Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
I don't know why Joe Biden did this interview on 60 Minutes, but he made a point of saying | ||
He must've thought it was a good idea and they were talking real slow. | ||
Everybody thinks the interview was for 70-year-olds, and I mean no disrespect to older people, but it was a 60 Minutes interview, it was on TV, and they did talk very slow. | ||
In it, Joe Biden, wow, there's a variety of just crazy stories. | ||
One, when asked if his brain worked, he garbled incoherently, and he said something like, I don't think about how old I am, then fly, and it's like, I don't know what you're trying to say, dude. | ||
If you're trying to explain that your brain works, you're not doing it very well. | ||
He said that the U.S. | ||
would intervene with the military to defend Taiwan, which the White House then, for the fourth time, I believe, walked back those claims. | ||
Like, I don't even know who sets policies at the White House anymore, because the White House and Biden clearly disagree. | ||
After four times, you'd think that would be the U.S. | ||
policy, but apparently it's not. | ||
And the big news is that Biden has declared the pandemic's over. | ||
Now, of course, many in the media rushed into saying, he didn't, he didn't explicitly say, oh, he says he believes, no, Biden said the pandemic is over. | ||
And that's huge, because we've already got issues pertaining to, you know, they're saying like, oh no, the midterms aren't going to be wrapped up in a single day because of mail-in ballots, end them all. | ||
Pandemic's over, we don't need that anymore. | ||
People should start filing lawsuits saying like, it's got to go back to the constitutional system. | ||
Joe Biden said it twice, the pandemic was over. | ||
He expressly, he explicitly stated, Everybody in the armed forces should be able to, should no longer be required to get the vaccine. | ||
Vaccine mandates should all be done. | ||
Vaccine passports. | ||
Biden said it. | ||
Pandemic's over. | ||
They don't want to admit it. | ||
They don't want to accept it because they need it. | ||
So that's where we're going. | ||
But my friends, we'll talk about all that. | ||
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My friends, you gotta support companies that support us. | ||
And BioTrust, as you know, they sponsor the show every month more than once. | ||
And just make sure you're giving your money to people who like you and want your business. | ||
So check out strongerbonesinlife.com. | ||
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Support our work directly. | ||
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So become a member, smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends. | ||
Joining us today to talk about all of the news and more is Daniel Turner. | ||
It's great to be back. | ||
Daniel Turner, Power of the Future. | ||
Hi everyone. | ||
I was at a conference this weekend and honestly about nine people stopped me and were like, I've seen you on Timcast. | ||
I watch all the time. | ||
So it's always great to see how big your audience is and to see that people think I'm part of it. | ||
So thanks for having me here. | ||
You're a part of the show. | ||
I know. | ||
And I have to, if your knee hurts, my knee's killing me, do you mix it with water? | ||
Well yeah, you put in whatever. | ||
I like putting in smoothies. | ||
It's great. | ||
I'm totally gonna buy some of that. | ||
It adds like a kind of creaminess to it. | ||
I'm buying it. | ||
Love it. | ||
So great to be here. | ||
Thanks for having me. | ||
We also got the t-shirt salesman who lives in the parking lot. | ||
The humble t-shirt salesman. | ||
And even though Joe Biden declared that the pandemic is over, there still is a very dangerous media virus out there and you could do your part to fight it right now with ideas that cannot be censored on thebestpoliticalshorts.com. | ||
Which, of course, is represented by the shirt I'm wearing right now declaring that the media is the virus. | ||
And I think when you look at the effect that they have on everyone, I think there's a solid argument there. | ||
Ian! | ||
How are you doing? | ||
Are you working out with me tomorrow? | ||
Friday I am. | ||
Tomorrow you're doing kickboxing. | ||
I may join you. | ||
I'm definitely going to join you and eyeball this thing. | ||
Dude, I love your shirt. | ||
Thank you. | ||
The media is a virus because a virus is just basically like a mechanism to transmit something. | ||
It's, it's, you can have viruses that don't hurt you, you can have viruses that damage you, and the media also is a neutral, you know, injection. | ||
No, no, no, no, no, no, no. | ||
The corporate media is a very dangerous, very bad virus that destroys the integrity of humanity. | ||
But Tim, Tim Kast is a corporation. | ||
We can't, we can't debate this early in the show. | ||
We can't. | ||
