Speaker | Time | Text |
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This morning I woke up. | ||
I read the news, and one of the first things I saw was a picture of Joe Biden's son, apparently, | ||
laying in bed with a crack pipe in his mouth. | ||
And I thought to myself, well, that looks like Joe Biden's son with a crack pipe in his mouth. | ||
It's going to be a very interesting day. | ||
There was a lot of news and a ton of stories about these leaked emails from this computer, Wow. | ||
Today went nuts. | ||
So here we can see evidence that suggests Joe Biden lied when he said he didn't talk to his son about his business dealings because one of these emails shows this guy is saying thanks for giving me the opportunity to meet and spend time with your dad, something to that effect. | ||
Now we've got mainstream media organizations arguing the email doesn't actually say that because the opportunity doesn't mean they actually met. | ||
Now you have journalists, I'm doing air quotes here, saying do not link the story from the New York Post. | ||
Do not link it. | ||
Now that's anti-journalism. | ||
That's suppression of information and willfully making it harder for people to understand what's happening in the world. | ||
And that's what our news organizations do, anti-journalism. | ||
But the craziest thing that happened was Facebook and Twitter actively censoring not just the New York Post. | ||
I believe this may be one of the oldest newspapers in the country. | ||
It's like 218, 216 years old. | ||
But they're also suppressing links to the story. | ||
Twitter has... I believe they froze the account of the New York Post on Twitter. | ||
You can't share the story. | ||
It's got like warning labels on it. | ||
And the press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany, got locked out of her account for sharing this story. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen... | ||
This is it. | ||
Beyond a reasonable doubt that these big tech companies are actively working to cheat the election to help Joe Biden and the Democrats win. | ||
Now, I understand everyone's probably saying, we knew this, Tim. | ||
We knew this. | ||
It was obvious for a long time. | ||
I still have people on the left refusing to admit it. | ||
They probably still will. | ||
But I'll tell you what, man. | ||
When they shut down the New York Post, which has been around since I think like 1801 or something. | ||
This is not censorship of a regular conservative. | ||
This is not censorship of a guy where you're asking questions about, well, my private platform. | ||
This is a news organization, it's journalists, the press secretary saying, Joe Biden's son is corrupt and we have the evidence. | ||
Apparently, they claimed that they're blocking the information because it was hacked. | ||
But we have no evidence that's true. | ||
The information came from a hard drive that was left at a repair shop. | ||
So anyway, I don't want to get too much into this because we got a bunch of guests and we're going to talk about everything that's happening. | ||
And of course, as many of you probably already know, Jack Murphy is here with us today. | ||
You guys love Jack Murphy. | ||
Hello, Tim. | ||
Hello, Ian. | ||
Hello, Lydia. | ||
How's it going? | ||
Of course, we also have Lydia, who's producing. | ||
You guys know Lydia. | ||
I'm over here. | ||
And our special guest today is Captain Crossland. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Captain on the Bridge. | ||
Captain on the Bridge. | ||
He's wearing his Starfleet uniform for some reason. | ||
That's a red shirt, dude. | ||
That's a red shirt. | ||
Earl Grey. | ||
Yeah, we know how this ends. | ||
Red is command. | ||
Red is command. | ||
In the original Star Trek, it was Henson's who would go die. | ||
That's exactly right. | ||
If you were in red, that means you were dead. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
I prefer my Earl Grey hot. | ||
So by the end of this episode, you're going to get eaten by a space monster. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
Well, I mean, it's better than getting banned on Twitter, I guess. | ||
I'm surprised my videos from today didn't get shut down. | ||
So let's just jump into the story. | ||
Let me show you what I think is the most important one. | ||
We'll start with this. | ||
Check this out. | ||
From the New York Post. | ||
Actually, wait, wait, I can't believe... No, you gotta smash the like button. | ||
Did you guys... Yeah, yeah, yeah, whoa, hold on, yeah. | ||
They did not smash... Use your elbow. | ||
Use your finger. | ||
Use it. | ||
Don't forget, subscribe, like, share this podcast if you really do want to help. | ||
We're live, chillin' right now for those that are listening live. | ||
And, yeah, sharing really, really does help. | ||
So, smash, like, notifications, whatever. | ||
Let's read the news. | ||
It's from the New York Post. | ||
We're actually pulling up the New York Post. | ||
Twitter, Facebook censor post over Hunter Biden expose. | ||
I wonder if we're going to get shut off if like YouTube will pull the stream down. | ||
Let's find out. | ||
Let's keep reading. | ||
Both Twitter and Facebook took extraordinary censorship measures against the Post on Wednesday over its exposes about Hunter Biden's emails and leveled baseless accusations that the reports used hacked materials. | ||
The suppression effort came, despite presidential candidate Joe Biden's campaign merely denying that he had anything on his official schedules about meeting a Ukrainian energy executive in 2015, along with zero claims that his son's computer had been hacked. | ||
The Post's primary Twitter account was locked as of 2.20 p.m. | ||
Wednesday, because its articles about the messages obtained from Biden's laptop broke the social network's rules against, quote, distribution of hacked material, according to an email the Post received from Twitter. | ||
Twitter also blocked users from sharing the link to the post, indicating that Hunter Biden introduced Joe Biden to the Ukrainian businessman calling the link potentially harmful. | ||
Now that is a fat load of crap. | ||
Harmful link to the New York Post? | ||
That's a whole lot. | ||
Harmful to whom? | ||
To Joe Biden. | ||
Exactly right. | ||
Yeah, we saw, uh, it was Andy Stone. | ||
He worked for the Democrats. | ||
He was on the Senate Majority PAC. | ||
He was on, he worked for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. | ||
And now he works for Facebook. | ||
And he said, we're gonna suppress this. | ||
We're gonna, we're gonna, we're gonna suppress this story. | ||
Straight up. | ||
And all these journalists are, are, well, anti-journalists, sorry. | ||
These people are depraved, man. | ||
No joke. | ||
Like, utter depravity. | ||
They just want power. | ||
It's not good enough to be a journalist. | ||
You have to be not a journalist. | ||
You have to be anti-journalist. | ||
It is not good enough to simply be a journalist. | ||
You must actively be anti-journalist. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
That's what they're doing. | ||
What they're doing here is they've lost the battle of ideas. | ||
They've lost the upper hand. | ||
They've lost the high ground. | ||
And what they've done is instead of trying to change people's minds and opinions and ideas, they change the rules of the game. | ||
Yeah, it's like a little kid slamming the table and screaming and flipping the board over and over again because you're winning in chess. | ||
I think, you know, Trump, whatever he posts on Twitter, people will like mirror his account. | ||
Sometimes they'll make a new account, just whatever Trump tweets out, they'll tweet it out. | ||
And they've been banning those accounts when they leave Trump up. | ||
So it seems like they're not anti-Trump. | ||
They're just like excessively authoritarian. | ||
They're anti-Trump, but they would ban Trump if they could, but it would cause too many problems for them. | ||
But it's too much, like, hearsay? | ||
Like, I'm just feeling like this is a bit gonna ban. | ||
I mean, I know how it goes being an admin, a social media admin. | ||
You have total control over what you want to ban. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Trump's tweets will get flagged, and they'll claim he's breaking the rules. | ||
Like, my favorite was when they were like, Trump needs to be banned for breaking the rules on violent or threatening posts because he threatened North Korea. | ||
I'm like, oh, well, hold on a minute. | ||
There's a difference between, I mean, I agree Trump should chill out when threatening other countries, but he's also the president, the commander in chief of the armed forces. | ||
And if he's making a statement about the might of America versus our adversaries, can we ban that? | ||
Could you imagine if Twitter does do that? | ||
What are they going to do with Trump after the presidency is over? | ||
Whether it's, you know, hopefully, but four years from now, what happens then? | ||
They just going to ban him out right after that? | ||
Or it's too much of a cash cow for them? | ||
Have you seen the Ryan Long comedy skit he did on this? | ||
The journalists, one month after the election, they're like all sweaty and like freaking out, like, what do we write about? | ||
And someone's like, we can write about how Trump, no, no, Trump is just a guy now. | ||
Right. | ||
That's where we're headed. | ||
They're doomed. | ||
Well, they'll just go back to doing what they did before, which is just regurgitating without any question or skepticism, everything that the Democrats hand them to produce. | ||
Dude, the news in this country is Alive and well right here, Tim Pool. | ||
That's right. | ||
I mean, kind of. | ||
Correct. | ||
Conservatives do very little journalism. | ||
Very little. | ||
They mostly do commentary and response. | ||
They chase after the narrative put out by the left, so the left is framing everything. | ||
Now, the left has gotten so absurd with their framing that now people are starting to go, what? | ||
And the New York Post is not on the left and they do journalism. | ||
I'm just saying there's a tendency of most of the sourcing and publishing and statements being made that are like definitive news stories. | ||
I don't mean factual, I mean like this is a news story and here's what happened. | ||
It's left bias. | ||
Absolutely left bias. | ||
And then you end up with rating agencies, Media Bias Fact Check, News Guard, a bunch of these websites that they base what's centrist off of establishment left-leaning media. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I want to read this line here from Twitter. | ||
They say, In line with our hacked materials policy, as well as our approach to blocking URLs, we are taking action to block any links to or images of the material in question on Twitter, a Twitter spokesperson told the Post in a statement. | ||
The company said it took the step because of the lack of authoritative reporting on where the materials included in the Post story originated. | ||
They said they originated from a laptop. | ||
So for those that don't know the story, did you guys hear the story yet? | ||
We did. | ||
We read the story, talked about it a little bit. | ||
Let's talk about it some more, though. | ||
Maybe I missed something. | ||
So this guy at a repair shop, somebody comes in and gives him a waterlogged computer. | ||
Doesn't work. | ||
So he copies the hard drive and then tries to fix it. | ||
I guess he couldn't fix it. | ||
And eventually, dude never shows up. | ||
He couldn't identify Hunter Biden as the dude. | ||
The computer had Bo Biden Foundation on it. | ||
So apparently he gave a copy to Rudy Giuliani's lawyer, and then he gave a copy to the feds. | ||
Apparently he gave the copy to Rudy Giuliani's lawyer a year ago. | ||
Did you hear that? | ||
unidentified
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I wonder if they've been sitting on it until, what month is it? | |
Is it October? | ||
It's October, what do you know? | ||
So look, I'll say it straight up, dirty politics. | ||
However, if it's true, it's true. | ||
Indeed. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, there is a picture with him laying in bed with a crack pipe in his mouth. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Theoretically, hypothetically. | ||
So it could be a weed. | ||
It looks like, yeah, we were debating this earlier. | ||
Cause it's, it looks like there's resin in the bowl. | ||
It's a crack, which could be just THC resin, you know, but it also could be freebasing. | ||
You've smoked weed out of a bowl, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's got the, was it choke on it? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, this thing he's got his mouth does not have that after you oh, it doesn't have one | ||
No, it doesn't need one. You can smoke. We'd have a pipe without a carb on it | ||
If you're smoking crack you probably a connoisseur of some kind so you're getting the right pipe | ||
unidentified
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He's got the right pipe. The question I had about this too. | |
Cuz we were talking about a little before is like Isn't hunter Biden rich? | ||
He's getting $83,000 a month from this crooked Burisma deal. | ||
And he opts for crack instead of that sweet Colombian pure. | ||
No, they're from Scranton, dude. | ||
They are working. | ||
They're just regular salt of the earth people. | ||
Hey, he's not above smoking crack. | ||
That should be Joe Biden's new thing. | ||
Don't go supporting these Wall Street people, these Park Avenue people. | ||
Support me and my family. | ||
We are a salt of the earth. | ||
We are from Scranton. | ||
We are not even above smoking crack, yo. | ||
So now that we're shifting from the very serious death to free speech in this country, but we actually got this right. | ||
We got to follow this up. | ||
Check this out. | ||
Cocaine pipe and white powdery substance found in Hunter Biden's rental car in 2016 from the Washington Examiner. | ||
A police report said that Joe Biden's son, Hunter Biden, returned a rental car in Arizona that contained a cocaine pipe days before the 2016 presidential election, according to a new report. | ||
Hunter Biden's first name is Robert. | ||
Also left credit cards, driver's licenses, Delaware, blah, blah, blah. | ||
Okay, we get it. | ||
It was his. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Look, we got this photo now. | ||
It shows Joe Biden's son with like a crack pipe in his mouth. | ||
This is not even the serious news. | ||
The serious news is that Joe Biden lied, apparently. | ||
I gotta say apparently, gotta be very careful here. | ||
We've got a presidential election. | ||
The email suggests that the Ukrainian businessman from Burisma, the third most powerful man, said thank you for bringing me to D.C. | ||
and giving me the opportunity to meet with your dad or whatever or something and spend time with him. | ||
It was like poor English, so it's kind of confusing. | ||
So I think Bloomberg said, being granted the opportunity doesn't mean he actually met. | ||
Thanks for the opportunity. | ||
That's what you say. | ||
Thanks for the opportunity. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
It was great. | ||
Right, that's weird. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
Thanks for the opportunity to come to your house. | ||
It's too bad we didn't do it? | ||
That's weird. | ||
Right. | ||
I'm glad you sort of switched back to the important news, because we should say one thing. | ||
It's obvious Hunter Biden is dealing with drug addiction. | ||
Drug addiction is very serious. | ||
Many of us, almost all of us, know somebody struggling with drug addiction. | ||
It's generally not a laughing matter. | ||
And you know what? | ||
Prayers up, Hunter Biden. | ||
Hopefully one day he can get that under control, right? | ||
And so, but what the real story, let's not be distracted by the crackpite. | ||
The real story is possibly him peddling influence and connections with his father, getting paid to do it all along the way. | ||
It's interesting that the story that's being blocked is specifically about this businessman meeting his dad. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So this is really interesting. | ||
I think the House Judiciary Committee, House Judiciary GOP says Twitter has blocked users from tweeting the link to the New York Post story on Hunter Biden. | ||
So we put it on our website for you to read and share. | ||
Love it. | ||
And it links to the Republicans, judiciary.house.gov. | ||
And it's the story. | ||
So is Twitter now going to block a .gov? | ||
That would be very, very interesting. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It doesn't seem to be beyond them at this point. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So let me break down for everybody who doesn't understand what's happening here, the seriousness of this story. | ||
There's a viral video where Joe Biden says, I want to, you know, I'll paraphrase, I want to get this prosecutor in Ukraine fired. | ||
So I use, I think it was a billion dollar loan guarantee. | ||
The US is going to loan Ukraine a billion dollars. | ||
And so he went to the prime minister and said, if you don't fire him, you're not getting the money. | ||
And the guy says, you can't, you can't do that. | ||
Only the president can. | ||
He goes, call the president, ask him. | ||
So, and then he's like, sure enough, six hours later, he's like, I'm getting ready to leave. | ||
You know, son of a B. Guy got fired, everyone starts laughing and clapping. | ||
The first response I had to that was, because you got the right saying, he's manipulating this to protect his son because his son was on the board of this company. | ||
The prosecutor was investigating that company. | ||
Then you get the left saying it's not true, the EU thought he was corrupt, they want to get rid of him as well. | ||
My response is, why is the Vice President going to any country and bribing them to interfere in internal affairs for these other countries? | ||
That to me, on its own, is kind of like, that's true? | ||
I don't like that idea that the US goes to foreign countries and says we'll give you a billion dollars to fire your prosecutor. | ||
Do you think that that's a new evolution in American foreign policy though? | ||
So my understanding is typically the way it works is we go there, we say, listen here, we're America. | ||
You get rid of this prosecutor, we'll give you a billion dollars. | ||
You don't take the billion dollars, maybe things get a little bad. | ||
Maybe your auntie has an accident, you know what I'm saying? | ||
And then sure enough, you don't take the money and then protest forms and then Or you don't get that anti-aircraft, you know, sales go through that you thought you were going to get. | ||
You can't buy the self-defense weaponry that you thought you were going to get. | ||
You don't get the loan from the IMF or the World Bank that you thought that you were going to get. | ||
You don't get the investment in a port or an airport or whatever it is that you thought that you might get. | ||
We've been doing this kind of crap. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Have you read Confessions of an Economic Hitman? | ||
Yeah, I was going to mention that. | ||
There's three steps. | ||
The first is economic. | ||
If they don't fall for it, then you send in the people to try and assassinate the leader. | ||
I thought that was the last one. | ||
That's the second one. | ||
If you can't assassinate the leader, then you go to war. | ||
Yep, yep. | ||
Yeah, I remember watching that. | ||
What was that guy like? | ||
He was like CIA or something? | ||
He was great, yeah. | ||
Read his book. | ||
Check him out on YouTube. | ||
I can't remember his name, though. | ||
It works even on the individual level. | ||
The first thing anyone tries to do is bribe you. | ||
If they can give you some cash and you'll do their bidding, it's the easiest way to get it done. | ||
Otherwise, they're going to start pressuring you and threatening you and your family. | ||
If they can't deal with you and the problem can't be solved, they off you. | ||
And if they can't, then they go to war, literally. | ||
I just mean like for an individual. | ||
Iraq, for instance, they went to war because they couldn't get Saddam. | ||
They tried to kill him, they couldn't do it. | ||
So they, we, the United States, marched in for no reason. | ||
Our representatives. | ||
Yes, we the people. | ||
So look, look, look. | ||
I understand this is a normal process. | ||
And I'm not saying it's a good thing, I'm just saying it's routine where the U.S. | ||
says, like, we got a billion dollars, why don't you take it and fire this guy? | ||
And they took it and they fired the guy. | ||
Here's the crazy bit about this. | ||
The guy was investigating Burisma. | ||
Now, some outlets argue he wasn't actually. | ||
There was an open investigation, it was inactive. | ||
And I'm kind of like, so you admit there's an investigation. | ||
Like the status of the investigation is less relevant to me because it could be inactive because it went cold. | ||
I don't know. | ||
It could be inactive because the dude started cooperating or because it led them out. | ||
