Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
The police officer who shot Jacob Blake is now in the hospital. He's in the ICU. He's | |
in the ICU. He's in the ICU. He's in the ICU. He's in the ICU. He's in the ICU. He's | ||
circumstance situation. They will not be charging this officer, so the National Guard is being | ||
deployed and I'm pretty sure there's, I mean if I had to make a bet, I'd say riots inbound. | ||
Now, they're not charging Jacob Blake either, and we'll get into the whole nitty-gritty here, but suffice it to say, They were rioting because they wanted the cop to face charges. | ||
The cop is not going to face charges. | ||
Stands to reason. | ||
It's going to get pretty messy. | ||
But in similar news, Kyle Rittenhouse has pleaded not guilty. | ||
So now you've got this double whammy for the left where no charges for the cop. | ||
Rittenhouse pleading not guilty. | ||
Well, Kenosha, you know, I hope you guys are safe and I mean it sincerely. | ||
They're bringing in the National Guard because of this. | ||
We got other news coming out of D.C. | ||
as well. | ||
Thousands of Trump supporters came. | ||
The main event is tomorrow. | ||
I'm interested to see how many people show up because I think the numbers today, a lot of people thought it was going to get crazy because people would be showing up today and they were doing a protest today for Donald Trump. | ||
But tomorrow is the main event, so maybe a lot more people will show up. | ||
I know a lot of people who are coming down. | ||
I talked to a lot of people who say that they don't actually, these are people, I know people who don't travel all that much. | ||
who are getting in their cars or they're flying. | ||
And I noticed a lot of non-stop flights to DC were sold out. | ||
So we'll see how things go in DC tomorrow. | ||
We're gonna talk about all this. | ||
We got news about Enrique Tarrio of the Proud Boys. | ||
Apparently he's being banned from DC, so everything's crazy. | ||
And over in Georgia, the runoff election. | ||
We have breaking news! | ||
The race is too close to call. | ||
We have no idea what's gonna happen. | ||
So we got a bunch of cool guests today. | ||
We're joined by the senior political analyst from Don't Walk Run Productions. | ||
That's me. | ||
I'm Andrew. | ||
That's me. | ||
Senior political... Tim forgot who I was. | ||
No, I didn't. | ||
unidentified
|
You have to introduce yourself. | |
Hi, I'm Andrew, the Senior Political Analyst from Don't Walk Run. | ||
Don't Walk Run Productions. | ||
So, Senior Political Analyst. | ||
You must have worked very, very hard to reach that position. | ||
Very much. | ||
I just needed a title. | ||
I gave myself a title. | ||
Oh, there you go. | ||
So you couldn't have given yourself a better title? | ||
No. | ||
I'm very humble. | ||
I'm a very humble person. | ||
Right on. | ||
Well, also we've got Ian chilling. | ||
He's got a crystal ball and a gorilla. | ||
Yeah, I'm double fisting today. | ||
I've also got this coffee with coconut water in it. | ||
Thanks for letting me know. | ||
Coconut powder. | ||
That's great. | ||
Coconut powder. | ||
And cacao. | ||
And cartilage. | ||
Can you ask the crystal ball when COVID's over? | ||
Yeah, I'll tell you one of the things about the crystal ball when they say the ball is cloudy. | ||
I can't see. | ||
It's because if you eat a lot of animal product and your skin exudes animal fat and you do it, it gets all cloudy. | ||
But if you are vegan and you do it, it actually sucks, takes the oil off of it. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
And then you can see through it. | ||
No way. | ||
unidentified
|
Magic. | |
That's true. | ||
Personal, personal anecdote. | ||
Well, I know one person who probably knows Luke Rutkowski, who's joining us. | ||
Is this true? | ||
What? | ||
unidentified
|
Who? | |
I see you, Lew. | ||
I'm totally lost here. | ||
Tell me, you wear a crystal on your neck. | ||
You're the crystal guy. | ||
You're the expert on crystals. | ||
I have disdain for that category of me here, describing me that way. | ||
And yeah, rocks are rocks. | ||
You're literally wearing a rock. | ||
I don't know what to tell you. | ||
It's my lucky moonstone. | ||
unidentified
|
I like it. | |
Welcome to the show, Lew. | ||
I am the space chief commander behind wearechange.org. | ||
If we're making up titles, I can make up my own as well. | ||
I just got a pooper, by the way, that I am exploiting to the fullest amount of likes on my Instagram under LukeWeAreChange. | ||
A pooper is also one way of saying yes, a survival apocalypse dog that I have now and I'm training for. | ||
The apocalypse. | ||
She barked at the cats and the cats freaked out. | ||
She's the nicest dog ever. | ||
Within a day she already knows how to sit. | ||
She's basically almost potty trained. | ||
Super smart. | ||
High IQ dog. | ||
Glad to hear it. | ||
I got to pet a puppy today. | ||
It was very nice. | ||
Thank you, Luke. | ||
I didn't answer your question about the crystal ball, Andrew. | ||
I don't know. | ||
What was the question? | ||
My question is, if a crystal ball is there and it wears Sagar, That was a, for those that aren't familiar, a reference to The Hills Rising with Crystal Ball and Cigar and Jetty. | ||
A good show, by the way. | ||
Those are both good people. | ||
Kyle Kalinske and Crystal Ball just started Kyle, Crystal, and Friends. | ||
I like it. | ||
Very nice. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, we have sponsors. | ||
This is really, really good news. | ||
I just want to let everyone know. | ||
We've gone a year without having legitimate sponsors for the show, and this means that we can do a lot more awesome stuff. | ||
So, without further ado, before we get into the show, let me give a shout-out to today's sponsor. | ||
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It's an amount of research, if you look into it. | ||
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But, so, I legitimately want to stay healthy, and so, you know, I take the stuff, I put it in my smoothies, and it's good for your collagen, your joints, your skin, skin elasticity, muscle development, all of that great stuff. | ||
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To date, BioTrust has provided over 4.4 million meals to hungry kids. | ||
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BioTrust hit their goal of 5 million this year. | ||
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But there's something else that's really cool. | ||
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I mean, that alone to me sounds pretty legit. | ||
And they say, free new eReport, the 14 foods for amazing skin with every order. | ||
So again, I'm eternally grateful for them helping support the show. | ||
We've gone a whole year without any sponsors, and now we have BioTrust helping us. | ||
And for me, I'm serious when I say that I skate all the time, we've got the skate park we're building, and I'm taking this stuff seriously because pro skateboarders, you know, a lot of them don't make it past their 20s. | ||
So I'm 34, I love skating, I'm gonna keep doing it. | ||
And I think if all of you are, you know, starting to get older and you want to take care of yourself, you can check this out one last time. | ||
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Thank you again to them. | ||
But let's jump to the big breaking news, everybody. | ||
From the Daily Mail. | ||
White cop who shot Jacob Blake seven times in front of his kids will not face charges. | ||
Kenosha brings in National Guard and braces for unrest as DA refuses to prosecute officer who left black man paralyzed. | ||
On Tuesday, the Kenosha County District Attorney, Michael Gravely, said his office will not file charges against white police officer Rustin Sheskey. | ||
Sheskey was the officer who shot Jacob Blake, this is really interesting, Daily Mail just has to put black man Jacob Blake seven times, leaving him paralyzed on August 23rd. | ||
Sheskey had responded to a call about a domestic incident and opened fire as Blake was getting into his SUV, whereas three young children watched in Kenosha, Wisconsin. | ||
I also want to point out that, didn't they say he was reaching for a knife where he had a knife? | ||
Jacob Blake did? | ||
Everyone's nodding yes. | ||
He said it is incontrovertible, here we go, it is incontrovertible that Blake had a knife, saying officers reported seeing a razor blade type knife. | ||
Ahead of the announcement, Wisconsin mobilized the National Guard, Kenosha declared a state of emergency, Blake's lawyers condemned the decision, saying, Now, while this is happening, we also have news coming out of NPR that Kyle Rittenhouse is pleading not guilty to all charges. | ||
police to abuse their power and recklessly shoot their weapons. | ||
Now while this is happening, we also have news coming out of NPR that Kyle Rittenhouse | ||
is pleading not guilty to all charges. | ||
For those that aren't familiar, Kyle Rittenhouse is the young man who showed up to the riots | ||
that ignited because of the Jacob Blake incident. | ||
And long story short, his clear-cut self-defense as far as I'm concerned. | ||
I mean, you even have some leftists who brought it up and got really roasted for it. | ||
Destiny in particular. | ||
This is a kid, Kyle Rittenhouse. | ||
He was working in Wisconsin. | ||
Someone in Wisconsin had given him a weapon. | ||
Probably a bad idea. | ||
Kid probably shouldn't have been there. | ||
But we had several witnesses on the show who told us what happened. | ||
These are journalists who were there on the ground, like Richie McGinnis, who actually rendered aid to one of the guys who got shot and died. | ||
And, I mean, multiple witnesses told us the rioters were pushing a flaming dumpster to a gas station and Kyle Rittenhouse took a fire extinguisher I'm sorry. | ||
Kyle Reynolds is seen running with a fire extinguisher. | ||
But there's videos of him and other people putting fires out. | ||
This triggered the riders. | ||
They got really mad. | ||
They chased after him and attacked him. | ||
And then someone else fired a gun into the air. | ||
Some say it's in the air. | ||
Others say it was in the direction of Rittenhouse and the guy chasing him. | ||
This guy, I think his name was Rosenbaum, one of the guys who died. | ||
And then Rittenhouse, hearing the gunshot, turned around. | ||
And that's when the dude swung at him and he fired. | ||
He runs. | ||
As far as I'm concerned, it looks like self-defense. | ||
The crazy thing is the left is saying outright, no way, he's a terrorist and a mass shooter and all this crazy stuff, but it's really worrying to me when you have situations like this. | ||
Low information individuals who don't watch the videos or just don't care. | ||
Take that into consideration now as they're saying this cop is not being charged. | ||
I'll open up to the panel. | ||
Gentleman, is the right a coming? | ||
unidentified
|
Duh! | |
I mean, is the sky blue? | ||
I mean, right now we're getting the reports of the mayor asking everyone to be peaceful. | ||
We're getting reports of the Blake family and supporters already marching through the city. | ||
Who knows how it's going to turn out? | ||
But as you were mentioning with the Kyle situation, Kyle's legal team actually released their version of events, their video, their photos. | ||
Of what happened to them and the depictions were almost completely opposite of what the mainstream media was depicting and telling us was happening. | ||
So again based on you know, both of those two stories look at both of them make up your own decision. | ||
But also in this story that like you were reading it you see race being weaponized by the mainstream media and you always see white man black man. | ||
But, you know, this is only particularly in this instance. | ||
But when it comes to other instances, when they can't weaponize it, they can't use it to divide and conquer people. | ||
They can't use it to put fuel on the fire. | ||
They don't mention it. | ||
I think I think our media has a vestigial or some kind of sickness, ill intent. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, no, no, no. | |
Look, look like there was a reason why you would write about a white man attacking a black man, because we had serious racism in American history. | ||
We had like the Civil Rights era. | ||
But we're well past that era. | ||
I'm not gonna say everything's perfect, but certainly we've made great strides. | ||
And now we have this problem where the media still wants to highlight the race of the people, even though that's not what caused any of this. | ||
There's a police officer getting a report of a woman who had just been assaulted in her bed by this man, who then reached for a knife, which even the court was saying, incontrovertible. | ||
The dude had a weapon. | ||
They recovered the weapon. | ||
He said he had a weapon. | ||
And the cops had dropped it several times, and the dude, Jacob Blake, didn't listen. | ||
He was actually fighting the cops! | ||
They gotta make it about race, though. | ||
Could you imagine what would happen if our laws were just like, it doesn't matter if you're innocent or guilty, it matters what your race is. | ||
Because that's part of what we're looking at, too. | ||
Now, I don't wanna derail too much, but I don't know if you guys saw, the CDC was advising to give the vaccine based on race. | ||
Now, I'm supposed to be convinced that Medicare for All is the appropriate way to go? | ||
The government should be in control of healthcare? | ||
When you're telling me they're gonna give it on race? | ||
That's creepy stuff, man. | ||
It's creepy. | ||
But now you've got people, I don't know, let me ask you guys. | ||
I think it's obvious to a lot of people, it seems probably like a redundant question, but the left rioting and protesting in a situation like this. | ||
Ignorance? | ||
Exploitation? | ||
Both? | ||
Both. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Absolutely both. | ||
And our Democratic presidential candidates, they totally took advantage of it. | ||
They kept saying, oh, well, you know, oh, we're so proud of Jacob Blake. | ||
Really? | ||
Proud of him. | ||
That's great. | ||
Not a criminal. | ||
This is a family-friendly show. | ||
But the things he was doing to that woman, I can't say. | ||
He was pinning her down, and I can't repeat. | ||
Assault? | ||
Sexual assault? | ||
But we gotta keep it family-friendly. | ||
We'll get demonetized, we'll get deranked. | ||
It was serious stuff. | ||
Where was the Me Too movement? | ||
This dude was wanted. | ||
For abusing a woman, pinning her down in her bed, and the cops were trying to stop him. | ||
And he fought with them. | ||
Could you imagine any other scenario? | ||
What would happen if those cops died? | ||
Would there be riots for them? | ||
No. | ||
Not in that situation. | ||
So what do you do? | ||
What are we supposed to do as a society when you have something like the Me Too movement demanding that these men be held accountable? | ||
Right. | ||
But when the cops actually come to hold them accountable, they blame the cops. | ||
I mean, believe all women. | ||
I mean, like, who called 9-1-1, right? | ||
Well, it was, you know, the mother who is an African-American woman. | ||
So you'd think that, you know, just on the intersectionality pyramid that, you know, she's black and she's a woman. | ||
And hey, you know, you have to believe her even more. | ||
Yeah, right. But instead, but instead like, oh no, this, you know, this man was, was, | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
you know, shot with a gun and, you know, and it's, it's, yeah. | ||
And, and everybody just took advantage of it. | ||
Like how, how, you know, Kamala was meeting with his family and meeting with him on bedside. | ||
It's like, for what? | ||
Like, what did he do? | ||
This guy's not a hero. | ||
Low information voters, man. | ||
And I'm very happy you brought up Kamala or Kamala. | ||
I don't know how to say her name. | ||
unidentified
|
Sorry. | |
I'm already, arrest me, throw me in jail, throw me in the bulag, please. | ||
I made a big misnomer here. | ||
But it's funny. | ||
When you bring her up, because specifically also talking about Believe All Women, she's the one that went after Joe Biden very hard against the allegations against him and other women. | ||
And now she's also blinded to it. | ||
The people who are adding fuel to the fire are filled with so much hypocrisy. | ||
The only constant is Joe Biden, who previously was for segregation, also kind of pushing for segregation issues right now in our modern day and age. | ||
He never changed. | ||
He never changed. | ||
So that's the only consistency that we have here with the establishment. | ||
And of course, the mainstream media follows and regurgitates everything they say. | ||
Has it always been this bad? | ||
No. | ||
unidentified
|
It was probably way worse before. | |
The rhetoric has been there. | ||
It's just that social media and 100,000 cable channels and YouTube channels just amplify it. | ||
So it just seems louder. | ||
It seems like it's a bigger thing. | ||
There was a John Wayne interview from years past and he was basically saying that the left are the, they're the loudest voices. And if you don't | ||
listen to them, if you don't agree with their ideology that you're wrong and that you're like a bad | ||
person and that they just keep driving at home that, that you need, if you don't believe in this, | ||
you're wrong and you're bad. You have to believe in this, which is the right way and the only way. | ||
And that was back in the seventies. | ||
unidentified
|
It's always been that way. | |
There was a story from NPR where they said 40% of people believe ridiculous conspiracy theories. | ||
And I noticed something really interesting. | ||
NPR separates what they called incorrect statements from correct statements. | ||
And then you see that among the incorrect statements, more people believe them versus the correct statements. | ||
But there is one thing that differentiates the two was timeliness. | ||
People believe the conspiracies if it's new, if it's in the recent history, and they believe overwhelmingly the mainstream narrative if it was long since past, right? | ||
So one of the questions was, like, was Barack Obama born in America? | ||
Most people, like, 75% said yes, and then, like, 20% said not sure. | ||
Smaller percentage said no, but that's because that was back 2008, well before social media and the advent of big VC-funded blogs. | ||
Take a look at Wikipedia right now, and I think this is a perfect example. | ||
You go to any conservative's Wikipedia, and it is an aggregation of negative opinions from left-wing activists. | ||
That's not a biography of somebody. | ||
Like, if I really wanted to know, say, who, like, Jack Posobiec was, I don't need to hear that you think he's far-right, alt-right, you know, ultra-right, you know, nationalist, and all of these other opinions you have about him, that they're like, you get a whole paragraph with, like, it's been disputed as to what he personally believes. | ||
You get the guy on record saying what he believes, but they'll put into Wikipedia all of their opinions about him that are as negative as possible. | ||
Because what's happened now is, We've got millions of different websites, and they all just repeat everything that gets the clicks, so Kamala Harris doesn't care if Jacob Blake was sexually abusing this woman. | ||
Right. | ||
No one's gonna find out because they're not gonna read the news! | ||
Well, they either slander or also disappear you, just like they did with Chris Martinson, just like they did with me personally. | ||
But also, another thing that I wanted to bring up here, When segregationists were making the arguments that people should stay, you know, stay apart because of their race, one of the things they used to do is they used to highlight certain events and also do what the mainstream media is doing now and highlight the race of a specific attacker, the race of a specific victim, and use that as propaganda in order to galvanize people to be for segregation. | ||
And then when we see this weaponized in so many instances, it's so weird seeing that being the major highlight, rather than the actual discussion of what actually happened, who was actually right, what is the evidence, can we make up our mind here when we first are able to actually see what happened, rather than jump into conclusions and being kind of radicalized as the internet, as social media, as the algorithms, as the timelines, as everything that the big tech monopolies shove down your throat, are showing you as it is. | ||
So here's a really good example of like how screwed up everything is and why you end up | ||
with these imbalanced riot type situations was the leaked phone call with Trump. | ||
You listen to it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
The four minutes that come out. | ||
Trump's like I need to find eleven thousand seven hundred eighty votes and then all the | ||
left is screaming it's worse than Watergate. | ||
They're throwing up on themselves and convulsing. | ||
And then I'm like well I'd sure love to hear the full audio of the phone call. | ||
And then it turns out, there's a little bit of bad stuff Trump said, but for the most part, it's kind of meh. | ||
There's a little bit of bad stuff that Raffensperger said, and it's kind of meh. | ||
But if you actually approach that story from a legitimate journalistic point of view, you'd say, okay, well, it's not that big of a deal that Trump said that. | ||
He was talking about the various areas where they have found, where they believe they have fraudulent votes. | ||
And he was saying, we don't need to do a hard investigation of every single accusation. | ||
We just need 11,780. | ||
But you also had statements from Brad Raffensperger, like, he didn't know that Georgia even had a consent decree. | ||
That's kind of a big deal. | ||
So if you approached that, and you leaked the audio of, say, Brad Raffensperger saying, we can confirm dead voters, which he said, and we have no consent decree, you could have leaked that portion and been like, whoa, whoa, crazy. | ||
But the Washington Post, which is supposed to be mainstream media, ignored Exactly. | ||
things that reference Berger was saying that were questionable and only | ||
presented the things that they could take to make Trump look bad. | ||
And then and then everybody reported on those four minutes. | ||
And it was it was it was at least a couple hours until they released the | ||
full the full hour recording. | ||
But at that point nobody's going to be listening to that. | ||
Strategic. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And just the fact that when you go and look for that news, that CBS and ABC, they're all focusing on those four minutes on that one line. | ||
So what's the narrative now with Jacob Blake? | ||
Because I don't want to derail too much, but in what reality is there a leftist saying it was good that Jacob Blake, that these cops... It doesn't matter. | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
He was black. | ||
That's it. | ||
It all has to do with race. | ||
That's it. | ||
That's the lens that they... It's not that they're forced to do it, it's what they want to do. | ||
They want to look down that lens and say, it's all about race. | ||
Democrats have always felt that way. | ||
Yeah, but I mean when you when you look at all You know | ||
when you Even even with George Floyd | ||
Was it was it? | ||
What was inside his body that that killed him? Right? Oh, right. What was it? Was it all these things that it is? | ||
Exacerbated that and then you get a little yeah the full video released later on showing it was much more | ||
