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New League documents show some really weird, weird grant proposals where in Wuhan there | ||
There was a few groups associated with this project. | ||
You may be familiar with Ecohub Alliance. | ||
They wanted to, like, aerosolize some kind of vaccine by spraying bats. | ||
I mean, I gotta be very careful, because it's a weird grant proposal for some kind of aerosolized vaccine. | ||
in 2018 and they also wanted to do gain-of-function research on bat | ||
coronaviruses specifically to make them more infectious and there are leaked | ||
documents now coming out the Telegraph published this and they were seeking | ||
funding from DARPA. What does DARPA stand for Jack? As you do that's the defense | ||
and defense advanced research and development agency. | ||
All right. | ||
I was like, I don't know. | ||
So that is the, to put it this way, it's the Pentagon's R&D department. | ||
It's also, I think, famous for essentially the early stages of the creation of the internet. | ||
It used to be called ARPA. | ||
ARP. | ||
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DARPA. | |
I guess they had a defense in front of it. | ||
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Yeah. | |
So anyway, DARPA's denying, they're like, we did not provide any funding for this. | ||
Well, yeah, it does look like they didn't do it. | ||
Right, but they were trying. | ||
And we also have this, it may not be the biggest story in the world, I think a lot of people might hype this one up a bit more, is a CCP defector who said he warned U.S., actually this is a big deal, he warned U.S. | ||
intelligence agencies in November of 2019 that China had released some kind of virus at the World Military Games in Wuhan, and they ignored him. | ||
September. | ||
It was September. | ||
September, yeah. | ||
The games were in September. | ||
He warned them in November. | ||
Oh, okay, I gotcha. | ||
In November he said, hey, you know those games that just happened? | ||
All those people got sick. | ||
Right, okay, so two months later. | ||
So apparently he has contacts still within China who have been giving him information. | ||
Could you imagine if the Trump administration had been like, that is very important, we should look into that. | ||
Well, the question is, who did he reach? | ||
Which agency did he reach out to? | ||
Right. | ||
And apparently, I guess the individual he reached out to didn't follow through and they were like, I thought he should be talking to these people directly. | ||
And then they just kind of ignored it because, you know, they didn't. | ||
Hey man, my inbox is full. | ||
If they knew then, what they knew now. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So we got, we got a lot to talk about, but obviously we're hanging out with Jack Posobiec. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome aboard tonight's edition of TeamCast IRL. | ||
Yeah. | ||
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I like it. | |
What do you do? | ||
Who are you? | ||
My name is Jack Posobiec, former Navy intelligence officer. | ||
Yes, I know, right? | ||
And the host of Human Events Daily, shooting up the charts on your podcast, Platform of Choice. | ||
So we just launched that with Turning Point, kind of like giving us a nice boost. | ||
We're part of Turning Point Live there. | ||
And also just put out a new book, a new kids book called There's No Such Thing as Free Ice Cream. | ||
I have to disagree with you. | ||
I was at Occupy Wall Street when Ben and Jerry showed up and gave out free ice cream. | ||
Was it really free? | ||
Or did you have to... Raise your communist fist and give over a piece of your soul? | ||
They were just giving it out to everybody with smiles on their faces. | ||
The ice cream's free, but the digestion requires it. | ||
Of course you had to go to Occupy Wall Street. | ||
So what they were really buying was a presence at Occupy to push their | ||
political cause. | ||
But that's that's so the book actually like, you | ||
know, and we're doing it with Brave Books. So we're not we're not even | ||
doing Amazon for it. | ||
By the way, it's Brave Books dot U.S. | ||
No Amazon, no cancel and, you know, And it's a series. | ||
So it's like Ashley Sinclair is involved, Elizabeth Johnston. | ||
So there's like a gender book. | ||
There's like a pro-life book. | ||
The gender book is called Elephants Aren't Birds, which is true, by the way. | ||
And YouTube, just so you know, elephants are not birds. | ||
And I can perfectly say that because it's on this list here. | ||
They're absolutely mammals. | ||
They're not avians. | ||
They don't have a lot of hair, but they do have hair. | ||
They do. | ||
I heard that elephants take two years to gestate. | ||
Really? | ||
That's a long time. | ||
That's a while. | ||
It's gonna be uncomfortable. | ||
Ian's like, I gotta Google it. | ||
I gotta know everything. | ||
Well, actually, we have an article about your book. | ||
We'll bring it. | ||
Oh, yeah, we'll do the pitch later. | ||
But hey, what's up? | ||
Good to be back. | ||
It's been a minute. | ||
I think, you know, we were doing like the Postal Wednesdays for a little bit. | ||
And I don't know what happened. | ||
Well, I was on the road, actually. | ||
I think that's what it was. | ||
Yeah, you went to Alaska, too. | ||
That was cool. | ||
Alaska was awesome. | ||
We'll talk about that, too. | ||
We got we got Ian. | ||
Yes, we do. | ||
And elephant gestation anywhere between 620 and 680 days, almost two years. | ||
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A long time to be in a belly. | |
Yeah. | ||
Wow. | ||
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Uterus. | |
Ian is still gestating right now. | ||
What's up, everybody? | ||
Good to see you, Jack. | ||
Ian is actually spiritually gestating right now. | ||
I'm a huge Star Wars fan, as you are. | ||
I'm really excited you're here to talk about the Force a little bit. | ||
Yeah, but before the show we were talking about how Rian Johnson did an amazing job by destroying the Star Wars franchise. | ||
This is an interesting theory and I would like to subscribe to your newsletter. | ||
Okay, we got Lydia pressing the button. | ||
I am pushing buttons in the corner. | ||
I'm wearing my glasses today. | ||
This always gets comments. | ||
They're for blue light. | ||
They're not actually prescription. | ||
Guys, I passed Sour Patch Kids in followers. | ||
We did? | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
When did this happen? | ||
Last night. | ||
Last night? | ||
Yeah, look at that. | ||
So what are the numbers? | ||
Show me the numbers. | ||
Is it neck and neck? | ||
I have 97 and they have like 96.3. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
Yes. | ||
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It's over. | |
Do they even know? | ||
Defeated. | ||
We gotta have them on the show. | ||
Folks, we need to meme them away with this thing. | ||
We need the Sour Patch Lids memes crushing! | ||
Or I guess squishing, right? | ||
Squishing and chewing. | ||
Before we get into everything, my friends, we've got an awesome sponsor, the sponsors that you know and love. | ||
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But this stuff's really, really delicious, and I gotta tell you, um, I'm not, like, doing a strict diet or anything. | ||
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No, no joke. | ||
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So now I'm like, the better I feel, the more I'm like, get that sugar away from me, you villains. | ||
And Ian's been screaming in my ears about sugar being bad. | ||
Oh, thank you for listening. | ||
A week and a half ago, I went keto for a week and I started waking up at 730 a morning. | ||
No matter what time I'd go to bed, I'd get up with the sun. | ||
And then over the weekend, I ate some bread and it tasted like paper. | ||
Like at first I was like, oh, this isn't really even food. | ||
And then after three or four pieces, it started, I started to get addicted to it again, the bread. | ||
So I'm back on keto. | ||
I haven't touched it in three days. | ||
And you've been up in the... I've seen Ian awake in the morning, which is... We actually scared. | ||
It's incredible. | ||
It's terrifying. | ||
People were running like, is Ian awake? | ||
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unidentified
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That's the one. | |
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Support the sponsors that are willing to be on shows like this because it's the opposite of cancel culture. | ||
It is What's the opposite of canceling? | ||
Promotion culture? | ||
Promotion culture! | ||
I like it. | ||
There you go. | ||
They're helping make shows like this possible. | ||
And so we have tremendous respect for those guys. | ||
It's not a boycott. | ||
It's a boycott. | ||
A boycott. | ||
That's right. | ||
And you can also go to TimCast.com. | ||
Sold that from Charlie Kirk. | ||
Yes. | ||
Go to TimCast.com. | ||
Become a member. | ||
We're going to have a members-only segment coming up around 11 or so p.m. | ||
And we're about to overhaul our members section. | ||
Which we're going to be adding new shows. | ||
There's going to be members only content from the vlog. | ||
We've got a new show called The Green Room, which is when guests arrive early and they talk about nonsense. | ||
You know, maybe there's a guest and you never heard about their famous cookie recipe. | ||
We were talking about eating chickens earlier. | ||
We were talking about eating chickens. | ||
Um, and there was some top secret phone calls. | ||
See all that stuff's fun. | ||
I think that's, I don't know that it's top secret anymore. | ||
Not anymore. | ||
Not anymore. | ||
The Project Veritas. | ||
I think, I think that's out actually. | ||
But yeah, they did give us kind of a little bit of a tip off because they knew we were going live tonight. | ||
That's right. | ||
And so we'll, uh, midway through the show, we'll pull up the Project Veritas stuff. | ||
Cause I got some big revelations. | ||
Creepy, creepy stuff. | ||
I'm going to take a look right now to see if it, yeah, it just dropped. | ||
unidentified
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All right. | |
So we'll, we'll pull it up in a second, but don't forget to like this video right now. | ||
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So, that would be greatly appreciated. | ||
Let's talk about this first story. | ||
And this one is one of the creepiest and strangest stories. | ||
From Newsweek, DARPA denies funding Wuhan Institute of Virology amid alleged document leak. | ||
They say, Newsweek cannot confirm the veracity of the drastic group or the existence of the project. | ||
Diffused documents describe the groups as the documents were provided anonymously. | ||
DARPA, the U.S. | ||
Advanced Research Projects Agency, has denied funding research at Wuhan, the Wuhan lab, after a group released documents allegedly detailing a coronavirus research proposal. | ||
They say DRASTIC is a group of activists who say they are working towards solving the riddle of the origins of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that is behind COVID. | ||
They say they were given documents by an anonymous source which detail something called Project Diffuse, according to what appear to be funding proposal excerpts published by DRASTIC. | ||
Project Diffuse aimed to reduce the threat of bat-borne coronaviruses through research and was headed by Peter Daszak, president of the U.S.-based research organization EcoHealth Alliance. | ||
It would have run between 2018 and 2022. | ||
Drastic states, the research proposal would have involved advanced and dangerous research into bat coronaviruses in cooperation with the Wuhan Institute of Virology and other facilities, and said the research would qualify as gain-of-function, a process that can be used to make viruses more dangerous. | ||
However, Drastic said the documents showed that DARPA rejected the defused proposal in part because of gain-of-function concerns. | ||
Specifically, they said something about, you know, we're not so sure about an aerosolized vaccine. | ||
The idea apparently was that they were going to make some kind of airborne aerosol I'm with DARPA on this one. | ||
coronavirus particles they would spray bats with so the bats would develop some kind of immunity to | ||
it and DARPA was like that sounds really dangerous to do. I'm with DARPA on this one. I'm gonna go | ||
ahead and say I agree with DARPA. I'm not a big fan of mass. | ||
Let's not go spraying the vaccines into the bat caves. | ||
It makes me think of fluoride in the water, like just dumping the medicine into the medium that we... Is there fluoride in the water? | ||
Really? | ||
Yeah, I've heard. | ||
Not here. | ||
Oh, okay, good. | ||
No, we have well water. | ||
Better not be. | ||
It didn't used to be, but they started adding it, I think. | ||
Fluoride in my coffee. | ||
Yep, not everybody. | ||
Some places don't, but we have well water, so... Plus we have like a nine-stage filter or some ridiculous number. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So the article basically goes on to say, like, gain-of-function is really, really bad and all that stuff. | ||
They go on to then say in a statement in Newsweek, DARPA denied funding any activity associated with EcoHealth Alliance or the Wuhan Institute of Virology. | ||
A spokesman said, in accordance with the U.S. | ||
federal acquisition regulations, we are not at liberty to divulge who may have or may not have submitted a proposal in response to any of the agency's solicitations. | ||
Further information contained within bids is considered proprietary and can only be released by the bidder. | ||
That being said, DARPA has never funded directly nor indirectly, as a subcontractor, any activity or research associated with EcoHealth Alliance or the Wuhan Institute of Virology. | ||
Why would Peter Daszak, he's the guy who spearheaded the Lancet article that said, this is not from a lab. | ||
And now we hear that, according to these documents- Who's then later kicked off the team, by the way. | ||
Right. | ||
And now Lancet's like, coming out with a statement, we should investigate because it looks like a lab leak. | ||
In a serious and open debate. | ||
So this guy, he was trying to get funding from DARPA? | ||
Look, NIH is one thing with Fauci, you know, being like, we would like to fund research in this area because you're the National Institutes of Health or whatever. | ||
It's another thing when you go to DARPA. | ||
I mean, what could they possibly be trying to do, pitch to DARPA? | ||
Hey, you want a weapon? | ||
You want bioweapons? | ||
You know, it's amazing because, you know, I know Alex was here on Monday, but doesn't this sound like something that you'd hear on his show, right? | ||
Yes. | ||
And you'd be like, Alex, come on! | ||
He's like, the Chinese were working with... | ||
A U.S. | ||
firm and they went to DARPA with their documents and said we were going to be aerosolizing the bat caves. | ||
Are you going to go for it? | ||
He'd be like... | ||
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You know, I'm telling people that the Chinese are coming to DARPA because the U.S. | |
is working with China to spray the vaccine on the bats. | ||
And I'm just like, Alex, slow down. | ||
Look, they're going to go into the caves. | ||
We're going to fact check this one. | ||
And then I'm like, I really don't think the Chinese went to US defense research projects to get like, you know, to get money to do a lab to make gain-of-function bioweapons to spray bats. | ||
And I'll be like, Google it. | ||
And then I'd Google it and be like, from Newsweek. | ||
Jamie, pull it up! | ||
Wuhan Institute of Virology was, and EcoHealth Alliance was seeking money from DARPA to weaponize. | ||
You're like, to weaponize the aerosolization, the human furring Cleavage site of the... Okay, so this says that what Alex was screaming about is entirely true. | ||
So get the jar! | ||
Jamie, get the jar! | ||
And you need to put another coin in the jar. | ||
EcoHealth Alliance went to DARPA? | ||
Is this a Chinese? | ||
Well, so when you look at the actual documents, and I've gone through this and I do actually dig through it on, we talked about it on the podcast today, as well as at humanevents.com. | ||
where we go a little deeper and we actually, I was actually reading the table of contents | ||
on this because I've only been doing the podcast for like a week, but I'm trying to get cancelled | ||
as fast as possible. So I started, I started reading the actual table of contents in the | ||
leaked document. And I was trying to go through it. I'm like, I don't know if I can say this, | ||
you know, and it was getting a little long. And we do we do a shorter version thing there. | ||
But they're talking about infectious experiments using entire captive bat colonies. | ||
They're visiting the caves and the one that's really big, the introduction of human specific cleavage sites. | ||
So do you remember when there was that big article that came out by the former New York Times reporter where he was, it was sort of like the article that changed the conversation, at least for a lot of people out there. | ||
All of a sudden he was like, Hey, we probably should talk about the lab leak. | ||
Cause there's some weird things. | ||
Well, I actually went in and read like all 7,000 words of that. | ||
Cause that's what I do. | ||
Um, and there's a huge section where he said, okay, we're going to talk about science now. | ||
So for anybody who wants to talk science, this is that section. | ||
And one of the main things they were talking about was this human fern cleavage site. | ||
That's where I heard the phrase, was in that article. | ||
And so I'm looking it up. | ||
I'm talking to people that I know who have been in pharma and R&D, et cetera, and one of whom I'm sure is listening right now. | ||
And the thing that was very interesting to them was they said, we don't know how COVID-19 could have evolved this so specifically. | ||
Because it seems to be the perfect addition to a coronavirus. | ||
Remember, coronaviruses, there's not one coronavirus. | ||
That's a family name. | ||
So that's like a genus. | ||
That's like a family of a type of virus. | ||
And so for COVID-19, they're just saying that we haven't seen another coronavirus with this specific feature to it, right? | ||
function, to use a word. | ||
And that's where gain of function actually comes from. | ||
It doesn't have this function. | ||
No one had gained this function before, at least that they'd found. | ||
And so the point of it was, this made the spike proteins, essentially, because you always heard this early on, spike proteins, ACE2 receptors, spike proteins, ACE2 receptors. | ||
So our lungs, human lungs, have these ACE2 receptors. | ||
What the Wuhan Institute of Virology was doing was they were humanizing mice. | ||
What were they doing with the mice? | ||
They were giving them the ACE2 receptors in their lungs. | ||
Trying to engineer a virus, a chimeric virus. | ||