There's a million reasons it could be inactive. | ||
Or a billion. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Infinite. | ||
I have no idea. | ||
All I know is they opened an investigation. | ||
It became inactive for some reason. | ||
Joe Biden says this guy wasn't investigating Burisma. | ||
That's why they wanted to fire him. | ||
So Hunter Biden, Joe Biden's son, is on the board of this company, and we believe, based on all the evidence, specifically, because he's selling his father's influence. | ||
It's like, you can't give Joe Biden money, but you can give Hunter money? | ||
You give Hunter that, you know, $83,000 a month contract, all of a sudden Joe Biden's doing you favors and getting rid of that prosecutor. | ||
That's the allegation. | ||
Here's the best part. | ||
Joe Biden says this prosecutor Shokin, Victor Shokin, was not investigating this corruption at Burisma. | ||
That's why we wanted him gone. | ||
And so, son of a B, right? | ||
That's what he said. | ||
Guy got fired. | ||
Guess what? | ||
New prosecutor comes in, clears Olszewski of all wrongdoing. | ||
That's weird! | ||
That's weird! | ||
I thought the prosecutor was supposed to be investigating him. | ||
Turns out the new prosecutor who came in, no problems. | ||
You're free to go, buddy. | ||
Zolotchevsky comes back to the Ukraine, working like no big deal. | ||
Then in 2018, during the Trump administration, new charges get brought back. | ||
Zolotchevsky flees to Monaco, under Trump. | ||
I'm not saying there's a correlation, like between Trump and this. | ||
I'm just telling you, if Joe Biden's excuse is legitimate, That he was supposed to be investigating this guy, and the new prosecutor found no wrongdoing, then Joe Biden got a prosecutor fired for not going after an innocent man. | ||
That's the official story of Joe Biden. | ||
Now I think most of us assume Joe Biden's probably crooked, especially with these emails, and what he was really doing was Cutting a favor for his son who's getting the cash. | ||
His son's getting paid. | ||
There was an email saying, thanks for introducing me. | ||
I think it was like almost a little bit less than a year later. | ||
Joe Biden flies out there, fired the guy. | ||
As soon as he got fired? | ||
And when you say they're investigating Burisma, what were they investigating them for? | ||
Zlochevsky. | ||
So, I think his name is Mikola Zlochevsky. | ||
He was the founder of Burisma. | ||
He's corrupt. | ||
He's been accused of a bunch of things. | ||
And along with the work he did, you know, Burisma is the periphery. | ||
What Burisma was involved in is directly related to what Zotchevsky was doing. | ||
So Shoken argued that he was actually looking at the executives of this company as well because of their involvement. | ||
Listen, throw that all aside. | ||
It's gotta be said. | ||
Why in the ever-living... | ||
Is Joe Biden's son, who doesn't speak Ukrainian, who has no experience in the energy sector, getting paid $83,000 a month to be on the board of this company. | ||
Right. | ||
Biden. | ||
That's why. | ||
His name. | ||
And in one of the stories from the New York Post, it looks like in the email, I say it looks like because I gotta be very careful here, he's saying like, you know, once people realize like our guy and what he says, our guy's coming in, The New York Post is asserting that he was using his dad, Joe Biden's visit, to gain more money. | ||
Like going to these companies and saying, hey, my dad's coming. | ||
You gotta pony up. | ||
We can't tell him, you know, Joe, what to do, but... | ||
You know what I love? | ||
Lydia, see if you can find this story. | ||
It's from Politico magazine about the corruption of the Biden family. | ||
And it's from a few years ago. | ||
About how Biden's brother, his kids, have all just come into all this great money. | ||
You know, I was having a conversation earlier today and I thought of something. | ||
I think Donald Trump's got a lot of problems. | ||
I think Joe Biden's got a lot of problems. | ||
And I said, you know what? | ||
I'd rather take the guy who's losing money trying to get re-elected than take the guy who's trying to get elected to make money. | ||
You found it? | ||
Yeah, I found it. | ||
Oh, look at this! | ||
Oh, snap! | ||
Here we go, baby. | ||
Biden, Inc. | ||
Biden, Inc. | ||
Over his decades in office, middle-class Joe's family fortunes have closely tracked his political career. | ||
unidentified
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So weird. | |
August 2, 2019. | ||
Look at that. | ||
They talk about his brother. | ||
They talk about his son. | ||
Purchasing a firm. | ||
You know, what's that firm they had? | ||
What was it called? | ||
Rosemont Seneca? | ||
All that magic money flying out. | ||
You might as well get into politics. | ||
unidentified
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That's right. | |
Joe Biden has been in politics for 47 years. | ||
47 years. | ||
And he made himself very wealthy. | ||
And his brother. | ||
What'd you say? | ||
Salt of the Earth from Scranton? | ||
Right, exactly. | ||
Now, what's it worth now? | ||
Several million dollars? | ||
How is it that he had to even pay $3 million in taxes in 2017? | ||
Like, why? | ||
Where's that income coming from and why? | ||
First you get the money. | ||
That's the name of the game, dude. | ||
He he he he you get into politics, you get the power, then you peddle that | ||
influence. And and me. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, exactly. First, you get the political position. | |
Right. I think about could you imagine, you know, like, imagine the scenario. | ||
Somebody gets elected to say like, you know, Senate or whatever, and then gets appointed to like some administration position, maybe like Secretary of State, and they launch a non-profit foundation. | ||
I'm tracking. | ||
No one would ever do that. | ||
That wouldn't happen. | ||
hundreds of millions of dollars and donations from all of these foreign | ||
countries while the person whose name is on the nonprofit foundation. No one | ||
would ever do that. It's like the Secretary of State or something. No. | ||
Let me ask you though, for those that are listening, if I told you that we had a | ||
Secretary of State who also had a nonprofit that received foreign | ||
donations from much different countries What would you think about that? | ||
Well, we gotta give it a hypothetical name, like the Clinton Foundation. | ||
Yeah, yeah, that's a good hypothetical name. | ||
We'll call it the Clinton Foundation. | ||
So just hypothetically, if the Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, hypothetically, ran a foundation, the Clinton Foundation, was receiving money from a bunch of foreign countries while they were the Secretary of State, I mean, that just reeks of corruption, doesn't it? | ||
Dude, you go deep into her involvement with, like, Sidney Blumenthal, who has this company, Global Osprey Solutions. | ||
They wanted to set up weapons deals in Libya. | ||
And so Hillary was like, yeah, Sid, in her emails, came out with her stuff with Sidney, who's been advising the Clintons since the 90s. | ||
Yeah, we'll get you guys set up in Libya when we go in with our guys. | ||
Then she tells Barack what's going to Libya as the Secretary of State. | ||
Sets up her buddy with weapons deals, arms contracts. | ||
We came, we saw he died. | ||
I mean, Joe Biden supposedly paid three some million dollars in taxes in 2017. | ||
If you've got a good CPA or whatever, you know, that's tens of millions of dollars that he's earning. | ||
Now, people say Trump is using the presidency to trade up financially to enrich himself. | ||
The dude's got a golden toilet. | ||
Right. | ||
So how is it, though, that Joe Biden makes it to the point where he's earning tens of millions of dollars to pay three million dollars in taxes in one year? | ||
How is that not the whole time enriching himself through his political You gotta ask yourself. | ||
Now, Nancy Pelosi, her personal net worth is actually, I think, in the eight digits. | ||
But her husband is extremely wealthy, so her married net worth is like $200 million. | ||
Yikes. | ||
But still, you gotta ask yourself, how is it that somebody runs for Congress, their salary is, what, $170K per year? | ||
Now they're millionaires. | ||
It's book deals a lot of times and speaking deals. | ||
Which is exactly leveraging their political office to make money. | ||
unidentified
|
For sure. | |
But think about this. | ||
You could write a book and then a pack could buy up 10,000 copies for distribution. | ||
I bet that never happens. | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
It literally does happen. | ||
There's rooms filled with boxes full of books somewhere that no one ever read. | ||
And it's left and right. | ||
It's Republican and Democrat. | ||
I think Trump's very, very different though, and it's really funny to me. | ||
I saw a post from somebody and they were like, there's no, uh, what was Sox? | ||
The cat? | ||
Is that the cat's name? | ||
What was the dog's name? | ||
The Clinton head or something? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Barney? | ||
No, it's like, they were like, there's no Fido. | ||
There's no dogs. | ||
There's no, there's no roses in the rose garden. | ||
They've been ripped out by this, you know, like literally insulted Melania for being a foreigner. | ||
And it was like, what's happened to our country? | ||
And I'm like. | ||
Is that what you were worried about this whole time? | ||
Like there's no dog at the White House? | ||
The roses. | ||
The roses are gone? | ||
Is that what you were worried about? | ||
Because I was worried about the fact that we blew up a bunch of kids in a foreign country. | ||
That was freaking me out the whole time. | ||
I'm sitting there like, what's going on? | ||
Why are we doing this? | ||
Robot assassins on one hand, not a dog in the yard on the other. | ||
I don't know. | ||
If the White House doesn't have crap in the lawn, is it really the White House? | ||
I'm going to go back one more time to this 2017 Texas thing because I'm stuck on this. | ||
He got elected at the end of 2016, Trump did. | ||
Took office at the beginning of 2017, right? | ||
As part of taking office, he's supposed to move all his money away, not make any money, whatever. | ||
He gets paid 400-whatever-grand to be the president, but he gives all that money away. | ||
So, didn't we demand that he make no money in 2017? | ||
Wasn't that the demand right off the bat? | ||
And now the guy reports he didn't make any money, so he's not paying any taxes. | ||
Like, how is that a story? | ||
But he paid taxes. | ||
He paid a million dollars in 2016. | ||
Millions and millions of other kinds of taxes. | ||
This is ridiculous. | ||
This is what's shocking to me. | ||
I think the New York Times has, there's a clear case for libel for Trump. | ||
That story they put out about his taxes opens with Trump only paid $750 in taxes, and then halfway down it says Trump actually paid a total of $5.2 million, but his liability was only $750, but he did pay millions. | ||
So if in the beginning they said he only paid $750, the one line people read and then X'd out, but they knew that wasn't true and later on said the total payment was actually in the millions, isn't that proving they lied and they knew they lied? | ||
They presented a fact, one fact, without the rest of the facts, which actually are- No, no, no. | ||
It is factually untrue that Trump only paid $750. | ||
That is not correct. | ||
Oh, I see. | ||
Should've said he owed $750. | ||
He was liable for $750. | ||
Oh, there we go. | ||
The opening line of the New York Times story said Trump paid $750. | ||
Oh, I see. | ||
If you actually read the story, they said Trump actually paid a million in 2016 and 4.2 in 2017, | ||
but after calculating his losses was only liable for $750. | ||
Trump let the IRS hold that money for all future payments. | ||
Meaning, Trump paid the IRS millions of dollars, and then when it turned out his liability was low because of losses, he said, just keep the money, and we'll apply it later. | ||
So Trump paid millions of dollars. | ||
Well, I guess it's factually true. | ||
If you pay a million dollars, you've also paid 750. | ||
Yeah, there it is. | ||
Yep. | ||
That's that's that's the dirty tricks of the anti-journalists. | ||
Reminds me of Rick and Morty. | ||
I don't know if you've seen it where you've seen it. | ||
I love that. | ||
The one where where Morty's in the simulation and he's like, he gets asked, like, what's nine times eight? | ||
And he's like, it's at least 45. | ||
That's right. | ||
It is at least 45. | ||
That's exactly what it is. | ||
Trump paid... You know that Trump paid $1 in taxes last year? | ||
unidentified
|
$1! | |
And another $740 on top of that. | ||
And well, after that he paid millions and millions, you know. | ||
But that $1. | ||
He did, yeah. | ||
He paid $1 and $2 and $3 and $4 and $5 and $6. | ||
It just brings me back to the same question. | ||
Dumb or diabolical? | ||
Are these people stupid? | ||
Or are they really just actually evil? | ||
New York Times? | ||
Mix of both. | ||
It really is. | ||
Because they're looking for views and clicks and like, Ode is not going to get you the hits that Hade is going to get you. | ||
Sadly not. | ||
But that doesn't mean they did it intentionally. | ||
So what do we do as citizens? | ||
Because this is not going to change. | ||
This is only going to get worse. | ||
As Alexander Dugan said on my podcast the other day, so there's no fact there's only information. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So what do we are to do as individuals moving forward in this universe where we're being bombarded by things that are $750 true billion also true. | ||
One thing, what do we do is acknowledge when you're wrong, at least on a personal level. | ||
unidentified
|
No, no. | |
I mean, what do we do as the recipients of this information? | ||
How do we make sense of the world? | ||
Stuff like this, at least partly. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
This is called sense making what we're doing. | ||
Because at least, at least the, the option is voting works. | ||
And you know, it's really funny. | ||
I was like, I wouldn't have said that in 2015 or 16. | ||
And then Donald Trump won and started laughing. | ||
I'm like, I guess voting works. | ||
They're freaking out. | ||
They're like burning the house down because they hate Trump so much. | ||
Clearly voting works. | ||
Go vote. | ||
That's the most important thing. | ||
And no confrontations. | ||
Like, they're so hungry for any right-winger to slip up so they can smear and say, that's it. | ||
I think it's hilarious when they were like, well, I can't remember what I was reading. | ||
It was about Antifa tearing down this Abraham Lincoln statue. | ||
And there was a comment saying, we know it's actually the Proud Boys. | ||
I'm like, there's no Proud Boy tearing down Abraham Lincoln, dude. | ||
That's just not happening. | ||
Why would the left tear down a statue of Abraham Lincoln when he was the last president to nominate a Supreme Court justice in an election year? | ||
They had to go all the way back to Abraham Lincoln to come up with some BS story about the Supreme Court nomination. | ||
They tore down Abraham Lincoln because he was a president during expansion. | ||
He was an expansionist, westward expansion. | ||
Colonial. | ||
Yes. | ||
And he was stealing land from the indigenous. | ||
He was a Republican, too. | ||
You know what's crazy? | ||
I saw this progressive friend of mine posted this thread about how you can no longer call Los Angeles, like, LA or something. | ||
Because, like, the Spanish name is... No, the Native American. | ||
It's like Ushanga or something. | ||
Or Ushagna or something. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I thought they were going to say Los Angeles is like a cultural appropriation of the Spanish phrase. | ||
Oh yeah, yeah. | ||
You know what the actual name of L.A. | ||
unidentified
|
is? | |
It's like this ridiculously long thing. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh really? | |
Yeah, can you look up the Wikipedia? | ||
Yeah, let me look it up. | ||
I didn't know this. | ||
I don't know, how do you guys feel about, while you're looking that up, Columbus Day? | ||
Because I think Columbus was a psychopath, and he got taught a lot of like... | ||
First of all, you've got to be a psychopath to get on a boat to sail off the edges of the world. | ||
And then you have to be a psychopath to manage the gang of guys that are going to be willing to do such a thing. | ||
Other psychopaths, yes. | ||
Cut me off at any time, lady, if you find what L.A.' 's all about. | ||
Oh yeah, we found it. | ||
We're looking at it right now. | ||
I can't pronounce this in Spanish. | ||
unidentified
|
Wait, why is my mic not on? | |
The actual name of LA is El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de Los Angeles del Río Porchincola. | ||
Town of Our Lady, the Queen of Angels of the River Porchincola. | ||
Oh, and Porch and Kula is the native word? | ||
I have no idea. | ||
Yeah, I got nothing. | ||
I'm not familiar with that. | ||
So, think about Columbus. | ||
I don't know how you guys feel about changing it to Indigenous Peoples Day. | ||
Because, like, he had his two brothers and they took, I think it was the Dominican Republic, is that where they set up their governorship? | ||
Yes. | ||
And basically were just beating people on the street. | ||
His brothers would drag women by the hair down the road and, like, rape them in public. | ||
I've heard too many different stories. | ||
So I just don't care. | ||
I heard that he was actually punished for the cruelty when he returned to Europe and he got criminal charges and I've heard a whole bunch of others. | ||
So I'm just like, you know, man, it's what we're dealing with right now and the reason why I find this censorship and this Biden stuff so scary. | ||
Historical revisionists. | ||
The statues are being torn down right now. | ||
This is not a joke. | ||
This is their revolution. | ||
No one is stopping them. | ||
They keep doing it. | ||
They've been doing it. | ||
And they started with confederates. | ||
And, you know, it's so amazing how much it's like, it's on purpose. | ||
They know that no one's really gonna defend confederates. | ||
Like, dude, personally, I think the confederate statues, you put them in a museum, we put up a plaque, we explain our history and all that stuff. | ||
Make sure people remember and they can learn the history. | ||
Then they're like, okay, now we're going to tear down Thomas Jefferson because, you know, he had slaves. | ||
And I'm like, whoa, whoa, whoa. | ||
Thomas Jefferson was a lot of things, but we cherish the good, not the bad. | ||
Then they tear down George Washington. | ||
Then they tear down Hans Christian Haig, a Union soldier who died fighting to free the slaves, an abolitionist. | ||
And that was his claim to fame. | ||
That's it. | ||
He was like 30 years old. | ||
He said, we got to abolish this. | ||
I will die to free slaves. | ||
And then he did. | ||
And they tore his statue down. | ||
Frederick Douglass gets torn down. | ||
Literally, dude was a slave and then worked on the Underground Railroad and fought legislatively and physically to free the slaves. | ||
Amazing, dude. | ||
They tear a statue down. | ||
Here's two little stories about how this has progressed and how quickly. | ||
In 2014, they were doing some statue stuff, but it was probably like some KKK guy at the time. | ||
And I was like, where is this going to go? | ||
Are we going to be tearing down statues of Washington one day? | ||
I said this on my Facebook page. | ||
It was like 2014. | ||
Everybody freaked out. | ||
They thought I was a maniac for it. | ||
The second thing is I went to Santa Fe a couple years ago, Santa Fe, New Mexico. | ||
I was invited to speak at the University of New Mexico when I was doing a book tour for Democrat to Deplorable. | ||
It's on Amazon.com, by the way. | ||
Democrat to Deplorable. | ||
There we go. | ||
I'm a media professional. | ||
And they actually banned me as I'm flying on my way to New Mexico. | ||
So I don't actually get to speak there because there was a hubbub. | ||
So I do a tour. | ||
We go to Santa Fe. | ||
I was in Albuquerque and we go to Santa Fe. | ||
And in the middle of the town, they have this 1869 monument. | ||
And it was questionable because it was involved like killing Indians and all kinds of stuff. | ||
And there's a plaque and it said like, oh, they use words like savage and rebel and whatever on this monument. | ||
It's on dispute. | ||
You know, tempers were high. | ||
Times have changed. | ||
We've grown and evolved, whatever, whatever. | ||
And I took a picture of it then 2018. | ||
I was like, look, this is how we should handle disputed monuments. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Put a plaque next to it. | ||
Explain what happened. | ||
Show our progression as people, as humans, as a society. | ||
And guess what they just tore down? | ||
They tore down that very fricking statue just like two days ago. | ||
A monument to the Union soldiers. | ||
