Louder with Crowder - AOC Declares There Three Types of "Americans" - And You're Not On the List Aired: 2026-05-11 Duration: 01:08:07 === Nick Fuentes Show Announcement (03:17) === [00:03:33] Gerald, I should be mature enough to be able to handle this, but I'm not. [00:03:37] I just, he does it every time he says something. [00:03:39] He's trying to aggravate me, and it works. [00:03:41] We have a lot to get to today. [00:03:42] I know some people thought it was today, but tomorrow Nick Fuentes will be on the show. [00:03:46] You guys can tune in. [00:03:47] He's going to be here, I think, on the outset of the show. [00:03:49] And yeah, look, respectful, keep it respectful like last time, but I think it's pretty clear the disagreement. [00:03:54] I'm moving forward. [00:03:55] His strategy, voting Democrat here in the midterms. [00:03:58] And we'll hash it out. [00:04:00] So you guys let us know what it is you want to see discussed most tomorrow. [00:04:03] But, you know, the Dan Bilzerian stuff is funny. [00:04:05] I don't think we'll get into that. [00:04:05] Everyone's a Fed. [00:04:06] Everyone's killing people, whatever. [00:04:09] Texas today, the learning center, right? [00:04:11] The Muslim thing. [00:04:13] Well, they responded, and it's bad. [00:04:14] We're going to talk about that. [00:04:15] We're going to fact check AOC. [00:04:16] We haven't done Comrade AOC in a while, and she makes about three or four claims that are so verifiably false, it almost feels lazy for us to do it, but people believe it. [00:04:26] And we're also going to issue a meme check going around right now about socialized health care that all these other countries have figured it out. [00:04:32] Every country except the United States. [00:04:34] This is an old, tired talking point. [00:04:36] Go back to Michael Moore, Sicko. [00:04:37] Same arguments were made. [00:04:38] We've addressed them many, many times, but now you're seeing it on the Marxist right. [00:04:42] Because for some reason entitlements are now a part of the right wing, I guess, as well. [00:04:46] I think our system is broken, but the solution is not to go to socialized healthcare. [00:04:49] So today's really just a fact check day. [00:04:51] You let us know which one aggravates you most on with the show. [00:04:59] Socialism, Sharia, and everything bad. [00:05:05] These were the ingredients chosen to create the perfect leftist. [00:05:09] But Professor Cink accidentally added an extra ingredient to the concoction. [00:05:13] Progressiveness. [00:05:18] Thus, the squad was born! [00:05:21] Using their ultra superpowers, AOC, Ilhan, and Rashida have dedicated their lives to fighting America and the forces of freedom. [00:05:30] Click Rumble [00:06:04] Premium and join now for $99 annually or $9.99 a month to get the entirely ad-free experience and an ever-expanding roster of content, creators, and free speech. === The Monday Premium Routine (14:45) === [00:06:51] Are you laughing because you know that's the Monday routine? [00:06:53] It's a little bit of a. [00:06:54] They're wonderful people. [00:06:55] The cleaning crew come in, you know, they come in once a week, and then some things get unplugged. [00:06:59] Gerald always sees me doing this. [00:07:00] I'm like, oh, what's the. [00:07:01] No, let me. [00:07:02] And I just want to be like, no, screw it. [00:07:05] Okay. [00:07:05] Whatever. [00:07:07] And they have it at the right height. [00:07:08] Otherwise, you know, it cuts off the top of my head, and I don't know. [00:07:11] Captain Morgan, how are you? [00:07:12] I'm fantastic. [00:07:12] How are you? [00:07:13] I'm good. [00:07:13] You went to a baseball game? [00:07:14] I did on Friday night. [00:07:15] Yeah. [00:07:17] Come on, man. [00:07:18] Thursday, May 21st. [00:07:20] He's going to be at the Hyenas Comedy Club in Dallas, Texas. [00:07:22] That's a very fun club. [00:07:23] Not underscore Firestine and X. How are you, Josh? [00:07:25] I'm good. [00:07:26] Gerald disappointed me, though. [00:07:27] He went to a baseball game on Friday, and it was bobblehead night. [00:07:30] I said, Get there early, Gerald. [00:07:31] You're taking your family of 14. [00:07:34] Yes. [00:07:34] Get there early. [00:07:35] Get bobbleheads. [00:07:36] Give me some. [00:07:36] I'll have one. [00:07:37] I'll sell some. [00:07:38] He got me none. [00:07:39] He got him none. [00:07:40] I didn't give me any either. [00:07:42] So you think that that absolves you of your word? [00:07:44] A little bit. [00:07:44] Of your word? [00:07:45] Yeah. [00:07:45] It's like, hey, I didn't keep my word to myself. [00:07:47] Therefore, you have no right to be disappointed. [00:07:49] No one cares if you keep your word to yourself. [00:07:51] We care if you keep your word to your friends. [00:07:52] Yeah, come on. [00:07:53] I thought we were buds. [00:07:54] With friends like you? [00:07:55] Already? [00:07:56] Yeah, you did get a bobblehead joke. [00:07:58] Yes. [00:07:59] And then my daughter broke her arm this weekend, and I can't be sure that it's not because she didn't have a bobblehead in her hand. [00:08:04] No, you know what? [00:08:05] If she had a bobblehead, there would be a weight displacement. [00:08:07] You know what? [00:08:08] With friends like Gerald, who needs CEOs? [00:08:10] No. [00:08:10] Yeah, that's what I say. [00:08:11] Might as well just push her into the wall yourself, Gerald. [00:08:13] Yeah, thanks a lot, Gerald. [00:08:14] You might as well have just put her arm in a vice and said, This is going to hurt. [00:08:18] I hope that you remember your lack of bobbleheads and snapped it. [00:08:22] I told my daughter, I said, No rollerblades. [00:08:23] You don't want them. [00:08:24] Nobody likes them. [00:08:25] They're not cool. [00:08:25] Nope. [00:08:26] They're dangerous. [00:08:26] Gerald said, Here, I will give you rollerblades. [00:08:29] Yeah. [00:08:29] But he didn't give it to her. [00:08:30] He sold them to her. [00:08:31] He hit her humorous with a rollerblade. [00:08:33] So, as the parent, you bought her the implement of her own demise and you're blaming me. [00:08:38] Santa brought those. [00:08:38] Yeah. [00:08:40] Convenient, Josh. [00:08:41] Convenient. [00:08:42] Unlike Gerald, who is the bringer of death. [00:08:44] Yeah, dude. [00:08:45] Or not the boss of death. [00:08:46] The bringer of misery. [00:08:49] All right. [00:08:49] I feel better. [00:08:50] That's also what he did with your daughter. [00:08:50] He took your daughter and he put her arm in a two by four and he went, almost done. [00:08:54] I'm like, Gerald, are you doing Kathy Bates in misery? [00:08:56] It's a child. [00:08:58] All right. [00:09:00] So, you know that hantavirus? [00:09:03] Hanta, Hanta, Hanta. [00:09:05] I don't. [00:09:05] Wanna, Hanta, gonna get sick, wanna, Hanta. [00:09:08] No. [00:09:08] No. [00:09:09] Is that a song? [00:09:09] I don't even know. [00:09:10] It's like Fanta? [00:09:11] There was a Fanta. [00:09:12] Oh, Fanta. [00:09:13] Okay. [00:09:14] It's Monday. [00:09:14] Give us a minute. [00:09:16] So, the Hanta virus outbreak, you know, it's a thing that people happen on a cruise ship. [00:09:21] People are upset about it. [00:09:21] Now, I don't know exactly what this next video has to do with it, other than the lady, I'm using the term loosely, says that thing, the Hanta virus, made me think and insert a bunch of. [00:09:35] Political points here, but this is how some people are dealing with it. [00:09:45] Let's go with the first one. [00:09:52] Yeah. I guess it's the latter. [00:09:53] We're good on the songs. [00:09:56] It was very unlikely. [00:09:58] Hallelujah. [00:09:59] And amen. [00:10:00] Is there anybody out there? [00:10:02] I'll take the gray aliens. [00:10:10] Oh, it's an autobiographical. [00:10:16] No, you think of Bruce Willis? [00:10:18] Boy, there's a rude awakening in this. [00:10:25] Yes, Holy Mother, can you absolve me of my. [00:10:28] Ah, I can't see you through your tattoos and grayscale face. [00:10:32] The only thing I want to beg her for is for her to stop. [00:10:36] Please. [00:10:37] Uh huh. [00:10:38] She chose the. [00:10:41] Anyone seeing what this has to do with the haunta virus? [00:10:45] Yeah. [00:10:51] And this is the problem with social media cloud. [00:10:54] People just go, oh, there's a trend right now. [00:10:56] People on a ship are suffering with this horrible virus. [00:11:00] I can help them by saying that God is dead and I'm God. [00:11:04] Hey, guys, don't you feel better quarantined on that cruise ship? [00:11:08] Don't you feel better that you heard this message from someone who looks like Wooly Willie? [00:11:12] Hallelujah and amen. [00:11:15] Is there anybody out there? [00:11:18] I'll take the gray aliens. [00:11:25] So good. [00:11:26] I love it. [00:11:26] Her name is Elle Rogers. [00:11:28] I guess she was on The Voice and Elle Rogers. [00:11:30] Let me guess. [00:11:30] The L stands for going out on a limb here. [00:11:33] Lesbian. [00:11:34] Yeah, probably. [00:11:35] Yeah. [00:11:35] Yeah. [00:11:37] Well, she looks like somebody out of a Rob Zombie film. [00:11:39] Yes, she does. [00:11:40] She can go both ways. [00:11:41] Who knows? [00:11:41] She actually does. [00:11:42] When she said God, did she mean to say dad? [00:11:44] Oh. [00:11:45] Where have you been? [00:11:48] I'm still waiting for you, Dad. [00:11:49] I love how she could, at the beginning of the song, she just laid it out for us. [00:11:52] She's like, I considered helping out my fellow man, but I also could just write a song instead. [00:11:58] Yes, exactly. [00:11:58] I'll just do that. [00:11:59] Will I die helping out my fellow man or doing this shit for you? [00:12:04] I'm going to go with this. [00:12:05] And then she's like, Will I die on stage to thunderous applause? [00:12:07] Like, well, if you collapse on stage, I mean, it's going to be thunderous. [00:12:10] I don't know about applause. [00:12:12] Apparently, I had somebody who told me earlier that she was on the voice. [00:12:15] Yeah. [00:12:15] Yeah. [00:12:16] She wasn't on the face, that's for sure. [00:12:17] No, she was not. [00:12:19] Certainly not on the bod. [00:12:21] Oh, gosh. [00:12:23] It's worse when you