Speaker | Time | Text |
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Alright, how you doing guys? | ||
I'm Dave Rubin. | ||
This is The Rubin Report. | ||
It is May 28th, 2025. | ||
We are live streaming on Rumble, YouTube, and Locals. | ||
There is no post-game show today because we are pre-taping this episode because I have probably... | ||
We're doing a big live Rubin Report show on May 29th. | ||
That's tomorrow. | ||
I'm pretty sure it's sold out already, but maybe there's some tickets available. | ||
Then I'm at CPAC on May 30th. | ||
Then we're heading over to Israel for a bunch of shows. | ||
You can check out venues and locations and all that good stuff at DaveRubin.com slash events, or you can take a picture of that QR code there. | ||
And yes, we are going to do as many live shows. | ||
We're going to do some live shows, interviews, all that good stuff. | ||
But today is a pre-taped program just catching up on general craziness. | ||
Lots of racism today. | ||
We're going to go heavy on the racism, or at least perceived racism in some cases. | ||
Some of it's real, some of it's perceived. | ||
We'll try to finish up with something. | ||
A little bit positive, and then you'll all move on with your merry day. | ||
How about that? | ||
Let's start because, you know, last week, the big story, of course, was that the South African president came to the United States and the poor man came in there all smiles with his accent and his white teeth. | ||
And Donald Trump was like, I would like you to look at this video of the killing of the white farmers. | ||
And then he really was like a deer in the headlights, and it got pretty messy. | ||
And the media for the last week has been doing this very strange thing where they're really going out of their way to dismiss the plight of the white farmer, the boar, the Afrikaner, in South Africa. | ||
Now, if the races were flipped, of course, it would be the other way. | ||
There's a lot of talk about, is this a genocide or not? | ||
We're going to show you a clip in a moment, but I did have South African businessman Rob Herzog in last week, and we discussed sort of the difference. | ||
Between killing of people, sometimes indiscriminately, sometimes just because they live outside of the city where there isn't protection, versus actual targeted genocide. | ||
But we're seeing a very weird move here, where it's clear that the media is running cover for what's happening because it's white people that are the victims, so it doesn't fit into the intersectional calculator. | ||
In any event, NBC reporter, I think she used to work at NPR, if I'm not mistaken, Yamiche Alcindor, asked Caroline Levitt, White House spokesperson Caroline Levitt, about what's going on in South Africa, particularly as it pertained to these South African crosses. | ||
And it got a little testy. | ||
Take a look. | ||
The video showed images of crosses in South Africa about white farmers who have been killed and politically persecuted because of the color of their skin. | ||
And those crosses are representing their lives. | ||
Those crosses are representing their lives in the fact that they are now dead and their government did nothing about it. | ||
Are you disputing that there is no... | ||
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The video showed what the president claimed it showed because it did not show that. | |
But even more, what I'm asking you is who at the White House... | ||
It showed white crosses representing people who have perished because of racial persecution. | ||
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The White House verifies the videos that the president shows and what protocols are in place when there's unsubstantiated information being put out for the world and world leaders to know. | |
Yamiche, what's unsubstantiated about the video? | ||
The video shows crosses that represent the dead bodies of people who were racially persecuted by their government. | ||
In fact, the Associated Press, of all places, So it is substantiated, not just by that video and the physical evidence that everybody saw on display in the Oval Office, but also by another outlet in this room, the Associated Press. | ||
So you should take it up with them if you believe the claim is unsubstantiated. | ||
And that's a ridiculous line of question. | ||
Man, Caroline is just fantastic. | ||
Like, just try to think what we were dealing with with Corinne Jean-Pierre now to this girl. | ||
And it has nothing to do with skin color or anything else. | ||
It has to do with competency. | ||
But, of course, you can see what's happening here. | ||
So, by the way, I do want to correct myself. | ||
I said NPR. | ||
She's worked at PBS now, she's at But she's obviously, she's just a progressive. | ||
She's a Democrat pretending to be a journalist. | ||
And of course, if those crosses all represented black farmers, they would be screaming about it and calling it genocide and everything else. | ||
I'm not even saying. | ||
I am not sitting here. | ||
Even after having Rob Herzog in last week, and you should watch the interview if you haven't. | ||
I'm not sitting here saying it is a targeted genocide, but there is something going on as it pertains to the white farmers in particular and the government going after white people. | ||
We'll have more evidence of that in just a second. | ||
That doesn't in and of itself make it a genocide, but this is just a good example of how the media picks a narrative, and if things don't fit the narrative, they gotta go the other way. | ||
Now, speaking of narratives, let's jump back to Ms. Yamiche Alcindor. | ||
Because you just saw very testy when it comes to dealing with the Trump White House. | ||
Conor, do we have perhaps a video that would juxtapose her positioning when it comes to Trump versus when it comes to say, I don't know, maybe Kamala Harris. | ||
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What I'm asking you is who at the White House-No, it did show that. | |
It showed White Cross is representing people who have perished because of racial persecution. | ||
