Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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you you | |
a civil war has erupted But not in this country. | ||
In the FBI. | ||
A whole bunch of FBI agents apparently are furious. | ||
They want Chris Wray out. | ||
They think he's biased. | ||
They're concerned that the agency has been besmirched by this political bias. | ||
And you've also got this other story about the staging of photographs. | ||
Trump's piss. | ||
Because apparently the DOJ, the FBI, took a bunch of top-secret documents, spat them all over the floor, took a picture of it, and people are claiming that's how Trump had documents strewn about his floor. | ||
They're now claiming that Trump has admitted to breaking the law with classified documents, except he's the president, so he has unilateral declassification powers. | ||
It's the stupidest thing. | ||
And they're saying, well, Trump doesn't remember declassifying. | ||
That's not how it works. | ||
Look, just read PolitiFact. | ||
You guys love PolitiFact, right? | ||
They say the president doesn't need a process. | ||
He can just be like, hey, it's declassified. | ||
Otherwise, how would any of this make sense? | ||
So we'll talk about all that stuff. | ||
We got a bunch of other stories. | ||
But before we get started, my friends, head over to TimCast.com. | ||
Become a member if you want to help support our work. | ||
We're gonna have that spicy members-only show coming up at 11 p.m. | ||
But more importantly, please, friends, help me lure more people into my right-wing world by buying the song. | ||
Clicking the link in the description below. | ||
Going to band camp and searching for Only Ever Wanted. | ||
For those that are staring at the screen right now, The Daily Beast published an article where they said, Tim Pool is using the song to lure people into his right-wing world. | ||
Oh, heavens. | ||
Well, if you'd like to help me lure people into my right-wing world, then the link in the description below is right there, and you can buy the song and support our work. | ||
Thanks for the commercial, Daily Beast. | ||
Y'all, you guys are crazy. | ||
I just want to say that. | ||
The Daily Beast, y'all are nuts. | ||
They wrote, I can't believe they wrote about this, but I could not have asked for a better commercial. | ||
I think that the reality is they're terrified. | ||
They're just, they're terrified. | ||
And the claim that I am using rock music to lure people into my right-wing world is laughable. | ||
Because what do you think it's called when Natalie Portman does an interview on a TV show she's doing, and then says, oh, and by the way, defund the police because of white privilege. | ||
What would you call that? | ||
So spare me your empty arguments. | ||
But I appreciate the commercial. | ||
So also smash the like button, subscribe to the channel, share the show with your friends, all that good stuff. | ||
Joining us today to talk about a bunch of issues is Billboard Chris! | ||
Thank you so much for having me. | ||
Who are you? | ||
I'm a dad from Vancouver, British Columbia, and I travel around North America, hanging out on the street, wearing signs that say children cannot consent to puberty blockers, or my definition of a dad, which is a human male who protects his kids from gender ideology. | ||
I talk about the harm coming to kids. | ||
We have another big story. | ||
The Boston Children's Hospital apparently got a bomb threat, but we may have some insider sourcing. | ||
It sounds like this may be a hoax and a hoax. | ||
A triple hoax, actually, I think. | ||
And we'll break that down as to why. | ||
I mean, obviously, it was a fake bomb threat, but there's a bunch of other information as to how this may be more political or something strange. | ||
But Billboard, Chris, thanks for hanging out. | ||
My pleasure. | ||
We also have Libby Emmons. | ||
She's back. | ||
Hey guys, glad to be here. | ||
Libby Emmons, editor at the Postmillennial, editor-in-chief. | ||
The best part about having Libby on the show is that the Postmillennial then embeds tons of TimCast IRL all over their website. | ||
Oh my god, we sure do. | ||
Beth Bache is out there helping us out tonight, watching the show, pulling clips. | ||
Right on. | ||
Shout out, Beth. | ||
What's going on? | ||
unidentified
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Hi, Beth. | |
Hi, Beth. | ||
Hey everyone, Ian Crossland here, and if you haven't seen the new Cast Castle, you should. | ||
I was in it, and it was great. | ||
It's on YouTube. | ||
There's a clip on YouTube, but you really got to go to TimCast.com and subscribe, and then go to Cast Castle on the left if you want the full Monty. | ||
It is already up on YouTube. | ||
There's a bit part of it. | ||
So what we're doing is once a week we put the cameo bits up as like gag reels sort of like sketches. | ||
Marjorie Taylor Greene turns out she's a pro tier Magic the Gathering player. | ||
MTG plays MTG. | ||
Check it out. | ||
Still salty. | ||
unidentified
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I am. | |
I had no idea that Marjorie Taylor Greene could play this really weird old nerdy card game. | ||
I'm also here pushing buttons in the corner. | ||
I'm excited to have Chris and Libby. | ||
Let's get into it. | ||
unidentified
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All right. | |
Here's the first story from the New York Post. | ||
FBI agents say Director Christopher Wray has got to go, lost control of the agency. | ||
FBI Director Christopher Wray has lost the confidence of rank-and-file FBI agents after a senior bureau official left under a cloud of accusations that he shielded Hunter Biden's laptop from a criminal probe, and some believe the top G-man should step down, a new report says. | ||
Quote, I'm hearing from FBI personnel that they feel like the director has lost control of the bureau. | ||
Kurt, how do you pronounce this, Cudzak? | ||
A lawyer representing FBI whistleblowers told the Washington Times in a report published Tuesday. | ||
They're saying, how does this guy survive? | ||
He's leaving. | ||
He's got to leave. | ||
The FBI agents are telling me they have lost confidence in Wray. | ||
All Wray does is go in and say, we need more training and we're doing stuff about it or we will not tolerate. | ||
His comments come in the wake of Tim Tebow. | ||
Is that how you pronounce it? | ||
Some people are saying it was Tebow. | ||
Is that what it is? | ||
Tebow? | ||
Tebow? | ||
Tebow! | ||
He's a quarterback. | ||
Is that the same guy? | ||
Is this a different Tim Tebow? | ||
Tim Tebow is a very Christian quarterback who took a lot of heat for being Christian. | ||
unidentified
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Timothy T. Bolt. | |
T-Balt is the top agent in charge of the FBI field office in Washington, either resigning or being forced out the door amid claims he blocked investigations into the first son's laptop. | ||
So this is big. | ||
I mean, I'm not entirely sure anything actually will happen here, but this is what I've been talking about for some time, that the culture war issues exist in all facets of this country, and the federal institutions are not exempt from people watching garbage mainstream media and believing garbage fake news. | ||
I really like the no-nonsense attitude of some of these FBI agents and really like if any agency on earth is going to have a no-nonsense mindset it's the FBI or one of them and they're saying they're calling out Ray for acting like when they're like what are you gonna do what do you do we're gonna look into it and make sure that we get better so that we can hit like this platitudes is what they're called usually you'll see like Kamala or someone will do it and it's just kind of I don't know. | ||
I kind of feel like a lot of these guys are crooked. | ||
I think it's obvious by what's going on with Trump. | ||
It's obvious by what happened with Russiagate. | ||
All of that was fake. | ||
Complete hoax. | ||
Now they're going after Trump claiming he classified documents and it's like, yo, he was the president. | ||
Like, he determines if it's classified. | ||
This is crazy. | ||
And there are people who are just, they don't know how to use Google or even read PolitiFact who are like, whoa, look at the picture of the top secret. | ||
That proves it. | ||
They believe it. | ||
And there are people at the FBI who are counting on this, and they're crooked. | ||
And I think what's happening with Christopher Wray is they're like, hey, our credibility is shot right now. | ||
So our ability to be corrupt is hindered by this guy's bad job. | ||
Can we pretend like we're having reform and get rid of him and then keep going about being corrupt? | ||
They had a lot of complaints to the employees who, you know, said that Ray should resign. | ||
One of the things they said was that there had been fabrication of terrorism cases to elevate performance statistics. | ||
And I think that's actually really quite an important detail because the Biden administration has used domestic terrorism as a, you know, crisis that they believe we're having. | ||
You've had Merrick Garland saying that domestic terrorism is the biggest threat to the US. | ||
And if the FBI has been jacking up those stats just to make themselves look better, you have the entire federal government basing their determinations on something that's bogus. | ||
A lot of people are pointing out that the DOJ posted publicly photos of top secret documents, and it's like, okay, if they're classified, then didn't they just break the law? | ||
Good question. | ||
Interesting. | ||
Yeah, because it's all fake. | ||
Oh, you made a good point about the FBI trumping up terrorism charges, i.e. | ||
this Gretchen Whitmer case. | ||
I think there were 10 FBI agents involved in the setup. | ||
Yeah, there were like more FBI agents involved than actual guys. | ||
It's just so funny. | ||
There's a lot of people in the agency that are like, I don't want my kid getting thrust into some stupid civil war that was brought on by my ineptitude or my avoidance of doing nothing as some corruption was going on, because I wouldn't stand for my boss trumping up terrorism charges. | ||
No, I think that's a really bad situation. | ||
I mean, it's just so clearly a problem because we have Merrick Garland going on TV saying that domestic terrorism is the biggest threat facing the country. | ||
He said that a number of times. | ||
And you had Biden saying that same thing. | ||
And if the FBI is faking it, Then what are they pouring all this money into? | ||
What is the Department of Justice doing? | ||
You know, they're going after regular Americans that the FBI is claiming are terrorists, perhaps. | ||
You know, what are we doing? | ||
Like these Whitmer guys were hanging out around a campfire, getting high, talking about random garbage that they wanted to do, like you do when you hang around a campfire and you're getting high, right? | ||
Like you say whatever. | ||
And then the FBI jumps in and is like, oh, we can encourage these guys to go nuts. | ||
They bring in some hot chick who smokes weed with them in hotel rooms, you know, and you know, you're going to do whatever the hot chick who's smoking weed with you says. | ||
That is the rule. | ||
I would do that. | ||
You mean, you're going to entertain it, right? | ||
Not literally do it. | ||
So then they had to like buy guns for them and everything. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Like, don't you want to go and do this? | ||
Like, sure, whatever you say, take your clothes off. | ||
We got him! | ||
He said yes! | ||
That's why I'm, you know, I look at this stuff and I gotta wonder, right, these guys are gonna go to jail. | ||
Two guys. | ||
There was a mistrial, then they had another trial. | ||
I'm seeing a lot of people report like the judge wasn't allowing certain testimony in and the whole thing. | ||
They say it was a sham. | ||
The left is screaming, aha, this proves it. | ||
And I'm just like, you know, I'm not entirely convinced there will be a civil war, because we're watching for six, seven years now, some of the most intense and absolute corruption we've ever seen. | ||
And everyone's kind of just like, huh? | ||
How about that? | ||
But, you know, more importantly, in 2018, Democrats win. | ||
In 2020, they still held the House despite victories from the right. | ||
And it's like, Dude, when they raid the former president's house, I hope, I think it was James Lindsay who mentioned this, that some woman was like, that's gone too far for me, like raiding the president's house. | ||
I hope that is true. | ||
And come November, people are like, but then not only do you have to hope you'll win, you have to hope that the people who actually get in do something. | ||
Right, and that's questionable as well, because the establishment GOP and the establishment Democrats are basically the same thing. | ||
They're trying to maintain their power. | ||
The Mar-a-Lago raid, though, is crazy. | ||
You guys, I'm sure, looked at the affidavit, the heavily redacted affidavit. | ||
He did. | ||
from what I could gather, the DOJ is mad that Trump had documents that he could have declassified | ||
he did stored improperly. | ||
He did declassify right and they were stored like but their big complaint is that they | ||
were stored improperly. | ||
This is but but so right. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Trump turned over boxes to the National Archive upon request. | ||
They then said, wow, look at this classified stuff. | ||
He might have more. | ||
So they asked an FBI agent saying, hey, we think Trump has more documents. | ||
And so they said, okay, we'll get a search warrant for them. | ||
But the idea that these are classified documents, when Trump tweeted a long time ago before leaving the White House that he was declassifying all of these reports. | ||
That's correct. | ||
He was very clear on that. | ||
It's another hoax, man. | ||
And the reason why, you know, I'm saying maybe there won't be a civil war is because the left keeps believing this stuff. | ||
The machine keeps on a churning. | ||
And even if the Republicans get in, they just say, you know, well, we can't, we can't push too hard. | ||
We had a couple of Republicans in here who are like, we can't impeach Joe Biden, you know, despite all of the evidence of the malfeasance and business illicit dealings with his son, not even an investigation. | ||
So what I think is, when I say no civil war, what I mean is revolution. | ||
The left is engaged in some kind of revolution. | ||
You've got all the crazy race ideology, gender ideology stuff. | ||
You've got the you will own nothing world economic forum stuff. | ||
And it seems like that's the direction we're heading. | ||
See, since 9-11, the American people have gone nuts. | ||
And it's more than just the United States, but people have gone totally twisted on each other. | ||
They've been looking at each other like that maybe we're the threat. | ||
Well, we made a huge mistake in allowing the authorization of the Patriot Act. | ||
That was a huge issue. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And what's happening is... And nobody cared. | ||
I remember being stunned at the time that so few people cared. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
It's insane. | ||
And the world is creating a new government. | ||
There's a world government being formed right now. | ||
If the Americans refuse to stop fighting and they keep arguing with each other, when they end up getting a seat at the table, one, no one's going to take them seriously when they're forming their new government, and it's going to get formed without us. | ||
And two, They might not even have a say in what happens. | ||
They can literally have their new government. | ||
I don't want any part of some world government where people are, you know, leaders are not elected in the way that we elect them. | ||
I actually, you know, Brexit gives me hope because Britain was just like, we're actually just still going to be Britain, y'all. | ||
Yeah, that's a form of world government, is decentralized autonomy. | ||
Like, we could bring American ideals and constitutionalism to the globe if we're a unified front and people believe us. | ||
unidentified
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No, we couldn't. | |
They don't want what we're offering. | ||
They don't want that. | ||
Well, yeah, that's why we would have to fight to argue at the table. | ||
They would want to pervert our system of government. | ||
They are looking at what they're saying the problem. They say I don't want it | ||
I'm like, why would we want to be part of some garbage world? | ||
Is that if you want free speech we have to regulate your speech, right? | ||
They're telling you that we are fighting for freedom and then simultaneously it is | ||
1984 that's correct. Yeah I mean | ||
They're the ones with this massive top-down approach telling us how we have to live how we have to you know | ||
Deal with our cars how we have to deal with our kids how we have to deal with our families and our homes all of | ||
They're telling us what to do, telling us that, you know, it's from the bottom up and the middle out, right? | ||
Doesn't Biden say that constantly? | ||
And it's not. | ||
It's just a complete lie. | ||
They want to control us from birth to death and to go along with what they want. | ||
And I think that we just, I mean, it's at the point where you just have to say no to anything the federal government offers you. | ||
But you need to propose something different. | ||
If you just say no, you'll slowly get steamrolled. | ||
Yes, exactly. | ||
But we had something great, right? | ||
We had constitutional democracy. | ||
And we're not going to have that anymore? | ||
It's a fight. | ||
I mean, I don't like the term fight necessarily, but it's a constant struggle to maintain economic democracy. | ||
The right constantly saying, no, wait, don't, while the left keeps expanding what they're doing. | ||
Well, look at what's happening in California now, right? | ||
They're going to phase out gasoline-powered cars, and now they're telling you you can't charge your EV. | ||
I mean, the amount I want to like. | ||
You will own nothing. | ||
Not only will you own nothing, you will lack freedom of movement. | ||
I want to get into that, but I want to jump to this story, because this one was talk about rhetorical escalation. | ||
Yes. | ||
Corinne Jean-Pierre reiterates that tens of millions of Americans are an extreme threat to our democracy and freedom. | ||
Their only supposed crime? | ||
They vote Republican. | ||
Again, the White House thinks Republicans are terrorists. | ||
She actually said that MAGA Republicans, yeah, that's 74 million people who voted for Trump, are an extreme threat to our democracy. | ||
What do you think she's saying to the country and the world when she says something like that? | ||
I think I know exactly what she's saying. | ||
I was talking to Libby about this a little bit before we started. | ||
I think the supply... Wait, what am I trying to say here? | ||
I think the demand highly outstrips the supply of white nationalist terrorism, and they need people to be terrorists. | ||
That's right, we were talking about that. | ||
Right, exactly. | ||