nuanced than right one believe but but even even after That was leaked. | ||
And these cops are overcharged. | ||
I don't think they're going to see a day in prison. | ||
I agree. | ||
But even after that full audio was leaked, it was ignored. | ||
It was completely ignored. | ||
They did not care. | ||
Are you talking about a Trump thing? | ||
No, no, no. | ||
The George Floyd body cam footage gets released. | ||
Where he's like, put me on the ground. | ||
I'm going to die today. | ||
I'm going to die today. | ||
When he's in the back of the car and he's saying, I can't breathe for 20 minutes while he's in the back of the car. | ||
And then he says, take me out, put me on the ground, several times. | ||
And they did. | ||
But the thing is, and you're right, it was much more nuanced than that. | ||
But nobody cares. | ||
Because it goes against the narrative that it was... It's this simple. | ||
The people that care are a problem for the establishment machine that just wants blind zealots to say, tell me what to do, please. | ||
It's like, it reminds me of that scene from Avengers when Loki is like, he tells everyone to bow and says, is this not better, your natural state? | ||
There's that one guy who stood up and said, I won't bow to you. | ||
That's like your, like the average people in the know who are questioning the media. | ||
But the Democrats seek out those who would just drop to their knees and say, just tell me what to do. | ||
I don't want to be involved. | ||
I'll do whatever you say. | ||
It's easier that way. | ||
So when you get a regular person, that's why we have the idea of the red pilling in the in the blue pill people because you got regular people who I think the Hunter Biden story is probably the best example of why nobody believes the media anymore because they all NPR said we won't waste our time on non-stories. | ||
So here you got some, imagine you got some 40 year old dude and he's like, he's in his house and his, you know, his wife is making breakfast for the kids. | ||
And then he's like, I'm going to work. | ||
And then he turned, you know, he's watching CNN and they're like, Hunter Biden thinks fake news. | ||
And he goes, eh, I thought so. | ||
And now a month later, they're like, Hunter Biden, it's all true. | ||
And he's going. | ||
What? | ||
Are you kidding me? | ||
A month ago you said it was fake, now you're saying it's true? | ||
Russian disinformation. | ||
They hear it's fake, it's gone. | ||
Then a month later it comes out, it was true, and they're like, what was true? | ||
What is that? | ||
I don't even remember what they're talking about. | ||
Something about Hunter. | ||
Or it's just that not everybody watches. | ||
Joe Biden's cousin's son or something. | ||
They don't watch all the news all the time. | ||
But I have to imagine there's a lot of people who wake up when they see this and they say, I care about what's going on. | ||
I care about why my checks are, you know, smaller. | ||
I care about why, you know, property value is like going through the roof is inflating in certain areas and why certain goods are really expensive at the store now. | ||
And they turn to the news and look for answers and you don't get it anymore. | ||
No, not on the news. | ||
None of that crap. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
It's like that same corporate, they talk like this. | ||
They have that same and coming up and it's like, dee, dee, dee, dee, dee, dee, dee. | ||
And then it shows the graph. | ||
It's like, there's a comfort. | ||
Even Tucker Carlson, even Tucker Carlson has that, like, he's not the same as the | ||
way, you know, news people talk, but he has his TV style presentation, which is, | ||
It's normal. | ||
Um, who is it? | ||
Rachel Maddow sounds like Chris Hayes. | ||
They sound alike when they talk. | ||
People don't realize they're reading a script. | ||
unidentified
|
People don't realize they're reading a script what matters ... | |
is who's writing the script and many times we see many ... | ||
big organizations just regurgitate press releases they ... | ||
do it for smaller companies they do it for special ... | ||
interest so what makes you think they're not doing it for ... | ||
bigger interest for bigger powers out there that benefit ... | ||
off of people fighting each other rather than of course ... | ||
looking at the real problems the real injustice is the real ... | ||
things that actually go out there and touch them in the ... | ||
average day and life of a human being those issues are ... | ||
usually just scrap to the side meanwhile hey look it's ... | ||
black man white man. | ||
Let's take this opportunity to get a little political here. | ||
Do you guys hear the FWEEDOM story? | ||
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No. | |
FWEEDOM! | ||
Here we go. | ||
You guys ready for this? | ||
Just going nuts right now. | ||
Fox News. | ||
Kamala Harris repeatedly told FWEEDOM story, now facing plagiarism accusations. | ||
I won't waste your time, friends. | ||
I'll give you a simple version before reading this. | ||
She apparently did an interview where she said she was at like a civil rights march when she was a toddler in a stroller and fell down. | ||
And then her mom saw her fussing and said, what do you want? | ||
And she goes, freedom! | ||
Yes. | ||
And then everyone clapped. | ||
That happened. | ||
And then apparently this was plagiarized off of a Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
story where he said he saw a little girl at a civil rights march giving, you know, fuss, and a white cop said, you know, what do you want? | ||
And she goes, feed him. | ||
So, I actually, look, if you told me a little kid yelled something they heard their parents yell, and they struggled to say it properly, I believe it. | ||
Makes sense. | ||
I do. | ||
I want to know. | ||
But Kamala Harris, that's, she's, I remember I was one year old and I was in a stroller and I yelled, feed him. | ||
Sure you did. | ||
See, I want to know if she actually remembered it, right? | ||
Like she actually thought it was her? | ||
Or, like, see, there's three scenarios here. | ||
Either she completely plagiarized Martin Luther King, which is possible. | ||
That's the most likely scenario. | ||
The second is that she remembered saying that or her parents told her that that's what happened. | ||
And either it happened or they read the article and then they just kind of... I have some ideas, but let me read this. | ||
So Fox News reports, Kamala Harris had previously told the anecdote about her younger self crying out for freedom. | ||
That's W-F-E-E-D-O-M, which has sparked accusations of plagiarism in her books. | ||
Quote, my mother used to laugh when she told the story about a time I was fussing as a toddler. | ||
She leaned down to me and asked, Kamala, what's wrong? | ||
What do you want? | ||
And I wailed back, freedom, Harris wrote in her 2010 book, Smart on Crime. | ||
Okay. | ||
Harris also detailed her younger self demanding freedom in her 2019 book, The Truths We Told. | ||
Apparently appropriated an anecdote. | ||
I am amazing, right? | ||
An anecdote first told by civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
when she was interviewed by Elle magazine for a feature that was published in October at the height of the 2020 presidential race. | ||
Harris has repeatedly boasted of her parents' involvement in the civil rights movement of the 1960s. | ||
In the Elle interview, she recalled accompanying them to marches as a toddler. | ||
Here we go. | ||
Here's the story. | ||
Senator Kamala Harris started her life work young. | ||
Writer Ashley C. Ford led off the piece. | ||
She laughs from her gut, the way you would with family, as she remembers being wheeled through an Oakland, California civil rights march in a stroller, with no straps, with her parents and uncle. | ||
At some point, she fell from the stroller, and the adults caught up in the rapture of the protest just kept marching. | ||
By the time they noticed little Kamala was gone and doubled back, she was understandably upset. | ||
My mother tells the story about how I'm fussing, Harris told the magazine, and she's like, baby, what do you want? | ||
What do you need? | ||
And I just looked at her and I said, freedom! | ||
After the interview resurfaced Monday, Twitter user Angles Freddy and Andre Domis, contributing editor of the Canadian publication Maclean's, noted that Harris' story resembled one told by King in 1965 interview published in Playboy. | ||
Maybe Kamala Harris is trying to make it seem like he was talking about her. | ||
Like Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
was telling a story that was about her. | ||
I'm going to err on Kamala's side on this one because I think a lot of people in the 60s wanted freedom and a lot of people said that around their kids so the kids just repeated them. | ||
So I think that at this point we have to say that we know two things for sure. | ||
One, nobody read Kamala Harris's books. | ||
Right, for sure. | ||
Yeah, definitely. | ||
Because otherwise this would have been amazing oppo research for any Democrat. | ||
It would have come out a long time ago. | ||
It would have come out a long time ago. | ||
It was 2010 she wrote this. | ||
Yeah, the book was 2010. | ||
Nobody read those books. | ||
Did you read those books? | ||
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I didn't. | |
No, I didn't know they existed. | ||
And also, I'll point out, the one thing I can say is factually true, but is framed not so well, is when the writer says, she laughs from her gut the way you would with family. | ||
Yes, Kamala Harrell laughs at inappropriate moments. | ||
Like there was one where she was being called out. | ||
I can't remember why. | ||
I think she was being called out for criticizing Biden as racist. | ||
And she's like... | ||
And then she just stops and she's just staring, smiling, like this weird grin, and it's like, stop laughing. | ||
This is inappropriate. | ||
Not the time. | ||
But she laughs. | ||
It's weird. | ||
Or when she was confronted about supporting Biden when she was viciously attacking him before, same thing. | ||
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It was a debate! | |
It was a debate, yeah. | ||
But she also, in that interview, it was the one like right after they were officially nominated, she said, it's a distraction. | ||
Like, no, it's a thing that happened. | ||
You want to talk about the thing that happened or you want to just write it off? | ||
Did somebody tell Kamala Harris and Hillary Clinton, if you're ever asked a question, just laugh for no reason? | ||
Because they both would do it. | ||
They're bought off and they're nervous. | ||
I don't know about that. | ||
I think, you know, look, I'll tell you why maybe Kamala Harris said this freedom story. | ||
She, she's got narcissists. | ||
I think she's a narcissist. | ||
I think she's an arrogant, authoritarian narcissist. | ||
And when she like, look, look at, look at Joe Biden's plagiarized how much? | ||
Oh, so not his. | ||
It's no surprise to me, even Build Back Better is not his. | ||
Isn't that hilarious? | ||
Nope, this is original for Kamala and I really want to say this because this is something that I just discovered. | ||
So the last civil rights march was in 1963. | ||
Kamala Harris was born in 1964. | ||
If you'll recall her details about being in college and listening to, who was it? | ||
Tupac? | ||
No, it was Snoop Dogg. | ||
Snoop Dogg she was listening to. | ||
Tupac is the last surviving rapper that she likes. | ||
You said the last Civil Rights March was 1963? | ||
This would be before she was born, yes. | ||
But like, what was that Civil Rights March? | ||
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Um, I think that was the March on... Damn, it died with the King. | |
I think it was the Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
When did Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
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die? | |
I think it was 63. | ||
unidentified
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63? | |
63, I think. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Could it have been? | ||
No, he didn't die the same year that JFK died. | ||
No, he was like 68, I think? | ||
I might be... | ||
That's a good story. | ||
There were civil rights protests happening forever. | ||
I mean, I know she's trying to make it seem like it was the civil rights movement, but there were a bunch of, you know, there's always protests for something. | ||
But why do you tell that story? | ||
And repeatedly because you're narcissistic, obviously, but you also want to say, you know, I've been here. | ||
You know, when I was a child that I wanted to that I wanted to fight for | ||
civil rights, whether it's Brian Williams, Hillary Clinton, they always | ||
lie about so many different events, so many different things and building on | ||
on top of what you were saying specifically, she was described as a | ||
ruthlessly evil human being when she was a prosecutor in California. | ||
I mean, the stories that come out of her knowing people are innocent, ruining | ||
people's lives knowingly just to get ahead, she will do anything to get ahead. | ||
Literally and figuratively. | ||
She was keeping people in prison beyond their parole to use them as cheap labor | ||
to put out fires no less. | ||
Now, I remember when I was three years old and I ran into a burning building to save a bunch of puppies, because it's just what a hero does. | ||
And I can't believe Kamala Harris would ever say something so egregious and exaggerated. | ||
Everyone clapped, by the way. | ||
You got the Presidential Medal of Freedom. | ||
I did, yeah, twice. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Another thing people need to realize is that prosecutors are rewarded when they have a high win case and not many loss cases. | ||
This is a totally horrible system. | ||
Bill Hicks had this skit about marketers and what they should do to themselves. | ||
I think that should be definitely translated. | ||
And I'm not saying it, I'm just saying he had a point. | ||
Maybe it could be brought over to some prosecutors, but that's the system, by the way. | ||
That was Bill Hicks, right? | ||
It was before he started InfoWars? | ||
Yeah, before. | ||
But when we look at the prosecutor system here, there is something that does deserve to have a legitimate conversation. | ||
We do deserve to talk about these issues because there are injustices, just like with Kamala Harris when she was prosecuted. | ||
Two plagiarists. | ||
within our legal system that do need to be addressed that some ... | ||
of these protesters want to change but they don't ... | ||
understand their movement is being hijacked by those ... | ||
individuals that literally make the system as bad as it is to ... | ||
plagiarists Joe Biden it's like I don't want my favorite ... | ||
memes is it's like 50 years in Congress and it's a picture of ... | ||
like you know Biden it's like how long is has come a little ... | ||
bit in like. | ||
Like 10 or so? | ||
It's like, you got Schumer. | ||
2016. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh, as a senator. | ||
You've got Nadler, Schumer, you've got Pelosi and Biden and it's like decades in Congress. | ||
Now's the time they're gonna fix everything. | ||
Everything else was just a dry run. | ||
Alright, they were just, they were there getting, you know, practicing a little bit, sharpening their axe before they were getting ready for that, you know, timbering. | ||
Now. | ||
Now is the time. | ||
The planets have aligned. | ||
You just don't get it. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
It's just the time. | ||
It's just the right moment. | ||
It's our moment. | ||
I feel like when Atlantis got flooded... Sorry, this is a bit of a segue, but I'm bringing it back. | ||
The entire world got wiped out and reset. | ||
Okay, before Atlantis got flooded, Atlantis was the giant king that ruled the Earth. | ||
Apparently they had circumnavigated the globe. | ||
Assuming Atlantis is real. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Northwest Mauritania. | ||
Atlas, the king of Mauritania. | ||
Well, Joe Biden's not all we could just ask him. | ||
Do we need another reset like that for this system? | ||
Because I want to change it. | ||
I want to get these politicians out of there. | ||
Ian, are you saying Noah, get the boat? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Can we fix this human system without something like that happening again? | ||
I don't know. | ||
You know, to be honest, that's why the people want to push the Great Reset. | ||
Yeah, sounds like a great reset. | ||
The Great Reset people are like, how do you stop everyone just kind of eating themselves to death and mass-producing garbage? | ||
So the problem is, whenever you have someone who believes they're morally right, they know everything, and thus you need to purge or erase or do something to other people. | ||
It never works out right. | ||
And why should I trust these people who are claiming all this bad stuff's happening and we need to make these changes? | ||
Like, so if you came to me and said, maybe we should have some kind of hard reset, I'm like, I don't trust one person to make that decision. | ||
So what do you do? | ||
Well, how do we get all those people out of office? | ||
First of all, Nadler, Schumer, Pelosi, these crazy Mitch McConnell, 40-year-old... There is a famous philosopher who had, I think, some really great ideas. | ||
He was a French philosopher. | ||
His name was, what was it? | ||
It was Robespierre. | ||
Yeah, Robespierre. | ||
That guy. | ||
I've been studying the French Revolution heavily in the last few days. | ||
So for those that don't know... The Nazi Revolution. | ||
Do you know who Robespierre is? | ||
Isn't he a rapper? | ||
No. | ||
But there should be one called Robespierre. | ||
So if you don't know much about the French Revolution, he was the guy who went nuts and was just like, you know, you ever see the episode of Simpsons where Mr. Burns sings, See My Vest? | ||
And he's singing about all the animal parts he has for his clothes and he's dancing. | ||
He's really happy. | ||
Replace animal clothes with beheading random people. | ||
And that was Robespierre. | ||
Dancing around, singing in the French Revolution. | ||
And then finally, when people realized like, yo, this guy's kind of killing too many people, they were like, They killed him to stop it all. | ||
They were like, this guy needs to die. | ||
They blew his jaw off and let him lay there for three days and suffer to die. | ||
It was horrible. | ||
They hated him. | ||
I was complaining about him having good ideas. | ||
He was this young, really lovable lawyer. | ||
I think he was a lawyer. | ||
And all he wanted was freedom and democracy for the people. | ||
And people loved him at first. | ||
And he was such a good guy. | ||
And he went crazy from the power. | ||
Just killing people like crazy. | ||
I think people just didn't realize he was a lawyer. | ||
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And then when he found out, then they were like, this guy's gotta go. | |
Like, wait, he's a lawyer too? | ||
So like, I could see if we... There's a danger of becoming that guy. | ||
Yeah, of being like, we gotta get rid of all that so that we can do something new, and so that can't happen again. | ||
Yeah, but you know what the scary reality is? | ||
For Zealots, it's true. | ||
Robespierre wanted something that couldn't exist so long as people opposed him. | ||
So he said, kill those who oppose me. | ||
And then they killed him because he was killing too many people. | ||
But with any one of these authoritarians or these despots, people like Kamala Harris, for instance, they have to get rid of those that are obstructing them, and they have no morals. | ||
They have no ethics. | ||
They'll say whatever, do whatever, and they'll take power. | ||
And then they'll laugh on camera when asked about it for no reason. | ||
You have to wonder why they're laughing. | ||
It's kind of weird. | ||
But a lot of it has to do with, fine, like, we're smart people. | ||
We know that these people are useless and they're liars. | ||
So you think. | ||
But then you look at somebody like, say, Maxine Waters, Congresswoman Maxine Waters, who is elected year after year after year. | ||
What has she done for her district? | ||
Nothing. | ||
Nothing at all. | ||
And she's anti-Maxine. | ||
And people are like, oh, we love her. | ||
Like, why? | ||
What has she done for you? | ||
Nothing. | ||
It's the same thing with AOC. | ||
She had this list of accomplishments. | ||
Like, well, I had a bunch of town halls, and I had like six amendments, and I introduced a whole bunch of bills that didn't even see the house floor. | ||
But, you know, I was doing really important work. | ||
It's like, no, you weren't. | ||
You weren't doing anything. | ||
You know what I would do if I got elected to Congress? | ||
I would just disrupt, like, Tiny gavel. | ||
It would just be a tiny gavel, banging it nonstop, screaming during sessions. | ||
They'd have to remove me. | ||
Filibuster nonstop. | ||
Yeah, just everything. | ||
Dude, I would sleep all day so that I could filibuster all night. | ||
They'd have a bill. | ||
We're like, we would like to read in a post office. | ||
And I'd be like, I'd like to sit here and read the entire 5,500 omnibus bill before we move forward. | ||
It's my time. | ||
I would park my RV right outside Congress and just show up in my bathrobe and just- No, there's dress code. | ||
Isn't there really? | ||
Yeah, there's dress code. | ||
I'd get kicked out in a heartbeat. | ||
Isn't there a congresswoman that was just elected that is also planning on bringing a firearm? | ||
Lauren Boebert. | ||
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Yes. | |
There's a freaking dress code, dude. | ||
There's dress code. | ||
And so, Boebert wants to bring her concealed lock, but you can't. | ||
There's an exception where members of Congress can bring an unloaded weapon in a case to their office, but you can't bring it into the chamber. | ||
I see those house rules changing in two years. | ||
You know what's kind of crazy though? | ||
Right now we have this big protest coming to DC. | ||
Wow. | ||
And Trump supporters, you know what they're posting on forums? | ||
They said they're advocating for bringing weapons to the event because they said the | ||
worst case scenario is you gain legal standing in a constitutional lawsuit against DC for | ||
infringing on the right to bear arms. | ||
That is a bold statement. | ||
That's a seriously bold statement. | ||
But that's like the rhetoric coming from a lot of people who are showing up in DC is | ||
No joke. | ||
So let's do this. | ||
We'll give you the big update here. | ||
This is the news story. | ||
I want you to see this. | ||
This is the AAP's official report. | ||
That's it. | ||
It's one sentence repeated twice. | ||
From the AAP. | ||
Judge bans Proud Boys leader from Nation's Capital after arrest on vandalism and weapons charges. | ||
And then it says, that's the title. | ||
And then it says, Washington AAP. | ||
Judge bans Proud Boys leader from Nation's Capital after arrest on vandalism and weapons charges. | ||
That's the whole story. | ||
Wonderful. | ||
That's some pretty deep reporting, AP. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But so, the other thing, he got arrested, Enrique, so he arrives in D.C. | ||
We talked about it yesterday. | ||
He had two high-capacity magazines on him. | ||
Not even weapons. | ||
D.C.' 's laws are so strict, you can't even have that. | ||
You can't have ammo. | ||
So we got a misdemeanor charge for that. | ||
But I think, you know, with a lot of these, some of these supporters saying that they want to, you know, come bringing weapons, we'll see if people actually show up. | ||