Yeah. | ||
They crossed out apparently like the word savages or whatever. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And left it up as a monument to the Union soldiers who died to end slavery. | ||
Well, they tore down Abraham Lincoln. | ||
So that finally happened. | ||
unidentified
|
Why? | |
The guy who literally signed the Emancipation Proclamation. | ||
He gets torn down. | ||
And Teddy Roosevelt. | ||
Because they're expansionists. | ||
Teddy Roosevelt apparently said some offensive things about Native Americans. | ||
Yeah, he killed a lot of them. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
So they tear him down. | ||
They hate him. | ||
He was an empire builder. | ||
He was kind of like a Trump. | ||
Trump people hated him. | ||
Loved him and hated him. | ||
He was an empire builder. | ||
A lot of love at the time. | ||
A lot of love. | ||
This is what scares me. | ||
It's the revisionism. | ||
It's the fake, you know, everything you have done is bad and they ignore everything else. | ||
It's like, how far back do we go? | ||
How far back do we go to figure out who gets what? | ||
Because the Native Americans fought for land too. | ||
They fought each other. They were vicious against each other. | ||
And I'm not saying that anything the colonists who came to this country did was good. | ||
I'm just saying, where are we now? What can we do to make everything better? | ||
How do we make that rising tide raise all ships? | ||
Are we going to do it by burning things down and screaming? | ||
No, we're not. | ||
The logical conclusion of this is that we just give everything back to the trees. | ||
Okay. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
I think trees came way, way after land animals. | ||
What came what was the first thing on land it wasn't trees was it was it trees? I have no fungus probably | ||
No, no, I don't think so I think that I think trees came way way after land animals. It was something else | ||
I have no I was reading I was reading No, no on land | ||
I was reading something that was like- I was reading something that was like, uh, trees are actually millions of years younger than, like, some specific land critters or something. | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
Like, there were other plants here, and algae was, you know, oxygen- oxygenifying, or whatever it was. | ||
Coral? | ||
Coral's an animal, which is odd. | ||
Maybe there was land coral. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, that's probably it. | |
I don't know about that. | ||
unidentified
|
Just throwing stuff out there. | |
It wouldn't be able to move around. | ||
But what do we give it back to? | ||
Like, how do we repair and move forward without destroying everything? | ||
Well, you just recognize fundamental human rights and you move forward. | ||
It's as simple as that. | ||
Fundamental human rights. | ||
Are human rights universal? | ||
Does every human on the planet have the same human rights? | ||
Does every culture have the same notion of rights? | ||
Well, that's a different question. | ||
I believe that we have been bestowed by our creator inalienable rights. | ||
They're endowed upon us. | ||
I'm actually not 100%. | ||
I'm just saying, you know, that's basically what we said and the U.S. | ||
said in the Declaration of Independence. | ||
And the rights are granted to us not by just the fact that we exist, not by a king or a government. | ||
That's not true for other cultures. | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And that's why they don't like us so much is because we declared that those are universal. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And if they're universal, that means if you haven't adopted them, that means that you're doing it wrong. | ||
It puts us in a position of conflict. | ||
This is what the outs, this is what the rest of the world thinks, right? | ||
They have their own, their own civilizations and their own cultures and their own morals and their own idea of human values. | ||
And then they hear us saying, Hey, ours are universal buddy. | ||
And if you don't take them, you're in big trouble. | ||
Did you see the Project Veritas release? | ||
I did not. | ||
Project Veritas just put out a video of this guy who is, I guess, a Democratic operative saying they want to get violent. | ||
They want to pull out the slicey boys, he called them. | ||
Slicey boys. | ||
You know what slicey boys are? | ||
When you're dealing with politicians you don't like, you bring out a slicey boy? | ||
unidentified
|
Guillotines. | |
Oh boy. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And Project Veritas, this guy's saying it. | ||
I'm not going to pretend like this guy's the most prominent Democrat in the world, but you've got Democrats saying this is our plan. | ||
He's what? | ||
He's not. | ||
I actually, I have a kind of salient thought about this. | ||
So what was interesting to me about this most recent Project Veritas release was that this happened in Colorado, which is where I'm from, and it happened in Weld County, Colorado. | ||
So that's not interesting to most people I know, but I spent a year there. | ||
That's a farming county. | ||
There's nothing there. | ||
This isn't Fort Collins. | ||
This isn't Boulder. | ||
This isn't Denver. | ||
This is way out in the middle of nowhere. | ||
There are cows. | ||
There are oil rigs. | ||
There's nothing exciting or interesting. | ||
This isn't cosmopolitan. | ||
And to hear this coming from somewhere like Weld County, to me, is frankly terrifying. | ||
unidentified
|
Why? | |
Because it's taking root there. | ||
That troubles me. | ||
In middle-of-nowhere country? | ||
Yes, and a bunch in farmland. | ||
This is literally like cornfields and cows and stuff. | ||
I'll tell you what this guy was saying. | ||
He was saying that, basically, if Joe Biden gets elected, they'll still riot. | ||
If Joe Biden gets elected and he won't sign the progressive policies, he said, we won't let him leave his house. | ||
I believe it. | ||
They hate Joe Biden. | ||
All of the above. | ||
keep hearing is they hate you. | ||
Yes. | ||
Of course, of course. | ||
That, but the question is, you know, under which president will we have bad riots? | ||
unidentified
|
All of the above, all of the above, but what's the difference between the two? | |
The media will, will, will go one way or the other. | ||
Well, the big, the big difference from the presidents. | ||
Oh. | ||
Under both presidents, we're going to have riots, right? | ||
Yes. | ||
So what's the difference between a Trump presidency and a Biden presidency in that regard? | ||
Trump might actually put some of them in jail. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Might actually put some of them in jail. | ||
Hey, they did go get that guy in Portland. | ||
That's for sure. | ||
What was his name? | ||
Rhino? | ||
The shooter. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Rhino. | ||
I mean, they sent the feds after him. | ||
Yeah, what did Trump call it? | ||
Retribution or something? | ||
We got. | ||
That's brutal. | ||
That's too much. | ||
I don't like that. | ||
Well, a guy pulled out a machine. | ||
Right, right, right, right. | ||
Of course, of course. | ||
Well, so I guess the official story is that he was armed. | ||
And he was armed because he had a he's been there's a bunch of other photos of him being armed. | ||
He was arrested before I started gun charges. | ||
The report I read said that he got off 50 rounds or more before they started firing on him. | ||
Makes sense to me. | ||
know it's it well so I read a report that said one witness claimed that | ||
wasn't true but I'll put this way man he did no no look if you get a guy who's | ||
got a gun charge then he comes out later and stalked a Trump supporter and kills | ||
him and then I hear from the cops that he had a gun I'll be like I mean the | ||
dude had a tendency to have a gun you know I mean make sense I'm not gonna | ||
doubt him on that regard makes sense to me yep the riots are coming no matter | ||
I have a thought about the Supreme Court packing, same sort of similar theme here, is maybe Biden's really had been avoiding it because he doesn't want to. | ||
And he knows that the left really, really wants him to, right? | ||
That's what he said. | ||
He said he's not a fan of court packing. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I spent the day in the horse country today trying to get my mind out of the news, but jerks. | ||
Dude, I go, but I talk to regular people all the time and they tell me stuff and I'm just like, wow. | ||
I can't, I heard some really crazy stories from the skateboarding community and this is one of the craziest things to me because, so when I hear, let me tell you a secret about skateboarders. | ||
They're nihilists. | ||
They don't care about your politics. | ||
They don't care about any of this stuff. | ||
Leave me alone. | ||
I'm gonna go skate. | ||
They're very libertarian, very anti-authoritarian, and very nihilistic. | ||
If they can live in a one- like ten people crammed in a one-bedroom paying a hundred bucks a month just to get by and they can skate every day, they're happy. | ||
It's sort of like what you've got going on here. | ||
This is a crazy commune farm. | ||
I'm here and now all these skateboarders are voting for Trump. | ||
I had some amateur skateboarder. | ||
Amateur usually implies they've got some notoriety. | ||
Hitting me up being like, amazing job dude, you're killing it, it's amazing. | ||
And I'm like, what? | ||
This dude should not be a politically active person. | ||
It's kind of getting crazy the amount of times I come across people who are apolitical. | ||
I've been skating my whole life, man. | ||
You don't talk politics with skateboarders. | ||
They don't care. | ||
Sometimes they might be left-leaning, but they're normies. | ||
Do a kickflip. | ||
That's the extent to which they have public videos, like a public video series called Do a Kickflip, because it's just like, there's nothing going on. | ||
It's like this 800th video I've seen called Do a Kickflip. | ||
And now I got these dudes posting. | ||
There's some crazy stories. | ||
I don't know how much I can reveal because it might, you know, a lot of these people are scared of getting canceled, but I'll tell you this, man. | ||
Some top musicians, Hollywood celebrities, and skateboarders have hit me up in the past several months telling me they're Trump train 2020. | ||
Even when I was saying like, so this is like before Trump put out a second agenda, before I was like, okay, I'm going to vote for the guy. | ||
I had people saying like, dude, you're wrong, man. | ||
Trust me. | ||
And I'm like, this is a Hollywood celebrity from like TV shows on Netflix and Amazon telling me I got to vote for Trump. | ||
And I'm like, I thought Hollywood was far left. | ||
I can't, this is crazy to me. | ||
So I have an idea on this. | ||
It has become completely obvious that the dissidents in America are Trump supporters. | ||
The punks are Trump supporters. | ||
The people that do DIY media production, audio, Trump supporters. | ||
We're out there. | ||
This is something that I did when I was a kid. | ||
We did raves back then in the nineties, right? | ||
We broke into warehouses and like DJ'd and played crazy music and did a bunch of drugs. | ||
And I was a rebel. | ||
And I've always been a rebel. | ||
And I'm seeing this now. | ||
More people seeing the fact that Biden, Antifa, Bill, it's the establishment. | ||
There's no denying the fact that they are the establishment now, with the corporations, the names on the streets, the backing of the government, the NBA, all this. | ||
They are now The establishment and good branding for Trump is to scoop up those disaffected people and be like, you're a punk. | ||
We're punks. | ||
We are insurgents within the United States and Trump is an insurgent. | ||
Johnny Rotten. | ||
Johnny Rotten. | ||
You saw Johnny Rotten, right? | ||
I did. | ||
It was sad to see him in such a state physically. | ||
But yeah, dude, with MAGA full on because he sees it and anybody who is involved in punk politics sees it. | ||
Let me tell you something, okay? | ||
You guys, you know Sex Pistols. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Sex Pistols, O.G. | ||
unidentified
|
Pong. | |
Of course. | ||
Johnny Rotten. | ||
Yep. | ||
He was the lead singer, wasn't he? | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
And this guy came out, and he was seen wearing a MAGA shirt, and then people asked him, like, you voting for Trump? | ||
And he's like, of course! | ||
And he voted for Clinton in 2016. | ||
Wow. | ||
He said he voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016, Obama, Obama. | ||
Now he's voting Trump. | ||
And he said it's because Biden's not capable of being the president. | ||
And the economy's like, you can't ignore it. | ||
And I'm like, that's an extremely rational and normal point to be made. | ||
The funny thing is, you know, Ricky Gervais brought it up in one of his livestreams, and it was really funny. | ||
He was like, oh, Johnny Rotten, like, why would Johnny Rotten wear a MAGA shirt? | ||
Apparently you can't do that. | ||
Or is that MAGA hat? | ||
He's like, well, unless you're an aging punk trying to agitate people. | ||
And I laughed at that too, because at least Ricky's got a fun attitude about it, but I think Ricky's wrong. | ||
They look at Johnny Rotten, the people who are, you know, like Ricky Gervais, who are having a good time and still willing to have a laugh, and he thinks Johnny Rotten's just trying to make everybody angry. | ||
Exactly. | ||
listen to Johnny Rotten, he's like, well, the economy was really good under, you | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
know, Donald Trump. And I have to recognize that. And, you know, Joe Biden | ||
just doesn't seem to have it. I'm like, that's like a normal point to me. | ||
That's not agitating anybody. | ||
Exactly. But someone posted a photo of Sid Vicious wearing a swastika T-shirt. | ||
And so he was the original singer. | ||
Yeah. And it's like, I don't think people know what punk is. | ||
Yeah. I mean, yeah. | ||
So like when I grew up with punk and I look, I'm not going to pretend to know | ||
punk is because apparently there's so many different punks and everyone thinks | ||
It's like libertarianism. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, exactly. | |
Of course. | ||
Lousy punks, they ruined punk. | ||
Exactly. | ||
What I was told when I was growing up, when I was listening to punk music and I was skating, was that it was basically anti-establishment, anti-authoritarian. | ||
The reason that these guys, the reason they would dye their hair, shave the sides of their head, make their hair look weird and wear weird clothes was to be as offensive and shocking as possible to the squares, to the normies. | ||
So yeah, Sid Vicious would wear a swastika t-shirt because he's like, he wanted you to get angry and he wanted to challenge what you would be comfortable in. | ||
He wanted to shock you to your core. | ||
That's not what punk is today. | ||
It's like been perfectly co-opted. | ||
There's this really funny cartoon of this woman wearing like a jean vest and she's got like a purple mohawk or something and she's like, you're not punk unless you support Black Lives Matter. | ||
And I'm like, and then there's another funny one where it's like, you're not, it was a mockery of it. | ||
You're not punk unless your opinions align with every major multinational billion dollar corporation. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Real punk doesn't, it'll get banned. | ||
That's the problem with it. | ||
Cause like I would be swearing and wearing a shirt with the koala giving the finger right now. | ||
If, if I could. | ||
You probably can do that. | ||
I might wear the Koala shirt someday. | ||
I mean, dude, one day that's going to be offensive, what you're wearing, and they're going to go back in time and delete the video. | ||
Once the Borg take over, then they'll see this video. | ||
They're going to rewrite the Prime Directive. | ||
Elon Musk is going to Neuralink everybody, then we're going to start talking about how the Borg was right in Star Trek, and then they're going to ban your shirt. | ||
I think punk is real, it's just so dissuaded by social media. | ||
It lives on currently in social media. | ||
This is the punk spirit. | ||
This is the punk spirit right now. | ||
DIY. | ||
Challenge the facts. | ||
Challenge the establishment. | ||
Create your own narrative. | ||
Build your own space. | ||
Have your own community. | ||
F you! | ||
I'm not going to listen to you. | ||
Oh my god, I'm just having flashbacks. | ||
Rage against the machine. | ||
It's making me so sad because thinking about them, they are now the machine. | ||
And I still listen to one song over and over on my workout list, you know, F you, I won't do what you tell me. | ||
F you, I won't do what you tell me. | ||
F you, I won't. | ||
I mean that's a vibe man. You know what the American spirit, a lot of it is? | ||
You tell me to do something, I do the opposite. Yeah. You get in my face, | ||
you demand I raise my fist, I'll flick you off. Yep. I'll do the opposite. There must be an | ||
insidious reason for you being the authoritarian. That comes from that lack, that natural distrust | ||
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for authority. You know, and that's Trump dude. | |
That's why Trump says the crazy things that he does. | ||
That's why he says, ah, just punch the guy in the eye. | ||
That's why he said stand back and stand by and not stand down is because he doesn't like people telling him what to do. | ||
Are you saying Donald Trump is punk rock? | ||
Definitely. | ||
100%. | ||
100%. | ||
This guy wearing a suit. | ||
Yes. | ||
A businessman. | ||
Yes. | ||
Punk rock. | ||
He's punk rock. | ||
100%. | ||
To be fair, we used to wear suits. | ||
Yeah, dress pants, suits, long sleeve button up shirts with collars. | ||
We used to go skate and we would put on suits. | ||
And it's not. | ||
For real. | ||
It's not the clothing. | ||
We would skate wearing, we'd get like thrift store suits and we would go skate with a tie and a suit. | ||
Sounds like Beastie Boys sabotage era. | ||
But you know what it was? | ||
Like when my friends were doing it and when I was doing it, it was basically like skateboarding was becoming mainstream and popular. | ||
And so to be the antithesis of this was to wear a suit now. | ||
Nice. | ||
Cause it was like MTV had a show and the dudes are wearing the same kind of clothes. | ||
And now they started marketing, you know, they started making the clothes that were like pre-ripped or pre-frayed or whatever. | ||
And so it was like, my jeans were ruined cause I was skating and was, you know, scraping my, you know, falling down. | ||
Then they started selling pre-ruined jeans. | ||
We went to the thrift store and put on suits. | ||
It was fun. | ||
I would love to see a clip to that. | ||
You should recreate it. | ||
That'd be amazing. | ||
I mean, that was a trend back in the early 2000s with skateboarders wearing suits because it was like... So here's the thing about punk and subcultures in general. | ||
Subcultures in general have a life cycle to them. | ||
They start off in the dark corners, then they get a little bit more popular, and then eventually the mainstream co-ops them, right? | ||
And then it takes away all of their bite, okay? | ||
And so what we're seeing now with social media and technology is there's no way to co-opt it. | ||
You're not going to be co-opted, Tim. | ||
You're not going to just get swallowed up. | ||
Your voice isn't going to get just put into the din with the rest of the establishment. | ||
Social media provides a place for dissidents to actually have a life cycle where they don't get co-opted by the mainstream. | ||
I firmly believe, and I was talking about this with the guy who's an ethnomusicologist, as a matter of fact, who studies dissident music scenes, that there isn't one right now in the United States. | ||
There isn't a dissident music scene. | ||
And that energy didn't go away. | ||
It lives on right now, MAGA social media. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Have you heard what, like, it's like the guy who started Bad Religion, I think. | ||
I can't remember exactly what he was saying, but he was talking about Black Lives Matter and the establishment and being punk. | ||
But they wrote a song, I think this was Bad Religion who wrote this, it was an alt-right recruitment song. | ||
Yeah, it was Bad Religion. | ||
They wrote a song and it was called The Kids Are Alt-Right or whatever. | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
And when the song came out, I was hearing from these lefties that it's a punk song that's supposed to be against the alt-right, but the song's pro alt-right. | ||
Like the lyrics are like, everybody needs somebody, come join the party. | ||
And I'm like, this is not critical in any capacity. | ||
They're not insulting them. | ||
They're literally telling people it's fun. | ||
Come hang out. | ||
Like, that's weird. | ||
Because Greg teaches at Berkeley. | ||
Super weird. | ||
I don't know about that. | ||