So to see if a chimeric virus could essentially be able to be inserted to become transgenically more pathologically transmissible, they were enhancing the pathogenicity. | ||
I had to practice that one like three times in the mirror. | ||
That's a good word. | ||
And so it's really interesting that again, you know, to everybody out there that's kind of following this at once more and not to like delve too into it, you just see these same terms coming up again and again, both at looking at the science of what is COVID-19, what makes it so unique, what makes it so uniquely transmissible in humans, and then also these grant proposals that are associated with the Wuhan Institute of Virology. | ||
I want to read this from the Telegraph. | ||
They say DARPA refused to fund the work, saying, quote, Thank you, DARPA. | ||
It is clear that the proposed project, led by Peter Dashek, could have put local communities at risk and warned that the team had not properly considered the dangers of enhancing the virus' gain-of-function research or releasing a vaccine by air. | ||
Wow! | ||
So, so DARPA was the voice of reason here. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
DARPA saying, Hey guys, let's just, you know, you know, we're busy making the apes. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Of course. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So, so dash it. | ||
The original of the burden, the new one. | ||
Oh no, I haven't seen that one yet. | ||
The new one's all prequels though. | ||
Right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So in the new one, you know what it's about? | ||
Yeah, with Caesar and all. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
So he makes a virus that enhances- Apes together strong! | ||
Yeah. | ||
Makes a virus that enhances the intelligence and functions of the chimps, but then it turns out that virus kills humans. | ||
So the humans start dying off for the most part, and the apes are intelligent and building civilization, and I guess that's the prequel in the future. | ||
The humans are all gone, and the apes are all smart or whatever. | ||
Except for James Franco, but not anymore, because there was an incident. | ||
No, he does die from the virus, I'm pretty sure. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
But there are some humans who are immune, and there's very few. | ||
There was like, oh, the guy from Zero Dark Thirty is in one of them. | ||
So you have DARPA basically being like, if you guys do a gain-of-function virus and then spray COVID particles on these animals which then travel, you know, you might destroy the planet. | ||
So we don't know, according to these documents, it doesn't say if they were actually funded. | ||
It says they were proposals. | ||
Um, so maybe they went to Fauci and Fauci was like, all right. | ||
The point that drastic makes and drastic has had a lot of, of legitimate scoops and research that's come out in the, they have an excellent track record when it comes to this. | ||
Um, the point that they make, if you read their summary is that, you know, we're not saying we're not trying to pin this on DARPA. | ||
We're interested in what type of research and what venues were they looking at? | ||
Because. | ||
As DARPA said in that disclosure statement that, hey, this is proprietary stuff. | ||
We're not actually allowed to share it because of the rules associated, which makes sense, right? | ||
If you're applying for a grant proposal, but, you know, if I, you know, if, if Moderna shares it, you know, sends me a proposal and I share their grant proposal with J&J because I you know, maybe my buddy works at J&J and he said he'd give me some money if I did. | ||
Obviously, you can think of the proprietary issues there. | ||
But the question is, what avenues of research were they looking into? | ||
What was going on? | ||
And then Did they ever, eventually, get funding from NIH? | ||
Or, by the way, did they get just funding from the CCP, for example, to fund these lines of research? | ||
So, again, we only have, so far, insight into what has been published from the Wuhan Institute, and we have better insight into what we funded, we being the US government, the US nation. | ||
But we don't really know. | ||
There's a whole black box surrounding that entire thing. | ||
And it seems like every time we get another leak, every time we get more documents, every time we dig up one of these statements that was made, right in real time, when you go look at this, I pulled up that New York Times article from 2017 that says, well, it looks like we're going to be funding gain of function research now, which could produce more lethal viruses, right? | ||
You know, New York Times. | ||
I'm done playing games. | ||
Look, the Hunter Biden laptop story comes out, and immediately you get people on the right, of course, willing to start digging into it, trying to fact-check it, verify a lot of the stuff. | ||
And it was almost immediately verified in a bunch of ways. | ||
Notably, Tony Bobulinski, who was like a confidant, being like, yeah, these emails are real. | ||
And it takes, what, a year for the mainstream media to go, oh, they're real, by the way. | ||
And then people go, oh. | ||
I still remember sitting there and it was, um, you know, uh, you know, Bannon gives us the hard drive and that was with Rahim and we were just sitting out at Morton's on the terrace and he starts, he's like, Oh, look at this video. | ||
And I'm like, God, don't show me that we're in public, you know? | ||
But I'm like, that's. | ||
Definitely Hunter Biden, no question about that. | ||
I'm not trying to rehash all of that because I see this snowstorm and I'm like, we knew this. | ||
We knew this story was bunk. | ||
We knew RussiaGate at a certain point was bunk. | ||
I was willing to entertain RussiaGate and then eventually I was just like, these people have lost their minds. | ||
It was getting crazier and crazier. | ||
UkraineGate was completely bunk. | ||
It's all been bunk. | ||
The media's lied about way too much. | ||
But Tim, here's the thing is I was going on every single day publicly during this period. | ||
So the eight was essentially eight weeks before the election. | ||
And I would say I was going as a Jake Tapper, Maggie Haberman actually got into it on Twitter with Mark Cuban a little bit over this because he actually responded. | ||
I said, If you guys want to come and get a copy of this thing, I will let you sit down, I will give you full access to it, I'll let you make a copy of it, I'll let you take it off with you, you can send it to... Like, I would like to know personally as well, but I also understand that we live in this environment where there's sort of like the independent media, and then there's like the accepted, formal, mainstream media, right? | ||
And so I understand that unless this hard drive passes through that, you know, that barrier, I'm just saying I'm done playing games. | ||
most of the time barrier into quote unquote accepted media | ||
channels as opposed to like podcast independent media that | ||
this are going to happen. | ||
So I said, guys, come on, get a copy of it. I'm more than happy. | ||
I'm just saying I'm done playing games when it comes to lab leak. | ||
We've got so much evidence pointing in the direction to | ||
research being funded at the Wuhan lab that was specifically | ||
working on gain of function coronaviruses to infect the | ||
lungs. And now we have a coronavirus from Wuhan that | ||
Bro, I'm done. | ||
I'm not playing these stupid games anymore. | ||
The people understand what happened. | ||
At the very least, it was a lab leak, and at worst, as this guy says, let's pull up this article and then hold that thought. | ||
Yeah, it's simple. | ||
This is from joe.co.uk. | ||
Chinese whistleblower claims first COVID outbreak was intentional. | ||
And I can believe it. | ||
This is a guy who defected, I think it was like a couple decades ago, 1987. | ||
He was held in prisons because he has been fighting for democracy. | ||
But apparently he still has individual, he still knows, he still has sources. | ||
And they provided him, provided him information that said that in 2019 at the World Military Games, China released a virus. | ||
Now that's his claim. | ||
Wait, where were the World Military Games in September 2019? | ||
They were in Wuhan, and there were 9,000 athletes, many of whom were sick with some pneumonia-like disease. | ||
I've actually had members of that reach out to me afterwards, or family members, and say, Which family member it was, but someone I was related to was on that trip. | ||
They came back, they were sick. | ||
We got sick. | ||
We passed that along. | ||
We have no idea what that was. | ||
And it's been so long now that we can't, you know, really get tested for it. | ||
So we're not sure what happened. | ||
But a lot of people were saying the symptoms were very COVID-like. | ||
So I'll say this. | ||
I don't know about intentionally. | ||
I think when you look at the lab leak evidence, you would be insane not to conclude this leak from a lab, whether it was, you know, if it was intentionally done, that's something totally different. | ||
But we actually have a director claims that he went in November, or I'm sorry, yes, in November, he went to U.S. | ||
intelligence and said, this thing that just happened, this wasn't an intentional release of a virus. | ||
And the funny thing is, we have the benefit of hindsight. | ||
We can look back at these past couple of years and be like, why didn't they listen? | ||
Well, think about it. | ||
The World Military Games happens and some people got sick. | ||
So what? | ||
So you got a bunch of athletes who get sick, and then you don't even notice because not that many get sick. | ||
And then some guy comes to you and says, people got sick because China intentionally released a virus. | ||
They're going to be like, what are you talking about? | ||
It was fine. | ||
The game went off without a hitch. | ||
Especially if they use the phrase, you know, if they say, oh, it's a bioweapon, secret Chinese project, military. | ||
It just, it kind of fits that sort of thing where, and saying this for someone who was in the Intel community. | ||
You get a lot of walk-ins, right? | ||
You get a lot of walk-ins. | ||
You get people coming all the time with this story, that story. | ||
And because of the Iraq WMD scenario, because of that situation, anything that kind of falls into that bucket of NBC, not NBC the company, but nuclear, biological, chemical, there always is a little bit of hesitancy from people in the community because of that experience to really jump on one of those things. | ||
And there's hesitancy from people that, you know, your middle managers, et cetera, to pass that on to the higher ups, the generals or the DASDs, or certainly anyone in the White House, give it to the president just because of that situation, because you don't want to be the next Colin Powell that, you know, et cetera. | ||
Were this, like, I'm curious, was COVID more negatively impacting Asian people? | ||
Wasn't there something about, like, some people had more ACE2 receptors based on their heritage? | ||
Yeah, I thought it was Asian men. | ||
No, I thought Asian men were less likely. | ||
Oh, I don't know. | ||
I don't remember. | ||
Sorry. | ||
Ian, do you want to Google that? | ||
There'll be something I want to look up, yeah. | ||
Because I remember seeing something about less ACE2 receptors based on, you know, different parts of the world and stuff like that. | ||
So I'd be curious. | ||
I could be wrong about this. | ||
unidentified
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I don't know. | |
Do you see anything, Ian? | ||
No. | ||
Is this here from E-Turbo News? | ||
It says East Asians and men have more than, say, white Europeans. | ||
OK, more receptors, which means they're more susceptible to this. | ||
That's just according to this. | ||
I don't know, but that's unconfirmed. | ||
So regardless of the outcome, I think it's interesting. | ||
China's accused the U.S. | ||
of releasing this, but it was a joint China-U.S. | ||
research. | ||
There was joint China-U.S. | ||
research being done at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. | ||
So, I mean, I don't I don't know, man. | ||
This also says that men have more than women by nature. | ||
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So what do you think? | |
Do you believe this guy? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know for sure, but I do know just from an analysis standpoint, I could certainly see a scenario where Someone and not necessarily Xi Jinping, but somebody in China says, hey, we have this situation on our hands. | ||
It looks like this thing is breaking out. | ||
Why should we be the only ones who have to take a hit on this? | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
Why should we be the only ones who have to take the economic hit, the supply chain hit, the monetary hit? | ||
They're going through a monetary situation right now with Evergrande. | ||
Yeah, I don't. | ||
It's breaking out. | ||
So why not? | ||
Why not just let it ride? | ||
The intentional thing, I'm not sure there's enough evidence of, but a lab leak? | ||
A lab leak, but a lab leak that you don't respond to immediately. | ||
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Right. | |
Or look at what happened with Fukushima. | ||
You think you can cover it up? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
There's like, just, just, just get rid of it quickly. | ||
Don't have to admit anything. | ||
But, but, you know, I guess the challenge is they didn't shut down travel to Wuhan. | ||
They allowed outbound travel, didn't they? | ||
They did. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So it doesn't sound like they were trying to, uh, it sounded like they were like, you know what? | ||
It hit us. | ||
It's going to hit everybody else. | ||
So when Chernobyl happened, and one thing that HBO totally missed in the Chernobyl miniseries, which I think is quite good, but one thing that, and my wife coming from, having been in the Soviet Union, always points out that they totally missed, is that if you look at the dates, Chernobyl happens in late April. | ||
What is May 1st, right? | ||
May 1st is May Day, right, in the Soviet Union. | ||
This is a huge day of celebration, it's parades, people are outside, people are, you know, garlands of flowers, etc, etc. | ||
So all of that happens in the Chernobyl area and across Belarus where a lot of the winds were blowing it. | ||
So this fallout, they allowed that to go on even though they knew the meltdown had occurred. | ||
unidentified
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Wow. | |
Because they didn't want to admit it to the West. | ||
Yep. | ||
And I think it was only because they detected radiation in Sweden or something. | ||
Right. | ||
That anyone started to realize what was going on with Chernobyl. | ||
Because people in Sweden started getting sick and people started detecting things. | ||
What's going on? | ||
Hey, Russia. | ||
Hey, Soviet Union. | ||
Do something you like to tell us. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
And so what's amazing, though, is because we have this situation now where what's the difference between the U.S. | ||
relationship with China and the CCP versus the U.S. | ||
relationship in the USSR? | ||
There is a monetary, financial, and a deep economic relationship between the U.S. | ||
and China that the U.S. | ||
and the Soviet Union never had. | ||
Our elites are getting rich off of this supply chain, off of the exploitation of cheap Chinese labor, the Uyghurs, etc., everything else. | ||
You don't have that now. | ||
So you don't have this huge... I mean, look at all the movies, the cultural... John Cena. | ||
John Cena going out and speaking really, really bad Mandarin. | ||
Apologizing. | ||
我很抱歉,很抱歉,台湾不是一个国家。我很抱歉,你不能看我。 No one has any idea what you just said. | ||
I'm so sorry, Taiwan. | ||
Taiwan's not a country. | ||
unidentified
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You can't see me. | |
很抱歉,中国。 I love how they mock the Baizua, but then these Baizua in the U.S. | ||
You can't see me. | ||
unidentified
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You can't see me. | |
I'm sorry, China. | ||
I love how they mock the Baizua, but then these Baizua in the US get on their knees | ||
for him. | ||
Which is why they mock them, because they know they're lesser. | ||
I'm sorry, China. | ||
I love how they mock the Baizua, but then these Baizua in the US get on their knees | ||
for him. | ||
Which is why they mock them, because they know they're lesser. | ||
It's crazy, isn't it? | ||
That means white left, by the way. | ||
Right, so this is the situation, and then they, because we are, like our elites, are so in bed with them, you don't have that situation, like Moscow, do you want to tell us something? | ||
Beijing, do you want to tell us something? | ||
I'm sure behind the scenes, you know, there's quite a bit, but then a lot of this was kept, and Peter Navarro has a book coming out, I think his book just hit number three on Amazon, where he was talking about having been in the room with Fauci, Because keep in mind, Fauci obviously knows about all this stuff or has the ability to pick up the phone and say, hey, did we, you know, something going on over in Wuhan? | ||
Where's that guy? | ||
Where's that Peter guy? | ||
You know, did he have something going on with this? | ||
Does he know what's happening? | ||
And, you know, we talked to Peter Daszak, not Peter Navarro, and Navarro says that moment never happened, right? | ||
You'd think, like, if it's seen in a movie, right? | ||
You think the scientists would come in, oh my gosh, Wuhan, that's where the lab is. | ||
That's where we were doing the funding. | ||
What's happening? | ||
And then like Jeff Goldblum runs, rushes in, I told you! | ||
I told you! | ||
It would be considered bad writing. | ||
It would be like the scientist runs in and goes, ladies and gentlemen, a virus has broken out in a city with a virus gain-of-function research lab. | ||
And people watching it go, oh, come on. | ||
It doesn't make any sense. | ||
A little bit more exciting than that, obviously. | ||
Right, where's the farming village, and then the peasants get sick, and then the bat gets in the soup, and then it gets to... What's in Outbreak? | ||
I think it's the bat, you know, and then it bites somebody, and then they go to a casino in Macau, and there's like some Americans there, and like... But, you know, if they were making a movie about this, it would literally be like a guy working in the research, you know, in the research lab wearing the suit, and then he would be like handling a bat, and it would bite his finger, and he'd go, Kind of like Peter Parker a little bit. | ||
He'd look around and be like, nobody saw, and then he'd go out and wash and be like, | ||
yeah, the stand. | ||
Well, one thing... | ||
And then just some coughing later. | ||
One thing that also that I think people should consider is that even though they always say | ||
there's no evidence of bats being sold at the sweat market, keep in mind, though, that | ||