I don't know if there was that many people there today, but tomorrow is supposed to be the big day. | ||
Today was just like a preliminary event. | ||
But I think it'll get particularly interesting. | ||
But I wonder if, you know, there's going to be, I guess, the political willpower among Trump supporters to actually go and do anything that might change really anything, I suppose. | ||
Well, I don't think they can. | ||
I think it's just more more of a, you know, a rah-rah, we're showing our spirit and support kind of thing because they protest. | ||
I look, I get that it's part of a You know, just trying to keep morale up, you know, but I generally dislike protests. | ||
Me too. | ||
On any side. | ||
I think they're, I think for the most part, they're useless. | ||
And, and, and, you know, you want to, you want to go down to DC tomorrow, be my guest. | ||
I'm not saying don't do it. | ||
Uh, you'll be around a bunch of people that, that, you know, you're, are like-minded and it'll be great and you'll have a fun time. | ||
Is it going to do anything? | ||
No! | ||
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Absolutely not! | |
This is why Louie Gohmert said the message basically from the Supreme Court was that | ||
conservatives need to be as violent as Antifa and Black Lives Matter. | ||
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See that's... | |
I see what he... | ||
I get what he's saying. | ||
I don't agree with it. | ||
But the fact is that Antifa and all these groups are not being maligned by the media, right? | ||
So then you can say, well, hey, we're doing the same thing as Antifa. | ||
They're not catching any flack. | ||
You're only going after us because we're conservatives, we're Republicans. | ||
I mean, that's what's going to happen. | ||
How many Antifa people have been snatched up as soon as they entered and barred from D.C.? | ||
That's the crazy thing about this. | ||
Does a judge have a right to kick you out of a city? | ||
That's, that's kind of nuts. | ||
Do you think that this is something that will, you know, uh, there'll be some kind of lawsuit down the line? | ||
Do you think that that's something that could happen? | ||
You know, I gotta be honest, the really hardcore Trump supporters get mad when I say stuff like this, cause it's true. | ||
And I guess they don't want to hear it. | ||
And it's that conservative, like, look, look, you, you voted for Trump. | ||
Andrew? | ||
Passed, no. | ||
No, I did, of course I did. | ||
But you're not gonna go protest, you don't like to protest. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
And I'm not saying this is disparagingly, it's just I think most of the people who recognize what's going on don't want to go out screaming, smashing, burning, destroying. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
And Trump supporters don't do that. | ||
Exactly. | ||
They don't. | ||
And so Antifa does, and Antifa wins. | ||
And then the police protect them. | ||
Not always, but often. | ||
Even when they do get arrested, the district attorneys cut them loose. | ||
Conservatives won't, they don't go out, they don't get active, they're not loud, and thus they're not | ||
paid attention to. And it's another reason why a lot of people in media are scared of them and | ||
will not cover this stuff because they know they'll get attacked. But also if, look at what happened | ||
to Kyle Reitenhaus. Yeah, they'll, you know, when they are defending, when they go and defend, | ||
when they try to make a difference, when they try to push back, then they get totally screwed. | ||
And then, then, oh my God, what if 10 million people showed up in DC and said enough, you'd make a change. | ||
Where are they gonna burn down? | ||
The Trump Account? | ||
I'm not saying if they actually showed up in mass, which they don't do that either. | ||
Well, it depends. | ||
It depends also how much institutional support you have because, you know, when we see protests, | ||
sometimes they do make a difference, sometimes they don't. | ||
When it came to the Iraq War, we saw some of the biggest protests in the United States | ||
and it absolutely didn't do anything. | ||
And now another thing to really consider here is a lot of leftist and a lot of left kind | ||
of thinking leaders are always making the argument that you need to riot. | ||
You need to burn down businesses. | ||
You need to be violent because when you do, you are heard. | ||
And there are examples that they specifically point to saying that there was injustices. | ||
We protested. | ||
We peacefully marched. | ||
Nothing happened. | ||
This is what the left says. | ||
This is not what I'm saying. | ||
But they're saying, but when we did riot, we finally did get the national media attention. | ||
We finally did get everyone watching us. | ||
We finally did get change because we put our words to action and actually made something that made people look at us and watch and actually do something. | ||
That's the argument that the lefts are making that should be somewhat considered here and talked about, honestly. | ||
I'm sorry, Tim. | ||
Instead of a protest, you can have a movement, like the Tea Party movement, which is something that made a difference. | ||
That was a thing that actually changed. | ||
We took back the Senate, essentially. | ||
We took back Congress. | ||
Any real life change, though? | ||
Well, but we're not burning down buildings. | ||
No, no, I'm not advocating for it. | ||
Not everything has to be the French Revolution. | ||
No, I'm not advocating for it, but we need to kind of lay out their kind of philosophy and their actions to understand it. | ||
And I think there's some fair points that they bring up. | ||
I kind of think this is like the new form of protest on the internet. | ||
Like Tim making a video, you protest in your videos. | ||
You're like angry about something and you're protesting that thing. | ||
This is ridiculous. | ||
Look at this. | ||
And people are listening. | ||
People listen to this. | ||
I think we stopped a war in Syria in 2012 because of our internet protest. | ||
So that's why I don't go to these giant crowds where you get smushed in like a sardine and if they fire mustard gas, you're gonna choke to death or whatever. | ||
You're right, but it's not 2012. | ||
Did you say 2016? | ||
2012. | ||
2016 is when it happened. | ||
You know why? | ||
Donald Trump got elected. | ||
And that's what stopped The escalation in Syria. | ||
I remember 2011 when they were talking about... We put boots on the ground. | ||
It was 2012, 2013 when they said that he had gassed his own people and Obama was going to take us in. | ||
The red line, right? | ||
And there was something... I remember we are changing involved with it. | ||
I might be wrong about that but I think you guys were real vocal about it. | ||
You're right but your ears are off. | ||
Obama did bring us in. | ||
Then people on the internet started posting memes, complaining, propping up Trump and pushing for Trump. | ||
Trump wins. | ||
And then Trump immediately says, I don't want to do this. | ||
What I'm thinking of is before Trump. | ||
It was Obama. | ||
Obama decided we're not going in. | ||
Obama put soldiers in Syria, period. | ||
But it happened. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But it wasn't a full invasion like Iraq and Afghanistan. | ||
Well, they were planning to Libya to do the same thing that they did in Libya and Syria. | ||
And there was a lot of extensive pushback, but also there was a lot of protest. | ||
I mean, you know, I was a part of like filming a lot of people and their voices. | ||
And it was in a time and period where the Internet wasn't fully censored yet. | ||
So those voices were extremely popular. | ||
But we also have to remember, it was also Russian warships that literally went in front of American warships. | ||
Right next to Syria and said, you do this, we are going to have a bigger conflict and a bigger fight here. | ||
Now, the topic of protest, it's a very interesting one. | ||
You could point to examples where it didn't do jack squat. | ||
You could point to examples where it did do something, like in Poland with the Solidarnosc movement, where people, you know, peacefully protested, they petitioned, and they also just had a worker strike, and that helped make a big difference. | ||
Well, that's a bigger thing, too. | ||
That was the Solidarity, I mean, Solidarity, right? | ||
Yes. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
And that brought people together against the communist government that was ruling their lives and being very unjust. | ||
So there are instances where it works and it doesn't work. | ||
So we need to understand, we can't just see it as black and white. | ||
You're talking about, I'm talking about protests, right? | ||
Protests, yeah. | ||
But then we talk about, you know, then you mix in worker strikes. | ||
And then, you know, it's a big part of the movement. | ||
Hold on, a farmer strike would be huge. | ||
Let me ask you a question, though. | ||
Yes. | ||
If a million Trump supporters showed up in D.C. | ||
tomorrow and blocked all the roads, Maybe they're all in DC already. | ||
I don't know. | ||
to count any votes. | ||
Maybe they're all in DC already. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, I maybe it can't. | ||
I don't know. I'm just imagining, you know, I think what Alex Jones say? 10 million people or something like | ||
ridiculous number. They say 10. | ||
I don't remember exactly, but they're the legal amount that they're allowed to have is 30,000. | ||
Well, see, the protest tomorrow. | ||
Well, forget about the legal amount. | ||
Then that's when you want to go, well, you know, what are Send in a National Guard that can't do that. | ||
What if so many people show up that just the roads are blocked? | ||
Not even intentionally. | ||
And it obstructs the process by which D.C. | ||
is supposed to function. | ||
Geez, they'll have to remote it in. | ||
What a novel concept. | ||
You say what, off of the phone in? | ||
Off the remote, yeah. | ||
They'll have to do it by remote in the 21st century. | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
But how do you verify the person who's voting is the real person? | ||
You gotta stream it live on Skype chat. | ||
No, there's filters people use all the time to mask and do deepfakes. | ||
They would do it through Webex. | ||
unidentified
|
And live. | |
They would vote through Webex. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it would be so ridiculous. | |
How do you know they're not an android in Congress right now? | ||
No, but we do have deepfake live filters and stuff like that, so they come in and they vote the person. | ||
But they are doing a lot of remote voting. | ||
The Maxine Waters Snapchat filter. | ||
I think it's a fact that there's a certain number of people that can shut down, you know, any city. | ||
That's true. | ||
If they just peacefully protested. | ||
But, you know, a protest is... You're talking more about a shutdown. | ||
No, no, no, I'm saying... Well, here's the question. | ||
If a million people were walking around in D.C., shoulder to shoulder on the streets in many circumstances, not even intentionally blocking anything, they'd be in the way, making things impossible to do. | ||
I mean, it's a Wednesday. | ||
Do you think 10 people or, you know, there's going to be a million people there? | ||
unidentified
|
No, no, no. | |
I'm not saying there will be. | ||
I'm saying that a protest could have that power. | ||
A protest of that size would have such a massive impact. | ||
It would really obstruct things. | ||
But it wouldn't obstruct, yes. | ||
But would it change something? | ||
It sounds like you're saying, Noah, get the boat. | ||
If we can't deal with corruption and bloat, and I love AOC just being this progressive who supports Nancy Pelosi in basically everything. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
At least, like, when you look at the Republicans, you have Republicans for and against Trump, and it's kind of split. | ||
Twelve senators supporting him and a bunch not. | ||
Look at the progressives. | ||
They're like, well, you know, we will vote for Nancy Pelosi even though we hate her guts. | ||
Why? | ||
Well, but we don't want Kevin McCarthy to be, you know, the speaker of that. | ||
If you, if, if they know you're going to bend and just give them whatever they want, they'll never give you what you want. | ||
I'd be willing to bet Kevin McCarthy could cut a deal with the progressives. | ||
They'd probably say better than nothing. | ||
Can I, can I ask you just a slightly derail? | ||
You, you were on the ground for, for Occupy Wall Street. | ||
Yes. | ||
Huge. | ||
Would you say that was a protest or a movement? | ||
Uh, it was a movement. | ||
Okay. | ||
Did it do anything? | ||
Ultimately, did it do anything? | ||
It got the DNC to transfer all their funds from, I think it was Bank of America, to Amalgamated, which was a union-controlled bank, which was a big victory for them. | ||
That was one of the things they wanted. | ||
There's a lot of people moving their money from big banks to local small banks and local credit unions. | ||
Yeah, sure. | ||
Credit unions saw a major boost, so it was really damaging to big banks. | ||
It really was. | ||
When you go down and talk to all the random people and all their different ideas, oh, it was lovable chaos. | ||
Yes. | ||
How they had no idea at the time what they were really fighting for, but they did create certain amounts of pressure. | ||
I remember, we were there at that Bernie Sanders book signing, right Luke? | ||
You were there? | ||
In D.C.? | ||
I believe so, yes. | ||
We were waiting in line for like, I think it was like meat or something, like in a buffet. | ||
And the guy, I'm pretty sure it was you and me, and the guy was sitting next to us saying that he worked for credit unions, and that because of Occupy Wall Street, they saw something like $500 billion transfer from banks into credit unions. | ||
Credit unions are non-profit banks that reinvest in their community. | ||
So, when I worked for American Eagle Airlines, we had the AA credit union, so that meant That money, that profit, went towards loans for employees, our union members, to buy stuff. | ||
I'm a member of the Navy Federal Credit Union. | ||
I probably shouldn't say what bank I'm using, but it's armed service personnel, and so the money that would normally be profit for shareholders is reinvested, giving the members amazing benefits. | ||
Like, with Navy Federal, you can travel internationally, and it's like no international fees or exchange rates. | ||
It's awesome. | ||
And that's because armed service personnel frequently get deployed to various places. | ||
So, that was big. | ||
That was great. | ||
I often advocated for many of these occupiers to see that as one of the biggest and most important victories possible. | ||
Taking away economic power from big corporate banks and bring them to non-profit community-centered credit unions. | ||
Because I would always complain these Antifa types would go and smash windows and stuff like that, right? | ||
And I would say, what do you think happens when that $30,000 a year banker shows up for his job in the morning and there's glass all over his desk and his computer? | ||
He's going to be like, what did I do? | ||
I don't understand. | ||
Why did you attack me? | ||
When you show up and you spray paint or bolt the doors shut or whatever, I'll tell you what the most effective protest would be. | ||
Don't smash the window of the bank. | ||
Put on a nice pair of slacks, a nice button-up shirt, stand out in front with some pamphlets, smile and shake hands, and give pamphlets for credit unions that reinvest in low-income communities. | ||
And then, guess what? | ||
How much damage can you really do to a bank when you break a window? | ||
Yeah, those banks are flimsy, man. | ||
But you'll make all of the working class people there hate you. | ||
How much damage could you do if you convince just five people in one week to | ||
move their average savings to a credit union? | ||
That could be $100,000. | ||
Those banks are flimsy, man. | ||
A few, if they lose a small percentage of their funds, they're, they go under. | ||
People need to understand voting, what your dollar voting, your, what your | ||
actions is absolutely insurmountable. | ||
It is so critically important. | ||
And I think maybe we could even just mobilize or even we should talk about this privately, put out some call to actions to actually help support local small businesses, rather than of course, the big mega corporate giants that are out there. | ||
And another thing that I wanted to bring up, because I know you're you want someone to say to say, pointing at each other. | ||
Dave Portnoy. | ||
Yes, he started doing it himself. | ||
But before we get into Dave and what he's doing, one of the best protests that I've seen and heard about and I've seen the memes about were, of course, the protests in Japan where bus drivers who were angry at, of course, their company for not giving them the proper wages, They decided to protest by, of course, continuing their job. | ||
Not striking, but they didn't charge people to enter the bus. | ||
And, of course, the bus company owners had to, of course, capitulate to their needs because they had all these people using their services. | ||
They didn't disrupt normal life. | ||
They didn't piss anyone off. | ||
They just really made sure that they did something that actually had a huge ramification that was still something that everyone was happy about. | ||
Yeah, so, but you brought up a good point about fighting for small businesses. | ||
It's one of, like, one of the best protest things you can do right now. | ||
Dave Portnoy of Barstool Sports started that fund, where, I think, how much did they raise? | ||
Like, millions of dollars? | ||
Twelve million last week. | ||
Twelve million! | ||
Sixteen, yeah. | ||
Wow. | ||
Last week? | ||
To help people whose businesses are hurting because of the lockdowns. | ||
Now, first, I'll say, that's direct relief. | ||
It's one of the coolest things I've ever heard in a long time. | ||
The next step is, how do we stop the politicians who are taking a dump on the Constitution and destroying people's businesses? | ||
So, you know what the answer is? | ||
Really simple. | ||
Protest. | ||
What will that do? | ||
If people just went about their business like there was no lockdown rule? | ||
Oh, well that's a good form of protest. | ||
Nonviolent civil disobedience. | ||
Showing up and opening your doors and if everybody did it, there'd be no lockdown and the cops can't do anything about it. | ||
Justify the order. | ||
If everybody, instead of going around and marching, just opened the doors to their businesses and says, we're open, then there's no lockdown. | ||
It's over. | ||
I think all of these businesses... I mean, you could... | ||
a protest, you can protest by prorating your property taxes, saying, well, look, you had me | ||
shut down for this amount of time. I'm not going to pay the taxes for for that amount of time | ||
because I couldn't make any money. And then tax men show up to your door with some guns and say, | ||
I don't care. Yeah, I go through these things. | ||
Government wants its cut, baby! | ||
I want to tell people to do certain things, like to not pay tax, but I feel like that is like a form of incitement. | ||
To tell people, disobey the civil authority if the civil authority is bad or evil. | ||
Well, what you could do, then they would maybe take you to court, and then you could go, well, then I'm countersuing, and this is the reason why, and then maybe There could be. | ||
I mean, it sounds like there's some justification to that, right? | ||
That's what the American Revolution was based on. | ||
So, yes, that is justice. | ||
I think I'm wearing the appropriate shirt for this. | ||
I think you are. | ||
To say the least. | ||
But again, many things we could do, many different small actions. | ||
But again, it all comes down to people being aware of what's going on so they actually know what actions to take. | ||
And I definitely think we need to mobilize and organize a lot more than just the kind of pontificating and thinking that we do here, and I think that might be a next step that I think we should really kind of consider. | ||
You know the biggest problem I think we have as freedom-loving individuals? | ||
I swear, it's these like whiny, fence-sitting podcaster types that will talk all day and night about all the problems, won't actually organize anything. | ||
Sit in their house, turn the camera on, complain about something, and then do literally nothing about it. | ||
I can just imagine some of these people sitting there with their open button-ups and their beanies, complaining all day for a year, and then literally not even doing anything about it. | ||
What I like about internet video is you're turning words into action. | ||
It is something. | ||
You're creating something. | ||
And speaking is a form of action, but when you record it and turn it into a commodity, you're creating something with your words. | ||
But you're also being an influencer, and that's a very important thing to help people shape their... I was half-kidding. | ||
But I think there's an important point, and there's a lot of people like us who will be like, man, all these things are bad. | ||
Oh, don't look at me. | ||
I'm not going to run for office and do anything about it. | ||
I'm just upset. | ||
I don't think that the political system, I don't think we can fix it from within. | ||
I think it's something new. | ||
I disagree. | ||
I disagree. | ||
Really? | ||
Yeah, I think it can be fixed from within. | ||
The problem is, people like AOC, right? | ||
She came from nothing. | ||
She came from, well, I'll say humble beginnings. | ||
Not like she was destitute or anything. | ||
She's middle class. | ||
Right, right, right. | ||
But she wasn't like, she's not wealthy, she's not a billionaire. | ||
This is it for her. | ||
She finally broke the barrier and became somebody. | ||
You think she's gonna give that up for anything? | ||
No way. | ||
She's got 12 million followers on Twitter now, I think. | ||
She's not gonna walk away from that. | ||
Even if she left political office, she'd be a superstar for the rest of her life. | ||
But, this is... Listen. | ||
For her, working as a bartender. | ||
And then they did, what is it, just as Democrats did, like, a round of, like, interviewing people to see, like, who would be a great politician. | ||
They run with her. | ||
She signs on to some of these organizations as, like, an executive on some of these non-profits. | ||
She wins the primary. | ||
And because the system is completely broken, she, like, default becomes a congresswoman. | ||
That launches her to stardom. | ||
Now, she could disrupt, obstruct, and challenge the system. | ||
But whoa, whoa. | ||
She finally made it. | ||
She's finally somebody with followers, and this is why she's in the system, and they love her for it. | ||
I would like to have her on the show, because I want to hear her perspective on it and what her feelings are in disrupting the system. | ||
She's not. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
She supported Pelosi, and she refused to force a floor vote. | ||
Yeah, she's kind of not, and I want to know why. | ||
Because they make excuses. | ||
Well, I just said you can't fix it from within, but you said you can. | ||
I want to know, why is she not then? | ||
You fix it from within by getting elected and then challenging the system, refusing to support garbage bills, refusing to support people like Nancy Pelosi, regardless of party, regardless of tribe. | ||