I know that the dissident energy that I grew up with, that I fostered and channeled as a teen, is living on today. | ||
I used to have a studio in my basement making music and an old Mac doing zines and writing little articles to hand out at parties and whatever. | ||
What am I doing today? | ||
I got a studio in my basement. | ||
I'm writing online. | ||
I'm doing Twitters and blogging. | ||
It's the same vibe. | ||
Same mood, sorry. | ||
Yeah, that's right. | ||
Same mood. | ||
I was reading something interesting where it was like this teacher asked his students How many of them thought that if they were alive during slavery, that they would have opposed slavery? | ||
He was like, imagine you, you know, it's the era of slavery. | ||
Slavery is alive right now. | ||
How many of you would oppose it? | ||
They all raised their hand. | ||
And he says, okay, now each and every one of you, I want you to name something you've done that has gone against the establishment, has been extremely unpopular, would get you fired from your job, kicked out of school, or grounded for life. | ||
And none of them had any, nothing to say. | ||
And he said, during that era, slavery was the establishment acceptable norm, and those that opposed it were the fringe, anti-establishment weirdos. | ||
And the people freeing the slaves were criminals. | ||
And the slaves, they were sending out people to catch them. | ||
He's like, each and every one of you following the establishment, listening to your popular music, you are doing exactly the opposite of what you think you would be doing. | ||
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Sweet. | |
I would have been an abolitionist. | ||
That's right. | ||
Yeah, probably. | ||
I think it's funny because people have tried saying that about me. | ||
Yeah, I know, right? | ||
Thank goodness. | ||
People, people try claiming that me and a bunch of other, you know, moderate or, you know, freedom-minded individuals would be the ones, and I'm like, it's the exact opposite. | ||
Right. | ||
You're the ones that are screaming in a woman's face while raising your fist demand she raise her fist with you. | ||
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Right. | |
There's no, there's no comparable movement. | ||
Right. | ||
Like on the right for that. | ||
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No. | |
You've got the creepy weirdo, you know, white supremacist types, but you know, you know what I realized too? | ||
Creepy. | ||
You know why I think there's an, like the left describes a very obvious group and the right doesn't? | ||
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Right. | |
the right, as we describe it, is more individualist. | ||
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Right. | |
Right. | ||
So you have a bunch of disparate individuals and groups that don't unify on any ideas. | ||
Right. | ||
The left, they're collectivists. | ||
So they all form a hive and then agree on all of these things. | ||
Right. | ||
Social justice, economic policy, for the most part. | ||
You got dirtbag left and you got woke left, but you know. | ||
Right. | ||
And I guess the alt-right is kind of a woke right or something. | ||
Even though their economic policy is left? | ||
I don't know, whatever. | ||
Dude, the alt-right today is different than the alt-right a decade ago. | ||
The alt-right a decade ago was like neoconservative warmongers. | ||
There wasn't an alt-right. | ||
It was the neocons. | ||
No, it wasn't. | ||
The alt-right didn't exist. | ||
The new conservatives. | ||
Alt-right specifically means white nationalists. | ||
Regular conservatives. | ||
Oh, it didn't though. | ||
But let's not get into that. | ||
It didn't right at first. | ||
No, it did. | ||
This is a big mistake a lot of people on the new right, as they call it, make. | ||
They assumed alt-right meant alternative to the right when it was actually coined by white nationalists in the first place. | ||
Yes, that is accurate. | ||
I made the same assumption error early part of 2015. | ||
I was like, alright, that sounds cool. | ||
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But it's not cool at all. | |
What is this awful, awful old ideology? | ||
Oh no, I don't like that. | ||
I don't like that at all. | ||
But the intersectional left, it's the same thing. | ||
Yeah, no doubt. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So then we should kind of, we kind of got off track. | ||
Can we talk about Rittenhouse for a minute? | ||
Cause I think they're not going to charge him. | ||
No, there's new, there's an update on the Kyle Rittenhouse stuff. | ||
He won't be charged in Illinois. | ||
Yeah, did you hear about it, Jack? | ||
You know what that means? | ||
What's that mean? | ||
Narrative debunked. | ||
That he crossed state lines with a gun to go to a protest. | ||
Illinois straight up said there's no evidence to suggest he had a gun in Illinois at all. | ||
He just showed up in Wisconsin. | ||
Somebody, he was working, he was working in Kenosha. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I think the, I think we, you know, this kind of wraps up to the earlier stuff we were talking about just with tearing the statues down, the riots, the unrest, the creepy, weird ideologies. | ||
I was talking to, I was actually talking to CNN reporter recently, uh, like the other day for quite some time. | ||
This is funny. | ||
Not for. | ||
You're in trouble. | ||
Maybe. | ||
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Maybe. | |
I'm like, maybe they're actually trying to do a story and they're lying to me about, like, just trying to have a conversation. | ||
Maybe it's all bunk or whatever. | ||
I don't care. | ||
I'll talk to people. | ||
Right. | ||
And so, you know, they were asking about what's going on and stuff. | ||
And I asked them, you know about Kyle Rittenhouse? | ||
Of course. | ||
Of course. | ||
I said, you know about the security guard in Denver? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And I was like, and you know what those two stories have in common? | ||
Kyle Rittenhouse wasn't a white supremacist. | ||
The security guard wasn't Antifa. | ||
They were normies. | ||
They were normies who came out with guns and shot people on the other side. | ||
For whatever reason, whatever you- I'm not trying to equivocate the morality of each incident, they're different. | ||
But the senior reporter actually was the one who brought up how Rittenhouse wasn't a white supremacist. | ||
Saying like, yeah, yeah, everyone's trying to claim that Rittenhouse is a white supremacist. | ||
No, he was a kid who came out with a gun and got into it with people and then people got shot. | ||
And I'm like, exactly. | ||
And then the CNN reporter was like, that's scarier. | ||
It's scarier that it was just some regular kid who worked for a local, as a local lifeguard who came out with a gun. | ||
That's scary. | ||
And then I was like, and that's the Denver security guard. | ||
This like Bernie bro guy. | ||
Not super, like people are trying to act like he's Antifa because I guess they want tribalist points to like make Antifa look bad. | ||
He was a Bernie bro. | ||
He was a Bernie bro and he was very active during Occupy Wall Street. | ||
But for the past several years he was working on a farm selling goat milk and chicken eggs or something like that. | ||
Eggs. | ||
And I saw a post about him and his girlfriend and the things they did over the past several years. | ||
Unlicensed, got a job as a contractor and shot a Trump supporter in the face. | ||
Now here's the crazy thing about that Denver guy. | ||
But had he been out in the protests before being violent or doing anything? | ||
I seem to have seen images, collages of him at a various number of events. | ||
Ten years ago. | ||
Was that what's from? | ||
A bunch of photos from him during Occupy Wall Street in 2011-2012. | ||
Look, it's scarier that he was not Antifa. | ||
He wasn't organized. | ||
He wasn't out with black-clad revolutionary communists and socialists. | ||
He was a Bernie bro watching leftist YouTube videos and he went to a Trump rally and he shot a dude in the face. | ||
You went to a cop rally, a pro-police rally. | ||
I think it's both. | ||
It's scarier, but it's also not scarier. | ||
Because it sucks to see people that aren't already radicalized do stuff like that. | ||
But, gang violence is terrifying too. | ||
So, I don't know. | ||
I mean, it's hard to say which would be worse. | ||
They're both pretty horrible. | ||
Sure, but I think it's scarier that regular people are now being pulled in. | ||
Yeah, but I mean that's American militia system is supposed to be American people defending themselves. | ||
I mean, I totally agree with you. | ||
It's terrifying and it really shouldn't happen. | ||
I mean, shouldn't's a weird word. | ||
Random people coming out and for whatever reason being put in a situation where they have to do it or they feel they have to do it. | ||
That's scary, man. | ||
I remember talking about this stuff back in, like, 2017, 2018. | ||
And so many people say, like, oh, Tim, the Proud Boys fighting with Antifa is not that big of a deal. | ||
Most people don't know or care who they are. | ||
Okay, well, now what about some random kid in Antioch, Illinois? | ||
And what about some, like, Bernie bro working as a security guard? | ||
Violence is there. | ||
Regarding Rittenhouse 2, I want to go into it a little bit more. | ||
So I don't think we've talked about it on this show yet, but the guy that was coming up after him got charged, right? | ||
So there's new charges? | ||
Yeah, new charges. | ||
Whoa, the guy who got shot in the bicep, that guy got charged? | ||
No, the guy who fired the first shot got charged. | ||
So this is from Cassandra. | ||
I always say this, I don't like the Gateway Pundit, man. | ||
But we do like Cassandra. | ||
But yes, we do like Cassandra Fairbanks. | ||
She does a pretty good job and she has the charging documents. | ||
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Okay. | |
So the first dude, I forgot what his name is, like Joshua Zeminski or something. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Is that his name? | ||
Yeah, well, Josh, yeah. | ||
That was his name? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I'm sorry, I'm just like agreeing with you. | ||
Oh, I don't know if I was getting his name right. | ||
Do you want to pull that up? | ||
Do I have something I can pull up? | ||
Yeah. | ||
So he fired a round into the air, triggering Kyle to turn around, and then Rosenbaum reached for his gun and Kyle went pop, pop, pop. | ||
Dude goes down. | ||
And I think that's gonna slam-dunk his self-defense case. | ||
I think that the only thing he'll end up actually sitting on, for the most part, is gonna be unlawfully, like, you know, he wasn't supposed to be carrying a weapon. | ||
But the fact that they're charging the other dude for shooting, come on, you can't deny self-defense then. | ||
Right. | ||
Someone fired a gunshot, he turned around. | ||
I was watching all those live streams live that night. | ||
And man, I felt like, of course, not there, not the same, but I felt like the energy, like people didn't know, the chaos, the shots going off, live streams, people running down the street, the whole thing. | ||
All of it rang to me, self-defense, as I was watching it in real time over the streams. | ||
And this poor kid's 17 years old. | ||
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Yeah. | |
But when people, your point is that he's a regular kid. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And he believed that he needed to defend private property from the mob. | ||
They had just all over the place. | ||
They were going to, they were going to blow up a gas station. | ||
Burning down whole fields full of cars and buildings and police stations and the whole thing. | ||
And the cops weren't stopping them. | ||
Nope. | ||
Nobody's stopping them. | ||
That's why I think we're, we're headed towards, uh, man, I, I, it's not supposed to be a pessimistic thing, but you know, Calamity. | ||
Hold on, think about this. | ||
You've got the social media companies actively shutting down a story that makes Joe Biden look really, really bad. | ||
What can the right do to counter the fact that you've got people laughing in their faces, figuratively, about how they're cheating, about how they're like, there is nothing you can say that we will ever allow, and we are going to win, and there's nothing you can do to stop us. | ||
The rioters have gone out for now 135 plus days, smashing, breaking, destroying, and they're laughing, saying, we're gonna keep letting them go, and there is nothing you can do to stop us. | ||
And Trump's trying, deputizing these cops in certain areas, but what worries me is, Where do you think it goes if the right keeps getting told you can't speak and we're going to burn down your neighborhood? | ||
What do you think happens? | ||
I think, well, on one hand I think that what I see happening already is that people are forming their own communities, right? | ||
They're already getting together with the idea of socializing, being professional, working with, having their own media environments, their own information, their own sense-making teams. | ||
Their own sort of communities to actually put up a barrier between themselves and the rest of the world. | ||
Now, that's not going to solve your legal issues or constitutional issues or whatever else. | ||
There's so many complications when you start trying to think about, oh, a civil war. | ||
It's not going to be anything like the, you know, 1860s. | ||
It's not even going to be anything like World War Two. | ||
It's going to be some weird hybrid thing of like Afghanistan, where there's you're here, they're everywhere. | ||
We're all everywhere. | ||
It's all happening all the time. | ||
And for me personally, I'm thinking in my mind, we need to start a new phase in American history. | ||
Resettle America. | ||
Repopulate America. | ||
There's so much land, so many places to go, so many great things to see and places to live, that we need to just have a movement to resettle America and actually just start anew. | ||
And you can do it in some places today. | ||
But if we're going to sit here and try to predict how the country comes apart, I think we can't. | ||
I think it's unpredictable. | ||
You're right. | ||
We could set up smaller communities all over the country with magnetic transportation, super fast trains from community to community with solar-powered water condensation in areas, and you could start setting up with our technology and solar power new communities. | ||
Yes. | ||
Remember the first time I came on the show, I was all about the 90 acres for 50,000. | ||
Homesteading? | ||
Yeah, 50,000 person medieval town is all you need, 90 acres. | ||
So this has been on my mind, how it shakes out electorally, how it shakes out with the military. | ||
It's all, it's, it's, it's tribal now. | ||
It's networked. | ||
It's not geographically centered. | ||
You've got people in the cities that see it one way, people in the country. | ||
It's not going to, there's not going to just be like a, this side of the Mississippi red, this side of the Mississippi blue. | ||
It's not, it's just not going to happen. | ||
One problem I'm having is that I'm moving states and I can't vote. | ||
I'm set up to vote in my old state but I'm changing states right before the election and now it's like if I vote in my old state but I'm a resident of my new state they might come after me. | ||
So I'm just not gonna vote because it's too risky and that's ridiculous that I'm an American citizen and I can't vote because I've moved states. | ||
So let's get away with that. | ||
You just gotta research what the legality is and make sure you do it right. | ||
But I can't, I gotta get my license. | ||
I can't wait another month and a half before I change my... No, no, I have to move forward with my life. | ||
And that's setting my voting ability down. | ||
You just vote where you register? | ||
I think you should be able to vote as an American. | ||
I don't think it matters where you live on this soil. | ||
No, I disagree with that. | ||
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Why? | |
Because... Because larger, denser, wealthier populations strip the rights away from smaller... But why does a guy in my old town represent me more than a guy in this... Like, why can't I just pick the person that represents me the most? | ||
Because there are small areas that are impoverished and have limited resources, and if we don't have the barriers, you end up with Los Angeles and San Diego voting away the surface water rights from Tulare County, and that literally happened. | ||
So then you have a bunch of poor migrant families who one day turn their water faucet on and no water comes out. | ||
Why? | ||
Because the cities are richer and there's more people and they won the right to take the water away. | ||
So we create jurisdictions to protect The minority. | ||
That's what this country is built upon. | ||
That's the point of, like, partly the point of Electoral College. | ||
So yeah, it's very important that you vote based on where you are and who represents your area. | ||
So what's up with gerrymandering, where they'll take an area that was previously functional and then they'll split it so that certain people now have control of the area? | ||
Gerrymandering's become extremely corrupted. | ||
Yeah, that's kind of ruined local voting. | ||
I mean, absolutely. | ||
Sort of like court packing at the local legislative level. | ||
But let's just carry your question out a little bit farther. | ||
I think the first thing that happens that we see is just a decreased reliance upon the federal government, right? | ||
Your corporations take more power. | ||
Your local communities take more power. | ||
Your associations begin to create more power. | ||
And then you just start thinking about the federal government less and less, unless you're the one who is like co-opting the federal government to do your bidding. | ||
But it's really there's because the future so unpredictable. | ||
What I have decided to do is to take action today and to build a community starting today. | ||
So what I'm doing is I'm building a community of men with like minded value, shared values is | ||
how you're going to start to create new communities based on shared values. Because one of the | ||
things that's very clear is that we don't have common united, you know, common values. | ||
And there's the common values that once made us a country seem to be no longer. | ||
So we need to find people that you have common values with, and then begin to build a new, a new civilization within website regarding that. | ||
So what is that website? | ||
Right. | ||
So the Liminal Order is the organization I'm talking about, and it's founded on our three core values of brotherhood, masculinity, and sovereignty. | ||
So we're very focused on building our own personal sovereignty. | ||
We have hundreds of guys around the country, even around the world at this point. | ||
And the long-term goal is to create a situation which you can socialize, work with, engage with, do service for, and just have a life with people who share your values right off the jump. | ||
Well, one of the big issues that's like one of the biggest problems we have is tribalism. | ||
Yes. | ||
That's only going to get worse. | ||
Yeah. | ||
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Yeah. | |
Because technology. | ||
The technology is feeding the tribalism now. | ||
So I have a guest coming up on my podcast tomorrow. | ||
John Robb, as a matter of fact, who is an expert on tribal warfare, insurgencies, counterinsurgencies, network warfare, etc. | ||
And we're going to talk tomorrow about this very question, actually. | ||
And what he believes is that tribalism is on the rise because of the imagery and the empathetic triggers that we can send around to people instantaneously. | ||
So you see a video and it triggers an empathetic reaction in you, and you know that if it triggers this empathetic reaction, you're part of this tribe. | ||
And if it triggers a different reaction, you're part of that tribe. | ||
And so these images keep coming out and they keep coming out and they keep triggering us and triggering us and we start to make a pattern and we start to recognize a pattern and then we sort according to these tribes and their network. | ||
So it's like all online and then these things are now emerging and we see these alliances, right? | ||
So Black Lives Matter Antifa, they're not the same but they have an alliance right now because they have a common goal. | ||
Right. | ||
And so the corporations also have a common goal, which is to diminish the power of the federal government. | ||
That's why you see the corporations, BLM and Antifa all on the same team today, because they all have the same common goal. | ||
They have what's called network alignment. | ||
So that's the future of our politics and of our populace and our civilization is like these tribes, which are built on empathetic triggers and reactions. | ||
And then they emerge and then they have alignment. | ||
And then that's how you have these alliances. | ||