the standards for control over these type of things in China are just not that big. | ||
So there are also economic incentives that, hey, if you're somebody that maybe just works, you're a worker there, you're a janitor or something, and you see, hey, there's a couple of bats, it looks like the experiment's over, they won't miss one, they won't miss two. | ||
Maybe, you know, you're selling them off the back of the truck to a guy, and then he goes and takes them out into the city. | ||
It doesn't have to be at the wet market, just be some guy he knows, and maybe he's been doing this for a while and has no idea, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Right. There are so many permutations you could think of to create a lab leak theory, all of which are very valid. | ||
And if I wanted to go, you know, if we were trying to go from like the most plausible scenario, like research was | ||
being done and then there was a lab leak because of, you know, incompetence, to the most and completely implausible | ||
one, I would love to just, you know, theorize about Xi Jinping trying to gain the ability to control bats and wield them like some kind of villain. | ||
He's doing that. | ||
But then the bats, you know, break out of control and they were trying to use a virus to control their minds and then all hell breaks loose. | ||
Seems like more of a Kim Jong-un thing. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I can see Kim Jong-un being into that. | ||
What you're saying is Navarro was in the room when Fauci learned about it, but he didn't react. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Well, basically, yes. | ||
And so you'd expect the lead scientist to be like, oh my gosh, let's look in. | ||
But because he didn't react, it was kind of like, why didn't he react to that? | ||
Right. | ||
So then eventually it becomes like the political appointees in the administration. | ||
And this is what Navarro's book is entirely about. | ||
And he's been actually calling me like a minute ago. | ||
That, you know, he's just he's trying to tell people the story of what actually happened to say, hey, we found out all this stuff about Wuhan. | ||
And then we see Fauci's name on it. | ||
We see NIH and NIAID. | ||
And we said, excuse me, are we funding this stuff? | ||
Tony, what's what's going on here, man? | ||
Like, what's just, you know, we're trying to fight this thing. | ||
We don't want people to be getting sick. | ||
Do you know something that you'd like to tell us? | ||
Because keep in mind that when you go back and watch those old videos of Fauci where he's talking about the need for gain-of-function research, what does he say? | ||
He says we need to do this because if there is a zoonotic spillover event, we need to be prepared for it. | ||
We need to have elements on the shelf or resources or at least just the knowledge. | ||
Sounds like total bullcrap. | ||
To be able to prepare for something. | ||
So, but just go with me on this, right? | ||
So it's like, okay, let's take you at your word. | ||
If that's the case, Why didn't you have that moment of saying, Oh my gosh, they were studying something just like this. | ||
Hold on. | ||
Let me call up Sher Jung Lee. | ||
We'll, we'll figure out what the best, cause you know, it's like you create the disease so you can create the cure. | ||
So why didn't that phone call ever take place? | ||
I remember seeing that video of Dr. Fauci being questioned by Rand Paul and he is shaking. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
And that was crazy. | ||
People noticed and they like zoomed in on his hand. | ||
unidentified
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Completely and entirely wrong. | |
And then it turns out that it was all true. | ||
We got leaked documents and more and more information keeps coming out. | ||
I don't understand how Fauci's not already under investigated. | ||
Yeah, he said they were not funding gain of research. | ||
So look at this. | ||
If you actually look at the first finding of drastic in these documents, the first finding So keep in mind, I mentioned that there was that New York Times article from 2017 that talked about the return of gain-of-function funding. | ||
However, this was 2018. | ||
So the question is, if gain-of-function research has been turned back on by Francis Collins, who's the director of the NIH, he's Fauci's boss, is Collins, so why are they going to DARPA if it's been turned on at NIH? | ||
Here's the rub. | ||
NIH instituted something called, I believe it's the PC3 framework, by in law, by in which they were going to, and Dr. Ehrbricht is part of this at Rutgers, that you are supposed to submit it to this group essentially to get sign off to say, is this going to create a lethal virus? | ||
Is this something that does constitute dangerous gain of function? | ||
So DASHAC knows that and the Wuhan Institute knows that. | ||
And so they just tweak it enough so they can argue or what? | ||
Not even. | ||
That framework is only under NIH. | ||
So they say, well, if we go to these guys, we can't tell them all the stuff we really want to do. | ||
But if we go to DARPA, maybe we can get some funding. | ||
And they don't have that framework. | ||
But at least DARPA goes and says, common sense. | ||
We're not going to do this, guys. | ||
I have a feeling. | ||
They were trying to circumvent the system. | ||
If you look at the amount of data and evidence that's been coming out implicating Fauci, we're just like a month away from like a video of Fauci holding a phone and like with Peter Daszak at the Wuhan lab doing a selfie and he's like, hey what's up guys, we're doing gain-of-function research on bat coronaviruses and we're gonna increase human trans-disability and then he high-fives and then that video comes out and Rand Paul is like, explain this video that you took, you are wrong Rand, that was just us in a lab doing modifications to chimeric viruses that would make them enter humans more easily, that's not gain-of-function. | ||
gain of function research. | ||
So go back to it, right? | ||
Look at what Fauci's done in the past because he had that huge, very public flip flop on | ||
mask wearing, right? | ||
Early on he says, don't do it. | ||
Then later he says, I had to say that at the time because we had to shore up the mask supply | ||
for doctors and for frontline health care workers. | ||
But now that that time has passed, the supply chain is working. | ||
We are going to open it for everybody else. | ||
So I had to say it at the time and it was for the right reasons. | ||
That's exactly what he'll do. | ||
He'll say, I had to say that at the time, but gain of function, of course we were doing gain of function and we had to do gain of function. | ||
Well, I don't think he'll ever do that because that would be admitting to lying to Congress, which is perjury. | ||
And that's, that's actually something where he's got himself in a little bit of a trap. | ||
That's why he was shaken. | ||
And then just gets a pardon. | ||
Can he just say it then get a pardon by Biden? | ||
Yeah, Biden, the pardon power of the presidency is a plenary power, which means it's absolute. | ||
It cannot be overturned by it cannot be overturned by a proceeding president. | ||
So like, like Trump can't come in and overturn one of Obama's pardons, right. | ||
And interestingly enough, it can't even be over, it can't be overturned by Congress, but the Supreme Court, it can't even be overturned by yourself. | ||
So if you are president, and you pardon someone, that's it, they're done. | ||
And you can pardon for more than just what they've been convicted of, right? | ||
So this is the idea of a blanket pardon, and that's actually never been challenged. | ||
So Gerald Ford does this famously for Nixon after the events of Watergate, and he does this sort of like blanket pardon, blanket amnesty for Watergate. | ||
And essentially just nobody decided, the Congress said, fine, whatever, | ||
we're not gonna challenge this. | ||
But it, so that is sort of the leading theory that you can give someone a blanket pardon, | ||
but it's not actually been completely tested. | ||
It's just that no one's ever gone down that road. | ||
We gotta pull up this Project Veritas story. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, Project Veritas. | ||
We promised, we promised. | ||
...has dropped a crazy story. | ||
The latest FDA official blow dart African Americans with COVID vaccine is, quote, where we're going, just shoot everyone, calls for a Nazi Germany-style registry of unvaccinated Americans, quote, think about it like the Jewish star. | ||
What?! ! | ||
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, Tim. | ||
You're not saying that, right? | ||
No, I'm reading a headline. | ||
No, that's, that's... Taylor Lee, FDA economist. | ||
The FDA economist said that? | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
Yes. | ||
Veritas reports they released a second video of its COVID vaccine investigation exposing a U.S. | ||
Food and Drug Administration economist, Taylor Lee, who was recorded calling for forced COVID vaccinations and a registry for all of unvaccinated Americans. | ||
Lee said that U.S. | ||
government policy would emulate Nazi Germany when it comes to the COVID vaccine, saying, quote, Census goes door to door if you don't respond. | ||
So we have the infrastructure to do it. | ||
Forced COVID vaccinations. | ||
I mean, it'll cost a ton of money. | ||
But I think at that point, I think there needs to be a registry of people who aren't vaccinated. | ||
Although that's sounding very much like Nazi Germany, he said. | ||
And so let me make sure I'm being clear. | ||
His exact quote is, so we have the infrastructure to do it, I mean, it'll cost a ton of money. | ||
And Veritas has inserted the context of the greater conversation in their quotes. | ||
He says, although that's sounding very Germany, Lee said, Nazi Germany. | ||
I mean, think about it like the Jewish star for unvaccinated Americans, he said. | ||
So just to be clear, because I want to make sure we cross all the T's and dot all our lowercase J's. | ||
He said, although that's sounding very Germany, Wow. | ||
Nazi Germany and then Veritas includes the context so you understand in that quote. | ||
He says so if you put every anti-vaxxer like sheep into like Texas and you closed off Texas | ||
from the rest of the world and you go, okay, you be you in Texas until we deal with this | ||
pandemic. Lee said that due to a large portion of African American of the African American | ||
community being hesitant to take the COVID vaccine, the solution should be to quote unquote | ||
a blow dart on them. Wow. What? Yeah, I'm going to be I'm going to be very, very careful | ||
about how I read this, but here's a quote. | ||
It says, I think that a lot of the time, so there's also this issue of, I remember reading about how the COVID trials, they were having an issue recruiting African-American people. | ||
It was because of a different medication the government tried to do that was specifically designed to kill African-Americans. | ||
Oh, like a mistrust thing, yeah. | ||
But this COVID vaccine is safe though. | ||
We know that now, but, like, again, I think there is still this big mistrust, and it's, like, deep-rooted. | ||
The journalist says, yeah, I can't blame them. | ||
Lee says, I can't, but at the same time, like, blow dart. | ||
That's where we're going. | ||
I'm watching it right now. | ||
James just texted it to me, so I'm watching here on the screen. | ||
It's one guy. | ||
It's an FDA economist. | ||
I want to make sure everything we're doing is reasonable and within context. | ||
And that's why I'm talking about what's being said. | ||
It's one guy. | ||
It's an FDA economist. | ||
An economist is not somebody who's going to be showing up and instituting policy on the | ||
census. | ||
However, as much as that would be the immediate reaction from mainstream media saying an FDA | ||
economist is just opining on his personal needs, it's nothing to do with policy. | ||
I say, wow, the internal culture of the FDA is psychotic. | ||
Exactly. | ||
And so if this is the access we're getting, we are getting a glimpse. | ||
Imagine it this way. | ||
There's a big building. | ||
Big old building full of hundreds of people. | ||
And in the second floor on the top are all the administrators and all the bigwigs. | ||
And everyone in there is hanging out talking. | ||
They share a culture in the workplace. | ||
And you look through the keyhole and see a man say these things. | ||
You're like, what are they doing in that building? | ||
Yes, I understand this guy is not an administrator who's going to go around set policy. | ||
They actually clink glasses at one point. | ||
I'm watching it now. | ||
They actually clink glasses there. | ||
I don't know if it's wine or water or what. | ||
I will say, I don't think it's not going to happen. | ||
There's not going to be door-to-door. | ||
Maybe a registry. | ||
Maybe people who aren't vaccinated will be tracked because we're at that point now where they're already doing vax mandates in a bunch of the big cities. | ||
But I really do think the United States, the Republic, will completely collapse before it gets to that point. | ||
Let me ask this question to people out there. | ||
Do you want government bureaucrats talking about you like this? | ||
Government bureaucrats should never be talking like this about the American people. | ||
Talking like they are drunk with power. | ||
Whether it's behind closed doors, whether it's at a restaurant, wherever this is. | ||
Right. | ||
That's the issue here. | ||
And our question is, it seems like that's what their attitude is. | ||
And he's telling us that's what his attitude is. | ||
He's someone that is behind those closed doors. | ||
This is obviously a private conversation. | ||
And so the question is, and I've gone to this with people who are vaccine hesitant. | ||
And it's, you know, you talk to them and it's not like there's nothing wrong with them. | ||
There's nothing different about them. | ||
In fact, they're saying the same things that Joe Biden, Kamala, and a lot of the mainstream media was saying throughout 2020. | ||
You can go to MSNBC and find these clips. | ||
And Joy Reid. | ||
Joy Reid, you know, all of it. | ||
Joy Reid had responded that saying, at the time, I didn't trust the CDC under Donald Trump. | ||
Now I'm okay with it. | ||
And my response to her is, ah, yes, exactly what you said, but for Trump supporters that Under the Trump CDC, they were, they were okay with it. | ||
And now under Biden, they don't trust it. | ||
That's the exact same thing you just said. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
But it's okay when she says it because she's Joy Reid. | ||
And so the issue becomes, you know, and this is something I've said to people that like, my position is check with your doctor. | ||
Everyone should have the freedom to choose. | ||
I'm literally pro-choice on this, but I'm also not vaccinated because I have natural immunity because I had like the real COVID. | ||
I had like the knock you on your butt, like, you know, couldn't really, it wasn't really on Twitter for a while. | ||
I was just, you know. | ||
You feel it in your chest and your lungs? | ||
A little bit in my chest. | ||
I mean, I woke up the one morning, had shakes, like legitimate shakes, and I took my temperature and it was low, super low. | ||
Wow. | ||
And then I just threw on a bunch of sweat, like two layers of sweatpants, two layers of sweatshirts, got back under the covers, and then my temperature shot up. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
I was sweating out. | ||
And it was crazy. | ||
So that was the first day. | ||
That was pretty much the only day I had that level of temperature. | ||
You know, just kind of hung out and they eat like Vietnamese pho. | ||
unidentified
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It's incredible. | |
I'm not a fan of pho. | ||
I love it. | ||
I love the pho. | ||
Oh, pho's great. | ||
Love the pho. | ||
I want to make some. | ||
Love the pho. | ||
You're free to make it. | ||
Oh, it's so good. | ||
So good. | ||
In my castle, we do not ban pho. | ||
That's right. | ||
I'll put it this way. | ||
I'll put it this way. | ||
Yeah, because of the cilantro, dude. | ||
Yes. | ||
Oh, the cilantro. | ||
Right, right, right. | ||
I'm a good leader, so I am making sure that my share of the cilantro goes out to all of the workers. | ||
Thank you, my lord. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Pepperjack. | ||
Let them eat cilantro. | ||
It wasn't the flu, but it was like not fun. | ||
I wouldn't want to do it again. | ||
So I have natural immunity. | ||
We've had a bunch of people on who and it's really amazing because like even Alex mentioned how like COVID was scary. | ||
Like you wake up one day and all of a sudden you're like you're out of breath constantly and you can't breathe. | ||
I was fatigued more than anything else. | ||
Honestly, that's what it was. | ||
I was just tired. | ||
All the time. | ||
I had a realization. | ||
I tweeted this. | ||
I'm looking at what's going on in Australia, where you've got the guys just pepperballing. | ||
It's fascism. | ||
I think that's the word for it. | ||
Biofascism, yes. | ||
And I realized something, though. | ||
I'm rich. | ||
I don't gotta follow the rules. | ||
I saw the Met Gala and the Emmys. | ||
What do I gotta worry about? | ||
unidentified
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Ah-ha! | |
Yeah. | ||
Huzzah! | ||
We're good. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's all those people that are in favor of it. | ||
If you're in a certain income bracket, then the rules don't apply to you. | ||
Is that how it works? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
I get it. | ||
I've got to, you know, Tanya where it says our accounting, I'll have to tap for her. | ||
So I was watching and I'm like, these people, they're being attacked. | ||
This is horrifying. | ||
And I went, wait a minute. | ||
And then I looked over at a picture of AOC and I was like, I'm rich! | ||
I don't gotta worry about any of this! | ||
You don't have to worry about it. | ||
So all I gotta do is make sure I show my bank account to Biden, obviously. | ||
unidentified
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Right, of course. | |
And then they give you your official, you're rich, and you get out of it. | ||
So this is the reason I made this. | ||
I'm making a joke, obviously. | ||
Is that the people who are advocating for these policies, where they will be beaten by police and pepper sprayed on the ground, are not rich people. | ||
The people like AOC, the political elites, and the ultra-wealthy are going to these events, they are not being bothered with, but the peasants carry her dress for her while they wear a mask. | ||
Is the peasants and I actually love that. | ||
I think it's Vogue. | ||
They did that like mini doc. | ||
And you can see the peasants are all they're carrying the dress and they're all masked. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
And it reminds me of and it pains me to say this, but actually, I think that, you know, when you talk about all of all the dystopias out there, which one are we closest to? | ||