But all of these people go in and they say, well, you know, it's better that the Democrats win this time than the Republicans. | ||
And then it's just back and forth with establishment elites. | ||
If you're going to fix a machine, you wouldn't like go into the machine and just stop it from working because that doesn't fix it. | ||
You have to build a new machine. | ||
I'll put it this way. | ||
You have a fax machine at your office that kind of works, and it does get copies out, and they're kind of smudged and awful, and the boss is like, look, I don't want to deal with it. | ||
You know, it's a lot of work. | ||
So you go over and you kick it really hard, and then it starts spazzing out, and he goes, fine, fine, I'll call a repairman. | ||
Something like that. | ||
But someone, a repairman, still says, oh, just come in from the outside and fix the thing. | ||
Here's a better example. | ||
You've got a machine with a bunch of working parts, but all of those parts have stopped working. | ||
Save a small handful, like Rand Paul, I guess. | ||
And Tulsi Gabbard, unfortunately, she's on her way out, but she's been doing really great in this past couple of months. | ||
You have very few actual working parts. | ||
You need to replace them with parts that work, one by one. | ||
If you replace a substantial enough of the parts, the machine starts working again. | ||
What if the machine itself is doing a disservice? | ||
Throw it in the garbage. | ||
Like your machine is spitting out fireballs at your customers? | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
It's unplugged! | ||
What if your Xerox machine is instead shooting out fireballs? | ||
You need a new Xerox machine. | ||
You do. | ||
You gotta unplug it and you gotta take it out. | ||
But the Xerox machine fires fireballs at you if you try to unplug it. | ||
And then police come and arrest you. | ||
You need to let it fireball you. | ||
What were you saying, Reggie? | ||
But ASC's not... Like, anything that she says isn't a fireball. | ||
It's... | ||
Mostly, no no no no Government itself. Oh, okay. I thought you fireballs of | ||
people as default is interest. You know Federal Reserve interest | ||
Well just that like the machine is so old ratty and broken and the parts are all decrepit and 80 years old and getting | ||
their hair Cuts at salons during lockdowns that sparks are flying out | ||
of it and people are like this thing doesn't work I don't care anymore. And how many what's what's Congressional | ||
approval like? | ||
18% but nobody wants to use this machine. We got to do something about it, but there's also something | ||
It comes down to power to do. | ||
Do you think the voters in the San Francisco area actually like Nancy Pelosi? | ||
No, I wouldn't say they do, but they vote for her because... and it's not just like, what's the alternative, but... | ||
She's the most powerful person in the house. | ||
So let's vote for her. | ||
Even though you don't like her. | ||
You ever see the image of the elephant tied to a tiny post? | ||
Yeah. | ||
There's like a little wooden post in the ground and the elephant's tied to it. | ||
And it's an old, like, I don't know, parable or whatever, where somebody sees | ||
this and ask the elephant trainer, the elephant could clearly just walk away | ||
and rip that post out of the ground, but they stay here strapped to the post. | ||
Why don't they leave? | ||
And he said, when they're babies, we tie them to the post. | ||
They can't break away from it. | ||
They grow up having defeated, been defeated, and they can't break away. | ||
By the time they're older, they don't realize they're not strong enough to break free. | ||
So what I mean by that is Nancy Pelosi wins because people are like, I better vote Democrat. | ||
Oh no, it's so scary. | ||
What's going to happen if the Republicans get in? | ||
And Trump said, what do you have to lose? | ||
Remember that? | ||
What do you got? | ||
Vote for me! | ||
What do you got to lose? | ||
And I'm like, that's a great point. | ||
I stopped voting. | ||
I look at the Democratic and Republican establishment. | ||
We call them the Uniparty. | ||
People criticize them all the time. | ||
Trump comes in and it was something wildly different. | ||
There were a few things I liked and I said, okay, I'll vote for that. | ||
Because that's not the establishment Republicans. | ||
Now you think I would ever support someone like Mitch McConnell or Lindsey Graham? | ||
Of course not. | ||
What's the difference between... I'll tell you a joke. | ||
You guys are going to love this joke. | ||
What's the difference between Mitch McConnell, Lindsey Graham, Nancy... Mitch McConnell, Lindsey Graham, and Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer. | ||
Nothing. | ||
No, haha, that's a funny joke, huh? | ||
Hilarious. | ||
It's kind of creepy, isn't it? | ||
Nothing. | ||
Lindsey Graham says Trump's got to fight for, you know, to object and have these legal challenges. | ||
Then he walks down on the Senate floor and he fist bumps Kamala Harris and pats her on the back, | ||
like, eh. | ||
They don't care. | ||
They're not here to actually bring about change or do anything. | ||
They're like puppet figureheads who get in. | ||
It's like, we set aside all of these resources because we want people to come into the head management office to help us run things. | ||
They walk in, they look around at all the hors d'oeuvres, they grab a few snacks, they stand there, you know, eat some food, drink some fancy wine, and then walk out the door and do nothing. | ||
No meeting ever took place. | ||
That's kind of what I feel like what's happening. | ||
Then Trump comes in and starts yelling at everybody. | ||
unidentified
|
He's like, hey, whoa, whoa, don't, don't rain on our party, dude! | |
We're chillin', we're rich, we don't gotta do any work, we pretend, we come out here, we talk for a few minutes, we do hearings, nothing really gets done. | ||
And then Trump comes in, he's yelling at everybody. | ||
Man, killin' their buzz, dude. | ||
So they gotta get rid of that. | ||
Now we're back to the Uniparty. | ||
I think South Park had the best kind of analogy here that I'm automatically thinking about what you were saying when it came between a douche and a turd sandwich. | ||
And I think that's exactly what we're in. | ||
And I think as long as people start giving their power to politicians, there's never going to be a solution. | ||
We should never put anyone above ourselves. | ||
We should always be making decisions for ourselves based on information that we get that should be free and open. | ||
But that's not what's happening right now. | ||
You know what the problem is? | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
There are people who eat turd sandwiches and enjoy it. | ||
Yes, some of them do. | ||
So no, here's what the issue is. | ||
You'll get a Rand Paul, someone who actually has principles and will filibuster and fight and do his best, to be honest, but no one's going to vote for him. | ||
They're going to insult him. | ||
Right now, you look at the left. | ||
It's the weirdest thing when they attacked Rand Paul over the Breonna Taylor thing, when he was the one who He introduced the bill. | ||
The Breonna Taylor bill. | ||
He introduced the bill to ban no-knock warrants. | ||
And they were attacking him because they don't know anything and they don't care. | ||
They want to eat the turd sandwich. | ||
They love it. | ||
Not all of them. | ||
I mean... No, not all of them. | ||
Too many. | ||
Obviously, Rand Paul gets elected because there are people who don't want to eat a turd sandwich and opted for a nice pastrami on rye. | ||
But there are a lot of people who... Wait, a little turd. | ||
What, Rand Paul? | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's not perfect. | ||
Nobody's perfect. | ||
No one's perfect. | ||
There's like a little piece of stuff. | ||
A little dingleberry in there. | ||
But regular people love the tribalism. | ||
Like you were saying, like you, Andrew, were saying about Auntie Maxine. | ||
What has she done for anybody, but they vote for her anyway? | ||
Oh, Auntie Maxine, yay! | ||
Tribalism. | ||
For no reason. | ||
And these people get in office, and they're partying, they're probably doing tons of drugs. | ||
I'm not even kidding, right? | ||
Everybody here thinks Congress, they're all doing a bunch of drugs, right? | ||
I would imagine so, yeah. | ||
What do you think? | ||
Cocaine. | ||
My lawyer would suggest that I not. | ||
I think they're all doing tons of drugs in Congress. | ||
I do. | ||
I think they're out of their minds. | ||
Who was it? | ||
We were watching TV and someone was pointing out some congressman looked like he had he had crusty nose from like doing coke or something. | ||
That's hilarious. | ||
Lindsey Graham's raging alcoholic. | ||
I don't know for sure, but man, his eyes are bloodshot. | ||
My goodness. | ||
Guy looks wrecked. | ||
OK. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, he's just shaking. | ||
But I think they get in the office, they get a cushy paycheck and they don't want to do any work. | ||
That's it. | ||
You also have the revolving door, you know, politicians. | ||
They get in for only a couple terms and they go and work for a lobbying firm or something like that. | ||
Well, this is what I think is going to happen with AOC. | ||
I don't think that she's going to give up. | ||
I don't think she's just going to. | ||
She was saying in some interview recently, I think it was Vanity Fair, maybe. | ||
Where she was saying that she doesn't see herself being a congressperson for much longer, and I'm assuming that she wants to be a senator. | ||
I think she's definitely going to run for president. | ||
No, I don't think she's going to primary Schumer. | ||
I think she's probably going to wait and primary Gillibrand. | ||
Because she's very vulnerable after her terrible, terrible showing in 2016. | ||
I don't think she ever polled more than 0.7%. | ||
She was awful. | ||
So she's very vulnerable. | ||
And people don't like her. | ||
People don't necessarily like AOC either. | ||
But she has a lot of money. | ||
And I, just as a very rough, like I was actually looking at all of the money that she makes. | ||
AOC? | ||
Yeah, like that she brought in for her, for Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for Congress. | ||
It's something like $19 million. | ||
Wow! | ||
Right? | ||
Most of that money, like 90, at least like 98%, Is not from her district. | ||
It's from everywhere else. | ||
She's going to run for president. | ||
She will. | ||
Oh, she she doesn't need to spend that $19 million. | ||
Right. | ||
So and she probably even has more from other, you know, from from her. | ||
She hasn't like another political action committee that she's probably going to keep a lot of that. | ||
But she is definitely going to run for president. | ||
And she could win and keep going on this, but not even because she's a woman. | ||
That's why I love her. | ||
She's not going to win as president. | ||
I'm not obsessed with her. | ||
Oh, maybe not immediately, but I don't know if she's gonna run immediately. | ||
You can archive this right now. | ||
She will never be president. | ||
Why is that? | ||
Because she hates all the flyover states. | ||
You ever hear her talk about the Electoral College, where she's like, oh, well, look at all this land. | ||
This land votes. | ||
Hold on there, mister. | ||
When they make Puerto Rico and D.C. | ||
unidentified
|
states, uh... and get rid of the electoral college well right at | |
the supreme court this is a great anyway will be president | ||
uh... | ||
now as it just accepted into your heart president and he is coming in twenty | ||
twenty eight uh... i think she's gonna run for | ||
she's and she's gonna run for senate and it's probably gonna be against | ||
jill brand i don't think it'll be shimmer shimmers like late | ||
sixties i think So he's still got plenty of time, you know. | ||
What, Gillibrand's how old? | ||
She's young. | ||
She's like in her early 50s, I think. | ||
That's young? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
That's crazy. | ||
It's young for our politics! | ||
And this is a great... What you said about Puerto Rico and Washington D.C. | ||
becoming a state is a great, great segue. | ||
into the Georgia Senate runoff. | ||
And I'm going to read you some quick reporting. | ||
With 65% expected total vote reporting, according to the Wall Street Journal, Ossoff is 0.35% ahead of Purdue. | ||
point three five percent ahead of of Purdue and the Reverend Warnock is point | ||
zero eight percent ahead of Kelly Love Democrats Democrats have swept it's not | ||
it's not over yet it's 65% but it's it's so freaking close man that is do they do | ||
really mail-in voting there oh yeah I yeah I don't know if they're counting | ||
They mail-in voting in this tally But, you know, I don't know how they're doing it. | ||
I have a ton of jokes I could make about this, but YouTube doesn't allow them. | ||
No joke. | ||
Like sarcasm pertaining to vote counts. | ||
That's right. | ||
I was like, I'm gonna know if I say that, YouTube's gonna be like, we don't care. | ||
Don't say it. | ||
Don't exacerbate it. | ||
Someone made a joke earlier. | ||
Channel's terminated. | ||
They were like, it's 12.07 AM and Fox News has called it for Ossoff and Warnock. | ||
And then they were like, I had to delete this because people thought it was real. | ||
Oh, I think it was Benny. | ||
Was it? | ||
Yeah. | ||
People thought it was real. | ||
They were like, wow, Fox called it, huh? | ||
Yeah. | ||
At 12.07 p.m. | ||
So I kind of feel like Republicans are going to win. | ||
It is super close. | ||
I mean, clearly looking at this map, you know, like Augusta and Savannah and Atlanta are like true blue. | ||
Right. | ||
But, you know, you're you're missing a lot of counties like It's Coffee County. | ||
I want to live in Coffee County. | ||
Purdue just went up by a couple points of a percentage. | ||
Oh, Warnock is 0.96. | ||
We're just going to read this all night, folks. | ||
How exciting. | ||
Like the Young Turks. | ||
But hold on. | ||
Stop laughing, because laughing is at least enjoyable. | ||
You need to talk like this. | ||
John Ossoff is currently at 50.2. | ||
Sound like you're in Congress. | ||
0.29% ahead. | ||
Just phoning it in. | ||
So funny. | ||
I don't know. | ||
So I've had the numbers pulled up for quite some time, and Perdue and Lafleur have been gaining. | ||
So I guess some of the earlier votes that came in were from the bigger cities, so it definitely gave the Democrats a boost. | ||
But now Republicans get their votes from rural areas where there's way more counties. | ||
So over time, they start closing the gap. | ||
Is it going to be where they keep counting votes for days after tomorrow? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, probably. | |
Because of mail-in? | ||
Because of mail-in. | ||
And because it's so close. | ||
But I also think there's going to be a lot more scrutiny from from both sides, but especially Republicans after all the shenanigans where it takes weeks. | ||
How many weeks did it take for Georgia to actually give like a final result? | ||
It was a long time. | ||
And same thing with Pennsylvania. | ||
And if anything, there is going to be some call, definitely on the state level, but maybe | ||
even on the federal level in two years after Republicans win back Congress, hopefully, | ||
that there's going to be some kind of election. | ||
reform, you know, whether even if it's just like a, you know, you have to maybe | ||
if you're gonna if you're gonna use a machine in your state, you need to use | ||
it in all of your counties as opposed to, you know, so what happened? | ||
They only saw only some counties had the certain machines. | ||
Yes. | ||
If the Democrats win this race, then Republicans are never going to win again. | ||
That's not true. | ||
Not in the way we know it, though. | ||
So, look at Republicans today. | ||
They are very, very different from Republicans 10 years ago. | ||
You see what I mean? | ||
The Republican Party as a party will change its values to adapt to... Like, so when I say, like, D.C. | ||
and Puerto Rico become states, what will end up happening is Republicans will start incorporating different values into the Republican Party in an effort to win. | ||
So everything will become substantially more progressive over time. | ||
Like, so that's why I mean the Democrats, if they win, they're gonna make enough changes to where the Republicans will have to become more like the Democrats. | ||
Like, they already are. | ||
Like, Donald Trump is not the staunchest of conservative religious folk. | ||
Far from it. | ||
He's fairly moderate. | ||
Even Vox.com said he was fairly moderate. | ||
That's Vox, V-O-X, not F. They said that Trump was a moderate. | ||
They did, when he was running. | ||
So, you have these, you know, hardcore religious conservatives. | ||
They're out. | ||
That's not the party of Trump anymore. | ||
Trump is a populist. | ||
You know, Trump campaigned on the deficit, but he didn't care. | ||
Give people $2,000. | ||
That's not the same as traditional conservatives, many of whom don't like him. | ||
And in Georgia, it's also important to point out that Biden and the Democrats' promise is to give people $2,000, something that, of course, Donald Trump has been trying to do himself. | ||
So that's another angle to think about here. | ||
But these evangelicals who... I'm so happy our voting system is in the hands of machines and private corporations that have ties to foreign governments. | ||
I'm so happy our voting system is in the hands of machines and private corporations that have ties to foreign | ||
unidentified
|
governments. | |
I feel so proud. | ||
As many leftists have told us, private corporations are allowed to do what they want. | ||
They're the new God. | ||
They're people. | ||
It's a private company, you know? | ||
So Facebook can ban whoever they want. | ||
So, you know, if we have a private company running our elections, well, then we don't need to be able to ask many questions. | ||
They can do what they want. | ||
Yeah. | ||
If you don't have religion, you have to make the corporations your overlords. | ||
I mean, it's that simple. | ||
While we're doing stats, can I say Bitcoin is up 5% in the last 24 hours? | ||
It's at $34,000. | ||
It's at $34,000. | ||
It's been at $34,000. | ||
Keemstar must be thrilled. | ||
Ethereum's up 45% this week. | ||
Why is Keemstar happy? | ||
I don't know the story. | ||
Keemstar got in earlier. | ||
It sounds oddly similar to the amount of money that's being printed. | ||
I just want to let you guys know something crazy. | ||
I bought Bitcoin when it was near like a grand or two. | ||
And it's because I remember in 2011, when Bitcoin was at 70 cents, I had, I had five grand saved from my job. | ||
And I was like, should I just put my savings in this stuff? | ||
Like, should I just buy, you know, it would be like 6,300 Bitcoin. | ||
And my friend goes, no, like, what is it even? | ||
You know, it's going to be a scam. | ||
You're going to give your money to some guy and then it's not worth anything. | ||
It's just like internet money. | ||
And I was like, yeah, that's a good point. | ||
It would have been 6,300 Bitcoin. | ||
Internet money, dude. | ||
It's like your job now. | ||
But here's what happened. Here's what happened. I remember then like a year later when I hit 20 bucks | ||
I was like, oh my god If I had six thousand three hundred Bitcoin hit 20 bucks a | ||
lot of people said dude you would have sold immediately I'm like, of course cuz it went up and down but so then | ||
when I'm like when it was race When it was just over a thousand bucks | ||
I decided to put some money in and then I just forgot about it and I had just like sitting on an old phone and | ||
Then the news broke of it hitting like twenty eight thousand and I was like, I gotta go find that phone | ||
I told Max Keiser to bug off when it was still a few dollars and then you know we all have our mistakes but you know looking forward. | ||
Why would you tell Max Keiser to bug off? | ||
We were fighting the globalists at Bilderberg with Alex Jones and Watford in the United | ||
Kingdom. | ||
I was hanging out with Max Keiser and one of his friends, who was a very wealthy dude, | ||
and he was like, you gotta buy some square stock. | ||
And so I was like, you got it, you're the billionaire. | ||
And so I didn't have a lot of money, I just bought some squares. | ||
Way through the roof since then. | ||
From like 10 bucks to like 200 and something bucks. | ||
Well, we have to understand, you know, using cryptocurrencies, especially just a few years ago, wasn't user-friendly. | ||
It wasn't like you could just get on an app and send your credit card in and then get your Bitcoin. | ||
It wasn't like that. | ||
You had to have your own server. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, you had to, you know, have your own physical wallet. | ||
You had to have space for your wallet. | ||
You had to back up the wallet. | ||
You had to know your private keys. | ||
You had to find someone and transact with them in a way that wasn't commercially, you know, approved. | ||
So it wasn't that easy. | ||
And again, when you're dealing with, you know, very severe issues, and you're also hanging out with a bunch of crazy people, you just hear a lot of crazy stuff. | ||
And he was right. | ||
And I'm willing to admit that. | ||
Yeah, but Max is... So for those unfamiliar, Max Keiser, he does like a finance show. | ||
He's done a finance show for a long time. | ||
He's got a podcast called The Orange Pill Podcast, where they just basically tell you, buy Bitcoin. | ||
And there's a really funny meme, a series of them. | ||
There's one, I think, I could be wrong, but I vaguely remember seeing him as Leonardo DiCaprio, like, laughing. | ||
And it says, have fun staying poor. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's like he's telling people, like, get Bitcoin, because it's, he's been saying it for a decade! | ||
And I, you know, personally, in the beginning, I didn't listen to him. | ||
But then I started seeing... You moron. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
What does that make you? | ||
And I didn't listen to him initially but then I started seeing the usage of it and I started seeing how this is essentially like a new printing press and when it was a couple hundred when it was a couple thousand I remember doing a lot of prominent coverage on it interviewing him and interviewing other people in the space when it was still coming up when people didn't even know what it was. | ||
When Chuck Schumer was on the mainstream media telling everyone how to get illicit items on the dark web, literally giving people instructions, talking about how bad it was, and people were like, wait, what is this? | ||
Online monopoly money? | ||
So back then, even when it came to, you know, this very important situation with Ross Obrecht, who hopefully does get pardoned, when it came to the kind of initial Bitcoin, when it was a couple hundred, I remember doing a lot of prominent reporting on it for WeAreChange, and a lot of people are very happy that I did. | ||
And you guys are welcome. | ||
All right. | ||
We got weird. | ||
I'm watching the, the, the official vote count. | ||
And, uh, we're like the law floor just go down in votes. | ||
I'm seeing, Oh, I didn't see. | ||
Oh, I didn't see the actual... So what I'm watching, I'm watching the Fox News counter, I don't know what's playing. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
But I can see the numbers going up and down. | ||
I'm just watching the percentage. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
So it's really, really close. | ||
Are they going through counties? | ||
She's like 630 votes down right now, but Perdue is now ahead. | ||
