Speaker | Time | Text |
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So the first poll is out. | ||
Joe Biden's anti MAGA speech. And the majority of Americans didn't like it. | ||
They felt that it was dangerous, they felt that it was escalating conflict in this country, and that it was incitement to conflict. | ||
So that's around 60%. | ||
Now here's the best part. | ||
Democrats overwhelmingly liked it. | ||
Republicans and independents do not like it. | ||
And here's the best part. | ||
Among independent voters, Joe Biden's approval rating is in the gutter. | ||
Two to one disapproval for Joe Biden. | ||
He keeps pandering to the hardest far left of the Democratic Party. | ||
It's making everybody in this country, it's putting everybody on edge. | ||
It's escalating the threats of violence and conflict. | ||
I agree with people who are polled. | ||
And in the end, he's losing the middle ground because they're chasing after Twitter. | ||
Now we have the story from Daily Mail that wealthy liberals are buying golden visas to other countries preparing to flee in the event there's a civil war, that Trump is leading it, or that fascism comes back to America. | ||
So I just want to shout out to all of those conservatives who are like, huh, all these liberals talk about leaving the country. | ||
Why aren't they leaving? | ||
Well, the rich ones, at the very least, they have the means to do it, and it looks like they're preparing to do it, so we'll talk about that. | ||
California is apparently facing rolling blackouts, so, uh, yeah, that's, well, that's their own fault. | ||
And then you have probably the best story, the funniest story I've read in a long time. | ||
Jennifer Lawrence says that she has recurring nightmares about Tucker Carlson. | ||
unidentified
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Yo, y'all need to calm down a little bit. | |
Before we get started, head over to TimCast.com. | ||
Become a member if you want to support our work. | ||
As a member, you'll get access to the uncensored after show that goes up at about 11 p.m., so sign up at TimCast.com. | ||
And you'll also get to watch Cast Castle, Tales from the Inverted World. | ||
Now, I know a lot of people wanted to see Cast Castle. | ||
We were delayed because of Labor Day. | ||
Everybody had the day off, so we just tried to double time it. | ||
And I think it's like 22 or 23 minutes long, so it's a bit longer and it's great. | ||
So it should be up at some point, but you know, check it out when you can. | ||
Don't forget to smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show right now, take that URL, post it everywhere you can if you really want to help us out. | ||
Joining us today to talk about this and so much more is Corey Mills. | ||
How are you? | ||
Who are you, good sir? | ||
So I'm the Republican nominee out of Florida 7, combat veteran, business owner, father, patriot, and apparently I'm a deplorable and an extremist. | ||
Oh wow, all those things. | ||
But you won the primary, so you're basically set to, it's like an AOC kind of thing where she won the primary and everyone said she's gonna win the general because it leans Republican, is that what's happening? | ||
Yeah, so it's pretty much a safe R seat at this point, especially after the redistricting. | ||
So it was originally kind of a PVI even district, but it was leaning D5 and now it's an, you know, R7 leaning R15. | ||
So, you know, this really was about the primary race and we had a very contested primary. | ||
We had eight, it was an eight way race. | ||
I mean, we had everything from a former state rep to a former vice mayor to a Navy SEAL to a business owner. | ||
So, you know, it was a very contested and very heated race, but the primary pretty much was the entire race. | ||
Right on. | ||
Cool, man. | ||
Well, thanks for joining us. | ||
Thanks for having me. | ||
We got Daniel Turner! | ||
Always great to be back here. | ||
Love it. | ||
Hi, everyone. | ||
Daniel Turner, Power of the Future, America's greatest fossil fuel advocate, energy expert extraordinaire, and Virginia's greatest sheep farmer. | ||
Bristol Farm, Virginia, on Instagram. | ||
Yes. | ||
Yes. | ||
You know what? | ||
We'll get to this later on, but I just bought a whole bunch more ewes yesterday. | ||
Drove them back to the farm. | ||
unidentified
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Ews? | |
Ews are female sheep that you inseminate, right? | ||
And as I was driving them home, I was thinking how new blood is so important to a farm because you can't have dads, you know, have sex with their daughters. | ||
New blood is important. | ||
And new blood is important in D.C. | ||
also because when you get the same stale blood and you pass your seed on to your son or daughter, you have a lot of bad D.C. | ||
So new blood in D.C. | ||
is great as well. | ||
So thanks for being our ewe. | ||
We gotta talk a bit about farming, too, because one of the stories that we have is this writer for The Guardian saying, if there really is going to be a civil war, I'm screwed. | ||
No guns, no bunker, no food, I'll last a week. | ||
And it's like, thank you for acknowledging that's the truth, but now you can change these circumstances. | ||
We also got Ian Chilling. | ||
Well, hi, everyone. | ||
Good to be here. | ||
Ian Crossland. | ||
What's up, dudes? | ||
Let's get down to brass tacks, shall we? | ||
I am very excited for this evening. | ||
I always have a great time with Daniel and Corey as well. | ||
Both are peak customers. | ||
I'm excited to get into it. | ||
Let's go! | ||
Alright, here's the story from TheDailyMail.com. | ||
Loaded liberals are paying millions for golden visas to other countries because they're scared of a Trump-led civil war in 2024. | ||
I said Civil War, that means. | ||
Now, I will say right off the bat, I'm a bit skeptical, but also kind of not, like, part of me wants to think it's an exaggeration, but part of me kind of believes it. | ||
We already saw the story about these billionaires who are trying to build bunkers and resorts in New Zealand and stuff, and that story's been going on for a long time. | ||
You had the CEO from Reddit, who's also one of these woke wealthy liberals, talking about survival, prepping, and getting food because they saw something coming. | ||
Daily Mail says, The wealthy wokes are spending huge sums to bag visas that | ||
allow them to escape to countries like Austria, Turkey, Jordan, and the Caribbean, according to attorney | ||
running the process. Consultants say they've seen a massive spike in interest | ||
for citizenship for second countries all over the countries over the last few | ||
years. Many Americans told them they are petrified by the thought of another | ||
Trump administration while others cited the Roe v. Wade ruling in the 2008 crash. | ||
You know I love about that? If you want to leave the United States because | ||
you're worried about abortions, yeah go to Jordan or Turkey. | ||
We'll see how that works out for you. | ||
If you want to leave America because you're worried about authoritarianism, is Turkey, right, the best runner up? | ||
Is Canada? | ||
This is the craziest thing I see with this. | ||
People are like, I'm going to move to Canada. | ||
It's like, okay, well, they were arresting people trying to leave their homes. | ||
They called truck drivers fascists and extremists. | ||
I mean, we got similar issues going on here in the US, but I don't think going to Jordan Yeah, I was just going to say, I think that it's greatly exaggerated. | ||
I think that we have to understand that historically a lot of billionaires and even multi-millionaires look for areas to park money that has the best taxation clauses. | ||
I mean, that's why you have countries in the Caribbean, like Bermuda, things like this has a 2% tax treaty with America, so they park their cash off there. | ||
You have the UAE and Dubai, who has a DMZ, which is a tax-free hub. | ||
Things like this. | ||
I don't think it has anything to do. | ||
I think they're trying to utilize this as an excuse I think the real reason they're doing is that they're looking at the increased inflation Taxation and what's going on in America and the fact that the dollar is not going as far They probably saw 87,000 new IRS agents and said, maybe I should be a citizen. | ||
It's Trump's fault. | ||
I also love like rich liberals that, you know, took a private helicopter from Amman to Petra and they're like, Jordan is paradise. | ||
I want to live in Jordan. | ||
I was like, well, yeah, that's great. | ||
It's like, you got your tour of the Hagia Sophia and you're like, I could live in Istanbul. | ||
Sure you could. | ||
But I will just caution and remind everyone that during President Trump's time in office, you actually had more billionaires and multi-millionaires moving their cash back onshore to America and you had businesses returning to America. | ||
So I think that this great exaggeration that they're fleeing because they're worried about another Trump administration, which I'm certainly hoping for one, I think it's completely far-fetched and they're running away from the realities because that doesn't add up to what actually happened from 16 to 20. | ||
Peter Navarro was on the show and he was saying, well, at least give me that we had the best economy of our lives or whatever. | ||
And I said, no, I think that the balloon was about to burst because of our 24 trillion deficit or debt. | ||
And he was like, oh, because he but at the same time, what he was did do well is they were bringing business back, which it seemed like it's been a while since there was a resurgence of American industry. | ||
Exactly what we're talking about. | ||
Right. | ||
I mean, right now we've got a GDP to national debt ratio of about 131%. | ||
So you're talking about an insolvency as a business owner. | ||
That means you don't qualify for a loan. | ||
That doesn't mean, I mean, that means that you're spending 31% over what your incoming revenue is. | ||
So, you know, at this stage, the only thing that props up America is the fact that we have the US dollars being a global currency, which is exactly what China, Russia, and Iran is trying to eliminate is the US dollar from being the global currency. | ||
That's the whole point of their kind of geopolitical alignment. | ||
They've been doing that for a long time, too. | ||
But now they're almost close when you talk about the fact that, one, they're already expanding the Eurasian border, they take over Africa, Oceania, create the Maritime Silk Route, cut off supply chain to the Western Hemisphere, because we're getting drug into these endless wars like we're seeing in Ukraine when the reality is that this is about economic resource warfare. | ||
This isn't about kinetics any longer. | ||
You know what's weird about this article, if I could just say, if I'm the Democrat advisor to the Biden campaign world, if your wealthy liberals are already banking on a Trump win, you have to be nervous about your campaign strategy, right? | ||
If they're already planning to leave, then they don't think he's going to win. | ||
unidentified
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Perhaps. | |
I think a lot of it's probably that they're saying, okay, it looks like Trump is going to win, so I'm going to hedge my bets. | ||
But I'll be honest too, in the source article, which comes from the Daily Beast, they mention For years, David Lesperance, an immigration attorney who helps wealthy Americans obtain second citizenships, saw a similar type of client. | ||
Millionaire MAGA heads, Silicon Valley libertarians, new money crypto investors, basically rich guys who wanted out of the US tax system. | ||
But in recent months, he's seen an increase in a surprising clientele. | ||
Moneyed liberals who are terrified of the political future of the country and want an escape plan. | ||
I think, after everything we've seen, I mean, look, they're talking about rolling blackouts in California. | ||
Perhaps they should have managed their energy production better. | ||
But these people, they... Here's what I think, as an aside. | ||
They campaign on climate change and then have no choice but to follow through with cutting off their own electrical grid. | ||
To appease their own voters and they're spinning themselves into oblivion. | ||
Now California is in serious trouble. | ||
They couldn't build enough generation to maintain their own state despite the fact they've been screaming about it endlessly. | ||
Now you have people who are suffering their own problems leaving places like California and going to Arizona or Texas and bringing their problems or their voting patterns with them. | ||
But then you have the wealthy who are looking at all the problems they created. | ||
All of the cheering on of the, you know, going after Trump, defense of Hunter and Joe Biden and their illicit business dealings. | ||
There's going to be accountability. | ||
We saw this in early 2020 or mid-2020 when the Boston Globe reported on war games that were being held by Democrats and, you know, neocon establishment Republicans. | ||
And on the Democrat side, in the war game, they suggested the West Coast secede from the Union if Trump were to win. | ||
That's where they were in 2020, at least according to the Boston Globe. | ||
When I hear that they're fleeing now because they're scared about Trump, I say, yes. | ||
And for the moneyed liberals, I don't think it's because they have Trump derangement syndrome. | ||
I think it's because these are the people who know that they've been doing naughty things and they're going to get caught when Donald Trump or Republicans It's not just any Republican. | ||
It's got to be Republicans who actually take action, actually file subpoenas. | ||
No, I think Larry Hogan will go after these guys too. | ||
I can't even finish the comment without laughing. | ||
Sorry, iPod. | ||
Well, I'll tell you though, I do think that there's a part of that, but I also think that you're starting to see a lot more currency hedging as well, where people are actually going and parking their money offshore. | ||
They're exchanging their currency and trading on the markets and they're making a killing on it, basically betting and shorting the dollar. | ||
I think that a lot of these people, they just have the amount of money that's necessary to go ahead and try and continue to create more wealth, and they're doing it on the backs of hard-working Americans. | ||
Do you think that they're actually, fleeing's an interesting phrasing, but do you think they're just increasing their portfolio buying more property? | ||
That's exactly what they're doing in my opinion. | ||
unidentified
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Correct. | |
And finding a way to save money on taxes. | ||
20%. | ||
Especially with the, you know, it's funny because- That's why I said Bermuda though, by the way, because they literally have a 2% tax treaty, and there's things that people will go and buy, like insurance captives, and then they will do something in one of their businesses, they will file an insurance claim against it, pay themselves out, insurance claims aren't taxed, And then they're basically just circumventing the system. | ||
So, you know, this is where the idea of needing 87,000 deep state police added into our system with the $600,000 in small caliber ammunition isn't the fix. | ||
It's actually fixing the loopholes and making sure that we hold those accountable who are actually trying to do these things. | ||
I think the moneyed liberal types, and look, the Democratic Party has become the party of the wealthy. | ||
Vox.com said this, not Fox, Vox, V-O-X, said in 2016 the Democrats had become the party of the wealthy. | ||
They've become whiter and wealthier over the past several elections, which is funny. | ||
And the Republican Party is becoming more diverse and more working class, so of course These are people who are like, well, with Joe Biden making these moves to raise taxes and stuff, I gotta do what I gotta do, you know? | ||
And what I see with Joe Biden's move and the Democrats' move, with the IRS for instance, they're not gonna go after the rich people. | ||
No. | ||
Because the rich people fight back. | ||
If you if the IRS sends a bill to a millionaire and says you owe us X, he'll be like, you | ||
know, he'll put it in the call to his law firm and say, hey, handle this for me. | ||
And they'll be like, you got it. | ||
And the IRS has got to deal with it. | ||
And they're like, we're going to lose money in man hours. | ||
Send the bill for 500 bucks to that working class Joe who can't afford to fight back. | ||
Do that to 10,000 working class Joe's and we're going to make a pretty penny. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And you will. | ||
You'll just you'll just pay the fine because you can't afford the attorneys. | ||
And we were just saying before we went live, you know, this is what this was the strategy | ||
of Mayor Bowser in Washington, D.C. as the city was struggling for revenue. | ||
She hired thousands more more meter maids. | ||
We used to call them and you know, you show up to your car. | ||
You're totally within your limits. | ||
You've obeyed all the signs all the parking rules you paid but you have a $35 ticket $50 ticket. | ||
And what are you going to do? | ||
ticket and what are you gonna do you gonna take a day off for work to go stand before a judge for | ||
$50 no you curse you scream you pay the $50 and they and she knows that's what you're gonna do | ||
she doesn't care about truth or justice and that's what these IRS agents are gonna do maybe not you | ||
know $50 but honestly if I got a $500 IRS fine I can't that's my lawyers fees would be more than | ||
that exactly you're gonna curse you're gonna scream and you're like damn it and here's the | ||
$500 I remember one time I got two tickets in the mail that were a final notice $100 | ||
$150 I think was due. | ||
Two of them, 300 bucks. | ||
And this was back when I was making like 10 bucks an hour working at the airport in Chicago. | ||
And I was like, what did I get tickets for? | ||
Looked them up and it said I had illegally parked in Chicago months ago. | ||
Never got a ticket on my car. | ||
unidentified
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Nope. | |
Never parked illegally. | ||
And when I called them and said, this must be a mistake. | ||
They said, well, you didn't respond to the first two. | ||
So now it's too late. | ||
You have to pay. | ||
It's a final determination. | ||
And I said, I never got a ticket. | ||
Doesn't matter. | ||
Prove to me you didn't get it. | ||
Yep. | ||
Exactly. | ||
That's very common. | ||
Prove that you didn't get it. | ||
That's fascinating. | ||
That's metaphysically impossible. | ||
But this is the way it works, right? | ||
It's guilty until proven innocent, not innocent until proven guilty, the way it was originally said. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And it shows you, you just mentioned the California thing. | ||
It shows you what I think a lot of government and government bureaucrats, what they really think of their constituents. | ||
Yeah, they're big banks. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
You know, like, we don't care about what this is bad for you, if this is inconvenient, if this is illegal, unconstitutional. | ||
We don't care that Tim didn't do this. | ||
We just need his damn money. | ||
But I'll tell you, this is why, you know, when I talk to my, you know, more moderate liberal types friends, and they tell me they're in favor of defunding the police, this is exactly why. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So I was talking to a friend of mine who lives in, like, a well-off suburban area, And I was like, why would you want to defund the police? | ||