We can do it. | ||
Hey, what conference were you at, Daniel? | ||
I was at Texas Youth Conference, and so it was a gathering of, aimed towards young people. | ||
Yeah, like high school, college age. | ||
you know, definitely center right in nature, not partisan, but political. And I talked about energy | ||
and climate change and energy issues. And I was excited to go because the 15 year olds and 17 | ||
year olds are the ones who've been told their entire life they're going to die from climate | ||
change. Yeah, you're putting me at ease about fracking a little bit. So it's nice to hear that | ||
it's not necessarily the end of the world. It is like I was told it was. Hey, Lydia, what's happening? | ||
I am getting my cast off tomorrow. | ||
I've never been more excited. | ||
Delighted to have you back, Daniel. | ||
Let's get into tonight's topic. | ||
I love that your cast is black in honor of Her Majesty. | ||
I'm wearing black because she was interred today. | ||
Tim, of course, is. | ||
You don't want to know my opinion on this issue. | ||
I normally don't wear this. | ||
Normally I'm wearing a fine yellow suit. | ||
Normally in pastels. | ||
A tan suit. | ||
A crown. | ||
All right, let's read this story from CNN. | ||
Biden's comments about pandemic widen public health split over how US should respond to COVID-19. | ||
I love this. | ||
They say even as the US prepares for a potential winter surge of COVID-19, President Biden roamed the cavernous halls of the Detroit auto show. | ||
For an interview on CBS's 60 Minutes, and gesturing to the mostly maskless attendees, told the nation, the pandemic is over. | ||
We still have a problem with COVID. | ||
We're still doing a lot of work on it, he told Scott Pelley. | ||
But the pandemic is over, he repeated. | ||
Let's give a round of applause to everybody. | ||
It's all over. | ||
Yay, we survived! | ||
Everybody can go home, or leave your home, because the pandemic's over. | ||
It's just so crazy to me to hear this. | ||
And then, you know, I go out and I still see people wearing masks in places that don't require them. | ||
Yeah. | ||
They must not know that the pandemic's over yet. | ||
Maybe they needed this. | ||
Maybe now Joe Biden's sweet whispers will assuage their fears. | ||
It will. | ||
A lot of people wait, unfortunately, for better or for worse, they wait for the official word. | ||
And this is the most official word you're going to get. | ||
Anything Biden says is the top official in the United States. | ||
Well, I wouldn't worry about what the top official says. | ||
Since last year, they were saying that there was going to be a severe winter of illness and death, and they were absolutely wrong about it. | ||
I was on this show last year, and I said, COVID's over. | ||
It's done with. | ||
There's no way it could return. | ||
I was looking at the data. | ||
I was looking at the graphs, and that absolutely happened. | ||
All the restrictions. | ||
And when I mean COVID, when I mean this kind of uh health mandates and these emergency issues all of that made absolutely no sense and we have slowly seen them dwindle because everything that they promised that was going to happen with this virus last winter never happened and this thing was very interesting because there wasn't a speech there wasn't an official declaration there wasn't a parade there wasn't even a banner it was joe biden walking through a car show nonchalantly talking to a tv show that aired his comments five days five days later saying kobe's over | ||
Yeah. | ||
Which is absolutely crazy. | ||
The one thing that the article gets right is that it said it will be a seasonal, you know, the winter is coming. | ||
And it is seasonal. | ||
The flu has a season. | ||
Lice cases go up in September because all the kids are back in school. | ||
So when they're like, well, we're headed towards a season of COVID, it's like, yeah, we're also headed towards a season of colds and a season of flu. | ||
A lot of our illnesses are seasonal. | ||
Let me read this quote. | ||
Quote, in a week, that's Twin Towers, right? | ||
It's a 9-11, week after week after week, said Greg Gonsalves, an epidemiologist at the Yale School of Public Health. | ||
I just want to point out that people die from, like, congenital heart failure and from peanut allergies and other things, and it seems like Covidian, that's the word, right? | ||
It's like a cult almost. | ||
These people are like hyper-focused on one thing. | ||
It's like, bro, look at flu deaths, right? | ||
I think they're about probably half or so. | ||
But if you're really saying it's a 9-11 every week, okay, look at car accidents. | ||
Like, how many car accidents are there every week? | ||
Someone want to look it up? | ||
My point is, you're only talking about one thing. | ||
Are we really going to shut down the world because there's a thing that causes people to die? | ||
