Doug MPA’s Pearl Daily episode dissects systemic unfairness toward men, from Eliza livestreaming her assault on Zscoro in 2024 to legal cases like Tulsa’s Thomas ($65K+ in child support) and Memphis’ Edward Bowdery ($460/month despite DNA proof). Callers—Zach (Ravens player’s $17M contract loss), Scott Rose (20+ years of $750–$1,200/month payments), and Dustin (custody battles after kidnapping)—highlight financial exploitation, double standards in schools, and elite-driven invisibility of men’s contributions. James "Baldhead" from Seattle’s McKinley Irving case reveals how women weaponize legal systems, while Marvin and Esteban argue men can fight back through fee waivers and lawsuits. The episode concludes: societal shifts demand men reclaim agency before exploitation becomes permanent. [Automatically generated summary]
Welcome to another episode of Pearl Daily here on the Audacity Network.
Today we're going to talk about life is really it's not fair for men.
And men, they have a tendency to find this out when they're fairly young.
You know, they see their sisters get away with things in the house that they can't get away with.
They see girls get away with things in public school that almost that they could never get away with because almost 80% of school teachers are women.
They're told they're not fast enough, tall enough, or handsome enough.
And it's really, it's part of the journey of being a man.
You know, that's why it makes me laugh when feminists say they want things to be equal.
Because when has life ever been equal?
Life is never going to be fair for men.
So feminists are literally advocating for life to be as unfair for women as it is to men.
That's why you see so many women that are unhappy in 2025.
Women are finding out that being a man and living up to these expectations just isn't fun, you know, despite what feminism tells them.
So why am I talking about this?
I'm talking about this because one of the most unfair things about being a man is having to endure unfair treatment.
Men are expected to just take abuse, take horrible treatment, and take disadvantageous deals in order for women in society to thrive.
It's why people get so tripped up when I ask the question, what's in it for men?
And their default is what's in it for society, right?
That's their default.
How many men have you seen whose girlfriends physically and emotionally abuse them?
The expectation is for men to endure for the sake of everybody else, and it's really not fair, and it's not right.
So here's a woman getting, so now we're going to watch women be treated like men.
So we're going to, here's a woman destroying a car for cheating and getting arrested for it.
Mendolysm for what? She said for what?
Bitch.
What do you think?
Guys, make sure you like the video.
A like is free.
For what?
Felling evangelism from all over social media.
I'm pregnant.
I can't get victims.
He hits her.
What do you mean?
You're not protecting me.
Why are you putting hands on me?
Did you press charges, man?
No.
Exactly.
You got to record yourself.
No, she's not going nowhere.
I'm going to close the door because she's not going nowhere.
Step out the house.
Yeah.
And so that's why you always see women have these altercations with the police.
They're so used to just doing whatever they want that when a man treats them equally, they really can't take it.
Five seconds, man.
Step out.
No, we're trying to make this easy for you.
So either you step out the house or we go in there.
You're not coming in.
What?
Nah, you can't come in.
Okay, okay, I'm gonna go.
You can't come in.
They proceed to come in.
That's so funny.
What do you mean?
All right, um, woman arrested for beating a man on live stream.
We're gonna keep going.
And we're gonna do a call-in show, and I want you guys to tell your story about when you've been treated unfairly as a man.
We'd see what happens when a woman is caught beating her fiancé, not only on video, but in front of thousands of people on a live stream.
Don't talk.
Don't fucking talk.
41-year-olds.
Oh, my God.
Was a former writer for the Howard Stern Show and had been pursuing an alternate streaming career on YouTube.
However, thank you for the super chat channel ID.
You're the best.
What a guy.
Thank you so much.
This would be short-lived when she decided to live stream her crimes on April 8th, 2024.
Don't talk.
Don't fucking talk.
Yes, sir.
We're really sorry about this and sending him your way today.
So don't worry.
But yeah, so yeah, he's coming.
Don't worry.
He's coming home.
Alright, I'm leaving.
She's just like all those broke my dogs.
She's gonna get up these idiots.
She posted your finger in her cancer discord.
And I would just be polite.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, so, so, bar, bar rom, bar wrong.
How do you?
Oh, my gosh.
So, I'm gonna text you your nudes that he sent me and what he wrote about you.
He said you're a dumb Mexican that he doesn't even like.
Just how he said that I'm a streamer that he doesn't like.
So, you guys are like, wow.
Interesting.
Yeah, sure.
Uh, yeah, touch me, and I fing dick your dumbass bitch.
I'll fing dick you.
That's the face of a guy who's done.
He's done.
He's like, please leave.
The man you see in the passenger seat is Barham, a streamer under the name of Zscoro, who had not only been making content with Eliza, but was also involved in a complex relationship with her.
Whether they were lovers, associates, or something else completely, we would only find out much, much later on.
Additionally, prior to this assault, Eliza had gotten her hands on Barham's phone and discovered that he had been- See, what if men beat us when we cheated?
And we cheat more than the men.
We truly do.
I mean, we're the biggest 3-0-foes, and men can't beat us up every time we do behavior they don't like.
Society might be a little better if they could, but you know, that's illegal, so don't do that.
But now the women think they just get a get-out-of-jail free card for cheating.
Been involved with other women, texting and flirting with them, resulting in Eliza's outrage.
However, it was about to get far, far worse as yeah.
All right, men should never hit women, apparently.
That's what this is saying.
Should men be able to defend themselves from women in women's sports.
Men are pretending that they're women and they're participating in women's sport.
You're aware of that, right?
And they just had a swimming match or something happened where the guy said that he's a woman and he's competing in the women's sport and he's beating them out.
Should men participate in women's sport?
Should men pretend what's a women's sport?
Swimming, basketball.
How is basketball a women's sport?
You have women that play basketball.
Yeah.
And it's all women.
Yeah.
That's a women's sport.
Women's sports.
Should men play with women in their sport?
If they want to, I guess.
I don't know.
Do you know that men are playing swimming?
You know that they're pretending?
You know that there are men who are pretending to be women, right?
I mean, transgenders?
Right.
Yeah.
You know that they're pretending to be women, right?
The transgender men.
Should the transgender men be allowed to participate, compete against women in their sport as a woman?
I don't think that's up to me to judge.
No, not judge, just observation.
Observation.
I mean, why not?
Oh, my.
Women like this that are just not athletic at all.
Not even the slightest.
Women like me, who played sports for over two decades, now I have to deal with what they're fighting for.
Truly.
They feel that they are a woman.
Someone in the chat says, girls in high school put sand in my hair after gym ended, and I felt there was nothing I could do.
I just brushed the sand off and walked away, but she thought it was so funny.
I never reported it.
And get on the website, guys, if you have something you want to put up there.
Women, more power to them.
Yeah.
And so in the women's sport, the guy beating them out, right?
And this one woman that would normally beat, she's losing against the man.
She's mad about it.
Should she be angry about that?
I don't know.
If I'm competitive, I might be a little mad, but.
Yeah.
Really?
Yeah.
Should women be allowed to play men's sports?
See, I feel like it's a little, like, a little blurry there because men can be a little more rough.
So I would hate for a woman to get hurt along the way.
That's more proof that women are not equal to men.
Uh-huh.
No, I'm just looking at.
He goes, uh.
Now, like.
Right.
Because men should never hit a woman.
Why not?
Men should never hit a woman.
That's just fed up.
Why?
Why should a man hit a woman?
To protect himself.
Oh, man.
This isn't a lot.
What do you mean?
I just disagree with your viewpoints.
Why?
You think a man should hit a woman?
Should a woman hit him?
Yes, I do.
I don't think violence is the answer to anything.
No, in protection, he's self-defense.
Let's say a woman hit, he shouldn't just go around hitting her just for no reason.
Yeah.
But let's say that, should women hit men?
No.
Right.
So if a woman should hit a man, shouldn't he smack her back?
No.
Yes.
No.
I'm going to say no only because that'll get you put in jail, fellas.
In the current system, I wouldn't.
Why not?
Because she's a girl.
Well, she doesn't know that.
But I just think that's unfair.
So if a woman smacks a man, what should he do?
He probably deserved it, to be honest.
What?
Women, man.
Yeah, you want to play this game?
Let's go.
Doesn't she deserve to be smacked back?
She's a girl.
Guys should not hit girls.
But girls should hit guys.
I never said that.
No.
But if they do, the guy should smack her back.
No.
Why not?
Because guys shouldn't hit girls.
Why?
Because it's just unfair.
Well, how?
Because girls are tender and beautiful creatures that should not be hit.
But don't they know that before they hit the man that they can't handle it?
I don't know.
Uh-huh.
I have no idea.
So if she smacked him one time, for example, and he smacked her back, wouldn't that send a loud message?
You can't be treating me this way.
She just stopped.
I don't think the guy should ever hit the girl.
Really?
Yeah.
Not even to protect himself against it.
No, what is he protecting?
What if she's got like a knife?
Can he do it then?
No?
He is a human being, just as she is.
Right.
And no one should treat each other that way.
Yeah, violence is never the answer.
Right.
That's what I think.
Have you ever smacked a guy?
Yes.
That's the look of someone who's beat the shit out of her ex-boyfriend.
Have I?
Oh, yeah.
I can tell you.
I don't think so.
No, you have.
I'm not a violent person.
I will cuss a bitch out, though.
I will curse a bitch out, but nah, I don't smack you.
Yeah.
Pearl should interview Tungen, Samoan, and Philasian women.
Same with women born in the Philippines, Korea, and China.
They will smack their men on the regular, and the men just take the hit.
Do you know what?
Oh my gosh.
You know what?
I lived when I was in London, so I lived in a very Muslim area.
But for whatever reason, the building I lived in was very Asian, Chinese.