Yeah, they need people to be terrorists so that they can create false terrorism charges, so that they can have the Department of Justice investigate their political opponents. | ||
Did you see the Vox article several years ago? | ||
It was like, 100 million Americans believe what white nationalists believe or whatever, and it was like some nonsense that had nothing to do with anything. | ||
unidentified
|
It was like, they agree with, you know, market capitalism. | |
That's what the other people believe. | ||
That's white nationalism. | ||
Hitler also drank water. | ||
Meritocracy matters, you know. | ||
That's white nationalism. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
So is working hard and showing up on time. | ||
Remember, that's all white nationalists apparently. | ||
This is the White House literally coming out and saying to your face, as someone who opposes the Democrats and the woke cult, you are a threat to their government. | ||
Typically, things like this don't end well for countries when the official administration is coming out and saying half the people are a threat to us. | ||
Well, that's correct. | ||
And the other thing, too, is you have a current administration investigating the previous administration, right? | ||
And you also have current lawmakers who are Republican lawmakers saying that they are going to invest, if they take the Congress, that they are going to investigate the current administration. | ||
This is what goes on in, you know, totally failed states. | ||
This is what goes on in countries that are falling apart is, you know, look at Sri Lanka. | ||
And what's happening here? | ||
unidentified
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Canada. | |
Look at what happened in Sri Lanka. | ||
You see what Trudeau just said? | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
About the reason people are angry is climate change. | ||
Climate change is one of the reasons there's so much anger today. | ||
Is that why you're so angry, Chris? | ||
That's why I'm out on the street. | ||
Trying to stop the sterilization of kids. | ||
It's getting so warm. | ||
Juno just pledged a hundred million dollars for two... Let me see if I can get the whole thing. | ||
I can do it for you if you want. | ||
Go for it. | ||
Do it, do it, do it. | ||
So the 2SLGBTA, he forgot the I. And he only put one plus in there. | ||
There should be at least three pluses. | ||
And then there should be a WTF. | ||
Yeah, honestly. | ||
That's fair. | ||
But he always puts the 2s first because he's all about virtue signaling and the 2s stands for two-spirit. | ||
That's right. | ||
Which is apparently, it's not true, but it's apparently indigenous cultures also used to believe that there were more than two sexes and you could be both sexes or none. | ||
Double virtue signal. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh wow. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
A double virtue signal. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Powerful. | ||
That's why it's first. | ||
But I mean, this is the claiming that climate change is the problem. | ||
They just keep doing it. | ||
And I'm just sitting here thinking, like, do people really believe this? | ||
Are they sitting there being like, I can't afford to eat? | ||
Climate change! | ||
Or are they like, I want the government to, you know, to stop banning fuel production and things like that? | ||
The average Canadian So here's what happens if you don't put a stop to what's happening in the U S because I'm like the canary in the coal mine. | ||
We're already way past where you guys are. | ||
Things are terrible up there. | ||
We have three main media sources all on the government payroll, CTV, CBC, and global news. | ||
They would all be bankrupt if not for government money. | ||
unidentified
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Wow. | |
And they just push Trudeau's agenda and they say whatever he wants. | ||
So the average person has no idea the truth about things because all they see is this lamestream media all the time. | ||
But. | ||
My word, we've got the same problems you guys have. | ||
The whole world does. | ||
It's inflation, terrible economy, indoctrination, not education. | ||
Feels like a controlled slow motion demolition. | ||
Yeah, these people believe that words are violence. | ||
And actually they believe that it's actual violence. | ||
And that's because they've never experienced real hardship. | ||
Like you saw the thing where Ben Shapiro showed up at podcast movement. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
You know, and his presence was actual harm. | ||
That's right. | ||
Even though everyone was stoked to see him there and they were like, can I take pictures with you? | ||
I put up a billboard about two years ago in Vancouver, a real billboard, that said, I heart JK Rowling. | ||
A Vancouver politician said it was hate speech. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
And they took it down the next day. | ||
Wow. | ||
Love is hate. | ||
Love is hate? | ||
It had a heart on it for the world's greatest children's author. | ||
And no sign company in Canada will deal with me. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
This is the state of things. | ||
So that's why I had signs made because I became a billboard and I go out and I have conversations, but freedom of speech is under attack. | ||
We're lied to constantly. | ||
And all the media do is stoke division. | ||
Same thing down here. | ||
You know, I recall that a couple hundred years ago, we here Americans offered Quebec an opportunity to revolt against the crown, and they said no! | ||
Do you guys know that? | ||
Yeah, they did say no. | ||
Would have been the 14th colony, but they were like, nah, we're not interested. | ||
And we were like, oh man, we really need their support. | ||
Oh, well, I guess not. | ||
And then we almost took you guys over. | ||
Do you remember that? | ||
unidentified
|
War of 1812. | |
I think that might be revisionist history. | ||
I think we burned down your White House and your Congress back in the day. | ||
Well, no, Britain did. | ||
Yeah, it was before Canada existed. | ||
Right. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Fair point. | ||
We, uh, we tried, I think we did occupy Montreal or something like that. | ||
1865 Canada became a country? | ||
1867. | ||
I think we occupied Montreal during the war of 1812 or something like that. | ||
Oh, nice. | ||
Montreal is worth occupying. | ||
It's lovely. | ||
It is awesome. | ||
When you're not getting attacked. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
But imagine this. | ||
What if we won and we took Montreal? | ||
Y'all be better off. | ||
What would that give us? | ||
Yeah, we'd be better off because they have a really large Antifa contingent. | ||
So if you want to take over them, that's fine with me. | ||
Yeah, by all means, take Montreal. | ||
Yeah, you can have them. | ||
Like, take D.C. | ||
Yeah, but if we did, it would be a bunch of MAGA. | ||
They'd all be walking around with American flags and AR-15s. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I don't think the French Canadians would be that MAGA, though. | ||
No, but who knows? | ||
Who knows, man? | ||
And Montreal's different within the province. | ||
There's a lot of English speakers. | ||
It's very different compared to the rest of the province. | ||
I'm just saying, you know, Canada sucks. | ||
Like, it's a great place with great food and great people, but I mean the government and what it's done to the country has just made it an awful place. | ||
This is what happens if AOC was your president. | ||
This is exactly what happens. | ||
Justin Trudeau, President Zoolander, is the AOC equivalent up in Canada. | ||
He talks like this! | ||
It's also an example of what happens if you let your government be a puppet of a king and just pretend like you're not a puppet of a king. | ||
It's British. | ||
It's owned by the freaking Queen. | ||
She decides who's in charge there. | ||
That's disgusting. | ||
I don't think that's true of the provincial leaders. | ||
And they have a lot of, the provincial leaders have a lot of freedom. | ||
I'm pretty sure the Queen of England technically could intervene, but I don't know if it's politically... In provincial, yeah. | ||
Oh yeah, in everything. | ||
I don't know if it's realistic though. | ||
I don't understand monarchy. | ||
It seems so stupid to me. | ||
Yeah, it's complicated. | ||
We have this, there's this person called the Governor General, who's actually appointed by the Prime Minister, but is the representative of the Queen. | ||
You see, there it is. | ||
It's just a, It's just like a, what do you call it, ceremonial sort of thing. | ||
Is it though? | ||
Well, so here's what can happen. | ||
Because we don't have a two-party system like down here. | ||
We have four or five parties that get seats. | ||
So Justin Trudeau has a minority of the seats in government. | ||
So to pass any law, he has to get some other party to come along with him. | ||
So he ends up bribing some other party by giving them what they want. | ||
And that's always an even further left party. | ||
But at any time, he could be kicked out if the parties just said, no, we're not going to go along with you. | ||
And then a new election would get called. | ||
And it's the governor general who actually does that. | ||
So she does have some role, but as far as I can tell, that's about it. | ||
I think we just look to Canada, and if we do not win the culture war, that's what's in store for us. | ||
So we're lucky in that regard, that we get to watch it happen to you guys, and then be like, hey, we don't want that to happen here, so let's, you know, shore up our defenses. | ||
Get out and vote! | ||
Get out and vote in November and make sure. | ||
There was a time in American history where there was a rebellion, a violent rebellion. | ||
People were shot. | ||
It was called Shays' Rebellion. | ||
It was in 17... Oh yeah, Shays' Rebellion, that's right. | ||
unidentified
|
1783. | |
It was right around, right after the Revolution. | ||
And a bunch of farmers were being taxed for money they didn't have, so they rioted. | ||
They went to the courthouses over the course of like a week or multiple days and weeks or whatever and violently surrounded them. | ||
The judges were like, I'm out of here. | ||
I'm not adjudicating. | ||
We're not going to steal their land. | ||
The governor cracked down hard like he wanted people executed. | ||
He wanted people arrested. | ||
And he was calling people, I don't know if he was using the word terrorist, but calling, you know, the whole insurgency thing. | ||
We got to go after people. | ||
The farmers are our enemies. | ||
And they were like, if you start killing Americans because they are revolting because they can't pay their taxes, that's a bad road to go down. | ||
That's a very bad road to go down. | ||
Eventually, John Hancock came back in, won the governorship and pardoned everybody. | ||
except for two guys who were looters and they got executed. | ||
But it was the pardon that it was like the road to banana republicanism. We saw | ||
it. We saw it where it was just just another cycle of the weak becoming strong, | ||
executing the weak, and trying to hold strength and they circumvented it. And | ||
now we have a situation where we have a president who told us that taxes were not going to be | ||
raised on people making under $400,000. | ||
unidentified
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That's a trick. | |
They are being raised and they have employed all of these IRS agents. | ||
It's not just about raising taxes. | ||
That's the trick. | ||
The trick is they say, we're not going to raise your taxes. | ||
No, we're going to just bill you on your existing taxes and claim you owe us and you can't fight it. | ||
But they're also, I mean, they're going after the middle class again. | ||
Yeah, of course. | ||
Yeah, the villainization of an entire group of people, like what they said about MAGA Republicans, is like what Beaudoin did in Massachusetts. | ||
Well, and the MAGA Republicans are like, these are middle class, small business owners, you know, nail shop owners out in the middle of Indiana or wherever, and they're going to end up paying a whole bunch more, get more pissed, and then be called terrorists. | ||
Very much like history might repeat itself here, because in Massachusetts for Shays' Rebellion, the governor was out of his mind. | ||
Hancock was governor and saw the rebellion on the horizon and was like, I'm resigning. | ||
I can't do this anymore. | ||
So he left. | ||
Then this new governor came and became this tyrant, kind of like what Biden's doing, claiming people are terrorists. | ||
I don't like it. | ||
And then eventually Hancock was like, OK, I can't not do anything. | ||
He ran again, got back into the governorship and pardoned people. | ||
Now, if we have a president who runs again and then comes back into the presidency and pardons people, Wouldn't that be an interesting revolution of the past? | ||
You know what I read that was funny? | ||
That if Donald Trump is indicted and goes to prison or is in jail or whatever, and then is still running for president and wins, he can pardon himself. | ||
Oh, is that right? | ||
Can you pardon yourself? | ||
I think it's debatable. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I remember there was a lot of talk about this a few years ago. | ||
It would get challenged, but apparently he could. | ||
I think, I mean, what do you do when someone in prison is elected president? | ||
Just safe there, you know what I mean? | ||
I guess. | ||
Sort of safe, depending on what kind of prison he's in. | ||
And I guess the charges would be things like obstruction of justice, mishandling of documents that are in your possession that you actually own. | ||
That's what they're trying to go for. | ||
Can you run for president if you're in prison? | ||
No, you can't. | ||
Well, hold on. | ||
They're going after this records law that says if you obfuscate, manipulate, or destroy records, you can't run for office. | ||
That's what they're trying to do. | ||
They just really don't want him to run again. | ||
Everything that they've been doing is about that. | ||
It's the same thing with Shays' Rebellion. | ||
They wanted to strip these people of all their voter rights. | ||
They wanted to strip people of their land. | ||
They seized people's property. | ||
They were trying to make them non-citizens, and eventually it was just like, you can't do that. | ||
You can't make a country if you're making people non-citizens. | ||
That's correct, yeah. | ||
I want to jump to this story here from the post-millennial! | ||
Oh my! | ||
Occupy Democrats demands boycott of Spotify after Joe Rogan says vote Republican. | ||
Talk about a bunch of whiny little babies. | ||
Joe Rogan has opinion, quick, boycott the entire largest music platform in the world. | ||
Post Millennial says, during a recent episode of his podcast, Rogan highlighted the failures of the Democratic Party's handling of the COVID pandemic, suggesting that people should vote Republican instead. | ||
It drew ire from many on the left, obviously. | ||
who went so far as to call on their followers to boycott the popular music and podcast streaming platform, Spotify. | ||
I mean, Occupy Democrats, they post a bunch of fake news anywhere. | ||
They're kind of nuts. | ||
They say, if you support a boycott of Spotify until they drop Joe Rogan's podcast after he just ignorantly urged Americans to vote Republican as payback for businesses closing down due to the pandemic, dangerous rhetoric as the GOP embraces full fascism. | ||
Please retweet and follow us. | ||
Well, you know, Donald, it was Joe Biden who said semi-fascism. | ||
They had to one-up him. | ||
I don't think they know what the word means. | ||
Well, I don't think they care what the word means. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Everything's upside down. | ||
Yeah, everything is upside down. | ||
I mean, look, look, look. | ||
But I predict that this is going to go as well as Neil Young's boycott of Spotify. | ||
Sure, sure. | ||
I propose this. | ||
How about someone out there makes a browser extension, and we select a bunch of keywords like far-right, fascist, semi-fascist, whatever, and we replace it with bad thing. | ||
That's it. | ||
So, like, bad thing person, and it'll be like, you know, business is closing down due to bad thing, or, you know, GOP embraces bad thing. | ||
That's all it means. | ||
It doesn't mean anything other than bad thing. | ||
So we get a browser extension, it just changes these phrases into the phrase bad thing. | ||
There we go. | ||
That'd be the name of the extension, bad thing. | ||
I like that actually. | ||
I would put that on. | ||
Translate the left. | ||
That's right. | ||
That's kind of, that's really smart. | ||
I like it. | ||
Another one of your good ideas. | ||
Inaccuracy with Occupy Democrats here. | ||
Rogan is not ignorant. | ||
No. | ||
He's done enough research over the last 10 years. | ||
I can safely say from a distance, the guy, not a genius. | ||
LOL. | ||
Actually, I think you are a genius, Joe. | ||
I think he is, honestly. | ||
He's a brilliant guy. | ||
Not ignorant. | ||
He knows what he's talking about. | ||
This is not a light decision that he's making or talking about. | ||
Joe's not a genius, but he's been he's been taken. | ||
He's been smoking DMT and weed and psychedelics and NAD. | ||
And so it's like his mind has just ascended to a new level. | ||
So in the fourth dimensional state, he's kind of just a regular intelligence. | ||
But to all of us lowly three dimensional beings, he's way out there. | ||
Also, if you watch that segment, he's saying vote Republican almost like to bring balance back to this thing. | ||
And it was the Democrats that shut down businesses. | ||
They shut down our schools. | ||
They shut down our churches. | ||
They left, you know, the cathedrals to sin open. | ||
They left open the liquor stores. | ||
They left open the casinos. | ||
But they closed down the things that... Churches? | ||
Yeah, they closed down the things that give us community, that help us, you know, learn things. | ||
They closed down libraries. | ||
They closed down all this stuff. | ||
And now we're supposed to just be like, oh, that was okay. | ||
You did that for really good reasons. | ||
No, they were garbage reasons. | ||
We all know they're garbage reasons. | ||
You have everybody walking it back. | ||
You know, I mean, you even had Kathy Hochul, stupid governor of New York, saying that it was a mistake to close schools. | ||
So it was obvious at the time, and it's obvious now. | ||
They're saying it now because an election's coming. | ||
And they're scared. | ||
What I don't like about what Joe said in this article, but a lot of people are saying vote Republican, what I don't like about that is the vague, bland, vote R on a ticket regardless of who it is, because idiot, random dude that has bad intentions can join the Republican Party and then get that vote. | ||
You should vote for the good candidate, the right candidate. | ||
It doesn't matter what party they're in. | ||
trans satanist anarchist won the nomination for I think sheriff or | ||