zoom out. [00:12:24] Sounds like a horror film. [00:12:25] This is, by the way, it's just talk about people saying narcissism. [00:12:29] It's like, yeah, God doesn't do what I. [00:12:31] So I'm actually the one who should forgive God. [00:12:34] First off, I don't think you know the hellfire that you are in for. [00:12:37] Like, I shouldn't laugh at it, but I kind of am. [00:12:41] It's going to be rough. [00:12:42] It's a wish granted moment. [00:12:43] Yes. [00:12:43] You want a world without God? [00:12:44] Wish granted. [00:12:47] What do you need to forgive God for? [00:12:49] Why would you even say that? [00:12:50] Let's just assume that God doesn't exist. [00:12:51] You don't think he exists at all. [00:12:52] On the off chance he does, do you really want to piss him off like that? [00:12:56] You know? [00:12:56] Like, he's dead to begin with, so he needs to get forgiveness from you? [00:13:00] Right. [00:13:00] I mean, I guess I understand if she's so illogical that she thinks there's no chance that God. [00:13:04] It's like me with Muhammad. [00:13:06] Like, I'll make fun of Muhammad because I know it's a false prophet and I know it's a false religion, so I'm pretty confident. [00:13:12] Like, it'll be on me if I show up at the gates. [00:13:15] I'm like, holy crap, I should have had child brides and raped people. [00:13:17] I didn't think that was godly, but I'm pretty confident in my bet. [00:13:23] I don't know where she gets her confidence. [00:13:25] That's the through line. [00:13:27] 11 a.m. Eastern. [00:13:28] We do this every day. [00:13:31] Let's go on to the next one here. [00:13:34] Texas Learing Center. [00:13:36] It's the school for peeping toms. [00:13:37] You guys know this. [00:13:39] Is it? [00:13:39] Yeah. [00:13:40] I didn't go there. [00:13:41] He's walking and I pick up the binoculars in the bin. [00:13:44] They have a bin? [00:13:46] Yeah. [00:13:46] Yeah. [00:13:47] It's a Learing Center school. [00:13:47] Every peeping tom is a bin. [00:13:49] Remember the Imam, the water park? [00:13:52] Well, it goes a little bit further than that. [00:13:54] So the husband of the woman who organized that Muslim only day at the water park responded. [00:14:02] Publicly, in a way that is very, very. [00:14:04] It's weird when you combine like social media clout, like social media slop crap, right, with, you know, the subtitles and the fast edits and Islam. [00:14:13] It's just. [00:14:14] It's just off putting. [00:14:17] But here you go. [00:14:18] Here's his response, and he immediately refutes himself. [00:14:21] He's like, We didn't do this, except we did this and then changed it. [00:14:25] Here you go. [00:14:26] The governor of Texas is attacking my family, and I'm sick of it. [00:14:30] Two days ago, Greg Abbott forced the city of Grand Prairie to cancel our eating event at Epic Waters. [00:14:35] For the past two years, my wife and I rented out the entire park so Muslim families could celebrate Eid in a modest environment. [00:14:43] This was supposed to be our third annual event. [00:14:46] Then the Islamophobes got a hold of a private flyer and twisted it into something it was never meant to be. [00:14:51] We never banned other religions. [00:14:53] We even changed the word into God is dress only. [00:14:57] First off, here's his argument. [00:14:59] It's like, we got away with it for two years. [00:15:01] Yeah. [00:15:02] What's number three? [00:15:03] And then he goes, Yeah, we didn't say what they said after we changed it. [00:15:09] Yeah, it said Muslims only three times, dummy. [00:15:12] Yes. [00:15:12] That's the primary problem. [00:15:13] Also, the private flyer was on a public website. [00:15:16] Dummy. [00:15:17] So, this is what these people do. [00:15:18] They just, they lie, they lie, it's okay. [00:15:20] And then go, but we didn't mean it like that. [00:15:22] Well, when you say for Muslims only, which you also said at the beginning of this video, people will take that to mean Muslims only, which of course violates the law. [00:15:31] I mean, you have the Civil Rights Act of 1964 regarding religious exclusion. [00:15:34] And then, of course, it violates the Texas law, thank God, forbidding Muslim no go zones. [00:15:38] Because that would be a no go zone unless you are Muslim only. [00:15:41] It doesn't matter if you changed it. [00:15:43] The problem was with the first public flyer that everyone could see. [00:15:46] Let's continue the video. [00:15:47] To make that crystal clear, but Greg Abbott, he don't care about facts. [00:15:51] He fueled the flames of hatred, empowered these hate filled politicians, and turned my family into a political target. [00:15:57] Hear me clearly I'm not gonna back down. [00:16:01] I need everybody to stand with me. [00:16:03] Pass this on. [00:16:03] Oh, you're not gonna back down, man. [00:16:05] You need help? [00:16:08] Yeah, I need you to follow me. [00:16:11] Click like, subscribe. [00:16:13] I want to eat his heart. [00:16:14] Praise be to Allah. [00:16:15] Oh, no. [00:16:17] Just a weird. [00:16:18] Subscribe to my Patreon. [00:16:19] Because that's what we do. [00:16:20] I ain't backing down. [00:16:21] I need your help. [00:16:22] I'm desperate. [00:16:23] Right. [00:16:24] That's right. [00:16:25] Allahu Akbar. [00:16:26] Wait, what was that last part? [00:16:27] Patreon. [00:16:27] Yeah. [00:16:28] Allahu Akbar. [00:16:29] That's what makes me uncomfortable. [00:16:30] By the way, pro tip let's just put a moratorium on Muslim water parks. [00:16:34] Don't make them. [00:16:36] There you go. [00:16:36] Don't make them. [00:16:36] There you go. [00:17:01] Can't swim. [00:17:03] I didn't catch that. [00:17:05] We didn't have to get super accurate. [00:17:06] Sometimes we're too close to the forest to see the trees. [00:17:09] We are coming straight out. [00:17:10] Guns blazing on Monday morning here. [00:17:12] I think you're a little generous with that. [00:17:13] By the way, we ain't backing down, but yeah, the event's canceled. [00:17:18] We ain't backing down as we cancel our events. [00:17:22] What does that mean? [00:17:22] What do you mean by not backing down then? [00:17:24] Well, subscribe to my Patreon to find out. [00:17:27] You've got to be a member for this. [00:17:30] Find out. [00:17:30] No refunds on deposits, by the way. [00:17:32] Nah, nah, we don't do that. [00:17:33] That's anti Islam. [00:17:36] Considered a tough one. [00:17:37] This is also why when you see these people, they go, you know, I've heard people say this, like the Dan Balsarians of the world and the Marxist right go, it's propaganda. [00:17:44] It's all Israeli propaganda. [00:17:46] And Megyn Kelly even kind of echoed this to be critical of Islam because there's such a small percentage of the United States. [00:17:51] They're not a threat. [00:17:52] Yeah, but go anywhere they have reached a majority. [00:17:54] And here's what they do they play victim, play victim, play victim, play victim. [00:17:57] And then once they have enough power, oh boy, they become the aggressor. [00:18:01] Just because it's not a problem yet, Doesn't mean that it wouldn't be if the left had their way and we had immigration policy like Europe and a multicultural policy like Europe. [00:18:11] Like you see, you know, a microcosm would be a place like Dearborn or Hamtramck, to be clear. [00:18:17] For more proof, look at all of the UK. [00:18:19] Look at what happens in France. [00:18:21] Look at what happened in Germany, in Sweden. [00:18:24] It's forever destroyed their country. [00:18:26] So the fact that it's not happening here is in spite of the efforts and because of the fact that we are allowed to be critical. [00:18:33] When people say it's not a threat, boy, that's a blind spot and that's. [00:18:37] Something that could grow out of control really, really quickly. [00:18:40] That's why this guy matters. [00:18:42] He's emblematic of it. [00:18:43] His name is Muhammad Abdullah. [00:18:44] Surprise. [00:18:45] Here he also weighs in. [00:18:46] Is this his born name? [00:18:47] I don't know. [00:18:47] Maybe. [00:18:48] I don't think so. [00:18:48] His name is Muhammad Abdullah X. [00:18:51] He also weighed in on other Texas issues, you know, the plight of Muslims like the Epic Center. [00:18:56] Here you go. [00:18:57] He's an articulate young man. [00:18:59] As you could imagine, they're not happy about that. [00:19:02] In fact, they're so upset. [00:19:04] It's gotten so bad that they're literally having nightmares about the word Epic. [00:19:08] Now, everything looks like epic. [00:19:10] Everyone is epic. [00:19:11] Everything is epic. [00:19:12] They're here. [00:19:13] The Muslims are taking over. [00:19:14] They're literally hallucinating. [00:19:16] Okay, so hallucinating would mean let's just go through that. [00:19:18] That would mean that you are seeing something that isn't there, creating something in your mind that doesn't actually exist. [00:19:24] In this case, people are going, Hey, what are you building? [00:19:28] A Muslim only epic center? [00:19:30] Whoa. [00:19:32] How far along the trail are you? [00:19:34] Quite a bit. [00:19:35] Hey, what does that say there on your flyer? [00:19:37] Muslim only water park event. [00:19:40] Yeah, were you hallucinating? [00:19:42] Oh, is this a morale? [00:19:43] Oh, you know, you wrote it and posted it publicly. [00:19:47] They always, everything is just a lie, an obfuscation, a misdirection, or they are the victim. [00:19:52] And of course, this guy posts about how much he hates ICE and Trump. [00:19:55] Surprise, surprise. [00:19:56] You know what? [00:19:57] People saying they're not a threat? [00:19:58] Well, these people, meaning those who want to take over entire neighborhoods, entire counties, they view strong immigration enforcement as a big threat. [00:20:08] So they attack ICE and President Trump in the same way that the left does. [00:20:12] They're useful pawns for the left. [00:20:14] And the same way that the Marxist right does, who says they're not really a threat. [00:20:17] Do you have any idea what would happen if these people got power completely unfettered? [00:20:21] What do you think would happen with the Epic Center if Texas didn't step