You live in the suburbs. | ||
That's where the cops are good. | ||
And she said, it's because we all keep getting pulled over and we don't do anything wrong. | ||
And they tell us to go to court over it and we can't. | ||
And we're all like, everyone's been talking about it. | ||
We're pissed. | ||
And then I was like, well, I get it. | ||
I completely get it. | ||
If you're seeing something in your community, like quota systems or something, then you're going to be like, don't know, don't care. | ||
But I tell you this, the funny repercussion of that is going to be, you may be upset they're milking money out of you, but you get rid of the police and then see what happens. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, that's what we're seeing right now, which is increased criminality. | ||
I mean, that's exactly what's going on. | ||
Lawlessness. | ||
And then you have the Democrats soft on crime policies. | ||
You have these catch and release policies, these Nobel policies, and you're seeing an increase. | ||
And now people are terrorized to go out in areas that are Democrat controlled, like Seattle and New York, etc. | ||
Let's talk about that. | ||
We have this story from The Guardian, which I respect. | ||
I respect this story. | ||
No doomsday bunker, not a single gun. | ||
If the U.S. | ||
really is heading for civil war, I'm stuffed, says Arwa Madawi. | ||
The super rich are preparing to ride out the apocalypse by their underground swimming pools. | ||
Ordinary Americans have bought another 20 million firearms, and me? | ||
I have a broom and a butter knife. | ||
I have tremendous respect for her recognizing everyone else is going out and buying guns, and she won't. | ||
The best part is when she says she'll last a week. | ||
She says, How long do you think you would survive if everything went to hell? | ||
Civil war erupted, institutions crumbled, and there was absolutely nowhere safe in the world left to run. | ||
Me? | ||
I'd give myself one week, maybe two. | ||
Maybe two? | ||
That's generous, lady. | ||
I would like to think that I'm a tough survivor type, but the last time I went camping I forgot to bring a sleeping bag and sobbed myself to sleep. | ||
So, on balance, I would have to admit that I'm not. | ||
I did have a brief period this year when, in a fit of madness, I thought I'd take up urban farming and become as self-sufficient as possible with a scrap of garden in Philadelphia. | ||
That seemed to go well until I proudly sent my mom a photo of the luscious berry bushes I'd cultivated, and she informed me that they were poisonous weeds and I should get rid of them immediately. | ||
So yeah, I don't give myself great odds on surviving the apocalypse. | ||
Yeah, but look I don't want this lady to get hurt. | ||
I don't want her. | ||
I want her to survive I want her to Understand and maybe this is the first step in realizing that the world is not some fancy beautiful skittle and rainbow bubble Where you can go around and do whatever the hell you want that there are real dangers and we're kept safe by a military and policing apparatus There's something to being not maybe not attacked by a wild animal. | ||
I'm not encouraging that anyone gets attacked by wild animal. | ||
When an animal comes at you, like I'm watching videos of like a wild boar attacking someone. | ||
You realize this world wants you dead. | ||
Everything about the universe is out there to destroy. | ||
Nature is metal. | ||
Space will kill you if you go out there too far. | ||
You say the universe wants you dead? | ||
Yes, it wants to explode you in its vacuum if you get near it. | ||
We're up against a mountain of terror, but we've lost that realization being in these cities all compacted. | ||
It was Canada, right? | ||
The wild boar thing? | ||
I didn't know where it was from. | ||
It was somewhere where they're only allowed to have three rounds or something. | ||
Italy. | ||
And the boar comes at him. | ||
Is it a guy? | ||
It was a high voice. | ||
I thought it was a woman. | ||
And you see the boom, miss, boom, miss, point blank, miss. | ||
And then you start beating with the gun. | ||
It's like, well, now people ask, why do you need 30 rounds? | ||
Because that boar would not have been a threat to the individual. | ||
And boars can destroy. | ||
I grew up hog hunting, so I know the dangers of wild boar, especially even bar hogs down in the state of Florida. | ||
And I mean, you can get boar hogs down there that are 300, 400 pounds, you know, four and a half, six inch tush. | ||
And, you know, they basically, I saw where, you know, people would blood out because they'll essentially grab them right between, you know, kind of the crotch and sever the femoral artery. | ||
And I mean, you know, you're stuck in the woods sitting there bleeding out behind the pines and palmettos. | ||
So it's a real risk. | ||
One of the funniest things I remember was when I had a friend who went, I think it was in Arizona, and they told me that they were locked down. | ||
And I was like, whoa, what's going on? | ||
And they're like, javelina spotting. | ||
And I was like, what? | ||
And they're like, javelina. | ||
I'm like, what is that? | ||
And they sent me a picture of this little pig. | ||
And I was like, that's why everyone's forced inside? | ||
And it's like, yeah, those things will destroy them. | ||
How big are they? | ||
Like the little wild pigs out there in the desert or something like that? | ||
Dude, at least those kids in college understood, like those little wild pigs or whatever they are. | ||
Is that what they're called? | ||
Javelina? | ||
Am I pronouncing it right? | ||
unidentified
|
I've never heard of those little pigs. | |
I've got a lot of compassion for animals and humans being part of that animal kingdom, but like when I had a raccoon, I went near a raccoon and I was like, okay, I'm going to use my magic on this thing and be kind with the raccoon. | ||
It was in a cage, but it screamed like it wanted to kill me. | ||
And I realized I gotta, the viciousness in me came out. | ||
I was like, that thing can die. | ||
I will eradicate all raccoons if that's a danger to my survival. | ||
Peccary, is that? | ||
unidentified
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Peccaries, yeah. | |
Peccaries, I guess, you know. | ||
Cute, they're so cute. | ||
unidentified
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Look how cute the little baby is. | |
I know, right? | ||
That thing would probably bite you and give you rabies or who knows what. | ||
You see that video of a lady getting attacked by the fox? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, what was that? | |
Yeah, rabid fox. | ||
So I just wanna say, you know, we've done a bunch of discussions over the years | ||
talking about, you know, would liberals survive the apocalypse? | ||
And it's funny when I hear people try and make the argument that it's not the case that liberals wouldn't survive. | ||
And I'm like, dude, the people in cities would be eating each other in like a week. | ||
She says she'd last a week, maybe two. | ||
Dude, when there's no water, what do you think people are going to do? | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's like, drink ocean water for sure. | ||
Some people will, they'll drink the river water and then die faster. | ||
Yeah, it'll be quicker. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Wow, man. | ||
Water, man. | ||
They said water is the new gold. | ||
Between all the dysentery and all the other things, not understanding how to boil water, not understanding how to, you know, check things. | ||
I mean, yeah, look, I don't care how many survival shows you try to watch and, you know, The Last Frontier or Alone. | ||
I mean, at the end of the day, if you don't have proper survival skills, you don't have them. | ||
Yeah, boiling water will kill microbes, but it doesn't get rid of a lot of stuff like pharmaceuticals. | ||
And it's very hard to boil water if there's no natural gas or there's no... Your stove doesn't work! | ||
Do these people know how to make a fire? | ||
And maintain a fire! | ||
unidentified
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Yeah! | |
Do they have any idea how to start a fire without... Well, I'll just get a lighter. | ||
Go to the CVS. | ||
There is no CVS! | ||
Do they know how to hide a fire from people that want your fire? | ||
Well, this is where people start asking, so have you ever built a friction fire? | ||
Do you understand how to build fires in different elevations and in different climates and how to maintain that and how to transfer? | ||
Because you can't just build a fire and think that you're going to live in one place forever. | ||
Maybe you're having to transport a fire. | ||
How do you do that? | ||
How do you tender? | ||
I would really love to see some of these people who have grown up In these downtown, you know, metropolitan areas where they've just always had something at the tip of their finger, live for a week or even two, as she said. | ||
Oh my gosh, if their Uber Eats driver is five minutes late, they get zero stars. | ||
And they send raging Instagram, like, this is absurd. | ||
And they want, you know, like, you think, build a fire. | ||
Imagine. | ||
unidentified
|
I grew up in the South, so for us it was like my grandfather taught us to live in the woods. | |
The people who think words are violence. | ||
They'll be out in the streets in an apocalyptic scenario and there's going to be some dude with a gun who's hungry and he's gonna... These people probably, many of them won't get to encounter words at all, but how will they respond to someone actually grabbing them? | ||
How many of them will yell for the police? | ||
If seeing Ben Shapiro in the concert hall made you literally shake with fear, get ready when it's a bear. | ||
And you have no idea how to use a gun. | ||
Maybe you have a gun. | ||
Do you have any idea how to load it, how to fire it? | ||
The apocalypse happens, the cities are wiped out, and Ben Shapiro's already created a small working city. | ||
And then the liberals are all outside the walls screaming how terrified they are of him and they're telling stories. | ||
And then the people who aren't insane will just knock on the door and be like, good sir, I'm looking for a job in food. | ||
And it's like, we are in need of someone of your specialty. | ||
Come on in. | ||
And they're outside screaming, terrified of Ben Shapiro. | ||
So this is what I was saying earlier. | ||
I'm not gonna pretend like, I think I would survive. | ||
For one, I'm out of the city, we're in the middle of nowhere, and I've started learning and setting myself up in a way that I would last longer than two weeks. | ||
We have emergency food, we have bug out locations, we've got solar stuff, and I've been reading a bit. | ||
Obviously, we have the chickens, but I'm not gonna pretend that I'd be better off than the average, say, Trump supporter who just grew up in the country. | ||
They know what food they can already eat outside. | ||
Like the first time- We have the pawpaw out here. | ||
The hillbilly banana, they call it. | ||
I didn't even know where it was. | ||
Last year, I'm like, I see these little pawpaws. | ||
I'm like, it looks like there's three of them. | ||
Then pawpaw season hit and there's 50,000 of them everywhere, like on the ground littered. | ||
I'm like, it's just food for days. | ||
And like, I had no idea. | ||
And the people out here were laughing. | ||
Cause they're like, we know all about it. | ||
What you can, where the berries are, what kind of berries you eat. | ||
Cause they grew up around it and I didn't. | ||
So here's my question for you guys. | ||
How long do you think you'd last? | ||
Let's say society breaks down right now. | ||
We can, you know, this, this liberal lady, she's self-aware, but what do you think Corey? | ||
I mean, I think I could sustain fine on just my own survival skills and the fact that I have sustainable food. | ||
I have, you know, the ability to go ahead and have my own water sources and not to mention that I own a 2,000 acre facility that's well armed. | ||
So if I really needed to, when it comes down to survival and the fittest, I'll take what I need. | ||
Yeah, that's kind of the point. | ||
It's like, it's not even necessarily about what you know, but it's about what you currently have. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
You know what I mean? | ||
I have currency. | ||
And currency is not money. | ||
That's what people have to understand. | ||
Currency is things like ammunition. | ||
Currency is things like food for trade. | ||
Currency is things like whiskey. | ||
People have to understand that in a society where currency, as far as you know it, has changed, Now it becomes who is the most, you know, the largest survival or the largest, you know, kind of provider and store of goods. | ||
I mean, this is why she talks about the doomsday bunkers and the preppers. | ||
You know, people make fun of preppers, but I can tell you right now that during the unconstitutional lockdowns, our family never did without. | ||
It's not just that. | ||
Preppers are having fun. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know, I've watched these videos about preppers and they always try to show you the craziest guy who's like, the warriors are coming, so I got beans. | ||
Like that's, that's not real. | ||
The real videos are really great where it's a guy like, Oh, we have, we have, here's where we store emergency food. | ||
We've got the animals over there. | ||
Here's where it's basically homesteading. | ||
And we have like a long storage and they're having a good time. | ||
It's purpose. | ||
They have purpose. | ||
They're doing what they love. | ||
They enjoy it. | ||
Like we have the chickens. | ||
The chickens are fun. | ||
Yeah, what concerns me is when people's purpose becomes defending against an apocalypse, because then it's almost like they need the apocalypse in order to fulfill their purpose. | ||
I don't want to take it that far. | ||
Let me let me let me let me ask. | ||
If you were in a city, let's say you're on a business trip. | ||
In New York, you're in Manhattan, right in the middle. | ||
And then all of a sudden, just everything just goes off. | ||
You would still be completely fine. | ||
And that's kind of the point, right? | ||
Well, yeah, because my initial instinct wouldn't be to sustain myself in that city. | ||
It would be to get back to where I have all my supplies and all my sustainment items. | ||
For sure, but I just mean like basic combat skills. | ||
Yeah, I mean look, I'm gonna, you know, it's not like we sit in a, you know, kind of empty | ||
solitude, you know, building that has no food whatsoever. | ||
I mean, you have enough to sustain you for a number of days. | ||
Clearly, my big thing would be pack what I can get out, get my way a means of transportation and get to where I have the most sustainability, which is my own facility. | ||
The funny thing is so many of these liberals would be like, they'd go outside and be like, okay, everybody, let's talk about what our plan is. | ||
And they would just sit, sit around. | ||
It's like, you realize there's no water in this place. | ||
The water pressure is gone. | ||
There's no water. | ||
It would be a lot of conversation looking for who to serve. | ||
Well, I think for a while you just have an increase in criminality, right? | ||
So you just have the stealing and looting of basic goods, or essentially the 2020 mostly, uh, what is it? | ||
Summer of Love? | ||
Summer of Love, yeah. | ||
I mean, you'd essentially just have that. | ||
You'd have rampant increase in criminality, you'd have a lot of theft, you'd have murders, you'd have all these different things going on, but eventually when those supplies run out, I like what you said about currency, because I did a thread the other day on social about becoming Great Depression, which I think is inevitable, assuming the government doesn't collapse, right? | ||
I'm not talking apocalypse, I'm just talking about like the Great Depression of our Of our grandparents of old. | ||
And I like what you said about currency, because I was telling people to start keeping big supplies of cash, because the black markets will pop up everywhere. | ||
And people like, not necessarily Tim, but people like Tim, who have extra chickens, will create a black market for eggs, because we're in a Great Depression. | ||
See, cash won't be the currency though, that's the whole thing. | ||
It'll have to be things like gold bullions, and it'll have to be things like fuel. | ||
But my point was, it could be, but my point was that though, They're not going to take your credit card. | ||
You're not going to take a check. | ||
They're not going to take your gold. | ||
Yeah, no, they're gonna need something that they can easily change. | ||
That's assuming the government hasn't collapsed, which I don't think it's going to. | ||
I don't think we're headed towards a towards an apocalypse. | ||
Well, I do think we're headed towards a depression though. | ||
It's not just that, it's that even if the US collapsed, other governments would have | ||
to collapse for something like gold to lose its value. | ||
In the event that the US goes into chaos in their civil war, there's still going to be | ||
people who say, hey, that gold is valuable in Turkey, that gold is valuable in Europe, | ||
so I will take it from you and bring it there. | ||
There's still going to be trade going on. | ||
I just think that in the event of a real civil war, what people need to understand is that | ||
it's not these regular liberal types. | ||
This is what I hear a lot from people. | ||
They're like, I think it was Bill Burr. | ||
He's the comedian, right? | ||
He was saying something recently, I think it was on Trigonometry, and it shows you the danger of ignorance. | ||
He's a funny guy. | ||
He's a good actor. | ||
I respect his work, but not his political positions because You know, he said on Joe Rogan, he's like, look Joe, I just put on the TV. | ||
Tell me to wear a mask. | ||
I wear it or I don't. | ||
Two weeks later, I'll turn it on. | ||
I'll do what they tell me. | ||
That's the kind of attitude where he says, he said on Trigonometry, regular people don't care about this stuff. | ||
You go out, nobody's talking about it. | ||
And that's ignorance of history. | ||
If I go out, I went down to like Strasbourg and Front Royal the other day. | ||
Yeah, I'm in MAGA country. | ||
Of course no one's fighting each other. | ||
They all live next to each other and have the same politics. | ||
You go into a city, it's woke country. | ||
Everybody's got the flags. | ||
Of course no one's fighting each other. | ||
I mean, they're still fighting each other, to be honest. | ||
But not always, because they're next to each other. | ||
It's the geographical differences where people are spreading apart from each other. | ||
And what happens is, in any major conflict, it is a small minority of the people who are leading the fighting. | ||
And when you have the president, Donald Trump just called Joe Biden enemy of the state. | ||
Joe Biden called Trump supporters extremists, and then tried walking it back later, and then doubled down and said, you know, the funny thing is, when he says MAGA Republicans are a threat, and so are their policies, you know, you know, he's talking about Trump supporters, because they're the ones who are pushing those policies and supporting those people. | ||