whatever by running a trans Satanist yeah it was up in New Hampshire to make | ||
a point to make a point being like you would just vote for whatever time are on | ||
it that's your fault people were pissed they were like wait this person won it's | ||
like you vote for him that's like there was a you guys probably don't remember | ||
this but there was an episode of Will and Grace where they were trying to | ||
figure out who to vote for and Grace was hosting a fundraiser for the Jewish | ||
candidate and Will was hosting a fundraiser for the gay candidate. | ||
They ended up getting into a huge fight and whatever. | ||
And then at the end, what's his name? | ||
The other guy comes in. | ||
Jack. | ||
Jack, the best character on the show. | ||
He comes in, he sees that they're arguing and he's like, why didn't you just vote for the black guy? | ||
And they're like, there's a black guy running and they both run out to vote for the black guy. | ||
When was this? | ||
This was whenever Will and Grace was on. | ||
Was that the 90s? | ||
It was hysterical. | ||
It was like so perfect. | ||
Just bang on. | ||
Back when identity politics was fun. | ||
Was amusing back in the 90s because we were also above it. | ||
Before comedy was terrorism. | ||
Yeah, really. | ||
That's 9-11 all over again. | ||
I keep talking about pardons on this show from time to time but it's like since 9-11 people went psychotic and we gotta like just Move on, man, because we are forming a world government right now. | ||
And if we don't move on, they're moving on without us. | ||
Well, let me let me look to put myself into the fray. | ||
Let me just point out, like, why this stuff persists. | ||
The Daily Beast read this article I mentioned earlier, where they claim that I'm trying to lure people into my right wing world with rock music. | ||
This is the insanity that they're telling people. | ||
And I don't want to, you know, forgive this sort of self-promotive, you know, promotion, I guess, that comes out of this. | ||
But my point is, there are people who read The Daily Beast as a mainstream corporate publication, and this is the world they live in. | ||
It is literally insane. | ||
They are in a psychotic, paranoid, delusional bubble. | ||
They believe this stuff. | ||
Now, I think the Daily Beast is writing this because it's, basically, you could create a Daily Beast article generator and click a button and have it spit out a name in some words. | ||
Jack Posobic, far right, you know, hoax or whatever, and it'll just randomly throw in random person's name, random identifier, random thing they did, and that's the Daily Beast. | ||
But when there are people who believe this insanity, what happens to their brains? | ||
I had one guy say that he was mad at me for breaking consensus reality. | ||
Bro, you don't live in consensus reality. | ||
You live in the crackpot reality of weird algorithmically driven garbage articles that make no sense. | ||
But this is what makes people lose their minds. | ||
And the reason why they hate Joe Rogan so much is that Joe Rogan appeals to regular people. | ||
I think he may be a vaccine, as it were, socially, to stop people from contracting the mind virus. | ||
The tip of the needle, so to speak. | ||
You know, you've mentioned 9-11 a couple times. | ||
I think that's also coincident with when the internet really took off, which has enabled division to be stoked. | ||
But also what's going on today, I go to universities and I hang out sometimes on campus. | ||
I've been to many Ivy League universities and I talk to these students wearing my signs. | ||
They are teaching these kids now. | ||
They're training this generation. | ||
That it's not okay to have a different opinion. | ||
You can't just be okay with it. | ||
You have to be actively engaged in trying to cancel the other opinion. | ||
Anti-racism isn't just about being against racism. | ||
It's about actively trying to cancel people who you disagree with. | ||
And they're creating these social justice warriors. | ||
This whole young generation can't even have a conversation because words are violence to them. | ||
It wasn't like that in 2012. | ||
I think it's TikTok. | ||
I think that ByteDance and the CCP are really intentionally driving this algorithm in the United States, trying to get people to hate each other. | ||
unidentified
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I honestly don't think it's TikTok at all. | |
I don't think it's TikTok at all. | ||
Twitter is doing that, but what TikTok is doing is making sure that anyone who opposes the cult can't have a platform. | ||
Tons of people on the right have been banned for literally no reason. | ||
I mean, TimCastIRL is banned from TikTok. | ||
We don't know why. | ||
Yeah, and from what I've been told, it's a different algorithm that TikTok uses in the United States than what it uses in China. | ||
That is correct. | ||
They push science and technology to the top in China, whereas they push gender ideology to the top in the US. | ||
Yep. | ||
I mean, that's not non-intentional. | ||
That's definitely someone chose to do that. | ||
But this stuff was happening before TikTok or any of these other things. | ||
You know, there was this push to not educate scholars, but to turn out activists. | ||
So it's a completely different way of engaging in instruction, right? | ||
It used to be the way that you engage in a university. | ||
is that you're having a discussion, you've all read the material, and any idea is open for discussion. | ||
It doesn't matter how crazy it is. | ||
It doesn't matter if you agree with the idea or not. | ||
Come up with an idea, throw it out there, let's talk about the idea. | ||
And now it has so much more to do with, you know, forming a belief system that then you can go and act as an activist out in the world and get people to sign on to your belief system. | ||
That's not what it used to be. | ||
The idea that a scholar is someone who has to believe a certain set of things and never question them, that's not scholarship. | ||
That's cultish behavior. | ||
Speaking of activists, I was in San Francisco two months ago down by the pier with my signs, with a woman who came out with me, and it was a weekday. | ||
Schools were in session. | ||
There were about 80 elementary school kids, 10 and 11 years old, down there protesting in favor of abortion and trans rights. | ||
10 and 11 year olds out on a school field trip protesting. | ||
On a school field trip. | ||
The school had them go out and do it. | ||
Three different classes. | ||
And they were not just protesting, right? | ||
They were protesting for the eradication of babies and for the sterilization of teenagers. | ||
Great. | ||
Talk about anti-humanism. | ||
If the pro-America side, if the freedom libertarian side, conservative side wins on school choice, then give it 20 to 40 years and the problem corrects itself. | ||
I think a lot of it, you were mentioning earlier, the internet, how it kind of coincided with 9-11. | ||
And I think what's internet video has been weaponized. | ||
I thought for sure back in 2006, like internet video is the future. | ||
I was right. | ||
It's just been weaponized as part of it. | ||
And like, for instance, I made a video when Barack Obama was running for president in 2007. | ||
I made a video and said, Barack, you're going to win. | ||
You're going to serve two terms. | ||
I was just like, let's manifest. | ||
Let's create this and give it confidence. | ||
So you're responsible for all those things. | ||
It's your fault. | ||
And then at YouTube, one of the, Steve Grove at YouTube, one of the administrators featured the article. | ||
So basically together we create a political propaganda. | ||
I didn't think of it at the time. | ||
I was just like, I want Obama to win. | ||
It got 50,000 views. | ||
I don't know how many people voted for Obama as a result, but talk about mass formation. | ||
Like the power of internet video that an individual can inspire the minds of almost the entire world is, It's disconcerting. | ||
Let me jump to this story we got from the Post-Millennial. | ||
Hey, it's us again. | ||
That's right. | ||
Connecticut assistant principal placed on leave after Project Veritas expose. | ||
This is crazy. | ||
This Veritas expose from the other day. | ||
Oh, this is wild. | ||
This is totally wild. | ||
This dude's basically bragging about how he's breaking the law, violating non-discrimination laws, saying he won't hire conservatives, Catholics. | ||
Or people over 30. | ||
People over 30?! ! | ||
Right. | ||
All of this is just hugely illegal. | ||
Meanwhile, look at this guy. | ||
Like, why does he have a job? | ||
That's a good question. | ||
And he's like, well, these people, they're brainwashed. | ||
And I'm like, dude, when you refuse to expose people to other ideas, it's you that's the cult. | ||
You! | ||
Not the other people who are actually okay with different ideas competing with each other. | ||
But this guy's now placed on leave. | ||
The crazy thing is, there's a video, I don't know if you guys have it, where James O'Keefe... Oh yeah, we have that in a different story. | ||
We ran, like, multiple stories on this. | ||
James confronts the guy at a bar or restaurant, and they call the cops, and the cops threaten to arrest him. | ||
Yeah, this is crazy, but this is it. | ||
This is one school. | ||
It's one school in Connecticut. | ||
Good job, Project Veritas. | ||
Super fancy part of Connecticut. | ||
I mean... But just, you need to understand, this is an example of what parents need to be watching out for. | ||
He's basically saying he won't hire someone who doesn't agree with trans ideology. | ||
He wants teachers to come in and tell the kids whatever the kids want to hear and what he wants them to say. | ||
And he's like, I'm pretty good at making sure we don't hire any Catholics or conservatives. | ||
You can't ask them, but you can ask other things. | ||
And then I just call him and say, you know, we've moved on to another candidate. | ||
This is what they're doing at your schools, man. | ||
If you don't keep an eye on what's going on, you're gonna wake up one day and be like, why did my kid shave their head, and now they hate me? | ||
unidentified
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I can't. | |
Well, I mean, your kid can shave your head and hate you without joining a cult, can't they? | ||
Yeah, but what I mean is, we've talked about this a lot, the cult indoctrination at these schools, especially at colleges, and we've had tons of people come on this show, and while we're getting ready for the show, they're like, yeah, my kid's about to go to college, and I was like, Do you read your own tweets? | ||
Yeah, why are you doing that? | ||
They just because it's just no, like, this is why I'm like, I don't know, maybe there won't be a civil war, because the right will just sit there and shake their fist while the left stages a revolution. | ||
Because even knowing the schools are doing this, they keep sending their kids to these schools. | ||
It's like, okay, I guess. | ||
Sure, fine, whatever. | ||
Well, it is hard. | ||
I mean, as a parent, it is hard to try and like figure out if there's a path that you can take. | ||
You know, I talk to my kid all the time about all of these things. | ||
Homeschooling? | ||
Well, micro schooling, private schools. | ||
You got to do all of these things. | ||
You got to figure it out. | ||
I'm just saying it is hard to figure out a choice. | ||
It's a full time job to figure out how to educate your kid. | ||
Yeah. | ||
No one ever said having kids was easy. | ||
I didn't say it was easy. | ||
My son actually said like he wants to go to college and I'm like, you could also just buy a truck. | ||
I got an idea, though. | ||
Hear me out. | ||
I hear what you're saying about it being a full-time job. | ||
What if we created some kind of cultural institution where there was a parent who would work and make money and acquire resources, while the other parent principally helped raise those kids? | ||
And then through that partnership, you'd have a healthy family to raise these kids and instill values in them. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
What could we call something like that? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Family? | ||
Sounds like evil white supremacy colonialism to me. | ||
The other thing too is I was recently listening to or something I was in somehow I was absorbing information about I don't know how about divorce about like the history of | ||
divorce in the US and I have come to the conclusion that no fault divorce was a total | ||
unidentified
|
mistake. | |
This should never have been absolutely allowed at all. | ||
It was the communists. | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's a terrible. | ||
And I love this. | ||
We never should have done this. | ||
Media matters. | ||
I think it was media matters. | ||
One of these lefty outlets wrote like Tim cast IRL. | ||
The right wing is now coming for no fault divorce. | ||
And I'm like, okay, like what? | ||
How do you protect against no-fault divorce as a woman too, I guess. | ||
I mean, I have like, you know, I'm in my forties. | ||
I know lots of women who are no longer married. | ||
There's crazy stories. | ||
You know, a guy wakes up one day and he's like, I don't want to be married to you anymore. | ||
And then he takes the house and tries to take the kids. | ||
And you're like, what did I do? | ||
What happened? | ||
And the inverse. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And the inverse. | ||
Women doing the same thing. | ||
unidentified
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Sure. | |
Guy comes home one day, the locks were changed, and she's like, here's the papers, go somewhere else. | ||
This is just crazy. | ||
You know, it's crazy. | ||
Signed prenups, I've heard, but then I've been told, like, they're not enough. | ||
Like, even if you have a prenup that says half of it's mine, they can still take it. | ||
If you have to sign a prenup, like, don't marry that person. | ||
Correct. | ||
I feel like prenups should be embedded in the marriage contract so you don't have to feel bad about it. | ||
But that's crazy too. | ||
What's the point of getting married? | ||
You used to not be able to get divorced. | ||
You'd go and you'd be like, I'd like to get a divorce. | ||
And then the judge would be like, no, denied, bang, go get counseling. | ||
The idea of getting married is I'll bring my $10 million, you bring your $600,000, and then with our $10.6 million, we make $100 million more and we split that. | ||
But you don't get my original $10 million that I I love the 10 million brought to the marriage in the first place. | ||
I just remembered what it was that I was listening to. | ||
It was the criminal podcast about this woman who was trying to get divorced from her husband after he had been convicted of murder. | ||
She had to go to South Dakota. | ||
It was like, I don't know, sometime before now. | ||
unidentified
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She had to go to South Dakota to do it. | |
But then he was exonerated is what happened. | ||
So she could have potentially gotten the divorce because he was in prison, but then he was exonerated. | ||
His dad got him off on like all these reasons. | ||
And so she had to go to South Dakota and live there for like a year in order to qualify to get divorced because it was legal there. | ||
And then South Dakota changed their law and other people started having no-fault divorce and whatever. | ||
But yeah, Criminal Podcast. | ||
I like that podcast. | ||
Did you catch what I was saying about the pre-nup, embedded pre-nup? | ||
How I think it makes sense? | ||
Yeah, because then you don't have to worry about it when you get divorced. | ||
You can just leave with your stuff. | ||
Like marriage is a business contract and you bring your initial investment and they bring their initial investment. | ||
I don't see why they should have access to your initial investment before you do them. | ||
I kind of feel like considering marriage as a business contract defeats the entire point of marriage. | ||
That's not how I would ever view marriage as a business arrangement. | ||
It's just financial. | ||
Then why do it? | ||
So you don't have to get taxed when you give your wife $100,000 a year? | ||
I hate this idea of marriage. | ||
That's not what marriage is. | ||
It's just like I can give you more than $14,000 a year. | ||
That should not be the deal. | ||
I'm not going to get taxed on it. | ||
There should be love involved. | ||
There should be wanting to take care of a family. | ||
Let's use your scenario about $10,000,000. | ||
You don't need to get married for the business contract either. | ||
If you had $10,000,000 and you married someone with $600,000, you would just hurt each other tax-wise. | ||
Well, what you would do is you do it because you want to make more money together. | ||
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no If you're stagnant, if you're stagnant. | ||
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. | ||
When someone's making, you know, $250K and they marry someone who's making $100 million or making $25 million per year and that's a joint filing, you basically have just jumped straight up. | ||
There's no benefit received to the person who's making less money. | ||
They just get taxed more. | ||
It doesn't make sense. | ||
They're also making $12.5 million a year because they're married to someone who's making $25. | ||
Yeah, but here's the other piece of that, is like, if you're both these wealthy millionaires, like, how do you even have time to find someone to fall in love with? | ||
Like, that really is a business contract. | ||
Like, working to make a lot of money is, um, maybe I'm just doing it wrong. | ||
I should clarify, too, because I think the highest bracket... What's the highest bracket? | ||
It's 250, right? | ||
250 and up? | ||
I have no idea. | ||
So it's actually, like, if someone's making 50k and they marry someone who's making 500, it's bad tax-wise. | ||
I mean, I would not encourage getting married and not trying to make more money. | ||
I think the purpose is you're going to make at least 10 times what you're making alone if you're married. | ||
I don't think it's bad tax-wise. | ||
And I say this as a former financial advisor because the 500 person can come down to a lower tax bracket. | ||
Right, because, well, it would basically put half of their money, they would get another $125k towards deductible or whatever. | ||
Or, no, no, no, that's not how it works. | ||
It's, yes, you're right, right, right. | ||
Like maybe $250 each. | ||
What I'm trying to say is... The overall tax bracket might come down, but... | ||
What I'm trying to say is, if you're acting as an individual who wants a prenup, it is bad for you to enter this arrangement because it benefits the person who has more money. | ||
And depending on how much money they have, it may not actually be a benefit at all for anybody. | ||
So what I'm trying to get at is, the system itself is being set up in such a way that it really, really disincentivizes marriage. | ||
Like, you can lose- It's true on the poor side, too. | ||
I mean, just across the board, the whole system is completely screwed up. | ||
