Supreme Court and redistricting, Venezuela, and lots of other newsy fun~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Politics, Testosterone, Flying Car Production, Starlink United Airlines, Joy Behar, Senator Fetterman, Gavin Newsom, CA Derangement Syndrome, CDS, Tylenol, Candace Owens, Pentagon Press Tantrum, NBC CBS News Layoffs, Young Republicans Chat, James Carville, Voting Rights Act, Big Balls Edward Coristine, Non-Judgmental Kendra Briggs, Venezuela Drug Boats, Alex Jones, Scott Adams~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~If you would like to enjoy this same content plus bonus content from Scott Adams, including micro-lessons on lots of useful topics to build your talent stack, please see scottadams.locals.com for full access to that secret treasure.
Grab yourself a beverage, get a good seat up in the front, and while people are pouring in, I'll check your stocks for you.
It's kind of flat.
Up a little bit.
It'll be jumping around today, I guess.
Let me make sure I can see your comments and we'll get going.
No, not that.
How about that?
Everybody feeling good today?
How are you all doing?
By the way, if you subscribe to Dilbert on either the locals platform or you can do it on X. Um you'll see that Dilbert's company has been asked to program some voting machines.
So Dilbert will be in charge of programming the new voting machines.
Just in case you wondered.
Alright, why is this not working?
Come on.
Come on.
All right, that didn't work.
But this will work.
Sure enough.
Do do do do do do.
Do do do do do.
Boom boom boom boom.
Do do do do do.
Do do do do.
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Ah.
So yesterday during uh I saw one of the comments on X. Someone asked me if I could recommend a book on hypnosis.
And I said, No, I don't know any books on hypnosis.
And then I was on Amazon looking at the uh results of my own book, Reframe Your Brain.
And turns out I have the number one book in the world on hypnosis, which I was completely unaware of.
So on Amazon's ranking for hypnosis books, I'm not even sure why this is on that that list.
It's sort of like hypnosis, but it's more of a conversational version.
It's it's not gonna put you in a trance.
But as recent tradition requires, I'm gonna give you a reframe from this book, see if it makes any difference.
Um, here's a good one.
So the usual frame when we're dealing with other people is something like other people think approximately the same as I do.
Do you do you ever think that?
You assume that the way you think is probably pretty similar to the way other people think.
That is a big problem.
Here's a reframe that's better.
Instead of others think and feel approximately as I do, others are unimaginably different.
Unimaginative.
You can't even imagine how different they are.
So if so, if you start with the assumption that they think like you, everything gets confusing.
Because you'll be like, Well, I mean, why why don't you agree with me?
Why aren't why aren't you thinking like me?
If you imagine that people's inner thoughts are just unimaginably different, which they largely are, you'll have much less stuff to worry about.
All right, let's talk about the news.
Um the Stockholm School of Economics did a uh study to find out if people who had uh men, if they had extra testosterone, if they would take more risk Taking in their financial decisions.
What do you think?
Did people take more risks?
Men when they got a testosterone shot?
The answer was no.
The answer was no.
That they they made the same economic decisions.
However, I have a little insight into this topic because as you know, I've turned off my testosterone chemically, uh, because of the cancer stuff.
So I've experienced what's it like to have probably too much.
Based on my own assessment, probably too much.
Uh, because I I do have a lifelong issue with being a little too aggressive sometimes.
So I always thought that was testosterone.
And now that I don't have it, now that I'm you know, testosterone empty, basically, I don't feel that you know, those sudden sudden angry urges that I used to have.
So it seems it does seem like my behavior changed.
But here's what I'm gonna add to this economic study.
The other thing I noticed is that since I'm a grown-ass adult with lots of let's say training for how to do things like invest and lots of habits, which I've developed over my lifetime.
And what I think is that if you temporarily temporarily is the key word here, change somebody's testosterone, that it doesn't make as much difference as you think because their training and their habits would be strong.
Might be different if you're 19.
But if you're if you're an adult and you've been one for a while, you've got all this habit and training.
So if I were making an economic decision, I'm pretty sure I would make it the same way I've always made them.
So I would make sure I diversify, you know, just ordinary things.
So if you're trained and you have habits, you wouldn't see any difference in the short run.
In the long run, you probably would.
So that's my addition.