You have the highest levels of government. | ||
There's a conflict happening. | ||
It doesn't matter what regular people are thinking or doing. | ||
It's that law enforcement, the military apparatus, are currently being pointed at each other. | ||
Sooner or later, you get what Matt Taibbi calls that arrest this man moment, where the cars rush to the police station, two guys jump out and point arrest that man at each other, and then the police basically decide whose side are they on. | ||
That's when you figure out who's fighting who. | ||
But speaking of, you know, collapse and stuff, let's jump to this story from Fox Business. | ||
Californians warned of possible rolling blackouts as state battles historic heatwave. | ||
Perhaps the collapse, you know, for those that are just joining, we had the segment where this lady was saying if civil war happened, she wouldn't last a week, maybe, she would maybe last two. | ||
No guns, no bunkers, no food. | ||
Perhaps it won't be a civil war they have to worry about. | ||
Perhaps it's just going to be rolling blackouts. | ||
I saw a video, I think it was out of Italy, where they're going to school and working by candlelight. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah. | ||
Because the energy costs are so high. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
Well, and you're starting to see that even here in America where people, you know, affordability of just your basic utilities has gone up double if not triple in some areas. | ||
And I mean, this is impacting every single American. | ||
It's insane. | ||
And, you know, I'm going to defer to the energy expert here, but I mean, I put a lot of this on the fact that we have sustainable energy sources at our disposal under our feet. | ||
And they continue to go to unreliable renewables, which we saw Texas even try at one point with their, you know, wind turbines. | ||
And they're now, you know, regretting that decision. | ||
I mean, we have to get back to energy independence, but we can do that through the actual energy sources that are reliable energy sources like coal and gas and oil, the things that are under our feet. | ||
Nuclear. | ||
Nuclear as well. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
But look, in California, they can't. | ||
They've culted themselves into a corner. | ||
They've told everybody we can't do it because nuclear is bad and climate change. | ||
I'll tell you this right now. | ||
I don't care what your position is on climate change. | ||
California objectively screwed themselves energy-wise. | ||
Because when you come out and say, carbon is bad and burning all this fossil fuels is making the climate worse, the response is, okay, nuclear is a good option, right? | ||
Totally green! | ||
And it's got an excellent energy return on energy invested. | ||
No, no, no, nuclear is bad as well because nuclear is dirty. | ||
Three Mile Island. | ||
Chernobyl. | ||
That's what everyone just says with nuclear. | ||
Fukushima. | ||
Chernobyl. | ||
And then the response is, OK, go for wind, I guess. | ||
Good luck. | ||
And now you get rolling. | ||
They're saying it's like a stage two emergency in California. | ||
They can't build nuclear because they campaigned on hating it. | ||
They can't build new fossil fuel plants. | ||
They campaigned on hating it. | ||
And they don't have the battery power for wind or solar. | ||
When Marjorie Taylor Greene criticized, I think it was solar power, saying that when the sun goes down, you lose the power. | ||
I like having the lights on at night. | ||
Everyone laughed. | ||
Liberals mocked her. | ||
They're like, oh, you're so dumb. | ||
Dude, large scale solar systems, there's not batteries for this. | ||
Solar works really, really well during the day when you have the energy and it has to be supplemented at night with fossil fuels or nuclear. | ||
Salt's kind of nice. | ||
I'll defer to you, Daniel. | ||
You know better than I do. | ||
Molten salt. | ||
You familiar with the molten salt reactors? | ||
No, I mean molten salt, blue hydrogen. | ||
There's lots of great things in theory that I think I would be fine seeing investors, not the government, I would find seeing them develop. | ||
And if they work, it's great. | ||
I welcome all technologies. | ||
But the problem is the electric grid is, for good or for ill, it is run by the state. | ||
Right, and if the state is in charge of giving you electricity, then the state has a responsibility to give you damn electricity, and the state is failing its job. | ||
They don't even know what electricity is. | ||
No, they have no idea. | ||
No, no, no, hold on. | ||
Most people don't. | ||
No. | ||
And that's okay, but if you're coming out and talking about energy policy and you don't know anything about it, and I'm not going to pretend to be an expert on this by any stretch of the imagination, but it's fascinating to me. | ||
I was talking to someone a long time ago, and I said, do you know where electricity comes from? | ||
And they went, the wall. | ||
Yeah, there you go. | ||
And I said, yeah, but like, where from like, you plug in the wall, it's there. | ||
And I was like, okay, there's like cables back there, right? | ||
And they're like, I guess. | ||
You think it's by design? | ||
Where does the electricity come from in that thing? | ||
And they're like, I don't know. | ||
They don't know. | ||
Now, to be fair. | ||
Well, that's because they don't know the history of Westinghouse and all the rest, I mean. | ||
But so the fascinating thing is, what they don't understand is that it's a flow, it's a circuit, it has to keep going. | ||
The reason they shut down parts is because it's overloaded and it can't complete a circuit. | ||
So you ask people, the fascinating thing about energy is that it's all basically steam power, right? | ||
Even nuclear power, it's boiling water to create steam pressure to spin a turbine. | ||
It's kinetic energy, yeah. | ||
It's kinetic energy. | ||
It's converting large rotating magnets to create electrical current, which then the | ||
current flows through the grid. | ||
They don't understand why we can't have wind and solar be like our permanent solutions. | ||
And it's one of the great evils that the Green Movement does is that you take a coal power | ||
plant that creates 900 megawatts of coal power. | ||
You take a natural gas power plant, same idea. | ||
Nuclear plant, 4,000 megawatts of power. | ||
They will say, well, if we build 4,000 acres of solar, we'll get the same capacity. | ||
It's like, but there's a huge variable. | ||
That means it has to consistently shine the sun nonstop with no cloud cover, with no, that is a variable. | ||
Massive acreages of underground batteries, which is insanely bad for the environment. | ||
Not to mention, who does this actually benefit? | ||
You know, this whole idea of the Green New Deal or these renewable energy sources only promotes China economics. | ||
I mean, they control 15 of the 16 rare mineral mines in the world. | ||
They are where we're going to get a lot of our solar, you know, panels and all these different things, the lithium that's necessary, especially as Joe Biden, the botched Afghan withdrawal, just gave $1.2 trillion in lithium mines from Afghanistan to the Chinese. | ||
So the whole point is, is that why are we continuing to promote and benefit Our adversarial nations and dependency upon them, as opposed to getting back to energy independence here in America and going back to an America First agenda, which is where we need to be as a nation. | ||
If they were just honest, you know? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I'd say, okay. | ||
If they came out and said, oh, yeah, we know 60 million people will die overnight when we enact this policy. | ||
I'd be like, well, at least they're telling you what they're doing. | ||
And if you vote for it, at least you know what you're voting for. | ||
But a lot of people who are listening to these insane policies don't know that they're voting for their way of life to be done. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
So we saw this in Denver. | ||
People couldn't change their thermostats. | ||
You saw that one? | ||
Oh, it's unbelievable. | ||
22,000 people. | ||
They opted in though. | ||
Yes. | ||
That's what they said. | ||
So here's how it goes, because this is actually what happened. | ||
It's going to happen more and more. | ||
When you sign up for your electric company or whatever, They say, would you like to sign up for our Energy Saver program? | ||
It's $100 off your bill per year. | ||
They go, wow, $100 off per year? | ||
I'll sign up for Energy Saver. | ||
They don't read it. | ||
Then one day, it's 99 degrees outside, and the thermostat says Energy Saver mode activated, and you can't change it. | ||
And they say, why can't I change my thermostat? | ||
They say, well, you opted in. | ||
Maybe you should opt out, but we gave you a cheap deal because you were willing to do this. | ||
So that's the bit that I did on Twitter, where I said- Absolutely right, I saw that. | ||
You're 100% right. | ||
It's 99 degrees. | ||
You go to set your thermostat, but you're locked out. | ||
Governor's orders. | ||
He declared an emergency. | ||
So you decide, you know what? | ||
I'll go take a drive. | ||
You go to your electric vehicle, but the screen says no charge available. | ||
Car wasn't charging. | ||
Sorry, governor's orders. | ||
So you decided to walk down to the park and just go and get some fresh air. | ||
But the checkpoint down there, the tweet was limited, but there's a guy saying, sir, if you want to walk past me, you've got to scan your QR code on your phone. | ||
And you're like, I can't. | ||
My phone's dead. | ||
I can't use the electricity. | ||
I'm sorry, sir, with no QR code. | ||
And then they tase you, because that's where the electricity goes. | ||
Then you go home, back to your pod, where you grab a bag of crickets to snack on and wait for the temperature to go down. | ||
I think that that is the future. | ||
You joke, but if the Democrats and the Liberals continue in the path that they're trying to, which is destroying us economically, politically, militarily, that's actually a real-life scenario that could occur. | ||
Look at California right now, rolling blackouts! | ||
I can't say this with any more sincerity, and I know people can think I'm crazy. | ||
It is a huge mistake to buy any sort of smart thermostat, a Nest, any of those things. | ||
If you're like, I need to be able to control it with my phone, then have a kid and tell the kid, go lower the thermostat. | ||
That's why God invented children. | ||
This is like the old days when you'd be like, all right, I need to change the television channel. | ||
unidentified
|
Go up there and flip it. | |
Buy mechanical cars. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So, you know, cause I have a Tesla and everybody's like asking me like, you really bought one of those things? | ||
Like why? | ||
And I'm like, well, you know, it's an electric car. | ||
I wanted to have it as an option. | ||
And they're like, yeah, but you realize we're getting close to the point where, like in California, they ordered people not to charge their cars. | ||
Still, I believe right now they can't charge their cars. | ||
So what do you do? | ||
You can't... Look, they have these cars. | ||
But again, this is where I go back to sustainability, right? | ||
I mean, I have a Generac generator at home. | ||
In both of our houses, we have a Generac generator just in case. | ||
I do have a solar backup just in case, but not on my roof. | ||
What I use it for is I've got these kind of lithium ion like storage that I can actually utilize solar to charge off of it. | ||
And it's for traveling, you know, when my family goes camping or we go out for a sustained period of time, et cetera. | ||
But these are areas that I can, you know, it tells me I have this much time I could run my refrigerator off of it. | ||
This much, this many times I can charge a computer or a phone or et cetera. | ||
And obviously you can kind of do it to wherever you want but my whole point is that I don't utilize that as my idea of a main source of energy. | ||
I utilize it as a backup source of energy just in the event of a storm or things like this. | ||
I've called for whistleblowers. | ||
I'll do it again. | ||
The left, you have to admire their solidarity with each other, right? | ||
There aren't a lot of whistleblowers. | ||
There's no Alyssa Farah, whatever, the former Trump spokeswoman, who's now on The View, who's just on a tirade about how much she hates Trump, most disloyal, Benedict Arnold, et cetera. | ||
But the left doesn't do that. | ||
But I will renew my call for a whistleblower. | ||
I'd love to know what the governor mansion in California is right now. | ||
I'd love to know if Paul Pelosi is charging his electric horse. | ||
I'd love to know if Dianne Feinstein's house is literally set at 79, because that is the orders. | ||
And the answer is, of course, they're not. | ||
None of their offices are set at below 79. | ||
None of them have off unnecessary lights. | ||
We saw the same thing, though, with Governor Whitmer. | ||
We saw it in Michigan, whenever nobody's allowed to take their boats out, yet her husband's allowed to. | ||
Again, this is that two-tiered, elitist justice system that I talk about that I can't stand, that we have to break the mold on, where political elitists and celebrities can act with impunity, and the rest of Americans basically get tossed under the bus. | ||
But if you thought it was that angering that you were in lockdown and Nancy Pelosi was able to get her hair cut, or you were in lockdown and the governor of Michigan, Michelle Lujan Grisham, opened up a store for her personal shopping spree... That's not what upsets me. | ||
No, but if that upsets you, that hypocrisy, just wait until the energy... You know what upsets me? | ||
Hang on, hang on. | ||
Wait until the energy hypocrisy kicks in that you are not allowed to use electricity today, but the governor's mansion is totally lit up. | ||
Not allowed to charge you a Tesla, but I can charge mine. | ||
Why? | ||
Well because I'm the senior senator from California. | ||
But this is the same idea. | ||
That hypocrisy is going to create the civil war. | ||
Democracy though is exactly what frustrates me about politicians because we actually will | ||
hold your feet over the fire if you're doing or committing insider trading, but yet we're | ||
allowing politicians, their wives and their offices to buy, sell and trade stocks. | ||
They know they're going to pass legislation. | ||
They know they're going to directly manipulate. | ||
Why is that not being cut off by the left or the right? | ||
This isn't even a Republican versus Democrat or a socialist versus communist, you know, | ||
or communist situation. | ||
This is literally just a right versus wrong, a good versus bad. | ||
left populists and the right populists agree on that point. | ||
It's the establishment politicians who are like, no, no, no, no, no, you're not taking away our insider training. | ||
I did really well last year. | ||
My portfolio was fantastic only because of my, you know, my, my top secret security clearance. | ||
And in the skiff we discussed a couple of things. | ||
And the fact that I know what legislation is getting rid of. | ||
Imagine deep diving into who bought Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson before they made this huge decision. | ||
Imagine looking at the ideas of this renewable energy and who's bought into Tesla and all the others. | ||
My point is, is that just like we need to stop a two-tiered justice system, we need to stop the insider trading and the fact that our politicians and our celebrities are able to act in a way that the rest of America doesn't, and we are the majority as Americans. | ||
The funny thing about Pfizer and Moderna was that weird speech that Biden gave yesterday where he was screaming, I beat Pharma! | ||
I beat Pharma! | ||
And he's yelling, and you're like, beat Pharma? | ||
Have you seen their profits this year? | ||
Pfizer was like, please, please, Lord, beat me again. | ||
Beat me harder, Daddy. | ||
Like, I beat Pharma! | ||
Oh my gosh, Moderna and Pfizer had a great feeding. | ||
What did he mean when he was saying that? | ||
No one knows what he, what does he mean? | ||
What does Joe Biden mean? | ||
Just a general question. | ||
What does he mean? | ||
And I was thinking on the way over, we're getting to the campaign season that useless politicians, and that does not include you because you're not a politician. | ||
I'm never going to be a politician. | ||
The useless politicians will start saying all these things like, I've stood up to special interests and I've taken on the big guys and I've fought for kids and like all these vagaries. | ||
And that's what Joe Biden, his whole speech, I took on pharma and I beat pharma. | ||
What the hell does that mean? | ||
And no one will ask. | ||
Let me know when you figure it out. | ||
No one will ask. | ||
Pharma, Donald Trump. | ||
That's who took on Pharma. | ||
You know, when you talk about not taking special interest groups, when you talk about taking on Big Pharma, when you talk about holding adversaries accountable, when you talk about proper foreign policy and a more America First agenda, you can get as mad as you want about his tweets, but no one did greater than President Donald Trump. | ||
Can you really take on Pharma though if you haven't screamed it from a podium? | ||
He just gave us with a weird red backdrop behind you. | ||
He just gave us, he gave Pfizer like a blank check. | ||
That's exactly right. | ||
But how is that doing good against pharma? | ||
That's what he's lying. | ||
We get it. | ||
No, no, no Biden. | ||
I'm talking about, you said Donald Trump was the best to take it on big pharma, but he gave Pfizer a blank check during the pandemic. | ||
Well, he actually just helped to do the research for, I mean, the blank check, if anything, was on Operation Warp Speed, which is just trying to get a vaccination in play. | ||
But what I'm talking about is when he started actually holding the pharmaceutical companies accountable and saying that, why is it that all these other nations pay a half or a third of the price of America when we're one of the largest consumers, we need | ||
the lowest drug rates, we need the lowest drug prices, we need to, you know, go | ||
after what pharma is doing by abusing their rights here in America just because we can afford to | ||
pay more doesn't mean that we should pay more. That's holding them accountable. Didn't he open | ||
up competition for medicines coming from Canada? Canada, correct. And for some reason... | ||
And generic brands and off brands. | ||
I've got this... They hated him, they flipped out and they demanded that he be removed and now you | ||
get big, big business Biden and his illicit dealings to come back in. It's remarkable. | ||
10% for the big guy. I've got to know about electricity before we move on to the next | ||
story because we're talking about currency and I think electricity is going to be a currency | ||
of the future of how you trade. | ||
Well, energy is everything. | ||
Yeah, electrical currency, it's an actual phrase. | ||
So like you were saying, people don't know what electricity is. | ||
A lot of people why that's by design because we didn't teach | ||
kids in school how to make an electrical current. | ||
That's probably by design too because if you give people the | ||
power to create their own electricity, you lose control of them. So the government's in a position now where they're | ||