He's ahead of Ossoff. | ||
Yeah, Warnock is 0.28 percent ahead at 28 percent of the total vote reporting. | ||
So I mean, super close. | ||
Now he's up like 3,000 votes. | ||
Can we just keep saying the numbers? | ||
Remember, this is a popularity contest that is being measured by a secret voting machine with proprietary software that we don't get access to. | ||
Oh, no. | ||
And in Arizona when the Senate Judiciary Committee filed subpoenas, Maricopa County said, | ||
screw off, we ain't gonna comply. | ||
The county protected their proprietary Canadian... | ||
The Judiciary Committee in Arizona said, we want a forensic audit of the machines, | ||
and Maricopa County said no. | ||
Do you think they intentionally... | ||
Makes no sense! | ||
I'm gonna make a prediction right now. | ||
If in the morning, like if overnight, it looks like both Republicans or at least one of the Republicans is going to win, you're going to see a nice bump in the stock market tomorrow because the market is definitely going to react. | ||
Bitcoin will probably go down then, you think, right? | ||
If they see that the Democrats are going to control the Senate, It's going to be a fireball. | ||
There's going to be a sell-off. | ||
You know, they call it a bear market. | ||
You know why they call it a bear market? | ||
You know why there's bull markets and bear markets? | ||
Are you familiar with the saying? | ||
Because animals? | ||
No, I don't know. | ||
So when the stock spikes, it's because a bull strikes up with the horns, and a bear strikes down with the claws. | ||
Gotcha. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
I just learned something. | ||
Yes. | ||
Now, if the Democrats win, It won't be a bear market. It will be like a bear halo drop, | ||
a bear halo elbow drop, jumping out of a high altitude with full gear, elbow | ||
dropping straight to the ground, leaving a crater in its wake. I'm half kidding, actually. | ||
Well, when Biden won, when Joe Biden won, the markets didn't react terribly. | ||
There was not that... Because of the Senate. | ||
Because of the Senate. | ||
There was this idea that if the Senate stays Republican, we'll have stability for a couple of years. | ||
But now we're going to have... And this is so weird when it comes to I don't understand it. | ||
Like, for example, Amy McGrath. | ||
She lost a Congressional House race. | ||
Then they said, you know what? | ||
She's perfect to run against Mitch McConnell. | ||
The most powerful man in the Senate. | ||
Same thing with John Ossoff. | ||
He's actually run twice. | ||
And this last one, he lost. | ||
Not only did he lose his congressional race, but they spent more money than any congressional race ever. | ||
And he still lost. | ||
And then what did they do? | ||
They go, you know what? | ||
This guy's perfect to run against David Perdue! | ||
I don't understand how—or Stacey Abrams. | ||
I swore that Stacey Abrams was gonna—that they were gonna have her run again, you know, because she—like, the winners are the—losers are the new winners, as far as the Democrats going. | ||
I don't understand the reasoning. | ||
how do they come along yeah yeah i i i have an important question | ||
unidentified
|
Kamala! | |
why do you think it is that when there's one election going right now we're going | ||
on right now for for these four candidates the numbers are different | ||
don't you think the republicans would go in and say purdue law floor have a nice | ||
day why is that people are going to think i'll vote for purdue | ||
but not law floor uh... | ||
they're both smeared in the exact same ways Is it misogyny? | ||
I'm not going to take credit for this because I was listening to Ben Shapiro this morning and he basically said that... Loeffler's winning now. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, wait. | |
Well, this doesn't make sense. | ||
By 0.30% at 69% expected total. | ||
It says Loeffler 50.2 to Warnock's 49, but he's got the higher vote count. | ||
What just happened? | ||
Anyway, sorry, what was Ben Shapiro saying? | ||
Ben was basically saying that minorities were behind Purdue because he's like pro-farm, pro-agriculture. | ||
But you also have a black man running against a white woman. | ||
But do you think there are people going in and saying, I will vote for one Republican and one Democrat? | ||
It's possible. | ||
And one Republican is all they need to win. | ||
Right. | ||
But not everybody. | ||
Most people do. | ||
I'd say most people do. | ||
And this is very anecdotal. | ||
I'd say most people vote down party lines, generally. | ||
But it could be possible that there are people going in and only voting for Warnock and nobody else. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
And so I don't get that at all. | ||
I don't understand. | ||
That's what they said when, when he said, Oh, well, uh, people were voting for Biden, but they weren't voting for, you know, anybody else. | ||
I'm like, I've never heard of that before in my life. | ||
I just saw Purdue go down. | ||
It is weird. | ||
Like it's still early, dude. | ||
No, no, no, no, no, no. | ||
The votes went down. | ||
Oh, that's because, uh, well, you know, those machines. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
No, I don't know. | ||
Like, I'm watching the numbers right now. | ||
unidentified
|
Pull it up. | |
Pull it up. | ||
Pull up the display. | ||
This is what I'm looking at. | ||
Fox News. | ||
You'll see. | ||
I'm like, I'm looking at it. | ||
And Purdue was at $1,439,000 just a moment ago. | ||
Nail biter. | ||
And then it went down to $7,000. | ||
Is this because they got some guy working at Fox News who doesn't know what he's doing? | ||
It might be data entry. | ||
Honestly, it, you know, it's possible. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's see. | |
We got So human beings, it's not like these results are being fed. | ||
is that it's a No, no, look down here. | ||
You can see the numbers. | ||
Loeffler on the bottom has got 1.46. | ||
See, I saw the numbers, like, roll up. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, they're going crazy. | ||
So, Purdue and Loeffler are both winning now. | ||
They're both winning by, like, you know, let's call it now. | ||
With less than a percentage point, though. | ||
So, clearly. | ||
No, it's over. | ||
It's over. | ||
It's over. | ||
Close your eyes. | ||
Cover your ears. | ||
Don't joke about it. | ||
Hide in the corner. | ||
This is it. | ||
Republicans have won. | ||
We did it, guys. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, we have a breaking announcement. | ||
The TimCast IRL Decision Desk is now projecting that Republicans will win. | ||
And hey, you can be wrong, remember? | ||
That's what the media usually does. | ||
unidentified
|
That's what the mainstream media usually does. | |
The polls are closed already, but that's the big thing about YouTube. | ||
Okay, the polls are closed. | ||
If the polls were open, YouTube would get mad. | ||
As the top senior political analyst on YouTube, I'm calling it. | ||
That's it. | ||
You graduated to YouTube. | ||
But calling it for who? | ||
I'm calling it for the Republicans. | ||
Yeah, I'm calling it for whoever wins. | ||
I'm calling it for Barney the Clown. | ||
Barney the Clown won. | ||
Essentially we all lost. | ||
Who's Barney the Clown? | ||
Barney the Dinosaur plus Krusty the Clown. | ||
Right now on Predict It, which party will control the Senate is 79 cents in favor of the Democrats. | ||
So yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Predict It is the betting market. | ||
Yeah, but they had Trump at like 70 cents at one point. | ||
The point is, if you were to buy at 23 cents for a Republican and the Republicans win, for every 23 cents, you'd get a dollar back. | ||
That's how it works. | ||
Uh, let me make an account. | ||
Predictit.org. | ||
I'm getting frustrated with the two-party system. | ||
That it's either, like, they're gonna all band together, and, like, if enough of us get the majority, then anything we decide on... The problem with it is that you get someone like AOC, who says she's a progressive, progressives vote for her, and then she goes, now that I'm in office, I'll support Nancy Pelosi. | ||
Thanks, Nancy! | ||
And that's just playing party politics? | ||
Yep. | ||
Well, the founders didn't like... | ||
You know, they didn't want two parties. | ||
They didn't want that at all. | ||
But that's just how it evolved. | ||
I think Washington didn't even want parties at all. | ||
He wasn't in a party. | ||
But that was because he was the first president. | ||
And a lot of people don't realize a lot of the early presidents were under the Confederation of States, not the United States under the Constitution of the federal government. | ||
So early on, we had a very, very weak federal government. | ||
Couldn't really do anything. | ||
And so that was the first few presidents. | ||
And then the second president... And the Constitution came like 10 years later, or longer than that, like 20 or 30 years later. | ||
Who was the second president? | ||
Why do I not know this? | ||
John Adams. | ||
Adams took second, and then Jefferson. | ||
So it was like Adams and Jefferson kind of split the government in half with their followers, right? | ||
The Jeffersonians and the... Adams and Jefferson were best friends, and then they just started to hate each other. | ||
Well, I think it had to do with Federalists versus the Anti-Federalists, right? | ||
There's also a weird thing where two people would run for president. | ||
The second place winner would be the vice president. | ||
So there might've been a little animosity going, like, oh, you're my boss, really? | ||
But not really. | ||
Isn't it a good thing, though, to maintain some kind of balance between- I would love to see Trump and Biden in there together. | ||
unidentified
|
Can you imagine? | |
It would've been President Biden to Vice President Trump. | ||
People would be happier, though. | ||
Then Biden and Trump would've been person of the year. | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
Think about it this way. | |
They would have been deciding issues with push-up contests. | ||
Think about what's happening right now, though. | ||
It would have been Trump-Hillary for 2016. | ||
It would have been great. | ||
And the Democrats would have been waiting. | ||
That sounds like a great idea because they'll be fighting each other and not really doing anything and bothering anyone. | ||
Nope. | ||
Nope. | ||
It's a bad idea. | ||
You know why? | ||
Because of the assassination. | ||
They would impeach Trump. | ||
Yes, so make Hillary the president. | ||
Some crap, you know. | ||
Or legit assassination. | ||
Well, it depends. | ||
I mean, they impeached Bill Clinton and they let him stay there. | ||
They impeached Trump. | ||
Yeah, well, they didn't remove him because, you know, we had the majority, the Republicans. | ||
If it was Hillary and, you know, Trump, the Republicans still had the Senate, so I don't think that would have happened. | ||
I think it would have been interesting, and I think The less government does, the better. | ||
And the more that they're fighting each other instead of surveilling, spying on us, tracking and databasing us, the better. | ||
Oh, don't worry. | ||
They've conscripted private companies to do that for them. | ||
Yes, they do. | ||
Republicans are pulling ahead. | ||
They are, yeah. | ||
Strong. | ||
It's still, again, it's still early. | ||
I don't know how they're counting their mail-in ballots. | ||
I don't know how they're, you know, if they're even part of this tally. | ||
Well, there was early voting results that I saw just yesterday. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Yeah. | ||
Oh, you saw them yesterday, really? | ||
Yes, yes. | ||
I didn't think they were allowed to put them out until today. | ||
They're saying that there's a small lead, there's projections as well, and they're saying from the initial counts, they're getting that this is going to... Well, if this holds and the Senate does stay in control for the Republicans, This is not great for Biden, which is a good thing. | ||
It's one of the very few presidencies that enter without the Senate and are completely powerless. | ||
It happened with Reagan, if I remember correctly, but that was a long time ago. | ||
But remember during one of the debates or maybe an interview where Biden was basically saying, well, we couldn't do this because we had a Republican We had a Republican Congress like, no, you didn't like for most presidents have the advantage because it's just it's kind of this wave. | ||
Well, it's because people who go to vote for the president vote party line. | ||
Right, and then two years later, everybody's like, yeah, what did I do? | ||
Why did I make that decision? | ||
And then Congress flips after at least four years in, and then there's a change of president. | ||
Everything was against Trump. | ||
With him look yeah, I did I did a man in the street video where I asked people I said one man on the street Got a man and a woman on the street Where I basically asked if you had to choose between four more years of Trump and a recession I remember that a lot of people Wow. | ||
unidentified
|
Yikes. | |
You know? | ||
recession and you're and you're just like that's insane right people die and | ||
yeah and and even this musician you know he said he was famous I'd never heard of | ||
him but he basically I don't even remember the his name so he's not that | ||
famous but but he was basically like well you know if it happens this time | ||
like but you're not making you're not selling albums right You're, you're selling live tickets to shows. | ||
What if people can't afford it? | ||
You know, not like, well, what if there's a gigantic pandemic? | ||
Uh, but this is, this is, um, the, it's just crazy that, that people. | ||
Got what they wanted. | ||
A lot of people got what they wanted. | ||
And it wasn't just that, but it was a recession, it was the pandemic, it was the media just lying their butts off. | ||
And everything is worse than Watergate. | ||
Everything. | ||
Oh, way more. | ||
That's what we were talking about before the show, where we were saying that Bob Woodward... Bernstein, yeah. | ||
I would like a Diet Coke. | ||
Is Pepsi okay? | ||
This is worse than Watergate. | ||
They printed 36% of our monetary supply in the last month. | ||
They say it's the pandemic. | ||
They'll be like, we're in a recession because of the pandemic. | ||
No, it's because you authorized the printing of 66% of our monetary supply. | ||
It's up. | ||
It's up from the last time we did the segment. | ||
We did the segment a month or two ago. | ||
All that money was being replaced. | ||
It was bad money. | ||
Like, we just shredded it. | ||
unidentified
|
Just printing, printing, printing. | |
I'm telling you, man, if you want to have fun, I said this last time, go on Amazon, click on like a tablet and then leave it in your cart for a couple days and come back and you'll see the price has gone up. | ||
Do the same thing right now. | ||
Go on Zillow and look at property values in West Virginia, in Wyoming, in Idaho. | ||
Just look at the estimated property values, and then come back a week later, and then you'll vomit a little bit. | ||
Just don't do it for ammo, because you're going to have a heart attack. | ||
Warning. | ||
What's ammo at now? | ||
A lot. | ||
Too much. | ||
Is it more than a dollar? | ||
What was it? | ||
unidentified
|
Ten cents? | |
A dollar a round? | ||
A 30-30 round is a dollar 30 or more. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow! | |
Wow, they're up 30%! | ||
Weren't they a buck a couple months ago? | ||
I was able to find some 5.56 for 90 cents a round. | ||
I tweeted that right away. | ||
Learn to make your own ammo, and then open an Etsy. | ||
Oh, by the way, someone wants to send us an ammo press. | ||
I didn't know where to have them send it. | ||
I suggested in the PO box. | ||
It's a big box. | ||
No, we can't do that. | ||
They should email. | ||
Okay, I'll have them email. | ||
Well, if we have a property somewhere where we can... That's what we're trying to do. | ||
I'll tell you the problem. | ||
So we want to get this farmland so that we can it's a film videos We're gonna we'll build like dirt jumps and we'll be able to you know, play with great fake civilizations like like snowboards and all that fun, but then we'll also be able to set up a range and yeah airsoft battles and just fun silly videos and also like notes alligators cool cool DIY projects and the idea is I said this before and You know, I made the joke earlier that all we do is sit around and complain, but the thing I want to do now is help create fun and exciting things. | ||
Instead of just complaining about the bad things, make some good things. | ||
So, do projects where we build lasers, Ian, you know. | ||
You got the graphene? | ||
Yeah, I got some powdered graphene, we got some graphene batteries. | ||
Just making fun videos to inspire people to do stuff instead of just complaining about stuff. | ||
I see you guys are going to open up like an FPS Russia slash Tim Cass channel, right? | ||
Is that... Shout out to the next thing, you know, with your... We want to have fun and inspire people to do cool things. | ||
You guys are going to want to follow Jeremy Riss on Twitter, the alien scientist. | ||
They are building lasers and much more. | ||
Did you guys talk about the alien thing, by the way? | ||
We did. | ||
We did, yeah. | ||
Okay. | ||
Here's the thing. | ||
So we're looking at this land, and it's almost impossible. | ||
Because right now, rich people, like super rich people, are calling up and they're being like, I see you have land available. | ||
I'll take it. | ||
Would you like to... No, I'll take it. | ||
I'll send you a check right now. | ||
And so the values are just jumping up, skyrocketing, because... Like, you can look in certain areas. | ||
People are fleeing New York, fleeing California, fleeing Chicago. | ||
I'm next, guys. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Where are you going? | ||
Hey guys, in the chat, tell me where I should move. | ||
Thank you. | ||
People from Texas like crazy. | ||
And it's causing property values to skyrocket. | ||
But property values, weird things are going to happen because property values in New York are dropping and people are fleeing. | ||
So now you've got these buildings that are empty. | ||
De Blasio says we're going to buy them and make them public housing. | ||
But here's my question. | ||
Look, if the property value is in the gutter, because nobody will live there anymore, let's say New York, and the tax assessment comes in, the property value is down, the taxes you owe goes down, then what? | ||
They offer lower rent, desperate to get people to move there, so rent in New York is going to start tanking, but rent in rural areas is going to start skyrocketing, and property values and taxes will skyrocket in rural areas. | ||
It's going to create really weird movement patterns across this country. | ||
I wonder what that's going to do to our elections. | ||
I think it probably had an impact on this past election, for sure. | ||
People who fled because of COVID. | ||
What's gonna happen in the next two years when all these people from New York flee to Western PA or something? | ||
Or even upstate New York. | ||
What's his name, J.P. | ||
Sears? | ||
Yeah. | ||
He did the video where, like, hey, I'm coming from California and moving to Texas and everything's gonna be great, but I don't like this thing. | ||
I don't like how you have all these Amazing gun rights, you know, nope. | ||
Nope. | ||
We gotta go to the City Council and fix that. | ||
So yeah, absolutely. | ||
This movement, this shift... | ||
A lot of people that are moving from New York, too, they can afford it. | ||
Not everybody can afford it. | ||
So do you think that those rich people are more leaning to the left or leaning to the right politically? | ||
To the right. | ||
And so what I was saying is the more right-wing people who are like, | ||
I hate this and I can afford to leave. | ||
And it's not all conservatives are rich. | ||
I'm just saying, in cities, you've got well-off individuals who are probably more right-leaning because, you know, they're going to move and it's going to make red states redder and blue states bluer. | ||
Well, when they move and they see how much money they save on their taxes, they're automatically going to become more right-wing. | ||
Let's just be honest here, because it's incredible what happens in New York City with city taxes, state taxes, on top of federal taxes. | ||
I don't understand. | ||
Well, that's why I'm leaving, because, you know, I'm a multi-millionaire YouTuber now. | ||
As a conservative YouTube realm. | ||
As senior political analyst, you're probably pulling easy six figures. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm shadow banned. | |
I can only do so much. | ||
But I am doing okay. | ||
But city taxes are just disgusting. | ||
Just as Bill de Blasio said, we need to redistribute the wealth. | ||
And that's exactly what he's doing, proudly pronouncing it. | ||
And how dare you not help redistribute your wealth? | ||
Well, I'm already doing it anyway because taxes are going to kill me this year. | ||
But this is one of the reasons why the Republicans need to hold the Senate and then hopefully get the House in two years. | ||
Because otherwise, this is going to be a raising taxes spree. | ||
But listen, it doesn't matter because in terms of taxes, I mean, you're right, you're right in that regard, but the Trump tax cuts are expiring no matter what. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Not for the corporations, but for everyone else as an individual. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
But what's the date though? | ||
It's not... He said specific term limits. | ||
So he said in three years, these specific cuts go away. | ||
In four years, these cuts go away. | ||
I don't know the exact parameters, but they do go away for the individual. | ||
Well, if the trend continues with the House, the Republicans are probably, and because now we have a Democratic president, presidential, president-elect, whatever, the trend is, you know, the Republicans are going to take back the House, and that's fine. | ||
And then they'll pass some new tax cuts. | ||
Biden will veto them, and then they'll just come back and say, yeah, we're signing it anyway. | ||
There won't be enough Republicans to override a veto. | ||
But you have all the you you do have Democrats like say Joe Manchin who is not completely in line Yeah, but then you got Mitt Romney Who loves the taste of a boot? | ||
So, you know, but also in two years, I mean, you know 33% of the Senate, you know goes up for re-election so anything can happen and That's true. | ||
You know, I think also it's an important thing we need to say is we talk a lot about Congress | ||
is old. | ||
That means retirements. | ||
That's true. | ||
A lot of retirements and a lot of I mean, how old is Feinstein? | ||
She's like a hundred and seventy seven. | ||
Seventy six. | ||
I think she was born. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
She was the niece of Thomas Jefferson. | ||
And here she is now. | ||
But she's in her 80s, isn't she? | ||
And she's been struggling. | ||
Like, the Democrats have been talking to her, like, to find out about it. | ||
unidentified
|
She can't read. | |
She's 87. | ||
unidentified
|
87! | |
What is wrong with this country? | ||
Well, she's the ranking member on the Judicial Committee. | ||
unidentified
|
She was born in 1903. | |
She was a great-grandmother before I was born. | ||
World War II ended, she was 12 years old. | ||
The CIA got formed when she was 12 years old. | ||
And these are the people deciding your lives. | ||
