Speaker | Time | Text |
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Black Lives Matter has issued a statement. | ||
They are standing by Jussie Smollett, even though he has been found guilty. | ||
And, you know, it's a really important story for regular people because everybody knows at this point that Jussie Smollett staged the whole thing. | ||
It was a hoax. | ||
He was trying to make more money. | ||
He exploited Black Lives Matter and the protest movement to advance his career. | ||
And now you can see Official statements from the Black Lives Matter organization that they don't care. | ||
They're standing by him saying, we don't care if police are liars. | ||
He's done too much for us. | ||
That's important for regular people so you can explain to them, look, this is not about justice. | ||
It's about political power. | ||
And here's proof. | ||
Now we got an even weirder story. | ||
The New York City mayor has said they refuse to surrender to Black Lives Matter and warned Hawk Newsome not to burn the city down. | ||
It's interesting, we're starting to see some pushback to Black Lives Matter and Antifa. | ||
In California, 11 Antifa members have been arrested and charged with some very serious crimes for beating regular people. | ||
Apparently there was a Trump rally, Antifa shows up and started beating kids, like teenagers. | ||
Pretty aggressive stuff. | ||
And then, where does this lead us to? | ||
Well, the intrepid journalist Andy Ngo, who has been documenting this much to the chagrin of Antifa, is now being sued by people because he retweeted them. | ||
This is Antifa lawfare. | ||
They're mad about it, so they're literally suing him. | ||
I'll say this right now before we get the show started. | ||
Andy Ngo, mark my words. | ||
There's a lot of political play here, but I will say this. | ||
On the merits, Andy will win a summary judgment, the judge will laugh this case out of court, and then Andy will seek legal fees and likely win. | ||
I'll just say, he will win. | ||
I will make a hard prediction on this. | ||
You can come back, and if I'm wrong, I will accept being wrong, but I am so positive that this is the stupidest lawsuit ever filed. | ||
Andy will win on summary judgment. | ||
He will never see a trial. | ||
The judge is gonna be like, this is ridiculous. | ||
You know, case for the defendant. | ||
And then Andy's gonna say legal fees. | ||
He's like, granted! | ||
Laughably bad. | ||
And we'll get into all this stuff. | ||
We also got inflation hitting across the country, and it's a little bit in the weeds, but I think this one's big. | ||
We can definitely talk about how it's screwing over the working class. | ||
And I have this article from the Intercept that really pissed me off. | ||
Inflation is good for you. | ||
It's bad for the 1%. | ||
They lie so easily to manipulate poor people into destroying themselves and supporting this trash. | ||
So we'll get into it. | ||
Joining us today is, of course, Libby Emmons from the Postmillennial. | ||
Hi. | ||
How's it going? | ||
Hey, you're the editor-in-chief, right? | ||
I am. | ||
I'm the editor-in-chief at the Post Millennial. | ||
Sweet. | ||
And you work with Andy? | ||
I work with Andy. | ||
He actually just sent me a message. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
He wanted me to show you something. | ||
Oh, what is it? | ||
Is it the part from the lawsuit? | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's his last tweet about being an effective journalist means that people will try to silence you. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, they will. | |
And he's fundraising for his legal defense. | ||
So if you want to check that out. | ||
Oh, definitely. | ||
It's libertycenter.org slash retweet. | ||
So, I used one of his articles today from Newsweek, and it's funny, they're like, he's not a journalist! | ||
And I'm like, pretty sure Newsweek isn't a far-right publication, and it's not an opinion piece, it's a straight news piece. | ||
They're so salty because very few people are willing to actually report on what they're doing and stand up to it. | ||
Well, and Andy is reporting on crime. | ||
He doesn't do opinion pieces. | ||
I recently was like, Andy, we were talking about something. | ||
I was like, that's a great idea. | ||
We should do an opinion piece on that. | ||
And he was like, meh, I don't want to do an opinion piece. | ||
You know, he does he does straight news stories. | ||
And they come after him because he's good at his job. | ||
You know, that stupid Daily Beast story about about this lawsuit. | ||
And they're talking about and they use they're like, oh, Andy has had All of these DCMA strikes against him and it's like, yeah, that's not evidence of anything other than people are out to get him. | ||
Right. | ||
You know, that's what that's about. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's it's because they just don't like they don't want to be there. | ||
Violent crimes to be reported on. | ||
I really want to talk so much about that one, but I felt like we couldn't lead with it because it's a little esoteric, but we'll get into that. | ||
We'll build up to it with the Black Lives Matter ride stuff. | ||
We got Luke chillin'. | ||
Yeah, Libby's from New York City, so I'm very excited to find out how my former homestead is turning into a hellscape. | ||
It's going to be a great conversation to have. | ||
And the shirt that I have now, I think, becomes more popular by the day. | ||
And it reads, people will forget your words, people will forget your accomplishments, but no one will forget that you voted for Joe Biden. | ||
And it's a great one because it catches a lot of people off guard. | ||
And you could get yours and be a part of street activism by just going to thebestpoliticalshirts.com. | ||
And because you do, I'm here. | ||
Thanks for having me. | ||
What's up, everybody? | ||
Ian Crosland here, ready to rock and roll. | ||
Good to see you. | ||
IanCrosland.net. | ||
Check it out. | ||
And I am also here pushing buttons on this very calm Friday night. | ||
We're gonna have a lot of fun. | ||
Love having Libby here. | ||
Love my ladies. | ||
Let's get into it. | ||
Thanks. | ||
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Let's get started with this. | ||
We were initially going to start with Jesse, but I think this is actually more important context. | ||
As we get into Black Lives Matter, from the Daily Mail, quote, We are not going to surrender to Black Lives Matter. | ||
New York City Mayor-elect Eric Adams warns BLM leader Hawk Newsom not to, quote, burn down the Big Apple and refuses to back down on reinstating plainclothes NYPD units. | ||
It's kind of crazy when we're at a point where the mayor of, you know, the biggest city in the country is warning A group of leftist activists not to burn the city down. | ||
Isn't it, isn't it, shouldn't there be a little bit more than that? | ||
Like, hey, you threatened to burn the city down. | ||
Like, that's a terroristic threat. | ||
You guys literally did smash windows and destroy things a year ago. | ||
Maybe those threats are not idle threats and there should be some legal ramifications. | ||
You know, maybe a slap on the wrist. | ||
Maybe they at least need to come out and be like, don't threaten to burn it all down. | ||
But how many times do they say this stuff? | ||
Yeah, you know, they say it a lot. | ||
BLM says this a lot. | ||
And Hawk Newsome also is much further to the left, I think, even than the national BLM groups. | ||
And he's spoken out against the national BLM groups. | ||
He's one of the ones who was bringing suit against them for having fundraised all that money and, like, nobody saw any of that money. | ||
Except, you know, Patrisse Cullors got a bunch of new houses or something. | ||
Oh, that's nice. | ||
Yeah, that's really nice. | ||
Well, it was for her family. | ||
It was for sure. | ||
She's doing very well for herself. | ||
Yeah, I mean every family needs a nice little house in Topanga Canyon, right? | ||
A couple of them, you know. | ||
That's just one, a few, you know. | ||
A couple of like half a million dollar houses. | ||
Yeah, so the thing about Newsom is he's very vigilant about that. | ||
I talked, I actually talked with him after the, there was like a whole incident uptown with some tourists who were in town and they didn't want to show their vax cards or something like that and they ended up getting kicked out of car mines and then When I talked to him about it, he was like, actually, the hostess was racist and used racist language and this whole thing. | ||
But yeah, he's very vigilant against the plainclothes cops. | ||
And I want the plainclothes cops back on the street. | ||
Pulling them off the street has been a disaster. | ||
That's how the police know what's going on in the community. | ||
You know, they're there on the street. | ||
They're involved. | ||
The context is that when they defunded the police in New York, they got rid of the anti-crime unit. | ||
That's right. | ||
And then crimes skyrocketed. | ||
Murders, muggings, violent crimes. | ||
Well, and who's getting killed? | ||
Like, black kids are getting killed. | ||
That's what's happening. | ||
Black people are getting murdered. | ||
So, you know, people were shocked. | ||
The super lefties that I know were shocked when Eric Adams won the Democratic primary, which essentially meant that he was going to be mayor, which he is going to be. | ||
They all wanted Maya Wiley and these far left progressives. | ||
But the black communities, the conservative communities, the Latino communities all wanted | ||
Adams. And it's pretty clear why they wanted him. You know, he was he's from the city. | ||
He was a D.A. He was a cop. | ||
Yeah. And he was he's definitely going to crack down on crime in these neighborhoods | ||
and save black lives like that. | ||
That's what he's going to do. | ||
I'm glad to hear it. | ||
Maybe I don't agree with this guy. | ||
I'm not a fan of what the Democrats have become. | ||
But if people are expressing their support for a cop, As much as I can say, you know, there's a lot of things | ||
that I don't like about the NYPD, the CPD, regular people saying, you know what we hate more? We hate | ||
you burning down our businesses and throwing rocks through our windows. | ||
This is a pie in the face to the extremist woke left. | ||
But when they did break windows, when they did bust down businesses, when they did steal from private enterprises, | ||
you saw the police department stand back and kind of watch everything happen. | ||
You saw some of the high command of the NYPD literally get on their knees with the mayor saying, we support you guys, as of course they were causing massive chaos, massive pain for the average citizen. | ||
So, you know, the previous administration acquiesced totally to BLM. | ||
They wrote their name in front of Trump's And arrested anyone who dared to express another political opinion across that particular street. | ||
So to see this kind of transition, it's not even a major transition. | ||
It's just a guy saying, hey, we're not going to have any bloodshed. | ||
We're not going to have any rioting here. | ||
I mean, that should be a normal statement. | ||
It's nothing out of the ordinary and shouldn't be. | ||
Yeah, I mean, de Blasio also did not think that New Yorkers cared about their own quality of life. | ||
And I've talked to members of city council about this, you know, who said that there are members of city council who don't think that their constituents care about quality of life. | ||
And anyone who lives in New York, there isn't anything else. | ||
That is literally the only thing there is. | ||
There's really expensive everything and not getting trash in your face and stabbed when you walk down the street. | ||
So that's the important thing. | ||
And if Adams can bring some of that back, That's a good thing, but I still, you know, I don't just, I don't agree with any of the VAX mandate stuff. | ||
He's come out on in favor of that. | ||
We now have a new mask mandate in the entire state because of the stupid idiot garbage. | ||
No one elected her governor. | ||
unidentified
|
The next person's always worse, right? | |
That's what I'm thinking too. | ||
It's like if we get rid of Biden, we have Kamala and she is just even the worst of the worst worse. | ||
She's terrible. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And this whole thing with the masking now, businesses are going to be able to decide if you have to wear a mask or if you have to show your vaccine card. | ||
Whatever. | ||
I want to address what Luke was saying about the police because I think there is an interesting kind of double-edged sword here. | ||
I'm not a big fan of what the police were doing letting people suffer, but I guess my point is more like regular people, when they say they want Eric Adams, they're saying no to Black Lives Matter and Antifa extremists. | ||
And we needed people to stand up and say something to that. | ||
Now it is, I think, an issue. | ||
When you have a police department and you have the whole city and the core Democrat movement being like, abolish or defund the police, well it's no surprise that when the cops are like, we don't have the resources to deal with this so we're not going to deal with it. | ||
You can't expect me to go out and then put my life on the line when you will not stand up and defend us as well. | ||
You had in New York, I think it was in New York, the police came out and said, we are being slammed in the media for all of these crimes when there were 375 million police interactions and only I think it was like nine unarmed black men being killed or like 13 or whatever. | ||
So the media is just drumming up all of this hate for cops when 99.99% of cops are just like routine stops. | ||
Most of them, but you know, they also did shut down, you know, private businesses in Staten Island that were going against the lockdowns. | ||
The NYPD, it's one of the most funded police departments, I think, in the entire world. | ||
I believe their budget, correct me if I'm wrong, I think you would know this more than I would Libby, their budget was six billion dollars, now it's five billion dollars, is that correct? | ||
They did pull a billion Yeah, but it wasn't the NYPD shutting down restaurants in Staten Island. | ||
It was the sheriffs. | ||
That was the state. | ||
That was under Cuomo's jurisdiction. | ||
Yes, but it's still police officers that came in. | ||
It was, but it was not the NYPD. | ||
Because the NYPD, if you were walking around going to, you know, basically were speakeasies during the pandemic, the NYPD did not come bother you at all. | ||
They brought in state troopers. | ||
Yeah, that was what was going on in Staten Island. | ||
That was not NYPD. | ||
That's corruption. | ||
These cops that are basically like Attila's Gym in New Jersey. | ||
The local cops showed up, and the cops said something like, you're in violation of public ordinance. | ||
That being said, have a nice day, folks. | ||
And they all clapped and cheered. | ||
So what did the city do? | ||
They called outside departments to come in, and the outside cops, with a smile on their face, were like, I don't know you. | ||
I don't care about you. | ||
Screw off. | ||
Callousness. | ||
That to me is like, You know what, man? | ||
These cops may be from out of the community, but people need a way to, like, call them out, shun them for violating human rights. | ||
The decree of an executive does not give police the authority to do these things. | ||
No, I mean, people have to stand up for their own values. | ||
And that's, it turns out, that's one of the hardest things for anybody to do, is to have a value system, make their decisions based on that value system, and to uphold it with their lives every day. | ||
This is why I'm like, you know, during the whole George Floyd riots and stuff, I was kind of like, in many circumstances, if the cops aren't going to defend people who want to abolish the police, I mean, good, this is what people have asked for, and the cops aren't giving it to them. | ||
That being said, when you then get police going to small businesses and putting the jackboot down, I'm like, you want me to defend you now? | ||
Not gonna happen as an institution. | ||
Well, it's not the police that are going around, you know, enforcing these restrictions. | ||
It's individuals and business owners who are enforcing the restrictions. | ||
For the most part, New York especially. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And that's sort of the worst case scenario, I think. | ||
If it was police coming in, we could all be like, no, police, don't do that. | ||
But it's individuals standing against other individuals. | ||
It's citizens taking up the enforcement. | ||
It's citizen middle managers. | ||
Well, the difference, I think, is in, like, New York, it's mostly the individual restaurant owners are the enforcers of these mandates. | ||
That's right. | ||
But there still are many circumstances in which police were engaging in this behavior. | ||
Attila's Gym, as I mentioned, the woman who was trying to sell things on Facebook Live in North Jersey. | ||
So we've seen several instances of this. | ||
I'm not gonna come out and defend organizations that take the goodwill. | ||
When we defend the police and say defunding them is insane, if anything, they need better training, better funding, better programs. | ||
And then what happens? | ||
They say, screw the little guy. | ||
We don't care. | ||
We're told to do it, so we'll do it. | ||
Granted, as you mentioned, a lot of NYPD were just like, nope. | ||
I've heard stories from people in New York where they were like, people have tried calling the cops over masks and the cops just laugh. | ||
They're like, what do you want me to do about it, dude? | ||
They're like, we're not coming out for this. | ||
It's ridiculous. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, my experience recently in New York City, tell me if you're wrong. | ||
Maybe this was just particularly in the neighborhood that I was in. | ||
No one's enforcing anything. | ||
As far as mask mandates, I haven't seen any kind of enforcement of that in local businesses and private businesses. | ||
Vax mandates, no one asked me about my papers. | ||
No one asked me to put on a mask. | ||
Those are the experiences that I just had a few days ago. | ||
Are you seeing the same kind of just not caring about any of this kind of bureaucracy made up decrees? | ||
There's a lot of people that don't care. | ||
I went to a diner the other day and it was like, I'm not going to say where it was because I don't want them to get in trouble. | ||
There was no issue. | ||
The vax mandates now have extended to children. | ||
So children are supposed to now show their vaccine cards. | ||
and a lot of places are not going to enforce that either. | ||
Also the mask mandate that came down from Kathy Hochul today is like businesses get to decide so you | ||
can enforce it yourself which also kind of means like businesses that are doing badly are | ||
they really going to stand there and be like put on your mask or you can't come in. You know? | ||
You know, I wouldn't. | ||
I'd be like, come on in, please buy some stuff. | ||