unidentified
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White House verifies the videos that the president shows and what protocols are in place when there's unsubstantiated information being put out for the world and world leaders to show. | |
What's unsubstantiated about the video? | ||
unidentified
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What's your message to them as they are looking at your journey, especially the history that you are making and might make as the first black woman in India? | |
to break down this glass ceiling. | ||
And even now, of course, making the history that you're making now. | ||
We have to go, but you talk about your mother What do you think your mother would be telling you in these final days before this election against Donald Trump? | ||
Just go beat him. | ||
That's probably what she'd say. | ||
Yeah, that's my mother. | ||
I mean, do you need a more, like, stark, crystal clear version of what this is? | ||
The media did not do their job for four years. | ||
Everyone loves you. | ||
I've been traveling around talking to so many people who love you. | ||
What would be your message to people who love you? | ||
What would your mom think? | ||
Also, the fact that she's the first black and Indian. | ||
Like, I honestly, at this point, I do this for a living. | ||
Dave, I am still unclear. | ||
Is she black? | ||
Is she Indian? | ||
Is she half black, half Indian? | ||
I don't care either way. | ||
Today, now they're telling me, I guess she's Indian. | ||
Her parents are Indian and Afro-Jamaican. | ||
Who cares? | ||
But you just see. | ||
You see how it is, right? | ||
Okay, so now let's jump over to The View and CNN. | ||
Just how is the media dealing with this issue? | ||
Because this issue by Donald Trump, again, Donald Trump understanding how to use media, does this incredible appearance with the South African president. | ||
The guy's all smiles. | ||
He's like, hey, hey, I love everybody. | ||
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Everything great. | |
It's so fantastic. | ||
And then Trump's like, watch this video. | ||
And it changes the narrative. | ||
So now the media is on its back foot having to run cover for, again, whether you think it's a genocide or not, undoubtedly the racist laws. | ||
There are over 140 race-based anti-white laws in South Africa. | ||
Fact check me if you'd like. | ||
And the killing of largely and disproportionately white farmers. | ||
These are facts. | ||
Here's some of the media. | ||
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It was false conspiracy theory. | |
The fact that the president of South Africa was trying to share was that data collected by white farmers themselves, these are the white farmers, has counted 1,363 white farmers murdered since 1990, which is an average of 40 a year, far less than 1% of total murders. | ||
So there's no genocide going on. | ||
There's no genocide. | ||
There's no evidence that white people are being talked about. | ||
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And the majority of Afrikaners do not want to leave. | |
They're not a part of the government, Scott. | ||
You're taking a fringe movement and you're trying to make it a characteristic. | ||
It is the height of racism to say that white people have to be exempted from all violence in any society. | ||
And that is what is being said here. | ||
There is no white genocide happening. | ||
There is no farm genocide happening. | ||
What are we saying? | ||
If anybody of one racial group is murdered, then that constitutes a refugee status for that particular group. | ||
It's the height of racism. | ||
Larry, there has been debate over that song. | ||
That anti-apartheid chant, right? | ||
And for people who don't have a historical context, it does potentially appear more literal. | ||
Talk to us about the debate that has happened inside of South Africa with the recognition of how it appears to people when they hear those words. | ||
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It's not been commonly sung after the end of apartheid in 1994, but it's brought it back again to reanimate the issue of the majority of land in South Africa still being owned permanently. | |
Okay, so there's a bunch here. | ||
First off, apartheid ended in 1990. | ||
So the song, and we're going to get you to the song in just a second about Kill the Boar, in essence, Kill the White Guy. | ||
The fact that it's back to reanimate the conversation, I don't know, generally songs about killing people, probably not great, especially in a place with a history of racial strife. | ||
As it pertains to the numbers, because the Blondie, who I always forget her name on The View, and my mom's always upset, what's her name? | ||
Sarah Haynes. | ||
I just can't get that name in my brain for some reason, because she's just not completely terrible. | ||
Sorry, Sarah, you're not horrible enough for me to pay any attention to. | ||
The numbers that she's bringing up there White farmers make up 44,000 people of South Africa. | ||
That's.066 of the population, less than 1% of the population, about half a percent of the population. | ||
So white farmers are being murdered at 1,500%. | ||
Their population, right? | ||
So you might say that the amount of these people that have been killed is so disproportionate, not 100%, not 200%, not 600%, not 900%, 1,500% higher than the rate at which if you just want racial murders to be exactly equitable to the population, you might go, boy, it does seem like they're killing some white people here. | ||
Can we get a little kill the whitey chant going here on the Rubin Report on this Wednesday afternoon? | ||
unidentified
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*mimics singing* | |
Shoot to kill the guy over there. | ||
He's got white skin. | ||
Let's go blow his brains out. | ||
Like, again, I'm not an expert in everything South Africa. | ||
I am learning a bit on the fly here. | ||