And I think it actually is Suzanne Collins. | ||
The Hunger Games. | ||
Right. | ||
So. | ||
In Hunger Games, remember, remember all the servants in the, so the capital is the elites and everyone else is in the, out in the districts, right? | ||
And then they, they send your kids to go off and die in Afghanistan, excuse me, I mean, in the Hunger Games. | ||
And, and then, and you watch it on TV and people can root for various sides. | ||
And then, and the elites say, Oh, more of that, please. | ||
Yes. | ||
And, and they have all their crazy hairdos and crazy dresses, but for all, they call them the Avoxes in, in Hunger Games and they all have their tongues cut out. | ||
The Servants. | ||
The Servants. | ||
And when I was looking at the masks, so AVOX, no voice, and so when I was looking at all the Servants surrounding AOC with the masks on, I just thought, man. | ||
They can't speak. | ||
They can't speak. | ||
unidentified
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Oh my gosh. | |
Suzanne Collins, I gotta say, she nailed it. | ||
Yeah, but I gotta be honest, I think it's a brave new Fahrenheit 1984 for Vendetta. | ||
Exactly. | ||
So, Luke Rutkowski has that shirt, right? | ||
It's like, you are here, but I'm like, I think he's missing one. | ||
I think he's only got three. | ||
Because you think about it, it's like you got 1984, you got Big Brother, censorship, spying, surveillance. | ||
You got Brave New World, video games, Instagram, this dopamine, you know, antidepressants. | ||
You got Fahrenheit 451, where they're banning all this different stuff, which is still very similar to 1984. | ||
But in Fahrenheit 451, it was people demanding the censorship because they were offended by everything. | ||
And then you got V for Vendetta. | ||
You know what V for Vendetta was? | ||
In the movie, at least? | ||
The virus happened, the government locked everybody down in a quarantine zone. | ||
What was the name of the party? | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Oh, the party, um, I don't, what was the party's name? | ||
I can't think of it. | ||
Do they have a name? | ||
I don't, I'm not sure they did. | ||
Or like the new government, or the new government had a name or something. | ||
I forgot exactly what it was. | ||
But it was the St. | ||
Mary's virus, I think it was called. | ||
That's right, yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Yunmi Park was saying North Korea is the Hunger Games right now. | ||
The city, what was it, Seoul is the capital of North Korea? | ||
No, Pyongyang. | ||
Seoul is South Korea. | ||
Pyongyang is like the capital. | ||
And everyone else is like eating human corpses. | ||
I mean, it's like horrific. | ||
unidentified
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No electricity, just mass. | |
And people get brought to the Capitol. | ||
North Korea experienced an extreme famine in the 1990s. | ||
And so now what's going on generationally is the famine generation in North Korea is attaining adulthood. | ||
So they are coming up and because they are so stunted, That their children are having issues as well. | ||
But you also had a population drop at that time because of the starvation. | ||
And so now that's leading to a second famine underneath all of this, as well as just the insane policies of that country. | ||
They're gonna collapse. | ||
When I saw the Met Gala and the Emmys, I'm like, these are literally Hunger Games villains. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
This is the capital. | ||
I mean, how can you not? | ||
I wish there was some higher literature we could compare it to, but it really is Hunger Games. | ||
Yeah, no, it's a good point. | ||
I mean, they're all dressed like crazy, but here's the thing about the Hunger Games that I wonder if, who is it, Suzanne Collins? | ||
Suzanne Collins, yeah. | ||
Did she know about behavioral sync? | ||
I'm done calling it wokeness. | ||
I'm calling it behavioral sync from now on. | ||
I mean, think about it. | ||
You're familiar with Behavioral Sync and the Rat Utopia experiments? | ||
Go explain to me. | ||
Confined space, unlimited food and water, and the rats basically went insane. | ||
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yes. | ||
I know that term, yeah. | ||
But one of the things is the Beautiful Ones. | ||
One of the things that emerged from it was what the researcher called the Beautiful Ones, who would just groom themselves. | ||
Just constantly trying to poop up their hair and be looking really pretty while doing nothing else. | ||
Get a selfie! | ||
And that's what I see as the Met Gala. | ||
They look ridiculous like plastic robot people. | ||
And I'm like, these are the beautiful ones. | ||
In their world of abundance with no responsibility and instant gratification, they are those who are just sitting there grooming each other. | ||
Then you get the violence in the streets and those are the crazy violent ones. | ||
Eric Hoffer in True Believer, the great longshoreman philosopher, had this line back in the 1950s where he said, mass movements don't usually arise among the working class because they are working. | ||
Mass movements generally arise among the affluent and bored. | ||
Yep. | ||
We got nothing else to do, man. | ||
No purpose, no direction. | ||
Well, and also because without having that without he's essentially saying there's there's something to the human psyche where in human nature whereby in you to go through a meaningful rite of passage from adolescence into adulthood. | ||
Usually that's that's work that's usually through work through rigor through taking the taking on of responsibility. | ||
The is sort of the mantle of adulthood. | ||
However, when you you have a certain level of affluence when you have a certain level of abundance that | ||
never happens. | ||
And so you're now missing something in your psyche that you're constantly searching for. | ||
And so that these people will create these mass movements in order to fulfill that internal need that they have. | ||
I want to talk about the troops because we were talking about mandatory vaccinations for the U.S. military. | ||
military, and what most people told us is they assumed that if you were in right now and you said, I won't get vaccinated, you would get an administrative discharge. | ||
Have you heard anything like that? | ||
Yeah, well, it's that's that's UCMJ 92. | ||
Well, it depends. | ||
You know, it's that essentially is is more of a decision made by the military, but it but it would be fair to follow orders. | ||
So they can give you administrative discharge, which is sort of like the medium. | ||
This is honorable, of course, honorable discharge. | ||
There's administrative there and then there's other honorable. | ||
Oh, so dishonorable isn't the exact word they use. | ||
Other than honorable. | ||
Other than honorable is what it's called. | ||
Is that a new phrase? | ||
No, I've heard it before. | ||
I just didn't know it was formal. | ||
So we have a story from Daily Mail. | ||
Biden says troops should be dishonorably discharged if they disobey. | ||
I believe Hunter has actually gotten admin discharge as well. | ||
It makes sense. | ||
Biden says troops should be dishonorably discharged if they disobey order to get COVID vaccines. | ||
The House is set to vote on the NDAA, the Pentagon's annual defense budget. | ||
Last month, they mandated all 1.4 million servicemembers get vaccinated. | ||
An amendment passed during committee markup prohibits giving servicemembers who refuse a vaccine anything but an honorable discharge. | ||
White House said that commanders must have the ability to give orders and take appropriate disciplinary measures, including enforcing the vaccine mandate. | ||
The White House also took issue with the section of the bill that exempts those who had the previous COVID-19 infection from the vaccine mandate. | ||
Now that is insane! | ||
So a dishonorable discharge, the difference between that is a dishonorable discharge means it can only be administered by a court-martial. | ||
So that means you're actually going into a military trial that you've got a JAG, you've got a military judge, etc. | ||
You're facing charges and then that whole process plays out. | ||
So the other ones that we were talking about were our forms of administrative, but For dishonorable discharge, I mean, you have to do something. | ||
There's medical discharge, right? | ||
There's medical discharge. | ||
Yeah, a lot of people, obviously, you know, you can get discharged for various reasons. | ||
It's not always something like negative. | ||
And then when you leave, if you want to retire, if you want to resign, if you're an officer, that's still considered a discharge. | ||
A discharge by itself doesn't necessarily mean something negative occurred. | ||
If you're an officer and you resign, it's honorable? | ||
Everyone is discharged, right? | ||
Right. | ||
If you're an officer and you resign, it's honorable? | ||
Yes. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So the anything other than honorable discharge would be not dishonorable discharge. | ||
That's a different thing. | ||
There's no court-martial involved. | ||
What I'm saying is, yeah, dishonorable discharge means that you've gone through a court-martial and you are out. | ||
So you could have an anything other than honorable discharge without a court-martial. | ||
Is that what you're saying? | ||
Right. | ||
That would all fall under these various forms of administrative discharge. | ||
So it doesn't seem like the people who refuse the vaccine as of right now will be dishonorably discharged. | ||
No. | ||
But Biden wants that to be the case. | ||
But he says he wants it. | ||
So that means that means he wants to, you know, to carry out what he said, which I don't think he understands what he's talking about, even though he had two sons in the military. | ||
He doesn't seem to know very much about the military. | ||
What do you do when your commander surrenders a war that you're winning and then makes horrible decisions after that? | ||
You're Commander-in-Chief, you mean? | ||
Yeah. | ||
You transferred to the Air Force. | ||
But I mean, legit, as Generals in the Army, when the Commander does that, what are you supposed to do? | ||
Well, if it's Rome, the centurions would, you know, go to the, you know, go to the senator or go to the emperor and demand some form of tribute. | ||
The Praetorian Guard, of course, would go and demand a form of tribute from them. | ||
Well, like, what are the generals supposed to do if Biden—he surrendered us to the Taliban and now he's— I read more and more, I think that was on purpose. | ||
I really I just more and more you learn about what's going on with the with the mineral deposits, the deal from China coming with the Taliban. | ||
You know, it's there. | ||
There's I wouldn't I wouldn't want to say I believe it's entirely probable or even likely, but there's that possibility. | ||
Joe Biden's done deals with China and his son and he's hooking them up. | ||
This is why I tell people to take the Alaska pill, because we have so many mineral deposits under our own soil, that if we're worried, by the way, about these deposits in Afghanistan, well, guess what? | ||
Flood the zone, right? | ||
If we are putting our own minerals in this, then we are going to get them, they're going to be cheaper, we're going to be able to use them better, we don't need Afghanistan, and it's going to hurt them in the world market too. | ||
So we need an authorization for use of military force in Alaska. | ||
Invade Alaska. | ||
Yeah, we should invade Alaska. | ||
Occupy Alaska. | ||
Nation building. | ||
Occupy Alaska. | ||
Nation building in Alaska. | ||
A hundred percent. | ||
All for it. | ||
Dude, last time I was on here, we talked about this. | ||
These towns out there, the poverty is insane. | ||
It's a nice thought. | ||
It really, really is. | ||
I think it would require a lot of private sector movements. | ||
However, in terms of any kind of actual military operation, I got to say this story about vaccinating our military. | ||
The military is being purged and the police departments are being purged. | ||
I mention this video every so often where I think it was in Portland. | ||
There were these Antipa people stalking a guy and they were yelling at each other as he slowly walked backwards. | ||
He had some kind of bat or bar and the police pulled up, ordered him on the ground and arrested him. | ||
The guy who was actually being harassed and was trying to defend himself, and then he apologizes to Antifussing. | ||
Sorry about that, you know. | ||
This is what happens when the police, who are good, are like, I refuse to enforce this stuff. | ||
They quit. | ||
What's left? | ||
Behavioral sync police officers. | ||
Woke police officers. | ||
When the military says... If you defund the police, the only police you're going to have are the bad cops. | ||
Because all the good ones are going to leave. | ||
They're going to leave that jurisdiction. | ||
That's why I say abolish the police. | ||
They're going to go out. | ||
But with the military, they're doing the same thing. | ||
Tucker Carlson said they're coming after, what did he say, something like Christian conservatives. | ||
Christian conservatives. | ||
So go back to January. | ||
I was reporting this early on, even before I was at Human Events, and I said this started with the pre-screening of the National Guard troops that were going to be occupying the US Capitol prior to January 6, they were out there with | ||
the the razor wire, the fencing that I had to drive past every single day. I couldn't even park my | ||
car when I was going to the studio at One American News because these soldiers were out and | ||
they were asking me for my identification papers for my papers just so that I could go to work at the | ||
same place that I had worked for years. | ||
And they would say, why are you filming? | ||
Why are you filming? | ||
I said, I'm a reporter. | ||
I work for One American News. | ||
Do you have credentials? | ||
I was like, well, I do, but I'm also on a public street in the nation's capital, right? | ||
But so one of the things that came out was, remember, they were pre-screening people that were deployed to the capital. | ||
What were they looking for? | ||
They were looking for Gadsden flags, MAGA hats, Turning Point USA, NRA, YAF, you know, all these just like very... The Gadsden flag is the flag of Virginia! | ||
Basic... Or a symbol in Virginia they use in the license plates. | ||
Right, right. | ||
These very basic symbols of American conservatism or patriotism and Americanism. | ||
The Gadsden flag, I don't really think is... I mean, I know the Libertarians have tried very hard to to claim it, but it really is just an American symbol at the end of the day. | ||
Symbol of independence. | ||
And that phrase, don't tread on me, that's Ben Franklin. | ||
That was the idea that because the rattlesnake was such a North American creature that he said, you know, this was something that really should be... We'll strike you back. | ||
And that we should use because it's ours and the British don't have it. | ||
And so you get all these conservatives who are very confident that they would win against the left in any kind of civil conflict. | ||
One of the original memes of America, if you will. | ||
Except it's not true. | ||
Because if it ever comes down to any kind of real kinetic warfare, the entire military and the police departments will be woke-ified by then. | ||
And there are a lot of people who are like, I would never follow those orders. | ||
Yeah, that's right. | ||
And they court-martial you or throw you out. | ||
And then the remaining woke, lemming NPC soldiers would do whatever they're told, like they did in DC. | ||
Well, and remember, they're not going to be told that, you know, oh, hey, these are just regular American citizens. | ||
They're going to be told these are extremists. | ||
These are crazy, far-right, anti-vax, conspiracy nutjobs who believe that they want to overthrow the country. | ||
They are planning an insurrection and you need to go in and infiltrate this group. | ||
With, you know, get them to commit crime so that we can bring them up on charges. | ||
And you get to egg them on and egg them on. | ||
And then we're going to arrest them all. | ||
And you are saving the country by doing this. | ||
You see that event in D.C. | ||
where it was for the J6 defendants. | ||
Everybody was a Fed. | ||
Right. | ||
It was the funniest thing. | ||
Ford Fisher got the footage. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
So a Fed actually was there and got arrested. | ||
The funny thing is, it's like when you have a large crowd of thousands of people and there's like seven Feds there, you won't notice. | ||
They all look fairly similar and they're kind of obvious sometimes, but you got so many people everywhere. | ||
But when no one shows up and the only people there are feds, they all look identical. | ||
They're wearing khaki shorts with the sides of their heads shaved, the same haircuts, the same sunglasses, the same watches, and it's like, what is this? | ||
unidentified
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Greetings, fellow insurrectionists! | |
How are you? | ||
Planning any insurrections? | ||
And there was one guy who got arrested. | ||
And the police surround him because he had a gun and he's like, my badge is in my pocket. | ||
And they pull out a badge. | ||
Some people claimed he was undercover, but others claimed he was just an officer who was there. | ||
And I think the left was trying to frame it as federal agents are MAGA cultists and they're at these events. | ||
Or was he recruiting? | ||
Recruiting? | ||
We're recruiting. | ||
In what capacity? | ||
Like trying to get more feds? | ||
Right, trying to get them. | ||
This is the way it works, right? | ||
A federal informant is not typically a federal agent, right? | ||
So a federal informant is someone who has a relationship with a federal agent, which is known as a source and a handler or an informant and a handler, right? | ||
You're being run. | ||
That's the parlance. | ||
You're being run by that agent. | ||
So they're not going to get somebody who has a badge and stick them in the group and have them like, you know, like Ian is not going to be, you know, you know, the agent, but Ian's going to be the one talking to the agent. | ||
I saw those signal messages. | ||
This is all theoretical, by the way. | ||
Big graphene. | ||
I'll talk to anybody, man. | ||
Let's heal this earth. | ||
Hey, man, we're just talking. | ||
We're just talking. | ||
But no, so the way it works is, and you've seen this, by the way, in the Michigan governor operation, and I'm calling it the operation because that's what it was, the text messages have been coming out where you can see the relationship. | ||
It is being driven by the agent, where they're telling people to egg things on, to egg things on, and to use the legal phrase, You have to commit a conspiracy to commit a crime. | ||
What you need to do is you need to, of course, first come up with the plan. | ||