unidentified
|
But like, if you're poor, Bring back the dowry! | |
That's what we need, right? | ||
I have linens from my great-grandmother's trousseau. | ||
Oh yeah? | ||
That she embroidered and brought with her into her marriage. | ||
I've been tossing around getting married. | ||
It's because I'm dating this girl and I'm like, I want to give her money every year, but I don't want to get taxed on it. | ||
So like, what's the only way to do that is to have a joint bank account. | ||
It's basically, we can share funds. | ||
But I'm like, it seems so cold and calculated. | ||
It sure does. | ||
Maybe that's the way you're supposed to treat marriage, because it's all numbers. | ||
It's not like a love doesn't make love. | ||
Like, that's up to me. | ||
I got to do that in my own soul. | ||
I think one of the big problems we have is that regardless of whether they're conservative... Actually, no, no. | ||
I would say this principally of conservatives. | ||
They are raising their children extremely poorly. | ||
Now, granted, they're doing better than liberals, for sure. | ||
What I mean, though, is How is it that there are conservative families that are shocked to find their kids have become, you know, purple hair, shaved head, you know, left extremists who hate their parents guts? | ||
That's bad parenting. | ||
That's it. | ||
I don't, I mean, maybe it's bad parenting. | ||
It is. | ||
You kick your kids off to the wind and then we're like, what happened to my kids? | ||
Maybe you should have paid attention to what was going on with their lives. | ||
I think for a lot of parents today, when they think of school, we think of our own experiences in school, and a lot of them just have no idea how much things have changed. | ||
These aren't education centers anymore. | ||
They're indoctrination centers, and people are getting blindsided. | ||
It's not even—it's also—there's more to it. | ||
We had, you know, our friend Richie McGinnis' mom was on, and she's an old-school feminist, and we tried explaining to her that feminists today are pro-war. | ||
She was shocked, said, no, they're not. | ||
Yeah, they are. | ||
They all have, like, Martina Navratilova has a Ukraine flag in her. | ||
Yeah, they want to pump money into the war machine. | ||
That's correct. | ||
They want Raytheon to see those record profits. | ||
And we're about to sell a bunch of weapons to Taiwan, too. | ||
unidentified
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Exactly. | |
A billion dollars. | ||
Yeah. | ||
A billion dollar grant or whatever for weapons. | ||
But these older people don't pay attention. | ||
They've resigned from modern political and social life, and now the world's being burned down, and they're sitting back voting for it, going, oh, you're crazy, it's not happening. | ||
So there are people who are like, Tim, don't rag on boomers. | ||
My friends, I'm not ragging on you, who is intelligent, smart, who reads the news, fact checks, and is questioning what's going on. | ||
And is watching the show. | ||
And is watching the show. | ||
I'm talking about how we've had people on the show. | ||
I'm talking about The large portion of boomers who are voting Democrat thinking they're voting for like a hard union guy, and they're actually voting for child sex changes. | ||
And they won't read a single article online to save their own children's lives. | ||
It's not just boomers, it's literally anybody. | ||
But, you know, I think the issue is, when it comes to the older generation, not just boomers, but anybody, they consume television media. | ||
That's where they get their news. | ||
We are online, so we're exposed to Counter information. | ||
They're not. | ||
So they sit there in their lounge chairs watching CNN going, wow, can't believe that's true. | ||
Again? | ||
And no matter how many times there's a hoax, no matter how many times there's a new Jussie Smollett, they believe it. | ||
There is a sense of erosion that is interplayed as well. | ||
People are not impervious to realizing what's going on. | ||
Eventually, sometimes enough information appears in their face. | ||
genderqueer books or books about this and that and seeing a 12 year old with | ||
a double mastectomy and they're like sometimes like an erosion can | ||
happen slowly over time sometimes all of a sudden a big piece of rock just falls | ||
off and you're like whoa what am I looking at? The trick now is you're | ||
familiar with black propaganda? | ||
The concept? | ||
Yeah. | ||
So this is what the left does, right? | ||
Lying, cheating, stealing. | ||
And the right doesn't do these things. | ||
They try and take this straightforward approach of here's what has to be done, and here's the harsh reality. | ||
You go to someone and say, you're going to have to work hard to make a better future. | ||
They go, hard work. | ||
Then the Democrats come along and say, you know those loans you took out? | ||
We're going to make other people pay for them. | ||
And they're like, sounds good to me. | ||
Freebie, right? | ||
What they even say is that no one's going to have to pay for them. | ||
They lie about that too. | ||
Oh yeah, yeah. | ||
I'm imagining what would happen if you went door to door, knocking on doors in a swing district and said that you were a Democrat, you know, voter, and you showed them the book Genderqueer. | ||
And you said, here's a book, here's what's in schools. | ||
Do you think, how would people respond to that? | ||
I think that there's two ways that they respond to it, right? | ||
I mean, some people would look at it and they would say, oh, that's shocking. | ||
I'm going to start looking into this because that's crazy. | ||
And other people would just say, no. | ||
They would do that thing where they just don't even believe their eyes. | ||
But that's why I'm saying you don't make any arguments. | ||
You don't tell them, like, if someone just literally handed them a book and said, like, I want to just, like, you buy it. | ||
The problem is you buy the book and you're helping the person who's making the book. | ||
But I'm just wondering, like, what would happen if you were, you know, in a neighborhood handing out these books? | ||
Like, what would they be saying about it? | ||
The far left likes it. | ||
But the problem with Democrats these days and the Democratic Party is they're essentially being held hostage by the far left wing of their party. | ||
Because if they object to any of this, they are called a bigot. | ||
And to be called a bigot as a Democrat is like instant death. | ||
It's like none of them will stand up to them. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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I actually did buy a copy of that book. | |
I bought a copy of Genderqueer because we were writing about it a lot and I was like, I should just take a look at this book. | ||
And the things that I found horrifying about it had a lot less to do with the graphic imagery and more to do with the trajectory of the story. | ||
By the end of the book, this main character, who now is non-binary, is planning with a euphoric sensibility how to come out to their students because also the character is a teacher now. | ||
You see, that's the weirdest thing to me, that there are teachers who are like, I want to make sure all of these children know who I like to bang. | ||
Right. | ||
Why would you want that? | ||
No. | ||
We would never even say our teacher's first name. | ||
If you went up to your teacher and said their name, they'd be like, excuse me? | ||
Oh, you did? | ||
Yeah. | ||
So I went to several different kinds of schools. | ||
I went to public school through eighth grade, and then I went to Catholic school for two years, and then I went to Quaker school for two years. | ||
What was that like? | ||
Quaker school? | ||
It was great. | ||
It was academically rigorous. | ||
I had teachers who were old school professor style teachers where any idea that you wanted to talk about was on the table. | ||
I was having trouble in my English class with Peter Renka and we called him Peter. | ||
Did we call him Peter? | ||
I don't remember. | ||
Anyways, I think I called him Mr. Anka because I came from Catholic school, and I was used to calling people sister, so it was... Anyways, who cares? | ||
My point is, I was having trouble in English class, and so I talked to Mr. Anka about it, and he said, well, what do you want to read? | ||
And I said, I'd like to read this book, The Castle, by Kafka. | ||
And he was like, great, read that, and we'll make time, we'll talk about it after school. | ||
and that's what we did and it was great and my philosophy classes were interesting and I took you know independent studies and writing plays I mean it was ludicrous if everyone could go to the school I went to the way it was in the mid 90s if everyone could go to that school we wouldn't have these kinds of problems to be honest I want to jump to this story from The Post Millennial. | ||
Ooh, it's us again. | ||
34. | ||
Bomb threat at Boston Children's Hospital ruled false. | ||
Police report. | ||
No suspicious items were observed or located. | ||
An incident report from the Boston Police Department specifies. | ||
I just want to say that my initial assessment here was that it was a hoax and a hoax, but now it appears it's a hoax, hoax, and a hoax. | ||
So I'll explain and then I'll throw it to Billboard Chris, but the first story is clearly the bomb threat itself was clearly fake. | ||
But also, the police did not even show up until an hour and 20 minutes after the call came in, and they did not clear the area until an hour or about an hour later. | ||
So I'm like, okay, the police weren't even taking it seriously. | ||
It was around 8 o'clock that the call came in. | ||
9.20 where the police actually showed up, and then 10 o'clock when they actually cleared the space out. | ||
So you have the hoax of the call itself, you have the hoax of the media narrative that everything got shut down, and now what's the latest? | ||
So yeah, there's a couple of employees there that send me the emails they're getting. | ||
So I get those. | ||
But then this employee told me the weird thing is that they never sent out an initial lockdown email, only the all clear one. | ||
No added security this morning either. | ||
And this whole time, the last two weeks, there's been no added security. | ||
No one in the hospital has been getting any threats that this employee knows of. | ||
Most people didn't even know that I had tweeted out all these videos originally. | ||
They're just playing victim, trying to shift the narrative away from their own words that everyone heard in the videos that I tweeted out, and they're trying to make themselves into a victim. | ||
But there's really not that much going on there. | ||
What are their own words that you tweeted? | ||
Is that stuff you can talk about on YouTube? | ||
Yeah, it's all these. | ||
So they were on YouTube. | ||
These videos were on YouTube. | ||
They had all these. | ||
They took them down. | ||
Yeah, they had all these videos on their YouTube channel, and I was alerted to one of them, so I tweeted it out. | ||
It was about gender-affirming hysterectomies, how they will cut out the uterus of a girl or young woman to affirm her gender. | ||
And it started to take off. | ||
Postmillennial wrote about it. | ||
And I thought I better record this because it's getting some steam going here. | ||
And of course they deleted the video. | ||
So then I tweeted out my recorded version of it. | ||
I sent it to Libza TikTok. | ||
I sent it to Matt Walsh. | ||
They retweeted it for me. | ||
It went viral. | ||
And in the meantime, I recorded about 40 other videos from their YouTube site that they have also deleted all of those now. | ||
Are they still doing gender affirming hysterectomies at the hospital? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And they even, they even changed their website. | ||
They had a page talking about how they do phalloplasties on 17 year olds, or sorry, vaginoplasties. | ||
So this is. | ||
Yeah, it was the vaginoplasties on the 17 year olds. | ||
Yeah. | ||
This is where they create a neo vagina for young men or boys. | ||
They castrate them and then invert the penis. | ||
It gets gruesome guys, but anyway, they changed their website. | ||
It used to say 17 year olds, now it says 18 year olds. | ||
They also claim that they follow the WPATH standards of care. | ||
So WPATH is the World Professional Association for Transgender Health. | ||
They write the standards of care that these gender clinics can follow if they feel like it. | ||
But WPATH is lowering the age for all of these surgeries right now, and their new standards of care are coming out next week. | ||
And in there, they recommend womb removal and testicle removal for 17 year olds, breast removal for 15 year olds. | ||
But a lot of these clinics are going even younger than that. | ||
I have Kellen Lackhart on video from Kaiser Permanente in Oakland, California, admitting that they cut off the breasts of a 12 year old girl and they're castrating 16 year old boys. | ||
We have lots of stories like this. | ||
These places are out of control. | ||
There's no regulation. | ||
But humans love boobs. | ||
That's the crazy thing, right? | ||
But it's true. | ||
What does this look, Libby? | ||
These gender clinics treat them as expendable. | ||
Like if someone wanted to cut off their foot, we wouldn't cut off their foot. | ||
What I mean is, correct me if I'm wrong, I may be wrong, but I'm pretty sure that humans are the only mammalian species with permanently swollen breasts. | ||
I believe so. | ||
I believe that's true. | ||
So most mammals only start producing and their breasts only engorge when they're child-rearing, but humans are different. | ||
That's what I mean, like humans love boobs. | ||
And so it's this interesting thing just to see that they're telling children that these are bad things that you should get rid of, and they're performing mastectomies on minor girls. | ||
Yeah, we've got Johanna Olson-Kennedy, who's one of the top specialists in the world, who runs the gender clinic at Children's Hospital Los Angeles. | ||
She's on video talking about a 13-year-old girl who got her breasts cut off, and she says, what's the big deal? | ||
If they want to get breasts when they're older, they can just go buy them. | ||
You also have... What do they think breasts are? | ||
Right. | ||
You also have doctors on TikTok saying that they're going to yeet the teats. | ||
And it's... What? | ||
That's what they say. | ||
They're like, I'm going to yeet teats tomorrow. | ||
It's very exciting. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And they get all into it. | ||
Uh, Olsen Kennedy was also, I think, the doctor, um, a doctor who was treating the child of an ABC executive who was at Disney, who was then advocating against the parental rights and education bill. | ||
She also, get this guys, she applied for a grant and was given a grant. | ||
It went to four hospitals. | ||
The NIH, National Institute of Health, gave $5.7 million to four different children's hospitals. | ||
As part of the grant, they reduced the age that these kids could receive the opposite sex hormones. | ||
So this is girls getting testosterone or boys getting estrogen. | ||
They reduced the age as part of this grant from 13 years of age to eight years old. | ||
But I also want to make sure we're clarifying here. | ||
They're not actually giving kids testosterone or estrogen. | ||
They're giving them pseudo, right? | ||
It's a faux. | ||
It's not actual human hormones. | ||
Well, yeah, it's synthetic testosterone. | ||
Right, right, right. | ||
I don't know how they produce it, but yeah. | ||
So this is an important factor because for a long time I thought they were giving legitimate human hormones to children. | ||
They're not. | ||
It's synthetic or it comes from animals or things like that. | ||
There have been older trans people who have advocated for like horse estrogen or something like that I've seen posted on forums. | ||
So what I end up reading is that some of these kids end up with very serious ailments based on the hormones they're getting because they're not quite the same. | ||
I think one example, because I'm not a biologist or a chemist or anything like that, but people talk about soy and how soy feminizes people, but I believe soy is phytoestrogen, which is a different form. | ||
It's like less potent or something like that. | ||
I'm not saying necessarily what that means other than there are different kinds of estrogen that affect the body in similar ways, but they are different. | ||
Okay. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And plus it doesn't belong in their body. | ||
Like they have a small amount of testosterone girls do naturally, but they're getting dosages that are 20 times what they're supposed to have. | ||
But what I mean is if you give a human being, if a human being's body produces human testosterone, then the body reacts to it. | ||
But I'd imagine if you give a human being horse testosterone or some other synthetic, it's going to react differently than it would to actual testosterone, but perhaps similarly. | ||
And we don't know because this whole thing is a giant experiment, right? | ||
It's never been done in the history of the world. | ||
Whether you believe in God or you believe in evolution. | ||
Well, obviously if you believe in God, you're saying God made us wrong by doing this to kids. | ||
And if you believe in evolution, as I do, well, we've evolved over about a billion years. | ||
Humans have been on this planet only for maybe 300,000 years. | ||
But are we to believe now that for the first time in human history, in this little 10 year window, that a pharmaceutical company is here to help our children be who they really are? | ||
You don't trust pharmaceutical companies? | ||
Evolution got it all wrong. | ||
You know? | ||
I love this notion that the left used to, like, ten years ago, they were like, these big pharma's bad, and now they're like, big pharma's good, my friend. | ||
Well, it's all part of a piece, too, because you have on the at Boston Children's, one of the founders of the gender clinic there was pioneering the use of puberty blockers in younger kids. | ||
And that was something I think that was started in like 2013 or something like that. | ||
Boston Children's, as part of their promotional materials, was showing profiles of kids who came to the clinic specifically for being young and being cared for in this way at that clinic. | ||
And they talk about how they have to go into the hospital a lot. | ||
And they talk about this as a positive thing. | ||
You know, they know right who I am and why I'm there. | ||
They have to get bone density scans. | ||
They have to get brain scans and all of this stuff. | ||
Isn't there vision impaired too? | ||
Yeah, there's a lot of concerns. | ||
Also the makers of these drugs don't recommend that you be on them for more than like three or four months. | ||
And kids are going on them for years at a time and then being ushered on to cross-sex hormones. | ||
So that's an issue as well. | ||
And the way that the trans kids are promoted, I think, is also really a dangerous thing because they look so happy and smiling and it's like, yeah, you look great for these photo ops, you know? | ||