But there's been a lot of places that are not asking for vaccine paperwork or anything else because they want people to come in. | ||
And also they don't care. | ||
There's also, though, a ton of people, more than I've seen in a long time, walking around outside with masks on, in their cars by themselves with masks on. | ||
Watching CNN too much. | ||
Right? | ||
And there's the subway. | ||
People are like fully masked on the subway. | ||
It'll be like, I'll be on the subway and I'll see somebody and we'll be like, oh, what's up? | ||
Nice. | ||
I want to pull up this story. | ||
Two people without a mask on. | ||
We have the story from Star Tribune, and this is despicable. | ||
Albert Lee restaurant owner found guilty of violating state COVID mandate. | ||
A jury of three women and three men took only an hour of deliberation to convict Lisa Hansen. | ||
She was sentenced to, where do we have the sentencing down here? | ||
There we go. | ||
She was sentenced to 90 days in jail, which began immediately, and a $1,000 fine, considerably more than what Albert Lee City Attorney Kelly Dawn Martinez, who prosecuted the case, had sought. | ||
Meaning, the prosecutor didn't even want it to go that crazy, and the judge was like, nah, lock her up three months. | ||
Why? | ||
Because she opened her wine and beer bar, Flouting Tim Walz's executive order to shut down last winter during the COVID-19 pandemic and was found guilty of six criminal misdemeanor counts Thursday by a Freeborn County jury. | ||
It was cops who came and arrested her for this. | ||
This is Minnesota. | ||
This is Minnesota. | ||
She fled to Iowa and then sheriff deputies came and arrested her. | ||
So these are people, these are officers. | ||
Look, you gotta understand in places like New York City, as much as you might be saying, like, well, the NYPD weren't the ones going out and doing this, the leadership were appointed by Democrats. | ||
They do not believe in the same moral systems, moral frameworks, and values that we here do. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Just because we might be like, there are good cops out there, and they're besmirching the name of officers over, you know, a few fringe cases, you need to realize that in places like Seattle, there are Antifa cops. | ||
Right, there sure are. | ||
No joke. | ||
Yeah I mean there was an Antifa person running for the basically like Attorney General of the city in Seattle and then you know she lost but she was entrenched you know she was running for that. | ||
It's interesting too I was talking to some friends about this the other day there's a there's definitely a difference today between the way that Republicans and Democrats, Conservatives, Liberals whatever terminology you want to use approach things. | ||
It used to be that everyone basically seemed to have the same goal and the question was how do we get there? | ||
What is the process? | ||
I don't think there's the same goal in mind at all and I don't think that there's even a similarity of worldview at this point. | ||
Yeah, I think, for the most part, everyone's become increasingly selfish. | ||
And, like, the judge in this case, or the prosecutors, they're just basically like, I'm gonna get mine. | ||
Like, I don't care. | ||
I mean, we're seeing what's happening all around the world, and it should be a warning shot to the rest of the world, especially with what's happening in Germany, in Australia, in Austria, in Italy, in France, where we're seeing just, you know, elderly women walking by, big Police officers grabbing their hands demanding to see their papers demanding to see their identification and throwing them in jail giving them huge fine stealing their hard-earned money punishing them scaring the crap out of them because they didn't comply with the whims of the state. | ||
I think what's happening around the world in some of these places is what a lot of politicians want to happen here in the United States and I think. | ||
Because of people fighting against it because of people not ... complying because of the state of Florida and other people ... saying hey I I believe in my human rights I have dignity I ... have a life here that I will fight for and I will protect no ... matter what I think that's one of the only reasons why society ... totally hasn't gone the way as many other societies have gone ... to work even protesting even just simply complaining. | ||
is banned or made illegal. | ||
And it's absolutely crazy to see that happen in Australia, to see that happen all over Europe, where you can't even protest. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
We have that here with corporations. | ||
Corporations ban protest in the U.S. | ||
How so? | ||
Well, you have Twitter, you have social media platforms. | ||
Well, they ban speech. | ||
They ban speech and speech is protest. | ||
Yeah, and they also ban people from organizing and from having groups and doing events together. | ||
And covering the Ghislaine Maxwell trial. | ||
unidentified
|
That's another big one. | |
It's obvious what they're doing! | ||
They're like, it's bad enough we had to pull this stupid campaign with Maxwell anyway, the last thing we want is someone to be tweeting about it. | ||
unidentified
|
No talking about the justice system. | |
Or just how the government took your tax dollars for over 30 years and ran an international extortion child | ||
trafficking operation. | ||
That's another big one. | ||
unidentified
|
I'll take sources on that one. | |
I'll give you some. | ||
I got a whole bunch of them. | ||
But look, look, look, I think, you know, we've seen a lot of the details out of the Epstein | ||
stuff and now we're kind of getting off the rails from where we just were. | ||
It's like, you know, these small town cops arresting this woman and then Epstein and | ||
an internet. | ||
No, but I will say there's a simpler, there's a simpler thing. | ||
It's like you've got how much, how much of our money without our consent goes to literally | ||
bombing civilians. | ||
Right. | ||
And for some nebulous cause where they tell us, what are they saying? | ||
They were saying on TV about Ukraine, we fight over there so we don't got to fight here. | ||
unidentified
|
And I'm like, you think Russia is going to invade the continental US? | |
Let alone Hawaii. | ||
And then just a really quick point before I'm gonna leave it up to you. | ||
I think it is interconnected because there was police officers in New York City, in Florida, that knew exactly what was going on. | ||
They had the victims. | ||
They had children that were coming to them and they were told to shut up by their superiors and they had to shut up and there was no justice for thousands of victims and thousands of children that came forward. | ||
So sorry, go ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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You didn't know about this, Louis? | |
No, I don't know all about this. | ||
Okay, okay. | ||
Oh, the Epstein stuff is great. | ||
Yeah, the Epstein stuff is out of the insane. | ||
Well, I mean, I've read about the Epstein stuff. | ||
Yeah, there's a number of police officers that fell into depression. | ||
There's a number of police officers that were silenced, shunned, and couldn't do their job because the higher-ups said shut up, obey our orders, and they did. | ||
And they had to. | ||
That's what goes on with a lot of things. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know, that's pretty clear. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And it happens in some of the most atrocious atrocities that we can't even mention or talk about. | ||
And that to me is frustrating to understand people still putting a lot of their faith and a lot of their power and a lot of their hope, which I think is needless into this kind of system that they're going to be doing the right thing. | ||
I think we should be more skeptical than just hopeful from my perspective. | ||
You know, when I think about Cops defunding police and police is an organization. | ||
I think like the trash people pick up the trash and you're like, okay, if there's an organization of trash men across the United States and a small group of them started dumping trash on lawns and they were like, F this, we hate these. | ||
And they're like targeting black people, you know, some racist trash men. | ||
You wouldn't say like defund trash people. | ||
No more trash pickup. | ||
We totally need the garbage collection. | ||
unidentified
|
I How do you do | |
firefighters and police, you know, I mean if there was a video imagine a video of a firefighter at a | ||
fire and he like He's got the hose and a little old lady walks by he just | ||
sprays her and she gets knocked over and they're like time to | ||
unidentified
|
Shut down the fire department fire | |
How do you hold them accountable? | ||
You criticize every time they do something wrong. | ||
You try to hold them accountable and if they don't, if they're not held accountable, they shouldn't have any institutional power or money until they can be accountable, until they can be trustworthy. | ||
Until they can be honest and real with the people that ... they're serving because they're supposed to be serving ... the people not doing the bidding of the special interest ... that many times they just take the orders blindly and do ... whatever they want. | ||
There was a big thing during Occupy Wall Street where NYPD were working in uniform as private security for wealthy individuals who wanted to go to restaurants in the financial district. | ||
Right, that makes sense. | ||
So you come out as a protester and you see police officers in uniform, badges and everything, and then you realize they were hired as private security for the wealthy elites of New York City. | ||
There's a lot of cops that moonlight as security. | ||
But in uniform with their badges? | ||
I don't think they're supposed to do that. | ||
Well, there's an official program within the NYPD where corporations could hire police officers to show up at their businesses. | ||
Many banks use police officers and hire them. | ||
I don't know if this program still exists, but I know it did exist a few years ago, and they were able to hire, pay their salaries, and they would show up particularly to protect their business and essentially just stand around there because that was a deterrent for a lot of criminals seeing, oh, there's a police officer here. | ||
I won't come and steal from this place. | ||
Oops, sorry. | ||
Trash in the joint. | ||
Their job is to protect people but then but their real job is to do what their supervisor tells them to do or they're gonna lose the job. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So like that's a big conflict of interest right off the bat. | ||
Including up to some of the worst atrocities. | ||
I mean isn't that true of soldiers? | ||
Isn't that true of the military? | ||
Any of these kind of enforcement organizations are all about making sure that the people are following the orders. | ||
Like you can't have a bunch of people It just wouldn't work if everyone was out there making their own assumptions about how the law works. | ||
You know, there has to be a coordinated effort in order for it to be successful. | ||
And right now it's running through people like authoritarian individuals. | ||
So maybe in the future the system will be altered so that we'll be able to police without having authority telling people what to do? | ||
I don't think that's really how it works. | ||
I think there always has to be authority to tell people. | ||
If you're going to have a, if you're going to have some sort of army, people have to follow the orders in the army. | ||
What about policing though? | ||
Policing, I mean in New York City, like that's, that's an army to a certain extent. | ||
Yeah, how many is like 30 something thousand? | ||
It's a lot. | ||
It's a lot of people. | ||
And the thing, too, that happened in New York is that a bunch of low-level crimes basically got decriminalized and stopped being prosecuted. | ||
So that just opened the door for criminals to do bigger crimes, you know? | ||
And the way that the smaller crimes worked, I was actually listening to a podcast about this with Inez on Inez's podcast. | ||
But essentially the idea is that those low-level crimes are now decriminalized. | ||
The idea was not that those low-level crimes are there to be prosecuted and send people to prison. | ||
It's so that police have an intervention point, an early intervention point, right? | ||
So if you're standing there on the street corner smoking a joint, Then the police can be like, hey, what's up? | ||
You're standing here on the street corner smoking a joint. | ||
That's an intervention point. | ||
Right. | ||
If turnstile jumping, right? | ||
Hey, you just jumped the turnstile. | ||
That's an intervention point. | ||
What other, you know, what else is going on? | ||
Right. | ||
And when you have a bunch of crimes, right, and then people plead down once they're in the court system. | ||
So then you have like this person went up for a drug offense for, you know, five years Did they really go up just for the drug offense? | ||
Like they pled down a whole bunch of other charges and landed with one and took a sentence. | ||
It's sort of interesting. | ||
I hadn't thought of it in those terms, but it makes sense when you start thinking about it in that way. | ||
Let's talk about some wins. | ||
We got the story from Newsweek by journalist Andy Ngo. | ||
Prosecutors make first move to break up Antifa cell as 11 activists charged with violence. | ||
Now, this is not an opinion piece. | ||
This is a factual news report by Andy Ngo for Newsweek. | ||
And the reason I'm emphasizing a factual news report by journalist Andy Ngo is because Antifa and these extremists have tried their hardest to smear and besmirch his name simply for reporting on what they do. | ||
This is it. | ||
Newsweek is not some far-right publication or some conspiracy blog. | ||
Newsweek's actually fairly left-leaning. | ||
And here we have a factual news piece. | ||
You see, prosecutors are actually going after Antifa. | ||
Andy writes, This week, the San Diego County District Attorney's Office charged 11 alleged Antifa members with felony conspiracy and felony assault charges, among other crimes, in a riot case where supporters of former President Donald Trump and random bystanders were beaten in Pacific Beach, California in January. | ||
Eight suspects were arraigned this week. | ||
They have all pleaded not guilty. | ||
There's videos of what happened. | ||
There are reports that there were minors who were simply walking down the street, and Antifa decided to attack and pepper spray them. | ||
There was a guy who was apparently longboarding with his dog, and they pepper spray this guy. | ||
For no reason. | ||
Because they assume if you're there, you must be a Trump supporter. | ||
Oh hey, I'm curious here, you know. | ||
I think we should be happy that finally we're seeing law enforcement go after Antifa, right? | ||
This is finally- how long has it taken? | ||
But my concern is, is it too little too late? | ||
And is it just kind of a show, some appeasement, you know what I mean? | ||
Are they actually going to get serious across the board, around the country, and deal with this extremism? | ||
Well, I want to know exactly what happened in this particular case before kind of espousing an opinion on it. | ||
But what brings me to think about, you know, when I hear about this story was just a few months ago when Antifa was caught celebrating because their opponents were being arrested. | ||
They were celebrating when the FBI was going after Trump supporters. | ||
And my first comment on them celebrating it, it's only a matter of time until the state turns against you and starts arresting you. | ||
So I think This could be the first of that. | ||
I still don't know a lot of the details around this case, but do they have any charges against these individuals? | ||
Yeah, felony conspiracy and felony assault. | ||
Okay. | ||
Among other crimes. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Do they know... Let me see if I can come down. | ||
Yeah, okay. | ||
So we have Samuel Ogden, charged with felony conspiracy and assault. | ||
We've got Jesse Cannon, Felony conspiracy felony assault, so you know basically they're all being charged similarly And it's for trying to cause a great bodily harm to individuals They're fundraising to try and try and deal with this these people thought they were untouchable They felt like that the cops couldn't do anything and you know what for several years that was the case | ||
Well, the cops weren't doing anything for a long time, and as we know, the cops and the feds have a lot of data. | ||
They're running huge dragnet information operations where they literally are flying drones over a lot of these protests. | ||
They know a lot more. | ||
Then they let on so I would say that you know the federal authorities the surveillance grids know most everything so to see this kind of turn when they were previously cheered on by many establishment institutions for doing these actions to see them now face the ramifications of them. | ||
It shows a kind of very interesting turn. | ||
I mean, there could be just not enough right-wingers for them to go after for the petty crimes. | ||
So they're like, OK, we got to do something now. | ||
We need to look useful, quick! | ||
Yeah, we got to do something to justify these overly huge budgets that we got. | ||
But it's going to be... I need to read more into this. | ||
I wonder if this is actually because the midterms are coming up and the establishment Democrats know that this is a huge problem for them. | ||
I do think also, though, the courts have proven to be the front lines lately, and it's been pretty fascinating to watch justice at work. | ||
You had, you know, the Charlottesville stuff came up, and those white supremacist groups or whatever were fined, like, so much money, enough money to completely bankrupt them out of existence, which is kind of, you know... But they don't... Look, the... And you had Rittenhouse. | ||
That was proper justice. | ||
The Smollett trial. | ||
The Charlottesville thing is interesting. | ||
Suing private citizens who have no money just doesn't do anything. | ||
No, I mean, that's not effective, right? | ||
I mean, it's not going to be effective for that. | ||
But it is, you know, an interesting thing to see that the courts are really on the front lines of this. | ||
If you look at the most of the biggest stories that we've had lately, they've all been trials. | ||
It's all been like waiting for a verdict, you know? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And that's been pretty wild. | ||
You know, the Supreme Court oral arguments have been heating up the whole situation with the abortion laws. | ||
Courts are the front lines. | ||
It's interesting, too, because once things hit the courts, you know, that's really where you're going to start to see what's going to happen, like what the precedent is going to be, what the law is going to be. | ||
Next year in June, it's widely believed that the Supreme Court is going to overturn Roe v. Wade. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And that was leftist activists. | ||