China is gonna mass produce flying cars next year, a company called XPeng.
It makes me wonder is is China gonna win the flying car industry.
I'm not I'm not a hundred percent sure that flying cars ever need to be a thing, unless they're self self-flying.
Uh I wouldn't want people flying their own flying cars, that'd be a disaster.
But if they were sort of self-driving flying cars that are more like Ubers, maybe I can see it.
But the U.S. is gonna have a massive uh regulatory problem because every state will have its own regulations and there'll be environmental things and noise prohibitions and everything else.
So we got a problem.
I don't think we'll be winning the flying car competition.
But Elon Musk tells us that Starlink, the satellite um internet connections, will be are now available on United Airlines flights.
I kind of thought that they already had something like that, but not as good as Starlink.
Can you can you even hold in your head how shitty the United States is become that it took until 2025 to have uh internet on a plane?
Really?
It took this long to get internet on a plane.
Flying was the I I also wonder if this will have an impact on book sales.
Because in my life, the uh the time to read a book is on an airplane and no other time.
I when I when I hear about people who read a lot of books, I automatically think they travel a lot.
Because if you're not trapped on an airplane, you're probably gonna be more on the internet than reading a book.
But if you only have, you know, if it's the only thing you have to do, you read a book.
So you know, I think of people like uh uh Charlie Kirk, he was a big reader, but also a big traveler.
So it makes me wonder if Starlink on airplanes will make book sales plunge.
Might.
Um Joy Behar of The View said recently, it's kind of funny.
Quote, I think we should have more Republicans on the show, but they don't want to come on.
They're scared of us.
Are they?
Do you think there's even one Republican in the entire planet who would be afraid to go in the view because it's the view?
Now there might be people who don't want to go on TV at all.
You know, maybe they're shy or something.
But I'll bet there are zero people in the world, zero, who are Republican and not shy, who would say no to going on the view.
Do you notice the pattern?
The the pattern is really clear.
That the thing that Democrats are worried about, obsessed about, and blaming Republicans for, what quality do all of those uh criticisms have?
They have one quality about them.
No matter what the criticism is about, if it's about Republicans, there's always one quality that exists, and that quality is it's not real.
It just isn't real.
There's no Republican who's afraid of going on the view.
None.
Probably none.
You you could search the whole world, you wouldn't find one.
But but that's her worldview.
She's surrounded by people who are afraid of her.
It must be tough to be a Democrat.
Speaking of that, uh Fetterman continues to be a thorn in the side of the Democrats.
He said recently, quote, I love people who voted for Trump.
They aren't fascists, they aren't Nazis, they aren't destroying the Constitution.
He says we have to turn down the temperature.
Now, here's the thing.
Unless all of the you know senators or high-level uh democrats, unless all of them say Trump is a fascist Nazi constitution tearing up dictator, it doesn't really work, does it?
You only need one Fetterman to put the lie to the whole thing.
You know, as long as there's one reasonable elected Democrat who said no, you know.
And it's not even, he's not just sort of ignoring the category, which would be one thing.
It's not that he just not that he doesn't participate in those types of insults.
It's that he's saying directly, this is bullshit.
You need to stop this for our own benefit.
That's pretty powerful.
So no matter what you think of Fetterman, just his existence as someone who's willing to stand in the middle of that bullshit and call bullshit on the bullshit.
Well, that's really important.
I I think that's a bigger deal than people imagine.
Well, the so-called no kings protest uh will be happening this Saturday.
And I guess there's a little drama because at the same time there's some kind of uh 250-year celebration of the Marines or something that might be happening in Southern California, and that it might include I kind of doubt this,
doesn't seem possible, but some are saying that there would be a live launch of missiles uh and a vanity parade, it's being called, and it would shut down portions of the I-5 during the No Kings protest.
So I don't have enough information about this, but uh I don't believe that there will be live missile launches anywhere.
That that just doesn't seem like that could happen.
Oh, it's the Navy.
I'm being corrected.
250 years of the Navy in the comments, I see.
Um I don't know exactly how the No Kings protest is going to overlap with with that event.
I mean, it would only be one part of the one part of the country anyway.
I guess the event will be everywhere.
Anyway, uh I would hate that uh the missile launches would interfere with their walking around trying to save the country by walking around.