And there was this Asian couple across the street or across my apartment complex.
And yeah, I do think that she beat him or something because they would yell a lot.
And they would be so quiet in public.
So you would never.
But I would come out sometimes and I would just hear yelling.
All right.
Man finds out that his 11-year-old son is not his.
And guys, we're going to put the link in the chat now before this last video.
I need you guys to help me make this show.
My question is going to be: what is the worst thing you're expected to put up with as a man?
And when did you learn that you were supposed to put up?
What did you learn that you were supposed to put up with when young?
So in a bit, I have like a couple videos left, but we'll go through them quick.
What's up?
Is why you've been lying for 11 years telling me that DJ is my real son?
Why you been lying to me?
What I've been lying about?
I got a DNA test done.
A DNA saying what?
Saying that he's not my son.
Let me see this DNA test.
You don't need to see it.
I saw it.
How DNA tests are going to say that?
How are you going to be lying to me for 11 years?
Why would you do that to me?
Who wears the lie?
The lie is you.
You are the liar.
Where's the lie?
Isn't that crazy?
I don't know if this is real.
Let me look in the comments.
This is so crazy that then brag to her.
Okay.
You would hope it's staged.
11 years having me believe that my son that I've been raising for 11 years is not really my son.
Like, how could you do that to me?
Like, what can you say for yourself right now?
What made you get a DNA test?
Because I went through your phone.
And why?
Talking about me, laughing and bragging, telling your friends that I have no idea that he's really not my son.
So I want to get a DNA test done.
Like, you think I'm stupid or something?
Like, how could you do this to me?
You know what?
What?
Care more about me going through your phone than you lying to me about somebody, my son, not being mine?
Are you kidding me right now?
Are you kidding me right now?
You care more about being humiliated and me finding out that our son is not really my son and that he has a different father than him?
I should have because I thought he was my son.
Because you've been lying to me this whole time.
What are you talking about?
Does it matter?
It does matter.
Are you crazy?
What do you mean?
That absolutely matters.
Like, you don't see anything wrong with what you did?
You don't see anything wrong with what you did?
You've been lying to me.
You've been sitting here lying to me for a lot for 11.
Of course, I love him, but I can't.
But you guys can't stay.
You can't stay here anymore.
Where are we going to go?
I don't know.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, she's got to get out of here.
It's not my problem.
It's not my problem.
You can't stay here.
I don't know.
It's not my problem.
I did my job.
I did my job.
Yeah, you guys got to stop arguing with women.
Just show them.
That's the biggest waste.
I saw this guy arguing on a clip the other day, and I messaged him.
I'm like, look, you're too smart to be arguing with women.
We're not logical creatures or really good people in general, not all.
So, you know, if you find out she's a terrible person, he's trying to rationalize why are you, he's saying, why are you so awful?
Do you think she's going to be introspective and say, do you know what I am?
An awful person.
Yeah.
Let me just fix my life.
No, she's going to double down.
My job is a dad.
I did my job as a dad.
You can't stay here anymore.
Y'all got to go.
Y'all can't stay there anymore.
No, I'm hurt.
I'm hurt.
I can't deal with it.
I can't deal with it.
Y'all can't stay here anymore.
Y'all got to go.
Y'all got to get y'all out.
Y'all got to go.
I can't deal with it.
I'm putting y'all up.
Yes.
I'm going to put you out.
I'm going to put you out.
I'm going to pack your bags myself and put you out of here.
I will pack your ass.
Y'all can't stay here.
You got to go.
You lied to me.
You lied to me.
You lied to me for 11 years.
And you lied to me.
For 11 years straight.
You lied to me.
Having me believe that he's my son.
No, you got to go.
You got to go.
You got to get up out of here.
You got to get up out of here.
No.
And here's the thing.
He's never going to be the same.
When women attack a man like that, they're never the same as a person.
Look at you.
I can't look at.
No.
Y'all got to go.
Y'all got to go.
Oh, Tom Likas is still a lot.
Someone told me he died.
Yeah, if you wanted to come on.
Sorry, Tom.
I didn't mean to spread that.
I gotta go.
No.
Before I do something crazy, I'm gonna regret.
Yes.
Yes.
Yeah, you guys should never say that to a woman.
Before I do something crazy, the woman is going to get worse.
She wants you to be crazy.
That's what she wants.
Yeah.
Brutal, man.
All right.
Next, we got woman ask why it's okay for girls to hit boys.
Oh, I am looking rough this morning.
But anyway, I want to talk about what is this fascination with these kids and fighting.
Like, I just don't get it.
Especially now with the girls, the girls attacking boys.
Girls that attack boys that hit boys.
And if you're like me, I raise my boys to keep their hands off girls.
First of all, I don't want them fighting.
No, I can't ever say none of my kids have never fought.
Especially with my daughter, she don't fight.
She ain't finna fight you.
Yeah, she's going to be one of those that's going to call 911.
Okay.
She's 12.
She's already known.
Ain't about time fighting.
Okay.
And her twin brother, he's not a fighter.
He'll, you know, he'll stick up for himself, but he's not a fighter.
My other two boys, if you take it there, they're going to go there.
But they are not the type of kids that's going to come and just, you know, put them up, touch you, whatever, whatnot.
But these girls these days do not care.
They will put their hands on a boy in a minute.
And I'm not understanding where is this coming from.
Why are you allowing and teaching your girls it's okay to put their hands on people, especially boys?
Now, I'm teaching my boys to keep their hands to themselves.
Don't hit no girl.
Like, I don't want my boys to be hitting on girls.
For the most part, they have never ever and never will witness a man putting his hands on me.
They have never witnessed their father putting his hands on a woman.
You know, so they don't know.
They haven't been in situations where they didn't see women getting beat up.
So I know that that doesn't mean that they can't, you know, end up being, you know, domestic, having domestic situations or whatever.
You know, everybody is a different person.
But hopefully from the experiences that they have in life and things that they have seen, they have taken away that that's one thing you do not do.
So I'm not understanding if you go through life and you're used to a guy putting his hands on you or different things like that.
Why would you teach your daughters or make it okay?
I don't even say teach, but make it okay for them to think it's okay for them to put their hand on boys.
Like, I don't get this whole thing with these girls hitting boys.
I didn't see situations where girls come and they hit the boys and boys can, you know, push them off of them and be pushing them off of them.
And the boys get kicked out of school because the girl can't put her hands on them.
Or a girl will sit there and she'll verbally attack a boy, say everything under the sun.
And if the boy say a little, a little anything smart to the girl, he'll get kicked out of school.
And it's like, it's crazy because our boys have feelings too.
You know, our boys don't want to be physically attacked.
Our boys don't want to be verbally attacked.
So why, why do you think it's okay for your girls to attack our boys?
Like, I don't understand it.
Like, if.
Yeah, so this poor mother, you can't stop these young women.
They're giving everything in life.
So now there's a man who's paying child support for a kid that's not even his.
A man's worst nightmare.
A Tulsa man is ordered to pay child support for a baby that's not his.
Thomas tells us he wants to get Oklahoma's law changed in hopes of helping other men in the same situation.
News on Sex Crime reporter Lori Fulbright explains how the law works.
When Thomas's high school girlfriend got pregnant, he married her, and then five months later, she gave birth to a baby boy, and he believed he had a son.
But as often happens with young marriages, theirs fell apart.
And the boy was about three years old when Thomas decided to get a paternity test.
Comes back at 0%.
That was in my office.
I saw that.
Can you imagine three years of that responsibility?
There's another man's kid.
I should have expected it, but I didn't.
And it hit me.
And I was next to my coworker at that time, and I was telling her, I was just shocked by how someone could do this to someone.
A judge ordered Thomas to take another DNA test.
He did.
Same result.
So at first, the judge ruled Thomas.
Crypto says from one of your female.
I have a woman that watches.
I didn't think you guys could take it.
Thanks for the great content.
Was off the hook financially.
But then reverse that decision because Oklahoma law says men must question paternity within two years of the child's birth.
Thomas says he has no reason to question it before he did, but because he missed that deadline, the judge ordered him to pay around $500 a month in child support, plus nearly $15,000 in back support plus interest.
Oh my gosh, $15,000 in back support.
For a child that's not his.
I wish I was telling a lie.
I wish this wasn't the truth, but it is.
That's what makes it so crazy.
And everyone I talk to about this, they can't believe where the court is coming from.
Thomas wants lawmakers to change the law.
He believes DNA matters regardless of when a man learns he's not the father of a child, especially if that man was lied to.
But even if the law changes, it'll be too late for Thomas.
It's done.
I mean, it's already done.
That's the law.
So basically, once a child...
What an evil woman.
Evil woman.
Okay, next.
Another man has to pay child support for a kid that is not his.
Now to attend News Channel 3, getting to the bottom of a burning question one Memphis man has been trying to answer for years.
Why is Shelby County Juvenile Court forcing him to pay for a child that is not biologically his?
Can you imagine the frustration every month watching your paycheck go for a mistake you didn't even make?
I don't want to call kids mistakes, but with some of the women that you guys get pregnant, I can't say it was planned, right?
I mean, these all these corn stars are getting pregnant.
If you plan that, I don't know how you would think that was a good decision, but I just cannot imagine because, and I think I'm going to react to my video I put up on my channel the other day talking about how I understand that men fear women.
There are women that have cost me millions of dollars, and if I ever met them in person, I just pray to God I never do because I would want to kill.
And I can't imagine how you guys feel about your ex-wives that are making your lives hell.
But at least you know that that woman gave you a child.
You can at least counter rationalize it, right?
But money, 500 bucks every single month for 18 years, I would kill somebody.
What's even more unusual, he says the judges at juvenile court have an idea who the real father is.
Yet they're still demanding he pay up.
