and Emmanuel Acho also came out and commented on this. [00:58:43] This is not coming from the viewers. [00:58:45] No. [00:58:46] I get it. [00:58:47] Look, I think it's silly, but I get that at the DNC, they have to cater to the lowest common denominator, right? [00:58:51] Because Doge Walker might stroll through the doors. [00:58:54] So they have to act as though they care. [00:58:57] But this is not coming from the NBA viewers, just like it wasn't coming from the NFL viewers when you had the kneel during the national anthem. [00:59:04] The viewership of the NBA, it's 60% male. [00:59:07] Males in this country support Republicans by a very, very, very wide margin, to be clear. [00:59:12] 26% of the viewers are black. [00:59:15] That's more than the general population. [00:59:17] Two-thirds of black Americans believe that homosexuality is always wrong. [00:59:23] And what's funny is I know that's an older stat because I couldn't find a newer one, but it remained pretty much unchanged over the course of two, three decades. [00:59:30] You can check out that reference. [00:59:32] So this idea that what he's saying is such an affront to the viewers, the people who buy tickets, the people who tune in, no. [00:59:40] This is how you know it's social engineering. [00:59:42] For more proof, you can even look at the NHL, by the way, for Pride Month for the named Nashville Predators. [00:59:50] It's like no one had a meeting at one point said, this probably isn't going to go well. [00:59:55] A, because our name is Predators. [00:59:58] B, because it's Tennessee. [01:00:00] Yes, we're the gay predators. [01:00:01] Yes. [01:00:02] We're very proud of it. [01:00:04] Did you see their logo? [01:00:04] They just took the predator and they just put a pair of pedophile glasses on it. [01:00:07] Oh, that's all it was. [01:00:08] Yeah. [01:00:09] And a weird mustache. [01:00:10] It's pretty close, at least. [01:00:11] So there's a difference between, yeah, I know. [01:00:14] There's a difference between people will say, oh, you know, freedom of speech does not mean freedom from consequences. [01:00:20] But if you are an athlete or you are an entertainer and people are choosing to buy a ticket or people are choosing to watch you, they should be the ones determining barring actual criminal behavior if your words or your opinions are impermissible. [01:00:37] That is not what is happening. [01:00:39] Anywhere the left achieves institutional power, free speech dies. [01:00:46] It's not a bug, it's a feature. [01:00:48] You look at academia. [01:00:49] You look at the entertainment industry. [01:00:50] You look at media. [01:00:51] The problem is those same entertainment industry and media types are the ones often pushing the pencils with these athletic organizations. [01:00:59] They are not representative of the people who are tuning in on a Sunday. [01:01:03] So I say that to keep in mind as you watch all these other commentators, you just saw the coach and go, oh, these people, there's actually a huge disconnect with them and the people who want to watch basketball. [01:01:14] Bring in Acho taking issue with the comments and gross. [01:01:19] I don't want to say misinterpretations. [01:01:21] He just says a bunch of stuff that's not, it's irrelevant or not in there. [01:01:26] Now let me talk about the biblical aspect of it. [01:01:30] Because Jaden Ivey also has to understand that not everything that's legal is going to be biblical. [01:01:35] Render to Caesar what is Caesar's. [01:01:38] Also have to understand, you have to be wise, discerning, and tactful as to how you speak and when you speak and who you speak to. [01:01:44] What's the Bible say about sodomy? [01:01:46] Paul and Corinthians, Paul wrote what he wrote to the church in Corinth. [01:01:50] He didn't necessarily write what he wrote to the church in Ephesus or the church in Galatia. [01:01:53] In the same manner, Jayden Ivey, you got to use discernment of when you speak and who you're speaking to. [01:01:57] If your job and your goal is to emulate Jesus, also understand when Jesus saw the woman who had committed adultery, he said, go and sin no more. [01:02:05] He didn't then try to extrapolate every single sin and every single man she has slept with adulterously. [01:02:10] Yeah, it's covered under the umbrella. [01:02:12] Don't do any of that. [01:02:12] One actually, he did, though. [01:02:14] Understand the difference between legal and biblical. [01:02:16] Two, Jaden Ivey, make sure you tend to your mental and emotional health if indeed there is anything going on because you have been very vulnerable about your struggles previously. [01:02:24] And then three, render to Caesar what is Caesar's and render to God what's God's. [01:02:28] That's biblical if you want to talk biblically. [01:02:30] I want to go to Joe, but they pivot to mental health. [01:02:33] I'm like, well, look, this person may be mentally ill. [01:02:36] Won't do that for a tranny, by the way, who shows up with a titty job. [01:02:41] But a guy who says this is unrighteous, and where could he get that from? [01:02:44] I don't know, watch any gay pride parade anywhere, watch any Pride Month, watch when they bring out drag queens to perform the national anthem. [01:02:51] Like, where could he possibly get that this is a little bit degenerate? [01:02:55] Yeah, and they had the, they won't, they great, they won't say anything to a trans person for the same exact thing, and they