107,000 people overdosed on fentanyl last year and divided by 52 weeks, that's 2,057 per week. | ||
You know, that's another thing that is a Twin Towers every week. | ||
How many car accidents per year? | ||
I've got 38,800 per year. | ||
So what is that? | ||
unidentified
|
38,000. | |
How many fentanyl was it? | ||
107,000 died of just fentanyl. | ||
So what is that? | ||
38,000. | ||
How many fentanyl was it? | ||
107,000 died of just fentanyl. | ||
So we're looking at 746 deaths a week in 2019 from car accidents in the United States. | ||
What about heart failure? | ||
I think that's the number one cause of death is heart disease. | ||
Heart disease, huh? | ||
Heart disease. | ||
So we gotta shut it all down. | ||
We gotta shut it all down. | ||
Well, no, we gotta do it again because people have heart disease. | ||
And to shut down the world for heart disease means shut down the gym. | ||
Right? | ||
Shut down all the gyms, the parks. | ||
Lock them in their rooms. | ||
Make them order Uber Eats. | ||
No, I get it. | ||
It's contagious. | ||
So it looks like COVID is about seven times as many deaths as there were car accident deaths. | ||
But what about heart failure? | ||
Heart disease? | ||
I'm still looking for that. | ||
What about obesity? | ||
How many people die every year from obesity? | ||
I think that that's not ever really the cause. | ||
It's that'll bring on something else that will kill you. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And it tends to be a comorbidity. | ||
Cancer deaths per year. | ||
300,000 people die every year due to obesity. | ||
Whoa! | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
And it's an epidemic! | ||
They say obesity epidemic! | ||
So that's like 6,000 a day? | ||
600,000 die of cancer every year in America. | ||
Whoa! | ||
I gotta say, we had Drew Pinsky on the show last Friday, and he's a doctor, Dr. Drew, and was talking about Paxilivit and how people are having, not breakthrough cases, but rebound cases, which I think, I don't know exactly what a COVID rebound case is, are you guys? | ||
It's when you test negative and then you test positive again. | ||
So I think what's happening, Oh, is that COVID is still here. | ||
Like, I can feel it. | ||
I can feel my back in the same place where I got really sick before. | ||
I can see that it's, I can still sense it, but I have an immunity built up now to it. | ||
So yeah, it's going to be here like the flu virus. | ||
Obesity is two 9-11s per week. | ||
Apparently now we are going to be measuring deaths in 9-11s because that's what, and I know it's like, it's kind of silly, but they've been doing that since the beginning of COVID. | ||
Like, when COVID deaths were really high, there were, like, 9-11 every day, and it's like, is this a unit of measurement? | ||
I think Bill Maher made a joke about it. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Like, are we using this as a unit of measurement now? | ||
How many Reich dogs burned for this? | ||
Well, it's because you can point to the 9-11 people and see who supported them, who sympathizes with them, and if you don't believe in COVID, and if you don't believe in vaccines, and if you don't believe in masking, and so on, you support the terrorists. | ||
And in 9-11, and for those of us who remember when all of it happened, were you even born when 9-11 happened? | ||
When 9-11 happened, if you were like, well, I think this is ridiculous, it was like, oh, so you want the terrorists to win, huh? | ||
It's like, no, I don't want the terrorists to win. | ||
I just don't think this is the right approach. | ||
Well, CNN had a ticker on their show. | ||
Their producers were celebrating and happy that the numbers were going up, because the more death, the more fear, the more viewers that they had. | ||
And this was released by Project Veritas. | ||
Essentially, they loved that ticker. | ||
They loved those numbers. | ||
They loved celebrating death. | ||
And they loved the trauma, because essentially what we're dealing with when we're dealing with corporate media is a lot of trauma-based mind control. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And this is, again, a lot of sensationalism, a lot of, you know, doom and gloom, a lot of severe winter illness of death. | ||
None of that happened. | ||
They were absolutely wrong. | ||
This statement is very convenient right before the midterms, and I think that has a lot more to do with it than actual science that was, again, bastardized from the very beginning. | ||
I remember a lot of people pointed out, including this show, right after Biden was inaugurated, how the CNN ticker death thing disappeared from their screen, right? | ||
That was in the bottom chyron for a year. | ||
And like a week after Biden got in, it was like, yeah, we don't need to put that number anymore. | ||
Even though more people died under Biden, which is a silly statistic, right? | ||