in? [00:20:24] Genuine. [00:20:25] Comment below. [00:20:26] You guys let me know. [00:20:27] I mean, I'm glad that we did do something. [00:20:29] This guy hates ICE, hates Donald Trump, clearly dislikes the United States, but he's taking a stand and taking down Texas politicians, according to him, the only way he knows how. [00:20:45] It's kind of fun. [00:20:46] It's an amazing balance. [00:20:47] Yeah. [00:20:48] For a wheelchair guy, he is an athlete. [00:20:50] I mean, he did recover. [00:20:52] It's got to be tough to do it in a wheelchair. [00:20:54] You can swim out with, you know, just arm water slightly. [00:20:57] Great at treading water. [00:20:59] By the way, this is just really quickly. [00:21:01] We don't have to guess at the intentions of Islamic takeover. [00:21:05] And to say that this is a, you know, since 1948 thing, read into that exactly what you think you should, is moronic. [00:21:12] All we have to do is just look at what's happening in Europe. [00:21:14] You said it's already ruined cities. [00:21:16] The methodology is exactly the same as they're trying here in the United States. [00:21:19] And then going to Texas, one of the places, like, listen, that is a shot across the bow. [00:21:25] Well, look, let's go through, let's really distill this, okay? [00:21:28] My position is no more blank checks to Israel. [00:21:30] It should be an ad hoc basis, like every other nation, by the way. [00:21:32] We shouldn't be funding all sides of that war, any nations over there. [00:21:34] If there's something that's of value to us, okay, we work out an agreement. === Accountability for White Nationalists (09:30) === [00:21:37] And APAC should be treated like other foreign lobbying groups. [00:21:40] I think that it's absolutely word placing. [00:21:42] These are American Israelis, but they are advocating primarily on behalf of the interests of another nation that sometimes supersede the United States. [00:21:49] Treat them like, let's do away with all foreign lobbying in the government. [00:21:52] Okay? [00:21:52] That's my position. [00:21:53] But let me ask you this if Israel didn't exist and APAC didn't exist, do you really think the outcome of Islam. [00:22:02] Would be any different either any place they reach a majority, as we see in obviously Middle Eastern and Arabic countries, or once they overrun, they have enough numbers in places like Europe? [00:22:12] Do you really think that it would be any different? [00:22:14] The answer is no, because it was no different if you look at the history of Islam in every single century before the advent of modern Israel as we know it. [00:22:22] The two have nothing to do with each other, and you could say that they are both problems, but everything now goes back to no, Islam isn't a problem. [00:22:29] No, by the way, the border isn't a problem. [00:22:31] It's all Israel and the Jews. [00:22:33] Islam is a problem. [00:22:35] We can have the discussion on Israel and APEC, and we should. [00:22:37] Islam is a problem. [00:22:39] That has not gone away. [00:22:40] And if you turn away from it for a second, if you don't pay attention, it grows rapidly. [00:22:46] Here's more proof. [00:22:46] And by the way, all the references are available. [00:22:48] 11 a.m. every day we stream, links in the description. [00:22:51] Thank you for the raid. [00:22:52] Remember, the organizer is his wife, Dr. Amina Knight. [00:22:57] Couldn't answer basic questions about the event. [00:23:00] And before I go to this, I want you to understand something. [00:23:03] This was very common. [00:23:05] With Islam in Canada when I was growing up. [00:23:08] And you see this quite a bit from people in the squad, for example. [00:23:11] They just don't answer or they say, I don't know, and expect the institutions to carry their water. [00:23:16] The media, higher education, all the nonprofits, the SPLC, because they say it's a religion of peace. [00:23:21] They've never actually felt obligated or compelled to answer the kinds of questions that any other notable demographic or religious representation would be forced to answer. [00:23:31] Here is Abdullah's wife, Amina Knight, who organized the event, Muslim Waterpark. [00:23:37] We have some questions on the Ascend in Faith LLC that the money was going to. [00:23:42] We couldn't find any listing for that here in the state of Texas, anyway. [00:23:48] What is Ascend in Faith LLC? [00:23:51] I don't know where you got that from or what you're talking about, actually. [00:23:55] Well, when people go to your website to buy tickets for that event, it says that Ascend in Faith LLC is who is receiving the money. [00:24:02] And you don't know what that is? [00:24:05] I don't know. [00:24:06] It must be some type of typo. [00:24:08] What? [00:24:09] It must be a typo. [00:24:11] The whole name? [00:24:12] Interesting. [00:24:13] And the Ascendant Faith LLC, you are dead set on that. [00:24:17] That was a typo. [00:24:18] That's what you're saying. [00:24:20] I am set on it. [00:24:21] I actually don't know what you're talking about. [00:24:25] And I thought you wanted to talk to me about how I felt about the event being canceled, which I was happy to talk to you about. [00:24:34] And we did talk about that. [00:24:35] Okay. [00:24:36] So that's it. [00:24:36] I don't have anything else to talk to you about, but. [00:24:40] I appreciate you reaching out. [00:24:41] Oh, oh, combining the entitled white broad form of sing songy talk with the terrorist elements is just. [00:24:50] And combine that with gaudy earrings and a nose ring. [00:24:54] I don't think that's very halal. [00:24:56] No. [00:24:57] I don't know. [00:24:58] I don't know. [00:24:58] You guys let me know. [00:24:59] We have a few halal viewers. [00:25:01] No, we don't. [00:25:02] She would have to know what that is, by the way. [00:25:04] That is a fucking lie. [00:25:05] You know why? [00:25:06] Because no one else is going to call her on it. [00:25:07] Well, it's not being given to a charity that she is unaware of. [00:25:10] For people who don't understand, when you have an account like that to accept payments, you have to set it up and then connect it to your website. [00:25:16] It is not going to be beyond you that the company taking the payments is X name. [00:25:21] You know what I just want? [00:25:22] You know what I want? [00:25:23] I want. [00:25:24] The media, investigative journalists, to treat Islam and Islamic centers in the United States and nonprofits the way they do Scientology, the way they do Mormons. [00:25:32] And by the way, I'm okay with doing that. [00:25:34] If there's financial corruption anywhere, certainly Scientology. [00:25:37] Absolutely. [00:25:38] And there are leaders in every religion who, by the way, end up becoming corrupt. [00:25:41] We saw that with the Catholic Church. [00:25:42] Great. [00:25:43] Great. [00:25:44] The way they treat Christians. [00:25:45] Yeah. [00:25:45] I mean, you saw a recent story about white Christian nationalists or whatever it was. [00:25:50] And it was totally blown out of proportion. [00:25:51] But if they use that same logic with these Islamic people, then. [00:25:55] Just, okay, it starts with this. [00:25:57] Oh, well. [00:25:58] What is this LLC? [00:25:59] I don't know. [00:25:59] There you go. [00:26:00] You now have a lead, investigative journalist. [00:26:03] Please go ahead. [00:26:04] She also, by the way, had an answer for the problem with the Learning Center, supposed to be Learning Center. [00:26:11] All right. [00:26:11] So you also run a daycare, I believe, called Excellence Early Learning Center. [00:26:17] At least it's listed on Google that way. [00:26:18] And on your website, I think it's also called a Leaning Center. [00:26:22] So I'm just wondering is it appropriate to be in charge of teaching children when you can't spell learning right? [00:26:32] I love this. [00:26:34] Okay, she's not frozen because she's blinking. [00:26:36] She's just mad. [00:26:39] No, I'm not mad, but I'm just, I am acknowledging the typo. [00:26:44] And I think that's a more appropriate way to say it. [00:26:47] Are you trying to let me know that I have a typo on my website? [00:26:53] I know you're almost out of time, so I want to respect your time here. [00:26:56] I also want to know how the daycare is operational if your right to transact business was involuntarily ended in Texas. [00:27:04] What? [00:27:06] I mean, this is according to the state website. [00:27:10] Your registration is inactive. [00:27:18] Nothing to say. [00:27:19] I guess I have to figure that out. [00:27:22] I guess so. [00:27:23] I hope she can figure it out in a white collar jail. [00:27:26] She wasn't expecting those questions. [00:27:28] No. [00:27:28] She wasn't expecting someone to actually look into her finances. [00:27:30] She's like, oh, crap. [00:27:32] I honestly don't think it's a typo either. [00:27:33] No. [00:27:34] I think it's on purpose. [00:27:35] You do. [00:27:35] I do. [00:27:35] I think because they put leering in one, leering in another, leaning on another one. [00:27:39] They are purposefully going out of their way to not spell it right because I think legally they can't call it a learning center. [00:27:46] It's like when Nestle Drumsticks calls it a frozen dairy treat instead of ice cream because they were sued once or something. [00:27:53] That's what I think is going on. [00:27:54] That does make sense. [00:27:54] It also makes it harder to search. [00:27:56] But unlike the Nestle Drumsticks, they are not delicious. [00:27:59] No, but they're nuts. [00:28:00] Hey! [00:28:02] By the way, it's really interesting. [00:28:03] This is going to be a little business wonky. [00:28:06] The franchise tax expiring involuntarily means that they sent you a letter. [00:28:09] They do it every single year in the state of Texas, and you literally have to check one box and send it back. [00:28:14] You don't, like, she's not making enough money to qualify to have to pay franchise tax. [00:28:18] It's a huge limit until you have to. [00:28:20] You go under and put it in the mail and send it back. [00:28:23] She didn't even do that. [00:28:24] Yeah. [00:28:25] Did not even have the capability