And people keep voting for her. | ||
She's a whore. | ||
have to understand this whole taxation system is a system meant to of course | ||
control you rather than of course fund the government I mean we've talked about | ||
it extensively on this show the government literally prints money out of | ||
thin air what's the point of taxes when they could just press zero on a computer | ||
there's absolutely no reason. Punitive taxation it's something that was never | ||
supposed to happen where they say we don't want you to drink soda so we're | ||
gonna we're gonna put a tax on soda That's what that's what John Berg did Chuck Grassley's 87. | ||
That's what I do Maxine's 82 Maxine Waters is 82 years. | ||
Why don't you retire? | ||
No? | ||
First of all they're making Chuck Grassley is I don't think Feinstein does that. | ||
I'll tell you that. | ||
He's 87 years old. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
Is he in touch? | ||
Chuck Grassley is awesome. | ||
He had he had COVID and he was like, I was fine. | ||
He the guy runs like two miles a day. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
Yeah, impressive. | ||
unidentified
|
Mm-hmm. | |
Wow. | ||
I don't think Feinstein does that. | ||
I'll tell you that. | ||
He's 87 years old. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
Look man. | ||
Is he in touch? | ||
Chuck Grassley is awesome. | ||
I am. | ||
I'm a big Chuck Grassley Stan. | ||
I still I think at a certain point too old too old. | ||
unidentified
|
Do I agree with term limits? | |
Absolutely. | ||
I'm not even saying term limits. | ||
I'm just saying, you know, at the end, I kind of feel like if people want to vote for, you know, Mr. Magoo, they vote for Mr. Magoo. | ||
Well, see, it depends on what they're bringing back to their constituents. | ||
And Chuck Grassley, it's like, you know, Iowa is like big, you know, he, he, he delivers for the farmers. | ||
He delivers for, he, he does, he does work. | ||
I don't know what Feinstein's done for her. | ||
What does Nadler do? | ||
Wear ill-fitting clothes. | ||
I'm not going to say. | ||
He falls from a shelf and then all the king's horses and all the king's men can't put him back together. | ||
The problem is life extension is big. | ||
You know, people are living to their hundreds now. | ||
So we got 87 year olds. | ||
Richard C. Bloom is 85. | ||
I have a question. | ||
How come Humpty Dumpty is depicted as an egg? | ||
And why on God's green earth did anyone try to let a horse put him back together? | ||
I just never understood that. | ||
All the king's horses and all the king's men. | ||
Couldn't put them back together. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So what are the horses doing? | ||
Are they like kicking around pieces? | ||
They weren't helping. | ||
No wonder. | ||
I guess they're like dragging carts of glue. | ||
Oh. | ||
Don't they use horses to make glue or something like that? | ||
Oh yeah, horse hooves. | ||
Is that what they do? | ||
I think they use that material right there. | ||
Wow. | ||
I've never even, I never even considered that. | ||
We put it together. | ||
We did it. | ||
unidentified
|
They were taking, we put it together like Humpty Dumpty. | |
Almost got put together. | ||
Do they really use horse hooves to make glue? | ||
Yeah, animal hooves. | ||
They'll make, um, they boil it and they make collagen. | ||
They take the collagen from it, I think. | ||
Really? | ||
And I tried putting the fake egg guy back together. | ||
Well, it's a tragic tale because they never get him back together. | ||
Even with all that horse glue. | ||
Not enough force, but I'm afraid. | ||
I wonder if they could, with modern technology, if they could get him. | ||
For sure. | ||
If they could do it. | ||
Oh, now with, you know. | ||
Microsurgery? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Sure. | ||
Oh my God. | ||
I saw it. | ||
They do a shell transplant. | ||
They do all sorts of things. | ||
I feel bad for these politicians that are like old and frumpy and just like out of it. | ||
But I feel worse for Americans who have to suffer because of it. | ||
But it's like they vote him into office over and over again. | ||
Over and over again. | ||
So it's a suffering brought on By them, although I agree there are people that aren't involved with voting Nadler in the office. | ||
I think there's a very simple solution. | ||
There needs to be some kind of very, very simple and low barrier for casting a vote. | ||
Like a speed bump, not a fence, not a restriction, but something that says you need to know who you're voting for and why. | ||
Now the problem is the Democrats are very much everyone should vote no matter what because they go after low information voters which creates this problem. | ||
That's why they get Nadler, Schumer, Feinstein, and Pelosi who are all ridiculously old. | ||
Is the average age of Democrats higher? | ||
It is higher. | ||
It is? | ||
At least the last time I checked because I did a video about it. | ||
It's higher than Republicans. | ||
I actually put every Congress person in a spreadsheet and their age. | ||
I actually went to Wikipedia and looked at every single one. | ||
And there are a lot of old people in Congress, mind you. | ||
But there were more Democrats than Republicans. | ||
I've been saying we get rid of the party listings on ballots. | ||
What if you had to match the name with a face? | ||
Could you imagine? | ||
And you didn't know if you succeeded. | ||
So you don't know if your vote's gonna get counted, only if you got the name and the face matched. | ||
We're just getting rid of party affiliation on ballots. | ||
Easier. | ||
You would just see the name, and if you don't know who it is, do you vote for it? | ||
It's up to you. | ||
But what if it's, like, a really cool name, like... Like Max Power. | ||
People will be changing their names! | ||
No, honestly, if I did... Total Power and stuff like that. | ||
Democrat Johnson. | ||
If I didn't know... | ||
That Warnock was like a socialist Democrat. | ||
I'd be like, that's a cool last name. | ||
I don't know who that is. | ||
Raphael Loeffler? | ||
He sounds like a superhero. | ||
unidentified
|
And Loeffler? | |
That sounds like someone going, oh, falling over. | ||
Warnock! | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
Leffler? | ||
I can't even pronounce it. | ||
Perdue? | ||
Like the chicken guy? | ||
Is that the chicken? | ||
Well, I'll vote for the chicken guy. | ||
You know what? | ||
To be honest, Awesome sounds like the sounds a chicken makes, and Perdue sounds like the guy who harvests the chickens. | ||
Speaking of... | ||
Great segue, Mr. Tim Poole. | ||
Purdue, at 77% expected total vote reporting, Purdue is up 1.84%. | ||
And Leffler, Kelly Leffler, is up 1.09%. | ||
CNN is even reporting both Republicans are now leading in Georgia. | ||
So again, I stand by my I just want to say this. | ||
I did a segment where I said I thought the Republicans are going to win. | ||
I'm not saying they're going to now, but what I was saying was I actually thought for a while and I was tweeting, I think the Democrats are going to win because Trump's not on the ballot. | ||
Then when polling data came out, I just said very simply, look, if the polling data was off by four to seven points nationally a month ago, then I can only imagine they're off at this point by a certain degree. | ||
And it's, I'm going to say Republicans will probably win this one. | ||
Well, we don't know yet. | ||
We don't know yet. | ||
Well, there's a difference between exit polls and these opinion polls. | ||
You figure, like, if the Republicans are only down by, like, one point or they're only up by one point, that they're probably leading by a lot. | ||
Because these polls are just like, oh, your buddy, your buddy Frank Luntz, That guy was yelling at me. | ||
That was so weird. | ||
You saw that? | ||
Yeah, I did. | ||
What's up with that? | ||
And I actually called him out on it too. | ||
I told him that he should stop tweeting and stop polling because he's neither an expert or both. | ||
He's losing it. | ||
I think he's really mad about the polling industry collapsing. | ||
So for those unfamiliar, Frank Launce is a very famous pollster. | ||
And I've had kind words for the guy in a bunch of my segments saying, I think he's all right. | ||
I generally trust he does these panels. | ||
You can see he shows the people and talks to them. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
And he posted a four-minute clip of the Trump leaked audio. | ||
All I said was, is there a full recording? | ||
And he says, if you can't find it, you might as well take journalist out of your bio. | ||
And then all these leftists are going like, oh! | ||
Oh, snapback! | ||
Oh, Franklin's got him! | ||
And I'm like, what is happening? | ||
You were doing investigation. | ||
Yeah, he was asking a question. | ||
If you're going to be investigating news, you may want to take your journalism. | ||
It's like, dude, that's the job of an investigator. | ||
Literally what I'm doing. | ||
But here's what happened. | ||
I saw the story popping up, and I'm scrolling, and I'm reading news, and then I saw he tweeted the clip, and I was like, wow. | ||
And because I actually had respect for him, I was like, oh wow, Frank Luntz tweeted it. | ||
Is there a full recording? | ||
And then he smack talks me, I'm like, this dude snapped. | ||
He was saying, he said before the election, if we pollsters get it wrong this time, we'll all need new jobs. | ||
And then they got it wrong, and by even worse margins. | ||
Upwards of like 12% in some states. | ||
That's how bad it was. | ||
The polling was so bad. | ||
Funny though, can you blame the pollers or do you have to blame the machines? | ||
Pollsters. | ||
Okay, so I want to point people towards a video called American Election Hacker Testifies by the account on YouTube, Hack247. | ||
And it's a guy that testifies in front of Congress that he wrote a program that flips votes 51-49. | ||
But listen, we're talking about the polls were saying Trump was going to lose. | ||
We're talking about polls, we're not talking about... No, no, no, hold on, hold on. | ||
Were the polls wrong because a machine flipped the vote is my question. | ||
Are you claiming that Trump hacked and flipped 12% of the vote? | ||
I would never claim such a thing, Tim. | ||
No, but I'm claiming there's a guy that testified in front of Congress that says he built a program that does that. | ||
We're talking about the polls saying Biden was up 15 points and then Trump loses by like one in certain states. | ||
What does hacking have to do with it? Was Trump the one who hacked to get those votes back? No. | ||
The polls were off saying Trump would lose and then Trump ended up winning, | ||
you know, narrowly in several states he was supposed to lose. | ||
And like destroying in Florida. | ||
Yeah, and not only that, in Florida there was a safe blue district which flipped Republican | ||
and a bunch, if you look at the New York Times, safe toss-up districts between Democrat and Republican, | ||
shift it all to the right because they would say this is safe Democrat and some of them flipped Republican. | ||
Then they would say, Leans Democrat, and they all go Republican. | ||
I think the pollsters are like people that are like, upcoming football game next week. | ||
They're like, I think that he's going to run for 120 yards. | ||
If you look at the way he's been catching the ball all season, they're probably going to win by 14 points. | ||
And you're like, dude, you're just making up your projections. | ||
These pollsters are looking at data too. | ||
They're calling, you know, 500 landlines or whatever. | ||
And they're asking people if they want to. | ||
You know, who they're voting for. | ||
But but the makeup of those voters are, you know, it's like 25 percent Republican, 35 percent Democrat. | ||
And, you know, the rest are independents, you know, which are leaning, you know. | ||
So I don't think that has anything to do with the program. | ||
I think it just has to do with how they're how they're weighing it and they're weighing it wrong. | ||
This is important here. | ||
Kyle Becker tweeted this out at 4.45 p.m. | ||
saying the Georgia election will allow an extra three hours to process absentee and mail-in ballots until 3 a.m. | ||
Democrats are going to win it! | ||
Well, again, again, what I said before is there's going to be a lot more scrutiny and I think a lot more Republican observers and they're going to be looking at this Very very closely like they should have the the first time they should have made demands Ahead of time. | ||
Well, I and I've been saying this for four months that this whole stop the steel movement Should have happened back in the summer. | ||
Yeah, you know when they said look there's You couldn't make lawsuits, right? | ||
You couldn't make certain lawsuits, but you could at least say that Why is the legislator being overruled by the governor in Pennsylvania? | ||
Why is this happening? | ||
Make a bigger stink about it, because all you really heard was Trump in these press conferences go, mail-in voting is bad, there's gonna be a lot of fraud, right? | ||
And instead, there should have been a stop-the-steal movement back then. | ||
There should have been protests or movements or social media activism or whatever happening back then, not after the fact. | ||
That makes no sense. | ||
Right? | ||
Well, this is what we're doing now in Georgia. | ||
the lack of action taken by this administration to fix their system of voting, that they would | ||
allow a proprietary system. Well, this is what we're doing now in Georgia. We're looking at it | ||
hard. Look, this Stacey Abrams woman is nuts. She's a She calls for voter suppression and then she screams, like, oh, you're taking voters out of, you know, you're purging voters. | ||
And you're like, well, yeah, because of your group. | ||
What is she calling for? | ||
Because what she did, there were tens of thousands of voter registrations. | ||
that her group, when they went out and they got people to sign stuff, | ||
addresses were wrong. Things weren't signed wrong. | ||
Social Security numbers didn't match up with addresses and names, right? | ||
So they said, well, these things aren't, it's not kosher, so we're not going to include it. | ||
And she's like, no, no, you're the they need to be included. | ||
And she was fighting for that, saying that it was voter suppression when it was her fault. | ||
It was, you know, because, you know, their workers weren't doing the right thing. | ||
And then she's she's I think she sued Rasenberg and I think it's still in court, but she's going to lose because, you know, just just because you I feel like data entry wrong doesn't mean that it's voter | ||
suppression. | ||
You know, of course, when Biden wins, oh, it's not voter suppression. | ||
We did everything right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know, um, Leffler is still ahead, by the way. | ||
And so is Purdue. | ||
We'll, we'll see how it plays out. | ||
And, uh, I'm not staying up till 3am. | ||
Hey, by, by the way, tomorrow's going to be crazy. | ||
So where, where did everybody say I should move? | ||
I know we're doing Super Chats now. | ||
We'll have to get to it, because it's probably in the Super Chats. | ||
There's a lot of different places. | ||
So, let's go to Super Chats! | ||
If you haven't already, smash that like button, subscribe, hit the notification bell, leave us a good review on iTunes, and if you haven't already, you can find us on iTunes and all the other podcast platforms. | ||
We're live Monday to Friday, 8pm. | ||
Tomorrow's gonna get crazy with this big protest, and we'll see what it looks like in the morning. | ||
I'm gonna be doing my normal show from here as usual, and then we'll make our way over to the DC area. | ||
It's not too far away. | ||
But let's read some super chats. | ||
Jonathan Galterini says, just thought I'd say I love you and that a gift, it's on its way tomorrow. | ||
Excellent. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Hope it's ammo. | ||
Somebody, uh, so well, I'll, I'll drop it there, but we have a lot of ammo. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Some people are like, where did you find all this stuff? | ||
It's like, I don't know, we got lucky, I guess. | ||
Could never have enough ammo. | ||
Went to a shop and... What's the rule? | ||
Like a thousand bullets or whatever? | ||
Minimum. | ||
Minimum? | ||
Yes. | ||
A thousand per firearm. | ||
That seemed crazy to me, because I thought it was like one box of like fifty or whatever. | ||
No. | ||
No, they go very quick. | ||
They go a lot quicker than you expect. | ||
Especially if you've got a gun range. | ||
Like, at least two thousand per firearm. | ||
Now that's, uh, you can't find any ammo anywhere. | ||
Like 30-30 particularly hard. | ||
It's like for the Winchester repeater. | ||
It's a cool gun. | ||
I was able to find some 5.56. | ||
I'm very happy I did. | ||
There you go. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Let's see what we got here. | ||
Wintlow says, did you see, I'm not going to call him, uh, by that name. | ||
Do you see Cenk Uygur video of him flipping out at the airport? | ||
Uh, that's, but I, that sounds great. | ||
Have you seen it? | ||
No. | ||
It's a very, very old viral video where he's yelling about his flight being delayed. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah. | |
I've seen that. | ||
Jimmy Dore tweeted that recently. | ||
Right, right, right, right. | ||
What's up with him and Jimmy? | ||
They're going hard at it. | ||
Because Jimmy Dore is legit, and the Young Turks aren't. | ||
And they've just been having drama against each other? | ||
Jimmy Dore said the progressives need to leverage their votes for Pelosi as Speaker of the House with a floor vote for Medicare for All. | ||
AOC should go to Pelosi and say, unless we get a floor vote, I will not vote for you. | ||
And for some reason, the establishment progressives said, no, we won't do that. | ||
How weird is that? | ||
What do they have to lose? | ||
They're still gonna vote for Pelosi. | ||
Just tell her to do it. | ||
You have the leverage now. | ||
And they wouldn't do it. | ||
And so, a bunch of establishment faux-progressives were like, Jimmy is a bad person, and he's disruptive. | ||
I'm like, Jimmy's right! | ||
Yeah, stand up for yourselves! | ||
But the progressives don't want to do it. | ||
The ones in Congress voted for Nancy Pelosi. | ||
Not all of them, but I think like 99% of the, you know, out of like 12 or whatever, like 11 said, Pelosi, no questions asked. | ||
We're not going to challenge her. | ||
We're not going to demand Medicare for all, anything like that. | ||
Okay. | ||
See, that's why I think you've got, you've got people like Lauren Boebert. | ||
I think she's genuine. | ||
She wants to bring her gun to Congress. | ||
She really believes what she believes. | ||
But then you get people like AOC and I'm like, AOC is a careerist. | ||
Like, you've got these new populists that are coming into Congress, and I see the ones on the right, and they tend to, they seem to have principles, and the ones on the left just, for the most part, agree with the establishment. | ||
I'll give mad respect to Rashida Tlaib for voting no on the omnibus. | ||
AOC complains about it and then votes for it. | ||
Josh Hawley complains about it and then votes for it. | ||
That's Democrat or Republican, I don't care. | ||
Rashida Tlaib voted against it. | ||
Bravo. | ||
That's amazing. | ||
So how many people who are progressives are actually going to stand up and say, here's what I believe and why? | ||
Very few. | ||
One, Tulsi Gabbard voted against it. | ||
Of course, she's awesome. | ||
But the rest of them? | ||
Establishment garbage. | ||
No opinions. | ||
Let's read more Super Chats. | ||
Everyone's like, yes, we agree. | ||
Tulsi's leading the government. | ||
unidentified
|
That little faith in that system. | |
Jake Dog says, get the dog on camera. | ||
Yeah, I should. | ||
You should. | ||
You should. | ||
Go, go, go. | ||
Tomorrow, maybe we could start the show off at the pooper's. | ||
unidentified
|
Go do it now! | |
What do you mean? | ||
Now? | ||
Bring it on! | ||
How much did they give? | ||
Uh, what is it? | ||
Five dollars. | ||
That's not good of me. | ||
Sorry. | ||
unidentified
|
$2.99. | |
They're $59.99. | ||
We'll bring the dog. | ||
If you want to see the baby German Shepherd. | ||
We are change.org forward slash donate is the place. | ||
If you want the puppy to have a good life. | ||
Sorry, buddy. | ||
Alright, Luke's gonna go get the dog. | ||
Aww, she's gorgeous. | ||
You're sellin' out just like Ace, I love that. | ||
Alright, let's see. | ||
Mark G says, Tim, why haven't you torn off your shirt yet? | ||
Can't sell supplements if you don't. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, man. | |
Well, this is a supplement, right? | ||
It is a supplement. | ||
It says supplement on it. | ||
And it's unflavored. | ||
We should get a steamy shot of you with no shirt on, dude. | ||
Because someone did a shout out to this other one, I'm eternally grateful. | ||
We have sponsors. | ||
We don't have any sponsors for a year. | ||
We had no sponsors. | ||
What is that stuff called again? | ||
Biotrust. | ||
What's the material? | ||
It's collagen. | ||
I put it in my coffee. | ||
It's not creamy, but it is kind of. | ||
It's not like dairy. | ||
I can hear it in my voice. | ||
I had a lot of pizza in the last few days, but it's not creamy like dairy creamy or even like coconut cream. | ||
It adds a fullness to it. | ||
Yeah, it cuts the acidity. | ||
Interesting. | ||
I just like putting it in my smoothies because I'm an old man who skates and my knees hurt. | ||
I have a story about this. | ||
It's really short. | ||
Don't worry. | ||
So when I was recovering from shoulder surgery, I would pour collagen into my smoothies because that was like the only thing I could fix for myself with my left hand. | ||
And I was like, I need collagen. | ||
And I really think that it helped with healing my shoulder. | ||
See, I'll tell you something. | ||
One of the reasons we don't take sponsors, for the most part, is because I don't like promoting things that I think are dumb. | ||
Oh, I agree. | ||
Look, I get stuff all the time. | ||
I get VPNs. | ||
Well, we got a VPN that we got a sponsor for a VPN. | ||
We do have one? | ||
But that's coming later, so, you know. | ||
unidentified
|
Cool. | |
VPNs are great. | ||
Uh, you know, but there, there's, there's certain things like, uh, what, what's Blinkist? | ||
I don't know. | ||
You know, it's like, like read a book in 15 minutes. | ||
Like, I don't agree with that. | ||
Like if I won't, I, you know, like I'm, I'm not going to go, well, you know what? | ||
Like I, I really like this. | ||
Uh, I don't like this coffee, but I'm going to promote it anyway. | ||
You know, like, yeah, I won't do that. | ||
No, I won't. | ||
I will never. | ||
I promise you will never do that. | ||
You want me to read a script claiming I like something I don't like. | ||
So there was a video game company that reached out and they offered ridiculous money. | ||
I remember that. | ||
So I don't don't say that because I don't want to. | ||
I tested that game. | ||
But right. | ||
And I asked a few people, like, what do you think? | ||
And the conclusion was like, don't do it. | ||
And I was like, I agree. | ||
Was it cyberpunk? | ||
I'm not going to. | ||
I've got my eyes on that game. | ||
I don't want to disparage anybody. | ||
But, you know, when I got it, I've got an offer from first like for once a casino mobile game. | ||
And I was like, I'm not going to promote gambling. | ||
No, I won't do that. | ||
Like, I like going to the casino. | ||
And we had a crazy night the other day. | ||