But let's see what's really going on. | ||
Why do you need brain scans and bone scans? | ||
Twenty year prediction. | ||
Oh, this is done. | ||
You think it'll be gone? | ||
There'll be no more? | ||
Way before that. | ||
Way before that. | ||
But what about these people? | ||
They're home for life. | ||
They are literally lifetime medical patients. | ||
When you cut out the womb of a girl, sometimes they cut out just the uterus, sometimes they cut out the ovaries as well. | ||
So if this girl gets a little older, she gets to be 25 years of age, her brain's finished developing now, she says, what the heck did you do to me? | ||
I have all these medical complications. | ||
She's gone through menopause. | ||
You cut out their ovaries sometimes. | ||
That's instant menopause. | ||
That has a hundred side effects of its own. | ||
Early onset dementia, osteoporosis, all sorts of issues. | ||
A young woman in DC messaged me two days ago. | ||
She was rushed to the ER three times because she's on testosterone and it was damaging her kidneys. | ||
Wow. | ||
I heard that causes the blood to thicken up too. | ||
There's so many things and we don't even know them all. | ||
You mentioned vision loss. | ||
The FDA just three or four weeks ago, Issued a warning saying that these kids brains are swelling up and they're suffering permanent vision loss This is news a young girl in Sweden suffered spinal fractures while she was on puberty blockers 12 other kids there At the Karolinska Hospital suffered catastrophic injuries and they've stopped this in Sweden They've started in Finland in Tavistock in the UK in England. | ||
They're shutting down the Tavistock, which is the only gender clinic They are spreading it out though and making it regional. | ||
Yeah but they're going to totally redo how it's going on and it's not going to be nearly as extreme. | ||
I just want to mention one more thing, what never gets talked about enough. | ||
At the Tavistock where we have good statistics because there was only one gender clinic that all the kids went to in England. | ||
35% of the children had moderate to severe autism. | ||
That number goes above 50% when you include the mild cases. | ||
And all these children's hospitals here in the U.S. | ||
have partnerships with autism organizations. | ||
It's like providing a funnel of kids for them. | ||
And if you look at the Children's National Hospital website in D.C., where I was just at yesterday, two days ago, Right on their website they have a gender autism program and it states right on their website that they don't yet know why so many autistic kids experience gender non-conformity but that doesn't stop them from sterilizing them. | ||
Why do you think they experience gender non-conformity autistic kids? | ||
From all the parents I've spoken to, these kids already feel like they don't fit in. | ||
They tend to obsess over things. | ||
They're feeling like they don't fit in, and this ideology's coming along, and it's being presented as the cure for them. | ||
that it's because they're trapped in the wrong body, which is why they don't feel like a typical girl. | ||
And that by transitioning, this is gonna solve all their problems. | ||
But all these kids at these gender clinics have comorbidities going on. | ||
They've got autism. | ||
Some of them will grow up to be gay. | ||
All of our studies into gender dysphoria show that 80 to 90% of the time, | ||
when kids went through puberty, it desisted, and the majority of them were gay. | ||
The most recent study that came out followed 139 boys from about the age of five | ||
all the way into their 20s. | ||
87.8% of them, they just grew out of it. | ||
64% grew up to be gay. | ||
So in addition to all the other harm that's going on, this is actually a deeply homophobic movement that's telling kids just because they don't conform to stereotypes that this must mean they're trapped in the wrong body. | ||
And my message is one of That's the weird thing. | ||
This movement just reinforces gender stereotypes. | ||
It sure does. | ||
throw around a football, hates wearing dresses, and wants to have short hair, guess what? She's | ||
a hundred percent girl. It doesn't mean she's a boy. I mean she's a tall boy. That's the weird | ||
thing. This movement just reinforces gender stereotypes. It sure does. That's all it is. | ||
They call it social constructs, but then if someone exhibits what is clearly, as they | ||
describe a social construct, they say, well, gotta get surgery and drugs. | ||
Right. | ||
Which doesn't really make a whole lot of sense, now does it? | ||
No, it's actually totally diverse. | ||
What if the stereotypes of society change? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, look, people in Scotland wear skirts, you know what I mean? | ||
This doctor... What if, like, some kid from Scotland comes over and they're like, he's wearing a skirt! | ||
Oh, get a surgery ready. | ||
We already chopped his nuts off. | ||
Sorry. | ||
Right. | ||
unidentified
|
Yikes. | |
So these doctors at Boston Children's Hospital in their own videos, we have this doctor saying that if a little girl, little toddler girl tries to pee standing up, that's a sign she's a boy. | ||
If a little boy doesn't want to get a haircut, that's a sign he's a girl. | ||
She literally states in this video that toys are one of the determining factors in our gender. | ||
Well, and she's not the only one. | ||
This is being said by doctors all over the place. | ||
You know, if your child wants to play with trucks, then maybe they're not the gender that you think they are. | ||
And they talk about how kids very young ages can express that they're in the wrong bodies before they even know what a body is necessarily. | ||
It's also interesting too that American kids are prescribed psych drugs like 1 in 12 American kids is on a psychiatric medication. | ||
Most of these have not been FDA approved for Kids under 18 as well. | ||
You have a lot of kids who are on these drugs. | ||
They're on multiple They're on like major drug cocktails of these things that are not approved for kids and you also have a lot of the kids who are being prescribed these drugs are boys who are Like lower-class boys who have had multiple child abuse issues as well and they're being given masses of Psych and behavioral drugs. | ||
It's very weird what I think It's very weird what we do to our kids. | ||
We've been talking about that a lot tonight, I think. | ||
Between all of the different kinds of drugs and medications, telling them what we think they are, what we think they're about. | ||
We're not educating them properly. | ||
We're just trying to indoctrinate them. | ||
It's so weird. | ||
We don't let kids exist. | ||
There's also the inverse, where I saw these pamphlets where they were like, let your children be who they are. | ||
And it's kind of like, I mean, you're the parent. | ||
You've got to help the kid become who they're going to be, right? | ||
And you have to reinforce them positively as well. | ||
So, I'll say, it's not a blanket moral logic statement that indoctrination is bad. | ||
Indoctrination is a reference to typically instilling children with harmful things. | ||
With values that are going to do them wrong in life. | ||
But could be good. | ||
Well, so the idea is, you could technically use a word in a similar way, if you're going to instill within your child values that will help them survive and be happy and flourish, You are instilling values into them that are good. | ||
What these parents are doing is either not instilling any values, letting your kid be | ||
who they are, let your child tell you. | ||
It's like, I've heard a lot of things from a lot of kids that don't make sense. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
I was thinking last night. | ||
Also, what happens when that kid tells you they are something that you don't like? | ||
Like a rock. | ||
Like a rock or a cat. | ||
I'm a giraffe. | ||
Or a conservative. | ||
I am now. | ||
You know? | ||
Last night I was thinking how in times of war, one of the most horrible byproducts of war is that kids don't get a childhood. | ||
They grow up as fast as when nine year olds are carrying around weapons. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
We're in a childhood, like a little eight, nine year old ends up having to be on the front and fighting or loses their parent and sees the horror of death when they're like seven or they lose their child. | ||
They're like forced into the real world without any I don't like this idea of a childhood. | ||
I really, really don't. | ||
Well, you want to protect kids so that they can develop. | ||
I disagree. | ||
What about child labor laws? | ||
Children should have jobs. | ||
Children should have jobs? | ||
Yes, they should. | ||
They shouldn't be put in factories where they get their hands stomped at. | ||
My point is, children shouldn't be doing harmful jobs that will developmentally stunt them or cause them irreparable harm, but kids should be doing paper routes, kids should be mowing lawns, kids should be working the cash register for the family business, kids should be carrying wood to their dad when he's prepping the furnace. | ||
And throughout history, children have been exposed to the real world and grew up understanding what the world was, but only throughout the past hundred years. | ||
I'm talking about the fact that over the past hundred years, we have slowly removed children from reality, and now we have an evolution of snowplow parenting. | ||
Where kids today think words themselves are violence because they've not actually experienced what the real world is actually like. | ||
So this idea that there is a such thing as a childhood, a childhood in the 1700s was taking the musket out back to, because you got a wild hog in the yard, and then you were doing labor with your family to grow food. | ||
We developed technology, we made things more comfortable. | ||
And then we got wealthier and wealthier as a civilization, and we took our children out of reality to shield them from what we said was too difficult. | ||
And now we have whiny snowflakes who want pastel rooms with beanbags because the man giving a lecture at their college had a naughty word. | ||
You don't expose kids to sex when they're young. | ||
You don't expose them to violence. | ||
I don't think you should. | ||
I think that's what I'm talking about. | ||
Childhood is you protect kids from rape. | ||
You protect kids from death and maiming. | ||
And what's happening is because we're in a global fifth generational war, kids are getting, they're not getting their childhoods, they're getting thrust into this at the age of seven. | ||
And now they're, they're turning into these weird... Are you talking about like global warfare? | ||
This is like a psychological warfare thing that we've been in for seven years and the kids are eating it. | ||
Like the kids in wars in Africa who are being given drugs to go... It's very similar to like a... Like I'm not sure what you're talking, like what are you referencing? | ||
Kids are being exposed to porn at the age of nine on average now. | ||
That's like in a war country. | ||
When did you first see porn? | ||
I was 21. | ||
You were 21? | ||
Yeah, I think I saw a video when I was 16. | ||
But this is not the same thing, Ian. | ||
I mean, what I'm saying is that, obviously, in the 1700s, there was not going to be a way for a child to see, like, five guys and a donkey and, like, three women swinging around. | ||
Well, what would happen is the barbarians would invade the village and the kid would either be raped by the attackers or made to watch. | ||
Like, horrible stuff. | ||
And you protect kids from that. | ||
Well, you try. | ||
Yeah, and it's not working right now because of this unfettered... But you understand, Ian, that even back then we prevented those things. | ||
Like, we didn't want to... Desperately, we would try to not. | ||
My point is that we've created this idea of a childhood where kids romp around and play and do no real work. | ||
I mean, the craziest thing to me is that in the United States, from the age of zero to five years old, what is a human being doing? | ||
Literally nothing! | ||
What do you mean nothing? | ||
That's insane. | ||
They're learning how to do all kinds of things. | ||
Sure, sure, sure. | ||
Like, uh, give me an example. | ||
You learn how to tie your shoes and dress yourself. | ||
You learn how to wash yourself. | ||
You learn how to read. | ||
My kids can read at that age. | ||
Your kids. | ||
But the average kid is not in any kind of education program. | ||
You learn how to clean up after yourself. | ||
Yeah, but like your parents do that, right? | ||
You read to your kids. | ||
No, no, parents aren't homeschooling their kids. | ||
Well, you don't have to be homeschooling your kid to teach them how to read and read to them all the time. | ||
And this is bad. | ||
It's very bad. | ||
The most important year is... They sweep up the kids. | ||
kitchen I mean they do all kinds of things. Yes, the most important years of a human beings life are 0 through 5 and | ||
the next up to 13. | ||
It's a developmental years and in the United States, we don't have kids doing anything. | ||
I mean sure sure sure they're gonna tie their shoes, but that's not gonna help them succeed as adults. | ||
They do all kinds of things like my kid was learning how to my kid. Your kid's an anecdote, right? | ||
So if you're doing a good job as a parent, that's great. | ||
But the average parent is putting their kid in front of an iPad and ignoring them. | ||
And the kids are then watching insane algorithmic garbage on YouTube. | ||
It was a huge scandal. | ||
It's happening way too much. | ||
And these kids today, the internet, back to the internet, this is the first generation that's grown up online. | ||
Their friendships are online. | ||
These kids who identify as trans are spending seven hours a day online. | ||
That's statistically what's going on. | ||
Actual sex as teenagers is way down. | ||
And into the twenties. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Up to 30 years old now. | ||
And, you know, I don't want to say the word, the G word, like James Lindsay talks about, this is happening online to these kids. | ||
It's the G word, yeah. | ||
They're getting into these cultish environments online. | ||
TikTok, Tumblr, uh, anime sites are huge recruiting centers for this ideology. | ||
DeviantArt, that popular website, tons of kids get sucked into it through there. | ||
Even video games, because they're talking to kids online as they're playing role-playing games. | ||
You know what they say, Missouri loves company. | ||
Yeah, that's what they say. | ||
But we just need to get the truth back out there, because this is a far-left ideology that should have stayed in some obscure corner of university where they debated this ideology for years, and now they're pushing it into all of our schools. | ||
It is currently prevalent among the far left, but it's not inherently left-wing. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
I don't think so. | ||
So left in terms of economics or governance, hierarchical structures, the fact that these people believe weird things about science and biology is irrespective of how a government should function or an economy should function. | ||
But it's for whatever reason, critical race theory and gender theory have been absorbed by the left. | ||
Because my point is you don't see laissez-faire capitalists walking around demanding an open free market and child sex changes. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Right. | ||
So it is currently of the left, but it's not inherent to left political or economic... No, not at all. | ||
And that's the thing I try to communicate to all the politicians and everyone when I talk to them, is that this is a hugely winning issue for anyone to talk about because the In my experience, and I've had about 8,000 conversations on the street, more than 90% of people agree with us. | ||
Of course. | ||
We shouldn't be doing this to kids. | ||
Of course, Democrats, parents, they don't want their kids getting harmed. | ||
They don't want them being sterilized. | ||
You know, look, you just, you got to go out and pamphlet for the Republicans saying, we would like to ban child sex changes and then let people say they agree or disagree with it. | ||
Well, there is an issue with that, though. | ||
I was talking to Marjorie Taylor Greene about this, and she was saying that Republicans are not coming out in favor of banning Gender surgeries for kids. | ||
She can't get a whole bunch of people to join in on this. | ||
I was talking to somebody about why this is happening, why more conservatives aren't jumping on, and he was like, oh, they can't. | ||
You know, they can't jump on board because they have to win their districts and all of this. | ||
And it's like, just do it. | ||
Just suck it up and state the truth that this is inappropriate and should be stopped right away. | ||
This should be the first thing I ask any politician that comes on the show ever. | ||
And green is right. | ||
Green is right. | ||
This stuff should be totally criminalized. | ||
Yeah. | ||
At a federal level. | ||
I think a lot of them are a lot of them see this as like the new gay rights movement. | ||
And that's what the left wants you to believe. | ||
Well, they want you to do that because they want to keep getting money from all of the foundations, right? | ||
Like it wasn't a human human rights campaign. | ||
They were all on board trying to legalize gay marriage. | ||
And then as soon as they got that win, they didn't all want to have to quit their jobs. | ||
So they had to pivot to something else. | ||
It's so clearly that this is what it is. | ||
You got to keep donations flowing. | ||
Hospitals get a ton of money for this. | ||
And because Biden just recently has decided that conversion therapy includes telling your kid that they're not trans, right? | ||
The next push is to get insurance companies to cover this for everything, for everything across the board. | ||
Which of course is actually discriminatory because if you say that a boy can get breast augmentation but a woman can't and the reason is because the boy can get it because he's a boy and the woman can't get it because she's already a woman, that's discriminatory on the basis of sex. | ||
I say you're right, 20 years from now this is all gone, but maybe not for social reasons. | ||
It's going to be because we're going to have a lot of people who are very angry, there's going to be hearings, there's going to be lawsuits, there's going to be, you know, very serious conflict. | ||
But also because these people, you know, I'm not trying to be mean to them, I think these people are victims, but they're not going to be able to reproduce. | ||
So you've got the left overwhelmingly terminating their own children through abortion, and then many of them are also sterilizing their own children through surgeries or through puberty blockers. | ||
Give it 40 years and this country is going to be Christian conservative. | ||
Unless you lose the schools. | ||
Especially if we keep letting in people from South America, which I don't have really a problem with so long as it's done legally. | ||