But generally speaking, if in America there was, let's say, a white guy singing a song about shooting the black guy, I'm pretty sure the media would not be happy about it. | ||
And the media shouldn't be happy if it's a black guy singing a song about shooting the white guy just because He's white. | ||
By the way, that video was just from this past weekend, so it is not as if we're going into the archives for this. | ||
But here, check out this image. | ||
I mean, this is wild. | ||
From 2023, this was a kill-the-boar rally. | ||
Pretty freaking wild, where that's, you know, let's get whitey. | ||
They're not even hiding it. | ||
You might want to just work on some branding stuff, so it seems a little less obvious. | ||
But on a more serious note, here is my interview with South African businessman Rob Herzog. | ||
About a minute's worth. | ||
Explaining how sort of out of control things have gotten in that once great country. | ||
South Africa could be Germany in 1933. | ||
We have the dangerous populists, not in brown shirts, in red berets, jumping up and down and openly and publicly threatening to kill minorities, especially white people. | ||
We have that already. | ||
We have a Soviet playbook being pulled out, which is economic genocide, which is already in place. | ||
You know, taking as much as you can away from minorities to chase them away or take away what they have. | ||
And then signed into law in December expropriation without compensation in law by Cyril Ramaphosa. | ||
So this is the farmer portion of this, correct? | ||
Well, this is the beginning. | ||
And then Cyril Ramaphosa denies that farm attacks are anything different. | ||
He says South Africa is a violent society. | ||
There are farm attacks. | ||
Everybody's under threat. | ||
If you live in the townships as a poor person, you're just as likely to be killed. | ||
Not true. | ||
There are 30,000 commercial farmers in South Africa. | ||
There are 3 million commercial farmers in America. | ||
If you take 2000 to 2020, the number of South African farmers murdered, not attacks, murders, and there are about 45% of the attacks are murders. | ||
Torture and rape at 20% of them. | ||
Torture and rape. | ||
And it's not just white farmers, but it's mostly white farmers. | ||
If you take the numbers of South African farmers that have been murdered, extrapolate that pro rata to the 3 million American, you would have had 234,000 farmers murdered in America from 2000 to 2020. | ||
Okay, all right. | ||
So that's just a bite of the interview, and I do recommend you watch more. | ||
But there clearly, again, I am not, and I went through this with Rob, and I talked about it a bit last week as it pertained to some other stuff. | ||
I'm not accusing the government of genocide at the moment. | ||
He gets into the sort of levels of genocide and how you just lead up to genocide and everything else. | ||
But there is something strange that there is this group of people who happen to be producers, right? | ||
If you're a farmer, you're a producer. | ||
People need food. | ||
Everybody, regardless of whether you're black or white, needs food. | ||
And they are being disproportionately killed. | ||
And it certainly is happening with some racial context. | ||
Now let's bring the racial context back here to the United States because these things are connected. | ||
Unconnected. | ||
This endless, and this was the danger of the woke stuff 10 years ago as it proliferated all over the globe. | ||
Once you basically whittled us down to our base level stuff, our lowest common denominator stuff, you were going to be able to attack the roots of the West really easily because any society that is multicultural in nature or has brought in all sorts of people and said, hey guys, you got to put away some of the baggage so that we can all live together. | ||
Well, once you go hacking away at that, which is what the wokesters and the progressives have done for, well, really For several decades, but let's say on steroids for the last decade, you're gonna basically destroy everything. | ||
So now let's connect this to basketball because the women have a league. | ||
As far as I understand, it's mostly women without penises, but I leave that to you to figure it. | ||
Well, it's actually a little unclear because there's Brittany Griner. | ||
A lot of people think she's a dude, but in any event, Brittany Griner is a black basketball player who some people think is a man. | ||
I don't know, I believe, Let's just say she's a woman. | ||
Here's a chick, a black chick. | ||
And then, of course, there's Caitlin Clark. | ||
and everyone knows Caitlin Clark. | ||
We'll get to that in a minute. | ||
But Caitlin Clark is an absolute all-star. | ||
She is the Michael Jordan of this. | ||
This is the girl that girls have been waiting for forever to elevate WNBA to the point that guys might start talking about it and going, boy, she really is something else, her level of skill. | ||
What has happened to her in the last two years, since graduating college, is that she has been abused repeatedly. | ||
We have shown you videos just getting elbowed, getting crushed, inbound passes where they ram into her. | ||
Here is Brittany Griner elbowing Caitlin Clark in a crazy way and then calling her a trash fucking white girl. | ||
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Fouled out, had six, and it was the tiki-tac fouls, and again, Caitlin Clark doing a little bit of an acting job. | |
Not sure if that was actually a foul, but again, that's for the tiki-tac fouls that we were talking about earlier today. | ||
Alright, so she wants to be seen. | ||
She knows the cameras are on. | ||
Her trash fucking white girl. | ||
She wants to be seen saying that. | ||
Now imagine if Caitlin Clark had said trash freaking black girl. | ||
Like, what would be happening right now? | ||
Also, the way she sets the pic, some people are cheap and whatever. | ||
You don't set a pic and just throw an elbow up like that. | ||
That is not what you do. | ||
But okay, fine. | ||
Caitlyn might have acted there a little bit, but she's just getting abused. | ||