Now he's turning to on-your-side investigator Stephanie Skurlock for help.
Talk Show TV makes millions off the catchphrase, you are not the father.
But the reality in Memphis is just because you're not the daddy doesn't mean Shelby County Juvenile Court won't make you pay.
I was down there in handcuffs and chains.
Over the years, Edward Bowdy had his driver's license stripped and once even found himself in handcuffs over child support payments for a child that's not his.
I would hate to see somebody else go through the same thing.
I've been going through this.
I mean, headaches.
This mound of paperwork shows a juvenile court judge ordered him to pay child support even before the birth.
I didn't do a voluntary acknowledgement.
I didn't sign the birth certificate.
All I know is we legitimated the child in your name.
Bowdery asked several judges during several hearings for a DNA test, but no judge ordered one.
I said, how did I even get put on child support?
And I never said this was my child.
And they said, again, this is not what we're here for.
In 2009, he took the child support.
Yeah, because they all get, everyone gets paid off of the man's money.
So if the actual dad doesn't have money, yeah, they're not going to go through a lot of trouble if your name's on the birth certificate.
Get a DNA test and found the son he'd supported for years was not biologically his.
He took the documentation to court.
The judge wouldn't accept it, but ordered a new DNA test done that showed the same results.
Probability of paternity, 0%.
They never did do what they were originally supposed to do, which was give me the opportunity to take a DNA test.
I was just a voice not being heard.
So I guess I needed a choir.
Juvenile court magistrate Nancy Kessler agreed in October to allow Bowtery to disestablish paternity, but only after he says she admonished him for taking it this far.
The judge stated that, well, I don't, I find it very distasteful that you're bastardizing a child.
The judge stopped the child support going forward, but Bowtery still has to pay $460 a month to the mother in back pay.
He doesn't believe he should have to pay anything.
In fact, he believes someone owes him money, the $30,000 he's already paid.
Administrators at juvenile court denied our request for an interview on this case, saying it's not appropriate to comment about rulings.
What are the chances of him getting his money back?
It is very unusual and very infrequent.
Family lawyer Miles Mason says in a similar case, the Tennessee Supreme Court ruled a man in Middle Tennessee could sue his ex-wife for fraud.
He got a $100,000 judgment.
There was a very large judgment awarded against the mother, but I doubt it would be likely that they would be able to collect in most cases.
This bill is simple: that a person who has proven not to be the biological father.
State Representative Jay Hardaway says he's heard from a number of fathers in his district who were like Bowtery.
He introduced a bill letting them file civil lawsuits against the biological fathers, but it never made it out of committee.
To a degree justice needs to be served.
I think it needs to be a totally different, a new law or something.
The question many people might ask: why is Bowtery still paying back pay to the child's mother?
Well, we're told by law, the new judge he's dealing with can't undo another judge's ruling.
Well, the on your side.
Yeah.
I wanted to show you guys a video.
It got a lot of traction on my channel.
I think I got to do more coffee talks because I haven't done them.
I was walking the other day and I just sometimes I have these thoughts.
And this was an example of how life really isn't fair for men of someone I know in my hometown.
So I don't know if you guys can hear me.
It's kind of windy.
It's like nice sunset out here.
So I'm back home right now and I'm kind of like by my hometown.
And there's this childhood friend that we have out here that he had like a false accusation issue with a woman who basically said that, you know, he raped her.
And it was like completely baseless.
She never went to the cops, whatever.
And he ended up kind of getting off like scotch-free.
I mean, in terms of he kept his job and didn't get taken to court or the police or anything.
But she did a lot of damage to his reputation.
I mean, she had a bunch of posts on Facebook.
She called his job, like all this stuff.
And I was thinking about this guy.
I was talking to his mom the other day and he's never gonna be the same after that.
He's never gonna date the same.
You know, he's like scared of women.
And I never understood why men like don't fight more.
You know what I mean?
Like, you know, these women, these women, like, do these evil things, and it's just very difficult because that girl goes on to live a normal life to just watch like them get away with it.
Do you know what I mean?
Like, she can just go on, and he has to be damaged forever.
And so, when I got into like the red pill space and like media and I started talking about like men's issues, this frustrated me, right?
So, I, you know, I like calling out women, and you like, um, you feel like you're sticking it to them, whatever.
But then the women started treating me like they treat a man.
Whenever you embarrass them, or they feel like they're wrong, um, or they feel like you're wrong, they go to like no ends to ruin your life.
And, like, I've been called a pedophile.
Um, not true, completely baseless.
I've been dragged to court, I've had been threatened with lawsuits.
Um, I've you know, had my name slandered.
Like, if you Google me, there's all this stuff, and I'm grateful to like get to do my job and stuff.
But I see why men kind of just let women win in a way because it's way easier to just pay the woman off and give her the million dollars or, you know, like when you see those cases where the woman's obviously doing a false accusation, but it's like easier to just give them the money to get them to go away.
Like, it's easier to lie to the woman than deal with her scorn.
And, you know, people will make fun of guys and say, what?
So you're afraid of women?
And to be honest, after going through like the last few years and seeing how women treated me, and I'm sure they treat you guys, I know they treat you guys worse.
I'd say, yeah.
Most men, I hope you guys can hear me.
It's kind of windy.
But most men, they do fear women.
And it's completely warranted.
Because women can have so much power.
Like, we're just drunk on power.
We have the police on our side.
We have, like, you can have a woman dragging you to court.
And you have to spend $100,000 just to prove you didn't do something.
So I really think after going through this, and I don't want to make it seem, you know, like, I had one scorned woman cost me millions of dollars.
One scorned woman, millions of dollars.
That if I just gave her her way, if I just said, fine, you win, would have saved me millions of dollars.
And I think that's what men go through.
It's easier to just tell the woman that you win, you're right, than to lose millions of dollars, lose your reputation, have secrets of yours blasted and used against you.
And yeah, I think that's why men fear women.
I hope you guys can hear me.
It's getting kind of windy.
But thanks for watching.
Thanks for supporting me all over all the years.
Yeah, so I really explained it there where a lot of times it's just easier to give women their way because my God, they just make your life a living hell if you don't.
But let's see who's on the line.
So we're going to do a call-in show and I have a question for you guys.
What is the worst thing?
So we went through women can make your life hell and they get away with it.
You know, men paying for kids that aren't theirs, men having to accept women attacking them.
What do you think is the worst thing you're expected to put up with as a man?
And what did you learn you were supposed to put up with when you were young?
So when's the first time you realize that you're treated differently as a man and that you just have to put up with something?
I'm guessing we got Doug MPA on the line.
Of course we do.
What's up, Doug MPA?
Hey, Pearl, how's it going?
Good.
How are you?
I'm good.
So what are your thoughts on the topic?
What is the worst thing you're expected to put up with as a man?
First off, guys, don't get married.
Don't do it.
Because that was what I learned.
There's a lot of small things when you're a single guy, but in marriage, you find out what you're supposed to put up with.
And one of the biggest things is a couple things.
One, your money is the house money, and then her money is her money.
So you have to pay for everything and then give her the freedom to be able to spend her money how she chooses to spend it.
And if you try to say anything against it, you're, you know, you're, well, a real man wouldn't this, and I'm supposed to be your wife, and I'm independent because women expect to be independent in a relationship and independent in a marriage.
So that's number one.
Number two, I meet a lot of guys who are married, but once again, their wife still wants to be independent.
So the guy is making because 70% of households, the man is the breadwinner.
His wife will work part-time or have some multi-level marketing business, and he's supposed to make her feel empowered, make her believe that she doesn't need him when he's paying all the bills and that she's still strong and independent.
So she has some multi-level marketing and way thing, and he has to buy into the delusion, buy into her delusion that she's somehow contributing to the household.
It's garbage.
Absolute garbage.
And what about when you were young?
Yeah, what was the first thing you noticed when you were young?
Well, remember, guys, in sixth grade, the girls start hitting puberty first.
And so a lot of girls are taller than the boys.
I don't know if you guys remember that time.
I think it's around sixth grade.
And girls get real physical when they get taller than you and bigger than you.
So in sixth grade, girls would be trying to fight the boys as we haven't hit puberty yet.
So I remember this one girl, her first name was Erin.
And she took that if they like you, she'll hit you thing to the extreme.
Because it was a push and a shove.
Oh, like you shoved her back, and then the teacher yelled at you.
Yeah, but that was in sixth grade, I think it was.
So, but yeah, guys, we're just supposed to eat it, especially when it comes to women.
Society does not care.
They just don't.
And like Pearl was saying to Andrew Wilson, why do men have to sacrifice so much and endure so much for society and women when society and men, society and women just don't care?
Why?
Yeah, I know that's like the default for TradCons.
Well, what's in it for men?
Well, but society, you know.
Yeah.
And guys, look, man, this is 2025.
A woman vandalizes your car or does something to you, press charges, and don't be afraid to defend yourself, guys.
Equal rights means equal lefts.
Do you see the woman that was vandalizing the car after he cheated?
Why do women think it's okay to commit crimes over cheating?
Like, I understand cheating is an alley.
You can be mad about it, but I mean, that doesn't give you the right to vandalize or to trespass.
Or even worse, a woman will sabotage their husband or significant other because they got mad.
This guy that was on the Seahawks, he went to the Ravens.
He got a $17 million one-year deal with the Ravens.
Him and his wife got in a fight, and his brother was in the NFL too.
So him and his wife, they got in a fight, and he went to his brother's house.
His brother was holding a party.
So, of course, on Snapchat and social media, he was posting videos of him and his brother at the party, at his brother's house with women all over the place.
So one of his friends, one of his wife's friends, saw that and showed the wife that the wife got her, you know, her pistol with three of her friends out of the house, was waving the gun around, the pistol with a couple of the hookers there.