I mean, Trump's winning among Latino voters. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Letting the Catholics have a bunch more kids. | ||
Do you want the country to be Christian, like a Christian nation, or you just think that that's inevitable? | ||
That's just what's happening. | ||
Why do you think that? | ||
Science shows it happened. | ||
It already happened. | ||
We've talked about it before. | ||
In 2000, there were a couple studies. | ||
One found that conservatives had 2.01 kids and liberals had like 1.73 or something like that. | ||
And that was very simple math. | ||
If at that point in 2000, That's how it was breaking down between conservative families and liberal families. | ||
Then it was obvious that in 18 years from that point, the voters in this country entering their first voting age would skew conservative. | ||
Sure enough, what did we see? | ||
Pew research showed that Gen Z is the first generation in 100 years to be slightly more conservative than the last. | ||
Now, Gen Z is not as conservative as Gen X. They're just a teeny bit, like one little degree more conservative than millennials. | ||
Wait, Gen X is conservative? | ||
No, they're more conservative than millennials. | ||
Gen Z is slightly more conservative than millennials, though they mostly agree on everything, but this is the first time in a hundred years. | ||
were more conservative than millennials. | ||
Except Gen Z is slightly more conservative than, Gen Z is slightly more conservative | ||
than millennials, though they mostly agree on everything, but this is the first time | ||
in 100 years. A lot of people thought it was because there was a breakthrough in culture | ||
and that these kids were based because, you know, the right was fighting back and winning | ||
the culture and stuff like that. And it's like, no, it's because they had more kids | ||
20 years ago. It's that simple. So what are the schools doing now? Desperately trying | ||
to indoctrinate your kids because they know they've lost that fight. They know Gen Z there's | ||
more Gen Z kids of conservative parents than of liberal parents. And so they're desperately | ||
like we better be able to get them in the schools. | ||
Lo and behold, school choice has become a major issue and they're freaking out over it. | ||
Because if that happens, they've lost. | ||
Give it two generations, give it two voting cycles, and you are gonna have a massive wave of conservative voters in this country. | ||
Forty years from now, it's gonna be like 51-49. | ||
Depending on what happens with immigration, there's a whole bunch of variables at play here. | ||
But if we get two 20-year periods, let's say 36 years, two 18-year periods of conservatives having tons of kids and liberals having abortions and sterilizing their kids, the math is very, very simple. | ||
You will end up with voters who are just more likely to vote conservative, and the left will start losing, and they'll be desperate to bring in some kind of voter to help them. | ||
You know what I think? | ||
I think within one or two years, we will get a stop put to this because there's so much pressure building and it's going to come internally from organizations like the American Academy of Pediatrics, which by the way, we have a big protest planned for October 8th in Anaheim where they're having their conference. | ||
There's going to be 10,000 doctors there. | ||
I have doctors messaging me all the time asking how they can help. | ||
I have some going through every research report that's ever been written so they can submit things at this conference. | ||
But the AAP is ignoring calls already that are happening. I think you've written about it. | ||
They're ignoring calls from their own doctors for an inquiry into this because the average doctor hates this. | ||
They just don't know that it's going on. | ||
We're talking about a tiny number of ideological doctors that are doing this to thousands of kids and the rest swore | ||
an oath to first do no harm. | ||
And no matter which way you slice it, there is no justification for what they're doing to these kids. | ||
It's so crazy. | ||
I can't see how this lasts for many more years because the momentum we have is huge. | ||
And the last two weeks alone have been massive. | ||
I see it on the streets. | ||
I think it really is simple that if you go to any American and say, would you be in favor of banning sex changes for children? | ||
They would say, yeah, I think, yes, absolutely. | ||
It's all about framing. | ||
So what they're doing, the media keeps saying health care for trans kids. | ||
And that's not what it means. | ||
That's also like how they say allowing trans kids to play sports. | ||
No kids who identify as trans are banned from playing sports. | ||
And it's not the whole Democratic Party that's in favor of this. | ||
permitted to play sports in many places on teams of the opposite sex. | ||
That's not banning you from playing sports at all, not even a little bit. | ||
And it's not the whole Democratic Party that's in favor of this. | ||
It's 10% of them. | ||
Really? | ||
If it's 10% of them, then why is it? | ||
I mean, it's huge. | ||
Like you had the president come out and say, affirm your kids. | ||
All of the politicians go along with it. | ||
Why do you think that is? | ||
But they're not the voters. | ||
Right. | ||
Because the media tells them to. | ||
They can't stand up to the radicals in their party. | ||
They're cowards. | ||
When the media says... Well, I mean, actually, in the past few primaries, the far left has been losing, and the moderates had been doing fairly well. | ||
So maybe that will change. | ||
But also, with the Republican Party, it's the inverse. | ||
The MAGA Republicans are actually doing way better, and the establishment's losing out consistently. | ||
And that's why they're going after Trump supporters. | ||
unidentified
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Because those are the people who are winning. | |
I support people's right to experiment on themselves personally, like if you want to cut yourself, if you want to get a piercing, if you want to take a drug. | ||
But when the kid, like a 16, 17 year old, they're starting to become an adult, but the parents are kind of the guardian. | ||
So if a 12-year-old gets gender surgery of some sort, is that not the parent experimenting on the kid? | ||
Well, I think that parents have different reasons why they go along with it. | ||
Some parents, I think, are just fully indoctrinated into this mentality themselves, and you would know better than me on this. | ||
So, this is happening in schools that they're socially transitioning children, changing their names, changing their pronouns, and hiding it from parents. | ||
There's a woman in California named Abigail Martinez. | ||
Her story encapsulates this perfectly. | ||
Her daughter grew up healthy, normal girl. | ||
They came from El Salvador originally. | ||
Girly girl wearing princess dresses, all that sort of stuff. | ||
Got into high school, started to hate her body, started to get teased. | ||
Joined the school's QSA or GSA, the Queer Straight Alliance or Gay Straight Alliance Club, where they feed them pizza and love bomb them and tell them that maybe you're born in the wrong body. | ||
And she became indoctrinated to believe that she was a boy. | ||
And the school hid this from her mom. | ||
Why? | ||
Because her mom is a Catholic. | ||
That happened in Florida as well, with a dad. | ||
Yeah, it's happening everywhere. | ||
In Florida, January Little John, who we know, the school drew up a gender transition plan for her daughter without telling her. | ||
Right, it's crazy. | ||
But anyway, this girl became indoctrinated to think she was a boy. | ||
She was just struggling. | ||
She was dealing with depression, anxiety, and mom knew that testosterone was not the best thing for her girl. | ||
But these social workers who have known this child for two or three hours took her into custody. | ||
They took her away from her mom, put her into foster care, put her in a group home with other so-called trans kids. | ||
And I do not believe there is such a thing as a trans kid. | ||
We should frame this as children with gender dysphoria because there's no alternate form of human. | ||
There are just girls and boys. | ||
But anyway, the state of California took away custody, put her on testosterone. | ||
And while she was still separated from her mom, she knelt down in front of a train. | ||
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Wow. | |
Police had to pick her body up in pieces. | ||
And this is what's happening in this country all over the place. | ||
Parental rights are being stripped away and we are not allowed to parent our own children. | ||
In British Columbia where I'm from, a dad went to jail last year. | ||
Why? | ||
He spoke out against his daughter's transition, which he was powerless to stop. | ||
And you're not even allowed to say his name in Canadian media. | ||
It's Rob Hoogland. | ||
Right. | ||
I say it all the time. | ||
Right. | ||
Let them come for me. | ||
I don't care. | ||
Well, we're not in Canada. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And so at the age of 13, what happened was in the Delta School District, this girl, the first year they taught gender ideology in school, this girl came to believe she was a boy. | ||
The school district center to a psychologist named Wallace Wong. | ||
This guy says he's transitioning over 1,000 kids. | ||
His youngest patient is two years, nine months old. | ||
Over 500 of his patients are in the British Columbia foster system. | ||
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Wow. | |
That's about 10% of all the kids. | ||
Are they just sterilizing poor people? | ||
All these kids are struggling. | ||
These aren't the kids who are thriving, who are great at sports, who are beautiful and all that. | ||
These are struggling kids. | ||
It's like a new residential school system. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Whether it's intentional or not. | ||
This psychologist sent this girl to the BC Children's Hospital and at 13, she signed a consent form for testosterone. | ||
The dad wouldn't sign it. | ||
So the endocrinologist sent him a letter, which literally states, I have it. | ||
It says you can be a friend and advisor to your daughter, but you can't intervene in essentially her own sterilization. | ||
Whether it's intentional or not, the end result of this are that poor people are being sterilized. | ||
And medicated. | ||
And medicated, but it will prevent them from reproducing. | ||
Now if you went back a hundred years, you'd have a lot of eugenicists cheering for this right now. | ||
It's like Margaret Sanger would be thoroughly on board with this whole project. | ||
Eugenics of autistic children. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I can't stress it enough. | ||
So many of these kids have autism. | ||
Where's the autism society? | ||
They're doing nothing. | ||
You've got a dad from Canada traveling around the world having conversations on the street, getting arrested and all this crap. | ||
Like where are all the professional organizations standing up for these kids? | ||
It's all parents and beautiful, wonderful people like Libby Evans, who's doing more of any journalist in the entire world to expose this. | ||
The amount of content you put out is incredible. | ||
So I love you to death. | ||
But this is such a problem and we've got to all speak up about it more because it's not about hate. | ||
It's the exact opposite. | ||
It's love and we're the ones trying to help these kids to be who they really are. | ||
It's true too, but I will also say that I think it's inevitable that this stuff ends because these people are clearly, we're already seeing on the D-Tran subreddit 40,000 people and regular posts about how their lives are ruined from this. | ||
So you can't just stop people from speaking and it's already going to a dark place because it's been going on for a while now. | ||
So I feel like it's inevitable that sooner or later there's going to be too many people who are going to be lawsuits, there's going to be committee hearings, there's going to be people in medical, doctors probably going to go to jail. | ||
I don't know how many, but I think when you get enough people, there's going to be hearings, there's going to be fines, there's going to be penalties. | ||
We can look back at some of the medical practices we've had in this country, thalidomide being an example of a big mistake. | ||
But people were affected by it, and there's going to be hearings, and there's going to be recompense of some sort. | ||
The man who invented the lobotomy won the Nobel Prize for Medicine. | ||
Oh, good for him. | ||
I mean, they stuck ice picks through people's orbital sockets. | ||
Ice picks through orbital sockets? | ||
Seriously? | ||
Yes, through the top of the eyeballs. | ||
They're just ice picks, essentially. | ||
That's all they are. | ||
And they just jabbed away at the prefrontal cortex. | ||
They zombified people. | ||
A couple people seemed to get better. | ||
So this must be great. | ||
Yeah, wasn't there like a Kennedy or somebody who got that or something like that? | ||
I was reading that on Reddit, I think. | ||
There was also all of the electroshock therapies, remember that? | ||
That was like considered to be helpful for people. | ||
I know someone who went through that and eventually she died of alcoholism. | ||
Actually, I read an article. | ||
That if you do a really low level current through your brain, it like increases your cognitive faculties or something. | ||
I've done that before. | ||
Let's all do that. | ||
Yeah, I was reading something and I was like, no, like that's too high. | ||
This guy did a thing where it was like seriously low current, you know, on his temples or whatever. | ||
And then they did tests and he performed better at math or something. | ||
I had those, um, those, those like electro massage things that where you like put them on your muscles and they slowly turn up the thing. | ||
Oh, I had that when I had physical therapy. | ||
I put it on my temples. | ||
Never again. | ||
Ooh, that's too much current. | ||
Not there. | ||
But that was pretty cool. | ||
I had that with physical therapy. | ||
Ian was like a normal guy wearing a suit, and he was like, what an interesting product. | ||
I can handle anything. | ||
And it burned me. | ||
And the doctor was like, oh, sorry. | ||
Oh, yeah, you gotta get hot. | ||
You gotta put gel on them. | ||
unidentified
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No, it was horrible. | |
Well, that's for conductivity. | ||
Yeah, they sell those ab cruncher things. | ||
You put the belt on, and it exercises for you. | ||
Oh, I've seen those videos. | ||
It's like shaking midsection. | ||
But hold on. | ||
I'm confused by this, because you can just choose to Crunch your abs. | ||
You could just do that yourself. | ||
It doesn't work. | ||
The belt or whatever? | ||
It's causing them to spasm, but it's not going to make them stronger. | ||
Right, right. | ||
But my thought on this was like, you can buy a product to do what you can literally do by thinking. | ||
It's almost telekinesis. | ||
You can be like, I will crunch my abs while I sit here. | ||
You can just do it. | ||
You don't need to buy a thing to do it. | ||
I don't get it. | ||
That's modern culture, man. | ||
The human wants it done for them. | ||
Even if you can just think it. | ||
That is laziness. | ||
I don't want to think. | ||
Amazing. | ||
Just do it for me. | ||
I don't want to think. | ||
Well, I guess you can go to bed. | ||
You'd sleep. | ||
Well, then you just go to American schools. | ||
It's so dumb, too, because ab exercises don't give you a six pack. | ||
Dehydration and losing weight gives you a six pack. | ||
unidentified
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That's right. | |
Dehydration? | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
So that's why you look at, because when you... Unless your diet's perfect. | |
Yeah. | ||
No, no, not even. | ||
Like you see these photos of, you know, Chris Hemsworth or whatever in the movies and he's like all ripped and chiseled. | ||
And then you see him on the beach and he looks like, oh, he looks a little thick. | ||
What's up with that? | ||
And it's like, that's what human beings look like. | ||
When you're hydrated. | ||
So what they do for these photoshoots and these movies is they don't drink water for a day. | ||
Oh, you're kidding. | ||
No, yeah, yeah. | ||
And then the skin dries out and you look thin and then you can see the muscles. | ||
I drink so much water. | ||
That's not true of everybody. | ||
I'm constantly chugging water. | ||
There are people with six packs. | ||
It's just very low body fat. | ||
I'm not one of them. | ||
I just drink a lot of water anyway. | ||
One of my best buddies is big into fitness. | ||
I've been to the Olympia a few times too and we'd pick up some of these bodybuilders and stuff from the airport and they're all angry because they haven't eaten and they're dehydrating themselves. | ||
So then you're ready with a rice cake and some egg whites for them because they're getting ready for competition. | ||
They've lost 30 pounds in the last month. | ||
unidentified
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All right, all right. | |
We're going to jump over to Super Chats. | ||
If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, head over to TimCast.com, become a member. | ||
We have that members-only show coming up at about 11 p.m. | ||
You don't want to miss it. | ||
And of course, my friends, if you would like To help me lure people in to my right-wing world! | ||
You can click the link in the description below and purchase Only Ever Wanted, our latest song from Tim Cass Records, our first song. | ||
The plan right now is to release a song probably every four or five weeks. | ||
We've got a bunch lined up already, I'm constantly writing more, and we've got other artists in the house, obviously Ian writes, Carter writes, and we're actually planning on bringing more artists in as well, so there will be a consistent stream of new music coming out. | ||
So, uh, with your support, um, we will be able to exponentially increase the rate at which we pull people into our right-wing world. | ||
I mean, that's what the Daily Beast said. | ||
So, appreciate your support. | ||
Alright, now, uh, let me try and pull up these superchats, because YouTube has been, uh, it's the chat causing the browser to crash, I guess. | ||
Which is unfortunate. | ||
We got too many superchats! | ||
Yeah, we got too many. | ||
Too many superchats. | ||
Oh, it's the last day of August, too, huh? | ||
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Wow. | |
A lot of super chats. | ||
Okay. | ||
This is a, this is a crazy amount of super chats. | ||
By the way, people can go to billboardchris.com if they need to contact me. | ||
Okay. | ||
Let's see here. | ||
unidentified
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We'll grab some super chats real quick. | |
Uh, where were we? | ||
Ah, yes. | ||
Ready to rumble says Kim Iverson, Matt Walsh, Twitter war. | ||
Is something happening between Kim Iverson and Matt Walsh that I didn't see? | ||
I only saw that Kim was pointing out that the age of consent is different in different states. | ||