Now, you might know the name Brittany Griner because Brittany Griner was the one that went to Russia with some weed and got stuck in jail. | ||
And then we traded, the Obama administration traded this guy. | ||
Putin's merchant of death is back in the arms business, this time selling to the Houthis. | ||
Do you realize how insane this is? | ||
Russian gunrunner Victor Bout was traded in 2022 for U.S. basketball star Brittany Griner. | ||
Do you realize how absolutely, leave that picture up. | ||
So that man right there, we had him. | ||
He was a gunrunner who was sending stuff to the Houthis. | ||
The Houthis who have been bombing our shipping routes and now we've been bombing them and they've been lobbing rockets into Israel. | ||
We traded him back for Brittany Griner to get Brittany Griner, who did, You cannot bring weed into Russia. | ||
You just can't. | ||
That's just how it is. | ||
But we traded her, we got her back for the guy who's bringing the weapons to the Houthis who were now bombing. | ||
Like, you actually, this must be a simulation. | ||
It's so ridiculous, you can't make it up. | ||
Anyway, then check this out. | ||
So there's this other girl in the WNBA. | ||
Her name's Angel Reese, and if Caitlin Clark is the Michael Jordan of this thing, I don't know what you want to consider. | ||
I don't want to compare her to an NBA player because she's kind of an unpleasant person and she does strike me as racist and dirty. | ||
So she's just up there. | ||
She happens to be black. | ||
Again, I don't care, but she seems like a dirty player. | ||
So check this out. | ||
This is an image that she reposted. | ||
And the implication is, well, what it says at the top is white, I don't know, this is how they say girl, white gal, G-Y-A-L, running from the fade, like as if she's just, as if Caitlin Clark is basically a pussy. | ||
No pun intended. | ||
And doesn't want to get involved because she's getting smashed all the time. | ||
And Angel re-pieceded that. | ||
Fade means to get knocked out. | ||
Anyway, we thought it would be fun to show you. | ||
For those of you that are like, this is a little in the weeds, Dave. | ||
I'm not a big WNBA fan. | ||
She must be pretty great, this Angel Reese. | ||
You said she's sort of the number two there. | ||
We have some video. | ||
We have some of her highlights. | ||
She's pretty fantastic. | ||
unidentified
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Cardoso with the miss. | |
Angel Reese picks it up, which she's good at. | ||
Getting another offensive rebound. | ||
She says, give me that. | ||
How about another? | ||
Persistence trying to pay off. | ||
Jones gets a piece. | ||
Angel Reese won't give up. | ||
Jones with another block. | ||
I love how hard the announcers write. | ||
Angel Reese won't give up. | ||
She missed again, and she still tried. | ||
She missed 17 minutes. | ||
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Look at the persistence of the Angel Reese. | |
As you guys know, in February, I blew out my knee. | ||
15 micro tears in my ACL, MCL, meniscus. | ||
Had stem cells put in from my own fat on April 10th. | ||
Five weeks later, I was out on the basketball court. | ||
And if you missed it, these were the first five shots that I took. | ||
Give me a bra. | ||
Call me Debbie. | ||
I'm joining the WNBA. | ||
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Here we go. | |
Come on, one more, one more, one more! | ||
Here we go! | ||
I'm not kidding. | ||
I'm not kidding. | ||
I'm 49. I'll be 49 in a few weeks. | ||
49 mangled knee. | ||
Something ain't right with the shoulder. | ||
I'm doing it. | ||
I'm putting on a dress and I'm joining the WNBA and I will be as racist as any of those bitches. | ||
You understand? | ||
Anyway, the story, again, it's just, the reason that these things are important, you might not care about them, is just because this little thing where we should just pit each other against each other because of race, and we elevate some people because of this race, and denigrate some people because of this race, it's just not good over time. | ||
And if for no other reason, if you are a female basketball fan, You don't wanna break, you don't wanna take the person. | ||
The NBA was something in the 70s, right? | ||
And then there was the ABA first and then the NBA. | ||
And then suddenly there was this rivalry between Magic Johnson. | ||
And Larry Bird. | ||
And there was an ethnic component to it in that magic was flashy and he was black in Los Angeles and Larry Bird was from Indiana, played in Boston. | ||
It was thought of as more white and blue collar. | ||
But it was always about who was the better basketball player. | ||
And there were plenty of black people who loved Larry Bird and there were plenty of white people who loved magic, right? | ||
But the league then grew in the early 80s because of that. | ||
And then what was born out of that? | ||
Michael Jordan. | ||
And he took it to the stratosphere. | ||
The point is, if you care about basketball, you care about the sport, you should want the best people to be out there, and you shouldn't be like, I want to take out that one because she is of that skin color. | ||
Anyway, here's Fox's Kevin Cork saying that nobody is going to watch the WNBA if they don't get rid of this racist nonsense. | ||
They've taken it too far. | ||
A couple things. | ||
First of all, if you're old enough to remember the old Magic Johnson-Larry Bird rivalry, this could be great for the sport to sort of have two good teams, two great players. | ||
But I think Reese really has enmity toward this person, and I don't understand why. | ||
I think Kaitlin Karg has been great for the sport. | ||
And if they keep this up, Joey, here's what's going to happen. | ||
Players like Reese don't understand. | ||
You are killing the game. | ||
For non-fans, I'm talking about people just, oh, basketball. | ||
Caitlin Clark, I recognize her. | ||
Angel Reese, I recognize her. | ||
But if you keep taking shots, nobody's going to want to watch that product, and that's the real danger. | ||
Right. | ||