You know, I thought my comments would be more viral than it was when I said that the uh democrats have imaginary problems.
They just imagine that their democracy is being stolen and all that.
And uh, but they've matched it With imaginary solutions, which is the No Kings event.
If we just wander around and carry signs that other people bought and provided to us, I feel like I feel like we could save our democracy.
I don't, I don't think there's even one person to protest who believes their own protests.
Do you?
They're just fighting Trump.
Well, speaking of fighting Trump, uh, as you know, Gavin Newsom is doing this thing where he's sort of mocking or pretending to act like Trump in his social media because it's kind of funny.
And it didn't work for a little while when it when he first did it, it was uh it was different, it was provocative, and it was well executed.
So when he was you know mocking the way that Trump spoke, you looked at it and you thought, oh, okay, that's actually kind of clever.
Yeah, nicely done.
But the one thing I predicted is that they wouldn't be able to expand that success.
That you know, those those several fake truth uh social posts that they did that supposedly sounded like Trump.
I knew they could pull that off after they did one or two.
You you could see that that was a reproducible thing.
But I knew that if they tried to continue to expand that, it would all fall apart because it would require way more talent than they demonstrate.
So here we are.
He sort of stretched it too far now, but he he's now talking about something called California Derangement syndrome, which he's partially blaming on uh Greg Goffeld.
He posted uh uh a clip from uh the five where Greg was talking about California in a negative way.
So uh Greg said uh CDS, hoping that you knew what that was, is not CDS if the data is real, right?
So it's not derangement if you're looking at just data.
Um but Trump derangement is real uh as a phenomenon is real because they it's based on not data.
So one of them is based on data and one of them's not, so one's real and one's not anyway.
Um goes in with the post and goes, sad to see CDS, California Drangement Syndrome, has infected so many of Fox, hoping some Tylenol can help them recover.
Now, do you think the Democrats are on safe territory mocking Tylenol as a cause of uh obviously this is a callback to Tylenol being a potential cause for autism?
Don't you think that the data is strong enough that you shouldn't be mocking Tylenol that may or may not have caused autism in what hundreds of thousands of children?
Isn't that kind of a serious topic?
Is that is that what you want to joke about?
Tylenol, the the uh potential uh you know, life-altering chemical for children and babies.
That feels like just such a mistake.
Anyway, uh Joel Pollock commented on Gavin Newsom's comment, and he said he's not exactly what I was thinking.
He said, Newsom copies everything Trump does except the things that work best.
That's exactly what they're doing.
They they've looked at Trump and said, all right, Trump keeps winning.
What is it he's doing that's allowing him to win?
But the trick is that if you're a Democrat, your your brain can't wrap itself around the fact that your policies and your politicians are terrible.
So that that's off the table.
Yeah, the entire explanation of why Trump is succeeding, and Democrats are less so, is that he's got a tremendous amount of talent, and they don't.
That's it.
You can't reproduce that.
You would have to find new people with talent.
So you can't just copy it.
That would be Like, you know, Einstein had some good ideas.
I've got an idea.
I'm gonna wear my hair like Einstein.
Doesn't that feel like that's what they're doing?
Because they can't actually be Einstein.
You you can't copy Einstein because you're not smart enough.
So but you can't do nothing if Einstein's winning and you're not winning, so you're like, all right.
All right, well, we'll copy Einstein.
I'm gonna talk it in German accent and I'm gonna have wild hair.
That should do it.
Now, if you think that's a ridiculous analogy, look what look what Democrats say out loud that they're doing.
When they talk about what they're gonna do, they say we're gonna fight Trump.
Fight Trump.
Where is that on my list of priorities?
Don't you want to get policies in?
You know, isn't it more like I want to get something done?
Where's your plan?
No, we just want to fight Trump, and the way they're gonna do it is they think they have to get tougher because Trump is tough.
So they're like, all right, how do we get tough?
I got it.
We're gonna act like we're trying to appeal to men.
Yeah, yeah, that's what he's doing.
He's going to those uh all those fighting events and doing manly things.
Well, so we'll have to act like men.
And then they then they they've got Tim Wals trying to act like a man.
I've got a gun.
I can fix a carburetor.
It all just looks stupid.
Because they're copying the wrong thing, even if they could do it, it'd be the wrong thing.