And then you need to take an overt action in furtherance of the conspiracy. | ||
So what it was in the Michigan plot was because if you're just talking about stuff, okay, that's just talk, you can't make a case on that. | ||
But, and again, I'm just talking about the legal, you know, situation. | ||
So what they do is they say, Hey, we're going to go get in the car and we're going to go do recon. | ||
And he says, get everybody you can tell them Saturday, whatever the day you can, he says, what's better? | ||
What should I go Saturday or Sunday? | ||
He responds, go whichever day you can get the most people. | ||
Get them all in the car because the agent knows that this is the way the rules work So that if whoever's in that car then and they're going around and they're just like taking pictures around the lake But it just so happens that this is the lake where the governor's mansion is and so they can then put on paper This was an overt act and furtherance of the conspiracy What if like you showed up with a bunch of pizzas and you're like, hey guys I brought a bunch of pizzas for us to eat and hang out and they're like, ah, that's a planning meeting. | ||
You'd have to be in furtherance of the crime. | ||
People need to understand when it comes to talking to cops and feds and all that stuff, they don't care about you. | ||
They will use you. | ||
And by the way, one of those stories, one of the informants is getting brought up on charges. | ||
So this is a guy who was in on the operation, and of course the speculation is that maybe they're not being as forthcoming, maybe they're not willing to testify like they were, and now guess what? | ||
They're getting slapped with charges too. | ||
There's a bunch of stories about this, and I won't get into specifics because of privacy details and stuff, but there are big stories over the past 10 years with federal informants who cooperated and did everything right, and then immediately once it was over got arrested and charged. | ||
A lot of this was done during the early 2000s in the War on Terror, and it was young Muslims in the United States, American citizens, who thought they were talking to, you know, I mean, like, there are people who have been contacted by the Feds and they'll be like, would you like to help us stop this crime? | ||
And they'd be like, yes, I will help you. | ||
And then they start saying, like, you know, let me know what you need. | ||
They start working with the Feds to get them information. | ||
And then the Feds come and arrest them. | ||
When they come to you and say, we're going to have you be an informant, it's quite possible you're being investigated. | ||
And they want you to say things. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah. | |
They can lie to you. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah. | |
And yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
You're an informant. | ||
Tell us what's going on. | ||
But yeah, so they were saying this, they were doing this, we're doing that. | ||
This guy was organizing a conspiracy. | ||
You want to serve your country, right? | ||
Yep. | ||
You care about your country, don't you? | ||
You're a patriot, right? | ||
You're not one of those. | ||
You wouldn't do that. | ||
You wouldn't lie to a police officer, would you? | ||
You wouldn't download a TV, would you? | ||
I was kidding. | ||
One of my lie detector tests, one of my polygraphs that you have to do. | ||
So they do this thing that's supposed to be like the test right before they get into the real questions. | ||
And then they say, um, you know, the guy was like, no, I just, just want to get the baseline. | ||
And so I just wanted to check. | ||
So they ask you questions that, uh, they assume you're going to lie on so that they can get a baseline of what you read, what you're reading as is lying. | ||
Keep in mind the machine, they ask you something they think you'll lie about, right? | ||
Like what? | ||
So the question he asked was, you've never lied to your parents, have you? | ||
unidentified
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That's a good one. | |
Do people say I haven't lied to my parents? | ||
Wait, because of course, they're thinking then that it's going to trigger a response of well, of course, I wouldn't lie to parents. | ||
But actually, the one that he asked me ago, and he prefaced it, he goes, you know, I'm a prior state trooper. | ||
And boy, when I would pull somebody over for speeding. | ||
Oh, my gosh. | ||
You know, I would know how fast they went. | ||
But I'll tell you what, if they were honest with me and if they said, you know what officer, I was going a little fast back there. | ||
I'm sorry about that. | ||
I would usually let them off with a warning. | ||
But if somebody lied to me, if somebody had the audacity to just lie to my face and disrespect me like that. | ||
I was coming after them. | ||
You would never do that, right? | ||
You would never lie to a police officer, right? | ||
So keep in mind, understand what they're doing. | ||
They're priming you, right? | ||
So you're being primed to say, oh my gosh, I'm going to be in trouble if I tell this guy who, keep in mind, he's the evaluator of the test and the proctor, the administrator of the test, right? | ||
So he's grading you. | ||
My answer to that is, I'm going to be honest, it's kind of confusing. | ||
I'm not quite sure what... | ||
Honestly, when you make a really, really long question and say, you would never do that, I'm not quite sure what that refers to. | ||
You'd never lie to a police officer, would you? | ||
I would not lie to a police officer. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
And you never have lied to a police officer. | ||
I have never lied to a police officer. | ||
Never something like that, right. | ||
And so that's the idea, is that because they're trying to prime you into a situation where you're going to tell, and it's a white lie, obviously. | ||
I lied to my parents all the time. | ||
unidentified
|
What do you mean? | |
I was a kid. | ||
Kids do that stuff. | ||
Where were you last night? | ||
What if you said to the guy, I'm lying right now? | ||
This sentence is a lie. | ||
Keep in mind. | ||
unidentified
|
The machine explodes. | |
The essential question is that a machine can't tell if you're lying. | ||
We don't have machines. | ||
I don't think we'll ever have machines that can do that. | ||
What does it do? | ||
It measures your heart rate, it measures your respiration, there's little clips that measure your sweat, you have one across your chest, you have one kind of across your lap, you have one that you're like sitting on a pad. | ||
So they're measuring various, your physiological signs, but it can't tell if you're lying. | ||
Yeah, they're just like, they're trying to see all these different stressors light up. | ||
Right, so they're trying to get a reaction out of you. | ||
I mean, they're inadmissible. | ||
The light detectors to me... Which is why they're inadmissible, because they're fake. | ||
Right, they're completely fake. | ||
It's just not real. | ||
But I had a buddy who, you know, who was doing that. | ||
It was called PCAST, was one of the systems. | ||
And he was doing it overseas for some third country nationals that were coming on base. | ||
And so he was, that would work as like third country national workers. | ||
And so he was doing PCAST on them. | ||
Anyway, you know, one thing he said was, we are evaluated not necessarily by the amount of people that we conduct, but we're actually evaluated by the amount of elicitations that come out of this. | ||
Because essentially what you're doing is, for most people, you know, for General Normie out there, you're putting them into this high-stress environment, you're telling them that, I will know if you are lying, so you better come clean, you better tell me. | ||
So they start to ask a question, and they say, you know, have you ever taken home government documents? | ||
Have you ever taken home government resources? | ||
And then they'll say, I'm going to step away from the machine for a second. | ||
You know, when I was asking that question, I could, there was, I was getting a weird reading and I wasn't really sure what it was. | ||
It just seemed like something was registering with you, just as I was saying the question. | ||
So is, is there something you want to tell me? | ||
That maybe could help me word the question better so that this test, this evaluation can be more accurate to explain the situation. | ||
So if you just tell me that, I'll write it down and I'll refurbish this question and reevaluate it for you. | ||
People spill their guts. | ||
Yeah, it just seems like polygraphs for the most part are to put people in high-stress situations where they think they have to tell the truth. | ||
Right, exactly. | ||
And it makes them panic, and then it's just not real. | ||
Yeah, in interrogation it's known as emotional fear up. | ||
So it's emotional fear up with, you know, a very elaborate I got a better one. | ||
What we'll do is we'll take two gigantic metal discs hooked up with a bunch of wires. | ||
Yes. | ||
And we'll have them hooked up to the polygraph and be like, don't worry about the giant metal discs. | ||
They just blast you with intense radiation whenever you lie. | ||
unidentified
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But you're not going to lie, so... It doesn't matter. | |
Yeah, you're fine. | ||
If you're not going to lie, then you won't die from radiation poisoning. | ||
Actually, just step out for a second. | ||
We just got to test them. | ||
Every time you lie, you have to eat this... Ian, grab the sponge. | ||
Every time you lie, you have to eat polonium, just so you know. | ||
Just a little bit. | ||
Just a little bit. | ||
But a little bit, not a lot. | ||
We wouldn't make you eat a lot of polonium. | ||
I mean, like a tiny little bit would just kill you, wouldn't it? | ||
Wouldn't a tiny little bit just kill you? | ||
Just like disintegrating your DNA or whatever? | ||
Yeah, completely. | ||
Not immediately, by the way. | ||
Yeah, that's what the... Didn't Nivalny get polonium? | ||
I don't know if it was Nivalny. | ||
I think it was... | ||
Somebody got polonium. | ||
It was in the UK, and it was one of the ones that they had ascribed to. | ||
Polonium's radium disintegration by synthetically bombarding bismuth or lead with neutrons. | ||
You get this polonium stuff. | ||
How does it kill you, though? | ||
It's radiation. | ||
It's radioactive. | ||
Yeah, it goes into your body and then starts destroying you. | ||
It's not immediate or anything, but yes. | ||
So it's not like ricin, which would be much more immediate. | ||
Yeah, people gotta pay attention to the stuff they eat, man. | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
Number one. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's why when I hear people say that, hey man, it comes from the earth. | ||
I'm like, I don't know, man. | ||
A lot of stuff comes from the earth. | ||
That's not exactly the best argument. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I don't, uh, people send me food in the mail and I'm just like, oh, that's really great. | ||
And I throw it in the trash. | ||
I'm like, what am I going to do? | ||
Give it to somebody else? | ||
But some people might take it and be like, no, I'll keep it. | ||
I'll be like, okay, that's your choice. | ||
But I went through a phase where I would read all the ingredients. | ||
And if I saw something I didn't know, I'd look it up online and read, how does this interact with my body? | ||
And I'd read all about it. | ||
That's a good question. | ||
That's great, by the way. | ||
That's good. | ||
Donald Trump would only eat fast food. | ||
You know why? | ||
That's exactly why. | ||
Because when you go to a place and you ask someone to prepare food for you, he wouldn't exclusively, but almost exclusively, he was eating fast food. | ||
And there are two big reasons I was told by some people in the press corps. | ||
One, he was a germaphobe. | ||
He is. | ||
He felt like these fast food chains had standards, and so that if he ate from these places, it was less likely that he would get sick compared to going to any other restaurant. | ||
Two, when you walk in and say, I want a Big Mac, it's pre-made and sitting right there. | ||
So no one could spit in his food or smear stuff on it or do something gross. | ||
Super Troopers. | ||
Yep, yep. | ||
And there are a lot of people who don't like the man, but more importantly, he's a celebrity, so a lot of people might, you know... Well, it's not like he's going at himself, too. | ||
Or what? | ||
Well, it's not like he's going at himself, too. | ||
Right. | ||
But it's just when they already have the Big Mac sitting in that little warmer and you order a Big Mac and fries, they just go right in the trash. | ||
I've actually, so there was that, um, I don't know if people saw that, that tweet that, um, I had tweeted a picture of him out. | ||
Um, and it was actually, he was with Sean Parnell, but then I clipped, I cropped Sean out. | ||
Sorry, Sean. | ||
Him super thin. | ||
Um, and it was like, he was looking really thin and I, and I just tweeted out, he, how is he getting younger? | ||
Right. | ||
So it went kind of viral. | ||
And then I get an envelope at the studio down in D.C. | ||
and I open it up and it's a note from, it says, from the desk of Donald J. Trump. | ||
He's printed out my tweet and then written, Thanks, Jack. | ||
You are looking great, too. | ||
Holy cow! | ||
Keep up the great work that he cited Donald Trump. | ||
So when you when you absolutely have to respond to it. | ||
So then I tweeted that out, which I have to look into the process. | ||
But some people were saying, like, that should definitely be your NFT, Jack, like that. | ||
Oh, yeah, that tweet of Trump's printed out tweet that he responded to you, which then I then tweeted. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's amazing. | ||
It's like when you absolutely have to comment on a tweet, but you're not on Twitter. | ||
How do you do it? | ||
Let's talk about one of the darker stories. | ||
Oh, sorry, sorry, sorry. | ||
The little bit of the backstory, though, was I was told, not by him, but someone else I was discussing this all with, that he's cutting down on the fast food. | ||
I was told that he's cutting down on the fast food. | ||
Keto. | ||
More steak. | ||
They said, hey, man, eat more steak. | ||
And it was like, sure, I'll eat more steak. | ||
Why not? | ||
You know, that sounds like a good diet. | ||
They said, yeah, you gotta get all that sugar. | ||
He's at Mar-a-Lago. | ||
He's at Bedminster. | ||
He's at Trump Tower. | ||
So, I mean, it's his restaurants that he controls. | ||
It's his staff, etc. | ||
You know, people need to understand about keto and stuff. | ||
A lot of the garbage you eat is the processed breads, grains, sugars. | ||
And I've noticed that when I've been trying to stay away from all the sugars, | ||
I'm also staying away from processed foods. | ||
Yes. | ||
So it's a lot more fresh chicken breast, a lot more roast beef, fresh cheeses. | ||
We have raw cheeses. | ||
So my wife's family, and my wife, of course, they're from Eastern Europe. | ||
When they come to the US, they, like my father-in-law, he will not eat the processed food here. | ||
He looks at it and says, this is not food. | ||
Like, this is plastic, this is fake. | ||
I don't know what this is. | ||
But he gets something from Whole Foods or the butcher, something that they get and they cook themselves. | ||
You're like, okay, this is food, right? | ||
But when it comes to the processed stuff, like, I've seen him just, you know, | ||
we'll have some chicken nuggets And hey, do you want one? | ||
No, like just emphatically. | ||
I just had a feeling that grain fed beef maybe isn't as keto as grass because grain is, if it's eating grain its whole life, then maybe it's got some, some stuff in it that's not. | ||
Well, you do have to watch for I was actually tweeting about this earlier today. | ||
Like if you're eating beef, you have to make sure you're not eating double plus good beef. | ||
Because because there are at some of these factory farms, they're depending on what they feed. | ||
That's why you want free range grass fed, because they are feeding These cows, you know, corn and stuff with all this estrogen and putting all sorts of additives into to make it bigger, to make it juicier, to make it last longer. | ||
But guess what? | ||
It's also not healthy. | ||
That's right. | ||
They feed salmon, farm salmon is fed corn. | ||
Yeah, and then I read I read that like in nature salmon turns pink because of the krill and stuff that eats or whatever right in Farms, they're fed corn. | ||
So they're gray. | ||
So they have to add food coloring Yeah, amazing, isn't it? | ||
unidentified
|
I was just spit out my coconut I don't think it's funny that they're making Superman fight Lobo, but I digress. | |
I have some comics I want to talk about. | ||
Synthetic food coloring look out. | ||
I want to talk about comics. | ||
Check this out. | ||
This is hilarious. | ||
So from Bounding into Comics, we have this story. | ||
DC Comics pokes fun at anti-vaxxers with anti-saver movement in Superman vs. Lobo number one. | ||
I don't think it's funny that they're making Superman fight Lobo, but I digress. | ||
You basically have like Lois Lane. | ||
Superman always fights Lobo. | ||
No, I know, but like as like the main villain. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
You know, in this in this capacity. | ||
So we have Lois Lane, who is apparently like, she looks like she's a 26 year old angsty goth of some sort. | ||
Intern, yeah. | ||
And she's got someone filming her on a cell phone where she's like, you know, Lobo claims to support America and be a patriot. | ||
But he's actually, you know, look what he's doing to the flag. | ||
And so they have this depiction of these people. | ||
This woman says Superman didn't bother to ask her about her fear of heights when he flew her away from a fire. | ||
This one says Superman's powered by radioactivity and making people sterile. | ||
And what the hell is an anti-saver? | ||
And it says don't interfere with God's plans. | ||
Is that anti-sa? | ||
I suppose. | ||
Anti-vaxxer? | ||
Anti-saver? | ||
Anti-va? | ||
You know what's funny? | ||
Because I was looking at this and then I see this art right here where it shows Lois and she's got like her hair over one eye and she's looking up and she's supposed to be like the cool anti-anti-vaxxer speaking the truth on the web saying he's lying to you. | ||
This is Lois Lane for staying in your lane. | ||
Please like and subscribe. | ||
Thank you. | ||
And I'm like, I just want to make one thing really clear for people. | ||
That is not cool. | ||
You know, like, Lois Lane being like the establishment and Big Pharma. | ||
That's what we're all into. | ||
That's the cringiest cringe that's ever cringed. | ||
Did you see the Kaiser Chiefs? | ||
The Kaiser Chiefs? | ||
Did you see the viral Kaiser Chiefs video? | ||
No, no, what's the Kaiser Chiefs video? | ||
How did you not see this one? | ||
You're gonna love this. | ||
When, at a concert, some guy from the Kaiser Chiefs goes, Everybody raise your hands! | ||