Nobody's going to want to watch the product because, what do I always say, wokeism destroys everything. | ||
It's like the alien in the alien movies. | ||
It infects the host. | ||
And then it bursts out of their stomach and goo goes everywhere and it kills everybody on the ship. | ||
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All right, so let's continue with the racialization of virtually everything. | ||
In Rotterdam, which is in the UK, it's a largely Pakistani community, and this is to the backdrop of the Pakistani rape gangs. | ||
They have a new mayor. | ||
Her name is Rukhsana Ishmael. | ||
Here's a bit on that. | ||
unidentified
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Because of my faith and because of my parents' prayers. | |
Deputy Mayor Councillor Haroun Rashid and Councillor Taiba Yassin expressed their happiness at Rukhsana Ismail becoming mayor, saying, I congratulate Madam Mayor. | ||
This is truly historic. | ||
She is our first female mayor in South Yorkshire. | ||
Is that Downton Abbey 3? | ||
What am I watching? | ||
Is that the Dowager Countess? | ||
Okay, look, there is a problem. | ||
In the UK, it is obvious and everyone knows it. | ||
If you have a certain type of person from a certain religion That is there to dominate. | ||
And they only vote for their candidates. | ||
And now the UK, I don't know what the number is, how many mayors, we can try to find the numbers of how many Muslim mayors they have. | ||
And it's not a problem in and of itself unless they're only there to be the mayor for a certain type of person who happens to be in their religion. | ||
Do you think that the, let's put it this way, do you think that the average Brit of 1974 would look at a video like that and be like, this is good for England? | ||
Do you think that that's what they would think? | ||
And the answer, obviously, is no. | ||
But the real problem there is that they have this massive Pakistani, it's largely Pakistani, grooming scandal that has been happening in the UK for decades. | ||
And it was systemically covered up by the government because the government was like, oh, those are brown people. | ||
They have their own cultures and their own traditions. | ||
And they were literally letting them rape largely young girls, but it was young boys, too. | ||
We have a bit on the Rotterham gang scandal itself, which basically took place from between 1997 and 2013. | ||
It involved the sexual exploitation of about 1,400 girls, mostly aged 11 to 16 in Rotterdam, Rotterham, UK, by organized groups, primarily British-Pakistani men. | ||
Abusers groomed vulnerable girls with gifts or drugs before subjecting them to rape, trafficking, and violence. | ||
Systemic failures by Rotterham council, police and social services allowed the abuse to persist with warnings ignored since the 1990s due to fear of racism, accusations, victim blaming, and coverage. | ||
The scandal, part of wider issues in towns like Rockdale, So again, I don't, and I don't think the average UK person cares if it's a brown person raping a white person or a white person raping a brown person or anything else. | ||
But if you're going to go out of your way to be like, oh, those rapists who happen to be from another place and have a different religion and a different nationality and have their own traditions, they're allowed to rape our girls and we're going to let that happen for decades. | ||
And it's gonna go on and on and on. | ||
Then eventually you're gonna create a country of racist people because they're gonna be racist against those guys. | ||
And also rape is bad. | ||
So don't be for rape. | ||
Here is a man explaining that UK police, I mean, this is just so insane, but it's a perfect example of this. | ||
And I would connect this to the new mayor. | ||
You just have to think, okay, is the new mayor going to be going after these guys or not? | ||
I mean, where are her allegiances? | ||
You just have to think about that. | ||
Here's a man explaining that UK police once found a drunk, naked 13-year-old girl with several Pakistanis, and who did they arrest? | ||
Well, yeah, the girl. | ||
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Individual family stories. | |
One of the very first was from a grandfather who rang from Rotherham who wanted to talk about his granddaughter. | ||
One month after her 13th birthday, she'd gone to school and then gone missing, and the school had rung her mum, who'd immediately rung the police, who'd said, don't worry, love, she'll turn up as soon as she gets hungry. | ||
She didn't turn up that afternoon, that evening, and at 2.30 in the morning, the next morning, a woman on the other side of Rotherham had picked up the phone and dialed 999 because she'd heard a young girl screaming in the house next door. | ||
Police had gone round to the house. | ||
They found this 13-year-old girl with another young girl. | ||
She was almost completely naked. | ||
She was blind drunk, and she was with seven adult Pakistani men. | ||
She was drunk and leery. | ||
And Southwark police arrested the 13-year-old girl for being drunk and disorderly. | ||
They took her back to the station, put her in the cells, eventually charged her, and she was convicted. | ||
They didn't even question the man as to why they were in a house with a 13-year-old girl who was nearly naked in the early hours of the morning. | ||
Why did the police not ask those guys what they were doing? | ||
Why was there a drunk, naked 13-year-old girl with seven Pakistani guys? | ||
Like, what's going on there? | ||
Now, the broader issue here, again, is the systemic part of this. | ||
If you were in the police and you're like, uh-oh, I don't want to get called racist. | ||
So we're going to arrest the 13-year-old white girl, 14-year-old white girl, who's drunk, but we're not going to talk about the guys. | ||
Well, then you have a real problem on your hand. | ||
And the other problem that the UK has, of course, is they've let all of these people in, some of them legally, some of them not. | ||
And they're causing all kinds of mayhem all over the place. | ||