of checking a box and sending it back to the state of Texas. [00:28:30] Also, like a Nestle drumsticks, the best part of it is when you finish it. [00:28:33] Yeah, yeah. [00:28:34] And there's always a little chalk on the bottom. [00:28:36] A little chalk on the bottom. [00:28:37] That's what it's like. [00:28:38] You're a Nestle drumstick, Dr. Knight. [00:28:39] Yeah. [00:28:41] In general, in closing, I'm getting very near the end of this now. [00:28:45] Don't make Muslim cities. [00:28:46] How about that? [00:28:47] How about in the United States, we don't allow it? [00:28:48] Why? [00:28:48] Well, because we have a constitution and Islam has a political prescription, a system of laws that are incompatible with the constitution. [00:28:55] Also, let's hold these people accountable. [00:28:57] There absolutely should be, at the very least, some minor fines going on here. [00:29:03] I know we would have to deal with that with our business. [00:29:05] Don't make Muslim cities if you do, and you shouldn't, but if you do, make sure you get the best rate possible. [00:29:17] No, I'm glad you called. [00:29:18] It was nice. [00:29:21] Yeah, I am too. [00:29:22] I really miss this. [00:29:26] Hey, Dad. [00:29:28] Remember when you scored all those touchdowns in the state championship game? [00:29:33] Yeah. [00:29:34] I love it, man. [00:29:35] I was really proud of you then. [00:29:38] Love you, son. [00:29:39] Love you, too. [00:29:42] But that's not how the reunion really went down. [00:29:45] You see, Timmy never played in that state championship, he never even made the team. [00:29:51] You see, his parents suffered from crippling debt and skyrocketing inflation, and they were never able to buy that nice new house on the east side. [00:29:58] Their debt led to marital stress, culminating in a messy divorce, leaving Timmy to raise himself while Mom was working three jobs. [00:30:05] Let's see how the reunion actually went down. [00:30:12] Give me your phone and your wallet, old man. [00:30:14] I don't have anything on me. [00:30:15] Hurry up! [00:30:16] I. Timmy? [00:30:18] Is that you? [00:30:20] Dad? [00:30:21] Tim, I've missed you so much. [00:30:22] It's been 15 years. [00:30:25] I've missed you too. [00:30:28] Now give me your money. [00:30:32] Don't let this happen to your family. [00:30:34] Call American Financing. [00:30:35] American Financing is helping homeowners save an average of $800 a month. [00:30:39] And there are no upfront fees to say how much you can save. [00:30:41] And if you sign up today, you may even delay two mortgage payments. [00:30:44] Call 1 800 974 6500 today. [00:30:47] Or go to AmericanFinancing.net slash Crowder. [00:30:49] NMLS 1 82 334. [00:30:52] There we go. [00:30:53] That was nice. [00:30:55] Next up on the docket is I just saw President Trump. [00:30:57] What was he talking about? [00:30:58] He was on CNN Live, or was that new, or did he run it like it's live? [00:31:01] I don't know if it was live, but he was talking about, I think, what was it, maternity stuff? [00:31:06] Oh, okay. === American Financing Scam Alert (14:28) === [00:31:07] All right. [00:31:07] So then let's go to AOC. [00:31:10] Here's the thing I get it. [00:31:12] She's kind of an easy sort of foil because AOC is she's really stupid. [00:31:18] And I don't mean that as an insult, I mean that descriptively. [00:31:22] She is a very unintelligent person. [00:31:24] I think we all kind of know that. [00:31:25] Not everybody on the left is, by the way. [00:31:27] I wouldn't even say that about Pelosi. [00:31:28] She's kind of cunning. [00:31:29] Yeah. [00:31:30] AOC is dumb, but that doesn't stop her from going out and opining as though she has any clue as to what she's talking about. [00:31:37] So I don't know so much if this is a fact check as it is all right, she's actually delusional. [00:31:44] Here's how we haven't done this in a while. [00:31:45] It's time for Deep Thoughts with Comrade Cortez. [00:31:54] Claim that she makes here. [00:31:56] That was a pretty shallow stinger. [00:31:58] It is, yeah. [00:31:59] That's what she deserves. [00:32:01] So, the first claim, and by the way, all the references are available. [00:32:03] We do this. [00:32:04] Links in the description. [00:32:05] Every show we stream 11 a.m. weekdays. [00:32:07] She said that the American Revolution, picture in your mind the American Revolution. [00:32:10] Okay, what it was about. [00:32:11] Think of the Boston Tea Party. [00:32:13] Think of that. [00:32:13] Okay. [00:32:14] It was actually about fighting the billionaires of their time. [00:32:18] America was founded. [00:32:21] You look at Thomas Jefferson's handwork to Madison. [00:32:27] In revolt of British aristocracy. [00:32:32] And Peter. [00:32:32] The American Revolution was against the billionaires of their time. [00:32:39] Okay, and this is very telling here. [00:32:41] So here's the truth. [00:32:43] The founders had no problem with wealth, just to be clear. [00:32:47] Just like Robin Hood didn't. [00:32:48] This is something that the left has often done, where they go, Oh, Robin Hood stole from the rich to give to the poor. [00:32:53] If you're a leftist, and this is why I always say, try and make sense of it, you can't without Marxism. [00:32:56] They just go, Wealth! [00:32:58] Success equals oppressor. [00:33:00] No, Robin Hood stole from an evil monarchy who overtaxed their citizens into poverty and gave it back to the rightful earners. [00:33:08] If you just see the world through wealthy, poor, you just see the world through successful, unsuccessful, majority, minority, you'll go, well, yeah, obviously the British aristocracy, they would have been wealthy. [00:33:18] So the problem with the founders was the wealth. [00:33:21] No, the problem was with the taxation without representation, the subjugation. [00:33:26] The problem was with the corruption. [00:33:28] The problem was with the lack of freedom. [00:33:29] The founding fathers, I can disabuse you of this notion, they came from wealthy land owning families, by the way. [00:33:35] And they believed that one of the primary roles of government was to protect people's wealth and specifically property rights. [00:33:40] That's a distinctly. [00:33:42] American idea as far as it being central to our form of governance. [00:33:47] That's what makes these people so incredible. [00:33:50] They actually were pretty well off and they still fought because they knew that others would not be well off. [00:33:56] To give you an idea, George Washington, if adjusted for inflation, he'd be worth like $580 million today. [00:34:03] And still had bad teeth. [00:34:04] Yes. [00:34:05] Yeah, he was quite wealthy. [00:34:06] He owned people and stuff. [00:34:07] Yes. [00:34:08] He was very, very wealthy. [00:34:10] You got to be wealthy to own people. [00:34:11] So the left, they do this all. [00:34:12] Yeah, Robin Hood, steal from the rich, give to the poor. [00:34:14] Yeah. [00:34:15] Is the primary defining characteristic how much money you have, or is it your character? [00:34:22] Meaning, how did you get that money? [00:34:23] How did you accrue that wealth? [00:34:25] What did you do with it? [00:34:27] If someone actually accrues that wealth through legitimate means and then wages a war, a revolutionary war, for example, so that other people who come after them can also gain, can also grow their wealth, that is indicative of character. [00:34:47] That's something we want to emulate. [00:34:49] That's what makes America so unique. [00:34:50] She just goes, like Karl Marx, wealthy, bad, poor, good. [00:34:55] Therefore, the problem with the British was wealth, not the royalty and not the violation of basic foundational rights. [00:35:02] No, and that's what the founding fathers put on the line. [00:35:04] If you read the rest of the declaration, their lives, their treasure, and their sacred honor that they were pledging to this cause, they had a lot to put on the line. [00:35:13] Not just their lives, they were just poor people that were like, ah, crap, I don't have any food, I'm going to do a revolt. [00:35:17] They were like, hey, we got a lot here. [00:35:18] Life is good. [00:35:19] I could live here for the rest of my life. [00:35:20] My family's going to be set for generations. [00:35:22] I'm putting all of that on the line to make sure that we can be free. [00:35:25] To be clear, there were a lot of people like that that were fighting. [00:35:27] Of course. [00:35:28] A lot of the leaders were rich and everything, but the guy on the ground every day, they weren't necessarily going, hey, I want to fight the billionaires, fight the rich. [00:35:38] They were just like, hey, it would be nice to eat this month. [00:35:41] Yeah, exactly. [00:35:42] And you know what you need? [00:35:43] You need people with some form of power or wealth to fight the world's biggest superpower. [00:35:48] People like Washington, people like that, they could have sat back. [00:35:51] And enjoyed this pose. [00:35:52] They would have been fine. [00:35:53] They effectively could have been kings, could have been royalty of the New World. [00:35:56] They said, no, we're not going to do this because of other people. [00:35:58] Washington in particular, he fought for the British. [00:36:00] Yeah. [00:36:01] Before the Revolutionary War started, he was a British general. [00:36:03] Or maybe not a general, but he was a British officer. [00:36:07] Yeah. [00:36:07] Then he chose to switch sides. [00:36:08] Nuts around Christmas, crossed an icy river, and they were like, holy shit. [00:36:11] Here's the next claim that AOC makes. [00:36:14] And again, you can't make sense of it unless you just go, okay, Marxist. [00:36:17] These people are Marxists. [00:36:18] Leftists are Marxists. [00:36:20] That's how they support Islam and LGBTQ. [00:36:23] That's how they try and claim, oh, wealthy is automatically bad. [00:36:26] That's how you make sense of all of their inconsistencies. [00:36:29] Hold on a second. [00:36:30] We hate Christians, or at least we think that Christians have enabled and created a patriarchal system, but Islam, it's beautiful because Islam is a minority. [00:36:41] Oh, a billionaire is bad. [00:36:42] Poor