But it is a true one. | ||
You know, more people died under Biden with COVID than under Trump, but they were like, We don't need to talk about statistics anymore. | ||
That's important. | ||
You said with COVID, and we're going to have to continuously remind people that there's a difference between dying with COVID and dying from COVID. | ||
Because if you get into a car accident and you had COVID in your system, you might die with COVID from a car accident, but they'll still clock you as a COVID death because you had COVID in your system, as opposed to COVID making you cough up blood. | ||
No head. | ||
They're like, what did he die of? | ||
Well, he died of COVID. | ||
He doesn't have a head. | ||
They would say he died with COVID. | ||
He's a COVID death, which is very, very, you know, that's malicious in my opinion. | ||
The driver was decapitated, but he did have COVID. | ||
What about the passenger? | ||
The passenger was bifurcated. | ||
Right down the middle. | ||
Buddy had COVID. | ||
So there were two COVID deaths because each half had COVID. | ||
We found two incomplete bodies. | ||
And the head was not wearing a mask. | ||
Oh my god. | ||
I know. | ||
Which proves it. | ||
I feel like I'm dazed from this last three years. | ||
I'm just still in shock and awe, man. | ||
This is like our eulogy for the pandemic. | ||
Because these COVIDian people, they don't want to give it up. | ||
They love being the Karens wearing the masks, screaming at people, shrieking, but it's done. | ||
It's been done for a while, but this is it. | ||
Joe Biden came out and said it. | ||
That's what we need now. | ||
There's still people who are facing mandates, lockdowns, things like that, restrictions. | ||
It's time to start filing lawsuits. | ||
There's still teachers being fired today. | ||
Today, 850 unvaccinated teachers and paras were fired from the New York City education system. | ||
There's still an FDA emergency authorization for a booster that was just tested on eight mice. | ||
There's still people losing their jobs within the military because they didn't comply with these mandates, which are absolutely nonsensical. | ||
So people are still being fired by this. | ||
Why, when the president says it's over? | ||
Ian, you mentioned that people don't die of obesity, they die from something because of obesity. | ||
It's called a comorbidity, and people are pointing out that's literally how they define COVID deaths. | ||
Yep. | ||
As, like, people who get sick and then they die from comorbidities. | ||
Like, what is it, like 90-some-odd percent of people had some kind of comorbidity? | ||
And obesity was a large component of that. | ||
Huge. | ||
So here's the important factor is that obesity deaths and COVID deaths I imagine have a large overlap. | ||
Yeah, and age also. | ||
And then they started hiding that data. | ||
How many people were over the age of 75? | ||
And it's tragic, right? | ||
We don't want our old people to die. | ||
People forget the original reason why the vaccines were rushed is because it was supposed to save old people. | ||
And then for some reason it went to, let's get all the seniors vaccinated too. | ||
Now you have to get your 15 year old kid vaccinated. | ||
It was like, well, I thought this was for old people. | ||
And the old people, if you look at it, didn't have bad reactions as much to the vaccine | ||
because it was made for old people. | ||
But for some reason it disappeared. | ||
Like that thinking of, I remember my parents were happy because they were the ones at risk. | ||
Dude, the idea of vaccinating you to keep Luke healthy is insane. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
We live in the Middle Ages, and we're all, like, got bacteria eating our skin alive, then maybe we would consider that? | ||
I do want to point out, I think people need to understand the full context of what happened at the start of the pandemic. | ||
After a while, we started seeing different strains, you know, we get to, like, Omicron or whatever, and it's getting weaker and it's weaker, it's like... | ||
People need to understand the alpha strain was really scary. | ||
The scar tissue and damage in people's lungs. | ||
We had Dr. Gironi mentioned the spike protein was causing microvascular damage, and then it was inhibiting nutrients and oxygen and stuff to get into parts of the body. | ||
In the early days of COVID, you could see the scans of people's lungs. | ||
It was really, really bad. | ||
That's kind of... | ||
I don't know. | ||
I think we got Omicron. | ||
Is that what we got when we got sick? | ||
I think it was Delta, but there was also a lot of malpractice inside of the hospitals that were doing things that they later found out was absolutely wrong, especially when it came to drugging a lot of the patients and then giving them particular medicines that gave them organ failure. | ||
Are you talking about malpractice or are you saying error? | ||