There was one guy from, I think, from Slate. | ||
And he was like, that's it. | ||
It's done. | ||
The Supreme Court will overturn Roe v. Wade. | ||
And everyone started freaking out. | ||
He's like, no, no, no. | ||
It's a prediction, not a statement of fact. | ||
But it's probably true. | ||
And even like NBC was saying this. | ||
Now, I say this in the context of Antifa. | ||
What will, how the far left will be able to rally a lot of crazy young people around this should it happen. | ||
But that will be bad for Democrats. | ||
Right. | ||
It will be bad for Democrats. | ||
The other thing that's bad for Democrats is that they had to base abortion rights on a Supreme Court decision and they could never actually pass it on a federal level. | ||
It's a state's rights issue. | ||
It's not elucidated in the Constitution. | ||
When you heard the oral arguments, I guess it was whenever it was, last week, and Justice Thomas, who is so interesting whenever he talks, it's so interesting because he was, you know, he hardly ever says anything. | ||
Um, but he consistently was asking, what is the basis in the constitution for abortion rights? | ||
Is it liberty? | ||
Is it this? | ||
unidentified
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And, you know, she's the, uh, the woman, um, I forgot her name. | |
Yeah. | ||
Council just kept being like, well, she said abortion abortion. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
14th amendment. | ||
And it's a liberty issue. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
And I don't think that's good enough. | ||
And I think it's bad law. | ||
Why is it bad law? | ||
Because it's not actually a law. | ||
They didn't make a law. | ||
This needs to go through Congress. | ||
If they want a federal abortion rights thing, they need to make an amendment and do it. | ||
And they can't. | ||
And that's what Kavanaugh said. | ||
Yes. | ||
He said, why is this going to the court and not through legislation? | ||
That's exactly right. | ||
Here's what I see happening. | ||
I think Antifa will definitely use this kind of stuff. | ||
Should they actually overturn Roe v. Wade, they're going to have a powerful media asset to rally a bunch of young, ignorant people and people who are not all with it, if you know what I mean, into getting violent. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Because their agenda is burn it to the ground and then rebuild. | ||
But the establishment Democrat, their agenda is like, win the moderates over in the midterms. | ||
You've got a flailing economy. | ||
You've got abysmal job growth. | ||
You've got the Democrats trying to claim that Joe Biden's, we're in the Biden boom period. | ||
I'm like, you can only lie so much when people can't buy cereal anymore. | ||
And you're going to add to that the extremist crackpots going around smashing up windows and they know it. | ||
So I wonder if this is preemptive because they're like, if we don't start arresting these people, they're going to go nuts. | ||
And it's not going to be a red wave, a red tsunami, it is going to be a red great flood. | ||
Build your arc now. | ||
I'm looking into this, and these are not federal charges. | ||
It looks like this was charges from the San Diego County District Attorney. | ||
San Diego has a lot of right-wingers in there, so it wouldn't surprise me if this was a local effort for them to go after individuals that target other people and hurt them. | ||
Because they worked with other local police departments and it looks like they have a very solid case here As they also were able to get a whole bunch of weapons drugs On some of the suspects that were arrested here. | ||
I think it was eight suspects in total. | ||
There were search warrants issued So this seems more like a local issue rather than a federal issue So, um, I don't you know, I don't think that also matters. | ||
That's fine. | ||
Yeah, why should it not be local? | ||
No, I'm not I'm not saying it matters. | ||
I'm just saying that that it is a local issue. | ||
It's not a federal issue Yeah, so, but where California leads, the rest of the country follows, and I'm really optimistic that this precedent will kind of set the stage for some other cities to do the same thing. | ||
Do you think it will? | ||
I hope so. | ||
Did you know that, um, I learned this from the red-headed libertarian, Josie, good friend of the show, that communists aren't considered people for the sake of human rights in the 1964 Civil Rights Act. | ||
So this is really interesting, actually, because it's fallen out of, I suppose, legal precedent, but apparently in the 1964 Civil Rights Act it says this provision will not be construed as to provide rights to communists or communists-associated organizations or something like that. | ||
Antifa is quite literally rooted in Weimar Germany's communist, anti-fascist action or whatever, which was literally a communist organization. | ||
They use the same flag, same name. | ||
So I wonder if there's anything there we should be worried about or, I don't know. | ||
I certainly don't like the idea of the government being like, we've deemed you a communist therefore, because they could call anybody a communist. | ||
Well, and they have. | ||
Right. | ||
But Antifa is literally a communist organization, and maybe the reason we won't actually see anything from that provision Is because we don't care about it culturally and because many of the people in federal law enforcement, I know this was state-level charges, but many high-ranking, you know, Democrats are also, you know, at the very least, socialist, have communist leanings, or are unwilling to go after communists out of fear. | ||
Yeah, I think they are afraid. | ||
I think they're afraid to go after, you know, I mean, we see this at the Postmillennial all the time, right? | ||
Like these Antifa people are coming after us. | ||
They come after Andy all of the time. | ||
And they have this weird, you know, this communist ideology, and they don't they don't really care about anything else. | ||
And they just use the fear tactics, you know, they say like, don't fund this business, don't put your ads on this business, don't talk to this person because I'm telling you to, so trust me. | ||
And nobody ever looks into their background or looks into like, you know, the horrible things that they've done or what they're about. | ||
It's about time, you know, people started waking up to what these extremists do. | ||
They lie, they cheat, they steal, and it's all for power. | ||
And a good example is what we mentioned earlier, that they're still backing Jussie Smollett, even after he's been found guilty. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But let's talk about lawfare, because I am really excited to talk about this story. | ||
From the Daily Dot. | ||
Two journalists sue Andy Ngo over his online use of their videos. | ||
They say Ngo reposted their videos without permission, leading to online and physical attacks from his audience. | ||
I would just like to point out, I do not believe going to a court and suing for damages and then being like, people were threatening us online is any grounds for any complaint against Andy Ngo because he had nothing to do with that. | ||
That's immaterial. | ||
They say, Two journalists have filed a lawsuit against Andy Ngo for copyright infringement. | ||
Journalists Grace Morgan and Melissa Claudio-Lewis say that Ngo downloaded and tweeted their videos without permission. | ||
Their suit seeks damages and a permanent injunction prohibiting Ngo from posting their videos without express consent. | ||
Now before I show you this, I would like to make one definitive statement and prediction right now in the absolute I welcome being wrong, but I will say it. | ||
Andy Ngo will win on summary judgment, he will then seek legal fees, and he will win legal fees. | ||
This lawsuit is so laughably bad that I cannot believe they even wasted one red cent to file it. | ||
What Andy Ngo is being accused of doing is so beyond fair use. | ||
I have to imagine the first thing the judge is going to say to the plaintiffs in this case is, are you sure about this? | ||
You're going to be billed by a lawyer for it. | ||
And then he might come after you, you know, and he could file a claim for legal fees and he will be awarded them. | ||
This is beyond frivolous. | ||
Now there are lawsuits where it's like, now that's questionable at best. | ||
Okay. | ||
So good friend of mine, Cassandra Fairbanks, she filed a lawsuit against some reporter because she claimed the okay hand sign was a white supremacy gesture and Cassandra lost because it is very difficult to win these kinds of lawsuits. | ||
But let me show you here from the Daily Dot. | ||
Here are the tweets from Melissa Claudio Lewis. | ||
She was on the ground filming. | ||
She said cops are getting guardian angels to protect them. | ||
Here's one where she said Molt Co. | ||
tried to bust out but found their gate wasn't functional. | ||
They say when Andy Ngo posted it, he wrote, police observed the writing Antifa from behind a gate in downtown Portland last night. | ||
And as you can see, Andy Ngo did not, in fact, download this video. | ||
All he did was used Twitter's internal function to repost it in a tweet. | ||
And thus, you can see the woman's name, Melissa Claudio Lewis, and her video hosted on her Twitter account in Andy Ngo's tweet. | ||
In another tweet, they say he similarly altered text. | ||
Altering text is... Here's the funny thing. | ||
I just gotta... | ||
If they're actually trying to make the case, but Andy is being sued because he also altered the text, I'm like, that's in defense of Andy. | ||
Altering text for commentary or criticism is transformative and it's commentary and criticism. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Here's the best part. | ||
In the next tweet they highlight, you can see that Andy Ngo is literally reposting their video directly through Twitter's tweet function. | ||
He did not download this video and re-upload it. | ||
You can see them in Grace Morgan's name in this. | ||
So let me make this very simple. | ||
Andy Ngo retweeted That's correct. | ||
on Twitter taking publicly available videos providing his own commentary on | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
them for a newsworthy purpose. That's correct. It is it is it is like so | ||
laughably fair use. Yes. That he is going to win summary judgment that means | ||
there'll be no trial the judge is gonna read it and be like dismissed. And it's | ||
not like they turned off the retweet function or turned off comments or | ||
I'm just mad that it was Andy who did it. | ||
You can do that. | ||
They just don't like Andy. | ||
And it's because Andy exposes them, you know? | ||
He exposes them so thoroughly. | ||
Yeah, and I think that he is so correct to be fundraising for his defense on this one. | ||
So is this a copyright complaint or a harassment complaint? | ||
It's a copyright. | ||
But he put their name in his name. | ||
Attributions are relevant. | ||
I would like to reference the notorious case of Akilah Hughes v. Carl Benjamin. | ||
Carl Benjamin, a.k.a. | ||
Sargon of Akkad on YouTube, uploaded raw clips from Akilah Hughes' YouTube, and the only thing he did, there's nothing in the videos, it's literally her raw clips from a longer video, and he titled it something like, Liberal Sense of Self-Awareness. | ||
Right. She sued him. Sargon, Carl, very smart. He kept his mouth shut. And everyone asked him and | ||
he says, look, I'm in a lawsuit. I can't speak about it. Akilah went on Twitter, talked her | ||
mouth off, gave press comments. Here's what I'm doing. I'm going to sue him and I'm going to take | ||
everything. The judge in that case was like, are you sure you want to go forward with this? Because | ||
this is very clear cut, fair use. And Akilah was like, he's infringing on my copyright. He didn't | ||
provide commentary or criticism. She had to change lawyers and Carl kept his mouth shut. | ||
Carl won on summary judgment, he filed for illegal fees, and he won again. | ||
If Andy Ngo downloaded their videos, reposted them, and then wrote LOL, that would be fair use, and he would win. | ||
That's it. | ||
So what Andy Noah's done here is he didn't even download them. | ||
He just used Twitter's public functions to retweet it. | ||
And all he did also was say, you know, and what happens is Antifa posts it and says, look at these horrible police. | ||
And Andy posts it and says, actually, there's another way to look at this situation. | ||
Maybe take a look at it from this perspective. | ||
I can't handle it. | ||
You know, and there's more than one way to look at anything. | ||
This is like a lawsuit about messaging. | ||
Yeah, so Morgan told the Daily Dot that they're hoping to make it harder for Andy Ngo to steal journalists' content and change the narrative of their reporting, something he has built his career off of. | ||
If you post newsworthy video to Twitter, where it can be seen by the public, someone can retweet you. | ||
That's something you've acquiesced to. | ||
Now, I will say, for those that are wondering, how do news wires work? | ||
One of the core questions of fair use is if you are infringing upon their market. | ||
Now, this is important. | ||
If I post a video, On Twitter, there is literally no defense. | ||
I mean, you can try and muster up one, but they're going to be like, look, you posted the video to Twitter. | ||
It's publicly available, can be shared and embedded. | ||
I don't know what you want us to do. | ||
But if I post maybe like 20 seconds, and then I say to license the full video, go to my website. | ||
And someone goes to my website, takes the full version and repost it and says, well, I saw part of it on Twitter. | ||
Now you're actually infringing upon my market. | ||
That's different. So publishing something makes it now available to the public. It can be transformed. | ||
It can be commented on. To be fair, it quite literally is copyright infringement, but there | ||
is an exception to whether a judge will allow this. And it's quite clear what this is actually | ||
is, I think it's called ad terrarum. | ||
That's what they were, the judge called it in the Akilah Hughes case. | ||
These Antifa journalists are suing Andy Ngo, not because they think they'll win. | ||
They're trying to drain his resources and force him into a fight. | ||
And they want to force him off Twitter. | ||
I mean, it's so clear that they just want to force him off Twitter. | ||
Right. | ||
They don't want him to be able to do any reporting on them. | ||
And without Andy, I mean, Andy was at the forefront of this kind of reporting. | ||
They tried beating him? | ||
They tried bludgeoning him? | ||
unidentified
|
It didn't work. | |
Yes, it didn't work. | ||
But an important question here, Libby, maybe you would know this. | ||
Was he crossing state lines? | ||
Was he tweeting? | ||
Because, you know, that could be another reason to go after him. | ||
The mainstream media is really, sorry, the corporate media really doesn't like that. | ||
Yeah, they really don't like when you leave your home either, so they're against that. | ||
What's amazing is they're claiming that Andy Ngo violated DMCA's. | ||
Lewis says, if I had violated DMCA's that many times, my account would no longer exist. | ||
Why Andy gets a permanent pass, I can only guess. | ||
It's because he's retweeting you and Twitter allows it. | ||
And when you complain, they take some of the videos down. | ||
That's it. | ||
Well, it doesn't look like a retweet. | ||
Is that actually a retweet? | ||
Yes. | ||
It's slightly different. | ||
It's slightly different. | ||
What Andy did was he took the direct link to the video, and this is a core function of Twitter. | ||
If someone posts media, you can take their link from their Twitter and put it in a tweet and then write whatever you want, but you can see it's included her name in it. | ||
This video is not being hosted by Andy Ngo's account. | ||
And it's directly attributed. | ||
Right. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
And you click the one's name and it shows you their account where they've posted it. | ||
And you can see what she said about it. | ||
It is literally a retweet of her content. | ||
So does this function remove the other person's commentary? | ||
Yes. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
This, this is when this, this is you retweeting the link to their media. | ||
Gotcha. | ||
As opposed to retweeting the entirety of their tweet. | ||
So I say retweet because there's no real other word to describe what this is. | ||
Someone posts a video with their name on it. | ||
It produces a link on Twitter that you can then paste in your tweet, which is hosted by their account, not yours. | ||
So you're basically embedding their video in your tweet. | ||
Right. | ||
I don't think embed is the right word. | ||
This video is... I guess technically it's the case, but it's quite literally taking their tweet, their media, and putting it in... Twitter has an option when you... | ||
Let's call him Tweeter for now. | ||
I think that's more appropriate. | ||
When you press on a video, it gives you the option to share it through multiple platforms or tweet the video, a part of your own tweet attributing the person who created the video. | ||
It's functionally retweeting. | ||
Yeah, you can embed if you go to publish.twitter.com. | ||
That lets you actually embed a tweet in another tweet, but that looks different. | ||
Well, that's called quoting. | ||
So like Luke said, you can just click the video and be like, share this video in a tweet. | ||
So Andy Ngo isn't downloading or stealing anything. | ||
It's like, here's a public video. | ||
Let me comment on it. | ||
And they're like, lawsuit! | ||
He's really careful about that. | ||
You know, he wants to attribute. | ||
He wants to, and that's part of it too. | ||
I mean, he wants to show who the people are who are out there making these videos and doing these actions. | ||
He doesn't want to hide that. | ||
He doesn't want to take credit for anybody else's work. | ||
It's a Twitter feature. | ||
Did he not retweet and just type a paragraph above their Twitter because this format looks better? | ||
I don't know why he did this. | ||
No, he just literally clicked on the video and clicked tweet video. | ||
It's a better way to do it because then you don't see it. | ||
So like right now I have a video up Ian, right? | ||
And I just pressed on it, all right? | ||
And it came up and I have an option here. | ||
I tweet video and then it has the video here and I just get to write the commentary underneath it. | ||
This segment should be called teaching Ian how to use Twitter. | ||
I also want to stress as it pertains to copyright law, you may disagree with this, but I can literally download This woman's video, upload it to my own Twitter account, and put H. Hey, here's a video from Jesse Kelly. | ||
Just the letter H. From Andrew Pollack on Twitter. | ||
It's the exact same format. | ||
Jesse Kelly. | ||
Should Andrew Pollack sue Jesse Kelly? | ||
unidentified
|
Probably not. | |
No, he shouldn't. | ||
It's clearly frivolous, and you can see how they've framed this. | ||