like, Are we going to give people the power or are we going to try and hold on to it as society falls around us? | ||
And if people did have the power and everyone in the world had equal power to the government, would it just be a constant state of evolution and fighting and destroying and the strong man comes up with the techno? | ||
So is it good that people don't have that power? | ||
We've all seen, you know, on YouTube, perpetual motion. | ||
Yeah, all those videos where people build perpetual motion machines and generate free electricity. | ||
That proves it. | ||
At face value, everyone has their own power generator. | ||
Everyone has infinite. | ||
Wouldn't that be great? | ||
It would be until the strongman's like, I'm going to use my power to destroy that guy and take his so I have twice as much. | ||
That's the history of humanity. | ||
Is the government doing the right thing by keeping people stupid and subservient? | ||
Would it be constant war if they didn't? | ||
No, I can understand your point of saying if the government supplies the electricity, | ||
maybe we take away that potential for conflict between households or neighborhoods or whatever. | ||
And I can understand that. | ||
But then if we've given the government that power, then they also have that responsibility | ||
and they're failing that responsibility. | ||
You know, a great radio host who I'm friends with and I go on to show a lot of, Jesse Kelly | ||
out of Houston, he was replying on a bunch of tweet threads saying, you don't get to | ||
ask me to reduce my electricity consumption. | ||
Because your job is not to tell me how to live my life. | ||
Your job is to produce electricity. | ||
And if you're the governor of California, and it is a numbers game, California has to generate, I think it's something like 52,000 megawatts of electricity a day. | ||
If you don't produce that, then you're failing your people. | ||
And that's all the election matters about. | ||
You can talk about the election is about equity. | ||
It's about justice. | ||
It's about creating a more tolerant society for California. | ||
It's about homeless. | ||
All that is crap. | ||
So the election in California should be based on the fact that as governor, you are responsible for a few things. | ||
Crime, and boy are you failing. | ||
Electricity production, boy are you failing. | ||
And Gavin Newsom will win re-election effortlessly because that is also the two-tier system that we're dividing into. | ||
When, one last thing just to finish, when California, as Tim said, they have to start to shut down segments of the grid to keep the overall sustainability. | ||
When they shut down areas, look who they shut down. | ||
It will not be Silicon Valley. | ||
It will not be Facebook's office. | ||
It will not be a Kardashian household or Malibu. | ||
It'll be middle and low-income families. | ||
Voiceless, powerless people who have useless Republicans representing them in Congress will get plunged into darkness. | ||
And they'll be like, this is unfair! | ||
But if you live in the Central Valley and you go four days without power, pray to God your congressman fights for you. | ||
But obviously your congressman's probably just gonna be like, well, you know, life sucks, guys, but I was in D.C. | ||
I witnessed this personally during the drought in, I think it was like 2015. | ||
I went to Tulare County. | ||
Poor working families had no water. | ||
Yeah. | ||
golf courses did. | ||
Yeah. | ||
The city, you know, the people with money, they were not going to be wrong. | ||
It's not like they were doing well. | ||
They were in a serious drought. | ||
They didn't have a lot of water, but they, they got the water they needed. | ||
And that's, that's the reality of it. | ||
New York when the power went out, what was the first neighborhood? | ||
Brownsville, which is an all black neighborhood in Brooklyn. | ||
Summer of 2021, last year, when they had to turn off a small percentage of the grid and build a Blasio's administration, and that's in Brownsville in East New York. | ||
And if you look at videos of that time, the residents there, poor black people are standing outside because you can't be inside because the windows don't open in those housing units. | ||
But isn't it funny that these are the exact same people who say that you owe me your vote even though I put I put you always at the end of the line. | ||
You're the one. | ||
This is why you talked about it earlier. | ||
At the end of the day, the Republican Party went from being the wine and cheese party to the beer and blue jeans party. | ||
And that happened under Donald Trump. | ||
That happened under President Trump. | ||
And we have to acknowledge that we now represent the interest of the people. | ||
We now represent the interest of the everyday blue-collar modern-day society. | ||
Because why? | ||
Most of us came from that, like myself. | ||
My grandfather was a welder. | ||
My grandmother was a beautician. | ||
They adopted me because I lived in a family where my mom and dad had substance and drug abuse issues and were in and out of prison my entire life. | ||
And guess what? | ||
That's why I fight so hard for the American people, because I am one of you. | ||
Let me jump to the story. | ||
This is a story from Newsweek, and it helps us understand why it is that we end up with the politicians we end up with. | ||
Jennifer Lawrence admits to having nightmares about Tucker Carlson. | ||
You're supposed to date him. | ||
Okay, yeah, right. | ||
She's just mad. | ||
This was, oh, that people want to date her? | ||
Yeah, you're just upset because you want to date me. | ||
Look, in Vogue's October issue, she said that she has recurring nightmares. | ||
She said, I can't F with people who aren't political anymore. | ||
You live in the United States of America. | ||
You have to be political. | ||
It's too dire. | ||
Politics are killing people. | ||
She said that she has nightmares. | ||
Starring Tucker Carlson. | ||
Okay. | ||
These people, they're out of their minds. | ||
We talked about wild boars, guns. | ||
These are people who've probably never stepped foot in a wooded area. | ||
They've probably never driven outside of an incorporated town or whatever. | ||
Been attacked by a raccoon lately. | ||
What was the old saying? | ||
First world issues? | ||
Yes. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
My life is so good. | ||
Let's just Google Jennifer Lawrence Networth. | ||
Oh yeah, what is that net worth? | ||
Did you get it? | ||
Millions and millions, I'm sure. | ||
Of course it is. | ||
Jennifer Lawrence's net worth is averaged at $160 million. | ||
Wow. | ||
I'm sorry for her. | ||
She's the victim right now, guys. | ||
We need to understand that. | ||
She's the victim in this, and we all need to feel sorry for her. | ||
Her and Meghan Markle. | ||
They're the real victims right now. | ||
Dreams are fun. | ||
Tucker Carlson net worth, $30 million. | ||
She's worth, what is that? | ||
Almost five times. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, it was at all five, sorry. | ||
160. | ||
Yeah, more than five times Tucker Carlson's net worth. | ||
This is what happens. | ||
This is, man, people who are extremely powerful and wealthy, but it's the hunger games. | ||
It's Capital City. | ||
Which she actually was the main actress. | ||
There you go. | ||
It's ironic, isn't it? | ||
That she in real life represents the snooty people drinking Ipecac to vomit and keep eating while poor people actually suffer. | ||
And the funny thing about the Hunger Games, the movies, I don't know if it's the same thing in the books, the people in the capital are oblivious to the suffering of the people outside for the most part. | ||
And they're all weird looking. | ||
Oh yeah, they're all kind of like blue hair, shaved heads, slightly androgynous and bizarre and uncomfortable. | ||
So the problem is you get someone like Jennifer Lawrence and one of the quotes she has, I don't know if it's in the Newsweek article, But she said, here we go. | ||
Quote, it breaks my heart because America had the choice between a woman and a dangerous, dangerous jar of mayonnaise. | ||
And she said, and they were like, well, we can't have a woman. | ||
Let's go with the jar of mayonnaise. | ||
I don't want to disparage my family, but I know that a lot of people are in a similar position with their families. | ||
How could you raise a daughter from birth and believe she doesn't deserve equality? | ||
How? | ||
That is not why Donald Trump won. | ||
I would say the big reason, when it was a choice between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, is that, I don't know, Hillary Clinton was, the Clinton Foundation was receiving money from foreign governments while she was Secretary of State, that the Obama administration got us entangled in a bunch of wars, that Hillary Clinton said, we came, we saw, he died. | ||
Yeah, give me that against a Donald Trump. | ||
You know what? | ||
I still didn't vote for him. | ||
But then you give me Joe Biden and you give me four years of what Donald Trump was trying to do. | ||
And I was like, okay, all right. | ||
As if. | ||
The big issue for me is that Hillary Clinton is a woman. | ||
No. | ||
It's that she's a psychopathic, she's a sociopathic murderer. | ||
Also what they did to Bernie Sanders was unconscionable. | ||
Bernie was winning that election, he had all the energy and then the Clinton, I don't know, what- The DNC basically- Yeah. | ||
That was under Donna Brazile, and if you remember, Donna Brazile actually was even giving Hillary Clinton the questions ahead of time before the presidential nomination debates. | ||
And she was caught doing this, and she profited massively off of this. | ||
She gave Hillary the questions when she was out to debate Bernie. | ||
That's exactly right. | ||
Before he didn't have the questions. | ||
That's insane! | ||
If you know that, how could you? | ||
But this supported it. | ||
This is the mentality that we're up against. | ||
Her vote is equal to yours, Daniel. | ||
So when you vote and she votes, She's like, you just want to vote for mayonnaise. | ||
And you're like, I have very serious concerns about how people will live when there's no energy. | ||
You're, you hate women. | ||
You're a racist. | ||
This is the new thing. | ||
You're xenophobe. | ||
You know, when you don't think exactly like them, they want a name call. | ||
And we saw this from the president himself, you know, the, I call him the selected, not elected president of the United States. | ||
But you saw this where that's exactly what he did. | ||
He's gone now to name calling. | ||
And telling all of us, you know, first it was we're deplorables, now we're extremists just because we care about our nation and we are, you know, God-fearing, America-loving individual patriots and now all of a sudden we're labeled as extremists as a result of it. | ||
You know, we don't think like you, we don't act like you, we don't behave like you, therefore you are a racist or a xenophobe or an extremist. | ||
You know, this is really where the left has gone and meanwhile the rest of us who are sitting as part of MAGA or sitting as part of the America First agenda, we're just simply saying, well, no. | ||
We just care about getting back to constitutionality, freedoms, liberties, the rights for individuals, the rights for individual states, the ability for people to make their own decisions, the protection of our children, the, you know, betterment of all of America, getting back to American exceptionalism. | ||
No, no, no, you're an extremist. | ||
Jennifer Lawrence cares so deeply about women's issues that she stood next to Harvey Weinstein, probably did unspeakable things to him to get ahead in her career and to get the leading roles that she did as a 16 year old, Is her relationship with that guy? | ||
watched millions of dozens of women get abused by Harvey Weinstein and well and | ||
but but you know what she cares very very deeply but it's about women's | ||
issues is her relationship with that guy is that was that was that a big story | ||
unidentified
|
that's known absolutely yeah absolutely I always love how they say we care so | |
much about women's rights but at the same time they won't protect or even try | ||
and prevent women's sports from being taken as a B or a C or a D role for | ||
biological and more From what was the one Winter's Bone to the one that was awful with Bradley Cooper where | ||
Oh gosh, the Silver Linings playbook. | ||
She's got a long history with Harvey Weinstein and you did not get a leading role as a lady in a Harvey Weinstein film unless you did the things that Harvey Weinstein wanted you to do. | ||
Well, the article from Newsweek, did you get eight hours ago? | ||
Jennifer Lawrence addresses rumors. | ||
She effed Harvey Weinstein. | ||
That's the same interview she did. | ||
In the interview she did with Vogue, she said it was not true. | ||
I'm sure she says, no, of course it's not true. | ||
Of course she's gonna say it's not true. | ||
What, is she gonna come out and say it's truthful? | ||
Well, the only reason people are saying it is because they hate women. | ||
I think about women's rights and black rights and trans rights. | ||
I think of, like, human rights. | ||
We shouldn't be arguing about who gets the better bedroom in the slave quarters. | ||
It should be about, let's not be slaves, people. | ||
It doesn't matter who you are. | ||
That's a great line. | ||
That was great. | ||
That's a very good line. | ||
Yeah, I just, I am sick and tired of people glomming on to whatever they think their unique qualifier is that makes them a victim when they are the most privileged. | ||
Who in the world has more privilege than Jennifer Lawrence? | ||
If we lined up all 330 million Americans in privilege order, where do you think Jennifer Lawrence ranks? | ||
Does she rank, I mean, you're definitely higher than I am. | ||
160 million dollars. | ||
Yeah, but I mean think about it, this idea of self-victimization is what the left has gone towards. | ||
And it's the same with Meghan Markle, who gave another interview yesterday about how hard her life is, the little princess, right? | ||
This nonsense that we're always victims because victimhood is very, very sellable. | ||
Well to correct you, I think she's a duchess. | ||
Duchess, but I mean at what point, at what point, you've won an Oscar and you're worth 160 million dollars. | ||
unidentified
|
Serious. | |
At what point can you just shut the hell up and say, you know what, my life's been great? | ||
Oh yeah, I didn't like President Trump. | ||
I didn't like President Trump a big deal. | ||
Look, you've got athletes and you've got people who've gone to the ranks of political elites who want to talk about how there's this systemic racism that exists and there's this, you know, glass ceiling. | ||
Wait a second. | ||
You're one of the leading figures, whether it's in politics or whether it's in, you know, celebrity, you know, status. | ||
How did that glass ceiling impact you? | ||
How did that systemic racism prevent you from becoming the vice president of the United States? | ||
Or how did that prevent you from becoming one of the wealthiest talk show hosts in the world or one of the wealthiest, you know, basketball players, but yet you want to talk about how you're so disenfranchised. | ||
Because the real victims in society don't have a voice. | ||
And it is the job of a just society to elevate those people. | ||
Like what I was just saying about electricity. | ||
The most abused people in the green blackouts are going to be people who are voiceless and powerless, and no one will stand up for them. | ||
The most abused people, clearly, are celebrities worth ten figures? | ||
Nine figures? | ||
They've been treated so horribly. | ||
Yeah, and Joe Biden. | ||
Ask him. | ||
He'll always tell you how hard his life was. | ||
He and 80% of his friends all have cancer. | ||
Right? | ||
unidentified
|
He'll tell you that. | |
Jennifer Lawrence wraps up her day of work where she's pretending to be somebody else. | ||
Granted, she's good at it. | ||
Good for her. | ||
She wraps up her day at work and then probably hangs out in an infinity pool with, like, rare imported S-Cargo or other nonsense. | ||
Like, come on. | ||
$160 million net worth. | ||
It's good money. | ||
It's like in Iron Man 2 when Justin Hammer, the bad guy, is eating the dessert and he's like, it's Italian, I haven't imported every day or whatever. | ||
It's like, yeah, okay, we get it. | ||
Well, that sounds like Nancy Pelosi when she was talking about, you know, how disenfranchised she was while she sat in front of what was it, like $30 pints of ice cream behind her $30,000, you know, refrigerator? | ||
unidentified
|
She's like, I know everyone's suffering, but I've got $30 ice cream in my freezer. | |
I will say this, I've had that ice cream once in my life and it is really, really, really good. | ||
But it is like $15 for a little tiny thing. | ||
It was remarkably good. | ||
But who... I can't afford it. | ||
I can't afford it on the regular. | ||
And she opened up her drawer. | ||
By the way, her Sub-Zero was $20,000 and she had two side by side. | ||
And she opened up her freezer drawer and she had it probably about... | ||
$200 worth of ice cream in her $25,000 box. | ||
I'm sure if you'd open up the main one, it would have been nothing but vodka because we all know that she's like perpetually drunk. | ||
It's fascinating to me that there are Joe Biden, the Democrats come out and they're like, Republicans are just mad the IRS agents are going to go after billionaires. | ||
It's like, dude, 87,000 agents aren't needed to go after like 500 billionaires. | ||
Yes, around 479 or so. | ||
And if you're going to go after millionaires, I think there's what, like 30,000 or something like that? | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah, you still don't need that many IRS agents. | ||
One IRS agent can handle multiple people. | ||
But again though, I go back to the idea, which is that, okay, if you're there to audit me, I understand if you're trying to say, all right, I need calculators and ink cartridges and things like that, but why do I need $600,000 in small calorie ammunition? | ||
Why do I need a roles and responsibility? | ||
Well, that says I need to be able to issue deadly force. I need to go ahead and be able to detain search warrants, etc | ||
This is deep state police force being gone and i'll tell you something | ||
The average american is not coming to me and my constituents by the way are not coming to me and saying hey | ||
You know what? We really need We need eighty seven thousand more irises | ||
You know what they're saying? | ||
We need to secure our borders. | ||
We need to get our energy prices under control. | ||
I need to make sure that I am protecting my children in the schools. | ||
I need to make sure that our economy and our inflation gets under control. | ||
The everyday American wants affordability and safety. | ||
They don't care about getting 87,000 IRS agents. | ||
And this just shows the tone deaf You know, self-vilifying effect of the left and the liberals that are basically saying, no, no, no, no, you don't understand in 20 to 30 years, this is going to benefit you. | ||
The IRS Criminal Investigative Service, I think it's something like that. | ||
It's been around for like a hundred years. | ||
But I think it's important to point out, a lot of people made it seem like the buying the bullets was a rare or new thing. | ||
That happens all the time. | ||
And that's something y'all need to pay attention to. | ||