And when the police came, he had gotten the pistol away from his wife, but she had picked up a knife and was chasing him around his car in the driveway.
Right?
So the police walk up and they're literally running back and forth around the cars.
So they arrest her.
And because it's a domestic, you know, incident, he ended up losing his $17 million contract with the Baltimore Ravens.
No.
Yeah.
Oh, my.
I can't believe she brought a gun.
What is wrong with these women?
And was it worth it?
No.
Was 17 million.
Oh, but that's why the guys have to placate to the women, too.
You know what I mean?
Like, it would have been easier for him to say, oh, you're right.
Let me just leave this party.
You know, like, it would have saved, even though he shouldn't have to do that.
That's how women end up getting their way because then it's like, you don't want to, you just lost $17 million for what?
Yeah.
And of course, his statement was politically correct.
He's like, yeah, you know, me and my wife need to take some privacy.
So please respect our privacy.
And, you know, I want to get my family back.
She ruined it for you, dude.
There's nothing that he could have done.
And she doesn't work.
So was that worth $17 million?
I don't think so.
Yeah, especially athletes.
They got to wait till their career is over to get married.
Oh, God.
There's too many sharks in there.
Is there any guys on the line?
No.
Yeah, so I'll let in.
Okay, cool.
Zach.
What's going on, Zach?
You hear me?
He's still connected.
Oh, he's still connecting.
Zach, are you there?
Sister connecting to audio.
Zach, how's it going?
How's it going?
How about you?
Good.
Where are you calling out of?
South Carolina.
Hold up.
Sorry.
I'll get.
Oh, nice.
So what is the worst thing you're expected to put up with as a man?
Well, more or less what I would have put up with, not anymore.
The nagging, the expectation of always having to please, things of that kind of nature, which can go very far, really, depending on the woman.
They'll push you super far.
Is there an example that's coming to your head of a time that happened to you that you had to put up with?
For me, it was usually just a period of consistently having someone like expect me to always have to appeal to them, give them validation, you know, always be talking to them and giving them like, I love you, baby, and, you know, trying to always be kind of stuck in their ass, you know, whether it be spending time with them or whatnot, way more than you need to.
Like, it wasn't really all that serious.
I did not need to spend all my time with a girl like that.
It just was not worth it.
Especially she ended up cheating on me.
So it's like, fuck.
Yeah, she cheated.
That's how it goes.
But you didn't key your car or nothing when you found out?
No, no, no.
We were actually long distance as well.
Oh, yeah.
So when did you, what did you learn when you were young that you were supposed to put up with?
Like, do you have your first memory?
Descriptively, what I saw was my mom was objectively an evil bitch.
I gave her the perfect traditional life and she spit in his face with it.
She only wanted to pursue her interest and basically sucked all his income like a vampire.
And he still kept, was able to provide.
He made good for himself.
You know, we could have been middle class for quite a long time and maybe even gone a little further because he was very, very good with money.
And he had to sell property.
He had to sell this.
He had to sell that all because of her incessant buying just ridiculously.
What did she spend her money on?
That was a good question.
Where did it go?
It definitely went all in cigarettes, but I mean, that's the real shocking part is I never saw where it went.
I mean, it wasn't close.
It was clothes.
Like clothes, trip, plastic surgery.
You don't know?
That's the thing is there was nothing that I could observe that could tell you where the fuck the money went.
You know, some of it was into pyramid schemes.
Okay.
Fair enough.
That was a little bit to see.
But other parts, it's like it just evaporated.
I mean, she somehow got materials that she could toss away and just keep on spending, keep on spending, keep on spending.
It was really, really ridiculous.
Got it.
Was there anything at school that you observed between like the men and the women in the classrooms at a young age?
I kind of kept to myself for the most part.
I did notice the difference in kind of how women or girls could get away with a little bit more than the guys could, but not too much.
I mean, my school was fairly tame and I grew up in the 90s.
So it's like, it wasn't like everything just was batshit crazy like today.
So, I mean, and again, I'm in South Carolina, so I don't think it's like a completely ridiculous place.
That's bad.
Got it.
Okay, well, thank you for calling in.
Doug MPA, you got any other questions for him?
Yeah, I would say the Modern Women playbook is they want to meet an ambitious, productive, highly skilled, or highly educated man, and then get him to set his ambition and desires aside to help her achieve her selfish goals and dreams.
And that sounds exactly like what your mother did.
Because I always say when men win, everyone wins.
And when women win, they win for themselves.
Can I speak on one thing, Pearl?
Sure.
So I think I have some descriptive truths and a prescription for the average man, perhaps.
So descriptively, if men just understand, some of us are always going to be sacrificed.
So if we just all choose to stonewall these bitches, what are they going to do about it?
Men don't need sex from women.
We can do handball if we got to.
So it's like if you start understanding where your actual value is and sacrifice for anyone, then it's like, what are they going to do about it?
They have to cake.
And it's like, there's always younger women coming up.
And eventually you stonewall long enough, they're going to get in line.
I mean, we have more power.
I mean, what can they do about it?
You know, and as far as like acting out, you know, like, just don't put up with it.
You don't have to.
You know, peace is better than fake happiness because you're always trying to please someone and then they give it back to you.
Like, this doesn't need to be that kind of transaction.
Like, if I'm got to be the protector, the leader, and the provider, then shut the fuck up and I won't put up with less.
So I think if every man starts taking that kind of stand, they have to fall into mine eventually.
Some of us will be sacrificed.
That's okay.
We can still be happy on our own.
That's the thing that's beautiful about life.
You don't need a bitch.
Yeah, that's true.
Thanks for calling.
Thanks for calling in, Zach.
Appreciate it.
Call in any time, all right?
All right, who we got next?
All right.
Scott Rose, button you in.
Scott, are you there?
What's going on, Scott?
Scott, I like the hat.
Oh, well, thank you very much.
Let me see.
Am I muted?
No, you're good.
No, I can hear you.
Oh, beautiful.
I'm clicking buttons because I've never called in before.
Sure.
Where are you calling out of?
At the moment, I'm in Birmingham, Alabama.
No, but I actually live in Missouri.
I'm on the road for work.
And, man, watch out in Birmingham, man.
Birmingham is dangerous.
Dude, you ain't lying.
I'm in like a super ghetto.
I'm a traveling welder.
So it's like a small company that I work for.
We get put up in super ghetto hotels full of construction workers.
All the construction workers go home on the weekend, and it's just full of prostitutes.
It's crazy.
Seriously, Birmingham, you better carry, bro.
Seriously.
Man, you don't got to worry about me, Doug.
Let's just put it like that.
On the subject.
So, what is the worst thing you're expected to put up with as a man?
At least you don't have women at work, right?
That's good.
We definitely don't have women at work, but there are some of the Hispanics that have actually cracked the code and they hire their wife to work with them as well.
So they bring their wives to work.
And then the wives are super hustlers.
They have like a Honda minivan full of like tacos and stuff like that in the back.
So they sell tamales out of the trunk.
Yeah, absolutely.
That's what I'm talking about.
That's it right there.
I love these women, bro.
Like, I wish they would be at home taking care of their kids and everything, but like they show up every day and they make a hot meal for me for lunch.
Do you ever ask them?
You ever ask them if they got a little sister for you?
You know, I love Mexican girls.
No, you ever, yeah, you just gotta look at that to me.
I'm originally from San Diego, California.
So like, I might as well be like 20% Mexican.
You gotta just go to the next time one of their wives is at work.
Just ask them to bring their little sister next time.
I think you need extra hands here.
I'm telling you, I'm not scared.
The tacos, the taco, and tamalu, the tacos, and tamale ladies are like pillars of the community, man.
I'm telling you, you ain't lying.
I've been married two times and divorced both times.
My most recent divorce, I was trying to convince my half-Japanese, half-Jewish wife to come on the road with me and be a taco truck lady.
I was like, you don't understand.
You can make 10 grand a month just coming to the job site and making like burritos for people for like an hour and a half.
Like it's the easiest money.
I should probably quit what I'm doing and do that.
Yep.
Except for I'm probably not cute enough, but it is what it is.
So what's the worst thing that you're expected to put up with as a man in your experience?
Dude, that is such a tough question.
I don't, I'm, I'm super black pilled, but I don't know if I'm actually gone so dark to the point where I can actually like sit here and be like, the worst thing I'm expected to put up with is X, Y, or Z.
But I can tell you that probably in that upper echelon of things you could name would be paying child support to a woman that decided of her own free will to just up and fucking bail on you.
Excuse me, I don't mean I dropped way too many F-bombs.
I'm sorry.
That's all right.
I don't know the rules on YouTube and everything.
Yeah, that's okay.
You could say fuck here.
It's all right.
So wait, so it's paying down.
So how much child support are you on a month?
Okay, so my first marriage, I'm in a very unique situation.
My first marriage was like 25 years ago.
And so I paid between like $750 to $1,200 a month in child support for a very long time on that.
And one kid for one kid, yeah.
Yeah.
You know, it's a sliding scale based on your income.
So if you make a lot of money, you pay a lot of money.
Yeah.
And so for a long time, I was making a lot of money.
I was in, I had a sales career that was very lucrative for a number of years before I got into more of some blue-collar type of stuff, like what I do now.
You went from sales to blue-collar?
Yeah, but I'm going back to sales.
I just renewed my real estate and life insurance license.
I'm going back into financial planning, but there was, I got burned out on it.
Okay.
So I was like, you know, I burned down on doing sales and I got into doing like mechanic work and welding and whatnot.
And I did that for about the last like eight years.
And now I'm burned out on that because you don't make any money.
And it's hard work, but it was cool though.