In the article from the Daily Dot, they're like, I'm getting harassed, I'm getting threats because Andy is posting my videos. | ||
What they don't like is that when they publish this information, they want to control the narrative. | ||
They want to frame it as negatively as possible for the police and for the city. | ||
And Andy Ngo can take the video, provide his own commentary, and that's quite literally... Look, to say it's fair use, it would be like, imagine there is a 20-foot tall giant with a big shirt that says, Fair Use Incarnate. | ||
That's what it is. | ||
There's no question. | ||
Like, the judge is going to be like, I'm confused. | ||
This is fair use. | ||
And they're going to be like, but I'm getting harassed. | ||
And it's going to be like, I don't understand. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
Right. | ||
Also, online harassment. | ||
Who doesn't get online harassed? | ||
Doesn't that happen to everyone? | ||
Yeah, the definition has changed. | ||
The definition of harassment has definitely changed. | ||
When we would do terms of service at Mars, it's not the same as harassment from the 80s. | ||
That was when someone was banging on your window and yelling. | ||
That's totally different. | ||
This is like you wake up and somebody's like, You know, I hope you get killed. | ||
I woke up to this the other day. | ||
Actually, Andy was like, uh, Libby, they're saying Nazi things about you now. | ||
And I was like, oh, good. | ||
That's new. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
That's great. | ||
Wonderful. | ||
You know, and this is why I think, you know, this is why it's important to support independent journalism. | ||
It's why it's important to support journalists like Andy or outlets like the Postmillennial, because these people are coming after us. | ||
They're not coming after us for any reasonable reason. | ||
We're not doing anything wrong. | ||
They just don't like that we're actually reporting on their criminal activities. | ||
They don't want to be called out. | ||
They don't want anyone to look at their activities from the perspective of, you know, you guys are committing crimes. | ||
You are hurting other people, actually physically hurting other people. | ||
And now you're whining that somebody is saying something nasty about you on Twitter. | ||
You're out there injuring others. | ||
Let me, I'll say this too, there are a bunch of accounts that go into the members-only section of TimCast.com and post those videos, and that is where they're arguably not in fair use territory. | ||
And the reason is, although they're providing commentary or criticism on our videos, There's, this was where it gets a little bit murky. | ||
By publishing stuff that we have behind a paywall, it's arguably infringing upon our market by giving away our content for free. | ||
However, personally, I'm still fine with it. | ||
Right. | ||
Like, when I see the leftists and they're like, Tim Pool and his members only said X or Y, I'm like, eh, you know, look, it's commentary, it's newsworthy. | ||
I don't like they're giving stuff away for free, but it's kind of a preview. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
So I'm not, I'm not gonna be bothered with dealing with it. | ||
And I honestly welcome the commentary and criticism. | ||
It's tough because I don't want them to. | ||
Like you buy a book and then you quote the book. | ||
Or a movie comes out and you show a clip from it and you talk about it. | ||
Fair use. | ||
I think that's fine. | ||
You know the thing is though if you if there's like a movie and you take a clip from it on YouTube they'll probably just knock you down anyway even though it is fair use and you gotta fight for it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I played a small, like, even a second from the Matrix trailer and automatically copyright strike. | ||
I'm like, what? | ||
That's not a strike, though. | ||
A flag. | ||
From the trailer? | ||
Yeah, a flag. | ||
From the trailer? | ||
Yeah, from the trailer. | ||
But isn't that out there in order to monetize the file? | ||
And it wasn't even the trailer. | ||
It was just a few seconds as I was just, like, having it in the background going through the browser. | ||
And I'm like, okay. | ||
Wow. | ||
That happened to me with Joe Rogan, actually, because I pulled up his YouTube video and was talking about the podcast without playing it, and it automatically got flagged. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. I had to be like, Joe, you know, it's not like, can you get it off? And he was like, | |
oh, sorry, man. But it was automatic. I've had happened to me too, where people are like, | ||
I've had, um, angry leftists be like, Tim Pool copyright claimed my video. And I'm like, | ||
no, I didn't like YouTube automatically does it, dude. And so then I've gone in and released it, | ||
but I don't want it. I don't care. | ||
Say whatever the hell you want. | ||
That's the thing, right? | ||
One of the problems that the Freedom Faction, I guess, the libertarian little L, has is that we're willing to be like, well, they're allowed to use our content to criticize us. | ||
And then they will sue you! | ||
Right. | ||
So it's, look man, the sad reality is that cheaters win. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Cheaters win. | ||
Not always. | ||
Most of them get caught eventually. | ||
That's not true. | ||
You think they get caught because some get caught, but you'd be surprised how many people are playing shady games. | ||
Look, everybody lies on their resume. | ||
Really? | ||
I was actually encouraged to. | ||
I'm being hyperbolic. | ||
Wait, are you saying you seriously think people don't lie on their resumes? | ||
As an actor, when I went to LA, they were like, OK, this is the way it works in LA. | ||
You're not in the union. | ||
You're not SAG. | ||
But if you want to be SAG, put that you're SAG on your resume. | ||
And then when they see it, they'll think you're already in the union. | ||
They'll hire you. | ||
And then when they realize you're not in the union, they'll just put you in the union. | ||
And that's what they did. | ||
They hired me for a commercial. | ||
And then they just were like, well, all right, just give them his union card. | ||
That's wild. | ||
Yeah, most people lie on their resumes. | ||
Fake it till you make it. | ||
That's a fairly common thing. | ||
I've never lied on like a non-acting resume, but I was encouraged to by my agent and it worked. | ||
It was crazy. | ||
I'm actually a really poor liar. | ||
I'm just bad at it. | ||
I felt really weird about doing that. | ||
Antifa has a penchant for lying. | ||
They're really good. | ||
Like there's that video where Jack Posobiec got punched and the cops literally watch it and the woman goes, I didn't see anything. | ||
I didn't see anything. | ||
And it's like, lady, the cops witnessed it. | ||
Shut your mouth. | ||
But they just lie. | ||
I mean, she wasn't a good liar, to be honest. | ||
unidentified
|
But hey, Jussie Smollett, that dude... That's intense lying! | |
Yeah! | ||
I think you should get an Oscar. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow! | |
I think so too. | ||
We should get an Oscar for that. | ||
Just like Simone Biles got the Athlete of the Year, even though she, like, pulled out of all the competitions. | ||
But you know how they do, like, the Academy Award, like, actors will make a pitch video to, like, try... Like, that's what they do, right, Ian? | ||
Like, they'll have, like... Like, the actors will make, like, a video campaigning to win... Oh, I don't know. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Like, to win an Emmy or something. | ||
We should make an Emmy Oscar campaign for Jussie Smollett. | ||
Oh my goodness, this is a really good idea. | ||
And you know what? | ||
unidentified
|
He could use our support. | |
We'll have like slow motion scenes and it'll be like, for your consideration, Jussie Smollett. | ||
And then it shows him crying. | ||
He's like, I fought back! | ||
unidentified
|
I've fought back! | |
Jim Cramer saying the economy's doing great, better than ever! | ||
Don Lemon singing the praises of Biden, saying Cass is down 5 cents! | ||
I'm writing this down the fake news! | ||
We need our own awards! | ||
And Chris Cuomo saying that he treats stories about his brother the same as anything else! | ||
We also need like a top globalist award. | ||
Who's gonna get the most? | ||
It's always Klaus. | ||
unidentified
|
He won an Emmy. | |
Who was it that won an Emmy? | ||
Was it Andrew Cuomo? | ||
No, no, it's always just class. | ||
He won an Emmy? Who was it that won an Emmy? Was it Andrew Cuomo? | ||
Andrew Cuomo. | ||
Yeah, you gotta get that in there. | ||
He had to give it back though. | ||
unidentified
|
For your consideration. | |
The fake news Emmys. | ||
He had a huge book deal too. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
And Chris Cuomo's book deal is scrapped too. | ||
Andrew Cuomo just like single-handedly ruined that entire family. | ||
I mean I guess he did get the Tappan Zee Bridge renamed after his dad. | ||
But I mean, it really should just be the Tappan Zee Bridge. | ||
What's it called now? | ||
The Mario Cuomo Bridge. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, gross. | |
The Tappan Zee Bridge is classic. | ||
It's in really rosy. | ||
You know, I can tap across the Tappan Zee. | ||
You know, the Sphinx in Egypt, that was by one of the Pharaoh's kids, apparently. | ||
It used to be a lion, a giant lion statue. | ||
And he carved the face, had the face of it carved out to be his father's face. | ||
And they hated it so much that he had disfigured this beautiful lion statue that they destroyed the nose. | ||
Is that what happened? | ||
And that's kind of the story is what I've read. | ||
unidentified
|
That's a great story. | |
I was watching Joe Rogan. | ||
Oh! | ||
There was a guy who said that there used to be water there. | ||
There was like water damage on the Sphinx. | ||
Like an east-to-west river. | ||
That's cool. | ||
Like the largest river on Earth ran east-to-west across the Sahara. | ||
Whoa, that's crazy. | ||
That's ocean, Sam. | ||
And they said that means the Sphinx is older than we realize. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yep. | ||
That was a crazy episode. | ||
That was so cool. | ||
unidentified
|
When humans and lions... And now we're totally derailed. | |
We were talking about Julian Assange. | ||
Cuomo renaming the bridge after his father and then how the Egyptians were so angry that he did that they defaced it. | ||
I think I think I did write this down. | ||
I think we should put together a fake news Emmys. | ||
We should have like Jim Cramer saying the economy is doing well. | ||
You know, Joe Biden saying no mandates, you know, that kind of thing. | ||
Jussie Smollett crying on TV. | ||
I think Jussie is going to take it, man, because you got to let's be real. | ||
All right. | ||
We offer a prize. | ||
We offer a prize reward, and he'll definitely have to come. | ||
I will quite literally get a big $1,000 check and literally offer it to them and give them the check. | ||
You mean like a giant one, like on Happy Gilmore. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
And they stand holding up the Fake News Emmy Award and take a picture with it, and they will get a check for $1,000. | ||
For themselves or to the charity of their choice? | ||
To them. | ||
I will literally give $1,000 as a prize for winning, But they gotta take a picture holding up the big check saying fake news Emmys. | ||
Right. | ||
And then we'll do a video and we'll celebrate it. | ||
Amazing. | ||
They won't accept the money. | ||
Nobody would. | ||
I think that's really funny. | ||
But look, politics aside, we all need to recognize Jussie Smollett is one of the greatest actors of this or any generation. | ||
Dr. Fauci, I think, is in the consideration as well for the huge lies that he's been telling. | ||
The crazy thing about Smollett, too, is like he went out there and he lied in order to elevate his status as a victim. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know, to claim that and in order to, like, show how white supremacist the American society is. | ||
And he hired two black guys. | ||
To beat him up and then he claimed that those black guys were homophobic even though one of them He was like fooling around with or whatever. | ||
Yeah, it's like really you're first of all, that's how you treat your friends That's how you treat someone that you're like Really into apparently like come on And then everyone's still standing by him and it's like really cuz Smollett would not stand by you. | ||
unidentified
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He's He throws his boys under the bus He can lie. | |
He's got it. | ||
It's impressive. | ||
Him and Fauci, I say. | ||
And how much people are backing him still. | ||
People are still backing him. | ||
I have to imagine that right now in Hollywood, they're like, man, I can't believe Jussie did that. | ||
But the boy can act. | ||
unidentified
|
He can. | |
Doesn't he have, he has a film out, like some B-boy type of... Does he really? | ||
Yeah, or he was like working on it. | ||
He was writing a screenplay during this whole period of time and he couldn't get any work. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Poor Jussie. | ||
No, I mean this sincerely, though. | ||
I mean, you gotta do something, you know? | ||
I mean, at least be productive. | ||
But I do mean this sincerely. | ||
I really do think Jussie Smollett is talented. | ||
I genuinely believe that. | ||
You know, when he went on TV and he kept a straight face and the way he lied and the way he played everybody, the dude really can act. | ||
And you gotta understand that a lot of these actors, when they're on movie sets, they have, you know, cut, try again, cut, try again, hey, try it like this. | ||
For Jussie to be sitting on the hot seat on GMA, And go through that interview and nail the crying and everything. | ||
I genuinely believe, like, this guy. | ||
Yeah, he's got some theater experience. | ||
He definitely is good at what he does. | ||
He's just a scumbag. | ||
He's a great sociopath. | ||
I guess, you know, to a certain extent, he wrote a great script. | ||
Like, this should be the script. | ||
This is the story. | ||
Nobody cares what he thinks about anything else. | ||
Like, this is the story. | ||
And he could play himself. | ||
Or he should play one of the Osandari. | ||
Hillary Clinton should also be in the running. | ||
She just came out and started crying after reciting her speech, if she would have won the presidency. | ||
How do you do that? | ||
If that were me and I had so publicly been humiliated like that, I would never, first of all, I would never go back and read the speech, but I would never publicly be like, my goodness, to go out there and show everybody. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
She's now shilling a course where she's charging people money. | ||
But everyone's still backing her. | ||
Also, how much Clinton was on the Epstein plane. | ||
I would have trouble just like facing society. | ||
I would be like, and I'm over here in Chappaqua. | ||
unidentified
|
We're gonna have a tea. | |
When we do the Hillary Clinton, for your consideration, for the fake news Emmys, we can do one of two things. | ||
One, where she's like, I'm now going to read you my speech where I have to won the presidency. | ||
And then she like briefly turns into a lizard, puts eye drops and gigantic lizard eyes, and then changes back and goes, Or she could be a robot and she's sitting there going, engage crying sequence and then water just sprays out of her eyes. | ||
Violently. | ||
unidentified
|
Like an anime character. | |
It was watching her cry. | ||
I'll do air quotes here. | ||
I was just like, wow, does she think that like, I wonder if she actually can cry. | ||
I wonder if she's like hardcore sociopath and she can't lie. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
From my own personal perspective and opinion, I mean, what else do you need to know about a career politician that literally has celebrated the brutal torture and death of Muammar Gaddafi? | ||
What did she say? | ||
She was like, we came, we saw, he died. | ||
And the videos of what happened to Gaddafi were absolutely horrific. | ||
Do you know, when I was a kid, I lived in Hanover, Massachusetts, and for the 4th of July one year, I think I was in like 4th or 5th grade, there was a bonfire with an effigy of Muammar Gaddafi burned at the stake, and everyone cheered. | ||
And I was like, yay! | ||
And also people used to make fun of me, like all the kids would make fun of me. | ||
They'd be like, oh Libby, is Gaddafi your uncle? | ||
Oh my god, you are literally the stupidest people in all the suburbs. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
Hillary Clinton seems to me like the kind of person where, like, she's smoking a cigarette and she'll, like, walk past, like, a little kid and then just, like, put the cigarette out on the kid's head and flick it. | ||
She is definitely the kind of person to just pop your balloon just because she can. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
100%. | |
Accidentally jostle your ice cream. | ||
Yeah, a little bit. | ||
Well, like, you remember that story that former, I think it was an Air Force guy, or was it a Secret Service guy, wrote a book? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And he said that there was, like, they were on a plane, and there were Air Force, like, officers who were on this plane transporting Hillary, and she holds up her empty wine glass and goes, My gosh. | ||
And then like, these guys are like, yo, I am like an officer in the Air Force. | ||
I'm not here to pour you wine. | ||
And she just kept going, like. | ||
Wow. | ||
Did you cough drop? | ||
Yes. | ||
Are you coughing, ma'am? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
If you'd like to get up and grab your own drink, you might as well. | ||
Maybe that'll clear your throat. | ||
By all means. | ||
unidentified
|
Get it yourself. | |
Yeah, there's a lot of horrible human beings. | ||
That's like I say to my kid, you know? | ||
He'll be like, Mom, can I have some more juice? | ||
And I'll be like, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
By all means. | |
You know right where that is. | ||
unidentified
|
Take it away. | |
It's right over there. | ||
There's cups and everything. | ||
You even know where those are. | ||
My parents would be like, I don't know. | ||
Can you? | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Like, oh. | ||
And I'd be like, are you asking for permission? | ||
Because if you want it, you can go and do it yourself. | ||
Yeah. | ||
There's so many stories of these, like, snobby elitists treating people absolutely horribly. | ||
unidentified
|
I remember talking to one of those... Wait, can we just pause for a second? | |
The snobby elitists are treating people badly? | ||
Yeah, who would have thought? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know! | |
How could that be? | ||
unidentified
|
But I remember... Do you have evidence? | |