And then they started copying Trump's uh occasional use of cursing, because they thought that would make them look tough.
So they've they've literally found every single thing that isn't important, all the somewhat inactive ingredients, and they're they're just like, oh, if we use the inactive ingredients, we'll get something done.
No, the thing you can't copy is he's brilliant.
He he's just really, really smart at exactly the kind of stuff that you need to be a president, which some of us saw early, and some of us are just finding out.
Anyway, um apparently the FBI has been busy all summer.
they say they got 80,000 arrests of dangerous criminals, according to Ben Whedon in Just the News.
Trump said we kept it a little quiet and it had a big impact.
Did they keep it quiet?
I guess they did.
But doesn't that seem like an impressive number?
8,000 dangerous criminals.
If you assume every dangerous criminal, dangerous, probably hurts more than one person going forward, you know, they they may have like saved uh 30,000 people from some kind of horrible death or destruction or theft or something.
Well, there's a funny story.
Candace Owens, well, it's not funny to her, I guess, uh, was gonna do a tour of her podcast, and that would include Australia, but Australia has banned her.
So Candace Owens can't go to Australia, uh, because they say she's said things they don't like.
Um here's the list the list of things that allegedly, according to Australia, these are things that Candace Owens has talked about that they don't like.
They don't like about her comments on Muslims.
Okay, don't like the Muslim comments.
Uh they don't like her comments about black people.
Is this even real?
Doesn't it feel like this couldn't possibly be real, right?
They don't like they don't like the black woman's comments about black people, don't like your comments about Jewish people, and don't like their comments about LGBTQIA.
I do not know what the I and the A stand for.
So we're getting a little long on the letters there.
Uh and not only that, but there was a hearing involved, yeah, a court hearing to see if she'd be allowed in the country.
And since she's not being allowed, she's being ordered to pay the hearing's legal costs.
Now, here's my question.
If Candace Owens is banned for things she said on social media and on her podcast, would I be able to go to Australia if I wanted to?
Because I'm pretty canceled.
I don't know if you've heard.
But if if uh Australia went by what the news says I said, I would be banned from Australia, wouldn't I?
Am I wrong?
Now, if they went by what I actually said and what I meant and the proper context, I wouldn't be banned from anything.
And I wouldn't be canceled either.
But that's not the way the world works.
The world works based on what people imagine is what happened and what people imagined what happened is that I said some insulting thing to black people, which never happened.
In the real world, nothing like that ever happened.
So I probably banned from Australia, and I don't even know it.
But the good news is I don't want to go to Australia.
They've got a lot of killing animals there.
My understanding is as soon as you go out get off the plane in Australia, a large crocodile attacks you, and then it just gets worse from there.
Spider the size of a dog.
I don't know.
I hear stories.
So the uh Pentagon Press Corps decided to make the story about themselves, and they walked out, most of them.
They walked out because they're protesting the new Pentagon policy on dealing with the press.
Now, I've been trying to get interested in that story, but it's kind of hard because it's it's really just the media dealing with their own stuff.
But as I understand it, the only thing that's newly banned is that the reporters are not supposed to be working people for information that those people should not be giving.
Am I right?
That the only thing that changed is that the media is banned from asking people stuff that the military doesn't want to give out.
So some people who are smarter than me who are looking at this say, nothing changed, you idiots.
Go back to work.
There's no real difference.
Because 28,000 arrests, somebody's saying, maybe it's more than 8,000.
Umway, uh they're they're treating it like it's the end of an era, and that those reporters won't be able to report because they're leaving the Pentagon.
And it was the most professional relationship, and now it's over.
I don't know.
I don't know how to judge this one.
My guess would be that the press will sort of quietly trickle back because they have to do their job.
I don't think they're gonna quit.
So probably that was just for show.
There are big layoffs underway, allegedly today at NBC News, and also some coming later this quarter as CPS News.
So there'd be 150 staff uh let go.
According to one report, uh a lot of the staff that are being let go are responsible for the uh uh what would you call it, the diversity stuff.
So it'd be the people who are making sure that there's DEI, I guess they're all getting fired.
Uh here's what I think.
Here's my prediction.
If people keep getting fired from the mainstream regular media, where are they gonna go to work?