They're not going to last forever. | ||
But for right now, That's why you see BLM Antifa corporations all together on the same side. | ||
Where can people follow your podcast? | ||
The podcast is Jack Murphy Live on YouTube. | ||
JackMurphyLive.com is the website. | ||
Follow me on Twitter at JackMurphyLive. | ||
We're going live tomorrow at 11 with John Robb. | ||
I mean, John Robb is a special forces guy. | ||
He served all over the world. | ||
He wrote a book called Brave New War where he studied tribalism and networked counterinsurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan as well. | ||
And we're seeing that here. | ||
We're seeing it already happen here. | ||
Antifa is like ISIS, basically, in the way that they form and the way that they arrange themselves and the way they conduct themselves. | ||
You see what that ex-Facebook chief said? | ||
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What? | |
From the Social Dumb. | ||
His name's Tim Kendall. | ||
He said, a threat to democracy that could lead to civil war. | ||
He's basically saying social media. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Social media is a threat to democracy. | ||
It's tribalizing people. | ||
Yes. | ||
And it's factionalizing. | ||
It's going to lead. | ||
He says it could lead to a civil war. | ||
Yes. | ||
Agreed. | ||
Agreed. | ||
Because it's making us arrange ourselves around worldviews that are totally incompatible with these empathetic triggers that don't relate. | ||
And then you start to think that the other people are evil. | ||
Yeah, but the crazy thing is, it's the left. | ||
It's the left doing. | ||
So it's really funny to have a conversation where you're like, you view the other as evil, right? | ||
Because the left certainly says the same things about the right, but I kind of view it like light and dark, bizarro and normal or whatever. | ||
The left is a bizarro reality. | ||
They believe fake things like Russiagate. | ||
They ignore real things like the Hunter Biden scandal. | ||
They believe the Hunter Biden scandal is fake, even though there's photos. | ||
So what do they do? | ||
They have to censor the information. | ||
Otherwise people will realize they're in bizarro world. | ||
This is the key takeaway from the Hunter Biden thing. | ||
Who is changing the rules of the game? | ||
That's how you know who's losing. | ||
Yeah. | ||
They're losing, so they have to change the rules of the game. | ||
Every single time. | ||
Change the election. | ||
We gotta change the election. | ||
We're gonna do mail-in voting. | ||
Gotta change the Supreme Court. | ||
You know why I really love the mail-in voting thing? | ||
If the Democrats just listened to Trump, they would have been way better off. | ||
Now they're in serious trouble. | ||
The Atlantic wrote about this. | ||
Mail-in voting is a high margin of error, and now the Democrats have gone all in on it, and they're gonna get disqualified. | ||
Ridiculous. | ||
So many. | ||
We're looking at people with like cognitive dissonance and then they formed now what's known as like the crazy alt-left. | ||
These people that are like just unable to see reality when the emails are there and you see all the new information violates my past belief in what reality is. | ||
It's actually there's a really really easy way to break this down. | ||
You want to know how you're in the real world? | ||
You can say, the Klan, white supremacy, and neo-Nazis are despicable and disgusting and so is Antifa. | ||
There you go. | ||
Right? | ||
The left can't do that. | ||
Right. | ||
Now, they'll say things like, oh, I condemn all violence. | ||
Say Antifa. | ||
Well, Antifa's a myth. | ||
Right. | ||
That's what Nadler said. | ||
Why is it? | ||
Condemn Black Lives Matter extremists. | ||
Praise the good, peaceful Black Lives Matter protesters. | ||
They can't do it. | ||
Okay. | ||
I am not advocating violence. | ||
I don't advocate violence, but the United States was formed on a violent revolution. | ||
And if we hadn't gotten, if they hadn't gotten violent, it wouldn't have happened. | ||
We didn't start the fight. | ||
Well, we ended it. | ||
I mean, whoever started it, what started it? | ||
A gunshot, shot her down, the world nuts, civil war. | ||
unidentified
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It was a siege of a fort, the Boston Massacre. | |
The Boston Massacre is when it really started to take off. | ||
Yeah. | ||
When the British tried seizing the weapons from the colonists. | ||
But they got off though. | ||
John Adams. | ||
And then people started fighting back. | ||
So, listen, listen. | ||
Police brutality, people are fighting back. | ||
I mean, it's like, I don't condone the behavior, but Tiananmen Square. | ||
Could the people have overthrown the Chinese Communist Party without becoming violent against them? | ||
Obviously not, because the Chinese rolled in with tanks. | ||
But you're talking about fake news. | ||
The police brutality narrative is fake. | ||
I agree with you. | ||
It's different than being run by a king. | ||
It's totally different. | ||
There are instances of police brutality. | ||
Police brutality is a very serious problem when it occurs, and these cops should be arrested. | ||
There's also a problem with cops lying to protect each other when they do commit crimes, but there is not some widespread group of secret police who go around hunting down minorities like they've literally been saying. | ||
Right. | ||
There were, according to the Washington Post, tracking 13 unarmed black men who were shot and killed last year in the United States out of 375 estimated police interactions. | ||
That is a ridiculously fake narrative. | ||
When a cop shoots somebody and kills them, it should be investigated, and we should treat it very, very seriously. | ||
I'm not a big fan of the idea of qualified immunity, and I believe we need police reform. | ||
I believe we need criminal justice reform. | ||
I believe the drug war has failed. | ||
Yes. | ||
But to go around now saying, abolish the police, dismantle the police, and we're defending ourselves because you saw fake news is not the same thing as defending yourself from the British Empire. | ||
I'm not in a place where I think that we need violence to right the situation. | ||
I don't think it's that bad. | ||
Well, I mean, look, you look at these lunatics in Michigan. | ||
Hold on, hold on. | ||
I do not advocate for violence either. | ||
However, at some point you need to understand that you're in a burlap sack and you're either the mongoose or you're the king cobra. | ||
And which one of you is coming out of that sack? | ||
And that's what I'm starting to feel like is like, okay, I don't want to have a fight, but like, dude, they're not stopping. | ||
This thing is just coming at you. | ||
It's like a zombie. | ||
What are you going to do? | ||
This is the question I was asking before, and I said, what do you think comes next? | ||
If you have Twitter and Facebook shutting down one of the oldest newspapers in the country because it proves Joe Biden is a lying, corrupt piece of human garbage because they want him to win, what happens when that lying, corrupt piece of garbage actually wins? | ||
And then does something horribly corrupt and terrible and nasty, they're not going to report it. | ||
Obviously, they're going to hide it. | ||
It doesn't prove it, but it is evidence. | ||
I'm saying if it does, like I'm being more figurative and bombastic. | ||
So what I'm saying is, if you're on the right, and the perspective of people on the right is that it proves it. | ||
In my segment, I actually said, here's the argument from the left. | ||
They're arguing that opportunity doesn't mean he actually met them. | ||
But that's ridiculous. | ||
So listen, if Joe Biden said, I never talked to my son about this, and then an email comes out saying, I met your dad and I work for Burisma, sounds like he's lying, right? | ||
So inter- so media has been intervening the whole time, lying, fake news, ridiculous. | ||
Remember when ABC edited the footage of Trump to make it seem like he was throwing the fish food in? | ||
Seemingly ridiculous and innocuous things that are so insane. | ||
Or the paper towels or whatever. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's fake, fake, fake. | ||
So you're being lied to. | ||
They're cheating. | ||
They're manipulating. | ||
And now they're straight up saying, you know what? | ||
The New York Post published this story, which is a huge expose, makes Biden look bad. | ||
Shut it down. | ||
Shut it down. | ||
Because we don't know where it came from? | ||
That's what they're arguing. | ||
That's what they're saying. | ||
Because they can't confirm how they got it? | ||
They're not allowed to show it? | ||
That's ridiculous. | ||
That's not true. | ||
That's what Twitter said, right? | ||
The story confirmed where they got it. | ||
They got it from the hard drive of a repairman who was given the laptop. | ||
What was it the Twitter terms of service that if they produce a story without evidence of where it came from? | ||
It was hacked information. | ||
They definitively said it was something it was not. | ||
They are lying. | ||
Hands down lying the guy from Facebook who announced the censorship worked for the Democrats the DCCC | ||
And he straight-up says we're suppressing this so I'm telling you man from the perspective of the right | ||
I feel like we're sitting on a powder keg and the only thing that can happen is that | ||
It happens the powder keg go boom. No the No | ||
unidentified
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Oh. | |
No? | ||
No. | ||
The only thing that can happen is that the Democrats win, they take over, a corrupt government ensues, the cronies continue enriching themselves while selling out our government, and our country, and our manufacturing base, and that's the end of it. | ||
So here's why this is a really big deal. | ||
We are on the cusp of having technology that is capable of silencing all of us automatically and then doing it in a way that almost can't be stopped. | ||
And so if the wrong people get the technology, they're able to create what John Robb calls the long night. | ||
Okay, it's happening. | ||
Imagine you live in Hong Kong and you're a pro-democracy person. | ||
You're definitely experiencing the long night now, right? | ||
They facial recognition, track you everywhere you go, social credit scores, whatever. | ||
Those people, pro-democracy folks in Hong Kong, they're in big trouble, right? | ||
What happens if that happens here? | ||
They have control of social media. | ||
They have control of our networks, communication, technology. | ||
It's already happened to a lot of people. | ||
implement their AI, all of a sudden you can't do anything on the net at all, ever, period, | ||
done, finished. | ||
It's already happened to a lot of people. | ||
It's half happened to me, but I fought back. | ||
Luckily I could. | ||
Did Enrique tell the story about MailChimp? | ||
unidentified
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I think so. | |
Yeah. | ||
Oh, they cancel everybody. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Enrique didn't have a MailChimp. | ||
Oh. | ||
And the leftists complained and MailChimp claimed they banned him. | ||
But he never had an account. | ||
unidentified
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Literally didn't have an account. | |
They lied to just say they did it too. | ||
For clout. | ||
So it's Black Mirror, dude. | ||
We're building an alternate system. | ||
That's what the liminal order is, an alternate system. | ||
It's information militia. | ||
That's what we call it. | ||
Info militia. | ||
It's our job. | ||
We serve our members. | ||
We go out, we find information, we synthesize it. | ||
Now the media's going to say Jack Murphy's self-proclaimed militia. | ||
I'm not even kidding. | ||
Information. | ||
Doesn't matter. | ||
By the way, being in a militia is part of being in America. | ||
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That's for sure. | |
Which is also what I think hung up Trump on that, do you disavow militias? | ||
He's like, how can you disavow militias? | ||
These guys in Michigan though? | ||
Morons. | ||
You know why? | ||
Because they won. | ||
Who are you talking about? | ||
The guys in Michigan who wanted to kidnap Whitmer or whatever? | ||
The court already ruled she had no power and the AG said she's done. | ||
And if they didn't do that, like, that's why I'm saying, like, violence certainly isn't the answer, and these ridiculous extrajudicial acts are not working, especially when you're winning in the courts. | ||
So, you know, forgive me for being too pessimistic on a lot of this stuff. | ||
I think it's possible that the media is lying. | ||
We know that... You said it well. | ||
Look who's changing the rules they're losing. | ||
And maybe that's the case. | ||
Maybe they're trying to maintain this facade of power, but that's really being stripped away from the inside out. | ||
And I've had so many conversations with people that are saying straight up, they're not politically active, but man, they're voting for Trump. | ||
I have not met anybody who said they voted for Trump who are switching. | ||
I've seen the DNC people, the Trump-Grett people. | ||
I've never met a person in the real world who said, I voted for Trump and now I regret it. | ||
Not once. | ||
9 million Democrats ditched the party to vote for Trump in 2016 and not a single one is going to go back. | ||
You wrote a book about it. | ||
I wrote a book, Democrats are Deplorable, you can find it on Amazon. | ||
Five-star reviews, over a hundred. | ||
Moving up the list, sales are brisk. | ||
People want the story. | ||
You know why they want the story? | ||
Is because it speaks to them and it talks about their transition and the experience of what it's like to become awake and to get red-pilled and to make a move that was bold. | ||
It's hard to vote for Donald Trump after you voted for the Democrats. | ||
You don't know what the reality is? | ||
unidentified
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Hmm. | |
Tell me the reality. | ||
The reality is once you see the truth, you are broken out from bizarro world. | ||
Totally. | ||
Every single person I've talked to about how they went from Democrat to deplorable. | ||
It's a story about how they watched a video of Trump speaking or investigated something on their own. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Brandon Strzok. | ||
The reason why Facebook and Twitter are desperately trying to shut down this story about Hunter Biden is because it will snap you out of their bizarro world instantly. | ||
100%. | ||
Joe Biden said, I did not talk to my son about this. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, all of a sudden here's an email. | ||
Apparently that's not true. | ||
And there's evidence upon evidence. | ||
They're desperately trying to contain this and they're losing. | ||
It's a one-way street, the red pill. | ||
It's a one-way ticket, dude. | ||
It's a one-way ticket, and more people, it's happening today. | ||
I got red-pilled in 2007, about, is when I started getting all this information about 9-11, and like, the war in Iraq, and Afghanistan, and all this, like, the war, military-industrial complex, and I tried to go back to sleep. | ||
It was so hard to be there when no one else, I felt so alone in the world, that 2009 came around and Obama got elected, I was like, I can just rest easy, Obama's gonna fix it all. | ||
Three years ago by chaos begins. I tried to stay asleep 2014 | ||
Syria all of a sudden and so I that woke me back up going into Syria was a no-no | ||
No that and then from then on I just I've had to eat my way back into the mate out of the matrix | ||
I saw I saw somebody tweet this which I've been saying for years now | ||
But somebody tweeted it and then somebody big retweeted it said look the only poll you need is that is | ||
Is that no one that voted for Trump isn't, and like fewer people are voting for the Democrats. | ||
That's all you need to know. | ||
Johnny Rotten. | ||
Punk legend. | ||
Voted for Hillary Clinton. | ||
Voting for Trump now. | ||
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Right. | |
I mean, Tim Pool. | ||
Milk Toast fence-sitter. | ||
Didn't vote for Trump in 2016. | ||
Voting for Trump now. | ||
Democrats are deplorable. | ||
I believe it all started. | ||
I'm just kidding. | ||
But we did have a very good conversation. | ||
First time I was on here, we had a conversation first time, and I went back, checked the comments afterwards, and in the comments, there were like thousands of you guys saying, Thank God Jack Murphy's asking Tim the questions we've always wanted him to ask. | ||
Thank God he's saying everything we've been saying in here for years. | ||
And when I saw the, you know, the one with Adam where you were finally, finally came out, I was like, man, I dropped a couple of super chats in there myself. | ||
I was like, hell yeah! | ||
Well, it's, it's, it's the, it's the Middle East stuff. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, I remember earlier in the year when I was like, if he appoints Tulsi to a security advisor, Yang to an economic advisor and gets us out of the war in Iraq, like I'll happily whistle a tune while I go in and push that button down. | ||
It's not gonna... Yang, I think, went the wrong direction. | ||
He went totally establishment, and now I'm kind of disappointed. | ||
Because he was a voice of reason in a lot of ways. | ||
Not that I think UBI is necessarily a good idea. | ||
Tulsi Gabbard, I think, was also desperately trying to bring people together as best she could, and she wasn't strong enough. | ||
She was too strong. | ||
That's why they silenced her. | ||
I mean, she's a progressive. | ||
And she was really trying to speak to conservatives and Trump voters and everything. | ||
And she had some conservative endorsements too. | ||
But I think Trump's got to do something on the war on drugs. | ||
Criminal justice reform was good. | ||
But the Middle Eastern peace deals, dude. | ||
I remember when North Korea happened with Trump, and I was welling up, man. | ||
I was feeling that emotion deep inside me. | ||
Because I don't think people realize what it means that Trump crossed the DMZ into North Korea. | ||
It means the North Korean soldiers try grabbing South Korean soldiers and pulling them over to take them away. | ||
And Trump willingly walked, walked into North Korea with no security at all. | ||
With Kim, they smiled, shook hands, and then they walked back together. | ||
And I was like, oh, yeah, could be the end of the. | ||
And now there's there's murmurs that they're desperately, you know, trying to figure out | ||
a way to end the actual conflict. | ||
I don't know if it can happen. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But when you're speaking in the Middle East, what's happening in the Middle East is fantastic | ||
thing to talk about. | ||
I said, Dave, a boy on a Middle East specialist, and he was telling me that what's happened | ||
in the Middle East is a rise of a new nationalism. | ||
Okay? | ||
Like these Arab states, they're nationalist states. | ||
They want to take care of themselves. | ||
They want to do what's right for them and their people. | ||
And because of that, it's the dismantling of the globalist sort of empire. | ||
Right. | ||
And then in America, that's what we're fighting against to people on the right. | ||
Most people are nationalists or at least anti globalists. | ||
Right. | ||
And we want to just have a sense of taking care of ourselves, doing things that make sense for us in the world today. | ||
And so when you see this happening, Middle East, it's very similar. | ||
And it's going to strengthen Israel's going to strengthen Saudi Arabia. | ||
It's going to strengthen United Arab Emirates. | ||
It's incredible. | ||
I hear you, but it's not even a, it's not even national globalist. | ||
It's authoritarianism. | ||
I have, I have zero problem if we, if we created some kind of one world government or society, so long it was built upon our ideals. | ||
Free speech, constitutional rights, human rights, and then everybody, you know, had those equal rights. | ||
I'd be totally fine with it. | ||
Something like a federation. | ||
Yes. | ||
With a prime directive. | ||
So I'll put it this way. | ||
Imagine there is a one-world government, but like the states, the U.S. | ||
is sovereign in its own internal laws and decision-making, and the international laws govern between countries. | ||
We try doing that. | ||
We do that right now. | ||
We have all these supranational organizations that make rules and things that are non-democratically enacted. | ||
That's what they don't like in the EU. | ||
That's the problem. | ||
The problem is the authoritarian imposition of these rules. | ||
If we had a liberty-based system of international cooperation and agreement, but individuals were guaranteed their rights, what's the problem? | ||
I love you, Tim, but this is part of your transition still, I think. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Don't be totally nice about it. | ||