I have a hunch, just a little bit there, but I remember even talking to one of the staff members that was helping out the Bilderberg group and they were serving the Bilderberg members and they were told specifically, don't look them in the eye, don't start conversations, don't talk to them, look down and make sure that all their needs are served whenever they might even have a need or you might think they might have a need. | ||
It's like on Fawlty Towers, don't talk about the war. | ||
Yeah, and they literally can't even look people in the eyes as they're serving them and they're supposed to look down the whole time and it's just utterly ridiculous. | ||
It's kind of weird with that kind of elitism now because you'll go places and the staff is all masked up and you don't have to. | ||
And Nancy Pelosi doesn't have to. | ||
She's very happy. | ||
But she's fined Marjorie Taylor Greene, like, a whole ton of money for not masking, and she doesn't do it herself. | ||
Someone pointed out that in the Hunger Games that there was, like, the capital city had servants who had their tongues cut out and had to wear masks or something. | ||
I forget what they were called. | ||
You guys remember what they were called? | ||
I forget, but they just had their tongues cut out. | ||
They didn't have to wear masks. | ||
Oh, OK. | ||
No, I'm pretty sure there was an image of them, like, wearing masks. | ||
I'll look it up. | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
People in comment and chat can get us on that one. | ||
But is it any surprise to you that this is what humans do? | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Avoid eye contact because when you make eye contact with someone you're stealing their energy and you're changing the way their brain works. | ||
So these people don't want to be tainted. | ||
There's no joy in treating people badly. | ||
You know, I mean, there's it's like, I found this too, you know, during the pandemic, but even before, like, if I'm going to go into a place, if I'm going to, I don't know, buy something from person or order something, we're both experiencing this moment of life together. | ||
Like, let's just have it not suck. | ||
You know, let me acknowledge you. | ||
You can acknowledge me. | ||
We're here together. | ||
There's no issue. | ||
I was in a restaurant on my birthday. | ||
I took my son out for like seafood feast basically for my birthday, which is my favorite thing. | ||
And the waitress, and this was down the shore in Jersey, we were like, hi, you know, how's it going? | ||
you know, whatever, order our food. | ||
And at the end of the meal, she was like, I just want to thank you guys for being so nice. | ||
And we were like, uh, what do you mean? | ||
And she was saying that people come in there, they don't look at her, they're gruff, | ||
they just complain at her, they tip her poorly, like all of the mean things. | ||
And I was like, but you're here at this restaurant. | ||
You just brought me a meal. | ||
That is so nice. | ||
That's so wonderful that I could come here and order a meal and you would bring it to me. | ||
That's great. | ||
I'm so grateful for that. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
What a thing. | ||
When I got to eat, I'm a bit of a commie and I always tip ridiculously high amounts. | ||
Sure. | ||
But I figured out a way to exploit Luke's and Cap's So I'm like Lib left when I'm tipping. | ||
I'm like, I'm going to give this waiter a $100 tip. | ||
And then I'm like, now how do I convince Luke, who's Lib right, so I make it a competition? | ||
And I'm like, well, look, I'm going to get the better service. | ||
Luke, can you hand it out? | ||
Luke's like, I'll tip better. | ||
And then Luke ends up tipping. | ||
I'm pretty sure I started the last competition. | ||
You started the first one. | ||
The first one was pretty hardcore. | ||
And I was like, all right, we can play. | ||
But at the end of the day, you know, it's all in a good service since the people actually serving us do get a lot of support. | ||
Check it out. | ||
I got this story here from Timcast.com. | ||
Inflation soars to nearly 40-year high. | ||
I want you guys to understand the Consumer Price Index rose 6.8% in November. | ||
That means from November of last year till this November, if you did not get at least a 7% raise, a 6.8% raise, then you are losing money. | ||
So I would like to stress, people will forget your words. | ||
People will forget your accomplishments, but people will never forget you voted for Joe Biden because this is part of the reason why we have this. | ||
Shout out to thebestpoliticalshirts.com. | ||
But I genuinely mean it. | ||
I mean a lot of people who voted for Joe Biden, this is what you get. | ||
Now, I think we all know that inflation has been really, really bad. | ||
We don't need, like, the latest metric to make us understand this. | ||
What I really want to get at, as we're ragging on the snobby elites, is this article, which this one lit a flame in me from The Intercept. | ||
Inflation is good for you. | ||
Don't panic over milk prices. | ||
Inflation is bad for the 1%, but helps out almost everyone else. | ||
That is This is a funded, shill, controlled opposition, garbage media outlet lying to people. | ||
Let me just explain to all of you. | ||
Inflation does nothing to the 1%. | ||
In fact, it helps them. | ||
One thing he points out in this article that is true is that debt becomes worth less as the dollar becomes worth less. | ||
If I owe someone $10 but then $10 can't buy you anything anymore, I basically don't owe somebody any money, right? | ||
And he argues that's good for poor people because poor people hold all the debt. | ||
The problem is they still have the debt. | ||
Now they can't afford to buy food either. | ||
So maybe they'll get lucky, and eventually their wages will go up, and then they can pay off their debt. | ||
But let me make one thing clear. | ||
If you got $50,000 in debt, and that debt gets devalued because of inflation, and you make $15 an hour, your $15 an hour is devalued because of inflation too, and you still keep can't pay off your debt and now you can't buy food. But a | ||
rich person can take their money as soon as they get it, invest it in stocks and assets, which will go | ||
up in value during inflation, and they'll say, has no effect on me. And I tell you this, rich people | ||
that go to the store, they don't know or care about the price of milk. The intercept and these far | ||
left establishment crackpots are manipulating poor people so they can keep their crackpot | ||
Biden in power. And this one pisses me off. Yeah, because it actually hurts people tremendously. | ||
unidentified
|
And. | |
It hurts the weakest, it hurts the poorest people in our society, and it takes advantage of them in such an unfair freaking way where the Federal Reserve is literally printing money, giving it to their friends in Wall Street, and everyone else is finding it harder and harder to make ends meet. | ||
And why is that? | ||
Well, it's not because of a political party. | ||
It's because of the financial system being literally a Ponzi scheme that everyone's going through. | ||
And this is not just the intercept. | ||
This has been a coordinated effort through a lot of corporate media organizations that have been repeating the same lines. | ||
Inflation's great. | ||
CNN had a similar headline. | ||
CNN just had Don Lemon on singing the praises of the president of the United States saying, can you believe it? | ||
unidentified
|
So, ah, five cents less for gas. | |
Absolutely insane rhetoric, celebration, victory in poor people becoming poorer and the rich people becoming more powerful than they ever have been through the largest transfer of wealth in recorded human history that we're going through right now. | ||
And it's sickening to see happen right in front of our eyes. | ||
And then the corporate media lied to the people saying it's not even happening. | ||
You're better off. | ||
No, you're not. | ||
This is a dirty, dirty game. | ||
This makes me angrier than I've been for a lot of issues. | ||
Granted, I'm not nearly as mad as when the FBI raided James O'Keefe. | ||
That was clearly infuriating for me. | ||
But to see all of these massive, multinational, billion-dollar corporations trying to convince poor people that they are gutting your savings, your life, your ability to buy food, Everything you work for, for your family, for your kids, trying to build a better life, they are stripping that away. | ||
They are gutting you. | ||
You are being screwed over by the elites. | ||
And then, what do they do? | ||
They have The Intercept, progressives, and CNN tell you it's a good thing it's happening. | ||
These poor people who get stuck in this and believe this trash. | ||
That's what I want. | ||
I don't want any power over any of you. | ||
I don't want any money from you. | ||
I want you to know that you have agency, that you should keep the money you earn, that you have a right to control your labor, and that these big media companies are lying to you so that the Amazons, the Walmarts, these billionaires are stripping away your value while their cronies in the Federal Reserve and the government are printing away money and screwing every one of us. | ||
And you know who says this? | ||
Steve Bannon says this. | ||
They call him far-right. | ||
We have more in common with left populists than we do with the establishment. | ||
The problem is people watch too much CNN and believe this crap. | ||
If you are, look, if you are on the left, if you're a progressive or you know someone who is, please explain to them that CNN is a trash rag that is lying about everything. | ||
We're being ripped off by the entirety of the establishment. | ||
Well, and then what they do, too, is then the federal government wants to give everybody a lot of money, right? | ||
They want to not only, not only they're jacking up their prices and everything, they want to divide Americans from their basic ability to earn a living on their own. | ||
So they want to feed everybody money. | ||
They want to feed everybody all of these services so that then Americans are just entirely reliant on the federal government and don't have the ability to, you know, earn their own bread, take care of their own families, you know, and then we're gonna be, then we're afraid to speak up. | ||
Why would we, how could we possibly speak up against something that's so big and has so much control over our lives at that point? | ||
They control, you know, they control health care, they control our income, they control our families. | ||
That's what all of these programs are about. | ||
That's what these vast social engineering programs are about. | ||
Where it's like, let's give everybody some free money. | ||
It's not free money. | ||
It's control money. | ||
It's money to take your liberty away from you. | ||
You guys sound like crazy conspiracy theorists. | ||
I believe Jim Cramer of CNBC who just said that today we have the strongest economy perhaps That I've ever seen. | ||
Yes, that's literally what he said today. | ||
I don't know if you guys saw, but the Democrats were tweeting about all of the jobs that Joe Biden has created. | ||
And I really hope that all the rest of you guys saw this chart that they put out showing the gas prices are coming down. | ||
Well, if you look closely, it's zoomed in so tight to the cents on the dollar. | ||
It goes from like $3.38 to $3.36. | ||
And they're like, oh my gosh, the gas prices are coming down. | ||
And it's like, you guys are Joking, right? | ||
Yes. | ||
Seriously, Joe Biden is not creating jobs. | ||
He's allowing people to go back to work because he's a generous God. | ||
Right. | ||
I'd like you all to see this tweet. | ||
Yes. | ||
A generous God. | ||
That's what he said. | ||
Take a look at this. | ||
This is the Democrats on Twitter. | ||
Welcome to the Biden boom. | ||
Got ratioed. | ||
And it says jobs created in the first 10 months of presidency. | ||
Under Biden, the economy has outperformed the past four Republican presidents' job growth numbers. | ||
The funny thing about this is, they, they're, it's just, if you fall for this stuff, first, | ||
it would be important to compare Biden to Obama. Oh, that would make Obama look bad. | ||
And, and Clinton. | ||
No, it's just the Republicans. | ||
They don't mention that the job growth under Biden is actually stagnant, and what happened was there was a major collapse when Democrat governors locked down their states, and then it bounced back only a certain amount, and it's struggled to recover since then. | ||
But of course, if you take away 6 million jobs, and then snap your fingers and say you can work again, and you get 5.8 million jobs, then all of a sudden they're like, look how many jobs you made! | ||
These people are evil, man. | ||
I don't like Mitch McConnell. | ||
I don't like Lindsey Graham. | ||
I don't like Kevin McCarthy. | ||
I don't like the establishment Republicans. | ||
Their whole plan is obstruction and do nothing, and you elect these people again and they will do nothing. | ||
We need to primary them. | ||
And look, this is why I cheered when AOC beat Crowley in New York, because screw the establishment Democrats. | ||
I'll take whoever I can get. | ||
The problem? | ||
I think AOC is still just another establishment Democrat, but she's wearing a Bernie mask. | ||
That being said, primary all of them. | ||
I donated to a progressive leftist who was trying to primary Nancy Pelosi, because I would rather someone be in office saying, I have bad policy ideas, but I recognize these huge lists of problems, and be like, I can agree with that, and we can work on something. | ||
But when you have the Biden administration, the establishment Democrats, the Hillary Clintons, I came, we saw, he died, and their whole plan is, well, if we bloat more kids in a foreign country, maybe that'll be good for the economy. | ||
Then we'll claim to have some kind of win. | ||
And they gaffe with Afghanistan. | ||
We have a real opportunity to end that war. | ||
They just burn it to the ground. | ||
They destroy that. | ||
I would rather have some crackpot lefty who's like, I just want Americans to have health care. | ||
And then I can be like, that's a bad plan for health care. | ||
But at least we agree we're not going to spend our money on blowing up kids. | ||
Well, and it's so interesting, too, that now they're laying the groundwork for having like a whole Ukraine thing. | ||
It's like they can't exist without having some war to go fight. | ||
But they're not going to go against China. | ||
China's their business partner. | ||
No, no. | ||
And we saw that already. | ||
You know, we should have been standing up for Hong Kong and we obviously we should have been standing up for Hong Kong and we just let them get totally destroyed. | ||
That was a. | ||
That was a relatively free place, you know, and we just let them, we just let those protesters be imprisoned. | ||
We let the pro-democracy movement die. | ||
And we did that because we're just shilling for China. | ||
It's so stupid. | ||
Like these activists were out there with their lives fighting for democracy in Hong Kong, fighting for free speech, you know, working on that so hard. | ||
And we just let them down. | ||
And in letting down Hong Kong, I do feel like we let down They don't believe it at all. | ||
They just don't even believe it. | ||
Saki, you know coming out there talking about the importance of democracy globally, and it's just such an | ||
obvious Garbage thing. They don't believe it at all. They just don't | ||
even believe it if they believed it we would have stood up for Hong Kong | ||
Yeah, I remember being in Hong Kong during the uprisings and the protests there and they were | ||
absolutely intense And there was a warning. | ||
I remember Spray Painted saying, you know, this happened here, but it's going to happen everywhere soon. | ||
And it's only a matter of time. | ||
But they said it more eloquently. | ||
I forgot the exact phrasing of it. | ||
But to your point, Tim, I definitely agree with you. | ||
Mandatory term limits. | ||
Put new people in there. | ||
Let them give a try. | ||
Kick them out. | ||
Kick all the people out to prevent all the corruption. | ||
There's a lot of corruption. | ||
I think term limits could possibly result in shadow organizers. | ||
And so there's challenges there. | ||
There's already a lot of shadows. | ||
It's true, it's true. | ||
But why should we tell Ron Paul he can't run anymore because we're upset that Nancy Pelosi is running too, you know what I mean? | ||
It's like, you know, I suppose it goes either way, right? | ||
Term limits get rid of the bad, but they could also get rid of the good. | ||
The way I see it is that they're all criminals. | ||
Some criminals are better because they have more experience. | ||
So let in the new criminals. | ||
Whenever you have someone stealing money and then using it for their own purposes, I have my own definitions and my own understanding of it, but you either have expert criminals or you have rookie criminals. | ||
I'd rather deal with rookie criminals that don't know what they're doing, that aren't intertwined with the system, as much as the people who are definitely intertwined, like Nancy Pelosi. | ||
I think it's crazy that we're supposed to say Dr. Jill Biden, but we're not supposed to say Dr. Rand Paul. | ||
Right. | ||
Right, right, right. | ||
She's totally a fake doctor. | ||
She's a fake doctor. | ||
We gotta talk about one of the most important people in the world, my friends. | ||
This is from TimCast.com. | ||
Court rules Julian Assange can be extradited, overturning previous ruling. | ||
The final decision to extradite falls to UK home security Priti Patel. | ||
The report says England's High Court said Wikileaks founder Julian Assange could be extradited to the United States to face espionage charges. | ||
And I love how when you watch the shill establishment Democrat media, they're like, oh, he was hacking and the case is solid in mourning Joe spewing word vomit about complete bullish. | ||
That's not true. | ||
Here's the reality. | ||
Julian Assange is one of the most important journalists of this or any generation. | ||
He exposed malfeasance for, I mean, his entire career, ranging from malfeasance in Sub-Saharan African nations, all the way to the Democratic National Committee. | ||
For this, the establishment seeks to destroy his life, and they've locked him up now for, what, over a decade? | ||
How long has it been? | ||
His first arrest was ten years ago, I believe. | ||
Ten years. | ||
No, eleven years, excuse me. | ||
Eleven years since his arrest in the United Kingdom. | ||
It is overt and in our faces what the scumbags who believe they have moral authority over you and who control these systems do, with people like Julian Assange, who has done nothing wrong. | ||
He's been accused of completely BS charges, as far as I'm concerned. | ||
But let's talk about something very, very important. | ||
Julian Assange exposes corruption. | ||
Jeffrey Epstein was engaged in some of the most disgusting and psychotic corruption and atrocities we've seen, and who gets to go free and sit... Where was he at? | ||
Queen Elizabeth's Cottage? | ||
He was, yeah. | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