Well, I think the uh the more entrepreneurial ones will probably get involved in podcasts.
So some of them will start a podcast if they were on-air people, but others will be um support for making podcasts a bigger deal.
If you look at, say uh Meghan Kelly's operation, or you look at uh well, Alex Jones went before he got sued to death, and or you look at PVD, you know, they have studios, you know, big Bigger than uh the Rogan operation.
I think he's just one engineer.
Uh, but I'll bet you you're gonna see podcasts turn into more professional looking TV shows because all those people with those talents, everything from set production to everything else, will be looking for work.
I think they'll just team up with big podcasters.
Yeah, talker Tucker's number one.
So I think you'll see more of that.
Um so are we over that uh young Republicans group that had some bad things to say on their private messages?
Uh I I kind of like uh JD Vance's approach.
He says, I refuse to join the pearl clutching about that topic when powerful people call for political violence.
So what he did was contrast it to speech that actually matters, you know, if somebody's talking about violence versus just people trolling, basically.
Um, I wouldn't have compared the two things, I don't think.
I think that took a little bit away from it.
It would have been stronger just to say in any group of any large group of people, 10% of them are going to say horrible things.
That's the whole story.
In every group, every large group, 10% of them are going to be trolls.
It wouldn't matter if they're Republican, it wouldn't matter if they're Democrats.
Do you do you think if you had a thousand Democrats in an organization, and it was specifically a young-oriented organization?
so it skewed for younger people do you think that out of a thousand democrats in any organization you wouldn't find 10 of them who said things that were so bad you think they should close down the whole organization you don't think there would be 10 who are wishing for the the violent death of prominent republicans of course there are yeah
So anybody who's under the illusion that there was something special or or uh you know unusually bad about this group of Republicans.
What world do you live in?
The world I live in, there's 10% of these people in every group, reliably, every time, if they're young.
You know, at some age, maybe that goes away.
But if it's young people, and if it's if it's males, young males, of course they're going to be like this.
Most of them grow out of it.
Um, James Carville was talking about this issue, and he he said uh some people are quote, worried about some 20-year-old snot nosed in Kansas who's an insignificant little shit if one ever lived, and we're not focusing on the main target, which is JG Vance.
And then he went on.
So Carville says this about uh the Republicans.
He said that not all President Trump supporters are racist, but I will say this all racists are Trump supporters.
Really?
Really?
James Carville, you actually believe that all racists, all racists, they're all Republican.
That that might be the dumbest thing he's ever said.
There's one thing I think we could all agree on.
There are racists in both parties.
That's the most obvious, observable thing you could ever see in your life.
I got canceled for pointing out that there was a uh a respectable survey that showed that let's say Democrats are super racist.
Now you could argue about the validity of that poll, but they did reproduce it with a larger subset and got the same number.
And they are one of the most accurate pollsters.
So I do think the data shows that uh we've got some racists in both parties.
Meanwhile, speaking of that, the uh voting rights act is being discussed at the Supreme Court.
The ramifications of that are that uh if the voting rights thing gets uh at least one element of it gets overturned, then there would not be these racial set-aside districts for voting.
So apparently, I didn't even know this until recently, I didn't even know this was a thing.
But apparently, historically, uh, there were some areas that had a lot of black and brown people in them, and uh they weren't necessarily getting the leaders that would represent them, they thought.
So there was some kind of uh forced um redistricting so that they would, you know, there'd at least be a few places that were majority black and they could get their leaders that they wanted.
Now, that of course is called what racism.
Because if you're organizing your vote based on the race, what's that?
It's racism.
You might say it's the good kind, you might say it's the good kind, but it's still racism.
And I think it was Gorsuch who was pointing out what I point out often, which is a lot of these uh racial set asides and racial uh, let's say, preferences, um made sense as some point in our history.
You could argue that it didn't, but I'll argue that it does.
So I I've made the I've made this point a few times.
If your problem is slavery, the solution has to be a big solution, like a civil war, gigantic problem, gigantic scaled solution.
But then you've got the you know, just the ordinary uh discrimination that kicks in in normal life.
So you then you've got your Jim Crow stuff and your so you so you pass some laws to make sure that uh there's not just grotesque discrimination against all black people and and anybody else.
Now that makes sense to have a whole law that you know really will punish you for discriminating if we're still super racist, right?