You may remember the story from about a year ago. | ||
There was a stabbing, three stabbings at a ballet studio. | ||
By a Rwandan UK citizen. | ||
So in this case, he was a UK citizen, but he randomly walked into a ballet studio for young girls, stabbed three of the girls. | ||
Did three die? | ||
I think three died, if I'm not mistaken. | ||
And then look at this. | ||
Look at this tweet from Sky News. | ||
I will not let evil win. | ||
Southport survivor Leanne Lucas is calling for the use of blunt-tipped knives in home kitchens. | ||
So that girl you're looking at right there, she survived the stabbing by this guy who, again, came legally from Rwanda. | ||
Her solution is not, hey, what's going on with culture? | ||
Why are people killing each other? | ||
Why did this guy go to a ballet and stab three of my friends and leave them dead? | ||
It's that we should get sharp-tipped knives out of kitchens, as if that will solve anything. | ||
It really is rather extraordinary. | ||
The great Thomas Sowell had a quote that I thought would be appropriate for all of this. | ||
What multiculturalism boils down to is that you can praise any culture in the world except Western culture, and you cannot blame any culture in the world except Western culture. | ||
I mean, that is prairie. | ||
And so much of what we're talking about on the show all the time is just, will the West stand up for the basics? | ||
The basics. | ||
Individual rights, law and order, borders. | ||
And then have your traditions, and have your food, as I always say, and have your music and all of those things. | ||
But what you can have is, I don't know, gangbangs of drunk 13-year-olds. | ||
unidentified
|
That would be a bridge too far. | |
But we have instituted this. | ||
We have instituted this across Our systems right here. | ||
Let's jump over to Harvard. | ||
Scott Besson, here he is talking about how because Harvard has become systemically racist as it pertains to admissions, because they have allowed the campus to be shut down by people calling for jihad and for genocide, they've stopped students from coming onto campus. | ||
You get all that. | ||
It has nothing to do with free speech. | ||
If those jihadi masked morons wanted to just get out there and say whatever they want while the day was going on and other people could do their business. | ||
I would be defending them. | ||
I wouldn't be thrilled with them, but I would defend their right to do it. | ||
They have taken over campuses. | ||
They have destroyed the ability for young people to learn. | ||
They've been racist in admissions, everything else. | ||
So here's Scott Besson saying they're gonna lose their tax-exempt status, and we may look into the endowments, which I think the Harvard Endowment's about 40 billion, with the B, dollars. | ||
unidentified
|
Posted, actually, on social media that they were in the process of removing the tax-exempt status from Harvard. | |
There's been a lot of issues at Harvard, but that's one that comes within your bailiwick. | ||
Where is that process right now? | ||
The president is moving forward with that, and we're also looking at taxes on endowments. | ||
And I think the important thing here, and it goes a little bit back to this Main Street versus the elites that harbored. | ||
To have a tax-exempt status, there are rules you have to follow. | ||
And if you're not following the rules, no one's above the law. | ||
So we will see if they're following the rules. | ||
It looks like there's a substantial number where perhaps they weren't. | ||
And, you know, again, too, Harvard is a gigantic hedge fund. | ||
They run a leveraged investment model. | ||
So we'll see where all that goes. | ||
Okay, so it's super interesting because, yes, he's saying that if you're involved with the federal government, there are basic things you have to follow. | ||
Like, you cannot discriminate against people based on race, right? | ||
Like, those are basic things, and Harvard clearly has been doing that. | ||
They've admitted they were doing it, right? | ||
We know that. | ||
And to his point, Harvard is basically a hedge fund. | ||
It's not $40 billion. | ||
We checked while the video was playing. | ||
They have a $53 billion endowment. | ||
It is more of a giant hedge fund manager at this point than a place of higher education. | ||
Very few people are getting into Harvard and walk out smarter four years later. | ||
You walk out more radicalized and more with a greater desire to burn down the country, but that's about it. | ||
So finally, we have a government that is not gonna play ball with these radicals, and that is good, and that has nothing to do. | ||
Speaking of free speech, we've got a rubenreport.locals.com community Q&A coming in but just a second. | ||
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All right, Freedom Hawk says, where do you think Corinne Jean-Pierre has been hiding and why usually a former press secretary would have a gig by now? | ||
That's a good question. | ||
I think the only gig that she's gotten, we covered it a couple weeks ago, she's going to be the Grand Marshal in the big gay parade in D.C. I think it was in D.C. Can I confirm that? | ||
But it was definitely, she's going to be a Grand Marshal. | ||
It's a one-day gig. | ||
And she's going to get out there. | ||
You would have to shoot me and drag my dead carcass to get me to go to one of these parades at this point. | ||
New York City! | ||
She's going to be there. | ||
The New York City Gay Pride Parade. | ||
She will be the Grand Marshal. | ||
So if you want to go say hi to her and see a bunch of queers for Palestine, exercise their right to freedom of expression, that's where you can go. | ||
I mean, I don't think she can get a job because she's not really qualified to do anything. | ||
Like, what corporation? | ||
Would be like, I would like Corinne Jean-Pierre to represent us on the world stage. | ||
Like, I know they want her connections, but actually her connections with the Biden administration, who knows what those are anymore? | ||
So she don't have much of a job, you know? | ||