You know what's really funny is that they say that there's a conspiracy about creepy elitists and what they want to do and all that stuff, and it's really funny when the Maxwell trial ends with only a few witnesses in a few weeks, Epstein gets away with everything he's doing for two decades, and Julian Assange Who's like, here's evidence of malfeasance. | ||
They're like, destroy his life. | ||
End him. | ||
It's obvious. | ||
Yeah, this is a huge, huge injustice and has major ramifications for not just the free press in the United States, but for the world. | ||
Julian Assange is not an American citizen. | ||
For him to be ruled, to be extradited to the United States to face charges because he embarrassed the deep state, because he embarrassed the Pentagon and the intelligence agencies of this country by showing the country what they were actually doing and not falling for their lies, it's just absolutely insane. | ||
unidentified
|
Julian aside, oh, what a really part of Don't bump the camera don't bump the camera. I'm on it home | |
somebody somebody wanna I gotta turn I gotta turn on this other camera. | ||
Hi, guys. | ||
unidentified
|
20 minutes? | |
What up, sexy? | ||
You gotta see this guy's suit. | ||
He's wearing a nice fine suit. | ||
We're talking about Julian Assange. | ||
I just heard. | ||
I've been listening. | ||
I heard that you were talking about China and I was sitting in Washington, D.C. | ||
and I've said, I've got to go. | ||
I've got to go. | ||
And now I'm here. | ||
Now I'm here. | ||
Good. | ||
Tell us about it. | ||
Here I am. | ||
So when you were talking about Hong Kong and thank you so much for being here, Libby. | ||
We love Libby. | ||
Don't we all love Libby? | ||
unidentified
|
It's been a minute. | |
It has been a minute. | ||
No, when we did not support Hong Kong, when we passed them over, when we said, even going back into the 1990s, remember this was the original sense of it, right? | ||
They said, if we turn Hong Kong over, then Hong Kong's capitalist and liberal system will be passed on, and these ideals of freedom will go into China, China will become democratic, the CCP will disintegrate, it'll be amazing, and Gordon Chang wrote his book, The Collapse of the CCP, and it's coming. | ||
It's gonna be so great. | ||
And you look at everything, everything that Luke talks about, everything that Tim talks about, everyone talks about. | ||
Yeah, we did open up that pathway, but it wasn't a one-way street. | ||
It turned out it was a two-way street. | ||
And so we tried to send freedom in. | ||
It didn't take, but what did they send our way? | ||
Communism. | ||
Communism, authoritarianism, totalitarianism. | ||
And we didn't support them. | ||
And I just, I had to come in and say it. | ||
I just, I'm sorry. | ||
I had to just come in and say it. | ||
I've been sitting outside all day, actually. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
Yes, I have. | ||
Did you meet my son downstairs? | ||
No, I met your son last year. | ||
I know, but is he downstairs? | ||
No, no, I didn't see him at all. | ||
There was some guy running and screaming about some chickens earlier. | ||
I don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
Should I be terrified right now? | |
Well, I mean, it depends how much you like chickens. | ||
We're a fan of the chickens. | ||
We are a fan of the chickens. | ||
Talking about Assange and the way, I don't know if you heard this last part, we were just talking about Assange. | ||
Yeah, I saw that. | ||
I saw that he might be extradited. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh, right. | ||
Okay. | ||
Is it a mic? | ||
It's a mic? | ||
I thought it was ruled that he was. | ||
So the appeal was ruled on, but there's still one last decision, I believe at a secretarial level, on whether or not he'll be brought back to the United States for the crime of embarrassing the regime. | ||
Yeah, pretty much. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's what it should say. | ||
Is the democratic justice of American goodness like this, this veneer, this like illusion and then what's really happening is the most corrupt Epstein like child trafficking thing and it's this is our government is it's that and so that's why they're going Well, the only question you have to ask about Ghislaine Maxwell is why is it that the oldest prosecutor that SDNY assigned to that case is 37 years old? | ||
The other person they add on is James Comey's daughter, right? | ||
That's not an investigation. | ||
That's a cover-up. | ||
This is the worst prosecution I've seen. | ||
You know that she actually might get acquitted. | ||
She actually might get acquitted because they're not introducing evidence of specific crimes that she committed in terms of sex trafficking. | ||
Look, I sat through the Manafort trial. | ||
I remember here are the documents. | ||
Here are the bank records. | ||
Here are the transfers. | ||
Here are the emails, right? | ||
I know what it looks like. | ||
Look, look at how this is all you have to do. | ||
This is all you have to say. | ||
Take the two stories. | ||
Look at how the government's going after Julian Assange, and look at how light they are against Ghislaine Maxfield. | ||
That's exactly what I was saying. | ||
And not only that, but they have thousands of photos, thousands of videotapes that should have been entered into evidence. | ||
20,000. | ||
I gotta pull up this meme. | ||
So I initially discovered this thanks to Seamus of Freedom Tunes, because he made a very hilarious video about left-wing memes, and he talked about this. | ||
But there was something I discovered that was really funny. | ||
So this woman, this is Abby Richards, and she's a myths and disinformation researcher. | ||
This is fantastic. | ||
So she has this tweet where she said, conspiracy theories are everywhere and people don't understand how harmful they are. | ||
I made the conspiracy chart over a year ago. | ||
Here's the updated version. | ||
And so it's actually quite silly. | ||
She says speculation line clear. | ||
Here's one that says like grounded in reality. | ||
It's like Watergate MK Ultra. | ||
Then it says, we have some questions, and Iran-Contra is in there. | ||
And a lot of people are like, we know that happened. | ||
That's a historical event. | ||
It was an actual government conspiracy. | ||
It certainly was. | ||
Here's the best part though, right? | ||
I want to show you the best part. | ||
I remember Ali North testifying. | ||
So let me, this is the old version she made last year. | ||
I was going to say, do you have the one from last year? | ||
I have the one from last year. | ||
There's a reason she had to update. | ||
Right, right, right. | ||
unidentified
|
Let me just show you. | |
I want to show you. | ||
I wonder what that is. | ||
There were a few things. | ||
Well, hold on. | ||
Let me, we'll go through all of it. | ||
Speaking of China. | ||
But let me show you, let me show you the most, my favorite one is this. | ||
The top of the pyramid, it says, world ruled by supreme shadow elites. | ||
Once you believe one, you usually believe most, get help. | ||
She calls all of these theories anti-semitic. | ||
And I noticed one funny one in there when I was reading this. | ||
And it says, Bill Gates microchipping. | ||
And that is in the detached from reality anti-semitic section. | ||
She had to change it because apparently she discovered how to use Google. | ||
This story from the National Post, Bill Gates funds birth control microchip that lasts 16 years inside the body and can be turned on or off with remote control. | ||
That's not a conspiracy theory! | ||
There was one, there was another one that she had last year. | ||
This is the one from this year, right? | ||
Cultural Marxism is up there. | ||
Yeah, of course. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So the one, right? | ||
Wait, scroll, but go back into science denial. | ||
This is the one from last year. | ||
Zoom in right below where it says 5G. | ||
Look what it says was a conspiracy theory. | ||
COVID-19 made in lab. | ||
I love that one. | ||
Funny how that one had to get taken off this year. | ||
I wonder what could have happened. | ||
Could it have been soy boys? | ||
Soy boys are in there? | ||
Soy boys isn't that a conspiracy? | ||
They're a fact. | ||
Alien abductions is less of a conspiracy theory than And hypogonadism. | ||
It's called hypogonadism. | ||
They went after Tucker Carlson for talking about this. | ||
The idea that with some people, when they can track COVID-19, you can go to the NIH's website and see it's called hypogonadism, and it actually will lower your testosterone the same way that we've seen testosterone levels going down since the 1970s. | ||
What is mattress firm? | ||
Yeah, what is that? | ||
So the mattress firm one, I know this one, was that the reason that it was the theory that there were, that there, cause it was trending on Twitter. | ||
This is what I do. | ||
I find out something is trending on Twitter. | ||
I say, Oh, this is trending on Twitter. | ||
And this is what people are saying. | ||
And then people say, I'm promoting it. | ||
Right. | ||
And so, right. | ||
So the mattress firm thing was people said, why are there so many mattress firms? | ||
How could there possibly be so many people out there buying a product that you really only buy once or twice every, you know, like in your lifetime, right? | ||
That you buy a mattress. | ||
Think of it, how many times do you buy mattresses? | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like every seven or so years, right? | ||
Right, so the idea was that it was actually a money laundering operation and then people were trying to like find out if there were some issues going on because they were going around... So remember they were talking about the Wayfair thing or the Overstock.com thing? | ||
Yeah, no, that was separate. | ||
That was different from this. | ||
You guys ready? | ||
So in the old conspiracy chart, at the very top you see Deep State is up there. | ||
And that one's silly because that just refers to the establishment, you know, intelligence bureaus and agencies. | ||
It's not a conspiracy. | ||
It's literally just a function. | ||
They call it the administrative state. | ||
But just to the right is Celebs Moisturize with Children's Foreskin. | ||
I would like to pull up the Guardian from 2018. | ||
I tried the foreskin facial treatment, so you don't have to. | ||
And he literally says in the Guardian, they do this. | ||
He doesn't look good. | ||
He looks worse. | ||
I think he looks much worse. | ||
Well, there's celebrities bragging about this on national television. | ||
There was a number of them saying this on record. | ||
There was also, there were all of the Silicon Valley executives who were getting the blood of younger people pumped into their bodies. | ||
That's true. | ||
That was true too. | ||
Yeah, but for a while they said it was a conspiracy. | ||
It works. | ||
But the other thing about the mattresses real quick before we... It could work. | ||
No, no, it literally works. | ||
It is proven that doing a transfusion of younger blood helps regenerate and heal your body. | ||
Is it like a stem cell thing? | ||
Is that the idea? | ||
I think it's just because there's something in the blood. | ||
I forgot what it's called. | ||
Do you know what it's called? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Oxygen? | ||
No, no, no. | ||
When you get older, your body produces less of some particular enzyme or something. | ||
Not the plasma, right? | ||
There's something else. | ||
I forgot. | ||
You have to spin the blood a little bit and get the right particles. | ||
People use it for dental surgeries as well. | ||
Younger people have more of it, so they transfuse younger blood into an older person. | ||
It helps regenerate organs and stuff like that. | ||
But real quick, before we forget, the other thing about the mattresses is that if you want to upgrade your mattress, you can simply go to MyPillow.com and get the mattress topper. | ||
You don't have to support the money laundering operation of Mattress Firm. | ||
You use promo code POSO. | ||
The two inch or the three inch topper, particularly, we like the bigger one. | ||
We've got the foam. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
I just want to say, I appreciate how unapologetic you are about it. | ||
I appreciate the fact that you are so... No, one thing that Libby does, not everyone knows this, she likes to pass on the Bible stories to her children. | ||
Yes, well, the child. | ||
To her child, right. | ||
Just the one, but yeah. | ||
But to children in general, children in general. | ||
And one of the best ways to do that is with the MyPillow Bible Story Pillows. | ||
You pass the pillowcases, you pass... It's Noah's Ark, the nativity scene. | ||
Every single night, Jack-Jack says, good night, Joseph. | ||
Good night, Mary. | ||
Good night, baby Jesus. | ||
And good night, sheep. | ||
Available... Lindell should have you do a commercial. | ||
He really should. | ||
His commercials are next level though. | ||
We gotta go to Super Chats. | ||
I'm gonna read one from the bottom real quick because Rain20J says, Jack just strolls in suit on to start schooling everyone on China. | ||
I love it. | ||
Surprise post. | ||
I just got my Worthless Ideas shirt from Luke. | ||
Gonna wear it to Christmas. | ||
And then he says a word in Polish I can't read. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Luke, welcome to the uh, Luke, welcome to the ish show. Poso. | ||
All right, let's read some super chats. | ||
Um, the first super chat, I can't read your name because of the way youtube formats this unfortunately, | ||
but they say police are now starting to hunt down antifacels. | ||
Justice may be coming back. Let us pray. | ||
Yeah, we talked about that earlier. | ||
You saw that in California, they went after San Diego. | ||
Yeah, I mean, look, this is something that Barr had said he was going to do through the Joint Terrorism Task Forces. | ||
So finally, we're seeing little bits and pieces of fruition. | ||
And when I've worked on the Antifa problem set, I always find that there's always some guy, right? | ||
Like in the back of the office, he's usually working on the gang desk or something. | ||
And he's just got the spreadsheet full of like every Antifa All up and down the East Coast, the Philadelphia cell, the Washington, D.C. | ||
cell, the New York cell. | ||
They all know. | ||
They all know. | ||
And in fact, you remember that that time where, you know, I got into it in D.C. | ||
and there's like that photo of us. | ||
So after that, after we, you know, I got out, the police picked me up. | ||
I was in the back of the van and, you know, starting to kind of explain what happened. | ||
And there's this dude just literally sitting all the way in bed. | ||
He's like, I know who you are, Jack. | ||
Like, yeah, I know who that was. | ||
Yeah, we've been tracking you guys all week. | ||
Like, so are you. | ||
And they don't do anything about it. | ||
It's their hands are all tied. | ||
Their hands are completely tied. | ||
But there's always some guy who knows. | ||
Yeah, they have all the data. | ||
They have all the surveillance. | ||
They know everything that's going on. | ||
They have secret surveillance drones that are literally at almost every single protest. | ||
Kyle Rittenhouse proved it. | ||
I proved that story by leaking. | ||
14 months, they kept this. | ||
The FBI had, and you really want us to believe, that they only had a minute 39. | ||
No, Luke is exactly right about that. | ||
unidentified
|
They have all the databases on all the anti-famine protests. | |
Tell me about it. | ||
I was like, oh my God, that was crazy to see that. | ||
I was like, I've got a thing. | ||
Yes. | ||
I love a thing. | ||
I love when you call me with a thing. | ||
Chris Stark says the National BLM Group is a Democratic super PAC. | ||
Not only did those at the top line their pockets, but also they are the reason why the Democrats were able to amass so much campaign finances. | ||
Yeah, didn't they get like a billion dollars? | ||
Was that true? | ||
Or is that something close to it? | ||
A few years ago, they had raised a total of, wasn't it? | ||
Like how much money they made? | ||
Well, there were a few issues too, because there were people who were just kind of like opening up, you know, C3s and super packs and saying, hey, we're BLM of St. | ||
Louis. | ||
We're BLM of Arkansas. | ||
And then the local companies would say, oh, of course we're giving to BLM. | ||
But it's literally just some guy who filed a paperwork. | ||
And there were, I think there was a guy, wasn't there, maybe it was Atlanta, and it turned out that he was saying he was BLM. | ||
That's exactly, that's what I was thinking. | ||
Yeah, and he wasn't, he wasn't affiliated with anybody. | ||
No, he was just a guy who opened up. | ||
He was like, hey, I'm gonna be BLM now. | ||
Yeah, and he had like a Facebook page, and it looked, you know, and if you didn't know any better, you'd say, oh yeah, BLM. | ||
Wait, when was this? | ||
This was, you know, during the whole draft. | ||
You're not talking about the guy who had Black Lives Matter first, are you? | ||
No. | ||
There was a guy who had his own Black Lives Matter organization before the official formation. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
And they sued him. | ||
Like pre-Ferguson? | ||
I'm pretty sure. | ||
Like he said that when Black Lives Matter was like starting up, he formed an organization to do exactly what Black Lives Matter was doing, but there was no big centralized organization. | ||
And so then they went after him and all of the leftist press started claiming he was fake when he was He was the real guy. | ||
He was a regular activist who was raising money and it just so happened that Black Lives | ||
Matter became huge and they donated to him. | ||
I think he got like $350K in total throughout his few years operating. | ||
It became huge but it's still not like a very organized organization, right? | ||
I mean, you even heard Patrisse Cullors talking about Black Lives Matter, saying that it's leaderless, you know, that it doesn't have any leader, that you could take one leader out and a new leader would emerge. | ||
It's a hydra, you know, it doesn't have... So it has the people who are like profiting from it. | ||
Zombie horde. | ||
But we do have to give Black Lives Matter credit, and I don't think I heard you guys say this earlier, that they came out this week and they said that no matter what happens in that courtroom in Chicago, we believe Jussie Smollett. | ||
And they said, even though he's been convicted and found guilty of lying to the police, we still believe Jussie Smollett. | ||
Take the loss, people. | ||
You know, I guess the cop who arrested him said that if he had apologized, they'd let him go. | ||
I believe it. | ||
Really? | ||
But he stood firm. | ||
He stood his ground. | ||
He was attacked by homophobic white supremacist Trump supporters who were actually black guys that he worked with on a TV show. | ||
The crazy thing too is he probably wouldn't have been facing jail time until he got up and perjured himself for two full days in front of the jury with the judge. | ||