had similar backgrounds to a lot of you know, self-proclaimed. [01:03:04] I don't know if you know, but he admitted that he had mentioned he'd been sexually abused as a child, not by a woman, uh, and he gone through some other things. [01:03:14] Yeah, yeah, he's, he's had it, he's released, and the uh, the actual, the ones who celebrate degeneracy, they get a parade. [01:03:20] Yeah, it's not about it, so listen, really quickly, just to sum this up, Emmanuel Acha, you made a really good point before in that clip, and we cut it for time because we don't have enough time to do it, but you said your talent makes room for you. [01:03:30] You should have shut up after that because the rest of what you said is absolute garbage. [01:03:35] Because the husband thing with the woman at the Welsh, he goes, Where's your husband? [01:03:39] I don't have a husband right now. [01:03:40] Jesus said, You're right. [01:03:42] You had five husbands, and the guy you're sleeping with right now isn't your husband. [01:03:46] So it looks like he brought up all of her indiscretions in the past to say, don't do this anymore. [01:03:52] He called her out on all of her sins. [01:03:53] So you're factually incorrect there. [01:03:55] And to say that the letter to the Corinthians written by Paul does not apply to the other churches means that Timothy needs to have a word with you because he said, all scripture is God-breathed and useful for reproof and correction. [01:04:05] It goes on and on and on. [01:04:06] That is completely anti-biblical to say, oh, well, that was just for the Corinthians, man. [01:04:11] That doesn't apply to any of the other churches, much less us today. [01:04:14] You cannot believe in the Bible being applicable to anybody under those circumstances. [01:04:19] You can just make up your own rules then, I guess. [01:04:21] Jesus didn't say it to me. [01:04:23] He said it to Paul. [01:04:24] Or, sorry, in a dream. [01:04:26] He said it to Mark, Matthew, anybody else. [01:04:29] It's not to me. [01:04:30] That's the worst. [01:04:31] He's a pastor's kid. [01:04:33] I wonder what kind of pastor father he had. [01:04:36] Well, the real lesson there is that when people get offended, Jesus asked about the lady's body count. [01:04:40] He did. [01:04:41] He really did. [01:04:42] Like, hey, how many again? [01:04:43] That's right. [01:04:44] Yeah. [01:04:44] You not only don't have one. [01:04:45] Is it five? [01:04:46] It's five. [01:04:47] Which in Jesus' time, my time, is quite a few. [01:04:51] He called her out. [01:04:52] Yeah. [01:04:53] Yeah. [01:04:54] So anyway, I'm sorry. [01:04:54] That's just on the, if y'all want to talk about biblical stuff, we can get into biblical stuff. [01:04:58] That's what he said. [01:04:59] His religion is leftism. [01:05:00] His religion is liberalism. [01:05:01] And here's the thing. [01:05:02] He's going to keep a job. [01:05:02] Yeah. === Acceptance Versus Correction (06:57) === [01:05:03] Well, here's what it is, too. [01:05:04] He lost his last job for banging a coworker. [01:05:06] Ah, okay. [01:05:06] Well, you know, but at least there was the acceptance. [01:05:09] It really comes down to this when you go, oh, wait a second. [01:05:11] Why celebrate the trans thing? [01:05:13] Wait, wait a second. [01:05:14] Why jail people, for example, in Canada for speaking out against Islam? [01:05:18] It really comes down to the only thing that is tolerable from the left, their religion, their idol, is acceptance. [01:05:27] That's all it is. [01:05:29] It's acceptance versus sound judgment. [01:05:33] It's acceptance versus correction. [01:05:35] As long as you accept, you're in line with dogma. [01:05:39] If you have any convictions whatsoever and you correct, that's what's impermissible. [01:05:45] And they'll do this. [01:05:45] They'll apply it across the board. [01:05:47] Can't correct women. [01:05:49] You don't have a vagina. [01:05:51] It's none of your business unless you're a trans. [01:05:52] And of course, men can get periods too. [01:05:56] You can't correct LGBTQAIP. [01:05:59] Well, you don't know what it's like. [01:06:00] You're not allowed to. [01:06:02] You can't correct Black Lives Matter. [01:06:04] Hold on a second. [01:06:05] That's actually not correct. [01:06:06] Sit down, shut up. [01:06:08] All right, then I guess I'll just have to silence is violence. [01:06:12] It's a religion where the virtue to trump all other virtues is acceptance. [01:06:17] That's why this country and the Western world has accepted the absurd. [01:06:24] We've accepted the unacceptable. [01:06:26] No one is talking about throwing people with a lisp off a rooftop. [01:06:32] Like all these countries that you say, by the way, are beautiful and peaceful and have their own culture. [01:06:35] You know, Iran, you know, Afghanistan. [01:06:39] We're just talking about, well, hold on a second. [01:06:40] People have moral convictions and don't believe that this is in line with their Christian faith. [01:06:45] And by the way, it wouldn't be in line with even secular worldviews for a very long time because we understood that rampant promiscuity or sexual degeneracy may not be ideal for your soul. [01:06:57] Acceptance is the only acceptable, ironically, outcome for the left. [01:07:04] Any type of judgment, any type of criticism. [01:07:08] How do you know? [01:07:08] They say so. [01:07:09] Tolerance. [01:07:10] It means acceptance. [01:07:12] Tolerance doesn't