They don't need those bullets for billionaires. | ||
unidentified
|
Agreed. | |
They're not going to Jeff Bezos' house with guns. | ||
They're going after, now to be fair, drug dealers, but they're going after people who, there was a, in one of the training sessions they did, it was a guy who owned a landscaping business who didn't report a lawnmower or something like that. | ||
In that, you know that video where they're like, they walk up to a guy and they'll have the guns and they're doing the training? | ||
They're going up to a guy, a small business owner. | ||
They're not practicing going after cartels or anything like that. | ||
But Tim, they've also learned that it's easier to force you to comply at the end of a barrel than it is from the end of an ink pen. | ||
And that's what we all need to be concerned here. | ||
And I'll tell you something, I mean, going back, I think in 1913, it was probably one of the worst years for our Constitution, because one, we had the 16th Amendment, which was federal income taxes, and the 17th Amendment, which actually, you know, stopped our U.S. | ||
Senators from actually being elected by our state legislators, which actually controlled federal overgrowth in the violation of our 10th Amendment. | ||
You know, I'm one of those guys that, why should I be taxed on the hard work that I've, you know, earned, or the investments? | ||
Why couldn't it be on consumer and fair tax? | ||
Why can't we go to something like this, which actually makes sense for every individual? | ||
But not only this, why can't we reduce federal government, you know, when it comes to the IRS, or the ATF, or the DOE, or any of these? | ||
And that's the Department of Education, by the way, not Energy. | ||
But my whole point is that federal overgrowth, And the weaponization of these departments and agencies will be the death of America. | ||
The 87,000 agents are going to do so much damage to the daily commerce that we do as a country. | ||
It is not strange and Venmo was very convenient for just getting rid of like checks and paper and cash. | ||
But it was not hard to bring, you know, X number ahead of cattle and swap $40,000. | ||
And I'll keep that $40,000 in my Venmo because I know tomorrow I'm gonna do it. | ||
And I don't really have the $40,000. | ||
I'm holding it for a little while until I get the cows back from auction and then the Venmo. | ||
But if I have IRS agents, they're gonna be like, what was this $40,000? | ||
And that's exactly what they're coming after. | ||
What's this $4,000 you have on Venmo? | ||
Well, it wasn't really a profit. | ||
It was a transaction that was taking two weeks, and it's gonna disappear. | ||
It doesn't matter where your tax is on it. | ||
They tried implementing that policy or that law about tracking $600 transactions or more. | ||
That's what I'm referring to. | ||
They're not going after billionaires, dude! | ||
Correct. | ||
Well, we already know that 75% Of last year's audits were people that was making less than 100 grand a year. | ||
So the idea that they're getting these 87,000, you know, IRS agents, it baffles my mind when I think about the fact of what that costs and why we're not allocating that money to things like securing our borders or increasing our law enforcement so we can get increased criminality under control or the fact that we're 12 to 15,000 recruitment short for our armed services. | ||
Why aren't we looking at things that actually matter to the everyday American and the reason why? | ||
Because the government wants to steal every penny they have out of your pocket. | ||
I think it's a slow-motion demolition. | ||
The military, for instance, the recruitment, who wants to join a woke military? | ||
No one does. | ||
They're worried about pronouns, CRT, inclusiveness, diversity, instead of the things they need to be worried about, which is increased lethality, readiness, and preparedness. | ||
That's the things that I focused on when I was in the military. | ||
Yeah, but if you're one of these people who, like that woman from the Guardian article who's like, I would never survive, she's the kind of person running the military these days. | ||
Yeah, that's exactly right. | ||
I mean, look who's running the nuclear sector right now. | ||
I mean, I don't even know what its name is. | ||
No, is anyone running it? | ||
Probably not. | ||
I want to jump to the story from the Post-Millennial. | ||
We can't finish with Jennifer Lawrence, the poor girl. | ||
She never gets any time, Tim. | ||
We have a story from the Post-Millennial. | ||
Majority of Americans say Biden's anti-MAGA speech was designed to incite conflict. | ||
The poll found that 56.8% of likely general election voters said that Biden's speech represents a dangerous escalation in rhetoric and is designed to incite conflict amongst Americans. | ||
The Babylon Bees had their best night ever with their like 30 Biden kicked out of Austrian art school. | ||
Biden issues non-aggression pact with Poland. | ||
I genuinely spit out laughing when I saw that headline pop up. | ||
I had to watch that speech because I did a bunch of radio and TV on it later on that night and that was just some crazy, crazy stuff. | ||
Biden comes out and he's like, I'm the president and I hate half this country. | ||
And then the next day they're like, why are you talking about Trump supporters that way? | ||
He's like, I was not talking about Trump supporters. | ||
Then he comes out and like, the policies proposed by these people are a threat. | ||
Dude, it is... People fall for this. | ||
Or they lie. | ||
It is insane. | ||
Pandering to the base is gutting the Democrats. | ||
And it's backfiring already. | ||
56.8%, they don't like it. | ||
Independent voters, they don't like it. | ||
You're not going to win with just getting Democrats. | ||
Well, and especially when you ran as being the unifier and you became the divider-in-chief. | ||
I mean, that's really what's taken place here. | ||
And so we have to understand the fact that what they're looking at and when you're seeing headlines like this, where they're thinking, oh, this is to incite conflict. | ||
Well, that's because they thought that the whole January 6th incident was actually good for them politically. | ||
You know what that speech reminded me of? | ||
to basically utilize that to try and advance them and stop the red wave from coming in. | ||
But look, we have to identify for what it is. | ||
This is literally him calling half of the nation extremists. | ||
You know what that speech reminded me of? | ||
Especially in 80s or early 90s movie where there's some bad thing happening and finally | ||
someone stands up in the high school gym and they give this speech and all the bad guys | ||
put their head down and realize they're wrong. | ||
And then finally someone courageously starts to slow clap and everyone's like, yes, and | ||
That speech to me sounds like it was written by a 26 year old kid who was a poli-sci major who really thinks that if I just lay it out like this all those Trump supporters are gonna sit there at home and say you know what guys I think they're right. | ||
I think, like, it was written by a child. | ||
But they didn't identify, but they never did actually say what it was that we as America First candidates actually, or Americans, sorry, are actually about. | ||
They didn't identify. | ||
I mean, the people they described was their own followers. | ||
Well, and the thing that cracked me up is that after the speech of calling us all these names was one of his last lines was how we have to start seeing each other as fellow Americans. | ||
Did you just not listen to the things you read off the teleprompter for the last 20 minutes? | ||
Like it really was, whoever his speechwriters are, and boy this White House has struggled with speechwriters none more than Kamala's of course, but it really was a very immature speech. | ||
It sounded like that speech that a kid wants to give to their mom because mom didn't let me. | ||
It was just a childish, immature, petty, petulant speech. | ||
It was embarrassing quite frankly. | ||
Was it written? | ||
I didn't see him reading off a prompter or any notes. | ||
There's no way that he rambled on that long without, no, absolutely not. | ||
Did he have like multiple monitors around the room? | ||
A lot of times they have these see-through monitors that are at a distance that you can't see because of the camera angles and they're looking at the back shots. | ||
But he's sitting here, when he's going left to right, it's because there's usually two prompters that are up there that are clear that actually have everything out there. | ||
Do you really think Joe Biden can keep a continuous thought for more than 30 seconds where he says vanilla or chocolate ice cream? | ||
Remember the Simpsons episode where Homer's like, you have my undivided attention, and then it zooms into his brain and it's like a turtle playing like Old MacDonald or whatever, like banging on his chest. | ||
That's what I imagine with Biden. | ||
If I'd taken this poll here, I would have said that it seemed like the speech was intended to divide and incite, maybe I don't know if incite conflict, divide because of the red background. | ||
Correct. | ||
Blood red background. | ||
You see the wide shot, there's also all this blue and there's just this little segment, but all the media apparatus that wanted to record it had just pure red. | ||
Can I just say one thing though, whether it's Republican or Democrat, one of the things that disgusts me as, you know, prior military and, you know, combat veteran, We have to stop utilizing our military for backdrop props. | ||
You know, this is something that just shows absolute disrespect. | ||
Because the thing that you have to understand is, is that when you serve in the military, you serve a commander-in-chief. | ||
And we don't think of this as, it isn't a political thing for us. | ||
And the fact that each, the left and the right, try and utilize the military as a political backdrop really needs to stop. | ||
I think it's illegal to to a campaign with military present. | ||
Is that someone was telling you? | ||
It's a violation of campaign rules that military and also like even police and fire in the in their uniform. | ||
They're not they're not but not the president personal capacity. | ||
The president is allowed to the president vice president are allowed to campaign. | ||
The military can't do politics. | ||
Yes, but that's why they say this was not a campaign speech. | ||
This was a presidential speech. | ||
Again, deep concern for fossil fuel use. | ||
We had a fly to Philadelphia. | ||
No fossil fuels to light up Independence Hall. | ||
Why couldn't he have given the speech from the Oval? | ||
I don't know why, and this is something I've asked before on other shows, ever since Reagan, really, and maybe a little bit Clinton, presidents don't use the Oval anymore. | ||
Right, Ronald Reagan addressed everyone from the Oval on the regular when he gave a speech, and I don't know why or what's changed, but presidents don't speak... Is there a more presidential backdrop than the Resolute Desk? | ||
Joe Biden had a soundstage built of the Oval Office. | ||
Yeah, they have that weird room where they do... | ||
Why do you need a fake prop? | ||
Well, I think that one was obvious because the back window was a TV screen and so they could pre-record where they needed to to send it out so they didn't have to worry about Biden, you know what I mean? | ||
Well, but President Trump, though, President Trump did, I would say, 90% unless he was actually on an official delegation or a visit or something like that. | ||
I mean, he did it from the Rose Garden or he did it from the White House. | ||
Yeah, he liked the East Room very much and he liked the Rose Garden, but I'm always fascinated that we don't do more things. | ||
Obviously, there's always diplomats, etc. | ||
unidentified
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But this was for theatrics. | |
That's what this is for, for the Biden administration. | ||
It's about political rhetoric, theatrics, and trying to, you know, assuage every other American from looking at what's really going on in America. | ||
Yeah, and this was obviously produced. | ||
You know, there are advanced teams that put these together. | ||
Josh, if you're still watching, he paid for most of them, right? | ||
I mean, I know people who do this for a living. | ||
Maybe Jennifer Lawrence did this on her part time. | ||
Well someone had to decide this is the backdrop. | ||
Imagine if Independence Hall was just lit up bright white and just light and just light and and he gave out and he said you know the Constitution was written here and we are one America and I know we have a lot of division but we can come together and stop the division and and I want to hear from you. | ||
He could have given a speech that even his greatest detractors would say I hate the guy, but you know what? | ||
I can't disagree with that speech. | ||
Who orchestrated this to say, like, this is the backdrop, this is the rhetoric, this is the tone, this is the clenched fists in the face? | ||
According to the left, though, they said that Biden has been too soft and too polite and too nice. | ||
And he's, again, to quote something that Tim talked about earlier, which is that this is pandering to the left. | ||
This is continuing to try and go ahead and buy into this rhetoric that this is somehow going to prevent a red wave. | ||
And actually, If he would have gone with the idea that you had, that would have probably actually swayed more NPAs to the left than it would have actually pushed them to the right. | ||
Independence 2-1. | ||
If you are running his campaign right now, that keeps you up at night. | ||
The way Jennifer Lawrence has Tucker Carlson nightmares, independent voters are your nightmare. | ||
I think if he had come out, well people disagree, if he had come out and pardoned January 6 supporters, the left would be forced to agree with him. | ||
You laugh, but that's actually a great idea. | ||
The idea of him doing it. | ||
I love the idea. | ||
It should have happened a long time ago. | ||
If you wanted to talk about being a unifier, and again, stop trying to look at the political imprisonment of these individuals, like Jeremy Brown, who's in Pinellas County Jail, who still has no charges levied against him, former Special Forces, former Ranger. | ||
I could say this without hesitation. | ||
he's levied against him and never entered the Capitol but has been in prison this entire time. | ||
I mean these are the types of people that we need to be fighting for. | ||
I could say this without hesitation if Joe Biden came out and pardoned all the people from January | ||
6th and he called for an end to the hearings and said we have to move past it he would guarantee | ||
his re-election in 2024. When you pardon someone is it a general pardon? | ||
Like, I pardon you for every crime you've ever committed? | ||
No, just for the one specific, but that is it. | ||
So, some argue... Not just expunged from the record. | ||
At any level of the judiciary, no one can bring up charges. | ||
No one can. | ||
That's it. | ||
It is done. | ||
They would lose the far left and the hard left. | ||
They would. | ||
The moderates they'd gain. | ||
The moderates would be like, you know, the more establishment crony Democrat types would be like, aren't we so noble? | ||
Magnanimous. | ||
Yeah, and then the far left would be like, we just want a revolution and you're hurting that by doing this. | ||
And CNN would run to the Mitt Romneys of the world and get them to admit what a great guy he is and like see even Republicans admit that he is a great and it would guarantee his re-election if he really wanted to win. | ||
It would have actually have gone towards his claim of being the unifier. | ||
I don't think it would guarantee his re-election though. | ||
No, it wouldn't. | ||
Economics, energy, rolling blackouts. | ||
I don't know about that. | ||
That is true. | ||
I think we're just talking about what would have potentially have been a lot better, which anything, a rerun of The Simpsons would have been better than this right here. | ||
It's like the military, the Marines come out, they play the song and then they wheel out a TV and just put a TV up and it plays an episode of The Simpsons. | ||
And that would have probably had a better rating than this. | ||
This felt like... Do you approve of the rerun of the Simpsons? | ||
Biden played actually well. | ||
unidentified
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70%. | |
Yeah, we all really enjoyed it. | ||
They were like anticipating a fall of the economies crumbling as in the, okay, we're going to need to blame somebody in the future. | ||
So let's plant the seeds now. | ||
They've done the MAGA stuff as the seeds are planted. | ||
Now, if shit really hits the fan, we got a villain that we can pin it on. | ||
It's very Nazi Germany, what they do with the Jews. | ||
That's what it felt like to me. | ||
It is. | ||
And when you have 40-year high record inflation, when you have 30-year high energy prices, when you have... You're threatening to disarm Americans. | ||
You are literally in a recession regardless of how we determine the new definition is. | ||
We are literally in a recession. | ||
When you look at all the economic indicators, of the suffering the American families and blue-collar and working-class Americans are feeling, there is no reason why this guy should be in office. | ||
So what do you do? | ||
You find a scapegoat. | ||
And if it was the Jews in Nazi Germany, and now it's the MAGA. | ||
You're absolutely right, because I can't run on the fact that oil prices and energy prices and food prices are at record high, and, talking about the upcoming depression, they're going to get much, much worse, because winter hasn't even kicked in yet. | ||
We haven't even harvested the wheat yet. | ||
Let's jump to the story from USA9. | ||
Coy Griffin barred from public office for insurrectionary conduct. | ||
A New Mexico judge ruled Coy Griffin was disqualified from holding office under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment. | ||
So they finally got one. | ||
They have been trying, Democrats, to get people barred from holding office under the 14th Amendment for insurrection, and now a judge has actually done it, is barring him from office. | ||
I think they're removing him, right? | ||
In a judgment issued Tuesday morning, New Mexico District Court Judge Francis J. Matthew ruled Griffin was permanently enjoined and prohibited from seeking or holding any federal or state position, as defined by the 14th Amendment to the U.S. | ||
Constitution. | ||
That includes his current position as a commissioner in Otero County, New Mexico, the judge wrote. | ||
This is crazy stuff. | ||
Well, this had nothing to do, and again, I think they need to understand what insurrection actually means, but go back to what he actually did. | ||
He was the founder of Cowboys for Trump. | ||
And that's really what this is about. | ||
This is continual witch hunt and going after Trump, Trump, Trump, MAGA, MAGA. | ||
You're seeing this in every single thing that's playing out. | ||
And it's really about what President Trump told us a long time ago, which is that they're not after me. | ||
They're after you. | ||
I'm just in the way. | ||
Yep. | ||
This is, I don't know if this will be upheld. | ||
I mean, I imagine that it'll get appealed. | ||
As it should. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But the idea that they keep levying these attacks, I'm just like, guys, guys, civil war. | ||
Come on. | ||