She's got fluffy hair, but not much of a job. | ||
Olaf says, what's your favorite silly song to sing to the boys? | ||
They are really into Yakety Yak right now. | ||
Yakety Yak! | ||
unidentified
|
Don't talk back. | |
Yeah, we're really into Yakety Yak and a lot of like 50s kind of like hokey stuff like that. | ||
Big, big on the Yakety Yak. | ||
I got to go a little fast here today. | ||
Boots says, when will we get another comedy special? | ||
Love the Donald Duck and Goofy joke about Disney World. | ||
So we released only on Locals. | ||
We released my Don't Say Dave. | ||
It was at the height of the Don't Say Gay absurdity in Florida. | ||
And it was one of, we did, I don't know, we did about 20 shows, sold them all out. | ||
It was a great tour for Don't Burn This Country. | ||
And we, every day I did a mostly different show. | ||
I'd say about, the shows were like 50%. | ||
So somewhat kind of old material or about the book. | ||
And then it was 50% what happened in the news that day and just silly jokes and everything. | ||
And we took the last show that we did, which was sold out, a couple thousand people in Orlando, massive protests outside as I had Governor DeSantis on. | ||
And we aired that one. | ||
And that became the comedy special. | ||
I would like to do another one. | ||
You know, I'm doing a little more. | ||
Obviously, I'm on the road right now. | ||
I'm in Hungary. | ||
And we're going to do a little more of that stuff. | ||
I don't want to do just straight stand-up. | ||
It just kind of seems boring, just having to chase the joke the entire time. | ||
But sort of more. | ||
More storytelling and current events with the funny stuff mixed in. | ||
I don't know, you might say it's kind of what I do here. | ||
We will do more, so stay tuned on that. | ||
And for those of you that want to see the stand-up special, it's about 45 minutes. | ||
It's completely unscripted in that even the stuff, even some of the jokes that I had told before, it's all on the fly. | ||
You see, I just kind of make it up as the room goes around. | ||
You just have to join Locals, rubinreport.locals.com, and you can get it in the video section there. | ||
Minnie says, if you and Jasmine Crockett grabbed coffee together, what's one topic you think you could both find common ground on? | ||
Well, I would be very interested in the eyelashes. | ||
I really would. | ||
You know, my eyelashes are pretty standard. | ||
I don't feel any particular feelings towards my eyelashes. | ||
I think everything's fine. | ||
But I would be interested to know, when does a woman say, I need big-ass eyelashes? | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
And I'm not just, like, she went into a store one day. | ||
Like, let's assume she had normal eyelashes, you know, or average to... | ||
But then she was like, give me the fucking bananas eyelashes. | ||
I want to be known as eyelash lady. | ||
That's interesting to me. | ||
I'd like to talk to her about that. | ||
Shelly says, do either of your boys have an obsession with anything? | ||
You can use it as a teaching tool. | ||
My oldest grandson loved cars, so we went to dealerships and walked around naming the colors of the cars. | ||
At two, he could pick out Jeeps, Mustangs, Hummers. | ||
BW bugs and name their colors. | ||
Yeah, that's really cool. | ||
It's interesting you say cars. | ||
They are so into trucks right now. | ||
They had a mini dinosaur phase very quickly and they could name it a whole bunch of dinosaurs. | ||
And then just somehow overnight that turned into trucks. | ||
And, you know, here in Miami, because there's just so much construction going on and they're knocking down houses left and right, there are just construction trucks everywhere. | ||
So there are cement trucks and there's excavators. | ||
They love the excavator and they love saying excavator and excavator and all the different ways you could say it. | ||
And they just love, love, love, love trucks at the moment. | ||
That's the big thing. | ||
We got a lot of trucks in the yard and we're constantly, we're digging up dirt. | ||
We dig up rocks and we move the trucks and we move the rocks and we build things and all that stuff. | ||
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Jeffrey says, as an old trainee of The Daily Show, how do you think Jon Stewart is doing nowadays? | ||
So yes, I was an intern for The Daily Show in 1999. | ||
I was already out of college. | ||
I literally forged a letter. | ||
I completely, I mean, this is, I forged a letter on my old college letterhead to pretend I was still in college to get an internship at the Daily Show. | ||
I was there two days a week, while three days a week I worked at, or was it the other way around? | ||
I forget if I was there three days a week or two days a week, but one or the other. | ||
Yeah, no, no. | ||
I was there Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays in New York City. | ||
And I would, you know, get coffee for people and just do all the crappy jobs that you do at the beginning. | ||
And then the other two days a week, I was not yet assistant manager at Electronics Boutique. | ||
I was just a run-of-the-mill salesman. | ||
I was just an average video game salesman doing the best I could for like $12 an hour back then, 1999. | ||
And I had a little interaction with John over the years. | ||
Kind of liked him. | ||
Never had a bad interaction with him. | ||
But it's been, you know, you know my feelings on this. | ||
It's been kind of disappointing to watch the 20-plus years of John because he was kind of a voice of reason. | ||
That's what people liked about him. | ||
He's obviously really bright, and he is funny in all of those things, and he must have affected my formative years in some way, I suppose. | ||
Because I do something very similar. | ||
But he, unfortunately, he had a path to go down and he chose the wrong way. | ||
He decided to go all in with the woke shit. | ||
And he was all about the trans stuff and all about the racism and all about Trump's a Nazi and all that. | ||