Oh, wait, wait, wait, no, I did see this. | ||
And they raised their hands. | ||
That's right, yes, yes, yes. | ||
And he's like, your hands are clean! | ||
Washin' them! | ||
Let's hear it for Pfizer! | ||
And there's a guy and he's like crying, he's like, So, like, when you have a comic book, and Lois Lane's supposed to be, like, all cool, and she's like, he doesn't like America, and anti-savers are bad, I'm like, that's not actually it, like, they think they're still the cool, confident, and charismatic, they're actually the creepy weirdos raising their hands and going, washing your hands! | ||
But Trump supporters are the cultists. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, there is the Trump cult. | ||
It's just not mainstream influential and it's not dominant in the right. | ||
It's just they exist. | ||
You have a dominant influence network on the left that is pervasive throughout media, throughout entertainment, throughout academia, and anything they say goes. | ||
Now, you know, I'm also someone who thinks that inoculation makes sense. | ||
Having antibodies is a good thing. | ||
Obviously, that helps. | ||
That's science. | ||
But when you throw it and shove it down people's guts like this, or shove it down people's throats like this, and you wonder, why aren't people just doing as we're told? | ||
Why don't people just shut up and put this thing inside them? | ||
You have to wonder. | ||
Look, meet people where they are. | ||
Just meet people. | ||
If someone says it, talk to them. | ||
Literally. | ||
I have a conversation. | ||
Don't have Superman and Lois Lane smacking you in the face with it. | ||
They include this Patton Oswalt tweet where he says, haha, the new Superman vs. Lobo has anti-saver idiots who are against Superman helping them. | ||
And I'm like, first of all, that joke was done in The Incredibles when Mr. Incredible saves a guy who jumps off a building and then he gets injured and sues him saying he didn't want him to save him. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
That's the whole plot. | ||
Yeah, if someone says Superman don't touch me Superman don't touch them | ||
It's the weirdest thing that they're like, could you imagine someone not wanting to be saved by Superman? | ||
I'm like, there's probably a lot of circumstances in which someone for whatever reason decides they don't want | ||
Superman touching them And this is what these people fundamentally don't | ||
understand about Liberty mean like people who have DNR's Yes, sure | ||
But but I mean if someone's like in a burning building and they see Superman and they scream save me | ||
I get Superman's gonna save them. He's not a real person These things don't actually happen, but I'm like if someone | ||
literally says I Understand Superman saves people | ||
unidentified
|
Don't touch me That okay | |
Why would you make... See, this is what they don't understand about liberty. | ||
When I see people saying, like, I'm gonna go get vaccinated, I'm like, that's very nice, that's very... Excellent, I'm glad that you've made a good choice for yourself and you're happy. | ||
No, I mean it. | ||
The two sides of this are basically like the stupid people don't do what they're told, and the other side saying, do whatever you want, leave me alone. | ||
You have rights. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Rights exist. | ||
Rights are real. | ||
We believe in them. | ||
I just, I look at this and I'm kind of like, dude, it's really weird that they've become the pure flicks. | ||
They've become like the... This is why, by the way, the stuff that like Iconic Comics and Comicsgate and some of the, you know, Ethan Ranscriver of these guys, that's why so much of that is taking off. | ||
Right. | ||
Some of these guys have posted their revenue just over the past five years and the numbers are, it's millions and millions of dollars because the fans are checking out of this stuff. | ||
Just tell good stories. | ||
Imagine over 70, 80 years, 90 years, 100 years even, you have created this formula for entertainment, this system of entertainment, comic books and movies, and we've figured out what works. | ||
And we're like, these are fun stories. | ||
These are good ideas. | ||
We want to evolve them. | ||
We want to adapt them. | ||
We want to come up with new, unique ideas. | ||
We want to inspire people. | ||
And then all of a sudden, one day, the biggest industry says, We're gonna pivot away from the stuff that people like into stuff they don't like. | ||
And then all of a sudden, the entire multi-billion dollar industry opens up and there stand some regular folks who are like, I would like to make comics for this gigantic multi-billion dollar empty space. | ||
So it's no surprise they're making tons of money. | ||
By the way, one thing we should probably mention. | ||
Who's the target audience for comic books? | ||
Young dudes. | ||
Is it adults? | ||
Is it people over the age of 18? | ||
I don't think so. | ||
13, 14, yeah. | ||
That's when I was reading them. | ||
Adolescents? | ||
I give my three-year-old comic books. | ||
He doesn't quite understand all the plots, but you can see the characters. | ||
He loves them. | ||
They're trying to alter the mediums that kids read and to make them think these things are cool and stuff. | ||
That's why I think this image of Lois Lane was the funniest thing to me. | ||
Because... | ||
The people right now, who are yelling clean hands, washing them, like, they are the uncritical thinking individuals, they are the NPCs, they are not viewed as active contributors, and cool. | ||
I mean, certainly there are some people who view them as cool, I suppose, because they just see them on YouTube, but they're not edgy, they're not, like, the way they depicted her, is she's like, not in my country, and here's one, I hope not in yours, next time we'll discuss whether Lobo called Star Wars totally inaccurate. | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
What? | ||
What does it mean that Star Wars is totally inaccurate? | ||
No, quite literally, as, like, a Star Wars fan, what does that mean? | ||
Uh, well, I mean, it wouldn't make sense because Star Wars happened in a galaxy far, far away and a long time ago, so how would Lobo even know about that? | ||
But what is, what is inaccurate? | ||
Well, I'm saying, like, in their universe, he saw Star Wars and said it was inaccurate. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
It's a fantasy movie. | ||
That's a terrible writing. | ||
The people who are making this have no idea what criticism or culture has anything to do with. | ||
So, there's, you know, Somebody was talking about this and we just lost the greatest one to ever do it, Norm MacDonald, and people were talking about comedy and how comedy has changed over the years. | ||
And I don't think it was Norm, but it was in an article that someone was talking about, I think it was Patrice O'Neill, was saying that comedy changed when people stopped being allowed to be offensive. | ||
And so a good comedy is half the room laughing and the other half horrified. | ||
Um, and when you can't step on cultural taboos anymore, then you're not seeking laughter. | ||
You're seeking applause. | ||
You know what it is, man. | ||
And that's what this is. | ||
They are seeking applause. | ||
Clafter. | ||
It is time to stop acting like we are one country. | ||
It's the stupidest thing when I see tweets from people and they're like, I can't believe it took the mainstream media this long to verify the Hunter Biden email. | ||
I keep seeing those too. | ||
I just laugh. | ||
Do you tweet out when a country, Tajikistan, finally publishes documents on a new scientific research that America's been working on for the past decade? | ||
Are you like, wow, Tajikistan finally figured out how to do antimatter generation, which is huge. | ||
We're seeing this. | ||
No, we don't care what they think. | ||
We, as Americans, know how antimatter, how to create it, how to contain it. | ||
It's very, very difficult. | ||
It's very, very, very, very, very expensive. | ||
But boy, can you make powerful weapons. | ||
We're not sitting here every day being like, wow, finally, Kazakhstan's republishing, you know, scientific articles. | ||
We don't do that. | ||
So when a news story breaks, and we all verify it, and we know it's real, and then nine months to a year later, some foreign country, the blue states of Stan, are like, we finally figured it out! | ||
We're like, yeah, that's nice. | ||
It has nothing to do with us. | ||
It doesn't affect us in any way. | ||
It's almost, um, you know, it's almost like, it's almost like the right should start doing culture, like, I don't know, like, maybe like a children's book series that, you know, that caters to traditional American values. | ||
I'm just, I'm just, I'm just saying. | ||
Yes. | ||
Perhaps like a children's book from Mr. Jack Posobiec. | ||
Kind of, you know, it just so happens that, you know, for once, I'm not doing the Michael promo for Jack Posobiec. | ||
Yes, um, but culture is very, very important. | ||
We must build it up. | ||
Um, let's jump over to this article. | ||
This is funny. | ||
I had, uh, I was scrolling, bounding into comics and I saw a picture of your face. | ||
And I was like, oh, that's funny. | ||
Sitting right in front of me. | ||
Jack Posobiec announces new children's book to fight back against teachers in Hollywood pushing communism. | ||
Comic book creator and senior editor at Human Events, Jack Posobiec, recently announced a brand new children's book, The Island of Free Ice Cream. | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
So this sounds like a very complex and in-depth universe you've created here about The Island of Free Ice Cream. | ||
Tell me, Jack. | ||
Tell me about the Island of France group. So we're doing this. It's part of the Brave Books series. | ||
You go to bravebooks.us. We're not doing Amazon. No cancellations, no money in Jeff Bezos pocket | ||
to fly over us in his blue origin rocket and laugh down at the at the pores with our masks | ||
on while he wears his dress. No, this is so you go to bravebooks.us. | ||
It's actually a series of a shared universe that we're doing. | ||
I mentioned before Ashley Sinclair is doing one. | ||
The Hodge twins are doing one coming out. | ||
We have like a pro-life one that's coming out. | ||
We have some other really big names that I can't talk about yet, but they're coming to be announced pretty soon here. | ||
I think October we're gonna have a really big one dropping. | ||
So the first is like a 12-issue series, and they're all sort of this interlocking universe, part of this big country called, I think it's called Freedom, it's not called Freedomistan of course, and they live in, that's actually called Freedom Island. | ||
We're planning Freedomistan. | ||
Well, we've got Free Island, so we'll go to war eventually. | ||
No doubt. | ||
And so they're in this town of Rushington, and they have this market, and in the marketplace, all the animals shop, and they go out, and there's a market, and part of it sells ice cream. | ||
And there's this character, Asher, and he's a fox, and he's out there with his friends, and some people start complaining because the ice cream in the market is a little bit expensive. | ||
And they say, you know what? | ||
This ice cream is just too expensive, and we don't like this. | ||
Well, along one day comes a group of wolves, and the wolves say, Come to our island, because on our island, the ice cream is free. | ||
So if you just come, just follow us, we'll put you on the ferry, we'll put you on the boat, and you come to our island, and we have free ice cream as much as you want. | ||
You can eat to your heart's desire. | ||
Of course, the only trick is that when you get to their island, you actually see this on the cover, that their island has this beautiful sign on it. | ||
But the island is surrounded by a giant Berlin wall covered in graffiti. | ||
And the wolves are actually running it like a huge prison camp. | ||
And their version of ice cream is essentially like gruel. | ||
And it is perfectly free. | ||
Also, you're not allowed to leave the island of free ice cream. | ||
I do have a correction for you. | ||
What do you got? | ||
He's hang gliding, not being ferried in. | ||
No, this comes up later, actually, in the story. | ||
You've got to read the book. | ||
So he breaks into East Germany. | ||
Yeah, that's actually how he escapes. | ||
So it's sort of like a cross between East Germany, Cuba, you know, like the island, Cuba. | ||
And so that's actually how he escapes. | ||
And there's a catapult involved. | ||
It's pretty fun. | ||
And so it just teaches people, you know, the idea is no such thing as free ice cream. | ||
If something seems too good to be true, it probably is. | ||
But it's a cool story, right? | ||
And there's characters and there's action. | ||
And the idea is, you know, hey, we were complaining about this expensive ice cream, but then the guy said the ice cream is free, but it turned out to be, you know, much worse. | ||
Then, of course, you know, the main character goes back and says, no, you have to stop listening to the wolves. | ||
Don't trust them. | ||
You can't believe them. | ||
They're like, Why? | ||
They have free ice cream. | ||
Why wouldn't we listen to the wolves? | ||
They have free ice cream, wolves. | ||
They're really good. | ||
You hate ice cream! | ||
You're just an anti-wolf-ite, you know. | ||
Is that what they say? | ||
No, but they should actually. | ||
If we do a revision, we'll have to. | ||
Trent! | ||
Get on that. | ||
Right on. | ||
At the end, though, there's a section where there's sort of like a Q&A for parents, educators, to sort of like, you know, it's like, Jack says, you know, and ask, what did it mean that it was expensive? | ||
What did it mean that it was free? | ||
What should you be, you know, should you trust everything that you hear? | ||
Should you trust every offer that's out there? | ||
And the cool thing is, is that Brave Books is now working with Yes. | ||
homeschool groups, which of course, as everybody knows, is skyrocketing right now through COVID. And through this | ||
crazy woke CRT stuff that people can finally look over the | ||
screens because of zoom, one of the like, the actual like | ||
unintended consequences of this is that people can actually see how | ||
their children are being indoctrinated with this crap in the schoolroom on your dime, by the way, private schools | ||
and public schools. And then they want to check out | ||
So we're working with homeschool groups. | ||
We're working with Christian groups. | ||
We've got other religious groups to be able to get this book out and get the series out to them. | ||
And it is a series. | ||
So you get, um, we actually do like a subscription. | ||
So there's going to be 12 in the first series. | ||
You do a subscription, you get one a month. | ||
And there's actually a huge poster that you got to get you a poster. | ||
I'm being a terrible guest of this, right? | ||
I should have brought you one of them. | ||
Um, so it's, it's a poster and then you get a sticker for each book that you read and then it reveals more of the story as you guys go. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Freedom Island. | ||
Why don't we go to Super Chats and see what the people have to say. | ||
Oh, what is this? | ||
We're getting a weird So there's a really funny thing that happens sometimes where on YouTube's end it freezes, but on our end it's not. | ||
And people often point out that it's at a particular point of the conversation. | ||
We're not frozen here in real life. | ||
Let me tell you something. | ||
We're in the fan zone. | ||
My main segment today was about the defector saying China intentionally released COVID. | ||
The moment I went to put it up, YouTube started changing. | ||
It wouldn't let me do it. | ||
It said I couldn't monetize it. | ||
Things are disappearing. | ||
It wouldn't save. | ||
It said no. | ||
It kicked it back. | ||
And so I just sat back, and I waited, and I kept trying to save it, and eventually it let me do it, and I'm like... You know, there's a lot of things I talk about that I know YouTube probably wouldn't care about, but for some reason, whenever it comes to Chinese Communist Party stuff, we get problems. | ||
Notably, when we talked about the 50-cent army on one episode, as soon as it was said, on the YouTube's end, it freezes, and we see all the Fs in the chat, and then it jumps back in, cutting out that conversation. | ||
But anyway, I just saw that that's what I brought up. So let's go to super chat by the way real quick | ||
Um got a message in from tom sauer fellow navy officer. He says dishonorable discharge requires a felony | ||
conviction at the court-martial And almost always comes with a prison sentence like | ||
something that would land you in prison in the real world So it sounds like biden doesn't know what he's talking | ||
about No, so when, so like to get a dishonorable plus the court martial, like you have to have like a legit, seriously unfavorable outcome. | ||
Like you did something that is like, like you'd committed like a straight up crime. | ||
Like not refusing a vaccine. | ||
Smash that like button. | ||
Unless he changes it. | ||
If you haven't already, share the show. | ||
If you like it, subscribe and go to timcast.com to get that sweet, sweet members only content. | ||
We've got more members only content coming up really, really soon because we're preparing to launch the new shows. | ||
So, uh, we're actually... There's a lot of work going on behind the scenes, trust us. | ||
It's like, it's really difficult to get all this stuff done quickly, but we do. | ||
We had meetings on our new mystery show, we have the music being produced, and we're getting really close to launching. | ||
It's gonna be a weekly show on the podcast, uh, on iTunes and Spotify. | ||
It's gonna be like a 15 to 20 minute... | ||
You know, story reading with cool sound effects and music. | ||
And then we're doing the members-only version of the show, is where various individuals will hang out and talk about the mysteries and the ghosts and the UFOs and the true crime and the spooky stories and the rat utopia, but more in-depth, not news-focused. | ||
So, like, Bigfoot and just really crazy stories meant to be, like, tales of intrigue. | ||
I don't necessarily think Bigfoot is actually something that might come up. | ||
But the stories are typically a little darker than that. | ||
You know, like we've got one about Irish mafia murders in New York. | ||
Shane does an amazing job writing these stories. | ||
That being said, let us read some of these superchats. | ||
You know that area in Philadelphia that is always getting shown with all the meth and the addicts and everything? | ||
Right, so that's referred to as Kensington Beach. | ||
That whole area used to be run, it's called Kensington and Allegheny, so those streets intersect there. | ||
There used to be a huge Irish mafia in Philadelphia called the KNA gang, and they ran that specific area. | ||
So they got run out, the Irish got run out. | ||
All right. | ||