mean, okay, you live and I live. [01:07:14] It means you will be forced to care. [01:07:17] You will bake the gay wedding cakes. [01:07:20] You will support the transition of children versus criticism or don't judge me. [01:07:29] How do you run a society that way? [01:07:30] The answer is you can't. [01:07:32] You don't. [01:07:34] That's why you have places like Canada and Europe or the DNC. [01:07:41] It's silly. [01:07:42] It's a circus. [01:07:43] It's a freak show because acceptance above all else cannot work. [01:07:48] You have to have judgment. [01:07:50] Acceptance has to be married with discernment. [01:07:55] You accept the good, you correct the bad. [01:07:58] They only accept one half of that. [01:08:00] That's the only way that man can reconcile his words with his so-called faith. [01:08:06] And by the way, we'll get to Canada in a second, where they're basically, it's a roundabout way to render Christianity illegal, which will be met with thunderous applause from the Anglican church in Canada. [01:08:20] So Ivy himself, before we get to that, finally did respond. [01:08:24] They said, my conduct is detrimental to the team, right? [01:08:28] Why didn't they just say, we don't agree with his stance on LGBTQ? [01:08:34] Why didn't they say that? [01:08:37] How is it conduct detrimental to the team? [01:08:39] What did I do to the team? [01:08:40] What did I do to the players? [01:08:42] I did nothing but practice with them, play with them, pass the ball to them, good teammate to them. [01:08:49] Said, good job, good shot. [01:08:53] I said, good job, good job, good pass. [01:08:57] Way to play, bro. [01:08:59] Right? [01:09:00] I said these things to my teammates. [01:09:02] It was never detrimental to them. [01:09:05] So why is it that the NBA and the Chicago Bulls say that I'm detrimental to the team? [01:09:10] How? [01:09:12] Because I believe in the truth? [01:09:15] Because I know Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life. [01:09:19] You know what? [01:09:20] And maybe this guy does have some other issues. [01:09:22] Hey, lots of people do. [01:09:24] It's professional sports. [01:09:26] Why wouldn't they say that? [01:09:27] Just, you know what? [01:09:28] Just chalk it up to being his truth. [01:09:30] Live and let live, right? [01:09:32] Even if you don't accept it as the truth. [01:09:35] Just say it's his truth. [01:09:37] You got to play the rules evenly. [01:09:38] And I know we need to move on, but if Steve Kerr can go out there and go on tirades like he does and talk politically like he does, then somebody on the right should be able to say, why are we doing this? [01:09:48] This unrighteousness? [01:09:49] Why are we doing a month of this? [01:09:50] I don't get it. [01:09:51] I mean, Emmanuel Lacho, he's one of these guys that he's been a Colin Kaepernick simp in the past. [01:09:57] Right. [01:09:57] And it's like, well, you can't, you can't be outraged that Colin Kaepernick can't get a job in the NFL while simultaneously being like, yeah, well, that's what you get. [01:10:06] Right. [01:10:06] When it's something that you don't agree with. [01:10:09] Yeah. [01:10:10] And one is opinion, which, by the way, is in line with the Christian faith and has been for a very long time, as you see with this man. [01:10:16] And the other was literally misinformation from Colin Kaepernick about the history of slavery, about mistreatment of black athletes. [01:10:24] The NFL saw a huge downturn with all of the protests that were happening. [01:10:28] Like we mentioned. [01:10:29] They'll keep forcing it through, forcing it through, forcing it through until you accept it. [01:10:33] And where does that lead? [01:10:35] Well, we'll get to Canada and Bill C-9, which by the way, removes the religious exemption for hate speech, meaning quoting Bible passages. [01:10:42] But if you are not a member yet a member, hey, click that button right there below. [01:10:47] It's what keeps this going, the undercover journalism, everything that we do when we do our big streams election night, when we go on location, even the debates that you're going to see April 10th at UPenn, the Change My Mind Professor Edition. [01:10:58] None of it happens without your support. [01:10:59] $99 a year, you get 100% more show. [01:11:01] The Friday show and everything ad-free, including these other creators you see here. [01:11:05] If not, try for $9 a month or let us earn your viewership tomorrow. [01:11:09] Otherwise, you'll just go on. [01:11:10] You don't need to touch any button or turn any dial if you still have dials. [01:11:14] I don't know how you'd have a dial on your computer, but maybe a volume button. [01:11:16] I don't know. [01:11:18] You're going to go on to watch the lovely Hailey Coronia. [01:11:20] Let's get to Canada banning. [01:11:25] People, I hate it because there was clickbait saying, Canada bans the Bible. [01:11:30] No, that's not necessarily true. [01:11:33] But it kind of is. [01:11:36] Their House of Commons just passed Bill C-9, which means it still has to go through another part of the process. [01:11:41] Seems like it'll pass, which basically removes the religious exemption for hate speech. [01:11:47] So it used to be hate speech, but it was like, yeah, but if you're actually reading a passage from the Bible, you can't be jailed. [01:11:52] Well, that's changed now. [01:11:54] Canada's House of Commons has passed the Combating Hate Act, also known as As Bill C