people, good. [00:36:43] So the next claim she makes is that there are three archetypes, effectively, that define America. [00:36:47] Think of what those are. [00:36:48] We just sort of went through the founding fathers. [00:36:50] No, to her, it's black people, Native Americans, Indians, and immigrants, I guess. [00:36:56] There are very few, like, real archetypes of, in my opinion, truly what America is all about. [00:37:08] I think about the civil rights and voting rights movement and how black Americans really created democracy in this country. [00:37:16] That's exactly right. [00:37:21] She's going to say. [00:37:21] Black Americans created, she's like, that's exactly right. [00:37:24] Okay. [00:37:24] Then how come black non Americans haven't created democracy? [00:37:29] Anywhere else. [00:37:32] No, but there's. [00:37:35] No. [00:37:36] Yeah, just here. [00:37:36] You're forgetting about. [00:37:38] Just here. [00:37:38] They created democracy. [00:37:40] No, Barbados, probably. [00:37:41] Right. [00:37:42] Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. [00:37:43] Sure. [00:37:43] Let's continue. [00:37:44] Exactly right. [00:37:46] How they literally made something from nothing. [00:37:49] It is just beyond me. [00:37:53] I think about how. [00:37:56] A lot's beyond you. [00:37:59] Native people have survived. [00:38:02] And preserved and treasured their culture. [00:38:11] I think about, and I think many of us think about immigrants, which if you aren't from one of those first two populations, you are certainly from largely the third. [00:38:23] Largely? [00:38:24] So, first off, opinion I think the opposite of that, to be clear, but here's the truth obviously, black people did not invent democracy. [00:38:32] Oh, Lord. [00:38:33] The people here, the founding fathers, knew that they had to reconcile slavery. [00:38:35] That's why you look at a lot of them, they couldn't. [00:38:36] Free their own slaves while they were alive, but did so upon their death. [00:38:40] They created a system that led to prohibiting the banning of voting on race alone, for example. [00:38:45] It took a while to make some of the progress, but these conversations were taking place very early on. [00:38:50] Here's another thing that's pretty important. [00:38:52] Here's the people who created, and it's not democracy in the United States, it's a representative republic, but here's people who created the modern free sort of Western state. [00:39:00] Rye. [00:39:01] A lot of people think bourbon is the American drink. [00:39:04] Rye was actually grown quite a bit more in the North. [00:39:06] That's why, you know, Canadians like the call rye, Canadian whiskey. [00:39:10] Do you know why that exploded? [00:39:11] Do you know why liquor exploded? [00:39:13] These people came from a place where if they had any surplus, it went straight to the king, right? [00:39:18] It went straight to people taking the taxes. [00:39:20] So then they're here in the United States. [00:39:21] They have these huge, just acreage of farmland. [00:39:24] They go, well, we have all this extra rye. [00:39:26] What do we do? [00:39:27] I go, well, I don't know. [00:39:28] Do whatever you want with it. [00:39:29] Like, I can keep it, I can do whatever I want with it. [00:39:33] And without modern refrigeration or preservation methods, guess what? [00:39:36] Distilling is the best way to. [00:39:38] Make something of that yield of rye. [00:39:40] That's why rye and bourbon exploded, because for the first time, that's why it's a distinctly American drink, they could actually keep their own surplus. [00:39:49] And the people in charge would have had a vested interest in taking it instead of, I don't know, do whatever you want. [00:39:53] I have nothing to do with your rye. [00:39:55] Founders were the ones who fought for this country, and by the way, enshrined it into law knowing that slavery was going to have to be reconciled, and then the laws progressed. [00:40:04] One thing black people did invent, however, as it relates to government, is the filibuster. [00:40:09] Or at least that word sounds like a black person invented it. [00:40:12] And we have an old interview of footage here to back it up. [00:40:25] And they can filibuster for like a really long time and it's super easy for them. [00:40:30] It's a very verbal culture, verbose, even. [00:40:33] Here's the next truth. [00:40:35] And I'm so glad that we're allowed to talk about this now. [00:40:38] Truth number two, Toolman. [00:40:40] Native Americans, Indians, the fact that they've survived, well, not only have they survived, I'm going to get to that, they did nothing for thousands of years aside from killing women and children. [00:40:47] And by the way, they didn't figure out modern. [00:40:49] They didn't use the wheel. [00:40:50] It's true. [00:40:50] They didn't domesticate horses. [00:40:52] I don't think they would hunt animals basically to extinction. [00:40:55] They just chase a bunch of wild buffalo off a cliff, like, oh, oh, just take one. [00:40:59] Good enough. [00:41:00] It's like, no, oh, oh, have you guys ever thought about conservation? [00:41:04] They were killing each other in record numbers before any of the colonists arrived. [00:41:08] But here's the crazy thing people talk about, she's going on to say this too, genocide. [00:41:11] Like in 1890, there were about 250,000 natives. [00:41:15] Today, 9.6 million. [00:41:18] That's a 3,700% increase. [00:41:20] If it's a genocide, we really screwed up. [00:41:22] Well, then doesn't she have a good point then? [00:41:24] That they survived? [00:41:26] Yeah. [00:41:26] Yeah, they've survived and thrived. [00:41:28] They actually did better because we came here and now we have Christian mission groups that teach them how to fish. [00:41:35] Oh, they stopped sacrificing and eating each other, too. [00:41:38] Yeah, we stopped. [00:41:39] South America. [00:41:39] Let's just be honest. [00:41:40] They didn't survive the war. [00:41:42] They didn't come out of this and go, oh, we're going to band together and be strong. [00:41:45] We're like, we're kind of tired of killing you guys. [00:41:47] Can we just put you in Oklahoma for a little while and do the rest of the conquering of this thing? [00:41:52] Is that cool? [00:41:52] Also, by the way, you want to talk about our treatment of natives versus native treatment of natives? [00:41:57] Let's get into the modern era. [00:41:58] Outside of scalping, and it's not the same as people say, oh, Europeans did that, counting scalps before they had dog tags. [00:42:03] It's very different from using it as a torture method to women and children alive. [00:42:06] That's what Native Americans would do. [00:42:08] The barbarism and cruelty is something that people never actually want to discuss. [00:42:12] But even in modern times, they treat their own people incredibly poorly. [00:42:16] Look at tribal casinos. [00:42:17] It's like a $40 billion a year industry, but natives still have the highest rates of poverty and drug abuse. [00:42:22] They don't help their own. [00:42:24] Wow. [00:42:24] You still see a bunch of wealth just accrue at the top to a few people. [00:42:28] Why don't they help them out? [00:42:31] Here's the next truth. [00:42:32] Immigrants come, look, come on. [00:42:34] Immigrants come to America like you built America. [00:42:37] They came here because America was a thing. [00:42:40] It attracted them. [00:42:41] We're the shining city on a hill. [00:42:42] They wanted to be a part of the system that we created. [00:42:45] They benefited initially pre welfare state, economic opportunities, right? [00:42:50] Education, the ability to be free. [00:42:51] Basically, you want to start up a business, you can do it. [00:42:53] Here's your license, go ahead. [00:42:54] No one's going to stop you. [00:42:56] That's changed now because immigrants don't come here and become American. [00:43:01] They bring a little enclave. [00:43:02] Of their previous third world shithole here and still live that way and cost the American taxpayer anywhere from $150 to $500 billion a year because of a modern welfare state. [00:43:15] Immigrants, pre modern welfare state, they were risking something because they wanted the opportunity and the freedom. [00:43:22] Immigrants, post welfare state, build nothing, they come here to take. [00:43:27] And Democrats want to give at your cost, the American worker, so that they can buy votes. [00:43:33] Also, the United States loses $200 billion a year in remittances, just to be clear. [00:43:37] People come here, don't learn the language, create an enclave, and send all their money back home. [00:43:42] That has to stop right away. [00:43:45] Everything she says is wrong. [00:43:46] If you took just black people, just Native American people, and just at this point, random immigrants, which doesn't even make sense because the United States wouldn't exist if these were the only people who built the United States. [00:43:57] So just black people, Native people, and random immigrants, do you know what you'd have? [00:44:02] You'd still have a continent that didn't use the wheel. [00:44:06] That's what you would have. [00:44:08] And you still would have tribal warfare nonstop. [00:44:10] That's exactly what would happen. [00:44:12] Just to be clear. [00:44:15] AOC's an idiot. [00:44:16] This has been Deep Thoughts with Comrades Cortez. [00:44:23] Comrade Cortez. [00:44:24] Comrade. [00:44:25] By the way, David Axelrod did try to ask a really probing question because most of the interview that we saw towards the end was the one that sparked a lot of the controversy where she said, nobody can earn a billion dollars. [00:44:36] You've got to do it through nefarious means or whatever. [00:44:39] And he tried to follow up and say, specifically tell me. [00:44:42] And he was reading somebody else's, I guess, post to her tell me what Michael Jordan, Beyonce, Jay Z, and he listed one or two other billionaires did wrong and what the FBI should investigate against them. [00:44:53] And by the way, are you okay with George Soros being a billionaire? [00:44:55] Because he is somebody that obviously supports a lot of your causes that