Think it's good for men to know if you're just a salesman your whole life, you may miss out on being able to learn how to like fix cars and weld shit.
I didn't have anybody teaching me that when I was growing up, but I had salespeople in my family.
But now that I have some experience doing the blue-collar thing, I'm going back into sales anyway.
All that to say, I don't pay that kind of child support now.
And my daughter from the first marriage is like 24 years old, so that's over and done with.
The second wife, now I have a one-and-a-half-year-old baby girl.
I after I got divorced the first time, I was like, I'm never doing that again.
I was like completely convinced.
You have a one and a half-year-old right now, yeah.
Yeah, so I did 22, 23 years single, and then I crashed and burned, son of a much younger woman, she was pretty hot, she was pretty hot, wasn't she?
She was she's beautiful and she's also rich, and so I was like, Well, if this one marries me and then bails, she's probably not gonna fucking bury me financially.
You're muted.
No, I was waiting for you to finish.
And did she?
I'm waiting for the rest of the day.
What?
Yeah, she so she bailed on me, but she didn't take the, I mean, she took the baby and bailed on me and everything and moved back to California where she's from.
But she didn't hit me with like child support and alimony or any of that.
She's because like her family is so they're so paid that it would be like embarrassing for them to try to liquidate a guy like me, you know.
If that makes any sense, yeah.
I mean, you said she's half Jewish, they got a ton of money, so yeah, yeah, that was you were smart the second time around, smarter, it was definitely an upgrade, but and the marriage lasted about twice as long, which is like a year and a half.
How long were you with her total?
Oh, like two and a half years.
I was with her for like a year before.
How much younger than you was she?
Only a couple years.
Okay, I thought it was a thing where you know, a lot of us older guys we get so enthusiastic with the younger women, especially in the bedroom that we slip up and uh get one pregnant.
Yeah, you know, you know what?
I didn't even have sex with her before we got married.
Oh, wow.
I grew up in a super, super hardcore Christian family.
My dad was a preacher for a long time.
My grandfather before him is a preacher and all that kind of thing.
So the reason I called in was to back up a bunch of stuff that these other guys were saying.
But this actually answers the first, the other part of the question you were asking about, like when you grow up, where do you start to learn?
Like, girls are going to get preferential treatment and you're supposed to kind of like sacrifice yourself and all that kind of thing.
And like, I went to a Christian private school in Northern California, and my dad and my family was like involved in the church organization, you know, working for them.
And man, they were super hardcore about teaching us when we were little boys that like we were super bad because we were boys and the girls were super good because they were girls.
This was a church in California, right?
Yeah, as a church in there.
It is right there.
That's all you got to know.
Yeah.
And then the school that was like associated with the church was a private school where you pay all this extra money to go to this private school.
And then they were just like really hammer at home that like the little boys were really like raised up to be like sacrificial lambs.
Like we were going to be joining the army and going off to war and getting shot.
And we were going to be like laying down our lives for these little girls that we were growing up with.
And that was like made out to two.
And like if you were going to be Christ-like, there was going to be a time in your life where you're called to like lay down your life for one of these church girls or whatever.
And I mean, there's layers to it, obviously, but dude, they sold us that shit.
Lynn, the like the most black pilling kind of part of like you grow up and you get some experience with these girls.
And so you're like, oh shit, that's not how this is going to work.
Originally, you're taught in these institutions, they teach these people to teach you that if you treat these women with like honor and respect, there's going to be a reciprocation there.
There's a reciprocal environment here where they're going to honor you and respect you.
And so the more you put in, the more you'll get in return.
And so when you find out that that isn't going to be the case, the vast majority of the time, obviously, there's some, you know, diamond in the rough type of girls that will really value that.
But it's a very small amount.
It's like very, very small.
I got to ask.
So how old were you when you said you waited till marriage for your second wife?
Yeah.
How old were you?
I'm 45.
Oh my gosh.
So you did that for a 40, a 40-year-old woman?
Yeah.
What?
What?
Like, I just need to know what was your thought process between that and that being a good idea.
Did you wait for the first wife too?
No, the first wife was like a stripper.
Oh, your first wife was a stripper.
Yeah.
Well, she wasn't a stripper when I met her and then married her.
We worked together at, I was like a, you don't discriminate.
You go stripper, church girl, you're down.
I'm all up in there.
Yeah, now you're going for the Mexican women.
I love the Mexican girls.
I love Mexican girls.
I love Asian girls.
I had completely taken white girls off of the menu for like 15 years, but they're back on.
Let me tell you, Alabama, they have some dime piece blonde girls in these churches in Alabama.
So let's go back to the waiting for the way.
You don't have to convince me.
The South has nice blondes.
So what made you want to do that?
You didn't, like, obviously she wasn't a virgin, right?
No.
And I mean, I'm not either, obviously, you know, but like, I was, I'm, I still have a very strong software program installed in my brain that's like this, the programming from the church.
Yeah.
So I was hoping, I was like, I was like denying all of my red pill and black pill experience and really just like hoping that if I were to treat this woman in the way that I've been told I should, which is like, don't bang these chicks before you marry them.
Marry them first and then have children, like produce a family with all this sex you're going to have, you know?
Yeah.
And so I was really on that.
Wait, how old was she?
She was what, 40?
She was like, yeah.
How'd you guys get?
She was, so when she was like, well, no, so at the time, let's see, this was two years ago, three years ago.
38?
Yeah, she's like 39, 40, and I'm like 42.
Oh, gosh.
So she's only two or three years old.
She really beat the buzzer, huh?
Dude, she was throwing the hail married.
Wait, so did you guys do?
We had like a perfectly healthy baby and we had the baby at home.
We didn't even have to do that.
Yeah, because did you do IVF or no?
Hail no.
Natural.
Wow.
Yeah, no, she'd never been pregnant before.
And I have super sperm.
Like I have been known to.
Hey, ladies in the chat, 40-year-old women.
All you ladies in the chat, holler at me.
I'm scared.
He's got super sperm, you know.
That's funny.
But yeah, so the baby was perfectly healthy.
We were very fortunate in that respect.
We prayed about it every day and everything.
And so I really felt like that was a huge blessing.
And I still, to this day, even though everything went completely south, like I still feel like God has blessed me in such a way that I'm able to produce children and continue the bloodline of my family, even though I am unable to convince a woman not to divorce me.
Well, you and every guy, right?
I mean, that's like saying, I mean, what guy has convinced women not to divorce him or be nice to him and stay married?
You know, it's like one or something.
Pearl, when you're right, you're right.
Yeah.
You got to give it to you.
Doug MPA, you got any other questions for him?
She's still there?
Wait, wait, hold on one second.
I'm sorry.
What was that?
Oh, I just asked if you had other questions for him.
No, I don't.
I put the link to the Audacity chat in the YouTube chat because I don't know why people, that's what I was doing.
I'm sorry, but I don't know why people can't see it, but it's there.
So click on that link.
If you're a member of Pearl's website, it should take you there so you can get into the chat.
But yeah, all the, I don't have any questions, man.
Just, you know, have fun with that one and a half year old, man.
Holy crap.
Yeah, I call him.
Man, I got to work out some visitation and stuff like that.
I'm in Alabama there in California.
So it's one of those deals where she took the baby and moved a thousand miles away.
It's like, what do you do with that shit?
Yeah.
Well, anyway, Pearl, love your show.
I watch all the time.
Keep doing what you're doing.
Doug, you give legendary advice.
Keep it up.
Call in anytime, okay?
Thank you so much.
Thanks for having me.
Thanks.
Can we make sure the school link is in the description because I don't see it right now.
And I was about to plug it.
So, guys, just quick plug real quick.
We do have a new School community where it's an education-based platform.
So, all of the smart, intelligent people that I know, I bring onto that platform, and they're going to give education-based advice.
One of these days, I think I'm going to get my dad on there.
But for now, we had a PI give advice on how to catch women cheating, how to use the child support system against the women that are using it against you.
So, if you want to get ahead, go there.
And yeah, it's a one-time purchase, it's a lifetime entry fee.
You get to interact with all the other smart, intelligent people on there.
And the cool thing is, I'm going to bring on more famous people because we're going to get bigger and better every year.
And so, it's going to be more famous, more intelligent, and I'm going to just get more well-connected as I continue my career.
So, if you join it now, I was really going to get it out as a steal.
So, it's going to be the first link in the description.
And let's take the next caller.
So, that's my little plug.
Okay, we have Marvin.
Marvin's coming in, and then Esteban.
Marvin, what's going on?
Hello, Pearl.
How are you doing?
I'm good.
How are you?
Great.
I just wanted to say I really feel sorry for the fact you went through some major, major problems over the last few years with these liberal women that try to dash your character and all that stuff.
I don't appreciate those kinds of women, just like the single moms that, you know, put men on child support, vice versa.
Yeah, it is what it is.
It's part of the job.
But tell me, so what is the worst thing that you are expected to put up with as a man?
That's a very good question.
I know I won't put up with it in general, especially if she doesn't tell me what she was planning to do, especially if she puts someone like anyone in general in child support.
I'll be like, what is this about?
Why didn't you tell me ahead of time?
We were not going to be a very functional couple.
I want to put up with it.
I know a lot of men today that would not put up with it.
That's a yes or no circumstance at this point in today's world.
It's complicated with child support, case by case.
Right.
And what?
Sorry, go ahead.
I did want to mention: I do have a book that I got a couple of years ago in Jeffrey Levy's office in Chicago.
He's a father advocate, attorney, and he fights for father's rights all the time nationwide.
And there is another gentleman in Los Angeles, his name is Lionel TJ Tillman.
He fought for his child support case a number of years ago and got it dismissed.
And he represented himself without an attorney, no law, legal background.
And his channel on YouTube is called childsupportisfraud.com.