The Mercenary says, Tim, my county in Tennessee has over 10,000 students opt out of mask mandates. | ||
It's nice to see people make a stand. | ||
Love the show as always. | ||
Hey, thank you. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
unidentified
|
Cool. | |
Beast. | ||
Jonathan Galtarini says, MSM is finally talking about how the most hesitant group to get vaccinated are those with a PhD. | ||
I guess they did their own study to validate it. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Nice. | ||
Yeah, and I don't necessarily know why that is because I don't see people with PhDs as being necessarily smarter than anybody else. | ||
Getting a PhD just means you have, it doesn't mean- You spent more time staring at something. | ||
Exactly. | ||
It doesn't mean, it means you're a specialist in a field for the most part. | ||
So if someone's like, I have a PhD in what? | ||
Uh, you know, microbiology. | ||
I'm like, that's really great. | ||
You can tell me a whole lot about that, but can you explain anything about economics? | ||
No, I know you're a specialist in microbiology. | ||
So awesome. | ||
unidentified
|
Cool. | |
Yeah. | ||
When it comes to PhDs, just because someone has a PhD doesn't mean anything. | ||
They could have a PhD in economics. | ||
Okay. | ||
So what does that have to do with the vaccine? | ||
Well, it indicates that they have a strong attention to detail and a good attention span. | ||
Usually. | ||
I don't believe that's correct. | ||
That they're willing to pour over data. | ||
I mean, you can't really get your PhD without pouring over data. | ||
Yeah, but it doesn't, it's more so like tedium. | ||
It is. | ||
Dealing with the boring text. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And then, and then a bunch of other people vote and be like, okay, we agree. | ||
You can have one. | ||
Oh, great. | ||
All right. | ||
Let's see what we got. | ||
Ruben Pedroza. | ||
Jack, do you think China would nuke their capitalist model to demonize the West and consolidate power? | ||
The people of China that I meet say there's an astronomical gap between the rich and the poor. | ||
I mean, sure, right. | ||
So China has this system, which has been described in the past as almost like a hyper capitalism when it comes just to their markets. | ||
But you have to understand that, and we don't have time to get into all this, but a lot of these enterprises like Evergrande, which is the one, China Evergrande, this real estate company that's going bust right now, they essentially operate as shadow banks. | ||
So this is these are all shadow banking zombie banks that are constantly and in the past throughout which have been constantly bailed out by the CCP like you want to talk about money printer go burr in the US over there. | ||
It's Yuan printer go burr like it is massive and building go boom and building go boom because you're building ghost cities. | ||
I would see this when I lived in Shanghai that you would you would have these guys, you know, you know you the building would get painted like once a month. | ||
Right? | ||
You know, you don't need paint on the building. | ||
I just did it last month. | ||
We're doing again, because it's all these make work projects. | ||
It's constantly going on. | ||
Why? | ||
Because one of the biggest issues facing the CCP in terms of the legitimacy is unemployment. | ||
If you have a one to 2% unemployment spike in the US, you know, that's an issue. | ||
If you have a one to 2% percent population, because the population unemployment spike in China, you have a revolution. | ||
Yep. | ||
Yeah, so one thing I talk about when it comes to populations is scaling problems. | ||
If you have a thousand people who live in a small city, you know, what percentage of them need to revolt to actually change something? | ||
A large portion, because you're only going to have a few hundred people. | ||
But in a place like Manhattan, where you have 2.5 million on the island and you've got, you know, and I think it's 10 million or whatever in the metro, 13 in the surrounding areas, 0.01% maybe. | ||
Like a few thousand people. | ||
People don't understand. | ||
They see these massive protests and they're like, wow, look how many people are protesting. | ||
Like that's 20,000. | ||
Especially with how tight the roads are on Manhattan, you can actually do quite a bit. | ||
What is it, like 30k cops in New York City? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And so what, if 50,000 people protested the police would be overwhelmed and just leave? | ||
Right. | ||
That's a very, very, very tiny proportion of the total population of New York. | ||
All right, Little Tails Farm says, Tim, our chicks are doing great. | ||
Just put 12 more in the incubator and Chicken City is nearly done. | ||
When you are ready for milk goats, we will send you a baby triple registered Nigerian dwarf from our herd. | ||
I will take it! | ||
Yes! | ||
The new Chicken City we're building. | ||
The guy who just said he wouldn't take food in the mail. | ||
It's a goat! | ||
unidentified
|
What are they going to do? | |
They're going to give the goat some kind of secret mission? | ||
Yeah. | ||
That might be Peter Daszak on the other end. | ||
Be careful. | ||
We had a hawk attack. | ||
The hawk swooped down, the rooster yelled, ran away, the hawk bailed out. | ||
Did you get anything? | ||
No. | ||
One of the chickens looked like it was fruffled, like it got hit in a flyby, but totally fine. | ||
Just like the feathers were sticking up and she preened. | ||
Well, they do that to kind of try to ward off. | ||
The new thing we're building, it's going to go down about a foot and a half or two feet into the ground with fencing, and then it's going to be totally enclosed all over. | ||
So the coop we have now is totally enclosed, but the chicken run isn't. | ||
The new thing we're building is going to be totally enclosed with a totally enclosed chicken run. | ||
So we're legit making a chicken fortress. | ||
Now the problem is we have... We had the original seven, and then we had three babies, because out of like 14 eggs they just didn't make it. | ||
Yep, right. | ||
Some of them weren't fertilized, some of them rotted, and I had to try and pick and choose which ones were the rotted ones, and I think one of them may have, you know, not been rotted, but ultimately we ended up with three. | ||
One's a rooster. | ||
We named him Roberto Jr. | ||
because it's Roberto the rooster's only son. | ||
But now we have five Black Star chickens, which are a special sex-linked breed from the Rhode Island Red and the Bard Plymouth Rock. | ||
Three cockerels. | ||
I don't know what we're going to do with these guys. | ||
Because maybe if they're big enough, we can let them like hang out once they're fully adult in like a year maybe? | ||
Are you saying you've got too many roosters in the henhouse? | ||
Too many roosters. | ||
They're not in the hen house. | ||
unidentified
|
Not yet. | |
But it's already bad enough we've got the baby rooster growing up. | ||
And they're in the same area, but they're separated. | ||
They can't interact with each other, but they can see. | ||
They can interact, they can see each other and gobble and pluck or whatever, but they can't actually. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Because the baby's too small. | ||
But I think we can handle one, another rooster, but we can't handle three. | ||
And we got three, you know, baby roosters that are coming, baby cockerels, and they're gonna... | ||
We'll have to figure that one out as time comes. | ||
Even the Amish take their roosters far away from where they sleep. | ||
It's going to be very, very jarring day, because we're moving Chicken City right outside my bedroom window. | ||
Interesting year. | ||
I'm not going to be in your bedroom anymore, Ian. | ||
All right. | ||
Jinx McNinja says, sorry Tim, I can't tap the like button. | ||
I can only crush it. | ||
Just like Lydia will continue to crush Sour Patch Kids with her larger fingers. | ||
Very good. | ||
Excellent. | ||
Crushed them. | ||
Euphoric Breaks says, been keto eight years now. | ||
Lost lots of weight. | ||
And at 50 years old, am on zero meds. | ||
Welcome to the Fat Burner Club. | ||
I didn't start doing it because I was worried about my weight. | ||
Although many people have given us nice comments saying, Tim, you're looking good. | ||
No, it was more so that one day we ordered a bunch of crab and I didn't eat any breads or sugars. | ||
And I was like, I guess I won't. | ||
And then I didn't. | ||
And then within a few days I was skating better. | ||
I was not tired. | ||
I was feeling a million times better. | ||
And I was like, I'm just going to keep doing this. | ||
I've been doing it for about 10 years. | ||
Well, just sort of like the low-carb, low-glycemic index, staying away from bread, staying away from sugar, trying to stay away from processed food, pastas. | ||
I think next year will be 11. | ||
I've legit been doing a lot of cream. | ||
You know, we have these keto bars. | ||
They're so amazing. | ||
They're from a company called Boo Foods. | ||
Okay. | ||
And I saw an ad for it once and they have this keto cookie dough. | ||
It's basically cashew butter, but it's flavored like cookie dough and it's delicious. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
And they have these protein bars. | ||
We've got a bunch of them. | ||
Yeah, when I started doing it, there was like nothing, right? | ||
And people would look at you like crazy. | ||
I'm like, well, I don't want any bread. | ||
You know, you're at a restaurant and you're ordering. | ||
They're like, well, what kind of bread do you want? | ||
I don't want any bread. | ||
So do you want rolls? | ||
No, I don't want any bread. | ||
I don't want breadsticks. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
I don't want pasta. | ||
No. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
And then they just go, or, you know, the other one is, can you put that on lettuce? | ||
Right? | ||
Yes. | ||
That works great. | ||
And, but it is, it is becoming bigger. | ||
And now you're starting to see a lot of these products come up. | ||
A lot more companies come up realizing, look, folks, bottom line, if you see something that says low fat, stay away from it. | ||
Run. | ||
Run away from that. | ||
Because that means it's full of sugar. | ||
I'm not even, you know, I'm not even focused on trying to do any kind of specific diet. | ||
I say keto because, like, it's a lot of fat and, you know, very little sugar and less meat, just like a lot of the fats, cream cheese, avocado, stuff like that. | ||
But I also just, I'm not thinking about it. | ||
When I go out to eat, if there's something... I won't do bread, because that just always screws me up. | ||
But when I order stuff, I'm like... Once you get off bread, and then you go back to it, you feel terrible. | ||
unidentified
|
It's awful. | |
You feel absolutely terrible. | ||
unidentified
|
It's bizarre. | |
It's like you're chewing on paper. | ||
Exactly. | ||
And you feel this nasty aftertaste. | ||
I'll have, you know, I'll have whatever meal, even if it's got potatoes or something in it. | ||
But keep in mind, American... As long as it's natural and, like, normal and healthy. | ||
Keep in mind, American bread is very different than European bread. | ||
unidentified
|
It's full of sugar, it's full of that stuff. | |
Found in yoga mats. | ||
That's something where, you know, that's again, you know, having Molly being from Europe, you know, she just talks about this stuff all the time. | ||
Like, I don't know what you guys do with your bread. | ||
I don't know why you do this. | ||
Or your milk. | ||
You know, so we don't... Milk in Europe is so different. | ||
So we don't give it to our kids. | ||
We don't, like, we don't have white bread in the house. | ||
We don't ever touch any of that stuff. | ||
Big question. | ||
Why is potassium bromate used in bread? | ||
It is... Preservative, I think? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, I mean, I know why, but why? | ||
Why is it there? | ||
Why? | ||
Why? | ||
It's banned in Europe. | ||
It's so dangerous. | ||
They put it in yoga mats. | ||
It's crazy that it's in the bread. | ||
A lignin agent or something. | ||
We'll take some more Super Chats. | ||
The other one is seed oil, folks, since we're on the topic. | ||
unidentified
|
Canola. | |
Seed oil. | ||
Canola, which is also known as... Grape seed. | ||
Yep. | ||
All right, we got SharkBiteBiz says, Tim, great show. | ||
Love Jack, on some days even Ian. | ||
Can our YouTube show SharkBiteBiz get a shout out? | ||
We are about small business growth. | ||
Thanks. | ||
David Strosser should be a guest on TimCast IRL. | ||
Thank you for the super chat. | ||
For Jack, David A. says, why do civilians pledge allegiance to an icon while the president, members of the military, and civilians take an oath to the Constitution? | ||
Why do civilians pledge to an icon? | ||
The flag. | ||
I pledge allegiance to the flag. | ||
Well the flag isn't the president. | ||
I'm a little confused by the question. | ||
Why are civilians pledging allegiance to the flag, but the president, police, and military swear an oath to the Constitution? | ||
Uh, well, I, I think that the flag in general is representative to the Republic. | ||
And of course, that's the word that's said in the pledge. | ||
Um, so the, the flag is there as a representation of the Republic, whereas in the military, of course, that is a legally binding pledge. | ||
So you are binding. | ||
So you need a legal, specific legal document that created our Republic. | ||
So I think the inherent tie between the two is that one is representative of our Republic. | ||
One is the document that created our Republic, but it still has to do with the American Republic. | ||
All right. | ||
E.W. | ||
says, Jack, important question. | ||
The other day you put out a tweet about Insider Info about the administration discussing cutting off Intel sharing with India and Japan and the leaders of India and Japan being furious about it. | ||
Why are we not hearing anything about that anywhere? | ||
So keep in mind, I wasn't saying they were cutting it off. | ||
I was talking about the AUK-AUS treaty. | ||
This is the thing that partially led to the extreme anger between France and Australia and the US regarding the situation with the submarines. | ||
I've actually been talking to a French MEP about this. | ||
So if you're watching, if you're a War Room fan, which there's a lot of War Room fans out there, Sure, do we want the US on board? | ||
Of course. | ||
Do we need Australia on board? | ||
Obviously, that's their backyard. | ||
trying to create a Intel sharing agreement that's going to put | ||
China in a box? Sure. Do we want the US on board? Of course. | ||
Do we need Australia on board? Obviously, that's their | ||
backyard. But why would you not include India and Japan who literally share either borders or territorial water waters | ||
with with China and as well as South Korea that these are our | ||
allies right in the area. | ||
If you're going to do something like that and be serious, you cannot cut them off. | ||
All right. | ||
EGA says, Tim, you often bash public schools, and as a teacher myself, feel you're wrong in some aspects. | ||
Try getting one on the show sometime. | ||
All teachers are bad. | ||
Every single one. | ||
Abolish teachers. | ||
unidentified
|
All of them? | |
I'm kidding. | ||
That's a joke. | ||
I had a few really good teachers. | ||
Mostly had average and disinterested teachers. | ||
And then I had... It shows. | ||
Too many really bad teachers. | ||
Too many really bad teachers. | ||
That shows too. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Actually, I think it's probably fair to say The plurality of teachers I had were bad. | ||
I had only like two or three teachers I thought were good. | ||
Yeah, same. | ||
I had like two, three maybe. | ||
My whole life, isn't that weird? | ||
And you can remember the names, can't you? | ||
I can remember the names. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
I can remember the names of all my teachers. | ||
Except in the high school when I started getting different classes. | ||
Right. | ||
But in high school, do you remember the good teachers? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, yeah. | |
Mr. Strube. | ||
John Strube. | ||
What's up, dog? | ||
Geometry. | ||
Right. | ||
There was even a good teacher in my high school that I still remember. | ||
I still remember him. | ||
I remember his name. | ||
Never actually took one of his classes, but he used to sit with us at lunch and just talk politics and history and all sorts of stuff. | ||
And he was awesome. | ||
Just awesome. | ||
Who's that? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't want to dox him. | |
JL are his initials for anyone out there from the former Kennedy Kendrick Catholic High School alumni. | ||
YouTube is dying says stop bullying Ian with a crying emoji. | ||
I think we need to bully Ian more. | ||
Oh, why? | ||
Resistance. | ||
Because resistance builds strength. | ||
Yes, exactly. | ||
We need to strengthen the boy. | ||
He's going to be bullied so much like within a year people won't realize he'll be like six foot five and he'll have like a massive chest and he won't even realize it. | ||
No one will and then people will look back. | ||
I started making internet videos in 2006. | ||
I've gone through cycles of trauma learning how to deal with the internet text because it was so new at that time and none of my friends ever had experienced it. | ||
Were you elite? | ||
I became elite as it went on. | ||
But you learn not to take anything personally, including the positive or the negative. | ||
People say, I love you. | ||
You don't take it personally because they're talking about their own experience through you, using you as like this, you know, focusing agent. | ||
But they're just saying their own experience. | ||
How is that different from regular love? | ||
It's very different, Jack. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
All right. | ||
Guardsman Norheim of the 10th First says, you guys keep talking about Alaska. | ||
As an Alaskan, I can tell you we live under the boot of Washington, Oregon, and California. | ||
unidentified
|
100%. | |
It sucks that we are just the lower 48th Park, and I'm your entertainment. | ||
Huh. | ||
I mean, and you know, Daniel Turner, of course, talks about that as well. | ||
But Alaska for Alaskans. | ||
Let the Alaskans make their own decisions on this stuff. 100%. | ||
Alex Stevens says somewhere somehow in your holy Fauci skit, you need to find a way to include a declaration of holy war or Fauci ouchies against the unvaxxed. | ||
So in our, that was our bonus segment. | ||
What did the guy say in the Project Veritas blow darts? | ||
Yeah. | ||
The other day we were making a joke about doing a skit. | ||
So we were talking about the Kaiser Chiefs. | ||
Clean hands! | ||
unidentified
|
Raise your hands! | |
Washing them! | ||
And like how creepy it was. | ||
And I was like, it would be a really great skit if we set up like this little tent and we had someone wearing what looks like Catholic garb, but it's like Pfizer and Moderna on it. | ||