We basically, you know, just got over slavery practically, uh, and things haven't changed that much.
So then you still need a big solution using the legal system, but not as big as the civil war, because you're matching the solution to the size of the problem.
Still very big, but you want to match the size.
And then Gorsuch asks, um, and I've said the same thing, isn't there some point where you have to stop it?
Because once you get closer, but not identical, you just you just have to be in the same neighborhood of same opportunity, not equal.
That's largely impossible.
But if you get in a neighborhood, the the laws that give you preference are going to hurt you more than they're gonna help you.
That's what DEI is.
The the reason that um DEI is a double-edged sword is if you're let's let's just use black as the example.
If you're black and you get the advantage of DEI, you know, a little little extra leg up, so that's good.
So you would look at that and say, yay, DEI worked for me.
I I made sure that I got you know a little extra attention, first in line, got the job.
But what happens to the other people who are observing?
And they say, you know, discrimination isn't what it used to be.
I I never even run into it, really.
It's not something I encounter at all.
And they would say, doesn't that make the people in these DEI positions a little suspect that maybe they didn't get there by merit?
Some did, but how can I tell?
Because I can tell that the white people probably have to get there by merit.
But can you tell that about everybody?
So regardless of what the reality is, it creates an impression that one group is crippled and disabled and can't make it on their own.
At some point, you can't get to anything that looks like equality unless you drop the special preferences, but it only makes sense when things get close enough That everybody can figure out a way to get where they need to go.
So even if there's you know some discrimination against one group or another, as long as you have a path, you know, there's something you can do, you can move, you can, you know, somehow you can navigate around it, then it's time to drop it.
And so the uh Supreme Court's talking about these special set-aside districts and whether it's time to drop them.
It looks like the smart people, like Jonathan Turley, are saying that the way the arguments are going so far, is that uh it looks like maybe the majority will want to at least tweak the situation, if not get rid of it entirely.
So we don't know how that's going to settle.
But the big news is that if it does go that way, it almost guarantees that the Republicans will still have the House and they'll probably keep the Senate.
So this is a gigantic deal.
Maybe the Republicans would have won without this, you know, potential tweak.
Um, but it certainly makes it like a slam dunk if they get all those extra extra um districts re-redistricted.
So anyway, that's uh that might happen.
And uh CNN has been quite uh quite uh let's say stark about that, saying that the Republicans have this enormous advantage.
Apparently, there are more things that Republicans can redistrict, not even counting this.
I mean, this would be a bunch of seats, but uh the Republicans have room to redistrict to get more seats, uh, and the Democrats do not because they've already used up all of those possibilities.
So I don't know what's going to happen because usually the party on a power wins the midterm, but this time it looks like the rules changes, especially if the Supreme Court goes the way we think it might.
Uh the rules changes will determine who's in charge of the country, at least the Congress.
So I made the mistake of saying something uh on social media on X. Um, I said I was I'm paraphrasing, but I'm uncomfortable living in a system where we pick our government based on rule changes.
There shouldn't be rule changes, it should be votes.
We we should learn, you know, who's got what policies and and then vote.
But when was the last time we had an election that was based on voters?
It feels like it's all based on, well, we've got a pandemic, so we'll you know, we'll do it this way.
Or, well, uh we're not going to do a regular primary if you're a Democrat because Joe Biden, blah, blah, blah.
So it's always, it's all this little rule change stuff that's determining who's in charge instead of anything that looks like a you know democratic republic situation.
Anyway, uh, so some people said, but Scott, are you arguing that they should not change those districts and things?
No.
No.
Of course, if the current law is racist, which is the claim, of course I want that to change so it's not racist anymore.
Of course I do.
So it's just that how can you be comfortable, you know, supporting the Constitution, supporting America at the same time, you're completely comfortable that the government is picked by rule changers, you know, the the courts.
That's just not a comfortable situation, even though I like it.
Yeah, if I had to choose, I would want the Supreme Court to throw out that those special districts.
But you you get the point, right?
You know, it's not a perfect world.
Anyway, we'll see what happens there.
Um, the uh decision by the uh the judge in the big balls case, you know, the doge guy, big balls.
He uh got beaten up by a gang of you mostly young people in the streets of DC.