Cool.
Yeah, guys, check that website out.
So when you were young, did you ever notice that the men and the women were treated differently in school?
And is there a first experience that you remember when that happened?
Oh, yes, plenty of experiences.
I know when I was about 14, 13 or 14, around that age in San Francisco Bay Area, I went to school out in Pacifica near the ocean, just about 10 miles off of San Francisco area.
The women and the guys were treated differently in school.
It was just based on propaganda and proper popularity.
So, if you didn't, if you're like a brokey, then they just, you know, treat you like a broke.
If you had money or nice cars, they're just, you know, they're always a higher target, I guess.
Nice.
Doug MPA, you got any other questions for him?
I do not.
But it's good to hear you, Marvin.
I see you in the chat all the time, man.
Thank you for calling in.
Call in anytime, okay?
Yeah, thanks so much for calling in.
It's nice.
I love actually meeting the people that are in the chat, so it's great to have you.
Go ahead.
Most definitely.
What did you, what do you think about what I just said about the resources with the child support?
Because I know child support is very massive debate.
Yeah, I think that's great.
I was thinking I might check it out after the show, see if they want to come on for an interview.
They seem interesting.
And I wanted one to mention one more thing before I go on the $100,000, I call it $100,000 bounty that you have to prove that you didn't do anything wrong as a man.
That's because that's a propaganda going on, but you don't have to spend $100,000 just to prove that you're innocent.
You just got to, you know, sign for a fee waiver.
They call a fee waiver.
Even the gentleman who wrote the child supportisfraud.com website said the same thing.
You don't even have to pay your fees.
You just apply for a fee waiver.
And if any judge denies you your rights to do that as a man or a woman, then they're committing perjury against you.
That does against the law by federal law.
Okay.
I didn't know that.
Okay.
Wow.
That's perjury and fraud and all that, all other charges is up in the law.
It's all over the websites.
I know every jurisdiction is different, but the laws are the same.
So if you have an out-of-state case, it doesn't matter.
If they don't follow the law regardless of jurisdiction, they're in violation.
You can sue them for millions of dollars.
Sure.
Thank you so much, Marvin.
Thanks for calling in.
Okay.
Call in anytime.
Thank you, Pearl.
You take it.
Thank you.
Clue Studio sent a super.
Thank you, Clue Studio.
It says, shout out to Pearl.
Shout out to you, Clue Studio.
We have Esteban coming in.
Esteban, are you there?
Hey, what's going on, man?
How you guys doing?
Good.
How are you?
Where are you calling out of?
Sorry, go ahead.
I'm calling out of East Tennessee.
I called a couple of weeks ago, if you recall.
And I wanted to say, remember, I actually used to work for child support enforcement.
I did it twice.
Yeah, I remember you.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, I remember you.
And so I wanted to offer, I'm not going to use the term expertise, but offer my knowledge in any way I can, Pearl.
Okay.
To your website, to whatever organization, whatever you got going on for free, for nothing.
You know, like I said, because when I called in the first time, I said it then and I'll say it now.
I regret being good at that job because while I don't know for sure, I'd say I probably destroyed some lives.
And that's a regret that I'll take until my last breath.
Sure.
And I didn't know.
I truly didn't know.
And so whatever I can do for free, I don't want anything.
I don't even want any attention.
Just whatever I can.
Yeah.
I'll have Doug MPA reach out to you.
But yeah, we'd love that.
If you have any ways for guys to lower their child, we had an officer in California who came who is, we haven't put out the interview, but yeah, I mean, if you have more information about what they can do in Tennessee, definitely.
You asked a very good question: what's the worst thing that we as men are expected to put up with from women?
And this is going to sound like I'm going off on a rabbit trail and all of that.
But if the last five years has taught us anything, there is no such thing as conspiracy theories because it's not a theory.
They're facts.
And they're getting more and more brazen and not hiding it anymore.
But to answer your question, the worst thing that we as men are expected to put up with, and it's the worst thing that can happen to any human being because of where it leads.
It's like a snowball.
And that is Pearl being invisible.
And you've mentioned this many, many, many times, Pearl.
And, you know, I thank you for it.
You're one of the few people, and I mean very few.
And when I say few, I mean one-hand few that brings up the fact that it is men who build, who have built, who are building, and will build civilizations and societies, and we maintain them.
And that gets overlooked.
It gets overlooked.
And so all of these women out here, you know, misindependent, I don't need no man.
You literally need a man for your literal survival.
There was a show, I want to say maybe it was on sci-fi, I can't remember, but it was kind of like a 12 monkeys.
But all of the men caught the disease, and only one man was left.
And of course, it had to be a beta cuck.
And all these women were running around, and some were in the military with machine guns, and they were running.
And I'm just like, that's the exact opposite.
See, if men were to disappear, or not even disappear, if we were to truly go like Mad Max or post-apocalyptic or something like that, these women out here think they're going to be like Katniss Everdeen.
What they're really going to be is like that little Vietnamese hooker standing on the corner from an old school movie called Full Metal Jacket talking about me so horny.
That's really what's going to happen.
And so, again, it's just being treated as if we're invisible.
And so I think that's very, very dangerous because once you make someone invisible like they're not there, when you do notice them, when you have to notice them, you automatically think less of them and think that you can just walk all over them.
And by the way, to me, this is not by design, by the way, Pearl.
It's not by design.
I think it's deliberate by elites.
Other men, actually, elite men, call it the 1% of the 1%, the Illuminati, whatever name you want to use.
Go ahead.
But they certainly have used.
Go ahead, I'm sorry.
So, how young did you learn this?
Like that men are more invisible than women?
Is there like an instance at school with your friends?
Like, when did you first notice it?
Well, it's not, well, okay.
You know, like I said, I grew up with my dad.
And so, you know, like I said, he was in the military.
So me and my brother, we got, you know, we didn't grow up in the hood or the ghetto, but we, we, you know, when my dad transitioned to civilian life as we were teenage boys, and even, you know, here and there when we would go visit relatives or go on trips or whatever, it's, it's, you know, you can make fun of dudes.
You could always make fun of little fat boys.
You couldn't make fun of little fat girls.
It was just off limits.
And here we are back to body shaming.
It's okay to body shame men, but not women.
And so I always knew that there was something not wrong or something not right, I should say, from a very young age.
But as it got more and more, as I got older, I'm just like, hold up.
Hold up, because they got more blatant.
Honestly, I think, and I can only speak for myself, but it wouldn't shock me if other men felt this way either.
But I think as they got more open and blatant with their disdain or treating us as if we're invisible, I think that's what took men to wake up because like the previous, not the last caller, but the caller before the last caller, the guy in Alabama, I mean, you know, he was programmed.
Now he'll say it's his church and all of that stuff.
I just think he probably went to a bad church, but it's society as a whole that does it.
And so, and it's been pervasive.
We teach boys from a young age on how to treat girls, but we don't ever train girls on how to treat boys.
Have you ever noticed that?
Yeah.
And again, it's just like a light bulb continues to go on and on and on and on and on.
Because it's not because you don't know.
It's because you've been trained not to look for it.
And so that's, like I said, to answer your question, I just think invisibility, man, just to make us feel like we are not that we're here, but we're not here.
It's kind of like, you know, we're basically like the wind.
You know, we're out there.
You can hear us moving.
You can hear us blowing.
You don't care which way we're going, but you only care about us when it knocks your house down or something like that.
Right.
Then, you know what I mean?
And so when everything's going good, you don't care.
But then things are going down all of a sudden.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's the most, I think that's the worst and the most dangerous or the worst thing that we are expected to put up with.
And I'm not saying that, you know, we walk by, a woman should get down on her knees and bow or anything like that.
That's not what I'm saying.
But again, how they've made a lot of men.
And on top of that, to add insult to injury, I mean, where do you think the term or name incel came from?
I mean, If incels exist, it's because you, you, like I said, you treated them as if they were invisible, and now that you have no choice but to acknowledge that they're there, then you want to denigrate them.
So, again, it's like the wind.
And so, yeah, I agree.
Well, if you we're gonna go, we have a couple more callers.
If you if you want to reach out and destroy your contributions, um, yes, yes, you can email at doug at the audacitynetwork.com.
Doug at the audacitynetwork.com.
Yep.
Send the email there, and then we can connect, okay?
Roger, that will do, brother.
Pearl, thank you again.
Pearl, I keep saying next to the gospel, what you and a few others are doing.
I mean, it's second only to the gospel.
It's second only to the gospel, man, because this is, and I, and I get why people call you a pick-me.
I said it the last time I called.
I'll say it again.
Um, they're they're just mad because you are what they are trying to fight against.
So just keep doing your thing.
Thanks for calling in.
I was good talking to you.
All right, God bless you.
Okay, and then we are gonna let in Tony's gonna be the last caller.
What's going on, Tony?
It's connecting to audio.
We got a super chat.
This is how my 10-year-old boy was treated by his coach, sided with my ex in our high school conflict separation, threatened to bench him.
I raised this and they kicked him off the team.
Thoughts, link in the reply.
Wow, it's terrible.
Women use a lot to they use the whole community to turn against the guy.
What's going on, Tony?
How are you?
Well, first of all, I'd like to say thanks for having me on your show.
I am truly honored to meet you and be on your show.
And I'd like to say that your show gives inspiration to a lot of guys because when you're in the dark of night, because you've been through one hell of a divorce or whatever the case may be, in days gone by, you were kind of on your own, except with buddies.
But your show, a collection of millions of people and their thoughts, is a guidestone, if you will.
So there's always something that you can get away and take from it.
So thanks for having me on, it's your honor.
Thanks for calling in.
Where are you calling out of?
It looks like, wait, let me guess.
You look like a Midwesterner.