Come on. | ||
They're not trying to win elections now with stuff like this. | ||
They're just trying to find a judge who's willing to bang a gavel and say, okay, fine, we removed him. | ||
They tried doing it to Marjorie Taylor Greene. | ||
That's right. | ||
They tried doing it to Madison Cawthorn. | ||
Who else did they go after on this one? | ||
Obviously- Well, and they were successful with the establishment's help of eliminating Madison. | ||
But that was through the primary. | ||
100%. | ||
They primed him out. | ||
I'm talking about when you can't even win a primary, they go to a judge and say, just bang your gavel and say he can't be in office. | ||
And the judge went, okay. | ||
They used to do that and seize people's property. | ||
Then there were rebellions and revolts. | ||
That Shea's Rebellion was about them seizing their land. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Also taking away their ability to run for office. | ||
Man, it doesn't feel right. | ||
So I'll tell you one of the things that I probably have people who disagree with me on this, but you know, it's like I talk about, you know, my mom and dad, they both have, you know, a very colorful past and they've committed mistakes and they've had felony because of drug use and all the other things like this. | ||
You know, denying people who are felons from their right to vote. | ||
You're essentially eliminating their voice, and I just don't agree with this. | ||
You know, it's like the idea that, you know, I have two children. | ||
I have a 17 and 7 year old, and you know, it's like my 7 year old doing something wrong, and then after I give him his punishment, me carrying that for the rest of his life. | ||
I mean, that's really what it feels like. | ||
You know this is the type of thing that I just really push back against where you're continually you know basically levied as a criminal as a result of a single crime no matter what your actual punishment was and the elimination of your voice or the banging of a gavel ending your capabilities to serve our nation. | ||
I mean at some stage this really we have to start looking at our justice system how that works. | ||
Can they stop people from running for local elections too? | ||
With this stuff? | ||
It is a local election. | ||
For an outside commission, for like a federal force or a state governance force to tell you you can't govern in your local community is way antithetical to the United States. | ||
It's un-American. | ||
I mean, it truly is un-American. | ||
I mean, the idea that one, if you commit a crime, you can never vote again. | ||
You can never have a voice again. | ||
You can, you know, with a bang of a gavel, you can never ever serve in office again. | ||
I mean, this is, The issue is, this was a really stupid article and section in the 14th Amendment, because it was obvious, and I suppose the Founding Fathers had the foresight, but you know, 80 years later they did not so much. | ||
It's obvious that, how do you define insurrection against the government? | ||
Yeah, right. | ||
George Washington waged an insurrection against the king. | ||
Happy insurrection. | ||
Is January 6th an insurrection? | ||
The feds, look, there's some people who are currently charged with seditious conspiracy. | ||
I really don't believe. | ||
But you know the funniest part? | ||
Do you know the people who were indicted? | ||
Are people like John Earl Sullivan, who is a very well-known BLM antagonist, who basically raised a false flag. | ||
He did have an indictment. | ||
He did? | ||
Yes, he did. | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
And they did nothing with it. | ||
This is the same guy, by the way, that CNN paid for the murder of Ashley Babbitt's, you know, footage. | ||
He was indicted for being in the Capitol? | ||
Correct. | ||
And he was actually in a false flag operation wearing all MAGA gear even though he's a known BLM antagonist. | ||
We have to really start understanding either we're moving past this or we're going to do a proper, not this nonsense J6 unselect committee where they wouldn't even allow true patriots in a bipartisan fashion. | ||
Congressman Jim Jordan or Congressman Jim Banks to sit on this, you know, they picked the other two Democrats Ken Zinger and and Cheney who are both gone now But but the whole point is is that you know, we need proper justice, you know, we need real investigations You know, there is no doubt in my mind. | ||
There's a false flag operation There's no doubt in my mind that there was some type of an FBI kind of insider, you know deal going on here I mean we We have to start looking at this and really investigate. | ||
If we're gonna investigate this, investigate it the real way. | ||
Not from a partisan political witch hunt, but from a real we-wanna-get-the-answers. | ||
You gotta win! | ||
But even that's partisan. | ||
Republicans gotta win in November. | ||
And then not only do they have to win, but you have to win leverage over the, you know, establishment Republican types who are gonna just sit on their hands and go, well, hold out there. | ||
And you know what's funny about this case compared to someone else? | ||
So this guy, this will stick with him forever, can't run for office, he's an insurrectionist. | ||
But if you were in Kenosha that night and you burnt down 15 stores and you looted stuff and you can run for office and you can just say you were out there protesting. | ||
And this is exactly what I talked about one time. | ||
You were a protester because you believed deeply in these issues and Black Lives Matter, etc. | ||
Well, it's mostly peaceful protest. | ||
Yeah, and so one guy is an insurrectionist who walked through the Capitol building, again, obeying those red velvet ropes. | ||
We talked to the podium guy. | ||
I know it was a lectern. | ||
That was great. | ||
But everyone calls him Podium Guy. | ||
And his story, it's like, he's a dude who walked into a building, befuddled and kind of ignorantly, and then moved a thing and went to prison for it. | ||
Meanwhile, you have people who romped about, set fire to buildings, throw brick through- Murdered David Dorn, who was the former law enforcement chief. | ||
Well, they did, but my point is, though, is that at the exact same time that Seattle, Minneapolis, New York, Portland, you had CHOP, you had all these things going on which were complete lawlessness, violent rioting, looting of tens of millions of dollars, if not more, murders, rapes, All these things were going on, they justified those as protests, and you had the left who were inciting this, saying, like Maxine Waters, who was saying, well, you should get in the face of every single one of your political opponents, or, you know, you have the others, the vice president herself, who actually created the Minneapolis, you know, foundation fund, or whatever that was, the bail fund. | ||
I mean, the idea that they're actually promoting this, You know, and then all of a sudden they want to go ahead and just because it's conservatives on one side or Democrats on the other, they want to go ahead and try and re-label this or re-identify this. | ||
This is the type of thing that America doesn't need. | ||
Yeah, one of the things that also bothered me about the Biden speech, just connecting the two for a second, was the amount of the straw men. | ||
Firmly believe that straw men are an essential tool of the Democrat Party But multiple times he kept talking about how these MAGA people who were calling for political violence I've never heard for anyone except for Maxine Waters. | ||
I've never heard anyone call for I've never I've listened to a lot of Trump speeches I follow a lot of these folks. | ||
I do this this stuff for a living I I'm trying to find someone who was called for political violence and yet he gave that that remark so comfortably so callously that many of these MAGA Republicans and anyone on Stochastic terrorism. | ||
There is no time ever for political violence, and everyone claps. | ||
And he even said, go home peacefully. | ||
Who's calling for it? | ||
The left says that Donald Trump, speaking out in the way he does, is stochastic terrorism. | ||
Yeah, that was my favorite. | ||
And what that means is that when Trump says, I think this thing is a bad thing, he's secretly calling on his followers to go and attack that thing. | ||
Exactly. | ||
When Joe Biden comes out and says they're extremists, a threat to our country, and they embrace violence, what would you call that? | ||
But this goes back to the old idea that, remember when the king, he actually comes forward and says, can no one rid me of this petulant priest? | ||
And all of a sudden they go out and murder the priest and they say, oh, well, you were actually the reasoning for this because you actually indirectly said this. | ||
This is what they're trying to refer to when they try and say this about President Trump. | ||
But President Trump wasn't indirectly hinting at anything. | ||
He very clearly said, let us all go home peacefully. | ||
But I don't mean that speech, I'm talking about in general. | ||
Yeah, no, I'm with you, I'm just trying to say that's what the left is trying to say though, is that he somehow, you know, made this into- I think with Charles Manson, for instance, he told his followers, go F it up, go mess them up, you know, and then they went and they killed people. | ||
Manson never said go kill people, he just said go mess it up. | ||
Trump didn't say go mess it up. | ||
He didn't tell them to go hurt anything. | ||
He didn't incite any violence. | ||
He was pretty specific about it being peaceful too. | ||
Correct. | ||
I just don't understand. | ||
And I also just again, I have a great dislike for the establishment media. | ||
I just find it funny that he makes those strawman comments so comfortably. | ||
And yet no one seems curious to say, well, Mr. President, could you give us an example of who is calling for political? | ||
That is a very good and basic question the next time he ever speaks to the media. We're | ||
going on 220 days where he hasn't spoken to the media but that is a great question. | ||
You decried MAGA Republicans calling for political violence. Could you cite | ||
an example of a MAGA Republican calling for political or violence? | ||
Well he couldn't. Of course not. | ||
But no one will ever ask him that question. | ||
They will ask him like, Mr. President, when you're eating vanilla ice cream, how does that make your tummy feel? | ||
How do you answer that? | ||
The president right now, the office has no responsibility to reply to any questions, which is a problem. | ||
Well, he doesn't take questions. | ||
And that's the whole point. | ||
He goes up there, he reads from teleprompters, as his handlers tell him, and then he shuffles off and, you know, mysteriously shakes hands of people who don't actually exist. | ||
I got some questions. | ||
So you're likely, you're coming into Congress, right? | ||
You won the primary. | ||
That's basically the race. | ||
It's an R-plus district. | ||
So you got it, you think, right? | ||
Well, I don't take anything for granted, but yes, the majority of my race. | ||
Oh gosh, you're a good politician. | ||
Listen to that. | ||
I'm joking, I'm joking. | ||
I just don't believe in taking my foot off the gas. | ||
unidentified
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I'm joking. | |
So it would be the first time you'd hold federal office? | ||
I've never run in my life. | ||
What do you want to do? | ||
What do you think you can do once you get in? | ||
Well, I want to bring awareness to the real issues. | ||
I want to actually bring real solutions to things. | ||
I want to understand the fact that the America First agenda doesn't make you a racist or a xenophobe when you just want to secure your borders, protect your children, you know, get our military back to its original strength. | ||
Stop these endless wars. | ||
Stop looking at the insider trading that's going on within politics. | ||
Call balls and strikes on both sides. | ||
I mean, look, we have to understand that the deep state and swamp, you know, whether that's left or right, are all involved. | ||
And we know this. | ||
We have to stop the corruption. | ||
We have to actually identify what the corruption is. | ||
That's why You know, in mine, very much like President Trump, I'm donating 100% of my salary back into my actual district, selected by my constituents to a woman, child, or veteran charity. | ||
The other thing is that myself, my wife, and anyone who wants to work in my office cannot buy, sell, and trade stocks while we're in office. | ||
This is not about political enrichment. | ||
This is about serving the people. | ||
And no one understands about serving the people more than the actual military who went out and was willing to die when they swore that oath. | ||
And our oath doesn't expire just because we take off that uniform. | ||
You know, this is really about making sure that we get back to what it is to be a true constitutionalist, be a true conservative, understand physical responsibility, understand the significance of energy independence and knowing that we cannot, you know, I'm a business owner. | ||
I am about job creation and guess what? | ||
Government doesn't create jobs. | ||
They stifle, they over-regulate, and they actually prevent jobs. | ||
We need to empower the private sector. | ||
We need to understand the 10th Amendment and understanding state and individual rights. | ||
These are the things that I stand for. | ||
And at the end of the day, I'm an employee of the 7th District of Florida. | ||
I am not the one who gets elected by the people and then thinks that the party somehow put me in office. | ||
So, I'm all about, and I have a couple of bills that I want to pass in my first hundred days. | ||
And one of the bills that I really like is called the Publishing House Bill. | ||
One of the things I want to look at is that I don't believe in impeding upon state rights. | ||
And Governor Ron DeSantis has done the K-3 parental rights bill, which I think is phenomenal. | ||
But I think from a federal issue, one of the things we should be looking at, holding the publishing houses accountable, like the McGraw-Hills or anyone else, Who is intentionally publishing pornographic or inappropriate material with the intent of distribution to underage inappropriate material to children that are the age of six and seven years old. | ||
We also need to start thinking about the days when I grew up where if I went to my grandmother would drop me off to the movies and give me $20 and I'd have to go in and they'd say, how old are you? | ||
Oh, I'm 13. | ||
Okay. | ||
Here's the movies that you can buy. | ||
And here's the ratings. | ||
Why can't we put books that have actual ratings on it, a G rating, a PG 13 rating, et cetera. | ||
So that our parents who work all day long, who don't have time to proofread all of these books | ||
can go ahead and say, you know what? | ||
This is within your age group. | ||
Now I'm not saying we should ban books. | ||
You can publish as many books as you want, but I am saying that you should not and cannot | ||
basically distribute these to an actual underage or youth And if you do, it should be a felonious offense. | ||
You should register as a sex predator for the rest of your life. | ||
Are you talking about imagery or are you talking about... Both. | ||
Descriptors. | ||
So I have... And it doesn't matter even if you try and make it an anime or you're trying to make it a cartoon. | ||
I mean, look at genderqueer, for example, which actually shows oral sex and that's supposed to be third grade appropriate. | ||
If they're describing it, that would be like, you don't want like even textual descriptions. | ||
But my whole point is that whether you actually write it in text or you actually show it in, you know, the figure, it's the exact same thing. | ||
So my question is, there are parts of the Bible that are explicit and talk about sex. | ||
Should that be restricted from schools? | ||
But haven't they already banned the Bible from being in schools? | ||
I mean, I had a young kid the other day, for example, he was 14 years old and he said, you know what I wish I could have? | ||
I wish I just had the right to be able to go ahead and pray and to be able to read the Bible in school. | ||
And he said, my teachers have actually banned me from being able to do so. | ||
Outside of the fact that they already do, for the most part, restrict Bibles, do you think that, in the same context, the Bible would be inappropriate for young kids to read? | ||
No, I don't think of the Bible. | ||
But I think the whole point is, though, shouldn't that be up to the parents to be able to go ahead and make these things? | ||
Shouldn't it actually be parental rights and not actually just the teachers unions who are saying, this is the curriculum we're going to speech? | ||
And again, going back to how Joe Biden calls, you know, everyone who's MAGA or America First extremist, now you've got these actual teachers unions who are actually saying that if you're a parent who doesn't want certain things to be taught to your children, you're now a domestic terrorist. | ||
I mean, this is the type of thing and, you know, this is only one of many bills. | ||
I mean, one of the biggest bills I want to look at right now is the banning of, you know, purchase by foreigners to, you know, buy up our farmlands, especially China. | ||
I mean, this is something that's really important to me because we have to understand this economic resource warfare and the fact that our farmlands And our actual, you know, residences are being bought up by China, Russia and other nations who are trying to stop affordability and availability of housing, who are trying to prevent the actual, you know, growth of our actual domestic products when it comes to our agricultural sector, things like this. | ||
I mean, there is a law in Indiana just passed this law actually last year where they actually ban foreign ownership of their farmlands. | ||
You know, there's so many things that we have to write on this ship and that's, you know, part of the reason why I'm running is to try and make sure that we're prioritizing America over foreigners, American energy over foreign oil, our borders over Ukrainian borders, our veterans over illegals, and our children over teachers unions. | ||
If you could give a congressman something or Well, I just want to wrap up that point on the explicit nature of explicit depictions in the Bible. | ||
The meme versus Ezekiel 2320 that talks about the size of the man that the woman liked and the emissions of the man and things like that. | ||
And I think, you know, my view on it is parents should be absolutely, especially with the Bible, like teaching their kids about what they find to be appropriate. | ||
The issue with the schools is they're keeping it a secret from the parents. | ||
Well, but Sunday school taught something totally different than what you learned when you were so I can remember going to school for example on or going to when I was younger Sunday school where my grandparents would go into the main hall and then we kind of went into the children's area and we would learn things like David and Goliath or You know, it should be up to the parent when their actual child are taught these things. | ||
I mean, that's the whole point of the birds and the bees story. | ||
It should be taught by the parents. | ||
It should never be taught. | ||
When I grew up, look, there is no... I hate when people say there's an over-sexualization of children. | ||
unidentified
|
No, no. | |
There should be no sexualization of children. | ||