And uh those people got caught, and apparently they got a very light sentence, uh simple probation.
So they beat the hell out of this guy and they got probation.
And the judge, a black woman, which is important to the story, um, she said her job is to rehabilitate, not punish.
And Elon Musk weighed in on this.
He said that this was a racist verdict by a racist judge.
Do you think that's true?
Now, his test is if you reverse the races and it had been a group of white people who beat up a black citizen on the streets, that the white people will get a stronger um, you know, more of a more of a sentence.
Do you believe that's true?
I don't think that's proven.
Yeah, we we believe it's true, right?
We believe it's true.
But check yourself.
You know, check yourself.
I I would need to know that this judge has a track record of treating black and white um people differently.
If so, then I completely agree with Musk.
But if there's no track record of that, maybe she's just an easy judge.
Can't rule it out.
But certainly we uh our antennas go up and go, hmm, hmm.
It doesn't look right.
All right.
Anyway, um so I guess uh during the uh court case, uh Khatanji, what's her name?
Katanji Jackson was uh using an analogy to make a point, and she apparently analogized uh people with disabilities to uh black citizens who are not being represented.
Now, what do I tell you about analogies as an argument?
Sometimes an analogy is a good way to make a point to explain something that needs to be explained, but it's never an argument.
And uh here she is a Supreme Court justice, and she tries to use an analogy, and I think the analogy uh, as has been pointed out by others, proved the other point instead of the one she wanted.
So the analogy was to disabilities, and somebody said uh a disability is permanent.
Um but uh no, what was it?
Disabilities permanent.
Anyway, it was a terrible analogy, and uh it once again people are saying, how did she become a Supreme Court person with that kind of thinking?
Uh, but that's for other people to work out.
Uh let's see, what else is going on?
Apparently uh Trump has now authorized the CIA to do some dirty work in Venezuela as part of that, trying to stop the drug traffic and maybe trying to overthrow Madura.
Um here's what I thought.
Did you know that the CIA wasn't already already working in Venezuela?
Uh so what exactly got approved?
Did they approve doing dirtier stuff?
I don't know.
It's gonna could get kind of get kind of wet.
Uh and then Trump says that uh you know, we took out another one of those drug boats.
I think there have been five of them now that we blew up with missiles.
Uh and somebody uh somebody asked why he's doing that.
And uh Trump said that every Venezuelan drug boat that we knock out, we save 25,000 American lives.
Now, I saw that reported on the news.
I saw it reported on social media, and I'm waiting for people to laugh at that.
You're not saving 25,000 lives every time you blow up a boat.
That's insane.
Where would you even get that number?
I think 100,000, maybe 80,000 people die of overdoses every year, and it's not all fentanyl, but overdoses.
Uh We've already blown up five boats.
That would be 125,000 people we saved already, out of 80,000.
It's just a ridiculous number.
Now, what I do think might be true is that each boat might have enough drugs to overdose 25,000 people.
But they're not all overdosing.
So the fact that uh Trump even puts that number out there when you don't have to be an expert at anything to know that that's not even close to reality.
But it still works.
How many times have I told you that as long as he's directionally correct?
I don't really care.
I don't really care about the details.
Is he directionally correct that these drug boats are coming over and killing Americans at numbers that we think are shockingly high?
Yes.
Yes.
The boats are full of death that will bring shockingly high bad results to the United States.
So if he wants to sell that as 25,000 people saved per boat, okay.
I don't have I don't have any problem with that at all.
There are reports that uh the IRS is going to be uh modified a little bit to make it easier for the Trump administration to go after the uh the left-leaning major funders of bad behavior, bad behavior being Americans who were uh uh what would they be doing?
Doing illegal kinds of protests and stuff.
So I guess this is a way to get to the Soros type of uh of people who are putting money into the system in ways that we don't exactly know and don't like so that's happening.
I don't know how much of that reporting is true, but maybe I think it all it only involves maybe uh personnel changes to get somebody who's willing to do that work.
I asked uh I think yesterday, uh, how would Alex Jones ever support himself now that he's been sued for 1.4 billion dollars and lost, and somebody said that uh one of the workarounds is he could just keep going to work,
uh except that he would put the business, put a new business because the old one got attached, you create a new business in his wife's name only, so that he could just be an employee for a dollar a year, so he wouldn't have any income to pay to anybody as part of the judgment,
but that he would have all the same you know lifestyle because he would live in his his wife's house and work for his wife's company and you know, maybe maybe they would pay for his expenses and stuff.