I mean, at the end of the day, what we've seen is that unless you make the American people the priority of the government that governs the American people, then the American people gets hurt. | ||
I'm not saying not to do that. | ||
I know, but in that circumstance, you're trying to take care of people in this place and that place and be everybody all happy. | ||
I'm not saying that. | ||
But you'd say the Ohio people are in charge. | ||
Look at the laws of the states. | ||
We have a federal government. | ||
The federal government isn't particularly... I mean, it's decently strong, but Trump can't intervene in these states where riots are going on. | ||
That's local rules. | ||
So these states have their own jurisdiction and their own laws, and they can work for the citizens of their states. | ||
They just don't want to. | ||
So I think we can have international cooperation and agreements, but they're not being done right. | ||
They're being done by authoritarians who want to enrich themselves. | ||
You wouldn't even have to have a global president. | ||
I don't think, I think the idea of a president is passe. | ||
We would have like a council of however many, 12 to 30 people or something. | ||
We have the UN. | ||
Artificial intelligences that advise them. | ||
And we would have something like a democratically elected body of people. | ||
These are great ideas. | ||
However, I will tell you that the trends that I've identified and people I talked to identified is that this era of expanding is done. | ||
This era of indiscriminate expansion, which we've seen, is done. | ||
Social media expansion, NATO expansion, World Trade Organization expansion, UN expansion, all that finished. | ||
And what we're seeing now is strategic disconnection. | ||
And we see in that social distancing. | ||
We see that in social media, erecting barriers between yourself and the network. | ||
We're seeing that among nation states and we're seeing among tribes. | ||
So like this expansion era, done. | ||
So here's a question then. | ||
What happens when one country burns through its resources and is desperate need for more? | ||
Well, I guess we'll have to deal with it on a case-by-case basis. | ||
But if you're saying that they're coming after my resources, then we definitely have to defend mine, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
So war breaks out. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I think that one of the arguments that these, like, internationalist organizations have made is that all these free trade agreements will prevent war. | ||
I actually don't think that's true. | ||
I think it causes destabilization. | ||
I think there's a way you can come about making sure it is seriously challenging. | ||
This is a phrase they used to have. | ||
I mean, like I said before, I went to the George Carlin School of Foreign Service and I've studied international affairs and international economics. | ||
And what they call that is the embrace of death. | ||
And what they mean by that is let us embrace you. | ||
We'll trade with you. | ||
We'll give you our culture and stuff. | ||
And then hopefully that'll kill your authoritarian impulses. | ||
It'll kill all of your human rights violations. | ||
It does not work. | ||
Does not work. | ||
We trade with China. | ||
It's not preventing a conflict with China. | ||
In fact, what we've done is completely enriched them. | ||
They are mercantilist nation who are out there trying to collect as much money and assets as possible. | ||
And here we are, just with our deficits, sending them assets. | ||
Probably both, because we've been able to unify with Mexico and Canada in a way that wasn't in the past. | ||
Well, Trump actually fixed that. | ||
I think, you know, language fixed it in a lot of ways, too, being able to communicate. | ||
But I think the neural net, speaking of communication, is actually going to push things towards expansion. | ||
So the Borg. | ||
Yeah, there'll be no war if everyone's working for the collective. | ||
Unless you decide not to work for the collective. | ||
But that we're breaking down into tribes I don't think is actually going to continue. | ||
It does seem like we're kind of imploding or... Tribalizing. | ||
Yeah, we're tribalizing. | ||
But with this neural net and the internet, It just, we're so connected. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
I think what's happened with Twitter and Facebook and YouTube is that people can now express their opinions on grand scales, revealing which tribe they were in or what ideas they held. | ||
Normally the guy sitting in his kitchen would be watching CNN and he'd go, ah, this guy's a moron. | ||
But who would he tell? | ||
Nobody. | ||
So imagine this. | ||
If we all got Neuralink, you know, Elon Musk's brain connection thing, and then clicked in to this like internet where you can just think and see what people are thinking, whatever they decide to put out, it would be Twitter on crack. | ||
It would be like, you'd immediately know everyone you hate. | ||
You'd learn all of these things you hate about them. | ||
Twitter It's like, you could be friends with somebody, you know, 10 years before Twitter, and you'd hang out because of your shared interests. | ||
Dude, you wanna go to the game? | ||
Then one day, Twitter comes out. | ||
Now that person says, you know that can't stand? | ||
Pepperoni pizza. | ||
And you're like, whoa. | ||
Pepperoni pizza's my thing. | ||
And all of a sudden you're like, bro, are you an anti-pepperoni pizza guy? | ||
You're into pepperoni? | ||
unidentified
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Dude! | |
And they start fighting. | ||
Do you think tribalism is the natural order of humanity? | ||
So I got a couple of things to say here. | ||
Game A is the way that we've organized our societies in the beginning. | ||
Small tribes, 30, 150, 200 people. | ||
And we've now extrapolated that societal arrangement to where we are today. | ||
That's why it's not working. | ||
Okay. | ||
And the second thing is, is when you talk about social media being the thing that's going to kill us, basically civil war, whatever the reason is, is because it breaks down social cohesion. | ||
So we use narratives. | ||
The reason why we are in tribes is because we have shared imagined stories, shared imagined orders that we believe in and we belong to. | ||
And I know in your imagination, you, we, we, we agree, right? | ||
And when there's only one person you telling you what that story is, it's very easy to have cohesion. | ||
So when Walter Cronkite is up there just talking to the entire nation at night, everybody's watching him. | ||
He can tell you the story. | ||
We all believe it or maybe not, but at least we have a social cohesion around that story. | ||
We had one to many. | ||
Now we have many to many, right? | ||
We have everybody talking. | ||
We have every story possible, every narrative possible. | ||
And so people are finding the narrative that fits best with them and their physical makeup, chemical makeup, history, genes, culture, whatever, whatever story works with them. | ||
And so now you've got in your imagined order, your brain, you are now in a tribe with a guy that believes that same story. | ||
And so what happens when there's more than one story? | ||
There's a thousand stories. | ||
There's a million stories. | ||
So now we have a thousand or a million imagined orders and therefore now we have a thousand million tribes. | ||
So it's a language control thing. | ||
It's a mental image thing. | ||
It's an imagined order in your brain. | ||
Now it can be any Anyone out there, if you just find the one that feels right, that just fits with you. | ||
And this is why they create like fears of like aliens have come or there's an asteroid, they'll try and scare the human race into believing in one great thing because fear is an easy way to create a narrative. | ||
Rallying everybody around a cause. | ||
Yeah, it would definitely be uniting if we had if we had a common enemy like that. | ||
I was so surprised at the pandemic that people didn't unite more. | ||
There was a brief moment. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
There was a brief moment in March where it almost felt like that, where the pandemic was going to be the thing that like brought us together. | ||
But it turned out there was so much lies and misinformation control and whatever else that it just by April that was done. | ||
I got an idea. | ||
What if we work together to stage a fake alien invasion? | ||
unidentified
|
We can't talk about it in here. | |
We'll put it on TV and then it'll end all war and conflict. | ||
What's his name did that? | ||
The War of the Worlds? | ||
Oh yeah, that didn't go well. | ||
Great radio broadcast from the 30s, I think. | ||
The next show, we just play it live. | ||
Straight. | ||
Totally straight. | ||
8pm. | ||
And we'll have the cameras go out. | ||
Oh, no, what's happening? | ||
Oh, aliens! | ||
unidentified
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Oh, we're being attacked by aliens! | |
Oh, no! | ||
Oh, Jack! | ||
Oh, they're abducting him! | ||
I mean, the crazy thing is there could be aliens and we could be in trouble. | ||
So we should probably live like that. | ||
There could be an asteroid that could smash into Earth and destroy it if we're not aware of it. | ||
So we should live like that. | ||
Yeah, but your solution to the asteroid problem is a giant microwave cannon. | ||
I'm talking infrared lasers. | ||
You're wrong. | ||
You have no idea what you're talking about. | ||
You spray water into the atmosphere as a sphere around the Earth and then charge it with an electrical current so it deflects the asteroid. | ||
No, because the energy would still transfer into the particles and then push Earth out of its orbit. | ||
You're so dumb! | ||
You gotta move it faster, Tim! | ||
unidentified
|
Lydia, help me. | |
Jack, can you believe this or- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- this- These moisturists are dangerous. | ||
Do not link to the moisturists. | ||
Delete every URL. | ||
I'm anti-moisturists. | ||
I'm starting a new group. | ||
You know, I heard moisturists, Nazis. | ||
Definitely. | ||
Do you know what I was going to do? | ||
unidentified
|
You know who else wanted to put a military base on the moon? | |
Nazis. | ||
Nazis. | ||
You know that okay symbol that people think is white supremacy? | ||
I'm not going to make it right now, but if you think about it, it's a W. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh my gosh! | |
You have just offendedly proved Ian... You just called me out. | ||
Moisturists. | ||
No, no, listen. | ||
You guys ever watch The Fairly OddParents? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Negative. | ||
They had one of the best episodes. | ||
Write this down. | ||
Listen. | ||
No, listen. | ||
I am going to educate you on important cartoons. | ||
We got this. | ||
The Fairly OddParents is about Timmy Turner who has two fairies who grant him wishes. | ||
So he wants a world where everyone's the same because he doesn't want to be made fun of anymore. | ||
So everybody turns into a blob. | ||
And somehow they still find a way to form tribes and insult each other when they have no characteristics. | ||
That's actually a pretty good episode for a kids show. | ||
Interesting. | ||
It is the natural state of affairs to have affinity groups, to have people that you like more than other people and people that you're committed to working with and that you believe the same thing. | ||
It's common. | ||
Is that because in our historical DNA is because it protected us from? | ||
It is what actually helped us. | ||
If you read Sapiens, which is not entirely the best book in the world, but this is a very key point. | ||
It is what has allowed us to evolve to this point is our ability to organize around a shared imagined order. | ||
Something that's in our brains. | ||
So it's not only just in our history, it's actually fundamental to our evolution to where we are to this point today. | ||
There's no getting rid of it. | ||
The myth, they call it the myth. | ||
unidentified
|
Of what? | |
Whatever you believe is the shared ideal, they call it a myth. | ||
So like religion or mathematics. | ||
Or the wage gap. | ||
Yes, or the wage gap. | ||
By the way, I write a lot about shared imagined orders and the fundamental myths of the left in my book, Democrats are Deplorable, on Amazon. | ||
Have you done a book on tape with that? | ||
I have, as a matter of fact. | ||
And my Audible release is going to be as soon as they approve it. | ||
It's been uploaded. | ||
Audiobook is forthcoming any minute. | ||
Check my Twitter feed, JackMurphyLive. | ||
Oh, cool. | ||
Go subscribe to my YouTube page. | ||
You guys are watching this on YouTube, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Oh, my God. | ||
Go subscribe. | ||
JackMurphyLive. | ||
We're going live tomorrow at 11 a.m. | ||
with John Robb. | ||
I did not actually. | ||
I want to show you this meme I saw earlier that made me laugh. | ||
So it's a busty woman saying sexual preference is offensive and outdated and then this scraggly old depressed looking thing saying health care please. | ||
You have to explain this meme to me. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
I didn't understand it when I first saw it. | ||
You don't understand this meme? | ||
Oh, uh, so Amy Coney Barrett said that she would never discriminate against someone based on their sexual preference. | ||
And all of a sudden the media erupted saying, how dare you say sexual preference! | ||
That's offensive! | ||
Implying it's a choice. | ||
And like, me? | ||
I've asked a bunch of my friends, did you know this? | ||
They said no, I had no idea. | ||
It's because it's not true! | ||
So anyway, this meme is pointing out that the media is having a collective fit over the fact that Amy Coney Barrett said something totally irrelevant. | ||
And all anybody is asking for is a conversation on healthcare. | ||
And it's like a leftist meme, okay? | ||
Where they're like, we want Medicare for all, we want healthcare. | ||
But I'm like, we're not even starting there. | ||
You said healthcare? | ||
I agree. | ||
We need to figure out healthcare. | ||
And they're too busy asking Amy Coney Barrett about her stupid words. | ||
That's what the media is giving us. | ||
Well, you want to know what's even scarier about that is the definition of preference. | ||
According to Webster, last week involved sexual preference. | ||
And then they changed it after that question to say, this is offensive. | ||
You can't use it anymore. | ||
unidentified
|
Wait. | |
So if I prefer a silver computer to a green computer that first of all, I'm not choosing. | ||
Well, I'm not choosing to prefer that. | ||
Right. | ||
I just like the silver one. | ||
But you can be gender fluid and non-binary. | ||
Well, but those individuals are different. | ||
Jack, let me tell you something. | ||
Tell me, Tim. | ||
You know the appropriate phrases? | ||
No, tell me. | ||
Sexual orientation. | ||
There you go. | ||
And do you know why that's racist? | ||
unidentified
|
Because, I don't know, let me think. | |
The Asians. | ||
You see my tweet? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
I did. | ||
Orientation, the word, hold on, hold on. | ||
The word orientation, so when I heard someone told me this, like this is really interesting. | ||
Somebody said that sexual preference is offensive, so I tweeted this person like, what's the | ||
appropriate way to say it? | ||
They said sexual orientation. | ||
I immediately saw orient and I was like, I wonder what the root of this word is. | ||
So I google-searched orientation, and it originated in the 19th century from the word orient, meaning eastern Asian countries. | ||
Orient is an extremely offensive term for Asian nations. | ||
And I google-searched orient is racist and found this big thing breaking down like old art from Europe, old plays, and how they depicted the orient and oriental people. | ||
And it's offensive because it was derogatory stereotypes about the meek and pathetic Asians. | ||
And so they've replaced a word preference, which doesn't mean choice. | ||
It doesn't mean choice at all. | ||
And they've chosen now a word rooted in an offensive slur because orientation is derived from orient. | ||
Now here's the best part. | ||
The word orient is just Latin for from the east, whereas occident is from the west. | ||
And that's where the phrase came from. | ||
So even orient isn't really offensive, it just literally was a Latin phrase meaning from the east. | ||
My sexual occidentalism. | ||
So we were having some fun the other day pointing out the absurdity and all this media crap | ||
on my Twitter feed. | ||
And when 88 of Amy Comey Barrett's colleagues from University of Notre Dame wrote a letter | ||
saying that she shouldn't be like, you know, going to the Supreme Court. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, so 88. | |
Why 88? | ||
So, you know, we did like, come on, 88. | ||
This is obviously 1488. | ||
This is obviously a dog whistle, which is exactly what people on the left would say about somebody on the right. | ||
If they did anything that involved the number 88, anything that involved the number 14, especially if you put them together. | ||
Dude, there was, there was a guy who like is one of these researchers against white supremacy. | ||
And he tweeted something like, I have 14,880 followers. | ||
I need someone to unfollow me right now. | ||
Something like that. | ||
unidentified
|
And I was like, you're insane. | |
I was like, tons of people unfollowed. | ||
I'm like, good, unfollow me. | ||
Too many people. | ||
Too many people. | ||
Just one. | ||
Or follow me. | ||
How do you feel about Amy Coney Barrett? | ||
How do I feel about ACB? | ||
I don't know too much about her, to be honest. | ||
I know that she's a working mom that has raised a family and adopted some kids. | ||
And frankly, I'm just not a Supreme Court specialist by any means. | ||
I will say personally that Obergefell, the gay marriage decision, freed me up to become a Trump voter or a Republican. | ||
I'm a strong advocate for gay marriage. | ||
I believe gay people should get married just like the rest of us dummies. | ||
And if you want to get divorced, get me divorced too. | ||
But like, cause I'm a civil libertarian, like I'm not a libertarian, but you know, like people should be able to do whatever they want to do, right? | ||
More or less. | ||
So I believe they should be able to get married. | ||
So if her, if her, uh, you know, a confirmation on the Supreme court brings that back into question, I'll be very disappointed. | ||
It won't. | ||
I mean, look, I'm not going to pretend to be a Supreme Court specialist or a lawyer at all. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But she made reference to something called stare decisis, let the decision stand. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And apparently, as I was told when we did a show, when she was when, like, we all assume she's going to be confirmed. | ||
The idea is that her position is if it's already been ruled upon, we go from there. | ||
Beautiful. | ||
You know, so we're not going to go back. | ||
unidentified
|
Good. | |
And that's what Trump said about it, too. | ||
And he was being running. | ||
He was like, I consider it settled law. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Which is great, which is why I was able You know, and then hopefully we'll get some cannabis deregulation on there. | ||
And then all of a sudden, any reason that I had to be a Democrat would be vaporized at that point. | ||
No pun intended. | ||
Oh yeah, that's what I'm saying. | ||
Well, let's take some super chats. | ||
If you haven't already, you must smash the like button. | ||
Do it for me. | ||
And share the show if you do think it's good. | ||
It helps spread the word and all that. | ||
But smash that like button. | ||
Subscribe. | ||
And we got this good question here from Ian Hall. | ||
He says, gotta ask, WTF is Ian wearing? | ||
Is he embracing his internal barbarian princess? | ||
Yes, first of all. | ||
First of all, yes. | ||
And this is the top of a pajama that I was gifted by an old girlfriend of mine. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
Shout out to Amy. | ||
Thanks. | ||
I love it. | ||
It's a Starfleet captain's uniform. | ||
Yes, the Starfleet. | ||
So the red shirt is the officers on the Starship. | ||
Commanders on the Enterprise. | ||
No, just command. | ||
Any of the command crew. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Um, so you'll see like, you know, forward gunnery. | ||
I don't know who, who would do it, but Geordi, you know, Captain Picard. | ||
No, Geordi's an engineer. | ||
Oh, you're right. | ||
Geordi has yellow. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Thanks Tim. | ||
Bunch of nerds. | ||
I think Tim should answer this question. | ||
This is a, this is a bandana that I got at Burning Man. | ||
It was on the ground, I found, and I've carried it around ever since. | ||
Oh, very good. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Burning Man's so great. | ||
I love how they film Quiznos commercials there. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Burning Man went full corporate. | ||