That should be left up to the parental rights. | ||
That should be left up to the actual parents on when they feel that their children are ready to hear certain things. | ||
This is why, for example, that when I would deploy to combat, I wouldn't explain what my job is or what I've done in war to my wife the same way I would explain to my six-year-old, for example. | ||
You know, there's a time and the issue is when the teacher does without your consent or knowledge and keeps it a secret and says, don't tell your parents. | ||
Like if a teacher went to a kid and said, you know, your father is a murderer and he goes around and he does this, that, or otherwise, and they don't tell your parents, I told you this, it's a problem. | ||
The parents have right to know. | ||
So anyway, I ask because I think, you know, for some of this material, See, and I think that we shouldn't even have this in the school system because then, no matter how woke the teacher is, they don't have the materials in the schools to actually teach from to begin with. | ||
be it any kind of explicit depiction. | ||
See, and I think that we shouldn't even have this in the school system | ||
because then no matter how woke the teacher is, they don't have the materials in the schools to actually | ||
teach from to begin with. | ||
And that's why I looked at the publishing house bills for the exact reason. | ||
But I mean, you know, again, that's why I asked the question, | ||
like, do you think the Bible should be out of public schools? | ||
I don't, actually. | ||
But then the Bible has depictions in it as well. | ||
No, understood, but it should be one of those things where I think that the individual parent should have a right to be able, again, I go back to what I was talking about with the Sunday school versus sitting in the actual main hall. | ||
You know, you learn two different things. | ||
Yeah, but then you're saying other materials that are like woke or whatever should be allowed. | ||
No, I'm not telling you that should be taught by the teachers. | ||
But should that be available for students if they wanted to go and, you know, read the Bible during their library time, or whatever the case may be? | ||
Why shouldn't it be? | ||
I think the Bible is also sometimes—there are parts of the Bible that are age-appropriate, right? | ||
There are some explicit parts of the Bible that doesn't mean you ban the book, but that doesn't mean you have to teach it to the five-year-olds. | ||
Even, you know, we don't—the five-year-olds know that Jesus carried the cross, but they don't have to watch the Passion of the Christ. | ||
Right? | ||
I mean, like, you can get the point across without having to get into, like, well, well, you know, the nail actually went through, like, whoa, whoa, the kid's five. | ||
If the parents say, I would like this teacher to teach my child about the Bible, which includes all of it in terms, you know... We can edit selective parts out. | ||
There's nothing wrong with that. | ||
Because the kid's not appropriate. | ||
It's not appropriate. | ||
Same would be true for, you know, explorations of, you know, like, like, I don't want to | ||
say explicitly genderqueer because there's questions about ideology, but a book that | ||
includes, you know, coming of age sexual discussions, you could argue it should be available for | ||
the teachers, but they should avoid those topics without, unless the parents consent, | ||
right? | ||
Um, like they can read around it and say, I'm going to read to you about Billy going | ||
for a joyride in his dad's car. | ||
It was a problem or the story of Johnny who fought his bully. | ||
Yeah, but we're not going to read the part where Billy goes on his first date. | ||
Because then every kid in the class is gonna be like, we gotta get the first date part! | ||
Yo, it's all about that first date part! | ||
I don't understand the moral difference then between allowing them to just grab the Bible and laugh and point to the depictions of the horse-sized male girth, you know what I mean? | ||
Can you show me where in the Bible that actually is? | ||
Ezekiel 2320 is... No, but my point is that there is no actual, like, photo of these types of things, right? | ||
That's why I asked you if textual... text depictions were... Well, I think that definitely has to do with something when it comes to age group, obviously. | ||
I mean, I don't see that many second graders running to the Bible, you know, unfortunately. | ||
But, I mean, when you talk about... Second graders, I don't know, but eighth graders, yes. | ||
But here's my point, though. | ||
We did when I was a kid. | ||
Everybody grabbed it and pointed to it. | ||
Yeah, but my reason in saying that is that when you have something which is, like, genderqueer, for example, which is in cartoon fashion, You are actually building that with the idea of trying to encourage some of the youth to be able to go and at least look at the photos of these things that are going on. | ||
Imagery is very dangerous. | ||
A three-year-old can see the imagery. | ||
Yes, I agree with that. | ||
Right, which is why I'm asking if like textual depictions are, you know, comparable to image, but I think it's fairly obvious images can be substantially worse. | ||
I'm also curious as to what the lesson is that the teacher is trying to get across. | ||
like and I feel gross I'm not gonna lie it feels like you're committing a crime | ||
but I have seen because I have friends who were involved in this in this | ||
movement as well I have seen some of the these third and fourth grade primers and | ||
seen the imagery and read the story and I'm like what the hell class is this | ||
like what what's the purpose the purpose of this story is to teach four-year-old | ||
it's not based on curriculum sorry sorry we're back we gotta go super jet | ||
Smash the like button, subscribe to this channel, would you kindly, if you haven't already, and head over to TimCast.com. | ||
We're gonna have a members-only segment coming up at about 11pm. | ||
Let's get to the Super Chats. | ||
Tyler Turducken says, Tim, I'm non-Bidenary. | ||
My pronouns are Ultra and Maga. | ||
That's cute. | ||
unidentified
|
I like that. | |
That is nice. | ||
Dreadnought Trucking LLC says, you never read my Super Chats. | ||
Great super chat, thank you very much. | ||
Let's see, Johnny Atchison says, I was one of the 30 year old Johns you mentioned earlier today, Tim. | ||
Thanks for the shout out. | ||
I was talking, I was talking about demographics with like the independent voters and how independent voters two to one don't like Joe Biden. | ||
And 18 to 34 year olds have, I think the highest disapproval of Joe Biden for age group, like among the different, that's crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
And so then I was like, that's us. | ||
I was like, right now you at home, you're a 30 year old guy named John. | ||
Bill or something. | ||
So there you go. | ||
He was John. | ||
He was John. | ||
That's right. | ||
That was you John Etchison I was specifically referring to you. | ||
So I saw your post on Facebook. | ||
I'm like that guy I'm gonna shout him out. | ||
He's like one of the last guys named John I thought all 30 year olds now are called like Preston and bookcase John Crime guy! | ||
Who named their kid Crime Fighter? | ||
Someone did. | ||
I'm not kidding. | ||
I think it might have been Pendulite or something like that. | ||
Someone oppressed like Jennifer Lawrence, I'm sure. | ||
It might be like Pendulite or something like that. | ||
Look it up. | ||
I want to find out. | ||
Crime guy. | ||
Name child Crime Fighter. | ||
Look it up. | ||
Apple was Gwen Stefani's kid. | ||
Apple? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Diego Diaz says Argentina got a woke government and now four out of ten kids can't have three meals a day. | ||
I'm from South America and here people are rejecting woke ideology now that we see the misery it brings along. | ||
unidentified
|
Good. | |
I can't find it, I can't find it. | ||
Animo Argentina. | ||
You can't look up- Crimefighter? | ||
Named child crimefighter. | ||
Yeah, crimefighter named. | ||
Named Child Crime Fighter. | ||
Come on. | ||
I put Crime Fighter Kid. | ||
Didn't work. | ||
You didn't type in Named Child Crime Fighter? | ||
1900, Argentina was crushing America in GDP. | ||
Yeah, Pendulet. | ||
Pendulet! | ||
It was Moxie Crime Fighter is the kid's name. | ||
Moxie Crime Fighter. | ||
unidentified
|
There you go. | |
All right. | ||
All right. | ||
Michael Riley says, Hey Tim, really enjoyed your show. | ||
I just started listening a bit ago. | ||
My friend suggested it and it's pretty enlightening. | ||
Have also said sometimes you help with pet surgeries? | ||
You mean like shouting out GoFundMe? | ||
I mean that's when people super chatted I guess. | ||
Jamie W. says, Altuna PA here. | ||
We were hanging out there a few months ago at the skate park. | ||
Just bought several acres on the top of a mountain. | ||
Designing the Bardominium now. | ||
The need for homesteading and self-sufficiency has never been greater. | ||
Ian, love you, bruh. | ||
Love you too. | ||
You just gotta get rabbit traps, you know? | ||
Rabbits are free food. | ||
You just can't sustain yourself off of them. | ||
Correct. | ||
You actually get protein poisoning as a result of it. | ||
However, there is a trick to that, which is that if you actually put the bones over the fire and you can actually crunch the bones, there is enough marrow to give you fat. | ||
Oh, hell yeah. | ||
Look at this guy. | ||
Secrets. | ||
What's up with thermal deep earth drilling? | ||
Like, is that potential energy source in the future? | ||
The steam heat produced by the... Yeah, I mean, it's like geothermal energy on steroids. | ||
Again, great idea in theory. | ||
Let it work and let it actually prove its concept before we start closing. | ||
And go back to what you said, which is not government funded, but investor funded. | ||
So we can actually make sure that we have a white paper in testing to make sure it's sustainable energy. | ||
Cyclic Ops says, Cyclic Ops says, Tim, I was just listening to your earlier video and it's true, younger people like Trump. | ||
My bro just turned 17 today and he has a flag of Trump with a machine gun in his room. | ||
Because look, that's what they're trying to do Dark Maga. | ||
But it doesn't work because Joe Biden is like gooey and frail. | ||
Joe Biden's kind of, I'm sorry, Donald Trump is kind of crazy. | ||
So Donald Trump as this meme riding a tank with like machine guns or on a velociraptor makes you laugh because it's like, Look, I'll go back to my age group. | ||
You know, you got Donald Trump, who would be like the He-Man, and you have Biden, who in his last speech looked like the Skeletor. | ||
You know, he's like this. | ||
Someone needs to make, like, a Trump anime. | ||
I've seen, like, the manga where they've made jokes about, like, you need, like, a legitimate, like, Donald Trump anime style, like, Dragon Ball Z kind of fight. | ||
He's like, I have the power! | ||
And then he becomes muscular. | ||
I want to see someone make an anime of Donald Trump. | ||
Do you remember on MTV they used to do like the celebrity death match? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
There you go. | ||
That claymation stuff? | ||
Yes. | ||
That was awesome. | ||
Can Melania be like the scantily clad, like, you know, clutching his leg like all those cartoons back in the day? | ||
How dare you talk about our first lady this way? | ||
With a sword, you know, she's got a sword over her. | ||
I think what people love Trump is because they see the reaction that people have to it and that they're getting freaked out and then it gives them a sense of Empowerment to know that they're contributing to someone else's emotions. | ||
Yeah, you know, they want to be relevant That's kind of an unfortunate. | ||
I mean the thing that people got attracted to as well Is that president actually and this sounds bizarre given his his success and his his, you know, the fact that he has is a billionaire but he related to the everyday American people and he fought for them and And that's really what drew people and that's really what changed the conservative movement from being that wine and cheese to the beer and blue jeans party. | ||
I think courage is also attractive. | ||
Look at Joe Rogan. | ||
Look at this podcast. | ||
That's right. | ||
People who are courageous and say things and they know they're going to get in trouble and people try to cancel them and they keep saying it. | ||
That attracts people. | ||
That is true. | ||
Courage is attractive. | ||
But it's also kind of, you know, I feel like courage is facing down your fear and trying to get the job done. | ||
But I feel like, you know, I've been talking to a lot of people about how scared, say, like celebrities are. | ||
They secretly support you. | ||
They don't like the woke stuff, but they won't speak out. | ||
And I'm like, courage would be them speaking out. | ||
That's Clint Eastwood. | ||
But I kind of feel like for me, it's more indifference. | ||
Just like, what are they going to do? | ||
I don't care. | ||
I don't care about them. | ||
I don't, I have no fear of these woke lunatics like talking crap about me. | ||
Well, I mean, look at your response to getting swatted once or twice or 17 times. | ||
Ten. | ||
Right? | ||
That is supposed to silence you. | ||
And look at the way this organization... Just like it happened to Marjorie Taylor Greene. | ||
Look at the way this organization responded to it. | ||
And now Steve Bannon. | ||
And now Steve Bannon. | ||
And if you had, like, hey, we shouldn't do this anymore, guys. | ||
It's dangerous. | ||
I'm just saying, like, I don't think this podcast, for me, would be courage. | ||
I'm not facing down any... I don't fear what they do. | ||
Like, I'm trying to say, like, there are a lot of people who have jobs that are very... | ||
They require relationships. | ||
There are people who work in the music industry. | ||
There are people who work in these industries where they will lose everything if they speak out. | ||
That's courage when they do. | ||
For us, we exist in an ecosystem where we've never had to worry about that. | ||
So I'm not, I think the people who are actually coming out- Wait till the 87,000 IRS agents get fielded. | ||
Well, but like at this point, can I really be scared of what is projected to come? | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like, I don't know, man. | ||
Look, I'm always encouraged by people who are willing to speak the truth regardless of what's actually going to come as a result of it. | ||
And that for me is still courage because sometimes it's the fear of the unknown as well. | ||
A lot of people, they'll say things not knowing what potentially could come from it. | ||
And I just like the fact that Americans as a whole, we need to stop being the silent majority. | ||
We need to actually start speaking up. | ||
We need to understand that our civic duties and our civic rights are something that's important to us. | ||
And we need to start electing real statesmen, not just the everyday politician. | ||
And again, if we want to change the cycle, you have to do that by electing people in office who actually speak for you. | ||
Right. | ||
Noah Zork says, Texas native, javelinas travel in packs up to the high 20s. | ||
They were smart as dogs and break open doors and containers all the time with teamwork. | ||
That's so cool. | ||
Are they poor sign? | ||
They're pig people? | ||
They're in the pig family? | ||
Are they little pigs? | ||
Or are they like rats? | ||
Did you not see that photo? | ||
There's clearly a pig. | ||
So they're pigs. | ||
What a wacky little animal you have in Texas. | ||
Texas says that's weird. | ||
I think they're in Arizona too. | ||
And Arizona. | ||
Speakeasy official says, if the apocalypse is coming, you'll need a band to put in some work for you at Timcast Records. | ||
We are Speakeasy. | ||
We'd love to work with a cool record label that is doing something new. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
Well, we'll figure it out. | ||
We've been having, uh, so the best news is, um, There's good news and bad news. | ||
I don't know exactly what's going on. | ||
The billboard charts usually come out Tuesday, but there's a Monday holiday. | ||
And it's sounding like they aren't going to count our YouTube traffic, which means we basically just get bumped, which is insane. | ||
Look, we have a YouTube audience, so obviously YouTube is where we got massive play. | ||
We sold 12,520 something singles, which is like really great for an initial release. | ||
We are on a bunch of charts. | ||
I don't know to what degree, but the strange thing is also Will of the People actually charted as well, which is like a two-year-old song because people were buying that. | ||
I don't know where it will be, but without the YouTube views being properly listed, and we'll see, I think they're telling us they're not going to do it, which is insane, because we contacted Nielsen well in advance and asked them, and they're like, you're good, we understand, we talked to other people in the industry, and now they're like, Well, you know, the thing is, it's like, I'll be honest with you. | ||
I had just heard a couple of your songs tonight right before the actual segment that we ran. | ||
And, and I got to say, it was, it was really impressive. | ||
Like it's really great music. | ||
And I think that this is something that a lot of the people needs to go on widescreen. | ||
I mean, this, this is should be, Outside of YouTube, outside of everything. | ||
This is mainstream music. | ||
I mean, the quality of it. | ||
I mean, look, you got really great vocals on this, and I loved it. | ||
Even the one that Ian was actually kind of a backup Beyonce singer on it was really great. | ||
Tom McDonald's got a song coming out. | ||
I don't know if he did. | ||
He announced that already, didn't he? | ||
Pretty sure he did. | ||
He's got a song coming out, so we're really excited for that. | ||
And I just, you know, I saw his story. | ||
He was trying to get on, you know, he's huge, Tommy McDonald. | ||
You've probably heard his music. | ||
And they wouldn't track his stuff properly. | ||
They were denying it, rejecting it, and surprise, surprise. | ||
But the good news is, the release was such a success. | ||
And I want to give a special thanks to people like Hasan Piker and Ethan Klein, whose reviews really helped us. | ||
It really did. | ||
Because that's the kind of press from these leftist podcasts who are crap-talking. | ||
But, like, crap-talk is expensive. | ||
When you're launching a product and you can get major podcasts to talk about it, you normally gotta pay tens of thousands. | ||
They did it for free because they hate me. | ||
It worked out really well. | ||
Well, what did President Trump say? | ||
Good or bad coverage is still good coverage? | ||
That's right. | ||
So anyway, in reference to Speakeasy, one of the things we're talking about doing is, since the success of the song, we've actually gotten connected and have some deals with industry professionals. | ||
I think these people on the left need to realize, like, the industry doesn't care why you're talking about it, or why you're watching it, or why you're listening to it. | ||
That kind of attention was good, so we got some deals, and now we're looking at expanding the label. | ||
So it looks like a big success, and we're gonna be signing some bands, and then recording some music. | ||