Now, I don't know how well that works, but um let me tell you what would be wrong with this plan.
First of all, it would make it impossible for him to ever get a divorce.
So it would take the power, uh, which might have been, you know, maybe he had more in his marriage, maybe it was equal.
But as soon as you put all the assets in the wife's name, and she knows that if he misbehaved, and if she asked for a divorce anything that he wanted in the divorce, he'd have to give away.
So he basically he would just become his wife's bitch forever.
So I'm not sure that works, but I also am curious.
What how do you navigate that situation?
How do you navigate owing 1.4 billion and having the court be able to attach any income you got for the rest of your life?
What do you do?
I'm genuinely concerned about him and curious about how to navigate that.
Well, the uh the UN, there's a component of the UN called the International Maritime Organization, they've proposed taxing all global shipments, seafaring, seafaring shipments, and they would use that money for creating green shipping fuels.
So basically it's a climate change sort of situation.
Now, what do you think the Trump administration said when the UN proposed taxing Americans?
No.
How about how about no frickin' way?
We're not going to give it taxing authority to some international global organization that never had it before.
Not a chance.
There isn't even the slightest chance.
We would attack the UN, like actually militarily, before we would pay their fucking taxes.
No, that's not going to happen.
But didn't we, didn't we have a uh revolution in the United States because a foreign entity tried to tax us and we said no taxation without representation?
And they said, well, we're going to do it anyway.
And then we said, you better get some guns, because we have guns and we're not going to pay that fucking tax.
Revolution time.
And then the UN tries it.
We would literally attack the UN before we would pay those taxes.
I don't know, literally, but anyway, uh, there's a report that uh India is actually moving to reduce their consumption of Russian um oil.
Now that's a gigantic deal because India and China are the main purchases of Russian oil, and if they can't sell their oil, because there's a lot of sanctions, there aren't too many people who buy it, if they can't sell it to India, uh their economy will suffer, and they may not be able to press their war for forward as much as possible.
But there is a really big problem that I've heard about a few times that I think is real, that might suggest that Moscow uh or Russia is closer to uh a really bad situation than is obvious.
So there have been something like 58 um attacks by Ukraine on Russian energy stuff just in the last month or so, whereas the months before that it was just like a few.
So Ukraine is massively increased the number of attacks on the energy infrastructure.
Now, if on top of that, because that wasn't enough to stop the war, if on top of that India starts buying less Russian oil, and maybe, although I don't think this will happen, maybe part of the China tariff negotiations and might be to see if they would agree to buy less Russian oil.
I don't think that's gonna happen, because I think they want that Russian oil.
But India is more of an ally.
So India looks like they're actually moving toward alternative sources, and that would be a gigantic deal.
But here's here's the part that some of you haven't heard of.
The pipelines have to be active or they self-destruct.
Have you ever heard of that?
So the oil pipelines, of which there would be numerous ones in Russia, and they would be critical to moving the oil to where it needs to be.
If they don't have anybody buying the oil, like in real time at the end of the pipeline, and the pipeline goes quiet, meaning that the oil stays in there, but it's not moving fast enough to keep it from freezing.
I didn't even know oil could freeze.
Did you know oil can freeze?
But apparently the pipelines can freeze if they don't have anybody taking it out on the other end, and the entire pipeline would have to be replaced.
The entire pipeline.
Now, and it looks like Ukraine is getting close to that crossover point where as soon as the oil stops, what what are they gonna do?
Just open a spigot and spill the oil into the ocean?
Maybe they would, I don't know.
But uh so there's some possibility that the combination of you know bombing the energy stuff, getting India to buy less of it, and then that just the temperature, because winter's coming, it might destroy the entire Russian energy situation.
Now, obviously, uh Ukraine has the same problem because they're also being attacked in their energy infrastructure but that whole pipeline thing is really uh a wild card I didn't know about that might make a big difference well uh I also think that if uh if the war in Ukraine uh goes the way it looks like you know it's a robot energy war I think I think Trump's the only one who could get India to buy less oil
the time then that tells you how to deal with situations.