you have been very close with. [00:45:00] And she pivoted immediately away from that. [00:45:02] And she's like, Oh, you can't look at specifics. [00:45:04] I'm just talking about the system. [00:45:06] What? [00:45:06] Exactly. [00:45:07] She said, That's a red herring. [00:45:08] When you try to drill down and go through this, it's a red herring. [00:45:12] Yeah. [00:45:13] When you try to drill down and go, Okay, tell me what about the black civil rights movement created democracy in the United States. [00:45:19] Well, now that's a red herring. [00:45:21] Yeah. [00:45:21] What? [00:45:22] Well, it's actually the part of the question that I'm most interested in to find out how and why. [00:45:25] She doesn't want to get into specifics. [00:45:26] Because there's nothing objective about her parameters. [00:45:28] Look, I've said this. [00:45:30] I don't support the party of big business, a small business. [00:45:32] I support a country that is pro good business. === Immoral Billion Dollar Bailouts (02:30) === [00:45:36] So if you're a billionaire or you're a hundred thousandaire and you've actually created some goods, services, some kind of commodity that people have determined is worthwhile and have agreed on a price in a given market, great. [00:45:49] There's nothing illegal there and everyone actually benefits. [00:45:52] The problem, this is objective, is if criminality is involved or bailouts. [00:45:56] Government coercion that we see, lobbying, where they're doing it at the cost of other people who don't receive those bailouts. [00:46:02] So, yeah, I would agree. [00:46:03] You can't earn billions of dollars in the banking industry if it requires bailouts. [00:46:10] These CEOs can't even earn hundreds of millions of dollars if it's American Airlines or if it's GM, by the way, who should be bankrupt. [00:46:16] That is not earned. [00:46:18] What would be earned would be brokenness, would be poverty without you, the American worker, bailing them out. [00:46:25] But I have objective parameters. [00:46:26] Hey, if someone, I don't know, invented Some type of plastic that's used for modern computers and it ends up becoming the industry standard because it's incredibly effective and durable, and he becomes a billionaire. [00:46:36] Guess what? [00:46:37] None of my business because people have chosen to purchase it. [00:46:40] You can do it with anything, you can do it with insulation in homes. [00:46:43] I knew a guy who made millions, I don't know about billions, burger patty machines and the wax paper that separates frozen meat. [00:46:50] He saw a need for something and filled it. [00:46:52] Objectively, that is fine. [00:46:55] There's nothing immoral about it. [00:46:57] I can say there's something immoral. [00:47:00] In gaining billions of dollars through coercion, which is what government subsidies are. [00:47:06] She doesn't have that. [00:47:06] It's about a feeling. [00:47:07] I don't feel. [00:47:09] That's how Bernie Sanders went from the millionaire class to the billionaire class because now he's in the millionaire class with three homes. [00:47:17] It's always going to change. [00:47:18] Tell people who are struggling to find their next meal that you've earned what you have with a very nice apartment, shopping at Whole Foods, parking your Tesla illegally outside of there. [00:47:29] Tell them, like, no, no, I've earned this because I was voted in New York and. [00:47:34] I've produced nothing of value. [00:47:37] Their opinion would be they don't feel that you should have that. [00:47:40] We don't base what's appropriate or what's permissible as far as earnings on feelings. [00:47:45] That is Marxism. [00:47:47] I feel like you're too successful, therefore oppressor and oppressed. [00:47:52] Also, I feel like I could make quite a bit more money if I was willing to debase myself and work in a club with neon walk lights, but we don't do that. [00:48:02] We don't do super chats where you put the dollar bills. [00:48:06] In our shorts. [00:48:06] We actually do the opposite. === Healthcare Survival Rates Compared (14:46) === [00:48:07] It's time for reverse super chat. [00:48:08] You are the sex worker. [00:48:14] Reverse super chats are real work. [00:48:15] 50 free Rumble premium subscriptions just gifted in the chat thanks to Rumble Wallet. [00:48:20] Download Rumble Wallet. [00:48:21] It's an easy way to manage all of your crypto in one place. [00:48:23] You have a link in the description if you were just gifted a subscription. [00:48:26] 50 free right now. [00:48:27] We give them to you. [00:48:28] Take a screenshot, tag me on X or Instagram. [00:48:30] Also, look, explore your options because as attractive as you are, these good looks aren't going to last forever. [00:48:35] So maybe start a business on the side. [00:48:37] This has been Reverse Super Chat. [00:48:42] All right. [00:48:43] I was a sex worker yesterday for Mother's Day. [00:48:45] Whoa, good for you. [00:48:47] Yeah, it was like. [00:48:47] Did you get paid? [00:48:48] Well, I don't know how much is four minutes worth, but. [00:48:51] It depends. [00:48:52] It's about the intensity. [00:48:54] Yeah. [00:48:54] I mean, I work pro boner. [00:48:58] I wouldn't say pro. [00:48:59] It's his modus opera in a guy. [00:49:02] Yeah. [00:49:03] Wait. [00:49:05] I switched it to Gerald. [00:49:06] No, no, you did not. [00:49:07] You were talking. [00:49:08] I was just trying to go with Latin terminology. [00:49:10] Yeah. [00:49:11] I liked it. [00:49:12] Leave that to AOC. [00:49:13] It was clever. [00:49:13] Yeah, it wasn't. [00:49:15] So, oh, we haven't done this in a while, but this has been a topic that was used quite a bit. [00:49:22] Guys, remember Michael Moore? [00:49:26] He kind of looks like Walter White in transition now. [00:49:29] But he was a big thing for a while. [00:49:31] He actually shaped a lot of discussions that we had on firearms. [00:49:35] And then at one point, even healthcare. [00:49:36] There was this film, Sicko, for people who don't remember, where he showed us how Cuba had better healthcare than the United States and Canada. [00:49:42] And you're seeing these same talking points come back, only you're seeing it supported by an unlikely coalition. [00:49:48] So it's time to kind of put this to bed, I guess, for this decade. [00:49:52] Let's go meme check. [00:50:12] Yeah, that's one of my. [00:50:12] I like that stinger. [00:50:13] That's good. [00:50:14] And by the way, memes with zero sources, references, or any information even resembling accuracy, it's a really good way to make some money through clicks and ad revenue. [00:50:25] Those are the best, right? [00:50:26] It's really easy because you just figure all you need to do is figure out what people like or what they think is a thing and just say that thing back to them. [00:50:34] If you're like, yeah, you said the thing and that's my thing, you're like, isn't that the thing? [00:50:37] So here's more of the thing and ka-ching, ka-ching, ka-ching. [00:50:40] So today's meme check comes from the account. [00:50:43] MetaMateDaz on X. [00:50:45] And here you go. [00:50:46] It says, free universal healthcare is so complicated and expensive that only 32 of the 33 wealthiest countries in the world have figured it out. [00:50:54] And of course, the implication is that the United States hasn't figured it out. [00:51:00] Oh, we're the outlier. [00:51:02] Yeah, the ones who have created more modern medical innovations and have the best survival rates of any country on earth. [00:51:06] Yeah, we're the ones who were the outlier. [00:51:08] Stephen, it's not free. [00:51:10] Right. [00:51:10] Well, here's the truth. [00:51:11] So here's the truth the meme check. [00:51:12] And we'll provide all the references as we do every single show. [00:51:15] You can go back and watch some pretty in depth. [00:51:17] Segments I've done on this, including, by the way, me taking a hidden camera through Canadian healthcare, the hospitals where I was raised. [00:51:24] This is in 2009. [00:51:25] You can search it. [00:51:26] So the truth is, nobody has free healthcare. [00:51:29] It's just not a thing. [00:51:30] These other systems have major, major problems. [00:51:32] Now, if you consider 15% sales tax, 52% income tax, in some countries, even more, and you still have to pay for 70% of the drugs that you want, which is what the situation was like in Canada when I was being raised there, then fine. [00:51:45] I guess it's free. [00:51:47] But if you actually understand how economics work and tax rates, you know it's not free. [00:51:51] And then we look at the actual outcomes. [00:51:52] The United States has a broken system, and it's becoming more and more broken as we move toward more bureaucracy, as we move closer towards socialized health care or a public option. [00:52:02] Let's look, though, at the kind of results our system has created. [00:52:05] The United States outperforms all, all Anglosphere countries on five year survival rates. [00:52:11] All of them. [00:52:12] So you say, oh, 32 out of 33. [00:52:14] Yeah, we outperform all countries of note. [00:52:18] On the metrics that matter, if you want to survive some kind of healthcare crisis. [00:52:22] So let's look at lung cancer. [00:52:24] The United States, our five year survival rates are 27% higher than the UK. [00:52:28] Let's look at stomach cancer, 20% higher than Canada. [00:52:32] Let's look at brain cancer, five year survival rates, 43% higher than in Australia. [00:52:37] Now, you can look at the taxes, and this is not even taking into account the leftism that comes with these systems, right? [00:52:43] Where you're jailed for speech in many of these countries, where you can be debanked because of the coercive government control that's been granted to these authorities. [00:52:51] If you have, let's say, brain cancer, Let me ask you this. [00:52:56] Would you care that it's free if you were in Australia? [00:52:59] If you go, man, I could just be in another place geographically and have a 43% higher chance of surviving, what do you think would matter to you most? [00:53:10] Shouldn't we base our system around that and how to best accommodate and foster that? [00:53:16] Yeah, I