Obviously, we're gonna be starting with the music we have in-house, and then we're gonna be looking to, you know, maybe people like, uh, bands like Speakeasy or whatever. | ||
So, appreciate all the support, guys. | ||
We'll see if they actually decide to count the YouTube views, which is substantial. | ||
1.7 million? | ||
That's awesome. | ||
We'll see. | ||
We'll see. | ||
Decide Thought says, back in 2012, I chose to live in the wilderness and walk from California to Florida. | ||
Did it to make sure I could survive in the worst case scenario. | ||
13 months, best time of my life. | ||
That sounds awesome. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Sounds like a good time. | ||
That should have been documented. | ||
That's a hell of a, you know, Tim Cast documentary or something. | ||
13 months across the country? | ||
13 months walking from California to Florida. | ||
That's awesome, man. | ||
Good for you. | ||
That's how long it took. | ||
What shoes did you have on? | ||
You know what, that's the desperation of people wanting to escape California to come to the free state of Florida. | ||
They'll even walk it. | ||
They'll walk it. | ||
The U-Hauls have run out, now they're actually going to the actual Nike Treadrunners. | ||
So we, I was reading about like John Brown and stuff, because we work very close to the John Brown headquarters, and reading about Like, how long it would take to travel from, say, Harper's Ferry to, like, Frederick, Maryland. | ||
It's like a 15-minute drive, but back then it was like a half-day or a day trip. | ||
It's like, well, we're here in the big city and we gotta go to Harper's Ferry. | ||
It's like, get the horse, and horses gotta stop and drink. | ||
They can only do so much. | ||
Well, that was the whole point of the 20th Amendment as well. | ||
You know, they gave three months in between elections and the actual time that you started because they were worried about the time of travel. | ||
For me, that's very dangerous because now you look at what's going on today and what you can do and how much damage you can do in three months. | ||
And this is something that concerns me. | ||
When the Democrats end up losing the House and the Senate, how many executive orders are going to come about as a result of that because of the time of travel? | ||
All right, Cigars and Cigarm says, if you want an idea of what the collapse of society will be like, read the One Second After trilogy by William Forshen. | ||
Well, all right. | ||
We'll take a look. | ||
Josh says, Amazon removed all their solar stuff because it caught fire. | ||
Really? | ||
The other thing is I watched a video about hailstorms. | ||
Yeah. | ||
One hailstorm and your entire solar output is gone. | ||
Again, and that's, that's not good or bad. | ||
That's just reality, right? | ||
It's that, it's that Thomas Sowell quote, there, there are no solutions. | ||
There are only trade-offs. | ||
And if the American people knew the trade-offs of going green, they would not choose it. | ||
That is a real thing. | ||
Solars, hailstorms, dust. | ||
I have solar panels. | ||
I have a lot of solar gates on my farm. | ||
I've said this before on the show. | ||
And when we have two weeks of solid snow, if I don't brush my solar panels off the gates, the next time I try to move move my cattle through, the gate is dead. And a dead gate | ||
is very hard to retract manually. | ||
That's the reality of solar. That's not good or bad, it's just reality. | ||
We have reliable energy sources here in America and that's the issue with these unreliant | ||
energy sources as Texas found out through their own demise. | ||
Alright Robert Paveza says make culture. | ||
Get Ben Shapiro to cover The Devil Went Down to Georgia. | ||
You could even parody it, The Liberal Went Down to Florida. | ||
That'd be great. | ||
That'd be good. | ||
We need to do a collab on a song with Ben Shapiro. | ||
I'm still waiting for you to redo Chicken City. | ||
He plays the violin or something, doesn't he? | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
He probably plays classical violin. | ||
I don't know why he strikes me as a... He's good enough to... Rock violin's probably super, like, you know, pop or rock or whatever. | ||
Oh, dude, if we could get Ben dancing, man. | ||
Even just a few shots of him making some sweet moves. | ||
So we gotta get James O'Keefe. | ||
He sings. | ||
He also dances. | ||
We gotta get Tom McDonald. | ||
We'll work on it. | ||
Then we've got Ben Shapiro, Michael Knowles, Jeremy Boring. | ||
They all play music. | ||
Who else? | ||
Zuby, of course. | ||
Pesobic on bass. | ||
Just do this. | ||
We'll call it The Grifters. | ||
We'll get everybody to come and put a song together. | ||
I love it. | ||
Alright, let's grab some more. | ||
Lost Cause says, Daniel, has Tesla fixed the batteries where they do not work well in the cold? | ||
I have seen more here in North Dakota where we get weeks of minus 20 and lower in winter. | ||
No, they haven't. And that's again one of the trade-offs. | ||
And if you don't believe me, have some fun tonight. Charge your iPhone 100% and put it | ||
in the freezer and wake up tomorrow morning and see if your iPhone is still charged. And the | ||
answer is your iPhone will be dead because it cannot hold a charge below freezing. It's not | ||
good or bad. It's just reality. | ||
But how does that So Teslas, you can charge your Tesla all night long. | ||
But when you put your phone in the freezer, it discharges? | ||
Yes, your battery drains down to nothing. | ||
You have to leave your phone on and just put it in the freezer. | ||
That's lithium-ion batteries? | ||
Yes, that is just the reality of them. | ||
And again, your freezer, if it's 31 degrees, it may not work. | ||
But when you get down to 15 degrees, it sucks it out like that. | ||
And sometimes it doesn't even hold a charge. | ||
So imagine that. | ||
Imagine that was a big problem in the Polar Vortex in Chicago two summers ago. | ||
Do you remember the Polar Vortex two winters ago? | ||
When I worked at O'Hare, we had electric tugs. | ||
And in the winter, it was like... And if you have a heated garage or even an enclosed garage, great. | ||
But if you just park your car on the driveway, like I did growing up in New York City, and you bring out the thing and you plug it in, it's not going to hold a charge. | ||
But what happens if you take your Tesla out in the middle of winter? | ||
unidentified
|
You're driving it, will the battery just be melt like Your battery will definitely not last as long. | |
It probably won't die, but I don't know the actual percentages of how much it's reduced by. | ||
That's just the reality. | ||
But how many people in America are you actually describing when you talk about this heated, you know, garage with its own individual charger and it's $70,000, you know, with 40-year high inflation and the fact that we can't even get our supply chain to be, you know, continuous? | ||
unidentified
|
I mean... How many people in California... This is the Jennifer Lawrence's of the world. | |
How many people in California where they're gonna mandate electric vehicles live in a high-rise and they park on the street? | ||
All right, Spotch says, while listening to you guys talk about energy, California literally sent out an alert to phones about conserving electricity until 9 p.m. | ||
There you go. | ||
Brave new world. | ||
I keep thinking about lightning and ocean water. | ||
They're like, where are we going to get all our water from? | ||
Where's our electricity? | ||
And they'll look back on humans, what infants we were at this stage of humanity. | ||
Are you Ben Franklin in this right now? | ||
I think so. | ||
It is inconceivable Gavin Newsom could win reelection with the state of his state in terms of just crime, homelessness, poverty, drug use. | ||
I still think Larry Elder should have actually beat him out. | ||
and the electricity that is your, and again, maybe you should be able to have a nuclear reactor in your backyard. | ||
I agree with that. | ||
That was the best part of Back to the Future when he's got Mr. Fission, right? | ||
You should be able to have your own, but that is Gavin Newsom's job and he can't provide it for his constituents. | ||
He's unqualified. | ||
Sorry. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Peter Gohawk says, can you guys give my wife Kim a shout out? | ||
Been trying to get her to watch you. | ||
She finally did a few days ago and today she said, when is Timcast on? | ||
Get off your phone and turn it on. | ||
LOL. | ||
Thanks, Tim. | ||
unidentified
|
Shout out, Kim. | |
Yeah, nice job. | ||
Thanks for watching. | ||
That's great. | ||
That's good news, huh? | ||
That is pretty cool. | ||
Brendan McGrath Music says, Biden clearly called out MAGA civilians in his 9-1 speech. | ||
Now his Twitter and walkbacks with the media, he says, congressional MAGA Republicans. | ||
The gaslighting begins that he always meant Congress. | ||
Yeah, because the polling is really bad. | ||
We all knew it. | ||
Oh, that's good. | ||
So he's only referring to America First conservatives who are running for office. | ||
unidentified
|
Great. | |
Yeah, not the people who voted it in and who want it, just the representatives. | ||
I think that's what they call gaslighting, when they say something but then say they didn't say it. | ||
Is that gaslighting? | ||
Nathan L says, check out the fund for officer Matt Tidman. | ||
Thanks to the progressive prison reform in MA, Department of Corrections, a murderer had access to free weights and bashed Tidman over the head. | ||
He's in a medical coma with brain bleeds fighting for his life. | ||
Man, sorry to hear. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
Let's see, we just had one. | ||
Where'd it go? | ||
Julian Vega says, abortion issue is taking a lot of women to the Democrats. | ||
Almost like the abortion issue was brought up before the midterms on purpose. | ||
Maybe. | ||
I don't think the Supreme Court planned it. | ||
I think they got it when they got it and they went with it. | ||
I think that Justice Alito is right in saying that this was not a constitutional issue that should have been heard by SCOTUS to begin with and it should fall back into the individual state rights. | ||
I think Ruth Bader Ginsburg said something similar, right? | ||
That she didn't think that this was the right way to legislate. | ||
She agreed with the outcome, but she said the law is not going to stand. | ||
She knew it wasn't going to stand. | ||
And little did she know that her intransigence at resigning because she wanted Hillary to nominate her replacement would lead to its not standing, but that's just what we call irony. | ||
Josh Bushnell says, this is why Jesus said, truly I tell you it is hard harder for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of heaven. | ||
And he said it is, uh, what was it? | ||
It's easier to fit a camel through the eye of an eagle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. | ||
Yep. | ||
Except the eye of a needle is a door in Jerusalem. | ||
It's not actually the needle of a needle. | ||
He says, Jennifer Lawrence is in danger. | ||
She probably doesn't not understand. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
All right. | ||
Poor Jennifer Lawrence. | ||
Wicked says you are looking so slim, Daniel. | ||
What's your strategy? | ||
Oh my god! | ||
I love this person! | ||
Thank you! | ||
unidentified
|
Not eating. | |
Farming? | ||
Farming. | ||
You know, summertime on a farm is sweating non-stop. | ||
I shower at this point three times a day. | ||
You just walk miles and miles and yes, I have lost a decent amount of weight and it is literally just from sweating because farming is exhausting. | ||
Are you fasting? | ||
I just sometimes you don't have time to eat you know or sometimes you're just so hot and sweaty you're not hungry and and there are days especially when it's in the 90s that it's just you're just sweaty and gross and you don't want to eat you just want to drink So yeah, so thank you! | ||
Oh my gosh, I appreciate that. | ||
You made my day. | ||
Also, I gotta tell ya, I mean, not to sound like a kiss-ass, but you inspired me as well. | ||
Every time I was on this show, you got skinnier and skinnier and skinnier. | ||
But I know you do some weird stuff, like where you don't eat or you only eat rice powder. | ||
No, I just don't eat sugar. | ||
I don't eat rice powder. | ||
It's the opposite of that. | ||
Whatever you do, I know you have some weird things. | ||
I mostly just cut sugar out. | ||
So it's like, if I'm gonna eat, I'll go for the no bread. | ||
We went to a lot of alcohol, erythritol is an alcohol sugar. | ||
No, I hate that stuff. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I don't like it that much, but it's not cane sugar. | ||
And what's the other one? | ||
I just don't do sugar. | ||
I just, I put heavy cream in my coffee. | ||
It tastes amazing. | ||
Nitro cold brew with heavy creams, like drinking a chocolate milkshake. | ||
It's nuts. | ||
You ever have that? | ||
It's so good. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I drink my coffee black. | ||
I love the heavy cream. | ||
I put coconut water in mine, which has a little bit of sugar. | ||
Native sugar. | ||
Gotta say, I've never heard of that. | ||
It's freaking fantastic. | ||
And a little peanut butter powder as well. | ||
For dinner, I had slow-cooked chicken with peppers. | ||
unidentified
|
In coffee? | |
Daniel's loving it. | ||
Peanut butter? | ||
No, peanut butter and coffee. | ||
Because it's too acidic? | ||
Ask Jack Pasoba. | ||
Actually, I heard it from Jack. | ||
Jack's the one that introduced me to it. | ||
Peanut butter powder, right? | ||
A scoop of peanut butter powder. | ||
No, you've got to try it. | ||
Come on, are you serious? | ||
unidentified
|
My gut reaction was... You want to try it now? | |
It is gross, Lydia. | ||
It's creamy. | ||
My gut reaction was to heave. | ||
Coffee, peanut butter, milkshake? | ||
No, I just prefer my coffee with coffee. | ||
Coffee, coffee? | ||
unidentified
|
I like pouring cow fat right up in it. | |
All right, we just had a good one. | ||
There we go. | ||
Matthew Lincoln says, as a current member of the military, nothing makes me want to serve my country more than my president calling me a threat to the country. | ||
Let me tell you, this is a real issue. | ||
You know, a lot of our recruitment issue isn't just because of the unconstitutional forced vaccinations, which is an intentional purge, but the idea that he literally is kind of purging out the military because of a lack of morale. | ||
And that's really an issue for us. | ||
I mean, look, at the end of the day, I think that every single member who has been purged out of the military as a result of them refusing the unconstitutional vaccine mandate should be entitled to 100% of their benefits. | ||
And for those who have served 15 to 16 or even more years, they should be allowed back in the military to continue their service and go into their retirement. | ||
I don't think that an unconstitutional vaccine should be the reasoning for you being discharged out of the military. | ||
Do you remember that Russian military recruitment video? | ||
Yeah. | ||
That was just like super alpha. | ||
Same as the Chinese, same as the others. | ||
And you watch that video like, I wanted to join the Russian military. | ||
And then they switch to the American one where they're talking about pronouns. | ||
Well, the American one was like a cartoon and she was like the life of Jill and my two moms taught me how to protest and then I became in the army. | ||
Again, this goes back to... Oh my gosh, I want to join the Russian When I was in the military I was in the military during the be all you can be days and I can well as far as the army and so I can tell you right now you know the ideas of all the not being not being about you know pronouns or CRT or inclusiveness or diversity or things like that this is what I would tell every single politician who thinks that that's important as opposed to increase lethality things like that go walk through Arlington | ||
Yeah. | ||
Go tell me how those alabaster colored, you know, headstones are laid out. | ||
Are they laid out by gender? | ||
Are they laid out by religion? | ||
Are they laid out by your diversity? | ||
No, they're not. | ||
At the end of the day, we all bleed green. | ||
And that was something that we understood in the military. | ||
So the idea of dividing our military, weakening our military, and constitutionally purging our military is un-American. | ||
unidentified
|
Right on, man. | |
I'm so in line with that. | ||
I would love to let these people back in. | ||
Receive a hero's welcome back. | ||
Especially knowing now what we know about COVID. | ||
Like, come on. | ||
Amen, brother. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends. | ||
Head over to TimCast.com, become a member because we're going to have an uncensored, not-so-family-friendly, members-only show at 11pm. | ||
It's going to be a lot of fun. | ||
We usually have a lot of fun. | ||
Things get spicy sometimes. | ||
You can follow the show at TimCast.irl. | ||
You can follow me at TimCast. | ||
Cor, do you want to shout anything out? | ||
I just want to tell everybody that, you know, look, at the end of the day, if you don't like what's going on in America, you need to get out and vote. | ||
You need to understand that your civic duty is out there. | ||
You need to understand that if you like the increased gas prices, the lack of supply chain, the open borders, the soft on crime policies, the increased criminality, things like this, get out and do something. | ||
I'm not telling you to vote left or right. | ||
All the Republicans are the right way. | ||
But what I'm telling you is, is that at the end of the day, you have a voice and no one should be able to silence that. | ||
So get out, make sure you vote on November 8th. | ||
Always great to be here. | ||
Daniel Turner. | ||
Daniel Turner, PTF on all platforms. | ||
Powerofthefuture.com. | ||
If you care about energy issues and if you care about Virginia sheep farms, the preeminent Virginia sheep farm is Bristol Farm, Virginia. | ||
I know Lydia follows us and you like us all the time, which makes me happy. | ||
And we just got a whole bunch of new girls and you can go check them out. | ||
They're very, very sweet Scotties. | ||
I've been following you guys on Instagram. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I'm finding some amazing, amazing video from time to time. | ||
You don't follow me on anything. | ||
Well, I'm about to. | ||
I gotta follow you on Twitter. | ||
What's your Twitter handle? | ||
GetSomeSheep. | ||
At CoreyMillsFL. | ||
And hey, you got a hat behind you. | ||
Is that merch? | ||
It is merch. | ||
You know what? | ||
I will be happy to go ahead and provide that to you right now. | ||
Tell me more. | ||
Oh, wait. | ||
Tell the world. | ||
You know what? | ||
I don't sell merch. | ||
I don't drift off people. | ||
I actually give it. | ||
So if you're actually wanting to go ahead and represent some Mills attire, then by all means, go ahead and reach out to me. | ||
Thank you, Corey. | ||
Bye, everyone. | ||
And I'm also here. | ||
Thank you guys all for tuning in this evening, this fun Tuesday night. | ||
Thank you, Corey. | ||
And thank you, Daniel, for coming. | ||
And that sheep farm is just to die for, I have to say. | ||
Check it out for sure on Instagram. | ||
You guys can follow me on Twitter at Minds.com, at Sour Patchlets, as well as SourPatchlets.me. | ||
We will see you all over at TimCast.com in just about an hour or so. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. |