You are absolutely correct.
Yeah.
Michigan specifically.
I was going to say Wisconsin.
That was going to be my guess.
That's the homeland where I'm from originally.
I can hear it in the air, you know, we say.
I know.
So, Wisconsin, awesome.
So what is the worst thing you're expected to put up with as a man?
Oh, my.
I think that unlimited forbearance would be the answer to that.
Men are fighters.
Men are designed to go out there and get things done.
But in this circumstance, it's unlimited forbearance.
You have to absolutely eat it for the sake of your kids, for the sake of your family, for the sake of your reputation, because it's a very delicate dance that what men have to deal with in Dealing with these affairs.
As you found out, people are ready to sue you at the drop of a hat or smear your name or reputation.
And unfortunately, anything that you do can put you in a situation or circumstance when you're under the microscope where you can lose your friends, your family, your freedom, your finances, and your future just because somebody's upset with you or something went wrong.
So I think that's what men really face.
And it's an alien battleground.
We're not taught to be to have unlimited patience, and nor is it something that we as individuals expect to happen.
And so that's where, again, your website and your podcasts, those yeomans work for people who are involved in something new and definitely dangerous.
How long ago was your divorce?
Well, it was a long time ago.
It was 12 years ago.
And it was as ugly as it gets.
And so I take 100% responsibility for what happened because, of course, I'm the man, I'm the husband, I'm the father, and all that.
So I take full responsibility for what happened.
Yep, if the marriage breaks up because of you, it's your fault.
If the marriage breaks up because of her, it's your fault.
Correct.
That's exactly it.
You got it.
How many kids were in it?
Oh, three kids.
And they've turned out beautifully.
So it worked out in the end.
But the issue was in doubt for the longest time.
Yeah.
So have your kids noticed the difference between the way men and women are treated?
Because I'm guessing you have some boys, some girls.
Very much so.
Very much so.
I had no idea.
I thought I was in a good marriage.
I came home one day and oops, apparently not.
And so it went from not to get into the details of it, but they kind of grew up with it and they've definitely seen it.
But as children, they're protected somewhat by their innocence.
All they know is mommy said this or daddy said that.
So you try and minimize the variables and maximize the constance in that circumstance.
I was very blessed because at the time I was surrounded by good men who'd been through this before.
So I got some pretty good guidance, but it was very expensive.
It took a long time.
And the issue was very much in doubt.
And that's terrifying because when you're a young man raising young children, you don't know how it's going to turn out.
And so you're very much in a position where you have to hope and pray that things go the way they can and the best way they can.
And there are moments when things are not going well.
She brought all the firepower she could.
And it was finally the judge who looked at her lawyer and brought up a similar case that was going on between two doctors who were fighting over a young child.
And that child turned 18 and ended up in prison.
And these lawyers don't make money unless they promulgate fighting.
And I believe it was your show a long time ago I saw that had a silver bullet program, I think it was, which was a recipe for how they escalate fighting.
And that really resonated here because it sounded like our story.
So how did your kids notice the difference between the way men are treated and women are treated?
You said they've really noticed it.
There were a lot of interesting examples with that.
The mom was surrounded by all the neighborhood women who understood that I was some terrible beast.
All the harpies, I call them.
All the harpies.
Absolutely.
And of course, so they grew up in a home with all the toys and the trinkets and the pets and the friendly faces who felt sorry for, I mean, that whole mess.
Whereas over here, they saw dad going to work, putting the food on the table, going to the grocery store at two in the morning to make sure there was a successful launch for school.
And the dichotomy between the households, I think, was where they saw it.
And later on, when they were called into court, they saw that whole mess unfold.
So they saw a difference.
What the differences they saw were, I can't detail because it's for them to, it's for them to tell.
And what about when you were young?
Did you notice a difference between the way men and women were treated?
It doesn't always have to be relationships.
It could be school, work.
Well, absolutely.
As a child of the 1980s, I can affirm what one of your previous callers had said.
You know, we were brought up with that.
You're going to be the man of the family.
You're going to be the sole breadwinner.
You're going to be the one who's going to raise the family and take them where they need to go.
You're the one who will carry the family name.
So it was the 1980s.
And yes, there was the portents of the Great War with another nation.
So you better be ready for that too.
And you better have a good job, et cetera, et cetera.
So the expectations on men, very different.
And of course, that has changed over time.
So I can't speak to kids growing up nowadays.
But there was an expectation to be a pillar of your community and carry on, especially in Wisconsin.
It's cold there.
You don't have your act together, you freeze to death.
Yeah, that's true.
Did you notice it in school at all?
Oh, absolutely.
There were certain expectations, whether it was gym class or physics or whatever we were doing at the time.
Then out of school, there were expectations as well.
And of course, you know, eat the pain, carry on, do whatever you have to do.
And so there was definitely two different worlds growing up between men and women.
So to echo something else that what the previous caller had spoken of, along the way, there was a change, a briefing that I got, which I would like to relay, which I think is important to the nature of your show, if I can permit.
You don't mind me going into that a little bit.
Yeah, go ahead.
What had happened was my father was an instructor for USAFI, United States Arms Forces Institute.
And a lot of the classes they taught were predicated on the assumption that don't send a soldier, don't send a bullet when you can send a dollar.
And so USAFI was an organization which allowed for American policy to be carried on overseas.
And he was a learned man and a university professor in economics and just a great man.
But he had said something to me years ago that affected a change in the United States.
Now, a previous caller had spoken of a conspiracy.
Well, there was more to it than that.
The statement that they carried was that the helm of a ship, the wheel that controls the rudder of the ship, is a very small thing, but it controls the destiny of the ship.
Now, the helmsman who runs the wheel of the ship, he gets his orders from the officer of the deck.
The officer of the deck gets his orders from the navigator who's authorized by the captain to issue course and steering orders.
And that captain has a ship's master who pays the freight on it.
And they report to the admiralty and they report to, and so on and so on.
So, indirect control is a methodology of controlling our society.
The United States, as a democracy and as a republic, has always been founded on the heart and the engine of this country, which is the American family.
And the middle-class American family are the people who vote.
They're the people who pay the bulk of the taxes.
They're the people who maintain this country and its sovereignty.
There has been a plan in effect for a long time now, particularly since the assassination of John F. Kennedy, to effect a sequential series of systemic attacks on that middle-class American family on all levels,
from the education system to the savings, to the ability for the father to go to work and work one job and the mom to take care of the kids, and to the social responsibilities carried by that family.
And so when we look at the typical American middle-class family in 1963, prior to the Kennedy assassination, as opposed to now, you can see that there's been quite a considerable change.
Our purchasing power began changing in 1971.
And today's work week, which is in comparison to 1989, for instance, the work week, I believe, is done in three days or less.
And yet, Americans are not just working five days, they're bringing their work home with them.
And no longer does that one paycheck keep dad at home.
So there's a lot of stresses on the family.
Now, in conducting actions for USAFI, if you want to take over a society, there are six, seven elements of that society typically that you take over.
What's the most important one?
The money's one.
We can't do all seven because we're what's right up.
So do the top one.
Okay, the top one, the media, I believe, is the top one.
And if you own the media, you can steer the narrative.
And so there's been a shift within the family, which has resulted in massive changes in the dynamic of the family and the divorce rate.
So, yeah, and I would say it's all women's fault.
Women bought this feminism thing, hook, wine, and sinker.
And remember, women control the culture of the nation, and they control the social paradigm, set the social rules, and they teach the children.
Remember, men just react to what women, to the social rules, that men react to the social rules that women create.
Yeah.
Well, it's been a long-term plan of attack organized by forces that have been going against this country for a long time.
Yep, I agree.
I agree.
Thanks for calling in, okay, Tony.
Calling anytime.
It's been a tremendous honor.
Thank you.
Thank you for what you do.
You're a guiding light for a lot of folks.
So keep up the good work and keep up the fight because it's important to keep that family together.
There's more at it than we think about.
So go get it, you know.
I will.
Thanks so much, Tony.
Take care.
That is everyone.
Cool.
Guys, we had so many great callers today.
Unless you you you want our uh our our friend Dustin to call in.
He's waiting out you you you want Dustin to call me oh sure he can come in quick you guys make the show you know I really want to do more call-ins so we the more consistent callers we have the better Dustin How are you?
I'm so good.
How are you?
I'm good.
Do you know the topic today?
Yeah, it's uh what's the most or the worst thing men endure?
Yeah, they're expected to put up with what you got for me stepmoms What's what's crazy is my my real mom and my dad split because my mom was uh you know some might call her a whore, but she she had been around.
Okay.
And I love my mom, but she actually kidnapped me and drove off with me.
So my dad had to fight a lot for custody.
And I think he was just so scared to be alone.
So he married this terrible, terrible.
Well, maybe she's all right now, but she's real mean.
She's a real pretty woman, though.
And he married her, and then that kind of just inflamed the relationships between my dad, me, and my real mom.
And it caused just a, it was pretty much like 15 years.
It was just terrible.
Like my stepmom would, my real mom would call me, and my stepmom would pick the phone and hang up and say, like, I'd be like, oh, did my mom call?
And she'd be like, no, it wasn't her.
And she did that.
So I thought my mom like didn't care about me for a while.
And my stepmom just, she just tried to like replace every part of my dad's life that had me in it.
Because she didn't, she wouldn't like, you probably took attention away.
I thought you meant when you called in at first, I thought you meant stepmoms like dating in terms of like, you know, I tell you.
I think you meant like single mother like that.
That's what you're talking about.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, like right now, I'm dealing with one and she texts me all day about stuff I don't care about.
She's like, oh, I just made breakfast.
I just did this.
I just did that.
And I was like, like, if think if a guy texted you that, like, hey, I just woke up.