Right. | ||
And people walk up and they're like shaking and he takes their hands and says, with this washing, you are clean! | ||
And then they put the hands in the water and take the hands out and then bring them into the hut for their vaccination. | ||
And so we'd make it look like a religious ceremony. | ||
And then there's a joke about Fauci with his hand up, you know, the peace sign. | ||
You need one where if somebody comes up and they have it, he just smacks them really hard. | ||
I'm just going to smack the devil out of you. | ||
And then he does. | ||
That being said, go to Latin Mass. | ||
Yeah, that's right. | ||
But so that's the reference they were making. | ||
TNHP podcast says, the Pfizer cold wash your hands would only make sense at a Wiggles or Teletubbies concert. | ||
That's it. | ||
I mean, you saw the video. | ||
The clean hands. | ||
Right, right. | ||
We all have clean hands. | ||
I just, I just, I just, I just love it. | ||
Wash. | ||
Yeah. | ||
If he'd come out and was like, yo, everybody wash your hands and then went into rock and roll, that would have been cool. | ||
But instead he called out Pfizer. | ||
He was like, yay, Pfizer corporation. | ||
And I'm like, what the heck? | ||
unidentified
|
Boom. | |
50,000 check in the bank. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm down! | |
Wash your hands, man! | ||
Thank you! | ||
He's got, like, the sticker on his guitar and he pulls it up. | ||
He goes to play guitar over the back of his head and you can see a big Pfizer logo on there. | ||
Hey, the pills aren't just blue anymore, baby. | ||
So here's the important thing y'all need to understand. | ||
When you have a decent amount of Trump supporters who will never disparage the man, who keep thinking every other day is the day that Trump somehow gets reinstated, and believe all these things. | ||
Like, I can understand why you'd criticize that, but these people are not, have no institutional power. | ||
They tend to be like older folks in the middle of nowhere who aren't doing much, they're not in media. | ||
When you have a major concert with thousands of people all holding their hands in the air and testifying to Pfizer, yo, the cult is here. | ||
That's the problem. | ||
I don't care about what grandma's saying in her bedroom. | ||
She's retired. | ||
I don't care what Meemaw is saying. | ||
It's about power dynamics, about who has power, who's wielding power. | ||
When the president of the United States is saying that military members are going to be giving dishonorable discharges, which by the way, usually what my contact is saying, it does include Prison time, right? | ||
That's power. | ||
That's real power. | ||
And people in the West need to start understanding this, because anybody who's lived through the East, anyone who's gone through the Soviet Union, or through the communist countries, they've all seen this before. | ||
You don't need to talk to somebody from Poland, or Belarus, or Ukraine, or Venezuela, etc, etc. | ||
You need to talk to them, ask them, because they've seen this before, they've heard this before. | ||
It's always for safety. | ||
It's always for the good of the nation. | ||
It's always for public health. | ||
This is to make you better. | ||
It's for the good of the public, the safety of the children. | ||
During Occupy there was a cop who was a little bit older and he said he was born in the Soviet Union and his parents brought him to America. | ||
And he was just, he was talking to these young people and he was like, this is exactly how it starts. | ||
This is exactly what I was warned about by my parents and my grandparents and y'all are doing it. | ||
He's like an older guy. | ||
And then he was being argued with by like 20-somethings. | ||
He knows. | ||
Man, that wasn't even real communism anyway, man. | ||
It's never been. | ||
And then I was just like, I don't understand. | ||
Like he lived in the Soviet Union personally and his family fled when he was a young child | ||
and they warned him and told him all of these things. | ||
Like you guys are just college hipsters. | ||
You have no idea what you're talking about. | ||
Man, there isn't even real communism anyway, man. | ||
It's never been. | ||
It's never been tried, really. | ||
Well, you know, the thing is, it's that statement is right and it's wrong. | ||
There's never been a point where, like, everyone got together and did communism, because the problem is there's always people who dissent, and then the communists have to kill all of them, and then it just falls apart, because nobody likes that. | ||
I'll also throw out there, well, you know, man, real capitalism has never been tried either. | ||
Sorry, Libertarians. | ||
Sorry. | ||
I jokingly tweeted that, but I actually think it's still true. | ||
It is. | ||
There's always some kind of regulation or authority stopping people. | ||
Cornelius Buttknuckle says, Ian, grain-fed beef doesn't mean it was fed grains its whole life. | ||
It just eats a diet of grains at the slaughterhouse before it's slaughtered. | ||
Think of it more like grain finished. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
I see. | ||
Eat a lot of corn. | ||
It's really much more of a grating than a killing floor, Timmy. | ||
It's more of a bottomless pit into a grinder than a floor. | ||
Don't be fooled. | ||
Given the chance, a cow would kill you and your entire family. | ||
Is that what he said? | ||
You're about ready to graduate from Bovine University. | ||
Michael Brogan says I wanted to super chat on many topics tonight, but they've all been covered. | ||
On the subject of cancellation, Jack, Elijah Schaefer, and Sidney Watson beat you nine days, and You Are Here has been banned from YouTube. | ||
Two strikes, one vid. | ||
Two strikes on one vid?! | ||
On one! | ||
A band, like permanent band? | ||
Two strikes is what, like three months? | ||
They were just talking to me about getting on that show. | ||
unidentified
|
I was about to fly down to Texas, I guess. | |
You get a phone call, hey Jack, you wanna come on the show? | ||
I do, alright, we'll see you then, click. | ||
Hey Jack, we're cancelled, so no show. | ||
Wow, that's crazy. | ||
Yeah, I was literally just talking about that. | ||
It's still up though, so I don't think it's banned. | ||
No, they get a strike and they can't post anything. | ||
They can't post anything, it's like being locked on Twitter. | ||
Naughty Naughty. | ||
By the way, speaking of Australia with Sydney, I love that this idea that they're calling the protesters in Australia, the orange vests. | ||
So because it's a lot of the construction workers, I think they say tradies is their word. | ||
So it's a lot of construction workers, a lot of truck drivers. | ||
And so you have the yellow vest, the gilets jaunes in France, but in Australia, it's the orange vest. | ||
I love that. | ||
I love that name. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
All right, JP says, Tim, the late Rush Limbaugh has great patriotic kids book series called the Rush Revere series. | ||
You know, just for mentioning Rush, I want to point out, we watched The Nutty Professor a couple days ago. | ||
You guys have seen The Nutty Professor? | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
Eddie Murphy plays all the family, the clumps, and he's fat and doesn't want to be fat, so he does a serum that makes him skinny, and then it's Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. | ||
Excellent cameo with Dave Chappelle. | ||
There was a, yes, Dave Chappelle was hilarious. | ||
Women be shopping. | ||
Eddie Murphy. | ||
Women be shopping. | ||
Yeah, I know, it was funny. | ||
That is true. | ||
Women do shop. | ||
That scene is great. | ||
Eddie Murphy screaming and laughing. | ||
It's a good scene. | ||
Well, there's two because he goes back when he's Buddy Love. | ||
When he's Buddy Love is the funny part. | ||
When Sherman, the main character, is at his house eating a bowl of ice cream after Buddy Love makes fun of him and he's pouring Reese's Pieces and M&M's in his mouth, they show the TV and to the left of the TV is a bunch of books and one of them is a Rush Limbaugh book. | ||
Wow, I never noticed that. | ||
Eagle eye pool over here. | ||
I saw that because I was like man back in the day you could Eagle Eye pool over here | ||
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You could I know who the sniper is gonna be 10% Oh, yeah, I can I just see everything but I thought it was | |
crazy because I think you see back in the day You can make a major blockbuster and it was normal for a | ||
college professor to have a Rush Limbaugh book Nowadays people would be like there's their dog whistling. | ||
It's a It's a dog whistle. | ||
Why are they doing it? | ||
You've actually just initiated the cancellation of The Nutty Professor. | ||
Eddie Murphy's done. | ||
They're going to go in and they're going to digitally remove the Rush Limbaugh. | ||
Oh, right. | ||
They just remove it. | ||
It'll be Ibram Kendi. | ||
Harry Potter. | ||
No, it can't be Harry Potter either. | ||
It's got to be Ibram Kendi. | ||
Ibram Kendi, yeah. | ||
It's going to be Robin DeAngelo. | ||
I've had it, man. | ||
I've had it with this stupid cancel culture book burning thing, man. | ||
I just want to get back to Rush's books are great, by the way. | ||
Rush's books are great. | ||
His are for a little bit older. | ||
I think they're more text. | ||
The ones we're doing, they're for a little bit younger kids, but Rush's books are fantastic. | ||
It's really something where you start with the Brave books when they're younger, you go to the Rush books when they're a little bit older. | ||
They're working on reading. | ||
You keep going with it. | ||
Just keep going with it. | ||
Love, peace, and harmony says, how long do you think till the USA really starts going heavily downhill? | ||
Have you looked at the cost of food, inflation, gas, the southern border, the Afghan crisis? | ||
I mean, should we really just start listing? | ||
Do you understand what will happen if the US dollar is no longer the world reserve currency? | ||
Imagine the deflationary spiral that we'll be in. | ||
And then imagine what happens when the people... No, it would be deflationary. | ||
The dollar would become worthless. | ||
Right, it'd be worthless. | ||
It'd be done. | ||
So imagine your savings are worth nothing if you have your money in cash, which a lot of people do. | ||
Imagine a gallon of milk for $5,000. | ||
You think I'm joking. | ||
That's hyperinflation. | ||
That's what they were seeing in Weimar, Germany. | ||
And then imagine the social consequences of that. | ||
Yeah, the best part is America will be completely done. | ||
It'll become a wasteland for the most part. | ||
Too many people, all of our people, live... Which by the way, none of us want. | ||
I want to simplify this very much. | ||
Like Kurt Schlichter always says, I don't want these books to come true. | ||
People in New York don't do anything. | ||
They may do administrative work, they may do blog writing, they may do managerial work, they may do intellectual work, but they're not making food. | ||
When the U.S. | ||
dollar is no longer the reserve currency, the U.S. | ||
has no control over oil and can't get any, food stops showing up, and the people in New York will start fleeing rapidly, and those who stay, it'll go basically full-on Mad Max. | ||
I mean, crime will go through the roof. | ||
What people need to understand about the petrodollar is that when the U.S. | ||
wants to buy oil, it simply borrows or prints money. | ||
When other countries want to buy oil, they need to trade for U.S. | ||
dollars first and then buy oil. | ||
That means they need a robust GDP with good exports so that they're continually gaining value. | ||
They have to buy and trade. | ||
Which means there is always a market for dollars. | ||
Right. | ||
And so the U.S. | ||
has one great export. | ||
The dollar. | ||
And that's only because... I thought it was Timcast IRL. | ||
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That's right. | |
And that's because of the petrodollar. | ||
So that's why all of these people who have come out against the U.S. | ||
dollar as a reserve currency just, like, mysteriously end up dying. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
You know, Gaddafi wanted an African Union, and he wanted to trade, I think it was in dinars, and then he died. | ||
Still a big question. | ||
Saddam Hussein was challenging that. | ||
Still a big question about where exactly is all that gold from the Libyan Treasury. | ||
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Then again, a lot of Libya is the Sahara Desert, so... You got a bunch of gold and you gotta hide it somewhere, I'm just saying. | ||
That's gonna be hard to find, especially when it's shifting sands. | ||
But they are letting his son out of prison, last I saw, so I think the question is, does he know where daddy kept the gold? | ||
We don't have a manufacturing base anymore. | ||
We import too much. | ||
If we lose the dollar, your life- That was smart of us, by the way, getting rid of that. | ||
That was so smart. | ||
Very strategic. | ||
Good job, ruling class. | ||
Right. | ||
I think we'd see what, like, population collapse by, like, double digits within a few years. | ||
Which, by the way, and I have to do this since I'm here, we lost a great one this week, not just Norm Macdonald, but also Angelo Cotevilla, a professor at Boston University, also Claremont. | ||
I had the honor of actually having him as one of my professors when I was going through the fellowship. | ||
And he wrote a book about the ruling class from the right in 2010. | ||
So understand how far ahead of people he was. | ||
What is his name? | ||
Angelo Cotevilla. | ||
So he was Italian, moved to the U.S. | ||
when he was young, served in the U.S. | ||
Navy, and then went to the Senate Intel Committee, and then eventually made his way to Claremont Institute, also taught at Boston University. | ||
Just absolute genius. | ||
Couldn't stand the Intel community, he said. | ||
He said, if you look at history and you realize that how many heads of intelligence agencies have turned out later to be traitors, you almost have to wonder if it attracts a certain type or at least offers them that incentive. | ||
Genius. | ||
So we do have some news on Elijah and Sydney. | ||
Mike Sullivan says they are still doing the show on Blaze Media, which is exactly why you should become a member at TimCast.com. | ||
Perfect. | ||
Now, you can go into the member section. | ||
What you need to understand is that our TimCast members-only content is a massive library of all of our guests. | ||
So we've got like a couple from Colonel Allen West. | ||
We've got a couple from Steve Bannon. | ||
I think we have a couple now from... No, we only have one from Alex Jones, don't we? | ||
Yeah, I think we only have the one. | ||
But we have a bunch of other people, so you can search the names and see every time they've been on for our member segment, and you can watch all that stuff. | ||
So there's a great value. | ||
Every day, every Monday through Thursday, we're adding new members-only podcasts. | ||
They're typically around a half an hour. | ||
The Alex Jones episode is an hour and a half long. | ||
Because we're going at it, and Alex, he takes over, and then you try to, you can't stop him. | ||
I looked down at 8 minutes, or at 8.50 while we were doing the show, and I was like, I thought we were still doing the intro. | ||
It was 50 minutes in. | ||
I was like, I feel like we're in the intro still. | ||
Alex is like the juggernaut in X-Men. | ||
You know, once he gets going, you can't stop him. | ||
And I'm like, Alex Dirk! | ||
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And then he's like, Thomas Jefferson was in charge of the Illuminati! | |
And I'm like, oh no, it's over, we've lost control. | ||
It's fun though, so make sure you go to TimCast.com. | ||
Become a member at TimCast.com. | ||
We also have a bunch of journalists we're hiring more. | ||
We have the paperwork for the new fact-checking foundation, talking to some people, looking for some fact-checkers. | ||
So a lot of big, important work happening. | ||
We're looking to expand our corporate headquarters and we've been looking for new buildings because we're looking to hire a lot of people. | ||
All of you who sign up to be members are supporting our ability to hire people to make more crazy stuff. | ||
It's awesome. | ||
Thank you all so much. | ||
Don't forget to like this video, subscribe to this channel. | ||
You can follow me at TimCastBasicallyEverywhere, and you can follow the show at TimCastIRLchat. | ||
Yeah, so it started up with the new podcast, Human Events Daily. | ||
It's now up for Turning Point Live, so huge shout out to the whole crew over there. | ||
You can go follow it. | ||
It's sort of an evening briefing. | ||
It is 25 minutes. | ||
It is the cliff notes of War Room, the cliff notes of your day. | ||
We use an old adage that I learned when I was in the military, especially in the intelligence briefing, be good, be brief, be gone. | ||
This is your bottom line up front. | ||
You can share it with your normie friends. | ||
It's something where I'm just giving you high-impact analysis, the main stories of the day. | ||
You're in, you're out, you're done. | ||
25 minutes. | ||
Right on. | ||
You know, you guys, thank you for being a part of this thing, man. | ||
We are really expanding this operation. | ||
We're building out the Fediverse to build some decentralized social networking technology. | ||
I mean, I'm looking at really starting a new revolution of industry as making the United States the graphene production center of the world. | ||
I think that's absolutely possible. | ||
Let's stress that Fediverse thing real quick, too. | ||
I mean, Ian and the crew have been working around the clock developing code and getting this stuff ready to launch. | ||
And the key is decentralized open source social media technology so that you can host your own presence that interlinks with other people's sites so you cannot be banned or removed and you can have a strong central location for your content and a decentralized network. | ||
And then we say to all of these big companies, I want to ban and censor people. | ||
You can't stop the decentralization. | ||
But you can join the Fediverse. | ||
So thanks for coming and being a part of this again. | ||
I love you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
And you guys, thank you very much for helping me achieve my life goal of beating Sour Patch Kids in follower count. | ||
That's all I care about. | ||
Don't care about the Fediverse. | ||
I'm just kidding. | ||
I care about all the other projects we're doing. | ||
But you got to maintain. | ||
You got to maintain now. | ||
I'm working on it. | ||
I'm working on it. | ||
I think you're gaining distance already. | ||
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I know. | |
I'm scared. | ||
I'm scared. | ||
Anyway, you guys may, if you so choose, follow me at Sour Patch Lids on Twitter. | ||
We will see all of you at TimCast.com in our members segment. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. |