It's like, you know, the piece of legal advice, and Will Chamberlain mentioned it, he's like, yeah, don't do that. | ||
That's not a great plan. | ||
I would have absolutely 100% forgiven and respected Justice Millett if he apologized and owned up to it. | ||
100%. | ||
This was ill thought out. | ||
This was perhaps not the thing to do. | ||
Let's hear it. | ||
Do you remember Joey Salads? | ||
Joey, he took a car, brought it to this apartment building. | ||
He put a bunch of Trump stickers and stuff in it. | ||
And then he's like, let's see what happens. | ||
And then he hired black people to smash it up. | ||
And they said, you're racist, you staged this as a hoax, all this stuff. | ||
He got caught. | ||
But wasn't it supposed to see, he wanted to see what people's reaction to seeing that would be? | ||
Or is it one of those social experiment things? | ||
He made a video where you believed, the guy who filmed it waited for him to publish it, where you believed that by parking a car with Trump stuff in it, A bunch of young black men would destroy it, just smash the car up. | ||
And it was fake. | ||
He hired the guys. | ||
It was staged. | ||
And it was making people believe that there was this racist attack. | ||
And then he got called out. | ||
And then everyone started slamming him. | ||
And he decided to turn around, own up to it, apologize. | ||
He flat out said, in an interview with me, I was caught up in the money and the clicks. | ||
I didn't understand how far gone I had become when I was chasing after this stuff. | ||
And I was like, dude, If you're gonna come out and own that, like, we wanna welcome you back to the light and say, just please don't do it again, and now what does he do? | ||
He does viral clips where it's him and his girlfriend doing pranks, and it's wholesome and family-friendly for the most part. | ||
Jussie Smollett could've done the same thing, and I would've said the exact same thing. | ||
I don't want Jussie turning towards the darkness, I want him to come back to the light. | ||
I want him to be a figure to inspire positivity. | ||
But he doubles down, he perjures himself, and now he's gonna go to jail for it. | ||
Well, and forgiveness is such a beautiful thing and it's something that they, you know, the contemporary left has no room for. | ||
An admission of guilt on the left is, you know, a reason to believe further in your guilt and culpability. | ||
There's no way out of it, you know, and that's not... | ||
That's one thing that I think Christianity offers that we miss so much in contemporary | ||
society is that you can say, I'm sorry. | ||
And you know, then the person who you offended in some way can say, hey, no worries. | ||
We're good now. | ||
In Christianity, man being flawed, man having a sinful nature, this is built in, right? | ||
It's like, oh, I committed a sin. | ||
Yeah, we know. | ||
We all do. | ||
That's part of it. | ||
Yeah, you can never be perfect and that's good. | ||
That's for the best. | ||
But in sort of like the secular religion of woke progressivists, you know, whatever you want to call modern communism that we have today, there isn't. | ||
So they've created, it is a religion, right? | ||
But it's so interesting. | ||
But it has no atonement. | ||
Right. | ||
And it's modern communism without class, which is so weird. | ||
It's a communism that upholds the powerful elite structure Well, that is it. | ||
Historically speaking. | ||
You know, but like, yeah, but like in the text, that's not what you would anticipate. | ||
And it just completely destroys the working class. | ||
Like the contemporary left has no respect for a working person. | ||
All right, let's read some more here. | ||
We got Tim Crespi. | ||
He says, Tim got pulled over going through a parking lot to get to another road. | ||
So did 10 other people by four different cops. | ||
Starting to align with malice. | ||
You know, I don't think getting pulled over for jumping a parking lot is like grounds to be like all cops are like, so starting to align with malice is a good way to frame it. | ||
Beginning of the month, end of the month. | ||
But like, right. | ||
But that's quotas. | ||
That's quotas, man. | ||
Michael Malice's position is there is no law so, you know, egregious that a cop is so heinous that a cop is not willing to enforce it up into up and including executing children. | ||
If you're upset that a cop pulled you over because you jumped a parking lot, you're a bit far away from where Michael is. | ||
But I do think it's important to point out that it is the grains of sand. | ||
Of cops being like, there's no humanity here, it's quite literally, I know, it was a nothing, it was a turn. | ||
I'm gonna screw you over anyway. | ||
Like, these are the kind of things that build up for people and make them finally snap. | ||
Do people know what the quotas are? | ||
Do you know what I'm talking about? | ||
Quotas, like at the end of the month, the cops are like, I'm supposed to get a thousand tickets this month. | ||
I only have 700. | ||
Let's kick them out. | ||
So be very careful about the speed limit towards the end of the month. | ||
But then at the start of the next month, you're good. | ||
Quotas are filthy, dude. | ||
I got to read one super chat. | ||
Quotas are insane. | ||
Megan Murdoch says, Tim, my birthday is tomorrow. | ||
Pretty please wish me happy birthday. | ||
Happy birthday, Megan Murdoch. | ||
unidentified
|
I can't. | |
You can. | ||
You can learn Polish. | ||
birthday in Mandarin. We had Jan Jekielek the other day. So you know Luke and him are speaking Polish and then someone | ||
super chatted how are you collecting so many polls. | ||
unidentified
|
Somebody mentioned you but then Luke was like he doesn't speak Polish. | |
I can't. | ||
unidentified
|
You can, you can learn Polish. It will be good. | |
Very good. | ||
I agree. | ||
Meme a type says vote for your local sheriff the the only elected law enforcement office definitely. Yes. Oh, yes | ||
local 100% | ||
Flash arc says Tim, please read counter woke craft to understand how to defeat the woke zombies also read this | ||
aloud What's counter woke crap? I'm not familiar. No, it sounds | ||
interesting. Is it like communists are bad. They are though. | ||
Yeah All right. Let's see. I agree | ||
unidentified
|
ditto Martin Edgar says Tim you called it. | |
The authority used the terror organizations of Antifa and BLM and are now going after them since they have no use for them now. | ||
Perhaps in three years they will cuddle up to them again. | ||
Yeah, I think what we were saying was that with the midterms coming up, with the economy being so bad, I think the Democrats are going to be like, they're a liability for us now. | ||
So, and I actually had heard within the White House that Kamala was, this was something she was saying, that, you know, we should actually Go after some of the Antifa groups because then that will actually kind of balance it out with what they're doing with the January 6 people. | ||
And so it'll look like we're actually going after both sides. | ||
But then it also, historically speaking, this was what China did when they dealt with the Red Guards. | ||
They had to clean it up and eventually they said, look, they just sent the military and they said, you got to get rid of these guys and kick them all out to the countryside because they were nuts. | ||
Somebody super chatted saying, this is Rick Russell, one thing that always bugged me is your katana and boom blaster behind you isn't square. | ||
It's like 40 degree, 50-40-50. | ||
Mouth love from Canada. | ||
That's what you were looking at. | ||
That's because Tim's shoulders are a little bit slightly askew. | ||
So when he has to grab them quickly, that's exactly where they are. | ||
I think it's because I put the screw in the wrong spot and I could easily fix it. | ||
Not the screw, I mounted it on the wrong spot. | ||
Which again, because your arms are not equal. | ||
My arms are slightly uneven. | ||
I like your Telecaster. | ||
Oh yeah, the Brent Mason. | ||
What are the pickups on that? | ||
I couldn't tell you. | ||
Okay. | ||
Seymour Duncan. | ||
Yeah, I couldn't tell you. | ||
I was told if you leave your pick in the strings like that, it ends up messing up the pickup. | ||
Probably. | ||
The middle one is an active pickup. | ||
It's got a switch. | ||
You can turn on and play all three at the same time. | ||
It sounds really full. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
It's got an E-bender on it, so you can put the strap and then bend the neck. | ||
It's cool. | ||
Very Chris Cornell. | ||
Awesome guitar. | ||
Very Chris Cornell. | ||
Alright, let's see what we got here. | ||
To Forrest, I live walking distance from that protest and can only be grateful that it's been relatively tame compared to the rest of the country. | ||
On another note, our local gun stores have been doing well lately. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah. | |
Yeah, man. | ||
I got some info on Counter-Wokecraft. | ||
It's a field manual for combating the woke in the university and beyond by Charles Pincourt and James Lindsay. | ||
Oh, James Lindsay, yeah. | ||
Do you guys, have you seen that clip from, was it Sex and the City going around? | ||
No. | ||
I've seen it going around, but I haven't watched it yet. | ||
I hate that show so much. | ||
It's so boring and stupid. | ||
But I wasn't sure, was this a parody of Sex and the City? | ||
Sex and the City ruined millennial women. | ||
So childless millennial women are going to be a huge problem going forward. | ||
They're going to be miserable. | ||
They're just going to be miserable. | ||
But the issue is that they're going to be getting more power. | ||
Yeah, and they're gonna vote! | ||
And they're gonna vote, and they're gonna be lawyers, and they're gonna be in the DOJ, and they're gonna be judges, and it's gonna be bad. | ||
I'm just saying, when they're in their 70s, they're all going to vote for state-funded elderly care of some sort. | ||
Like, what I mean to say is instead of relying on family and private individual support, their only choice is going to have to be some kind of more socialist or communist. | ||
Which is exactly what was marketed to them. | ||
Remember the Obama ad for Julia, you know, the single woman. | ||
And then Biden had one too. | ||
It was like, I don't know, her sister. | ||
A mom and son. | ||
unidentified
|
What's nice though is that I think that a lot of Zoomers... This is what women are being sold. | |
Women are being sold no relationship. | ||
Your primary relationship is with the federal government. | ||
Right. | ||
So I think Zoomers are starting, like Zoomer females and males in general, are looking at this and saying, looking at millennials and saying, OK, this is generally a failed generation. | ||
You you made really bad decisions some a lot of which was you know due to external factors There was a lot of crazy stuff that Millennials went through in their formative years and that's true But at the same time we're gonna learn from these mistakes and we're gonna make corrections very quickly a lot of them We're also gonna be very pissed off when they find out how scammed they were by everything. | ||
yes and by the federal government. | ||
So there's also going to be a big pushback against it as well. | ||
But they're going to find out faster. | ||
I hope they do find out fast. | ||
I hope that it's not too late for them to have families and be moms. | ||
Don't be like us. | ||
Don't, yeah. | ||
And I want to say points for self-awareness on the topic of sex in the city. | ||
One of the stars came out and said, I really regret living the feminist life. | ||
I'm really sorry that I don't have a family. | ||
I'm sad that I don't have kids. | ||
Do you remember which one that was? | ||
I don't. | ||
And didn't they write her out or something? | ||
Oh, no way! | ||
I think they did. | ||
I think she's not in this one. | ||
That's all I know about Sex and the City. | ||
All I know is I was like looking for something to watch one time and I was like talking to my brother. | ||
I was like, oh, you know, I'll watch Sex and the City. | ||
I never really watched that show. | ||
And he was like, Liv, you're gonna hate this show. | ||
You're gonna hate it so much. | ||
And I was like, nah, I'll give it a try. | ||
Everybody likes it. | ||
I put it on. | ||
I watched like half an episode. | ||
I called my brother. | ||
I was like, you were right. | ||
I hate this so much. | ||
I hate it so much. | ||
Everything about this is pure hell. | ||
It sucks, yes. | ||
And it has no relevance to the New York City that I know. | ||
Remember, evil cannot create, evil can only corrupt. | ||
I'm going to read something that's going to be offensive to feminists because I often do. | ||
Excellent. | ||
Carl Benjamin posted this on Instagram. | ||
It's a Reddit post where it's titled, Attractiveness over 30. | ||
And it says, hi, 32 female. | ||
Have started feeling insecure over the past couple of years as I see more and more of my male acquaintances in their late 30s and over dating women in their early to mid 20s. | ||
I am by no means unattractive, quite the opposite, but seem to have trouble finding men interested in age appropriate relationships. | ||
What is going on? | ||
Can someone just please- What is going on? | ||
Can someone just please reassure me that there are men in their 30s out there interested in women in their 30s? | ||
Nope. | ||
Maybe, but this is not a new phenomenon, girl. | ||
unidentified
|
This is not new. | |
Libby, take it off. | ||
Take it away. | ||
Take it away. | ||
This is what happens. | ||
My grandfather, when he was in his 70s, was dating a woman in her 40s. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh my! | |
You know, it's like, come on! | ||
This is what happens. | ||
Men can date anyone they want at any point in their lives, and the older they get, the more access to the dating pool that they have. | ||
And women, when you fall in love with somebody and you're in your 20s, And you think to yourself, you know, I really want to pursue something else. | ||
I don't really have time for love in my life right now. | ||
I want to upgrade. | ||
Have the love. | ||
Take the love. | ||
When love comes to you in life, accept it with an open heart and move forward. | ||
You know, grow together. | ||
Grow together. | ||
Create a family. | ||
Create a life together. | ||
Young men can't compete. | ||
An 18-year-old guy struggles to compete against a 30-year-old guy. | ||
Yeah, because he has no job. | ||
He doesn't know what he's doing. | ||
He can barely grow a beard. | ||
Like, come on. | ||
Unless you're Kyle Rittenhouse. | ||
Okay, he's going to be fine. | ||
He'll be good. | ||
There are some young people who reach status faster than others, but an 18-year-old man and an 18-year-old woman, that 18-year-old woman is going to have, it's going to be a breeze. | ||
She pops open Bumble or Twitter or OkCupid, and she has max messages, and she can go through the pick of the litter, and that 18-year-old guy is going to get nothing. | ||
Right. | ||
But those apps are also part of the problem. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Because they are expanding the dating pool far beyond what it ever was historically speaking. | ||
And so you're going to have 80% of the women going for the top 5% of the men. | ||
Like it was back when we were tribal and nomadic. | ||
Right, but the pool was smaller, so you don't have that issue. | ||
But this thing, though, where people say to themselves, like, oh, you know, this is my high school boyfriend or this is my college boyfriend or whatever, and this isn't the right time for me. | ||
Now I need to go to graduate school before I can embark on, you know, before I can accept love in my life. | ||
That's the stupid idea. | ||
You know, when you fall in love, like, accept it. | ||
Go with that. | ||
Well, hold on. | ||
We have a super chat from John Cordisco. | ||
He says, love, love Libby. | ||
Sadly, I'm too old for her. | ||
Timely. | ||
My guess is he has no idea how old I am. | ||
Nice. | ||
We've done a bunch of segments. | ||
We've had a few guests where we've talked about this phenomenon. | ||
There was one story from, I think, the New York Post covered. | ||
It said, women in their 30s are struggling to find men who make the same amount they do. | ||
And the funny thing is, it's really simple. | ||
And I don't say this to be offensive, but boy, does this really trigger the left. | ||
A guy who's 35, who's making $80,000 a year. | ||
can find a woman who's 24 and he's going to be like, Hey, I make 80,000 a year. | ||
You want to go to the movies or go take? | ||
And she's like, wow. | ||
Okay. | ||
He's got the ability to, to like have fun. | ||
And a guy the same age as her is probably broken in college. | ||
Then a woman who's 35, he's going to be like, but I can have any woman, you know, all these younger women. | ||
Why would I, you know, go out with you? | ||
Especially like you're busy working all the time. | ||
Right. | ||
You're pursuing your career. | ||
Have fun with that. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And like, here's someone who's young and in college and not working and wants to have fun. | ||
This was the lie of Sex and the City. | ||
This is what was pushed. | ||
This was said. | ||
That you have to sacrifice one for the other. | ||
And that was never true. | ||
And you don't. | ||
You don't. | ||
And the other thing, too. | ||
I mean, you can have a career. | ||
You can have love. | ||
You can duo. | ||
Like, do them together. | ||
Team up. | ||
Team up, you know, and make this happen as a team. | ||
Literally, it's the plot of every Hallmark movie. | ||
unidentified
|
You know what? | |
There's a reason that they keep making Hallmark movies. | ||
And they're all profitable. | ||
And they're all profitable. | ||
I saw a Reddit, too. | ||
There was this guy and he was like, ladies, would you date a garbage man? | ||
Because I just got an offer to be a garbage man. | ||
Heck yeah. | ||
And it's a lot of money, but I hesitate. | ||
I'm pointing at the podcast arm. | ||
It's a stink bug. | ||
It's fine. | ||
unidentified
|
It's a Chinese marmorated stink bug. | |
The scream was priceless. | ||
I had a buddy once in this campaign office where I worked in Pennsylvania years ago, and he really got freaked out with them as well. | ||
So I had a little glass box and I just used to collect them. | ||
And then I would hide it in different places in the office. | ||
And then I would tell him, I'd be like, hey, can you grab some staples and stuff that he would open up? | ||
Be gentle with him. | ||
If you hit him too hard, they release a stinky gas. | ||
I would put it in his desk drawer. | ||
Libby, so what happened? | ||
Would the women date the garbage man? | ||
Oh, a bunch of women were basically like, uh, swoon. | ||
unidentified
|
Of course. | |
Yes. | ||
You have a job. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
So he's a good job and he with benefits and he pulls down nearly six figures. | ||
All right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That sounds amazing. | ||
And he has to get up early. | ||
Right. | ||
And then, you know, and he, he also, he was like, this job will give me weekends off. | ||