Well, maybe not full, but I went in 2008 when it was cool. | ||
Still cool. | ||
I would love to go to Burning Man again. | ||
I don't think they're doing that right now, are they? | ||
Oh, jeez, you're right. | ||
She doesn't wonder why we got some more virus lives says the radical left is looking like a comedy skit right about | ||
now Yeah, that's not my right. So a lot of people are asking so | ||
I'm just gonna for everyone asking I'm gonna I'm gonna do this in one super chat. They're | ||
asking about the seal team 6 CI whistleblower thing Have you guys heard about this? I don't know anything about | ||
it either I've seen some posts about it. | ||
Someone claiming that SEAL Team Six was killed by the Obama administration or something. | ||
unidentified
|
Six? | |
The whole team? | ||
I have no idea what it is. | ||
Six is the guys that took out Osama Bin Laden, right? | ||
Wasn't that who it was? | ||
I think so, yeah. | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
You know, I gotta be honest, I don't know what it is. | ||
I didn't see it pop up anything right now. | ||
DJ Zeno says, Ian, I'm smoking weed right now. | ||
Trust me, you're wrong. | ||
Love you, bro. | ||
Oh, so it is a crack pipe. | ||
Dude, the picture of him when it's hanging out of his mouth, I've never passed out with a pipe in my mouth, so it probably was crack. | ||
Aren't, like, when you're smoking weed out of a bowl, a glass bowl, you just put it up to your lips and then take, you don't put it in your mouth. | ||
No, not really, no. | ||
Yeah, a crack pipe, however, you know. | ||
Oh, you put it in your mouth? | ||
I'm assuming it's different. | ||
I'm just saying it's different, right? | ||
He's holding it in his mouth. | ||
Yeah, it looks like it. | ||
It's such a weird picture. | ||
Look up a picture of him, by the way, if you can find it. | ||
It's so weird. | ||
Don't tweet it. | ||
Stacey Ellis says, anyone else caught messed up on crack in the army would have gotten a dishonorable discharge. | ||
Uh-huh. | ||
I thought that was what he got from the Navy. | ||
Everyone is saying seal team six. I think big must have Someone mentions Kaylee McEnany's, you know got shut down. | ||
We got a big ol super chat. Whoa, here we go. What's this? | ||
Peter Bemis says Tim Please make a watchable video summarizing the media lies | ||
that are influencing the election and the sources that debunk them | ||
Your voice is a way maybe the only way that liberals who have been tricked by the establishment media can be woken | ||
up before the election You know the Democrats are about to instill a real 1984 and you can stop it. | ||
I think I've probably got like 12 videos about that. | ||
Because there's no one two-hour long documentary if you want to like shatter the facade or something. | ||
It's not a bad idea though. | ||
Make a playlist or something. | ||
Or a two-hour documentary. | ||
Or a playlist might be better. | ||
Oh, what is this? | ||
Did you see the latest Project Veritas video of Instagram censoring his tag? | ||
No, it's always something with these guys. | ||
unidentified
|
Geez. | |
Interesting. | ||
They hate Project Veritas. | ||
I know, they really do. | ||
Oh, yeah, for sure. | ||
Oh, I shouldn't say anything. | ||
I shouldn't say anything. | ||
I've revealed too much. | ||
Let it go. | ||
Let it go. | ||
Here we go. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Baelian says, Tim, you should watch the specials Glenn backed in on Ukraine. | ||
He backs everything up that he says with actual State Department documents. | ||
It's pretty eye opening. | ||
Interesting. | ||
He's pretty thorough. | ||
I like him. | ||
Yeah. | ||
James Nelson says Biden went to the Ukraine round time of emails to pressure the Ukraine government to stop buying natural gas from Russia and instead explore their domestic sources. | ||
Guess which company is the number one supplier of Ukrainian natural gas? | ||
I was gonna say, that sounds pretty good. | ||
Do you guys know why, one of the likely reasons, you know, we got involved in Syria? | ||
The Qatar-Turkey pipeline. | ||
Yeah, so, Qatar, we wanted a natural gas pipeline to go up into Europe to offset the Gazprom monopoly, so that we could, you know, Russia was jacking up the prices. | ||
And so, Syria said, our ally Russia doesn't want us to do this, so we won't do it. | ||
And then what was going to happen was, I guess, Iran was going to tap into the same natural gas field and then send it through Iraq, through Syria into Europe to double the power of the monopoly. | ||
And then conveniently for America, you know, a bunch of revolutionaries just happened to appear in Syria and, you know, the country started crumbling. | ||
And then, you know, we of course sided against the existing government because, you know, we were not allied with them. | ||
And that was reported by The Guardian. | ||
So, I don't like this war stuff they're doing, you know? | ||
It's all about money, power, resources. | ||
A lot more people saying Steal Team 6. | ||
Spice. | ||
Casetto says, Tim, if you were to be removed from YouTube, where else would we be able to find you? | ||
Where else would you stream? | ||
I would probably be down by the stream fishing, hanging out with the dog and just staring at the sky, kicking back and ignoring everything if that happened. | ||
Wait, there's a dog? | ||
No, it's a cat. | ||
If I get banned from these platforms, I'm just going to get a dog, take my van, go down by the river and just go fishing. | ||
That's it. | ||
You know, everything's going to hell in a handbasket and I'll just go fishing. | ||
That's all I need. | ||
Ian Hall says, to the Navy SEAL, please arrest the idiot across from you for false rank insignia. | ||
He's talking to me! | ||
unidentified
|
He's talking to me! | |
I am not a commander in the Federation. | ||
unidentified
|
This is a costume. | |
We all know Ian could never in no hellish reality be a Starfleet captain. | ||
General T. Poole, seriously, the people have spoken. | ||
Replace Soy Judas with a cat high off his face on the nip. | ||
Do you want to be replaced by Betsy? | ||
Tim wanted to read that super chat. | ||
He was like, yeah, I got it now. | ||
It's a big one. | ||
We'll serve on the Enterprise with you. | ||
We'll put Betsy on the table and give her some nip and just have her freak out. | ||
Her ears turn bright red and her eyes go crazy. | ||
It's all twitchy. | ||
unidentified
|
And then she passes out with a pipe in her mouth. | |
Isn't it really funny that we give our cats drugs and then laugh about it? | ||
We're like giving them drugs and they're freaking out. | ||
They're like tripping in front of us or whatever. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know what catnip does to cats, but it makes them freak out for sure. | |
Here we go. | ||
Adrianne Curry says, Adrianne Curry, Columbus Day was given to Italians as an apology for racism massive lynching. | ||
Now the government doesn't care about Italians, so gave the holiday to totally different people. | ||
It's just kidding holiday apology. | ||
Yeah, wow. | ||
Blue Satoshi says, look up In Defense of Columbus on YouTube. | ||
Pretty informative vid. | ||
Interesting. | ||
Oh. | ||
And then someone says the same thing. | ||
Ian, check out In Defense of Columbus and Exaggerated Evil. | ||
Wow, I wonder if he's not as bad as I was led to believe. | ||
Yeah, you gotta look this video up. | ||
Propaganda. | ||
unidentified
|
I heard he was like a psycho, like a cruel, horrible. | |
I have heard good things about him. | ||
And his brothers just like were marauders, but I should look into it. | ||
Yeah, man. | ||
Check it out. | ||
We have, uh, from Trip Ives says, Tim and company, why aren't we talking about the released video and audio files from CIA whistleblower proving HRC Obama and Biden assassinated SEAL Team 6? | ||
I didn't know. | ||
I didn't know much about it. | ||
I had seen like some posts about it and I didn't, I just, I don't know. | ||
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. | ||
confirmed that's that's what's the first question I don't know right that Obama and Hillary had our | ||
own Navy SEAL team assassinated that's what they're saying I'm gonna need just a little bit | ||
more well to be to be fair then you know some Google searching is warranted at least yeah let | ||
me that's what I always say about everything I don't care if you tell me the moon is made of cheese | ||
I'll Google search it. | ||
Like, isn't that the bare minimum you can do for any story? | ||
Google search the moon. | ||
It is not made of cheese. | ||
Okay, that was ridiculous. | ||
So who wrote the books? | ||
Who wrote the books? | ||
The guy. | ||
He said I was there. | ||
It was the guy. | ||
I was the trigger man. | ||
Didn't he write a book? | ||
Which one? | ||
About the moon? | ||
One of the Navy guys. | ||
No. | ||
He did write a book, yeah. | ||
He's on Twitter. | ||
Right. | ||
That's weird. | ||
Yeah. | ||
The guy who killed Osama is on Twitter. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I follow him. | ||
He got kicked off a plane recently. | ||
Sure did. | ||
Wasn't he SEAL Team 6? | ||
Why don't we just at him real quick? | ||
I think I heard a story. | ||
Is this real? | ||
I heard a story that they, they kicked the door in and shot Osama in his bed. | ||
Then I heard a story that they, they disposed of Osama's body at sea, which was not, uh, along the terms of what they, they would have wanted. | ||
So it was like an insult, but they, then I heard they hid that. | ||
It's, I heard a lot, a couple of different. | ||
Crackbot says pacifism is a shifty doctrine under which a man accepts the benefits of the social group without being willing to pay and claims a halo for his dishonesty. | ||
Robert Heinlein. | ||
Interesting. | ||
He wrote Starship Troopers. | ||
Taylor Cook says, And John Adams defended the Redcoats who shot colonists in the Boston Massacre to show we are a people of laws demanding respect and dignity. | ||
unidentified
|
Sure did. | |
Wow. | ||
I like that story. | ||
I just learned that recently. | ||
That is a bold, bold meme. | ||
Ian Hall says, Hey Jack, Ian is secretly reciting Boots by Red Yard Kipling. | ||
Lydia, make sure you get Jack's reaction. | ||
Were you? | ||
No! | ||
What was Boots? | ||
I've never read it before. | ||
That's Jack's reaction. | ||
I don't know what kind of deadpan here. | ||
I looked that up. | ||
Please whisper it in my ear. | ||
Yeah, so I got nothing right now. | ||
Sean Carter says, almost my entire town, small 3,000 people, held a few meetings over the last few weeks about closing the town off in case of and actively preparing for civil war. | ||
Crap is getting real. | ||
What town is that? | ||
I'm very curious, Sean Carter. | ||
Please tell us. | ||
Spike Lee said it, and everybody got mad at me because I said Spike Lee said it. | ||
I was like, hey guys, Spike Lee said Civil War is coming, and they were like, Tim, stop talking about it. | ||
And I'm like, okay, I guess. | ||
Don't talk about Spike Lee. | ||
Don't talk about Civil War. | ||
Yeah, don't talk about Civil War. | ||
But I think your definition of Civil War is interesting because it's not going to be like 1865. | ||
No, I've been saying that. | ||
It's fourth and fifth generational warfare for a long time. | ||
There you go. | ||
It could be a cyber war. | ||
I think you said that last time you were on that we're kind of in it, but we don't realize we're in an information war. | ||
I mean, info wars. | ||
So listen, this is the era in time that's called post-Westphalian, right? | ||
The Treaty of Westphalia is what kicked off the era of nation states. | ||
Now, people's loyalties are not towards nation states, but to ideas, causes, and gangs. | ||
Corporations, which is an idea. | ||
A gang is a gang. | ||
Definitely a gang. | ||
And that's where people's allegiances are today, right? | ||
And so those are the tribes that are forming around causes, ideas, and gangs. | ||
And we're already all in the midst of it. | ||
Yep. | ||
Let's see what we got this one. | ||
Brewmaster Monk says, Joe Biden can't lead his son away from degeneracy. | ||
How is he supposed to lead the country? | ||
I disagree with that. | ||
I've known plenty of fine men who have had children who have had drug addiction problems. | ||
It is a health issue. | ||
It is a public health crisis. | ||
I don't judge a man by the way someone is stricken by disease and sort of this really sad state of affairs. | ||
Now, did Biden create an environment in which the guy didn't really have to work and he got rich and he got flown around the country and used his influence and whatever? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
But I'm not going to crap on a guy because one of his kids has got a disease that could kill him. | ||
We got a super chat here from Gonzalo. | ||
Sorry, super chatter. | ||
Gonzalo Arado says from Chile. | ||
Question is, have any of you seen a link between the riots happening in the U.S. | ||
and the riots happening in Chile? | ||
Here it begins. | ||
October 18th, 19. | ||
Very well planned. | ||
Not that I'm aware of. | ||
Wow. | ||
It got really bad in Santiago. | ||
I was in Chile until 2019, like I left right before. | ||
You lived in Chile? | ||
I lived there for like two months in Santiago. | ||
We were looking at building a graphene factory to start making it down there because we knew a guy that wanted to invest. | ||
But it ended in 2019, just really violent Santiago protests kicked off. | ||
But I never saw any correlation. | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
We have this, uh, this here super chat. | ||
Wait, did I just miss it? | ||
Oh, here we go. | ||
One Grilled Cheese Sandwich says, I believe that someday we can achieve Gene Roddenberry's dream of a unified Earth. | ||
It can happen someday in the far future. | ||
It cannot be forced on us by those that think they are our betters. | ||
Maybe. | ||
But I'll tell you this. | ||
If you got a group of people that are like, everyone should freely agree to join and have these rights and be free, do you think that will win? | ||
Or do you think the 1.4 billion people who are essentially slaves to a massive authoritarian regime who weld their doors shut, who's gonna win? | ||
The first people. | ||
unidentified
|
Why? | |
Because information can't be stopped. | ||
Maybe. | ||
Maybe what happens is that when, you know, the Chinese are desperately trying to stop the social media in their country, because if people realize what freedom is, they're immediately going to revolt and turn against them. | ||
However, when it comes to major national natural disasters and war and everything, you know, China just welds people's doors shut and just discards the individual and strengthens the collective. | ||
So they could respond to COVID like that. | ||
Tim, you're saying that this super global entity would reflect American values. | ||
I'm not saying that, someone's saying that. | ||
I know, but in our conversation earlier. | ||
Oh, if we had constitutional rights as we know them and American values, but it was the entire planet, that's the Star Trek future. | ||
I know, but bro, like that's what we have here in America and it's not working now. | ||
Why would it work around the world? | ||
I'm not saying it is. | ||
I think it is working, but this is just a natural part of the evolution of it functioning. | ||
Maybe we need a Starship Troopers kind of thing, you know? | ||
Service Guaranteed Citizenship. | ||
We talk about that quite a bit. | ||
Very contentious, apparently. | ||
You're familiar with it, right? | ||
I am familiar, but I'm not an expert on the matter. | ||
Basically, it was just like anybody could demand something to do for the society. | ||
It wasn't necessarily military or whatever. | ||
We've talked about it quite a bit because a lot of people are big fans of Starship. | ||
But it was the idea that in order to vote, among other things, you had to prove you were willing to sacrifice for the greater community. | ||
You can't just come in and say, I'm going to vote for something ridiculous and then hurt everybody or something, you know? | ||
Got it. | ||
Kind of like what we have now here, where you can just vote for something ridiculous. | ||
You can vote to take away civil rights and affirmative action in California. | ||
You can vote on that. | ||
You can vote to make it so people who don't live here can vote. | ||
No joke. | ||
There are cities where they've enacted laws where non-citizens are allowed to vote. | ||
I like the idea of service, but we'd have to extrapolate service, like learning how to make graphene using lasers, making YouTube videos, exposing your deep secrets. | ||
That's a form of service to humanity. | ||
unidentified
|
Maybe. | |
Here we go. | ||
Beam me up. | ||
Fred Crane says, Ian is a scary person. | ||
No, I want to be independent, not part of the zombie hive mind. | ||
What, do you think the Federation of Star Trek is a zombie hive mind? | ||
No, the Federation is like a liberalist. | ||
Oh, the Neuralink. | ||
Neuralink is scary, man. | ||
I'm with you there. | ||
Yeah, I don't want any of that. | ||
I just see it as like an unstoppable reality, so that's why I'm kind of coming to terms with it. | ||
Join the Borg, baby! | ||
With humor. | ||
Benjamin Rhodes says, End the war on drugs, legalize, decriminalize, instantaneously defund criminal organizations. | ||
It has put money in the pockets of criminals willing to do violent things. | ||
Has there been any more destructive action in modern USA history? | ||
It's pretty bad. | ||
Civil rights issue, black racism issue, crime, mafia, liberties, personal choice. | ||
It's anti-American, the drug war. | ||
Dude, Nixon made it just to stop the civil rights movement to the Black Panthers and the hippies in the 70s. | ||
It's so ridiculous. | ||
It's this corrupt guy, president, that resigned, basically, put this into effect. | ||
Yeah, we should repeal this stupid thing. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Trump needs to just come on, do it. | ||
I wish he would. | ||
I wish he would. | ||
And part of my research for Democrats are deplorable. | ||
I asked one of the questions was, do you think that President Trump should decriminalize marijuana? | ||
And it was like 70, 30 percent. | ||
Wow. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Here we go. | ||
Dave Slattery says, Tim, when will you do a sit down with Ben Shapiro? | ||
I was just thinking about that. | ||
Could you imagine, because we both talk so fast, people would be like, how do I slow this down? | ||
It would be like a five hour podcast in an hour. | ||
Yeah. | ||
People would listen to it at 1.25 speed too. | ||
And it would just be like evolution. | ||
It's like sitting in a chair and seeing like space zoom. | ||
unidentified
|
It's so many, so many ideas in the marketplace, it's expanding my mind too quickly. | |
It's blowing up. | ||
It would be like in Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, when the lady gets the aliens and she's like, I want to know everything! | ||
And then she's like, ahh! | ||
And then she explodes or whatever. | ||
unidentified
|
That's too much! | |
It's too much! | ||
When people listen to podcasts on extra speed, is it like in the old days when you sped up the record and the pitch of the voice goes up? | ||
Or is it, oh really, the pitch does go up? | ||
Well, there's ways they can do it now with pitch correcting. | ||
So I don't know, not always. | ||
So the words just come out more quickly. | ||
unidentified
|
It'd be really funny. | |
Just like that. | ||
Yeah, I can do with him. | ||
unidentified
|
And then you could slow it down. | |
And it sounds like a bunch of really old rugged men. | ||
Yes. | ||
We don't sound like that. | ||
Well, I certainly don't sound like that. | ||
unidentified
|
You do. | |
Yeah. | ||
DC says to Jack and Tim, I'm just curious your stance on personal responsibility and accountability and the role it plays in our culture going forward. | ||
Well, personal personal accountability is sort of the bedrock essence of the values that I hold important and we need to have be as part of our culture and the nation that I live in. | ||
So I think it's important and I wish people would have more of it. | ||
Too many people don't believe in personal responsibility. | ||
Nope. | ||
Like, you can be a liberal and be left-leaning and agree with, like, social policy and things like this and, like, taxes and all that and still believe in personal responsibility. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like, the way I always viewed welfare systems and food benefits was like, we want to make sure we can get you to a point of self-sustainability. | ||
We don't want you permanently just stuck here where you're getting money from the taxpayer. | ||
And we don't want to just kick you to the curb. | ||
So it's all about giving you the tools you need to become responsible for yourself, teaching people to fish, not just handing out fish. | ||
I remember when the welfare to work programs were like brought in, people said they were so racist. | ||
And now you just, as you asked this question, we talked about personal, personal accountability. | ||
I was just remembering being on the streets in DC during the riots. | ||