And now he's been left with that. | ||
So he's just, I don't know, he's me for the Bernie Sanders crowd? | ||
like that doesn't seem particularly good. | ||
And that's why when we play clips in my, He could have, the way Bill Maher, whatever your feelings about Bill Maher, like John has a younger audience, let's say, and he could have ushered that into being a bulwark against the craziness, but instead he went all in. | ||
Kelly says, I wonder if you've watched the latest episode of the All In podcast. | ||
Chamath has been on Trump's side, but this big, beautiful bill sounds like it's not good. | ||
I would love your thoughts. | ||
They also had Ron Johnson on an emergency pod with Friedberg and Chamath yesterday. | ||
I think this bill, as written, is a mistake. | ||
So I have not seen all in on that, but I have seen, we did even play a clip of David Friedberg, who's who you're talking about last week on all in talking about why this bill is no good and it's going to be too much spending and all of those things. | ||
Look, you know, my general feelings on this, I'm trying to give Trump every bit of grace and leeway here with these things. | ||
It does sound like there is a spending component to this that will not be good for the debt and everything else. | ||
I haven't focused on it too much in this last little bit. | ||
And unfortunately I'm about to travel now, so we're going to be away from it, but I'll keep an eye on this. | ||
And it's, by the way, it's one of the reasons I like that show. | ||
They bring on people of other positions and it's why I showed you the Friedberg video last week. | ||
Look, I'm going to have either black And I don't wanna just go back to the well every time. | ||
I wanna show you people that disagree differently. | ||
So I will keep an eye on that. | ||
Glenn says, I know you love to play basketball. | ||
Did you play any sports when you were in school? | ||
Yeah, basketball. | ||
I mean, basically basketball. | ||
Once I picked up a ball, probably, it was a little bit late actually, but it was around seventh grade was when I really got into basketball one summer. | ||
I was at sleepaway camp. | ||
And I just, I have loved basketball ever since. | ||
I'm finally back playing again, as you guys know, which the stem cell thing is just incredible. | ||
And yes, we are going to have Dr. Striano on the show to discuss it and we'll release our little documentary probably in August because we'll need a little extra content for that for when I go off the grid. | ||
But I'm playing again and I love it. | ||
It's three hours where my brain completely shuts off. | ||
There's no politics. | ||
There's no cultural nonsense. | ||
There's nothing else in my brain except focusing what I'm doing on on the court. | ||
And sometimes I can do some stuff like a younger man And also playing here in Florida, this heat that we're playing in, humidity, three hours on Sunday mornings, 9 a.m. to noon, like the clothes are disgusting, drenched in soap, but it's a freaking hell of a workout. | ||
It will slim up that stomach real quick. | ||
Cool Mom says, all these years, I thought we got involved in wars to help other countries. | ||
After listening to Yanmi Park's accounts over the years, I wished we could free North Korea, but I guess it wouldn't. | ||
Be profitable. | ||
Look, we've done some things that have been good. | ||
We've done some things that have been bad for whatever wars we've done that haven't been good, let's say. | ||
You know, we haven't taken over all of these countries, right? | ||
We really haven't. | ||
As an overall arching thing, the United States absolutely is a force for good. | ||
It doesn't mean that every jaunt we did is bad. | ||
You know, you could look at Obama doing a kinetic military action without congressional approval in Libya, and we toppled Gaddafi, who... | ||
Syria was having their civil war. | ||
We kind of were doing stuff and not doing stuff, and now Syria is basically a failed state, and we're sort of backing a guy who basically was a jihadi a couple years ago. | ||
There's just a lot of stuff that you could talk about, Iraq war and everything else. | ||
I don't think that there's much, if anything, that we can do right now with North Korea. | ||
Obviously, Trump tried to talk to him. | ||
Kim Jong-un, first time around, it didn't really get anywhere. | ||
But countries have borders and they have a right to govern as they wish. | ||
Now, if you knew, and you could relate this to South Africa, if you knew, let's say, the South African government was systemically trying to kill a minority there, would you try to apply economic pressure? | ||
Would you maybe try to help people get out? | ||
Would you want South Africans that are all over the world and other countries to help their family members get out and everything? | ||
Sure. | ||
Do you have a right to topple a government and do all those things? | ||
Well, this is where nation building starts getting in and it usually ends up being messy. | ||
And by the way, the North Korean guys got the nukes. | ||
Polly said, "You've said your team is like a family. | ||
What's the most hilarious or memorable off-camera Well, you know, even just today, there was a knock on the door, and I can't get into much detail on this, but a federal agent showed up to the house to ask us a couple questions about somebody. | ||
It all turned out to be good. | ||
It was a little weird for a moment. | ||
It was all good, but you don't expect a federal agent to just show up at the door, and thank you for dealing with that, and everything's just fine. | ||
Okay, thanks for watching the show today. | ||
I am in Hungary, and then Israel, so if you have not bought tickets, we'd love to see you at DaveRubin.com slash events. | ||
Stay tuned, lots more, and yes, so we'll be gone at a studio until about June 6th, but there will be plenty of content, interviews, a couple live shows, and all of that good stuff. | ||
Thank you guys for watching, and did the federal agent leave? | ||
I don't know if we're okay. | ||
Okay. | ||
It's all good, people. |