I don't have that. | ||
And he eventually concluded the post with, I'll just tell people that I'm a delivery driver. | ||
Perfect. | ||
And he has a great immune system. | ||
Excellent. | ||
But there's no, like this sort of goes, there's no shame in, Honest work. | ||
Yeah. | ||
If I was a garbage man, I'd be like, Oh, I'm a garbage man. | ||
Me too. | ||
And I, you know, I feel very grateful for the ability to earn a living to work. | ||
I'm so happy for that. | ||
You know? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And it makes me sad that these women have been sold the lie that they can't have both. | ||
Well, I, you know, we could actually, we could actually interview there. | ||
There's, there's someone else who's here that we could interview that could actually ask about this situation. | ||
Someone I personally know who got married in her 20s, had her first son at 22, went on to an incredibly successful career. | ||
Come on! | ||
Here she is. | ||
A very lovely lady, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
It is my mom. | ||
My mom, Lori. | ||
Hello! | ||
unidentified
|
Just come down a little bit. | |
I got married fairly young. | ||
Jack, when I was 23. | ||
Nice. | ||
Had my associate's degree. | ||
I worked at a pharmaceutical company. | ||
Got a job. | ||
Microbiologist. | ||
unidentified
|
Got a job. | |
And I went and I got my bachelor's and my master's. | ||
Had two children. | ||
I just retired for 40 years. | ||
Congratulations. | ||
unidentified
|
Sounds like you had it all. Yeah That's so great, I like to do movies for Polish school | |
No You can do both. | ||
Yes. | ||
Luke was so hoping she spoke Polish. | ||
unidentified
|
If you wait until the best time to have children, it's never going to happen. | |
Well, because there is no best time. | ||
There is no best time. | ||
That's something I wish. | ||
I have one son. | ||
If I'd known that there was no best time, I might have two. | ||
unidentified
|
We should have girl talk! | |
Yes, let's do it! | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
Yes, I love it. | ||
Check it out. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean I wish I could have done part-time. | |
I did work full-time, but we had a lot of support, you know. | ||
Yeah, was it the support was in the community? | ||
unidentified
|
Family. | |
That's nice. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it's perfect. | |
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I really think that women have just been sold such a lie that they they either have to choose one or the other and I think it's wrong. | ||
I think that if you find someone that you love you have to find a way to make it work and if that means adjusting your work schedule you need to make it happen because that's way more important than a job. | ||
And you know the thing too is like it You know, it doesn't always work out, but you still have to go for it. | ||
Yeah, you gotta try. | ||
You can't say, when love comes into your life, you can't just say no to it. | ||
Yeah, and they've been told they have to. | ||
Right, because something else is more important. | ||
And self-fulfillment through career, you know, that can be a thing or whatever, but it's never going to be As fulfilling, you know, as having a team, as teaming up, as having a family, you know, being a mom is literally the best thing that I ever did. | ||
It's my favorite thing ever, you know. | ||
Everything I do is like in service, you know. | ||
unidentified
|
To Jack, of course, wonderful. | |
But everything I do is like, you know, that's the most important thing, you know, is like raising my son to be a good man. | ||
I didn't get your name. | ||
What is your first name? | ||
Lori. | ||
So you get out of high school and then get married and have kids? | ||
unidentified
|
I got an associate's degree. | |
Right out of high school? | ||
unidentified
|
In vet tech. | |
And I got a job at Glaxus. | ||
Did you meet the father of your children while you were in school? | ||
I was pretty young. | ||
I'm very diplomatic about that. | ||
unidentified
|
The man? | |
Did you engage the man? | ||
unidentified
|
He's down the road. | |
Did you know him in high school? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Oh, okay. | ||
Very cool. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
He's older than I say, seven years older. | ||
So at that time, that was literally what we were just saying. | ||
Scandal. | ||
Yeah, it is. | ||
That's scandalous. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
But that's, that's literally what Tim was just saying though. | ||
That's, that actually proves the point that, and that you met what 1977, give or take. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Same year Star Wars came out. | ||
Um, that, but that proves the point that dad to you was more attractive than someone who was your own age. | ||
That's true. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, that's true. | |
Like this, this is actually just a traditional thing. | ||
So sorry, you know, Reddit lady. | ||
I'm not sure where we got the idea that we have to be the same age as each other. | ||
I find that one partner having a little more life experience is a huge advantage in life. | ||
Communism. | ||
That's a big deal. | ||
Oh, communism made us that way. | ||
Well, so the people who want to create this, they want to destroy traditional culture and create this flat blank slate society needs to eliminate gender differences, which are I mean, there are immutable and, like, on average, I should say, gender differences. | ||
They exist. | ||
And hormones play a huge role. | ||
It's fascinating to me that they can quite literally say, like, oh, we're gonna have an athlete perform in the Olympics as a trans athlete as long as their testosterone is below a certain threshold. | ||
So you're quite literally saying that men who produce more testosterone than women are affected by that, and thus there's serious biological differences between males and females. | ||
There's never... I've said this before. | ||
You know they pulled that, right? | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
But this one, I'll tell you what really triggers, really triggered the feminist when I said, there will never be equality between men and women. | ||
There could be political equality, like you can't discriminate on the basis of gender. | ||
Equality under the law. | ||
Right. | ||
For sure. | ||
But the idea, I'll put it very, very simply. | ||
If there's a man and a woman and they both want to get a career and then have kids, the woman will always have to be the one who creates that child, which puts them out of work for even a short amount of time. | ||
That disadvantages them. | ||
I'm not saying it means they can't achieve. | ||
I'm just saying. | ||
Yeah, I don't think that's a disadvantage. | ||
I don't think having the ability to create and carry life is a disadvantage. | ||
I think it's an extra, it's an additional responsibility. | ||
Women do have an outsized responsibility for the furtherance of, you know, humanity itself. | ||
But is that a disadvantage? | ||
Well, it's just in the workplace, right? | ||
Is that a gift? | ||
You know, sure. | ||
That sort of thing. | ||
But if you have to take even a week off of work that a man doesn't, then that man has an extra week to do the work. | ||
But I also agree that one of the biggest problems is looking at that as being a disadvantage. | ||
The idea that women get to have children, it's like, oh, I'm so sorry, that's going to hurt your career prospects instead of being like, that's amazing, congratulations. | ||
I feel very strongly about this as well because I feel like we tell women in society that we say, you know, and this goes back to abortion as well, we say that being a mother is not something that's valuable. | ||
That being a mother detracts from your fulfillment as a human being, you know, and we tell people, you know, oh you're poor, you don't have a lot of prospects, being a mother is not for you, you should abort this child. | ||
Why aren't we saying instead like motherhood is kind of the greatest thing ever? | ||
And every woman can be qualified to be a mother, you know, suck it up. | ||
woman up as they say you know and like like do it do it and and respect yourself and respect your ability to give life if if you have the gift kit and can do that you know not every woman can do that um and that's a tragedy for a lot of women but you know you can do this you can be a mother if you're 17 and you're pregnant you can be a mother you can do this you know. | ||
Kalian uh Kalan Shaw Indie Game says is this a pass or fail of the Bechtel test? | ||
This right now. | ||
Fun episode, everyone. | ||
The Bechdel test is the stupid garbage, you know, standard. | ||
What is it? | ||
The Bechdel test is this thing where the idea is in scripts and in entertainment, you have to have sections of the of the script where women are talking together, but they're not talking about men. | ||
Right. | ||
And if they're not, then it doesn't pass the like feminism test. | ||
But I don't know about y'all, but like, when I get together with my girlfriends, we talk about men a lot. | ||
Like this is a big part of the conversation. | ||
We talk about other stuff. | ||
We talk about work. | ||
We talk about our kids. | ||
We talk about, you know, whatever stupid thing is going on in the world. | ||
But mostly we talk about, we talk about men. | ||
We talk about like, oh, who are you dating? | ||
What are you doing? | ||
You know, what happened with that guy? | ||
Did he call you back? | ||
Like, you know, this is what we talk about. | ||
My ex sucks, too. | ||
Like, that's what you talk about. | ||
Yeah, it's interesting to talk about someone who's so different from you. | ||
And it's like, well, what are they doing? | ||
What are they up to? | ||
We talk about relationships. | ||
You know, that's a huge, that's a huge part of my life. | ||
You gossipers! | ||
unidentified
|
No, we don't. | |
No, it's not gossip to share a life experience. | ||
I'm being facetious. | ||
One thing I said to Tanya, I remember after, or I guess when she was pregnant with our first son was, You know, it's, you know, men can do some pretty incredible things, you know, throughout history, men have done incredible things, but women can create life. | ||
It's pretty amazing. | ||
It's actually a miracle from God that women have the ability to do this. | ||
And I think men innately know that, you know, we can create, you know, you would create art or a civilization or build a city or architecture, whatever. | ||
We can do that too. | ||
But no, my point is, but men can never do that ever. | ||
And it's not going to be possible. | ||
And so... Well, they got some... Womb transplant experimentation going on. | ||
unidentified
|
Right, that's going on and the NHS is funding that. | |
No, it's Whoopi. | ||
Whoopi comes out and she's talking about the Roe v. Wade ruling and she says, you men shouldn't have any say in this because you don't have any eggs. | ||
And if you don't have any eggs, you can't have any children. | ||
And I said, Whoopi, you need to calm it down with the transphobia. | ||
Yes. | ||
You know, I've had male friends who have been in relationships where the woman has had an abortion and hasn't told them. | ||
And they have been like, is it okay if I grieve for this? | ||
Or is that anti-feminist? | ||
And I was like, you can grieve the loss of the child that you would have wanted if you had known about it. | ||
Yes, you can grieve that. | ||
You know, you can just imagine a scenario where there's, like, 10 dudes, you know, on an island, and humanity gets, like, wiped out in a nuclear war, and they're just sitting there, and they all look around and be like, in 40 years, humans won't exist. | ||
You can do the same thing with 10 women sitting on an island after the apocalypse. | ||
They all look around and say, hmm. | ||
Oh, we're duped. | ||
In 40 years, humans won't exist. | ||
You get at least one woman, at least one man that can be like, all right, let's try and make this work. | ||
There has to be... You can give it a shot. | ||
Men and women are required for building that civilization, but without women, there's no babies. | ||
No. | ||
I mean, without men, there's also no babies. | ||
Well, right, right, right, right. | ||
I mean, like, women make them. | ||
Women, women carry the babies. | ||
You can have ten women and one guy and your society will flourish because women are able to do art and build civilizations, but also have the babies too. | ||
And this is why, this is why men, male lives typically, particularly in the West, are devalued in many cases, right? | ||
Men, we are seen as expendable, right? | ||
Men are the ones who go and do, you know, build the pipelines and they're out on oil rigs, they're doing | ||
fishing, fishing boats actually is one of the most fatal careers, occupation that | ||
there is and these are all male jobs. There's not a, look, there weren't | ||
a lot of female coal miners is all I'm saying. Yes. | ||
Draft our daughters! | ||
unidentified
|
Oh no! | |
That's so sad. | ||
I'm really excited for feminists getting these achievements. | ||
I know recently that they... | ||
Draft our daughters. | ||
Yeah, well that was struck down. | ||
They removed that language from the defense bill or whatever. | ||
Oh yeah, and so unfortunate. | ||
Loss for feminists. | ||
But I'm really excited for, in the Netherlands, they have more female garbage persons. | ||
Okay. | ||
And I actually think that's fantastic. | ||
It literally is. | ||
People should be doing whatever job they want. | ||
I'm really excited for when women start working on petroleum rigs. | ||
Yes. | ||
High death rate, unfortunately, in that line of work. | ||
Earn good money. | ||
unidentified
|
Locking is also very high. | |
You know what's cool, though, on the petroleum rigs are those boats, you know, those boats that, like, shoot out the side? | ||
Yeah, and they go whoosh. | ||
Those are so cool! | ||
Very cool. | ||
unidentified
|
I'll do that. | |
See, she's already trying to get out of it. | ||
unidentified
|
Are you volunteering? | |
Yes, I'm escaping from the thing. | ||
I'll escape from that. | ||
The issue that everybody knows is that many of these feminists, when they're talking about equality, they want to be in corner office, 50th floor, air-conditioned buildings. | ||
They don't want to be in sewers wading through human waste to try and make the system, you know... Yeah, I don't want to do that. | ||
The sewage flow. | ||
I don't want to do that either. | ||
But I welcome all people of all sizes and shapes and genders and races to work in sewers and work as CEOs. | ||
It just depends on what you're good at. | ||
But that being said, I want to read one more Super Chat, and then we've gone a little bit over, but we're going to read this one. | ||
This is from Shane Kerwood. | ||
He says, This turned out to be such a wholesome episode. | ||
F'n love you guys and thanks for doing what y'all do. | ||
It's so important to get the truth out here. | ||
There's just a bunch of people who've been commenting since, you know, Jackie came in and with your lovely mother. | ||
It's been a really fantastic end of the show for the week. | ||
And I think we have a very special segment we'll put together, right? | ||
I believe so. | ||
Talking about, you know, marriage and all this stuff and getting input from your mom, which has been fantastic. | ||
Yeah, very cool. | ||
I'm sitting here and I notice the door slowly opening and I'm like, what is happening? | ||
You know why? | ||
Because you weren't checking Twitter while we were doing the show. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, why? | |
Were you tweeting? | ||
I saw it on there. | ||
Should I crash IRL? | ||
I suggested that you did. | ||
Did you see? | ||
I was like, come in. | ||
I didn't see you respond. | ||
She invited you. | ||
I did. | ||
I mean, look, you know, we're going into Christmas season here. | ||
We're getting towards the end of the year. | ||
We're thinking about that kind of stuff. | ||
A lot of these issues have been out there lately. | ||
And, you know, I think it is good to show that, you know, we are family people and we are family oriented. | ||
And there is a goodness of that. | ||
It's not just, you know, chattering about, you know, the news every day, that there is something more and there's something beyond. | ||
And I think that's good. | ||
And I think that's something that Independent media like this can show that you would never see a segment like this on CNN. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah, probably not. | ||
That's just two people. | ||
I mean, we did get to see Brian Seltzer in his underwear that one time. | ||
That was exciting. | ||
Good gravy. | ||
unidentified
|
That's my greatest nightmare you're bringing back. | |
You're triggering my PTSD. | ||
But that was the opposite of family-friendly wholesome and all that stuff. | ||
All right, everybody. | ||
Go to TimCast.com, become a member. | ||
It's Friday, but we'll be back Monday for sure. | ||
You can follow the show at TimCast IRL, basically everywhere. | ||
Smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends. | ||
You can follow me at TimCast. | ||
Libby, you want to shout anything out? | ||
Yeah, I'm Libby Emmons on Twitter, and I'm at The Postmillennial, and you can help us out. | ||
You can help us fight Antifa. | ||
Come on over there and throw in a donation and read what we've got to say. | ||
ThePostmillennial.com. | ||
And my website is enoughofcensorship.com. | ||
One of the best things you could do is not follow me on big tech social media. | ||
You could sign up on my email list, which is free, available for everyone, where we try to keep you informed. | ||
Enoughofcensorship.com. | ||
Thanks for having me. | ||
You can follow me at IanCrossland.net, and I'll catch you later. | ||
Great to see you, Jack. | ||
Glad you guys popped in. | ||
Thank you, appreciate that. | ||
Support moms, support grandmoms, you want to come see us. | ||
We'll be at AmericaFest next week in Phoenix, flying there on Sunday. | ||
Oh, I'm coming too. | ||
Are you coming? | ||
I suppose you're coming. | ||
I will see you there. | ||
Nice. | ||
And for everybody else, just, you know, God bless and Merry Christmas. | ||
I am so glad that Jack Gay crashed us because I love talking about this stuff, especially with Libby, because I really don't like feminism very much either. | ||
When I was 11, I was like, this seems like it's hurting women more than helping them. | ||
And ever since then, it's just been like, yep, I was right. | ||
Yeah, it kind of got all screwed around. | ||
Yeah, a little wild. | ||
Anyway, you guys may follow me on Twitter at Sour Patch Lens. | ||
This has been a fantastic episode for the season. | ||
Thanks so much, Jack, for popping in, and Lori, this has been wonderful, and thanks for your insights. | ||
This was great. | ||
I love it. | ||
It was an excellent Friday night. | ||
It was just special. | ||
It was just great. | ||
And to everybody who's watching, we're gonna go relax and take the weekend. | ||
Thanks for hanging out, and we'll see you all next time. |