And I remember this one guy just kept yelling into his megaphone over and over and over again. | ||
All black suffering is a result of systems of white oppression. | ||
Okay. | ||
All black suffering. | ||
So maybe there is some, some suffering there that's caused by bad things. | ||
But like, if your perspective is that there's no personal accountability, then there's really no reason to do anything with your life whatsoever. | ||
You know what? | ||
Hold on. | ||
I think we did this before. | ||
Can we get a show of hands of how many people want to vote to take all of Jack's money right now? | ||
unidentified
|
And give it to whom? We'll split it amongst ourselves. Ian says yes. It's three to one. | |
Give us your wallet. Hand it over. Oh man. I think there are important things you can do for kids | ||
to teach them about government taxes and that's one of them. | ||
If you got a couple kids, play this game. | ||
Or even just like one or two and you can bring in your wife or your friends or whatever. | ||
And then give them something they like. | ||
Like maybe they got that new, you know, what's that new Pokemon game that just came out? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I haven't played Pokemon in 20, 30 years. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Is it, I don't know. | ||
I don't know the name of it. | ||
It came out on the Switch and it's like, I don't know the name of it. | ||
But let's say this kid finally got their Switch. | ||
It's like, you bring the kid in and say, we're all gonna vote on who gets to play the game now. | ||
All in favor of taking the game away from, you know, your kid. | ||
They're gonna be like, what, it's mine? | ||
I'm like, well, we voted! | ||
So it's not fair that only you get to have it, you gotta share the wealth, because we don't have a Switch. | ||
And I read this really funny post that said what you do is, you tell your kid, you'll give him 10 bucks to mow the lawn or whatever, and then after they do, you pull out 10 singles and go, okay, let's see, so here's your pay, and then I'll take one for Medicaid, one for, you know, the dishes, one for this, and your total net pay comes out to, you know, $6.73. | ||
And they're gonna be like, but you said I get $10. | ||
Yeah, before taxes. | ||
Right. | ||
Taking the rest. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I use Halloween candy as a way to do that. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So for Halloween, not only do I do the dad tax, but then I sort them by colors just to give them a lesson on intersectionality. | ||
All the yellow ones over here, all the red ones over here, and do not mix them, understand? | ||
But you know what you need to do? | ||
This Halloween, you should get a really, really, like a friend of yours who's really big and fat, and have him just sit in a chair, just like, really, and then be like, well, doesn't he get candy? | ||
And they're gonna be like, but he didn't go out and trick-or-treat! | ||
But, well, he's too, he, it hurts his knees. | ||
So we're going to take, you know, a quarter of your candy, a quarter of your candy, and a quarter of yours, and we're going to give it to him. | ||
And he's having to sit there just looking him in the eyes and eating it. | ||
Good lesson. | ||
I had a friend growing up when I was really little and, um, his mom made us play with his younger brother who was, and we hated his younger brother for it. | ||
unidentified
|
Just didn't, like, just, that was another, another... Social communism. | |
Yeah, man. | ||
It's not fair. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Isaac Hillstrom says, can I plug a snapchat channel on a maxed out super chat? | ||
It's completely irrelevant. | ||
What's the max on a super chat? | ||
For sure, I guess. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Trip Ives says, here you go. | ||
Search YouTube for breaking whistleblower drops hard evidence Biden, Obama, Hillary executed SEAL Team 6. | ||
Audio proof. | ||
I think stories like this... | ||
Okay, so this is actually, I was waiting for a chance to say this. | ||
So remember we were talking about Robert O'Neill, the SEAL Team 6 guy who's on Twitter causing trouble on planes, who got kicked off? | ||
So apparently he is in on this, or he's talking about this. | ||
He goes, very brave men said goodbye to their kids to kill Osama bin Laden. | ||
We were given the order by President Obama. | ||
It was not a body double that they killed. | ||
Thank you, Mr. President. | ||
Happy birthday at U.S. | ||
Navy. | ||
He goes on to say, I know who I killed, homie, every time. | ||
And then he later joked- Wait, wait, wait, you said he was in on it. | ||
So he's talking about it. | ||
So you're saying he's rejecting it? | ||
Yeah, he is rejecting it. | ||
I thought you were saying that he was saying it's happening. | ||
He's on it. | ||
He's on top of it. | ||
Yeah, he's speaking about it. | ||
So we were talking about him earlier, and he's tweeting about it directly. | ||
He's 100% saying, shoot, I just found out that I killed Osama Bin Johnson, drinks are on me, I guess, and added, I know who I killed, homie, every time. | ||
So this has happened before, and he's like, nah, this is not what happened. | ||
Right. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Doop de doop de doop. | ||
Red Dragon says white pill for Lydia. | ||
That dem in Weld County is only able to hold a position in the county party because there are basically no dems in Weld. | ||
That is really interesting. | ||
unidentified
|
That's interesting. | |
Yeah. | ||
And he's their voice, huh? | ||
He is who they who is speaking out in Weld County in this farming county. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
I don't I still don't like that at all. | ||
I wonder if James even recognized that. | ||
Veritas realized that like, it's kind of crazy that this small town bumpkinville of all the Democrats they got, they got a fringe, crazy, violent leftist. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's weird. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Maybe he was the only one who had passion. | ||
Let's not be redundant now. | ||
Polaris Pixis says, I tend to think of the right along the lines of the clans of Scotland. | ||
We can't ever seem to unite. | ||
We need to come together and get organized. | ||
Also Cryptkeeper Pelosi needs to retire. | ||
Can't stand her. | ||
By the way, we won the election 2016. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
There you go. | |
Did you see Nancy Pelosi flipping out at Wolf Blitzer? | ||
I did. | ||
That was hilarious. | ||
I just skipped through it. | ||
Wolf is like, your colleagues are calling for you to approve the stimulus because children are going hungry. | ||
unidentified
|
And she's like, well, you don't know what you're talking about. | |
You've been elected to represent these people you don't know. | ||
And she was smiling. | ||
Oh my gosh, it is Halloween time. | ||
My goodness. | ||
That proved to me, or I should say in my opinion, seeing that is evidence that she hates Trump more than she cares about anybody else. | ||
She just wants, she would make every American suffer crying in the streets because she hates Trump. | ||
That is lunacy. | ||
You know, regarding the clans of Scotland not being able to unify, and the right not being able to unify, it's kind of like, sometimes there's this argument about good versus evil, and evil seems to have the upper hand in the fight, because evil is a- they'll force everything to come together to make their evil empire, whereas the good people are individualists, they don't force each other to do these things. | ||
Right. | ||
So it's more challenging for them to find a reason to unify, if not against. | ||
It's the same reason why you always get a bunch of psychos as president. | ||
I think the easiest way to put it is... The modern left has no empathy. | ||
They claim to be the arbiters of it, and the ones bringing it to all the poor people who just want healthcare, but the reality is they don't know, they don't understand how you feel, they don't care how you feel. | ||
Shut your mouth. | ||
Exactly. | ||
I'm right, I know what's best for you. | ||
And then you ask them a simple question about anything outside of their worldview, and they're gonna be like, huh? | ||
Dude, you see those videos where they're like, stop graffitying my house. | ||
They're like, I'm doing this for you. | ||
And they're like, yeah, white ladies. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
You could take any jargon from any subculture and be like, oh, OK, if you're going to help me, then here's my job. | ||
Here's what I do. | ||
And they're like, I don't know what that is. | ||
Shut up. | ||
Right. | ||
Like, all I know is we should we should have the government pay for health care. | ||
And it's like the government doesn't just pay. | ||
I was actually talking to somebody about universal health care. | ||
And I said, like, The big challenge is, look, first of all, I'd love a functioning universal healthcare system. | ||
Like, if we could implement it. | ||
If we could. | ||
The problem is, for one, 20% of our economy is built upon the infrastructure of healthcare. | ||
You can't just flick a switch. | ||
Even Bernie Sanders said it's like 2 to 4 million jobs or something would be gone overnight if we did this. | ||
So let's figure out a way to get to, you know, improving our healthcare system for sure. | ||
But I was actually told by one of these lefties, deficit spending. | ||
That's it. | ||
The government just prints the money whenever they need to pay. | ||
And I'm like, do you know what Venezuela? | ||
Do you know what that is? | ||
Have you heard that word before? | ||
Like there's a bunch of countries that tried this. | ||
Modern monetary theory. | ||
MMT. | ||
It's like this new thing I've been hearing about. | ||
I'm trained in economics. | ||
It's a wild thing where you can just print as much money as you want, run as many deficits as you want. | ||
And it works, hey? | ||
And it works, hey? | ||
That's what they say. | ||
They say, let's try it. | ||
And then you know what you do to limit the money supply? | ||
Tax people. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Or you just make sure the rich people get it. | ||
That's the funniest thing. | ||
I hear all these people say, like, how is it that there are billionaires and people are starving? | ||
They're hoarding all this money. | ||
And I was like, you can't eat money, dude. | ||
Taking their money away won't bring food to an individual. | ||
And not only that, we don't really have a big starvation problem in this country. | ||
We have a national caloric surplus. | ||
We have fat homeless people. | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
That's not the problem. | ||
No, we have fat homeless people with cell phones. | ||
Still not the problem. | ||
Although, if you eat a lot of crap, you're still hungry. | ||
That's the problem. | ||
They're like, they're going hungry. | ||
It's like, yeah, cause you ate fat. | ||
It's too expensive to eat healthy. | ||
I'm like, dude, you know how cheap fruits and vegetables are? | ||
I just made like a $3 stew downstairs. | ||
It's a giant pot of sweet potato. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
I remember when I was like flat broke, I couldn't eat at restaurants and get burgers. | ||
I was like, oh man, I gotta buy vegetables and fruits again. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh man. | |
Cause it was cheaper. | ||
Then you go to, you go to, you know, the fast food restaurant and you want that, that big burger meal. | ||
And I'm like, for that much money, I can get a bunch of tomatoes, oranges, some, some wraps, even some sauce to put on it. | ||
You gotta know how to make it. | ||
We have a caloric surplus. | ||
There's no, it's not a hunger issue in America. | ||
And anyway, it's a distribution issue. | ||
And then the other thing they bring up is housing. | ||
They're like, how come we have all these empty buildings and we can't just put people in them? | ||
And I'm like, dude, do you know what it takes to maintain a property? | ||
Could you imagine if we took a bunch of homeless people who didn't have jobs and just put them in houses? | ||
What would happen to those houses and those people? | ||
They'd get hurt. | ||
The buildings would end up just crumbling. | ||
Fires, maybe. | ||
What people don't realize about homelessness, because I actually worked for a network of homeless shelters, is that it's typically a mental illness problem. | ||
Definitely. | ||
It's not an economic thing. | ||
It's that people can't, they can't function, you know? | ||
And I mean that with all due respect, because we try desperately to help some of these people, and you bring them to a shelter, you give them what they need to make sure they're clean, healthy, safe, and there's no job for them. | ||
There's, like, so what do you do? | ||
You know, it's a serious problem. | ||
You can't just put them in a house and walk away. | ||
Maybe like group housing, you know, but that's literally what we did. | ||
We had a homeless shelter. | ||
So we're like, we're actively trying to solve that problem. | ||
People think you can just take a person, put them in a house and problem solved. | ||
That's sweeping under the rug as far as I'm concerned. | ||
You know, the metaphor of people being like cells in the human body and like, we're all kind of like a hive of intercommunicating things is like some cells are programmed to kill themselves. | ||
They're called apoptosis. | ||
Apoptosis is a natural phenomenon of reality where certain cells are like, I'm no longer needed. | ||
I will destroy myself. | ||
And I wonder if humans do that too. | ||
If some people are just like, just built to just be destroyed, like they're just no longer serving society. | ||
So they go into this self deprecating spiral. | ||
Well, at the very, at the very least, you're never going to bat a thousand. | ||
So like, even if you're doing very well, there's going to be. | ||
You ever hear about Blue Zones? | ||
Blue Zones? | ||
Blue Zones. | ||
Tell me about Blue Zones. | ||
Blue Zone. | ||
I watched a documentary about Blue Zones. | ||
They're areas of the world where people live over a hundred years. | ||
So it's like they call them and they try to figure out what they shared in common. | ||
One of the most important things was purpose. | ||
Yes. | ||
They said in the documentary, so fact check this stuff because I was watching this documentary on Amazon or something. | ||
And it said that the highest, like the most likely age of death is just after retirement. | ||
People retire, they die. | ||
They have no purpose anymore. | ||
They go to this blue zone and they see this guy and he's like 97 and he's chopping lumber. | ||
Doing stuff. | ||
And they asked him like, why are you, a 97 year old, cutting wood? | ||
Shouldn't someone else do it? | ||
And he goes, Purpose and community are two of the most powerful forces in the world today. | ||
younger, he's like, no, I have to do it. | ||
I'm the one who cut, you know, I have to wake up and make sure we have the, you know, the | ||
lumber to people need me. | ||
unidentified
|
Like, oh wow. | |
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
He couldn't, he couldn't stop. | ||
He's like, people need me to live. | ||
Purpose and meaning are two of the most power or purpose and community are two of the most | ||
powerful forces in the world today. | ||
People who are a part of a community are clinically proven happier, healthier, and wealthier. | ||
So if you can help, if you can have purpose and you can have community, what I've seen | ||
studies when it comes to addiction, they take a rat. | ||
They put them in a cage by himself and they give him unlimited cocaine. | ||
He takes the cocaine until he dies. | ||
You put a rat in a community of rats, you put the same amount of unlimited cocaine. | ||
Guess what? | ||
Because they have community. | ||
Interesting. | ||
They have people. | ||
And that is why in Alcoholics Anonymous, one of the fundamental components of the whole thing is building community. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Because community gives you a reason to live. | ||
So we got this super chat from Liam Baker. | ||
He says, we need some representation in fiction. | ||
Almost everything is left-leaning. | ||
So I sent you guys my novel. | ||
It's called Stay Tuned. | ||
I hope Jack checks it out. | ||
Lydia will dig it. | ||
It will make Tim say nightmarish dystopia and reality is fractured. | ||
Oh wait, is this the guy that sent me the tweet? | ||
I think I saw it. | ||
Stay tuned. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, super cool. | |
I'll check it out then. | ||
Guy, if it is you, good job, dude. | ||
You broke through the din. | ||
You were able to get our attention. | ||
unidentified
|
There you go. | |
Boom. | ||
Well, ladies and gentlemen, we've gone, as per usual, a little bit over, but just enough to make up for that super chat section. | ||
So thank you all so much for hanging out. | ||
Jack, correct me if I'm wrong. | ||
I heard you got a book. | ||
I have a book, it's called, and no one's ever heard of it, it's brand new, it just came out today. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, snap! | |
No, no, no. | ||
Democrats Is Deplorable, Why 9 Million Obama Voters Ditched Democrats and Embraced Donald Trump, tells the story of 2016 and the story of 2020. | ||
Get it on Amazon. | ||
Check me out, JackMurphyLive.com, on Twitter, at JackMurphyLive. | ||
And by the way, we're on YouTube. | ||
Check me out, Jack Murphy Live. | ||
Got a show tomorrow, 11 a.m. | ||
Thank you, appreciate that. | ||
And smash the like button. | ||
Yes. | ||
Of course, you can follow me on Twitter. | ||
Here and there. | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
You can follow me on Twitter, Instagram, Parler, at TimCast. | ||
You can check out my YouTube channels, YouTube.com slash TimCast and slash TimCast News, because I got way too many channels. | ||
And we do the show Monday through Friday live at 8 p.m. | ||
So definitely come back, hang out tomorrow. | ||
I think we might have to move tomorrow because we've got competing town halls. | ||
Like, what are we supposed to do? | ||
We got Trump and Biden at the same time on two different networks. | ||
Yikes. | ||
I think we should just do the show. | ||
I think so, too. | ||
You'd probably do better than Biden, for sure. | ||
We'll see. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I mean, it's going to be tough. | ||
It's going to be... We've got to think about it. | ||
I think the ratings for this might be bigger than a debate because you've got two different channels. | ||
Maybe so. | ||
Maybe less because who wants to listen to what Biden has to say? | ||
Seriously. | ||
Not me. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Not it. | |
Yeah. | ||
Speaking of Biden and Trump, November 3rd election. | ||
We're going to do a nice show that night, right? | ||
Election night. | ||
Oh, we're going to do, so we're going to do something special for election night where we're basically going to like turn the cameras wide shots for the room and we're going to have like a table set up with snacks and we're just going to have a bunch of people saying a bunch of silly things. | ||
Watch the news roll in. | ||
It's going to be fun. | ||
It's going to be hilarious all night long. | ||
I'll be here. | ||
And when, you know, look, the results aren't coming on election night. | ||
We gotta call it. | ||
But there's people like I'm hearing it from the left and the right Biden's gonna landslide so hard on election night it's over and people Trump people are saying Trump's gonna landslide so hard yeah but you're wrong because Biden's up by like 16 points and it's like no that's not true because Trump's got secret voters and I'm like go vote go vote early go vote in person What are they saying in Chicago? | ||
Vote early, vote often. | ||
There you go. | ||
Did you hear about the people who are microwaving their ballots? | ||
I had not heard about that. | ||
To disinfect them. | ||
And they're also wiping them down with like Purell and smearing them and just destroying them. | ||
Anyway, thanks for hanging out. | ||
Don't forget you can follow Captain Crossland over here. | ||
Thank you, number one. | ||
Follow me anywhere and everywhere on the internet at Ian Crossland. | ||
Engage. | ||
Engage. | ||
Yes. | ||
Engage. | ||
And of course, you can follow Sour Patch Lyds. | ||
That's correct. | ||
L-Y-D-S. | ||
I'm chilling in the corner. | ||
Sour Patch L-Y-D-S. | ||
Correct. | ||
Otherwise, no one would know what it was. | ||
So anyway, yeah, smash that like button on your way out. | ||
Thanks so much for hanging out. | ||
We're going to be back. | ||
Probably tomorrow, but we'll see, because I take the debate seriously. | ||
I want to watch, and we can't do both at the same time. | ||
It creates a weird podcast, but we'll see what happens. | ||
We'll figure it out. | ||
Anyway, thanks for hanging out, and we will see you all in the next show. | ||
I'll definitely post if something changes, so we'll see how it plays out. | ||
All right, bye guys. | ||
Adios. |