Oh, is that it? | ||
But I don't know if she's flaming with Matt. | ||
Interesting. | ||
unidentified
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Alright. | |
Waffle Sensei says, Tim, your butt rock is a gateway to Dark Maga. | ||
Nuclear Ultra Dark Maga. | ||
The worst! | ||
Waffles then says, next Tim Cass single will be called Butt Rock. | ||
No, actually we were planning on doing a gag called Is This What You Want and writing a dance pop song. | ||
Oh, nice. | ||
Yeah, and because we were like, all these lefties were like, duh, this music is dated. | ||
It sounds like the 2000s or whatever. | ||
And I'm like, Kate Bush? | ||
You mean when there was good music? | ||
But no, but Kate Bush is number five on the Billboard Hot 100. | ||
That's 80s. | ||
That's been a hot song for that long. | ||
Who doesn't like the 90s? | ||
Are you kidding me? | ||
Like, great music in the 2000s. | ||
I love the 90s. | ||
But anyway, I'm like, so what? | ||
People write music for the music. | ||
They write music. | ||
That's what happens. | ||
It doesn't matter what year. | ||
People are doing retro stuff these days. | ||
Plus, it's not like any good music is coming out now. | ||
But that's not even the issue. | ||
It's like, we ended up looking at the Howl 100, and we were like, is this the kind of music we should be making? | ||
And so we grabbed a bunch of random songs and listened, and it's like, dance boppy simplistic and we're like okay so we'll make a song called is this what you want it'll be about going to the club with some girl that's it that's it and it'll it'll be hilarious and it'll be like you know ian you know dancing at the club | ||
No, we're not giving the melody yet. | ||
We can't give it away. | ||
It's gonna be really good. | ||
Is this what you need? | ||
I don't want to give away too many lyrics. | ||
You're giving it up, Ian. | ||
unidentified
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Come on. | |
I'm a magician. | ||
We're gonna make a million dollars off this song. | ||
Because this is what they want. | ||
We'll find out. | ||
They want us to make a remake of Tiny Dancer. | ||
I got an idea. | ||
Here's what we do. | ||
Okay, Tiny Dancer right now. | ||
He's got the hair. | ||
This is the number one song on iTunes. | ||
It's Hold Me Closer by Britney Spears and Elton John. | ||
So they took an old classic from the 70s, made it a dance song. | ||
I got it. | ||
All we gotta do is make a dance pop version of a good 70s hit. | ||
How about Fortunate Son? | ||
That was the 70s, right? | ||
Or was it late 60s? | ||
I'm so into that. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Dance Pop, Creedence Clearwater, Revival, Fortunate Son. | ||
John Fogerty, is that his name? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Singer? | ||
Yeah, I got that. | ||
Let's do Dance Pop 1 by Three Dog Night. | ||
Nice. | ||
Let's go back even further. | ||
Let's do Rag Mop Dance Pop. | ||
Do you guys know Rag Mop? | ||
Just get some Betty Goodman out there. | ||
Betty Goodman? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Dance, pop, rag mob. | ||
That's what I'm talking about. | ||
In the video we gotta do it where like our face, it's our face, it's one guy's face and then it like blends into the other guy's face as we're all singing the lyrics and then into the other guy's face. | ||
You know what is fun though is all that, all the old Motown stuff with the guys doing the like this. | ||
Yeah, dance! | ||
We gotta bring back a dance number. | ||
That's great stuff. | ||
Choreographed. | ||
Yeah, like Gladys Knight and the Pips. | ||
Bino says, if you play Tim's song backwards, it's Trump's campaign propaganda. | ||
Did you all notice that the song actually is, the instrumentation is backwards? | ||
Maybe you should play it backwards and see what you hear. | ||
Hear it forwards. | ||
Hear it forwards. | ||
It's like you are hearing a song by Tim Pool. | ||
The song now continues. | ||
That's all you hear. | ||
Sean L says, YouTube now adds context to videos about abortion. | ||
The definition is so broad it would apply to c-sections. | ||
How do people not see this is happening in real time? | ||
Yo, I don't know. | ||
It just, it feels like we're being, they treat us like we're chickens in a chicken coop. | ||
You know? | ||
But like, just a little bit smarter than chickens. | ||
Are they filming us just like your chickens? | ||
I mean, what if they were? | ||
What's the Truman Show? | ||
And we don't even know it, right? | ||
That's the funny thing. | ||
We're just chickens. | ||
Chicken City is the Chicken Truman Show. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I was thinking about that. | ||
They don't mind. | ||
They're all walking around doing chicken stuff, like normal life going brrp, brrp, brrp, brrp. | ||
And there's like cameras watching everything they do. | ||
Right? | ||
They don't even know. | ||
One of them's gonna find out. | ||
I think the reason people aren't seeing it happen in real time is because there's so much information. | ||
That would be a great animation, though. | ||
Okay, but that would be a killer animation. | ||
One of the chicken finds out that he's actually on Chicken City. | ||
You hear that, Kat? | ||
Are you listening? | ||
That would be really pretty funny. | ||
All right, Logan Culver says, speaking of MTG, just want to shout out the best gaming store on the East Coast, the White Knights Game Room in Williamsport, PA. | ||
Has to be the largest inventory in gaming area. | ||
Oh, very nice. | ||
Yeah, we did for the Cast Castle, up on Cast Castle YouTube channel, Marjorie Taylor Green. | ||
Turns out she's a pro-tier Magic the Gathering player. | ||
Who'd have thought that MTG played MTG? | ||
It was funny. | ||
It was funny. | ||
Is that out yet? | ||
It is out, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Ah! | |
Yes. | ||
I said 60. | ||
It is, what, 67? | ||
Mark VA says actually Tim from your previous video it's two-thirds of the | ||
Senate is needed to convict and remove a president or other defined officer | ||
article 1 section 3 thanks for all your content ah yes I said 60 it is it is | ||
what 67 so more than that more than that Charles Neal says I've been a | ||
correctional officer for the last eight years I recently started a non-profit called Humane Justice Foundation. | ||
A foundation made up of officers and former inmates would love to come on. | ||
Well, we will take a look into it, my friend. | ||
Thanks for the super chat. | ||
Ian Kinney says, someone shouted out Chris Webby last night. | ||
Yes, check out Raw Thoughts 4 and 5. | ||
Also Topher, the marine rapper. | ||
Struggle Jennings, Tommy Vext, and Burden, culture vultures. | ||
Very cool, man. | ||
Gotta win the culture stuff. | ||
I think Fake Woke by Tom MacDonald reached number 14 on the iTunes Top 100. | ||
Nice. | ||
Because I was shouting it out, saying that people gotta buy music to support the culture. | ||
And then Tom tweeted about it. | ||
He's like, I'm number three in rap. | ||
I don't know where he's at now, but he's number 14 on the Top 100. | ||
So that's cool, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Let's grab, uh, uh-oh. | ||
Murph Tries says, Libby, you can never trust a hot chick. | ||
It might be James O'Keefe in disguise. | ||
This is, this is what worries me, y'all. | ||
This is a concern. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Very real concern. | ||
Yeah. | ||
He's gonna pull off the mask and suddenly it's gonna be... It's gonna be like those Mission Impossible masks? | ||
unidentified
|
Mm-hmm. | |
And there's gonna be like a hot chick and it's gonna, and it's James O'Keefe. | ||
You know, pull off the arms too. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
He grows several feet. | ||
We had a Vancouver person in the comments there. | ||
Yeah, I saw that. | ||
Which one? | ||
unidentified
|
Where? | |
It's cool. | ||
They'd seen me at many of the anti-mandate protests. | ||
This one? | ||
Oh, Virik says, holy ish, I've seen this guy while doing multiple anti-mandate protests in Vancouver. | ||
We had so many marches with thousands of people that the news just didn't cover. | ||
Yeah, you know, COVID was annoying to me because I was out there having conversations about this and all the conservative media were always focused on COVID, which I understand, of course. | ||
But I knew that once COVID finally waned, that conservatives would finally get on board with this and it's happening. | ||
So I'm excited. | ||
Get on board with? | ||
With talking about gender ideology and what's happening to kids, you know? | ||
All right, Valoran says, shout out to James O'Keefe for his work on getting results and freeing the schools from the fascists who don't hire Catholics. | ||
Next up, the FBI. | ||
Yeah, good job, James O'Keefe. | ||
That guy's put on leave now. | ||
He admitted to committing crimes. | ||
So how do you get criminals out if you don't have people like James O'Keefe? | ||
This is why they hate him so much. | ||
I was talking to a guy and I mentioned, somehow James O'Keefe came up and he was like, I don't know, that James O'Keefe guy, man, nah, he's not good. | ||
And I was like, what? | ||
Why? | ||
And he was like, because he just puts out fake stuff all day. | ||
And I was like, when did he ever do that? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I don't know. | |
I saw, I watched what they say about him and I'm like, bro, you are wrong about all of it. | ||
You know, right now, we have a video. | ||
It's one guy, one assistant principal at one school, admitting to committing serious crimes on an ongoing basis. | ||
Discriminatory crimes. | ||
And we only found out because James O'Keefe has this operation. | ||
Right, and he went and dealt with it. | ||
This is like what happened with Libs of TikTok. | ||
You know, she was putting out all of this information about what was going on at gender clinics and reporters at the Washington Post and NPR and NBC, instead of taking, you know, the material that she put out and saying like, oh, I wonder what's going on here. | ||
Let me actually try to do some digging. | ||
Instead of doing that, they blasted her and demanded that Twitter ban her account. | ||
They don't want to look into it. | ||
They just want to blast the journalists who are actually doing the work and the reporting. | ||
All right, Restless Medic says, Chris, what in your opinion can be done to prevent Canadian politicians from catering to people in Toronto and Montreal at the expense of everyone west of Manitoba? | ||
Common complaint of my fiancé's family in Victoria. | ||
These politicians in Canada, man. | ||
Vote them all out. | ||
That's the only answer. | ||
We don't have one single brave politician who will stand up and tell the truth about any of this. | ||
Why do you think that is? | ||
Is it because it's the Queen? | ||
We'll just kick them out? | ||
Why? | ||
No, nothing to do with that. | ||
They passed unanimously a law that made it a crime to help a girl feel comfortable as a girl, punishable by two years in prison and a five million dollar Five years in prison and a two million dollar fine. | ||
Unanimously voted for this. | ||
We have one politician who will tell the truth about all this culture war stuff. | ||
His name is Maxime Bernier. | ||
He almost won the leadership of the Conservative Party. | ||
He missed out by one percent and he was so disgusted with them all that he went and formed his own party called the People's Party of Canada. | ||
So they secured about 800,000 votes last election, 5% of the vote. | ||
But all these conservatives are cowards, man. | ||
I'm calling them out all the time. | ||
I've gone to some of their events. | ||
I've been escorted out because I'm there to hold these people accountable and get answers to these important questions about child abuse and they won't address it. | ||
Crazy. | ||
So we just need to vote them all out. | ||
Yep. | ||
Triton 54 says, Tim, your source is correct. | ||
T-S-I-S-C-I cover letters are controlled in the same manner as their contents. | ||
The FBI just committed an intentional uncontrolled spillage onto social media, confirmed with Poso. | ||
Or that would imply they are declassified. | ||
Simply put, right? | ||
The FBI wouldn't intentionally publish classified materials unless Trump declassified them. | ||
In which case, it is one big hoax. | ||
It's a hoax. | ||
Neglectful Sausage says, imagine you're upset living under totalitarian rule, uh, under Trudeau, having no freedom, losing your voice and doing nothing about it. | ||
Yup. | ||
I'm really concerned, man. | ||
I want, I, I have so much love for Canadian people in general. | ||
And like, I want, I don't know, do you think that the, that we could unify the states of across Canada and the United States to create kind of a greater federation? | ||
Well, I think we need to get rid of California and some places like that, and then we can form a new country. | ||
Sure. | ||
The value of California is all the ocean access. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know what? | ||
Most of California is great. | ||
It's just the cities, you know. | ||
Cities in general. | ||
You get 50, yeah, totally. | ||
You get 50 miles outside of Los Angeles and you might as well be in Kentucky. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
The desert's so nice out there. | ||
I love California, especially Northern California. | ||
All right. | ||
Dapper McStache says, Hey Tim, you've said a president has declassification power, but I can't find proof former presidents do too. | ||
Do you know a source or evidence of that? | ||
Cause I can't find one. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Y'all are great. | ||
I do not believe former presidents have that. | ||
The point is that Donald Trump declassified them when he decided to take them when he was still president. | ||
That's the point. | ||
But I don't know. | ||
Do former presidents have declassification power? | ||
Probably not. | ||
Unless it pertains to, if it were, it would have to pertain to their specific role, I would imagine. | ||
But I'd assume they wouldn't. | ||
The issue is, Donald Trump said, he tweeted out, I'm declassifying all these documents related to Crossfire Hurricane. | ||
Simply upon taking them, they declassified. | ||
So, I don't know. | ||
Interesting, to say the least. | ||
Waffle Sensei says, Ian, to be honest, Hillary Clinton, the 529 insurrectionist, and everybody else you name has been effectively pardoned. | ||
I don't see the purpose in pardoning people that were never held accountable. | ||
I think that the pardon is a sort of, I mean, maybe it's not a sort of holding them to account, but like, it's kind of acknowledgement that wrong was done. | ||
You know, that's, I'm looking for that. | ||
Bobcat says, Tim, when are you going to record some of these songs you were playing with Adam on Jam Nights? | ||
We've been waiting for a proper recording of them for over a year. | ||
I think that was, I think Only Ever Wanted was one of the songs I played. | ||
Maybe not, I don't know. | ||
We've got, I think three that are, one is completely done, has been done since like, what, April? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah. | ||
And we've just like, been planning how to release it, because we were planning on doing an album, and then decided that it's not really the way things work anymore, you know, dropping an album just muddies things up. | ||
So we've got one song that we're probably ready to release in four weeks. | ||
We're working on a lyric video for it. | ||
But we'll see, we'll see. | ||
We're working with some industry guys to figure out the best way to get it radio play and properly launch it. | ||
We properly launched to a certain degree, Only Ever Wanted, but we missed a ton of things. | ||
Like, you know, there's a lot of business end stuff we don't know. | ||
So we got it on all these platforms, but there's a lot of things we did miss. | ||
So hopefully the next release in about four or five weeks will be even better! | ||
It'll be a lot of fun. | ||
I wish we could do music videos for every single one, but lyric videos are probably what we're gonna get. | ||
All right. | ||
Jesus Crisp says, Congrats, Tim, on being the face of the Church of Wokes version of the satanic panic of the 80s and 90s. | ||
Shame on your rock music. | ||
Nah, it's all fake news. | ||
We released a song two years ago called Will of the People. | ||
And a lot of people are saying they like that one better, because that one's like overtly political. | ||
But they didn't come out and say this, anything about me when we launched that song. | ||
They did not care. | ||
I think the issue is, Will of the People was a political message. | ||
And it did well among people who are into politics. | ||
This song is apparently doing well among regular people who aren't involved, and that's the scariest thing to the woke beast, that we could actually build cultural influence with people who are not involved in politics, and then instead of coming out like Natalie Portman and being like, defund the police, we'll come out and be like, nah. | ||
No, we're not going to do that. | ||
That's dumb. | ||
You know what I want to say too? | ||
It's like these satanic panic people. | ||
It's like, they're, they're just not cool. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
They're like the dorky kids who are like, it's so lame that they're making music. | ||
It's like, okay, dude, well, I don't care. | ||
I'm having fun. | ||
All these people who want to defund the police are the first ones to call the police on me when I show up somewhere. | ||
Every time. | ||
All right. | ||
Joe Spinella says, common law marriage, both parties sign a mutual contract devoid of lawyers. | ||
Yeah? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I thought common law was like you just magically become married after seven years or something. | ||
I thought that was what it was too. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I don't really know. | ||
Garhunt says, Chris, the sixth leading cause of death in Canada is euthanasia. | ||
Being poor is a reason for euthanasia in Canada. | ||
CAVA is advising soldiers with PTSD to euthanize themselves now. | ||
Prairie Prav joined the US now. | ||
Yeah, that's correct. | ||
A vet called in, called Veteran Services to get help with some issues that he was having and he was recommended euthanasia. | ||
I'm telling you, it really does sound like they're just trying to reduce population. | ||
They passed a bill last year on euthanasia and now it's the sixth leading cause of death. | ||
You can also have medical conditions be a reason why you're seeking Suicide, which obviously, like, you have a medical condition. | ||
I mean, a mental condition. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, mental. | |
I was gonna say medical. | ||
If you've got, like, stage four cancer that's inoperable or incurable, it's a different question. | ||
But they're talking about mental illness as a reason to seek suicide, which it used to be that we would try to prevent people with mental illness from killing themselves. | ||
You call an emergency hotline and you're like, I'm feeling really bad, man. | ||
I need help. | ||