Dude, this is nuts. | ||
I put 20 bucks down. | ||
We were hanging out at the casino. | ||
And it was on high card flush. | ||
I've never played it before. | ||
And I got a six card straight flush. | ||
Wow. | ||
And the lady went, and that's like one in a thousand. | ||
One in a thousand. | ||
And then she was like, it's too bad you didn't bet on it. | ||
Exactly. | ||
So I ended up winning 20 bucks. | ||
And the pit boss is like, you would've won, you would've won, what was that, $20,000? | ||
Or something. | ||
If you put the money down. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But I ended up winning like a grand. | ||
Because I put a 20 down and then I got a five card straight flush. | ||
And then I just started tipping people like crazy because I'm nuts. | ||
All right, we got a dog. | ||
Make taxation tough to get. | ||
Such a smart dog. | ||
Have you chosen a name? | ||
No name yet. | ||
We're deciding on my social media what the dog should be called. | ||
unidentified
|
We need names. | |
She's super smart. | ||
Okay, top super chat names the dog. | ||
Oh, no. | ||
That goes to me? | ||
Yeah. | ||
All right. | ||
So the top super chat with a good name, if you name the dog that, you get the super chat. | ||
No, but she's super smart. | ||
Dr. Jill. | ||
Dr. Jill. | ||
unidentified
|
I like Atlas. | |
There's a lot of names put out there. | ||
Atlas, Anarka, Poopers, Moonstone. | ||
I'm not 100% on any of them. | ||
You said that rock on your neck is a Moonstone? | ||
If Kelly Leffler wins, you'll call her. | ||
Leffler. | ||
Leffler? | ||
Aw, she's so cute. | ||
Nine weeks old. | ||
Somewhat potty trained. | ||
She's super smart, man. | ||
She's so cute. | ||
While German Shepherds are smart by design, right? | ||
She's going to be my survival apocalypse dog that I'm going to be taking on runs and hikes and going to train how to bite. | ||
You know, she's always happy. | ||
Look at her ears. | ||
She's always very excited about everything. | ||
Yeah, she's got little lopsided ears. | ||
Well, she's on one of the top live streams in the country. | ||
unidentified
|
She's stoked. | |
She's like, my career is blossoming. | ||
It's warm up there. | ||
So young. | ||
Congratulations, by the way. | ||
You hit 900,000. | ||
We did. | ||
Wow, we're so close to breaking a million. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
That's pretty cool. | ||
Little puppy here yelped at the cats and they freaked out. | ||
Bucko hissed and then she barked, I think. | ||
And then Bucko was like, what have I done? | ||
She's not even barking yet. | ||
She's loud. | ||
She's just like, meow. | ||
I have a cat on my shirt. | ||
You may watch the Lotus Eaters podcast. | ||
unidentified
|
Powerful that's why pooper might be a more of appropriate name. Let's see. Let's speak of the pets by the way | |
Oh, we have some names are saying I have a cat on my shirt that you you may watch | ||
the Lotus eaters Yeah, Carl Benjamin aka Sargon of Akkad he was he was | ||
wearing this shirt because it's my shirt It's from my channel. | ||
Don't walk around production. | ||
Yeah, and congratulations. | ||
The Lotus Eaters podcast is one of the top UK podcasts now in news, I guess. | ||
I'm seeing these rankings. | ||
He's jumping. | ||
This is Carl Benjamin. | ||
And I guess he just broke 100k subs, and he's skyrocketing. | ||
Awesome. | ||
Glad to hear it, man. | ||
So congratulations, Carl and crew. | ||
I'm very happy for your success. | ||
And please keep wearing my shirts. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Right on. | ||
I got some more super chats here. | ||
Max Stahl says, I'm a gorilla. | ||
Love yourself. | ||
We'll make a great Valentine's Day merch. | ||
Oh, that's a nice one. | ||
I like that one. | ||
Love yourself. | ||
Thank you, Max. | ||
We got a bunch of names coming in. | ||
Someone says name her Beanie. | ||
Beanie? | ||
unidentified
|
That's cute! | |
Alright, let's see. | ||
Apocalypse Dog Beanie. | ||
Yes, I like it. | ||
James Degrees says, Tim, please check out the book, The Toaster Project. | ||
Author builds a toaster from scratch, literally mining and smelting ore. | ||
Shows just how far removed we are from our tech. | ||
I've seen that TED Talk. | ||
He got it to work for like 20 seconds before it broke. | ||
He said, could I build a toaster from scratch? | ||
He couldn't make plastic. | ||
It was impossible. | ||
So he mined plastic. | ||
He went to waste facilities and took old plastic and then broke it down and then pressed it. | ||
And it was a disgusting looking thing. | ||
It barely worked. | ||
He plugged it in, it heated up for 20 seconds, and then broke. | ||
And what was the toast like? | ||
I think it was awful. | ||
20 seconds. | ||
Not even gonna get it toasted. | ||
Alright, fair enough. | ||
Crazy, right? | ||
Kyle Canuck says, if Trump pulls this off, forget the banana peel backflip, Trump will be the guy who stole the airplane in 2018 doing all the tricks. | ||
Only Trump will stick the landing. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Okay. | ||
Sure. | ||
If so, you know what I did? | ||
I went out and bought a bunch of lottery tickets. | ||
You know why? | ||
Because, uh, if Trump wins, you know, go out and buy your lottery tickets, man. | ||
Like magic in the air. | ||
Like the likelihood that Trump wins, you know, the people who made these predictions, I'm saying, if you think Trump is really going to pull it off, you better go and make those bets. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
I'm not actually telling him to make, make, make literal bets. | ||
I'm saying, you know, put your money where your mouth, put your money where your mouth is. | ||
Exactly. | ||
It's a better way to put it. | ||
Here's a question for the chat real quick. | ||
When was the last time you played the lottery? | ||
When was the last time you played the lottery? | ||
unidentified
|
2018. | |
Did you win? | ||
Uh, no, but I played it for like the big super mega millions when it was like 700 million or something. | ||
But you know what's crazy? | ||
Like, when the mega millions is 10 million, you don't play? | ||
Like, you win 10 million, you lose half to the government, you get 5 million bucks in cash. | ||
Isn't that enough? | ||
Ugh, it's terrible. | ||
Can you imagine only like living off of 250 million dollars? | ||
unidentified
|
No, no, no, it's 5 million. | |
So when the number gets really high and it's like the Powerball is at a billion dollars, everyone goes, I gotta go play! | ||
Sure, I guess, but wouldn't you also just be satisfied with 10 million bucks? | ||
But then, well, in all likelihood, if you didn't pick those numbers and you did like a quick pick, you'd probably only get like 40% of that after taxes, because you get penalized for doing a quick pick. | ||
Oh no, four million dollars. | ||
No, no, it was 700 million. | ||
I know what I'm saying. | ||
I don't care if the lottery is at a billion or at 10 million. | ||
That's already too much money. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
What are you going to do? | ||
Buy a golden statue of yourself? | ||
Buy an island? | ||
I don't care about any of that stuff. | ||
An island would be nice. | ||
You're right. | ||
It's terrible having that much money. | ||
Is it? | ||
What was I thinking? | ||
Do you think the lotteries will kill him? | ||
I don't care. | ||
Look, if you told me I had a 1 in a 10 million chance to win, you know, a million bucks, I'd be like, whoa. | ||
And they said, or you can take this one, which is a 1 in 100 million chance to win 700 million. | ||
I'd say, I'll take the better chances of winning the million dollars. | ||
I'm happy with it. | ||
That's a lot of money. | ||
I think both are fun. | ||
It's just fun to dream. | ||
The point I'm making is, why don't people just play when you could win a million dollars? | ||
Why is it that everyone rushes out to the store to buy a lotto ticket when it's at 700 million? | ||
Because FOMO. | ||
I'm sorry, I did not mean it to be that. | ||
I used to make my own lottery tickets for my family for Christmas. | ||
I'd take the silver crayon, I'd like write numbers on it and they'd scratch off and then I'd smear the silver crayon all over it and bring it up for them. | ||
Let's read some more superchats. | ||
We got Romulus here. | ||
Romulus says, Hey Tim, as a guy who has been saving up for years to buy a home and land, I'm nervous about the inflation. | ||
In your opinion, would you recommend just buying land ASAP or put some of my savings on Bitcoin? | ||
I will not give anybody financial advice, because that's always a bad idea, but I'll tell you what I'm doing. | ||
I'm trying to buy land and Bitcoin. | ||
You can buy dollars with a Bitcoin. | ||
You can buy small increments. | ||
It's not like you have to have 30 grand to buy a Bitcoin. | ||
You can buy small denominations. | ||
It breaks down to eight decimal points, which is interesting. | ||
Do you know what happens if you take one with eight decimal points and then apply commas at three and three? | ||
You have two left and you put a decimal point there and what do you get? | ||
A million dollars per Bitcoin. | ||
What percentage, if you want to tell this to the audience, do you, would you put into property and into crypto? | ||
I'm terrible at all that stuff. | ||
The only reason I have any stock is because, like I said, Max Keiser, | ||
I was hanging out with him and his friend and they were like, buy square. | ||
And I was like, sure, I guess. | ||
And I knew how I missed it on Bitcoin. | ||
And I was like, I'll take the advice of the billionaire guy. | ||
And it's worked out for me. | ||
I didn't put that much money in, but now it's like skyrocketed in value. | ||
And then, like I mentioned, several years ago, I bought some Bitcoin. | ||
So I was like, you know what? | ||
You buy Bitcoin, you forget about it. | ||
And I'll tell you, if you're listening to Max Keiser, which is a smart move, | ||
if you look at his track record, he's saying, do not go into gold right now. | ||
Because gold is controlled by the U.S. | ||
government. | ||
If you have been a fan of Max Keiser and you trusted him, you would be extremely wealthy right now. | ||
I'm not saying you'd have some money to throw around. | ||
I'm saying you'd probably have millions of dollars. | ||
Because he was saying back when Bitcoin was like a dollar to buy some. | ||
Imagine if you were like, I got 100 bucks, I'll buy 100 Bitcoin. | ||
Now multiply that 100 by $33,000, $34,000. | ||
It wasn't just like do it because I think it was like he was looking at Bear Stearns and at Freddie Mac, you know, and how these, he was calling them criminals, like very overtly calling these corporate CEOs of these banks that were getting $500 million parachutes for retiring. | ||
I don't know what's going to happen in the future. | ||
I don't know if he's right about where we're going now. | ||
I'm just saying, if you listened to him from the beginning, you'd be a millionaire. | ||
Like, a regular working-class dude. | ||
Got a job at McDonald's. | ||
You get a paycheck for 150 bucks. | ||
You said, sure, I guess I'll buy 100 Bitcoin with it. | ||
You'd have, what, three million dollars or whatever right now? | ||
Ten years later, for sure! | ||
But if you've been following the show, he said, hold it, don't spend it, hold it, don't spend it, and he was right the whole time. | ||
So, that's just Max, I don't know, you know? | ||
So, I can only say what's true, and that he was right about it. | ||
Alright, let's see what we got here. | ||
Loktar says, Tim, you've mentioned the Proud Boy incident in DC a few times and have mistakenly said a PB male pulled a woman's hair. | ||
I know you're about accurate reporting. | ||
Please rewatch. | ||
Can't link in super chat, but I tweeted at Timcast. | ||
Someone did mention this and we did read it. | ||
So, you know, there you go. | ||
We mentioned it before that it was a woman who did it. | ||
Let's see, Tattered Shield says, Hey Tim, just got to Washington earlier today, looking forward to the rally. | ||
Will you be here? | ||
Right now it is looking like the answer is, I will be in D.C. | ||
I'm not going to be on the ground personally, but we did a test. | ||
It looks like the internet is doable. | ||
It may change when the event happens, which means we might not be able to be on. | ||
Like, if we're in D.C. | ||
and the internet goes crazy because there's too many people, then we can't go live. | ||
Then, you know, it is what it is. | ||
But it looks like we have extremely high likelihood of getting there. | ||
We'll see how it plays out. | ||
Depends on what happens in the morning. | ||
I gotta get- I'm gonna do my normal show here, and then we're gonna, you know, make our way to DC. | ||
Is she whining? | ||
She's like, yeah, that's a good idea. | ||
I think we should go back to reporting and otherwise... Will she be on the ground? | ||
Purdue is 2.4% ahead at 82% expected vote reporting. | ||
And Kelly Loeffler is 1.63% ahead of the Reverend Superhero Warnock. | ||
But don't forget, they have till three in the morning to, you know, pull in those absentees. | ||
To concoct ballots. | ||
All right, we got Chad Hefner says what if what if it's a democratic sweep and the Great Reset starts this year? | ||
Well, I guess it's here. | ||
Yeah, I guess what? | ||
All right, let's see we got here Superman if you wasn't scared of Green Rock says shout out to Sun Tzu for driving while I watch Sun Tzu ghost for driving while I watch We are driving through the night because United messed up two days in a row. | ||
I used to be lazy, Tim, but watching your work ethic I can't anymore. | ||
Smash that like button for all the gorillas watching. | ||
We do have a gorilla t-shirt being put together right now by one of our graphic artist friends. | ||
And it's a gorilla, you know, I'm a gorilla. | ||
Did you get the one of the gorilla smashing the like button? | ||
I think we should do one of those. | ||
Yeah, we'll get that one soon. | ||
I guess the gorilla's the mascot now because Alex Jones came here and said he was a gorilla. | ||
Maybe it was a puppy. | ||
I like this puppy. | ||
Alright, let's see. | ||
She's just a cat on my shirt. | ||
Warlock Home says to the audience, why aren't you in D.C. | ||
already? | ||
Don't let others fight your fight. | ||
Please go. | ||
If not, now when? | ||
The only thing stops me from going is I don't have the visa and I'm not a Canadian citizen yet. | ||
You gotta give her the microphone. | ||
She's trying to talk. | ||
She's trying to be on the show. | ||
You gotta move the microphone down otherwise. | ||
Oh, she licked it. | ||
She licked it. | ||
I know what you can call her. | ||
What's that? | ||
Grogu. | ||
Explain. | ||
unidentified
|
She doesn't like that. | |
Can you hear that now? | ||
Grogu. | ||
Everybody knows. | ||
Why? | ||
Why? | ||
No spoilers. | ||
Grogu. | ||
OK, OK, OK. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Coco Ducez. | ||
What have Republicans and Democrats done for you lately? | ||
I hope the Republicans lose in Georgia. | ||
Maybe then people will finally wake up. | ||
Time for a new party to take back our government. | ||
Spicy. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Well, Bernie Sanders had his chance. | ||
I freaking agree with that. | ||
New parties. | ||
I don't really like parties. | ||
Oh. | ||
JFSF says there are tunnels all over DC. | ||
I went to Howard University and there are tons of tunnels under the university alone. | ||
I was thinking that there's probably tunnels to get into the buildings to make sure the | ||
government can function regardless of what's going on outside, you know? | ||
Oh, so then that means your blockade thing wouldn't work. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Because of all the tunnels. | ||
If there's more than enough people, then how do you even get to the tunnels? | ||
It's so funny that they're like, we have to go to that building in order to do this most important job in the world, which is govern the United States of America. | ||
But we got to be in that building over there. | ||
It's like a target. | ||
We got to go to the bullseye so we can all huddle together in case of... | ||
You're right. | ||
Bombs being dropped. | ||
There might be some secret thing that we don't know about because we're just normal people. | ||
Yeah, it makes no sense to stuff them all into a target. | ||
We got to get Tulsi Gabbard on the show and ask her all about the secrets. | ||
I want to know all the secrets. | ||
I love her. | ||
Here's the puppy. | ||
She's resting. | ||
Somebody said to check CivMillAir on Twitter, and I don't see anything. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Yeah, Daniel says, Tim, check Twitter mentions for CivMillAir now, at C-I-V-M-I-L-A-I-R. | ||
I didn't see anything that stands out, but, you know, I'm doing a show. | ||
Silver millionaire. | ||
Civilian military aircraft. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I thought because we were talking about precious metals. | ||
No, no. | ||
Paul Meixner says, Luke, look up Robert Cabral on YouTube and IG for pup training. | ||
Luke is a great addition to the podcast. | ||
Followed you both for over 10 years. | ||
Would love to introduce you to IV quadruple eight if you like free firearms training. | ||
I take care of my own travel. | ||
Cool. | ||
Definitely looking up all the puppy training videos right now and doing a lot of work, including running and exercising and obedience and training. | ||
So this is going to be one high IQ pup. | ||
We have a very, very important super chat. | ||
Chivo Smith says, Don't walk, run productions. | ||
Love you. | ||
F you, Tim, you fence-sitting bullcrapper. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm drunk. | |
I don't care anymore. | ||
I'm so disgusted. | ||
Shout out. | ||
Wow. | ||
How much was that super chat? | ||
That was 20 bucks. | ||
Worth it. | ||
You can get mad at me, but I'll bring on I'll bring on, you know, don't walk around and you can like him and hate me all day and night. | ||
Look, first of all, Tim and the crew are awesome. | ||
It's always it is. | ||
I don't care if he's a fence sitter. | ||
I love this place. | ||
Now, honestly, it's always a great conversation. | ||
And I'm always I'm always happy to be back. | ||
So thank you for having me back and being in the presence of a cute little puppy. | ||
What is she complaining about? | ||
She's tired. | ||
She wants to go to bed. | ||
Puppies, like, sleep, like, all day, right? | ||
Isn't that their job? | ||
She's like yawning and trying to bite me at the same time. | ||
Aww. | ||
She is literally biting your hand. | ||
And yawning. | ||
So cute. | ||
Matthew Reckham says, couple weeks ago I posted that Republicans are one state legislation away from being able to pass constitutional amendments without Dems. | ||
I was wrong. | ||
Article 5 Convention of States requires a two-third majority to pass amendments. | ||
That would be a 38 states with Republicans and have a 30 split with MN. | ||
Well, a lot of states will, even if they are blue states, they're unlikely to easily pass a constitutional amendment, especially on things like, you know, bringing in or voting in on states, you know, like Washington, D.C. | ||
or Puerto Rico, because they don't want to lose their influence. | ||
A puppy whining. | ||
Yeah, I know. | ||
So we have a suggestion. | ||
Angela Luccarelli says, beautiful pup, Athena or Artemis? | ||
Artemis is Greek goddess of the hunt. | ||
Artemis. | ||
I have a friend who has a really beautiful cat named Artemis. | ||
So you can't take it. | ||
Sorry. | ||
John Joiner says, name the dog N.A.P. | ||
Nap? | ||
Nap. | ||
She responded. | ||
She does want naps. | ||
She does like naps. | ||
It's a sign. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Renee Villareal says, name suggestion Sage. | ||
Be honored if you choose it. | ||
That was one that we were talking about in the house. | ||
So that was the $50 super chat. | ||
I actually like it. | ||
Janet Partridge says, Coda is a good name. | ||
I'm not your buddy guy says Dakota. | ||
That also was suggested in the house as well. | ||
But I think it would be funny if there's a situation where the dog has to defend me or attack and it's like, poopers, go! | ||
How about Dixie? | ||
Dixie, maybe? | ||
I don't know. | ||
My friend told me, let the name come to me. | ||
And that's what we're doing now for two days. | ||
And my friend said once I know the name from her personality, then I'll be able to... My dad's parents used to actually train German Shepherds. | ||
So maybe I should ask my dad. | ||
We got a name? | ||
Mark Lautenschlager says dog name, and this is the biggest so far. | ||
I've seen super chat Kamala Hold on you're gonna like this one column freedom color freedom. | ||
We don't we don't okay freedom puppy if the Potter file says my one-year-old male German Shepherd Husky is named Atlas and Oh, that's the name that we've been talking about in the house. | ||
But for a girl though? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Like Atlas Shrug and Atlas is like the color ion. | ||
All right. | ||
Last, uh, Tom, Thomason says name the dog Gorilla. | ||
Gorilla? | ||
unidentified
|
Pass. | |
So OMG puppies just said OMG puppy. | ||
Hey, yes. | ||
How about just dog? | ||
Athena. | ||
Or Road Warrior. | ||
Yeah, Athena is good. | ||
Athena. | ||
Oh, well, that's funny. | ||
I like Atlas. | ||
I like Athena, actually. | ||
They're related, sort of. | ||
Wisdom. | ||
Atlas, Athena. | ||
Artemis is a fighter, though. | ||
No, Atlas went to war with Zeus. | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
He was a son of the Titans. | ||
Oh, interesting. | ||
Then Kamala it is, then. | ||
Kamala wins. | ||
That's it. | ||
unidentified
|
We did it. | |
How dare you? | ||
We did it, Joe. | ||
We did it. | ||
Alex Bones. | ||
It's a lady. | ||
Well, no, Alexandria. | ||
Alexandria Jones. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh, cute, cute. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Bertowski says, name her Videl or Bulma. | ||
Got a Dragon Ball Z fan here in Super Chat. | ||
Ray Ranja says, call her Lucky. | ||
Combined with Luke, we have a cowboy. | ||
That was my previous dog. | ||
My previous dog was called Lucky, so can't do that. | ||
Lucky number two. | ||
Bold Baladi says, I want to go tomorrow, but will the National Guard close down roads to D.C.? | ||
How do people park? | ||
Logistics are nerve-wracking. | ||
Also, false flag possibility. | ||
I don't think you gotta worry about any of that stuff. | ||
The worst case scenario is you park your car and you walk for a few blocks. | ||
Also, Washington D.C. | ||
can't call the National Guard. | ||
They did already. | ||
They're on the ground. | ||
Can they control it? | ||
I thought that they... Trump's acting Secretary of Defense approved it. | ||
Which makes me wonder... Mayor Bowser couldn't just call in a National Guard. | ||
She asked the Pentagon. | ||
She actually had to ask. | ||
So Trump's appointee was like, yeah. | ||
And there's only like 300 of them, and I covered many events when DC was just filled with hundreds and thousands of people. | ||
What people end up doing is literally just parking and just going on the subway and then getting into the city that way. | ||
Look, I gotta read this. | ||
I gotta read this. | ||
Matt, Matt, can I read this? | ||
It's about Pennsylvania. | ||
Sorry, it just came out. | ||
So it says, due to these inconsistencies and questionable activities, we believe the Pennsylvania election results should not have been certified by our Secretary of State. | ||
But who's statement is it? | ||
Is it fact-checked? | ||
time given the fact that the US Supreme Court is to hear Trump versus Bukhar in the coming | ||
days. | ||