You'd be like, what's fucking wrong with you?
You know?
Do I have a job?
She has a job.
She just texts me while she's doing it.
So it's like, it's a girl job, you know?
We're getting a lot of supers today.
And what did, I'm going to read it in a second, guys, but what about when you were young?
Did you see any differences like in school?
I know you did, Dustin.
I just know it.
And did you see any differences between how the men and women were treated in class?
Yeah, I'll actually tell you.
The first time I got detention, so I had a crush on this girl named Lauren.
And we were given a ruler and we were told to go measure things around the room.
And I had a friend named Chad, Chad Dunkelberger, who had a lisp.
And I said, hey, Chad, let's go measure Lauren's butt.
And he thought that was a great idea.
And it was part of the task.
So I went and I measured Lauren's butt in fourth grade.
And I had to go explain to my dad later that day why I had detention for measuring a girl's ass.
I was thinking back then I just got detention, but now you know, like it would be a whole thing.
Yeah.
It'd be much more than so.
What did a woman do the same thing and not get in trouble?
Or what was no, like, are you just still salty about the detention?
Or because I also, that year, I bought Lauren a frog for Valentine's Day.
And when I gave it to her, she was like, I'm sorry, Dustin, I'm lactose intolerant.
So I just never forgot her.
You know, my little heart was crushed.
Oh, I'm very sorry to hear that, Dustin.
Yeah.
That, like, you know, sneaking out of class to go kiss girls back in like middle school, maybe.
Like, I remember we'd all like hide behind the buses and like, you know, try to get a little freak on.
And, you know, nowadays you find that, and the teachers are going to, they're going to snitch on you until you're doing something wrong.
And then we're talking about the teachers are going to be taking their freaking male student behind the buses now.
Have you seen all that craziness?
Oh, yeah.
I mean, none of them are like dimes, but you know, I'm, hey, dude, I'm down.
I'm always down.
Dustin's going to get a job at the school.
He's like, hey.
That's how Dustin picks up.
He's going to work in the cafeteria just to be close to the teaching.
He's like, hey, hey, hey, they'll go for the male student.
You'll be like, hey, I'm legal.
We can avoid jail time here.
Let me save you a case.
So, okay, I think you keep talking about like discrepancies or maybe things you're jaded about from the school, but I'm not hearing the men versus the women.
I'm just hearing about L's you took as a kid.
When it comes to men versus women, I'll say, like, when my dad, when my mom had kidnapped me, and there was like that court case, my dad got like 50, 50 cuss.
He actually got sole custody like right away.
And I will say, like, the court, it took, he had to put a lot of effort in, and he actually had to show up to the judges' like quarters.
Um, he didn't even, he didn't, like, go through normal processes.
He just like he just showed up there.
He said, Where's my son?
And he invented, he ended up getting sole custody.
And nowadays, like my uh, my ex, she just like woke up on the wrong side of the bed and just took the kid and left.
And for me to get custody, like, I tried to show up at the judge's place, but I actually had the judge say, Do I need to call the cops?
He wouldn't hear anything.
And it took me, I had to be very aggressive in filing my motions.
And there was like no, there was no help for me.
Um, what actually did help me parole was an interview you did with a guy named James for men's rights and resources.
And I don't know if you're do you remember that interview you did?
Um, I'm not great with names, but I know like stories and faces pretty well.
So if you talk about Baldhead, he's real crazy from Seattle.
He worked for McKinley Irving for a little while.
Oh, he's he, I think I know who you're talking about.
I think his interview got wiped sadly when we had to clear the chair.
He probably did because, okay, I mean, I will say, dude, he's he is crazy.
But, like, when I, when I, when I called him, I said, like, he, I'll never forget what he said to me.
Is I said, you know, like, she's a good woman, but I think she's just like, I don't know what I think she's like, she's obviously fucking crazy.
But he was like, she's not a good woman, Dustin.
She took your kid and she's withholding your kid from you.
And that made me really think, like, like, women nowadays are there.
They are like, I do think a large portion of them are evil because they know that they have, they don't need men in their corner because the state's in their corner.
And back when I was young, the state wasn't always like maybe it was like nine times out of ten.
There's more, there's more female judges every year, too.
Oh, that's an issue.
And then the trads want to say the trads want to say it's going to get better.
I'm like, when?
The mother of your child says, why aren't you fighting for your kids harder when they're the person creating the fight for your kids?
Understand what I'm saying?
Yeah, because they'll be.
It's one of those evil things that women do.
They'll say, why aren't you fighting for your kids?
Or why didn't you fight harder?
But there shouldn't be a fight.
Like, you're, she's creating the fight.
And then she's shaming you for not fighting.
And it's costing you time, money, resources.
It's insane.
That's so true.
You're so right.
Like, because if you don't fight, because a woman's mind is, I took the kid.
If he wants time with him, he has the resources to get that time.
But if you're like, I don't have the resources, like if I didn't take the time to learn how to file motions and learn the law, I would have had to sell my house and I would have had a lawyer that just wanted to go to trial and then cost me another 50 grand and I might not even get my kid.
But like a lot of guys don't have those resources and women, let's say I didn't have my kid, she would be telling my daughter now, your dad just didn't care.
And I'd be like, oh, it's so sad.
It really is sad.
Yeah.
I'm glad the interview helped you, though.
That's always good to hear that you actually won.
Yeah.
Yeah, I fought because I took her lawyer to court.
And when I was in the hearing, I said, this lawyer took an oath to always tell the truth.
And if they're caught in a lie, they need to admit it to you.
And I caught a, they filed a protective order against me saying that I was stalking her.
And I showed with GPS data.
And conveniently, I had a DUI, so I had a blow and go in my car at the time that said that my car was off.
So DUIs don't always fuck you.
And I showed that to the judge, and I said she lied.
She did an abusive litigation.
And she immediately went to settlement.
And I got almost 50-50 there.
Now it took me another year to get a full 50-50.
But yeah, your interview saved me a lot, Pearl.
It really did.
Well, thanks.
That's great to hear.
Now, you get to see your daughter all the time.
Daughter, right?
Yeah.
Do you have 50-50?
I mean, I hope she stays that way.
You never know these days.
Oh, yeah.
Don't let her see the live stream if she's in the middle of the day.
And you do live in Portland.
Yeah.
So the odds are stacked against you, bro.
Yeah.
For now.
Well, good luck out there, Dustin.
Thanks for calling in, okay?
Yeah, thanks.
I'm going to read this super chat.
Men have to enjoy the suck, never get married, guys, says Steve M. Channel D, great format.
You're awesome.
I will check you out on the other platform I use, Float Plane for other podcasts.
So with why people need to diversify, I enjoyed the what color palette in my stream.
I filmed that so long ago, but I've had it in the queue forever.
And I was like, F it.
It was for the vlog channel, but I was like, I'll just throw it on there.
If they like it, they like it.
If not, whatever.
So I'm glad someone liked it.
I wasn't sure because I'm like, do a bunch of guys care about the colors?
I don't know.
But Doug MPA, you got any final thoughts today?
We had a lot of callers.
This is great.
Yeah, a lot of good ones, too.
Yeah.
Thank you for calling in, guys.
And thank you for all the people in the YouTube chat.
Thank you for people that finally found for the Audacity chat.
I really appreciate that.
Guys, I say one of the best, okay, feminism has freed women up.
for their traditional duties of being barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen, but it's also freed men up from their traditional responsibilities too, guys.
You don't have to just be a pack mule for society and for a woman anymore.
Now, you do owe it to yourself to be as productive as possible, but you don't have to do it for a woman.
And so you don't have to do anything anymore, guys.
Women ruin that.
So don't just endure.
You don't have to do that anymore.
We used to, that was the masculine thing to do.
It was the right thing to do, but women called that patriarchy.
So guys, don't just endure for some woman.
Don't endure for society.
If you choose to, that's fine.
But there's no such thing as doing the right thing anymore.
Don't let them shame you.
Don't let them insult you.
Don't let them guilt you.
And all these women have that need to be right.
So just make sure you put yourself, guys.
Remember, when men win, everyone wins.
And when women win, they win for themselves.
Jason says the worst thing men can endure is warm beer.
Let me see if anything else.
And by the way, guys, so right now we have the school group and the website.
The school group is based, it's the learning community.
And the website, that's where you can, if you don't want to super chat every show, it's 10 bucks a month, 100 bucks a year.
That's you can sign up.
You also get to see all my old content on there.
Eventually, when we raise enough money for this documentary, that's where it'll go.
But yeah, that's the difference between the school group and the website.
Doug MPA, do you got any other final thoughts you wanted to put out there?
Any other announcements we got to tell them?
Nope.
Just make sure to check for any more super chats.
Yeah, I think I got them all.
Give this to Doug MPA for all the great work he does.
You can put this on your invoice for the month, Doug MPA.
Thank you, Channel D.
I appreciate it, buddy.
All right.
Well, thanks.
Thanks so much for watching, everybody.
And thanks for calling in, really.
The more we can get personal stories on the show and people calling in, telling me there's no better journalist than what you guys have seen with your own eyes.
The way people and the media manipulates you is they want you to not trust what you've seen with your eyes.
And what I've found is if there's ever a trend coming, I can predict it oftentimes before the news does because of the firsthand accounts.
And it really makes the show better and more interesting because there are some things I don't see, perspectives I don't know.
And I really love bringing people on to see what's going on out there.
Doug MPA, thank you so much for watching or for coming on.
Thank you so much for watching, everybody.
If you can, check out the school group.
It's a one-time purchase for life.
You are in forever.
And I'm just going to meet more famous, more intelligent, and my network's just going to get bigger and bigger and bigger.
So it's really just an investment into the long-term future of the platform.