would definitely go with the health care for my brain cancer and then just file bankruptcy. [00:53:21] Yeah, there you go. [00:53:22] Is that social safety net? [00:53:23] Yeah. [00:53:24] If you have to, but the truth is that's not what happens with most people in the United States. [00:53:27] They say that because you saw the movie John Q. People in these other countries, by the way, they don't have the greatest financial outcomes because they have a much lower quality of life. [00:53:34] If you did, and I know what you'll say, Swedes have a higher quality of life than you. [00:53:37] Yeah, until you put them in the United States. [00:53:39] Swedes in the United States have a 53% higher quality of life than Swedes in Sweden. [00:53:44] Same thing for Danes here in the United States when you take them out of Denmark. [00:53:47] Here's also some good news, by the way, because the media is nothing but crap all the time. [00:53:50] 70% of cancer patients will reach the five year mark in the United States. [00:53:55] Used to be about 50. [00:53:56] In the 1970s. [00:53:57] Now, this is the only place where we have the five year mark survival rates compared to other nations. [00:54:02] It's not perfect, but it's much better. [00:54:04] Let's go to MRIs because you go cancer. [00:54:06] Okay, well, that's, you know, not everyone gets cancer. [00:54:08] It's an outlier. [00:54:08] Okay, sure. [00:54:09] Let's go to something that most of you have experienced. [00:54:11] I've had to go through this. [00:54:12] My mom had to go through this, severing a disc in Canada to get an MRI. [00:54:14] You're looking at 16 weeks, and by the way, that's a low estimate. [00:54:18] Jeez. [00:54:19] UK, six to 12 weeks. [00:54:21] United States, about two. [00:54:23] I've had several MRIs, and I've never waited more than a week. [00:54:27] Yeah, I've gotten same week MRI appointments. [00:54:30] Well, I've gotten same day. [00:54:31] Me too. [00:54:32] And here's the thing, too the way we list emergency services in the United States is very different from in Canada. [00:54:38] In other words, you could. [00:54:40] Have a severed disc, you could have a ruptured disc in your back and not be able to walk, you're still waiting 16 weeks. [00:54:44] That's where here you might be in a day. [00:54:46] Yeah. [00:54:47] They don't have the ability to do that in Canada. [00:54:49] When my mom needed to get an MRI in Canada, that's the empirical, go check the references, the anecdotal, it was over a year to get an MRI. [00:54:56] Wow. [00:54:56] There were more MRI machines in the state of Vermont than all of Canada. [00:55:02] And you don't think of Vermont as a bastion of medical tourism or a big place. [00:55:06] Right. [00:55:07] Highly populated, no. [00:55:08] Yeah, not to mention basic preventative care. [00:55:10] Well, that's not a thing. [00:55:11] You can go back and watch that video. [00:55:12] You want to get blood work because something maybe runs in your family. [00:55:15] You want to get checked. [00:55:16] If you don't have a family doctor, it's about a two to three year wait time in Canada. [00:55:20] Let's look at elective surgery. [00:55:21] In Australia, 49 days. [00:55:23] UK, 62 days. [00:55:24] Canada, 30 weeks. [00:55:25] United States, 28 days. [00:55:27] 30 weeks? [00:55:28] And by the way, elective surgery includes knee surgery, removing a gallbladder, hernia, serious crippling chronic pain. [00:55:36] So it's not just implants and BBLs. [00:55:38] No, no. [00:55:39] And they have, again, different metrics. [00:55:40] Like when people often compare to infant mortality rate. [00:55:43] So, the United States has, well, actually, we have a much higher standard. [00:55:46] We consider some of these infants to be deaths, where in other countries they just don't. [00:55:50] If you equalize it and use the same standard to measure it, we actually have one of the lowest infant mortality rates ever in the history of the world. [00:55:58] Elective surgery, by the way, in Australia, it means even the most basic of things. [00:56:02] Froggy! [00:56:04] Oh, that's cute. [00:56:04] She's got a little pouch. [00:56:05] Yeah. [00:56:06] She identifies as one. [00:56:09] Appointments with specialists. [00:56:11] And by the way, being in Canada, I remember I needed to go see a dermatologist. [00:56:15] Also, skin cancer runs in my family. [00:56:16] My father had it. [00:56:17] That was, it was over a year. [00:56:19] It was over a year. [00:56:21] This was in Greenfield Park, Quebec. [00:56:24] So, this is back then. [00:56:26] Maybe it's gotten a little better because in Canada, they've opened up to privatized hospitals. [00:56:29] That didn't exist when I lived there, right? [00:56:31] They always reach the point of no return. [00:56:32] They say, okay, well, I'll have some private insurance now. [00:56:35] UK, it's about 13 and a half weeks, see a specialist. [00:56:37] Canada, it's about 15 and a half weeks. [00:56:39] Australia, 26 weeks. [00:56:41] United States, 30 days. [00:56:44] So, you look at this. [00:56:45] Those are high numbers, too, by the way. [00:56:46] Yeah. [00:56:46] Those are high. [00:56:47] We're using the worst numbers that we've ever seen in the United States. [00:56:50] We're making ourselves look as bad as we possibly can. [00:56:52] I've never waited more than a couple of weeks to see a specialist if I had to. [00:56:56] Right. [00:56:56] Never. [00:56:58] When I snapped my leg, I was there and it was drained and I was in for an MRI within the day. [00:57:04] Or I had a CAT scan, had the MRI the next day. [00:57:07] So, did you guys in Canada? [00:57:08] Because so we talked about Australia and we talked about their free health care and like the brain cancer survival rate. [00:57:13] It's like that 43% chance of a better survival rate in the United States. [00:57:17] You'd pay anything for that probably at that moment in time, right? [00:57:19] But in Canada, Australia, they also, 50% plus of the population, buy additional medical coverage on top. [00:57:25] Do they do that in Canada too? [00:57:26] Yeah. [00:57:26] Where you buy your own personal plan somehow? [00:57:28] Yeah. [00:57:28] So what happened is there was a famous Supreme Court case in Canada, Quebec specifically, Showee versus Quebec. [00:57:32] You can look this up. [00:57:33] I believe it was 2005. [00:57:34] I'm going by rote, 2004. [00:57:36] There was this doctor, Dr. Showee, who patients were basically in these long waiting lines. [00:57:41] So let's say right now, you know, to see a specialist in Canada is 15 weeks. [00:57:44] I would imagine back then it would be over 30 weeks. [00:57:46] Honestly, that seems like a very low estimate. [00:57:49] It changed because of the Supreme Court case. [00:57:50] You had people who. [00:57:52] We're facing certain death. [00:57:53] Yeah. [00:57:53] But it was you go in a waiting line. [00:57:54] By the way, I've buried relatives. [00:57:56] I've buried relatives. [00:57:59] Not me physically. [00:57:59] No, no, no. [00:58:00] I don't dig grapes. [00:58:01] But because of basic things that would have been caught in the United States. [00:58:05] Cancer by the time they go in at stage three or stage four, because you're talking about 15 weeks before you get a screening. [00:58:11] This has happened many, many times. [00:58:12] I don't think my father would have survived the kind of aggressive melanoma that he had here in the States in Canada. [00:58:18] I don't think he would have been able to get in because we didn't have a dermatologist. [00:58:22] Once our dermatologist retired, you're looking at a year to find another one. [00:58:24] So in Canada, a Supreme Court case, Shui versus Quebec, people are facing certain death and these obscene waiting queues. [00:58:31] And so they went to a doctor and they said, Look, I will pay for care. [00:58:34] Can you do something for me? [00:58:35] And he did that. [00:58:37] He received payment to administer care and people were happy to do it. [00:58:42] The government shut it down. [00:58:43] Yeah. [00:58:43] The government said, you cannot do that. [00:58:45] That's it. [00:58:45] We have a socialized system. [00:58:47] It went to the Supreme Court and they declared it a violation of fundamental human rights to not allow people to pay for care of their own free will. [00:58:56] They said, you cannot force people to effectively wait for death if they are willing to use their own money to pay for care. [00:59:03] Well, good on the Canadian Supreme Court. [00:59:04] Yeah. [00:59:05] Finally. [00:59:05] Yeah. [00:59:05] It paved the way for super hospitals in Canada, as we know them here hospitals. [00:59:10] People were able to pay for care, and turns out it's better. [00:59:14] But you know what happens? [00:59:15] What do you think happens if you're living in a country where I don't know the top marginal rates right now in Quebec? [00:59:20] When I was there, it was like 52%. [00:59:22] That kicked in well below six figures, to be clear, and 15% sales tax. [00:59:27] Actually, 7.5% I've lived GST, and then it was like 7% PST. [00:59:31] So they actually add up the tax, and then you're taxed on tax in sales tax. [00:59:35] So you're taxed on the total of the first 7.5%. [00:59:38] What do you think happens if 52% of your income is gone? [00:59:42] And 15% sales tax. [00:59:44] And by the way, the cost of living, whatever you're paying here for gas, usually close to double, if not more, in Quebec. [00:59:49] Same thing for milk. [00:59:50] Same thing for everything you would purchase daily, where I grew up. [00:59:53] What do you think happens as far as privatized? [00:59:57] Who do you think can afford that insurance? [00:59:59] Only the ultra wealthy, and it creates a two tiered system. [01:00:02] So you end up right back where you started, only with a bigger disparity. [01:00:07] So these are the socialized weight numbers. [01:00:09] I bet you if you were to separate them, I don't think that all these numbers separate the The newer, meaning the last decade and a half, super hospitals or privatized care versus a socialized health care. [01:00:18] I bet you the numbers will be probably about double because that's