We ask that you delay certification of the Electoral College to allow due process as | ||
we pursue election integrity in our Commonwealth." | ||
This is something Trump tweeted, so I don't know what difference that makes. | ||
Whose statement is it? | ||
Is it fact-checked? | ||
It's from Trump. | ||
It's Mitch McConnell. | ||
Trump asked them? | ||
Mitch McConnell. | ||
Mitch McConnell said, please wait because of Pennsylvania? | ||
No, hold on, hold on. | ||
Okay, hold on. | ||
There's names. | ||
Jake Corman, President Pro Tempore, Kim Ward, Judy Ward, and Kristen Phillipsville. | ||
So this is the Pennsylvania General Assembly saying this. | ||
The problem is, it's not a majority, and it wasn't a session where they made a joint resolution or something like that. | ||
So a court might just be like, look, if one or two politicians come out and say it, it's not- It's a letter. | ||
Right. | ||
Right. | ||
It's not the legislature making a declaration. | ||
We'll see. | ||
They're trying. | ||
They're trying. | ||
In 1960, so I did, I talked about this in my main segment and then I actually dug deeper. | ||
Check this out. | ||
In 1960, Richard Nixon was the vice president. | ||
Hawaii voted for Republicans. | ||
The governor signed a certificate for Republican electors. | ||
Sent them to Congress. | ||
Unelected Democrats cast procedural votes and sent those to Congress. | ||
Afterwards, a recount showed the Democrats had won by a small number of votes, like 115. | ||
Richard Nixon presiding over the joint session of Congress was given two slates of electors, one from Republicans certified by the governor and one from Democrats uncertified. | ||
He chose to count the uncertified Democrat votes. | ||
That's it. | ||
But it didn't change anything, is what you were saying earlier. | ||
But that's not the point. | ||
The point is, there is precedent where the vice president was given two sets of votes and picked one. | ||
Not only did he pick one of the sets and discarded the other, he chose the one that was not certified. | ||
It can happen. | ||
So what's to happen if tomorrow, Mike Pence says, citing precedent from 1960 with Richard Nixon as president, because of the statements made by the Republican Legislature's Judiciary Committee of Arizona and the resolution introduced in Wisconsin, we are not going to be counting the ballots in states where there is an active dispute. | ||
Joe Biden does not reach 270 votes. | ||
If Richard Nixon can do it, why can't Joe Biden? | ||
They didn't dispute to Richard Nixon saying this uncertified slate is chosen. | ||
So why would they be able to challenge it now? | ||
And more importantly, if Mike Pence said these votes don't count, what do they do? | ||
Do they go to the Supreme Court? | ||
Do they challenge it? | ||
Do they say, you're wrong, we won? | ||
But Mike Pence presides as President of the Senate. | ||
He's also the Vice President. | ||
That's so weird. | ||
It is. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
But this happened before. | ||
I was reading a Wikipedia article that said there's no evidence that the Democratic electors were certified. | ||
The actual source says they were uncertified. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
So, you see all these media outlets saying Pence has no power, it's a ceremonial role. | ||
They say that about the Queen, too. | ||
Yeah, tell that to Nixon in 1960. | ||
I mean, maybe something changed. | ||
Maybe they passed a law, maybe they changed it all. | ||
Maybe there's precedent, I don't know. | ||
But I'm telling you, outside of everything, what if Mike Pence just doesn't show up? | ||
They thought he might not. | ||
Right, exactly. He's a human being. He could be like, I'm out, later. | ||
What if he just like got on a plane and left and was gone forever? | ||
Like, no, no, no, no. | ||
He'd never serve in politics again. | ||
What if Trump got abducted by aliens? | ||
There's a lot of what ifs and a lot of crazy nonsense could happen. | ||
But in the realm of reality, Trump could theoretically just be like, I'm leaving. | ||
Bye. | ||
And then what? | ||
Pence or Trump? | ||
Trump. | ||
I think Pence is like, thanks for all the fish. | ||
He's like, I'm just gonna be another politician, career politician. | ||
What I'm saying is humans can do whatever they want that is physically possible. | ||
They're saying Trump has no legal authority to do this. | ||
Sure, and cops have no legal authority to, you know, shoot someone who's unarmed, but you complain about that all the time and then nothing changes, right? | ||
If you're going to complain that the police do things they're not allowed to do and get away with it, what's to stop Pence from doing something he's not allowed to do and getting away with it? | ||
You see my point? | ||
And he's allowed to do it, right? | ||
Well, I'm not saying he is or isn't. | ||
I'm just saying, what would they do if Pence just said, Trump wins? | ||
What would they do? | ||
Would they say, you're wrong? | ||
A bunch of people would revolt in the streets, but not tomorrow. | ||
Or it would be like, they'd plan stuff and they'd start- What would happen if Pence says, I don't care, Trump wins? | ||
The left isn't going to show up when there's, you know, thousands of Trump supporters in D.C. | ||
They're not going to come out. | ||
They're not going to D.C. | ||
tomorrow. | ||
Right. | ||
So it's so if there was no big Trump protest, this is what makes me wonder about Trump's strategy. | ||
I'm not confident anything's going to change, to be completely honest. | ||
I think it'll be Biden. | ||
But think about this. | ||
The AP reported that Trump, Pence and legal scholars were having a meeting. | ||
Then Trump tweets out Pence can reject fraudulent votes. | ||
Trump called for people to be in D.C. | ||
If there was no protest in D.C. | ||
and Mike Pence said, I'm not going to certify these votes, therefore Trump wins due to a contingent election, the streets of D.C. | ||
would be filled immediately with antifa and far leftists. | ||
It would be chaos. | ||
It would be. | ||
If there's tens of thousands of Trump supporters there, the leftists will not be able to come to D.C. | ||
to do anything. | ||
Get it? | ||
It would be like, it would be like just rant. | ||
It would be like heightened violence. | ||
They wouldn't be able to get anywhere near. | ||
Well, they're already going to be there. | ||
I mean, it's going to be black, black stuff at night. | ||
I ultimately think it's going to be a lot of Trump supporters waving American flags, voicing their concerns, bullhorning, Pence is going to be like, Joe Biden wins, and we're all over. | ||
But Pence could legally say, I'm not going to certify these votes in question, and Trump wins the election? | ||
Legal is irrelevant. | ||
The left is saying he couldn't legally do it. | ||
I don't care what you think, because you can do things when, right now, Wisconsin has introduced a bill that says, here's a list of things that the executive branch and the courts did that was illegal. | ||
So they did it. | ||
The legislature says they did it and nothing has been done about it. | ||
So don't come to me and say it's not legal for Mike Pence to do anything. | ||
Yeah, well it wasn't legal to have democracy in the park in Wisconsin where they changed the rules for collecting absentee ballots. | ||
It wasn't legal to set up a consent decree changing the rules of the election in Georgia. | ||
Those were challenged in court but thrown out on standing and not on merits. | ||
Was it legal for Nixon to do what he did in 60? | ||
No one challenged it. | ||
So apparently it is. | ||
It was in the Democrats' favor. | ||
Yeah, right. | ||
And it didn't change anything. | ||
It's not like it was going to shift it. | ||
I think maybe, I don't know the story, but I would guess that maybe because he was running | ||
for president, right? | ||
He was running against Kennedy. | ||
So maybe it was symbolic. | ||
It was just a gesture of goodwill. | ||
Exactly. | ||
And what happens now when the Republicans say, Richard Nixon chose to count an uncertified slate of electors cast by people who were not elected to the Attro College, and there were no complaints, and it was counted in an election? | ||
Do we void the 1960 election? | ||
I guess the argument is because it didn't shift. | ||
That's the only thing. | ||
I'm gonna look this up because it sounds very interesting. | ||
Mike Pence could walk in and pull out a whipped cream pie and slap it in someone's face. | ||
The point is, it likely won't happen. | ||
Right. | ||
I would never bet any money, not even a dollar, it would happen because that's ridiculous. | ||
But he could physically do it. | ||
Sure. | ||
Mike Pence could walk in with sunglasses on and a joint and be like Trump and then pull out a ghetto blaster and turn on Thug Life. | ||
That would be awesome. | ||
Do something! | ||
It's not gonna happen, okay? | ||
I'm just saying, when people say, like, Trump can't do this anyway, I'm like, bro... Dude, if Pence walked in and sparked one up, I was like, legalize. | ||
So I'm just trying to say... Last person on the planet. | ||
There's a big difference in our time. | ||
There's a difference between what you can physically do and say, and what you can legally do and say. | ||
And you can physically do a whole lot of stuff that you can't legally do, and then whether or not anything is done after the fact is an entirely different question. | ||
Well, what Pence could do, he could do it. | ||
And then... I doubt he will. | ||
I doubt he will, I'm sure. | ||
He's gonna go Biden wins, congratulations. | ||
But he could do it, and then it would be legally contested, and then it would... Go to the Supreme Court, and then they would present the evidence. | ||
And then maybe they could say, well, who knows? | ||
So, you know what? | ||
Tomorrow might be a crazy frickin' day. | ||
Hold on, hold on. | ||
This is interesting. | ||
Think about this. | ||
If Mike Pence says, I refuse to count these, Take it up in court. | ||
The Supreme Court will have to hear it. | ||
In that proceeding, they'll say, why aren't these votes being counted? | ||
And then they issue the challenge to the Elector's Clause of the Constitution in these states. | ||
Well, I'm just going to say this. | ||
I have a normalcy bias, right? | ||
I think Pence is going to go in and he's going to say the objections have been heard. | ||
Biden wins. | ||
But could you imagine how crazy and historical and exciting, and I don't mean good or bad, I'm saying exciting like crazy stuff going on. | ||
If Mike Pence says, I will not count these votes while there is active disputes from the state legislatures and they have not been heard. | ||
I'll see you in the Supreme Court. | ||
Honestly, I mean, I'm not against that at all. | ||
I would love to see that. | ||
I think it'd be frickin' amazing. | ||
I think life is too boring. | ||
Pence is gonna be like, Biden wins. | ||
Bye-bye. | ||
I am siding with you, I'm down with that, but wouldn't you just love to see it? | ||
Yes, I'm not down with that, I think it's boring and stupid. | ||
And I think if you don't actually get these things heard in court, which we have not had, even though the media keeps saying it has been, it hasn't, then you're going to have 74 million extremely angry people, and they're saying, there was a CNN interview, it was Donny Sullivan, asked a Trump supporter, Do you accept Biden as president? | ||
He says no. | ||
And he goes, but do you accept he'll be inaugurated? | ||
No. | ||
He says, well, how can that be? | ||
Maybe there'll be a civil war. | ||
We don't want that. | ||
No, we don't. | ||
We don't even want that sentiment, which means maybe the best thing is we let the state legislatures who are upset have their day in court on the merits. | ||
This is what the media keeps saying. | ||
There's no evidence. | ||
The courts have litigated this. | ||
They've all been dismissed. | ||
Yeah, on standing, on latches, not on the actual arguments put forth by the state legislatures. | ||
I'll tell you the weird thing, though. | ||
Why isn't the state legislatures suing because the rules have been violated in their states? | ||
That's what needs to happen. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Who would they sue? | ||
They would have to, well, they'd probably have to sue in their state. | ||
But the problem is, if they're up against the other branches, then they would need to file federal suits against, say, like the state legislature would have to sue the governor in Georgia, for instance. | ||
Because the governor had a consent decree with a democrat, which is insane, which is really crazy. | ||
Like Stacey Abrams, I think? | ||
She sued the governor and they signed a consent degree, which was a no-fault settlement agreement giving a bunch of special powers and provisions as pertaining to the elections. | ||
State legislature says you can't change the rules. | ||
We set the rules. | ||
But the governor just changed them. | ||
So they need to sue the governor over this. | ||
Speaking of Georgia, Purdue, OK, so at 87, 87 percent expected total vote reporting. | ||
We have Purdue up three point zero one percent and Leffler two point two one | ||
percent. So Republicans are numbers a little different than yours because we | ||
are we're looking at Fox News. | ||
I'm looking at the Wall Street Journal, and I'm not seeing... But the Republicans are both winning. | ||
Now, hold on... They've won. | ||
Sorry. | ||
Sorry. | ||
Just be clear about that. | ||
It looks like there are still pretty blue areas that have not been counted yet, so... But not like the metro areas. | ||
Right, but you can see, you know, DeKalb. | ||
Fulton County's not in yet, it looks like. | ||
DeKalb County is 62.88% reporting and that's, you know, that's basically Atlanta. | ||
Richmond County is 39.37%. | ||
But then you have a lot of, I mean, you have a lot of counties like Bullock County, 24%. | ||
Jenkins, 24%. | ||
I mean, it's still early, but as far as the total goes. | ||
Basically Atlanta. | ||
Richmond County is 39.37%. | ||
But then you have a lot of, I mean, you have a lot of counties like Bullock County 24%. | ||
Jenkins 24%. | ||
I mean, it's still early. | ||
But as far as the total goes. | ||
You think they got it? | ||
It's looking good. | ||
Hey, I already called it, right? | ||
unidentified
|
You did, yeah. | |
Senior political analyst. | ||
I already called it. | ||
I can't go back on that. | ||
Running the Timcast IRL Decision Desk has issued a declaration. | ||
Yeah, I'm not like the Fox News Decision Desk. | ||
I'm calling it for the winners as well. | ||
I'm calling it for the winners. | ||
Thank you, Lydia. | ||
I love that. | ||
Let's do it. | ||
I'm calling it for the legit winners. | ||
That's right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Actual winners. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Crypto Mike says Tim Pool's joke before the awesome doggy came in. | ||
I laughed louder than I have in days. | ||
That casino joke was so funny. | ||
unidentified
|
What was it? | |
What was that one? | ||
I forgot. | ||
Casino joke. | ||
Casino joke. | ||
I gotta look back now. | ||
No idea. | ||
Anyway, thanks for the compliment. | ||
Glad you laughed. | ||
Well, you were talking about how you only won $20 or something. | ||
Oh, right. | ||
Congratulations, six-card flush, 1,000 to 1. | ||
The funny thing is, it wasn't even a joke. | ||
You did a joke. | ||
That literally happened. | ||
They're mocking your pain. | ||
And then when they rotated dealers, this guy looked at me and he was like, bro, that's where you make your money, betting on the flush. | ||
And I was like, okay. | ||
And then I put it down and I got a four-card straight, which is like 60 to 1 or whatever. | ||
And so it ended up turning like five bucks in a couple hundred and then I tipped the guy huge and I was like, oh dude, you know, I'm a lefty, right? | ||
People don't want to accept that, but I was like just giving him money away. | ||
And then he was, and then I bet again and I got a five card straight flush, which was like a hundred or something to one. | ||
I can't remember. | ||
And then I tipped him again and I started tipping everybody like huge amounts. | ||
Tip your dealer. | ||
That's a big part of it. | ||
And then before we left, I was like, I went to the roulette table and I just put it on black. | ||
And then the craziest thing happened. | ||
They spun it, and I was like, I'm gonna lose everything. | ||
It was off $20. | ||
I didn't care. | ||
For me, it was like, I was gonna lose $20. | ||
And these two guys were looking at me like I was crazy, because this was like $1,000. | ||
And then, it's going around, the roulette ball landed in red, and then bounced and went into the black. | ||
And these two guys are sitting there and went, What?! | ||
And they were like, dude, it went in red and then bounced out, went in black. | ||
And I was like, dude, it's crazy. | ||
Do you think that you're subconsciously, willpower is like flowing through you and causing it to bounce? | ||
No. | ||
I didn't even think about it. | ||
I just walked over, I put it down, I was like, oh. | ||
Like, you think that there's some energy flowing through you that's bouncing the balls in your favor? | ||
No. | ||
I think it's just physics. | ||
Tim's pretty good at it. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And then we went out to eat, and I went to, we were at this, uh, this, uh... Ramen place? | ||
Ramen place? | ||
Yeah, I got ramen. | ||
No, we went to a dive bar. | ||
Oh, yeah, and then they have like voting machines. | ||
Not voting machines, they have gambling machines. | ||
That was the next day, yeah. | ||
That's the same thing. | ||
Pretty much. | ||
But I put in 20 bucks, and then I got this crazy bonus thing and ended up winning a bunch of money again. | ||
And I just used it to pay for lunch or whatever, or dinner. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
It's just crazy. | ||
My problem with gambling is I was always play poker against other people at the table. | ||
I don't like playing against the house and I would take their money. | ||
And so it's like, if I would, if I would lose, I would lose my money. | ||
If I would win, I would still lose. | ||
Cause I would take their money. | ||
And I saw one guy took his paycheck. | ||
I could tell he stood up and he was just like. | ||
You know, I took money that he shouldn't have lost, I could tell. | ||
And after that, I gave up. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It gets ugly. | ||
It does. | ||
Alright, man. | ||
Well, we've gone quite a bit over. | ||
We had a good time. | ||
We're gonna see how things play out with the election. | ||
And tomorrow should get spicy. | ||
But the plan for tomorrow night is it's our usual show with Jack Murphy of Jack Murphy Live. | ||
Cool dude, we're excited to have him. | ||
So we'll probably be hanging out with DC with him. | ||
That's the plan for now. | ||
Depending on what happens, maybe wake up in the morning and like there will be a horde of Antifa, you know, zombies attacking children or something. | ||
But we'll see how it plays out. | ||
So, my friends, thank you all so much for hanging out. | ||
Smash that like button. | ||
Hit subscribe. | ||
Hit the notification bell. | ||
Give us a good review on iTunes. | ||
If you haven't already, go to iTunes, subscribe. | ||
Go on Spotify, subscribe. | ||
Because that helps boost in the rankings and all that stuff. | ||
I assume so. | ||
So, that helps. | ||
It's really, really great. | ||
Help the show. | ||
Share the show if you really like it. | ||
That's the best way you can help out. | ||
You can follow me on Instagram, Twitter, and Parler at TimCast. | ||
And my other YouTube channels are YouTube.com slash TimCast, YouTube.com slash TimCastNews. | ||
And of course, we're live here Monday through Friday at 8 p.m. | ||
Now, as for you, Mr. Senior Political Analyst Andrew. | ||
Yes. | ||
What's your show? | ||
My channel, my YouTube channel, is Don't Walk Run Productions. | ||
I can be found on Twitter and Parler at Don't Walk Run. | ||
And this is really important. | ||
I need your help, guys. | ||
Instagram. | ||
I need 10,000 followers total, because I can't do anything. | ||
I can't do polls, and I can't do links. | ||
unidentified
|
Really? | |
Yeah, it's weird. | ||
So you have 10,000 followers? | ||
No, I need 10,000 total. | ||
And then you can do polls and stuff? | ||
And then you can do all that stuff. | ||
That's weird. | ||
Yeah, it's weird. | ||
So I need you to follow me at Don't Walk Run Productions, and I don't post all the time, but if you want to follow me, Adrian Curry follows me on Shout out to Adrienne Curry, she might be watching the show right now. | ||
Yeah, and she's awesome. | ||
And she has, like, the best winter boots. | ||
So you should follow her, too. | ||
unidentified
|
But definitely follow me. | |
And also, you should follow Lydia. | ||
Lydia is awesome. | ||
Yes, you should. | ||
You absolutely should. | ||
Worth the follow. | ||
Sour Patch Lids, L-Y-D-S, and I post random things. | ||
No organization or flow at all. | ||
Not at all. | ||
But it's fun. | ||
We have a good time. | ||
That's why she's worth the follow. | ||
That's right. | ||
And you can follow the dog. | ||
You yourself could sponsor the official We Are Chained Survival Apocalypse Docs for as little as $4.99 on wearechained.org forward slash donate or my Venmo cash app under LukeWeAreChained. | ||
I'm joking I have I have you know some crypto saved up for a little pooper but if you do want to support me check out my t-shirt store which oddly i'm wearing right now who would have thought and if you like the shirt that says make taxation theft again you could get it right now by going to we are change.org forward slash stores we are change.org forward slash stores exclusively only through the we are change channel say hi say bye bye say bye to the poopers | ||
And I'm gonna get that dog on Instagram, by the way. | ||
You wanna see the dog, you gotta follow me at Don'tWalkRunProductions on Instagram. | ||
I'll tag you for mine. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I'll tag you too! | ||
If you would like to have someone scry for you, you can follow Ian. | ||
unidentified
|
Scry? | |
He's scrying. | ||
Have you ever done Reiki? | ||
You put energy into the crystal and it stores it. | ||
So when you're depleted later, you can retrieve it. | ||
Yeah, it's cool. | ||
Our bones are made of crystal. | ||
But what about Sagar? | ||
We got to get him on the show. | ||
Yeah, we sure do. | ||
But by the way, you can follow me at Ian Crossland all over the Internet. | ||
And I want to just give a shout out to the gorilla, the apes that we once were. | ||
Free software, graphene, cryptocurrency and any other keywords I'm forgetting right now. | ||
I love that dog. | ||
Look at the dog's tongue. | ||
What's the thing when I was in the show first? | ||
It had something to do with corpses? | ||
There was some kind of chemical. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
You're probably talking about cadaverine. | ||
That's it. | ||
Putrescine and cadaverine. | ||
That's it. | ||
That's what I was guessing. | ||
Putrescine. | ||
Shout out to cadaverine. | ||
It's a bacteria that grows on meat. | ||
All right. | ||
Look, very random. | ||
The baby puppy has to go to sleep now. | ||
Grogu. | ||
We're calling the dog Grogu. | ||
Thank you all so much for hanging out. | ||
And if you would like to see the puppy again, you have to come back tomorrow at eight. | ||
Actually, no, we're in D.C. | ||
But the dog will return for a sequel. | ||
Timcast IRL Part 2 with the puppy. | ||
Thanks for hanging out everybody. | ||
We'll be back tomorrow night at 8pm and Monday through Friday and we'll see you all then. | ||
Tomorrow should be fun. | ||
unidentified
|
Bye guys. |