Have you thought about killing yourself? | ||
Have you thought about taking these extra drugs and dying right now? | ||
No, I don't want to do that. | ||
I need help to stop me from doing that. | ||
And they're like, well, you're in Canada. | ||
Suicide would be paid for. | ||
Yeah, the Forbes author who, quote, writes about accessibility, inclusion and social justice wrote, quote, Canada's new euthanasia laws carry upsetting Nazi-era echoes, warn experts. | ||
I think they're right. | ||
Yeah, it's not good. | ||
It's horrifying. | ||
They also put out workbooks for kids so that kids can better understand the process of government-funded suicide. | ||
I'm gonna read this, but preface it by saying it is incorrect. | ||
M.T. | ||
Jeeve says, Ian is the prime example of the college-educated Newman who knows nothing of money, but doesn't pay his loans and waits for us to do so. | ||
Glad I dropped out, worked hard and honest, and stayed debt-free. | ||
Now I get to pay his. | ||
But I just want to pause and say that Ian has adamantly stated several times he doesn't want that to happen. | ||
No, I'm not going to take any kind of loan repayment if it's a tax burden. | ||
I'd be down for taking $580 billion off of Sallie Mae's books, if you guys want to do that. | ||
Make them pay it! | ||
At least look into doing that and see what that would be. | ||
But to print $580 billion and give it to Sallie Mae? | ||
No, I'm not taking part of that. | ||
Well, they already printed it. | ||
That's disgusting. | ||
It was printed when the loan was issued. | ||
And now by not paying it back, it's just, you got free stuff. | ||
I don't see how Joe Biden or any one person should have that authority to be able to do that. | ||
He doesn't! | ||
unidentified
|
Neither does Nancy Pelosi. | |
You know, Nancy Pelosi said that Joe Biden doesn't have the power to do this, and now they're like, yay! | ||
And it doesn't, I'm not happy saying it. | ||
Yeah, all of these universities have massive endowments. | ||
They should be the ones paying it back. | ||
I talked about this with someone the other day. | ||
In their articles of incorporation or whatever, there's specific ways they're allowed to spend that money. | ||
And they're legally prohibited from doing that, I guess. | ||
Well, it's too bad. | ||
Okay. | ||
Okay. | ||
This one's a good one. | ||
Liquid825 says, love you, Ian. | ||
Are you from this planet? | ||
I don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
I still don't know. | |
I think at some point the tide pool was splashed by fungus. | ||
You're actually one of us. | ||
You're like a squid. | ||
You're wherever the squids came from. | ||
You gotta watch the Cast Castle video with Marjorie Taylor Greene and Ian, because it's really good. | ||
Dude, we shot more today. | ||
Uh, it's really good. | ||
Oh man. | ||
Things are shaping up. | ||
It'll be really fun. | ||
We've got like, it's gonna be a three or four part arc. | ||
A four part, you know, it's gonna be like an hour or an hour and a half long. | ||
The next Cast Castle's gonna be an epic. | ||
But I can't say anything because the first episode's gonna hit like a hammer. | ||
It's gonna be so good, so. | ||
Yeah, I don't wanna talk about, I wanna not. | ||
That's next Tuesday, right? | ||
Yeah, every Tuesday. | ||
Next Tuesday is going to be really good. | ||
Nice. | ||
Really good. | ||
That's exciting. | ||
Yeah, I don't think YouTube would, you know, the jokes we're going for here. | ||
Yeah, you guys are gonna love it. | ||
It's gonna be so good. | ||
We got so much to, it might be four parts, we'll see. | ||
TWS has finally listened to Will of the People, then I listened to the one Muse made. | ||
Tim's song. | ||
Hey, be careful of the violent revolutions. | ||
It begets more violent revolutions. | ||
Muse. | ||
Woo, let's have a violent revolution, bro. | ||
I was thinking about that. | ||
Will of the People that I wrote is a song that shows a cycle of statues being rotated every time they get pulled down. | ||
And it's how everybody thinks they're fighting for the will of the people, but they're all just fighting for their own personal gain in power or vendettas. | ||
And then Muse made a song called Will of the People where it's just people tearing down statues and destroying cameras and stuff like, yay, revolution! | ||
And I have to wonder, if the impact of Will of the People from me was to encourage people to not engage in revolution, Muse then buries my content by screaming, no, no, no, have the revolution. | ||
And it makes me wonder, you know? | ||
Makes me wonder about Muse. | ||
Well, I think it's very strange that if you go to YouTube Music and search for Timcast, Muse, Will of the People is the first result. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Because that doesn't seem like it's an accident because that search term has nothing to do with Muse. | ||
I watched a live Muse video of them like doing a live singing of one of their... They're talented, really, really talented musicians, but that was kind of an empty song that Will of the People, that Marilyn Manson cover basically, you know, what is it called? | ||
The Beautiful People. | ||
Twitchy Spaz says, Tim, I think this needs to be said. | ||
Hormone therapy is legit helpful. | ||
People are born with hormone imbalances and the medicine helps when applied. | ||
Right. | ||
That I understand. | ||
That's not what we're talking about here. | ||
Right. | ||
We're not talking about that for sure. | ||
TRT for life says, all testosterone taken by adults is synthetic. | ||
Kids are getting the same that I take for TRT. | ||
Please get educated on this issue. | ||
Uh huh. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, we should have a testosterone detector on the show. | |
Yeah, I think that's what we literally said. | ||
We said it was synthetic. | ||
We should have more doctors on the show to talk about this stuff right now. | ||
Oh, I don't know. | ||
YouTube would ban us. | ||
I can get you doctors if you want doctors. | ||
They've got a new election policy that says you can't share hacked materials. | ||
And I'm like, how am I supposed to know? | ||
If the New York Post publishes a story and I'm like, oh, I'm going to read this. | ||
I'll get in trouble for it. | ||
You think I'm psychic, YouTube? | ||
You morons. | ||
The Canadian government froze bank accounts based on hacked materials. | ||
People who donated to the trucker convoy. | ||
And how did they get that list? | ||
It was hacked and released by whatever journalist. | ||
And then they acted on it to freeze bank accounts of people who donated $100 to a peaceful protest. | ||
If at the top of the alphabet chain, there's a company that owns Google, that owns YouTube, if the government, the American government's like, Censor this stuff or we're shutting you down in the United States. | ||
We already know that's true like they're up against getting shut down the United States We've already had what's going on Tom Fitton? | ||
report on Democrats going to Silicon Valley Telling them like this has to be removed We already have Alex Berenson saying that the government went to Twitter and said why hasn't he been banned yet? | ||
We know it's happening. | ||
The FBI went to Mark Zuckerberg and they said, hey, there's going to be, you know, some information coming out. | ||
You might want to bar or something like that. | ||
And then right around the time they were supposedly trying to not interfere over the Hunter Biden laptop investigation by not investigating it. | ||
Right. | ||
And they just so happened to go to Mark Zuckerberg at the time. | ||
How convenient for them. | ||
Yeah, we know they're doing it. | ||
Waffle Sensei says, See, this is why we need men and women. | ||
Tim says, Kids don't need a childhood. | ||
Like a strong, beefy warrior man, a mother is needed to cultivate a child's imagination so they can carry humanity forward. | ||
I did not say that a mother is not needed for that, and my point was that our idea of childhood has become so insane that kids now think words are violence. | ||
A childhood used to be a kid mowed the lawn and did chores and worked. | ||
And then when you come out and you're like, kids should have jobs, they go, how dare you? | ||
And it's like, you never shoveled snow. | ||
You never shoveled a sidewalk. | ||
You know, I worked at my family business. | ||
I put money in a cash register and took money out. | ||
It was not the end of the world. | ||
It was teaching a kid responsibility. | ||
And they liked doing it. | ||
I like doing it. | ||
It's fun. | ||
Mike asked me recently when he could have a job. | ||
And I was like, I'll put you to work right now. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
And then my parents would create a chore list. | ||
They would put a chore list on the refrigerator saying like dishes, lawn, laundry, or whatever. | ||
And then, you know, market rate for the task. | ||
And then you'd be like, okay, I'll go do it. | ||
And then you'd do it. | ||
And then you'd Do the job and get paid for it. | ||
Could you outbid your brother and be like, I'll do it for 13% less? | ||
That may have happened one time. | ||
I'm not sure, but I don't think so. | ||
We used to go door to door. | ||
I don't know if kids still do this. | ||
We'd go door to door and be like, do you need your lawn mowed? | ||
Do you need your snow shoveled or whatever? | ||
And they'd be like, sure. | ||
And then we'd be like 10 bucks. | ||
And I was always just like, I'm going to ask for more. | ||
And then I'd be like 20 bucks and the guy would be like 20 bucks. | ||
And then I'd be like, well, what would you give me? | ||
Is it going to be 15? | ||
I'm like, yes. | ||
It's still better. | ||
Yeah, man, the art of the deal. | ||
Negotiate the terms. | ||
You shovel snow. | ||
And then kids got to do work to earn stuff. | ||
I'm not saying put them in the mines or anything like that. | ||
unidentified
|
That's bad. | |
Yeah. | ||
When I'm saying protect the kid's childhood, I'm not in any way saying don't make them get a job. | ||
I got a job when I was 12 and I'm glad. | ||
Yeah, they don't need to read books with child porn in grade six. | ||
Protect their minds. | ||
I do think that there's a lot of things kids should do around the home without getting paid because they got to pull their own weight. | ||
Correct. | ||
Like my son has to deal with the laundry and the dishes and all kinds of other stuff and he doesn't get paid for that. | ||
What I was going to pay him to do was, honestly, I'm going to be driving tomorrow when Biden is doing his speech. | ||
So I'm going to be listening to the speech and I'm going to pay my kid to take notes for me. | ||
I'm going to be like, write this down, write that down. | ||
Oh, is that the State of the Union tomorrow? | ||
No, it's not the State of the Union. | ||
It's where he's going to call us all fascists and claim that we have no souls. | ||
All right, Psychodragon says, fun fact, Ronald Reagan was the first governor to sign no-fault divorce into law. | ||
Other states soon followed, but you can thank Marilyn Monroe. | ||
Ask yourself why the 60s and 70s history isn't discussed. | ||
Yeah, Reagan also pushed gun control. | ||
I love how they really like Reagan for some reason. | ||
Reagan pushed gun control because of the, yeah, because of the Black Panthers in Oakland who were out there when Police would pull black people over and they'd see the Black Panthers standing there with guns. | ||
And the Black Panthers would be like, um, what are you gonna do now? | ||
unidentified
|
Good! | |
Yeah! | ||
It's called the Second Amendment, baby! | ||
For real. | ||
And that's why Reagan started dealing with gun control because he didn't want black people in Oakland to have guns. | ||
This is why when I saw Antifa- So it's not a good thing. | ||
When I saw Antifa standing out with those guns outside of that drag shot, I was like, good. | ||
Good for them. | ||
Were those actual guns? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, look pretty actual gun-like. | |
You're allowed to do it. | ||
Now, the show going on inside, I have, you know, issues with for sure, but the right to keep in bare arms. | ||
Now, I do think- That's new for Antifa, because they've traditionally been against guns. | ||
No, no, no, no, no, no, no. | ||
Antifa's always been pro-gun. | ||
Yeah, John Brown Socialist Rifle Association, John Brown Gun Club, they are pro-gun as they come, baby. | ||
Okay, I'm very wrong. | ||
Yeah, there was even one Antifa guy, John Brown Gun Club, had a ghost gun and went and started shooting at an ICE facility and firebombing it. | ||
It might just be Canadian Antifa. | ||
Maybe. | ||
Because Canadians are opposed to it. | ||
You can't even have a gun. | ||
Well, Antrudeau has just banned purchase, transfer, or import of all guns, too. | ||
And they're introducing a new law. | ||
We know where this goes. | ||
We're gonna be sitting in America just like watching the news about the Canadians being shuffled into, you know, medical centers or something. | ||
For euthanasia. | ||
I would hope that people would not stand for that. | ||
Recommended. | ||
Recommended euthanasia and sterilization. | ||
At what point do they, it stops being an option and starts being mandatory for certain ailments? | ||
I mean, it is socialized medicine, so why would anyone have to pay for that? | ||
Well, they're gonna say, look, you've got, you know, stage 3 cancer, so you're being prescribed euthanasia. | ||
That's the concern that we had in the U.S. | ||
Remember when people were talking about the ACA and there were concerns over like death panels, you know? | ||
unidentified
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Yep. | |
Well, we know how people are treating these long-term care homes too. | ||
Yeah, not particularly well. | ||
Totally neglected, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Especially last year. | ||
Right. | ||
Lost Cause says, Tim, it wasn't the fact that they were offering the person to off themself. | ||
They said they did it before and did it before and even got counseling for the person's kids. | ||
Also, the person still works for the hotline. | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
All right, what superchats do we have here? | ||
What's a diagolon? | ||
Ronnie says, Ken in the U.S. | ||
should make diagolon. | ||
Look it up. | ||
unidentified
|
Huh. | |
That sounds like it's something bad. | ||
That sounds terrible. | ||
Trying to trick me into reading bad things. | ||
It's like a disease. | ||
Hoban says, Hi Tim, I want to correct the record. | ||
School choice would not stop woke schools and could even make it worse because less oversight. | ||
If you'd like to know more, James Lindsay talks a lot about this. | ||
Oh, interesting. | ||
Interesting. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, James Lindsay's not totally in favor of the school choice, that's for sure. | |
Well, I am. | ||
I don't get that. | ||
My friends, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, head over to TimCast.com, become a member, we're gonna have a members-only show coming up for you at about 11pm. | ||
And if you would like to, once again, help us lure people into our right-wing world using the power of rock! | ||
And click the link in the description below and buy our song, Only Ever Wanted, because we greatly appreciate it. | ||
We are going to be pushing it just until tomorrow. | ||
Tomorrow's the last day, because that's when they do song tracking. | ||
I don't know if the song will actually chart or anything like that. | ||
We did get a lot of play, but I don't think we were on, like, radios or anything like that, so... | ||
But purchases matter. | ||
It's 150 streams for every one purchase, and so if we got like tens of thousands, then we would probably charter something like that. | ||
And we just want to have an impact, and we want to have a good launch for the music endeavors we're doing, because we're going to do a bunch more, and I really do appreciate all of your support. | ||
You can follow the show at Timcast IRL. | ||
You can follow me at Timcast. | ||
Billboard Chris, do you want to shout anything out? | ||
I just really appreciate being here. | ||
If people want to reach out to me, they can find me on BillboardChris.com. | ||
And I'm on Twitter at Billboard Chris. | ||
Now they're censoring me. | ||
My account is deemed adult content. | ||
So you have to enter a birth date, 18 plus to follow me. | ||
What? | ||
On Twitter? | ||
Yep. | ||
unidentified
|
Weird. | |
And you, I don't show up in the search bar either, but on my website you'll find me. | ||
And, uh, yeah, if people want to support me, there's a donate button there too. | ||
But really I just ask people to have conversations about this. | ||
Cause that's how we're going to defeat this one conversation at a time. | ||
What about you Libby? | ||
Hey guys. | ||
I'm searching for Billboard Chris. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Come up. | ||
Is it at Billboard Chris? | ||
Yeah. | ||
When you type it, you can click on the at Billboard Chris and then you'll find me, but I don't show up in the search results. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I'm Libby Emmons. | ||
You can find me at Libby Emmons on Twitter or at thepostmillennial.com. | ||
And we've got a lot of great content up also at humanevents.com. | ||
So come say hi. | ||
Yes, and you can follow me at Ian Crossland anywhere on the internet. | ||
One final time for today, point you towards the new Cask Castle vlog. | ||
It's on YouTube. | ||
I don't know if it's search Cask Castle on YouTube if you want to see a clip, but if you go to TimCast.com, find Cask Castle on the left, you can watch the full episode just released yesterday. | ||
And there's more to come. | ||
Next week, I think, is going to be the most ridiculous and funny stuff we've ever done. | ||
And we've got one bit that I know YouTube would probably ban us over. | ||
So it's like that's exciting. | ||
Yeah well we're gonna keep it a secret because people you know who want to watch the show will enjoy it. | ||
And it's on the subscriber side. | ||
Yep. | ||
Nice. | ||
But we put the so what we're doing is Once a week, what we're aiming to do is every Wednesday have our cameos from our guests doing something funny. | ||
So we had Marjorie Taylor Greene playing Magic the Gathering. | ||
Who did we have before? | ||
Oh, Jack Posobiec delivering the scripts for Timcast.io. | ||
That was really cute. | ||
That was funny. | ||
And then we've got one planned next week, which is going to be really funny. | ||
Today, obviously, we had Ian and Marjorie Taylor Greene. | ||
So we're going to keep having, you know, people cameo and do funny bits. | ||
But then the full show itself is on Timcast.com. | ||
unidentified
|
Gotcha. | |
I can read from Trudeau's new action plan for the 2SLGBTQIA+. | ||
That'll play well. | ||
Yeah, that's great. | ||
Thank you very much for coming, Chris. | ||
Thank you for joining us once again, Libby. | ||
Always a good time. | ||
Chris, your story is awesome. | ||
I'm really looking forward to this bonus segment. | ||
You guys can all follow me on Twitter and Minds.com as Sarah Petulitz, as well as SarahPetulitz.me. | ||
We will see you all over at TimCast.com in about an hour. |