what they always were. [01:00:21] Yeah. [01:00:22] So their solution was moving close. [01:00:24] Here's another good example for you Canada, socialized health care, right? [01:00:29] There was one exception. [01:00:31] Maybe not, there wasn't one exception, but there was a notable exception. [01:00:34] LASIK, eye surgery, wasn't covered. [01:00:38] So the entire eye surgery, eye corrective industry, early on it was LASIK. [01:00:43] Now they used it, I don't know if they still call it LASIK. [01:00:44] Maybe it's a different laser. [01:00:46] It had to be consumer based. [01:00:48] You paid cash. [01:00:49] It was immensely cheaper than the United States. [01:00:52] People would travel from Boston, from New York. [01:00:53] They'd go and get their eyes done at like $700 an eye, whereas at that time it might have been over $2,000 an eye in the United States because you still had it going through insurance in many cases. [01:01:04] In Canada, the one area where it was entirely privatized, it was fast, it was good, it was so effective that people would travel to Canada for this one form of healthcare, no other. [01:01:15] Why? [01:01:15] Entirely private. [01:01:17] And so they were at the cutting edge. [01:01:18] That's when my dad got LASIK early, early on. [01:01:21] I had a teacher that did that, got LASIK in Canada. [01:01:23] Really? [01:01:24] Yeah. [01:01:25] Yeah, yeah. [01:01:25] Nowhere else do people go to Canada for treatment. [01:01:27] They're like, I got to get this medicine. [01:01:28] They go for meds. [01:01:29] I know that. [01:01:30] For medication. [01:01:30] They go for meds, or they used to at least. [01:01:33] Yeah. [01:01:33] Well, which actually brings us to the other point, too. [01:01:35] And I'll get to China in just a second. [01:01:36] The United States, we subsidize the health care of the world. [01:01:39] You know how Canada wouldn't be able to do that? [01:01:41] They wouldn't be able to pay for awful, terrible health care with quadruple the waiting times. [01:01:47] If they met their NATO requirements, Let alone could defend themselves and be their own sovereign nation. [01:01:55] Nations in Europe, they haven't met their NATO requirements, or at least pre-Donald Trump. [01:02:00] They hadn't met it for decades, but they were giving their citizens free internet, which also was pioneered here in the United States. [01:02:08] Let's change one thing. [01:02:10] Let's assume that all the health care is equal. [01:02:12] It's not. [01:02:12] The actual quality of care is worse. [01:02:14] You guys have to defend yourselves. [01:02:17] Go. [01:02:18] How do you think it would help, or how do you think it would affect the European nations if that hundred plus billion dollars that they were demanding for you, if they had to cough it all up? [01:02:27] If all of the nations combined, instead of not equaling just the United States contributions, If every one of those nations had to contribute as much as the United States, assuming they had been meeting their NATO requirements, it is international military welfare where we protect the rest of the free world. [01:02:45] And it still ends up collapsing. [01:02:47] And they have to open it up to privatized healthcare. [01:02:50] The United States, we are the top spender of healthcare, pharmaceutical research and development. === Hospital Access and Wait Times (04:01) === [01:02:54] It's not even close. [01:02:55] But you pay two to three times as much, like Josh just said, for basic medicine as Europeans. [01:03:00] Why? [01:03:01] Because 70% of the profits are from the United States market. [01:03:04] Why? [01:03:04] Because it's subsidized. [01:03:06] In Europe. [01:03:07] And so it's part of the business model. [01:03:09] You, the American worker, pay so that someone in Canada can get an American research, created, approved drug, and they get it subsidized by their government as they descend into socialist madness. [01:03:21] All the references are available, links in the description. [01:03:23] You guys need to know this. [01:03:25] When people talk about, I want to help America, yes, yes, but we need to look at the international welfare that we provide as well. [01:03:35] They suckle at the teat just as much. [01:03:37] As some inner city person on snap here getting Fanta in Coca Cola. [01:03:42] You guys need to know that. [01:03:44] But now, because of the Chinese propaganda on social media, along with Iranian propaganda, you guys need to know that. [01:03:49] Qatar, China, Iran, Russia, Ukraine, Canada, everyone does it on social media. [01:03:54] It doesn't mean it has to be accurate. [01:03:55] They spend a lot of money on propaganda and social media. [01:03:58] And it seems to be working with China. [01:04:00] People now consider the Chinese healthcare model to be the new darling of the internet. [01:04:04] Here you go. [01:04:04] Here's a collage for you a D14. [01:04:06] And people go, oh my gosh, the healthcare is great in China. [01:04:09] It's awesome in China. [01:04:10] Okay. [01:04:11] In reality, It looks like this, which is strikingly similar to what I experienced in Canada growing up. [01:04:17] A man in Henan posted a video on February 6th saying that getting a simple blood test at the first affiliated hospital of Zhengzhou University felt suffocating. [01:04:26] The scene was so chaotic that several patrol officers wearing helmets were there to maintain order. [01:04:46] So it's an airport. [01:04:50] It's the DMV with cancer. [01:04:51] The medical maze where one wrong turn could cost you hours. [01:04:57] In China, people don't typically see primary care doctors. [01:05:00] Whether you need a blood test or need cancer treatment, you go directly to a hospital. [01:05:05] To see a doctor, you have to register first. [01:05:08] Then head over to the right door for consultation. [01:05:12] After that, You follow the doctor's instructions and go to other departments for any necessary tests. [01:05:18] Finally, you get your prescription, pay the bill, and pick up your medication. [01:05:23] Major hospitals are packed with this many patients almost every single day. [01:05:28] Jeez. [01:05:28] Jeez. [01:05:30] Yeah. [01:05:30] So much better, Stephen. [01:05:31] So much better. [01:05:32] I imagine why outbreaks are such a thing. [01:05:34] I know. [01:05:34] I know. [01:05:35] Or at a Toronto airport for chronology. [01:05:37] That was the first SARS. [01:05:39] Yeah, we would have to do that. [01:05:39] You guys can go watch the video. [01:05:41] We'll link it in the description. [01:05:42] Where it was sick. [01:05:43] I think we were waiting for six hours with a broken arm and they didn't see anybody. [01:05:46] Yeah. [01:05:46] I wanted to get basic blood work. [01:05:47] I said cholesterol, blood pressure, runs in the family. [01:05:50] I really would like to get a workup because I've been having issues. [01:05:52] They say it's two to three years to get a family doctor. [01:05:54] Go check the graduates from med school. [01:05:56] You might be able to get one more quickly. [01:05:58] So insane. [01:05:59] I'd have to miss a day of school or a day of work, go down to the CLSC, the government clinic, take a number, usually try and get there at 5 a.m., wait for three, four, sometimes eight hours. [01:06:07] They always played Mr. Bean on a loop. [01:06:09] Anyone who used to go to the Charlemagne, you guys know what I'm talking about. [01:06:13] And then eventually you might get the blood work back if you were lucky enough to have a doctor. [01:06:17] Otherwise, you have to go to another clinic. [01:06:18] That's how it worked. [01:06:19] That's how healthcare worked there. [01:06:21] It was terrible. [01:06:23] When I first moved to the United States, I mean, again, I was raised from about three or four years old in Canada until I was about 18. [01:06:29] They were like hotels. [01:06:32] I said, wait, wait. [01:06:33] Someone had to explain to me the concept of like a minute clinic that you guys have. [01:06:37] I go, what? [01:06:39] So, you mean like I have to go into the big hospital? [01:06:41] Like, no, no, there are these clinics where you can just go in and they're, but it's fast. [01:06:44] It's like it's private. [01:06:44] You go in and you can see somebody. [01:06:46] Well, how long? [01:06:48] Like immediately. [01:06:48] I'm like, well, can they like do a, yeah, they can do a blood draw. [01:06:52] You're like, how many days does it take? [01:06:53] Like 30 minutes. [01:06:54] Yeah, it takes like 30 minutes. [01:06:55] To register? === Minute Clinic vs Big Hospitals (01:10) === [01:06:56] No, to see them. [01:06:57] You got, that didn't exist. [01:06:59] It wasn't how I pictured healthcare to be. [01:07:01] So, you have the empirical and the anecdotal. [01:07:05] Here, but I highly recommend that you prep yourself in knowing the empirical because people are trying to sell you this false bill of goods and they know what I've just told you. [01:07:12] They're just hoping that you don't look into it. [01:07:13] We've gone a little over time. [01:07:14] So if you are not yet a Mug Club Premium member, sorry, Rumble Premium, Mug Club Israel, it's easy for me to make a mistake because Mug Club grew into Rumble Premium where you get all these other shows, other creators, ad free, more content. [01:07:25] It's what keeps the lights on. [01:07:27] If not, we'll see you tomorrow. [01:07:28] We know many of you are curious to see how the conversation goes with Nick Fuentes. [01:07:33] I'm just going to tell you guys, I'm not going to be. [01:07:35] A dick. [01:07:36] I'm not. [01:07:37] We had a respectful conversation last time, and I'll keep it the same way. [01:07:39] I think strong disagreement, and that's what'll transpire. [01:07:43] If not, you're going to continue on to watch Hailey Corona. [01:07:46] I guess there's a video that we missed that you guys wanted to show me. [01:07:49] Are you telling me that AOC is doing the fake Southern preacher thing again? [01:07:53] No. [01:07:54] Okay. [01:07:54] Maybe. [01:07:55] We are not divided by state, we are united by our humanity. [01:08:00] And she literally wore a purple suit. [01:08:02] Oh my God. [01:08:04] Thank you.