I don't know how you want to categorize it, but there was a lot of mistakes made early on in the hospitals. | ||
That's what I mean to say. | ||
We didn't know what we were doing. | ||
There's a difference between a doctor screwing up and us being like, this is the best thing we could think of. | ||
But I gotta say, I think policy-wise, it was a total and abject failure. | ||
Fauci should have been fine. | ||
But any criticism was automatically censored. | ||
Anyone speaking up was automatically shut down. | ||
And there was practices that were done that people saw as a mistake, especially when it came to the ventilators. | ||
People were saying, hey, maybe we shouldn't be doing this. | ||
Maybe we shouldn't be, you know, knocking patients out and giving them drugs that give them organ failure so their bodies can't fight it off. | ||
Maybe we shouldn't be incubating them. | ||
And that was a big argument that should have happened publicly, but it didn't. | ||
And the policies continued on to the detriment of a lot of early patients. | ||
Well, let's talk about the big change and the big funny news. | ||
We got the story from Business Insider. | ||
Moderna, BioNTech, and Novavax plunge after Biden says the COVID-19 pandemic is over. | ||
unidentified
|
Oops! | |
Where are those put options at? | ||
Who is waiting for this moment? | ||
All the Congress members. | ||
Paul Pelosi, the reason why they waited five days to air it is because they had a call all day, like, hey everyone, hey Dan Crenshaw, sell your stocks, Nancy Pelosi, I mean, yeah. | ||
Those folks knew this was happening. | ||
But this is an important story. | ||
The New York Times did actually a good job. | ||
They investigated the investments of Congress members, and they reported out of 3,700 trades, they made over $100 million, many of them with Being almost perfectly timed. | ||
So the New York Times actually did a good job Investigated and showed the insider trading that is absolutely too good to be true for a lot of these representatives of Congress They got rich off of these stocks. | ||
This aired September 18th, and it was filmed when he went there, which was on Tuesday so we need to investigate who sold stocks between September 13th and September 18th and Especially these three or any of the pharmaceutical companies. | ||
And it would be fascinating to then have a legit investigation to say, Congressman Crenshaw, how did you know to sell all of your Moderna on Friday before the markets closed? | ||
We don't know, we actually didn't. | ||
Just using a name. | ||
Congressman Turner, I'll call myself. | ||
There is a Congressman Turner. | ||
Congressman... Ocasio-Cortez! | ||
How did you know to buy all that bacon? | ||
How did you know? | ||
That would be a fascinating study because someone made money. | ||
I'm willing to bet you'll find a lot of people. | ||
So what I would imagine would have happened is that CBS probably did something. | ||
They mentioned in the interview they contacted the White House for comment. | ||
You remember that, right? | ||
Yep. | ||
When Biden mentioned that we would intervene for Taiwan, and we'll get to that in a bit, they said in the video they released after Biden gave this response, we reached out to the White House who said the policy has not changed despite the commander-in-chief saying it did. | ||
Which means they did the interview. | ||
They then called politicians for comments, edited the interview, then put it up. | ||
How much you want to bet? | ||
After he said the pandemic was over, they called. | ||
All it takes is one member of Congress. | ||
They called Pelosi like, what do you think about this as the Speaker? | ||
And she went, oh, is that what he said? | ||
I'll call you back!" | ||
unidentified
|
And then she's like, Honey, you need to sell all of the stocks before the interview comes out! | |
And then Paul does it, and then everyone watching the Nancy Pelosi Stock Tracker sees it. | ||
Yeah, it's down 10% from the 16th to the 8th to the 19th. | ||
It's down 10%. | ||
The NVIDIA? | ||
Moderna. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
NVIDIA? | ||
That's the one that Pelosi- That's a graphics card. | ||
That was the company with the Pelosi insider trading one, yes. | ||
That one also, when they sold it off, was also at a very good time because the stock went down. | ||
There was another piece of news that came out against NVIDIA, which you were describing before, which I thought Ian was talking about. | ||
Yeah, that he sold, surprisingly, he knew to sell right before this news was released. | ||
Exactly. | ||
People were saying he only sold because he wanted to be ethical and wanted to come clean, but he actually sold on a good time, which actually gave him even more money. | ||
But what you guys understand, too, is we often talk about how it's insider trading because they know when to sell, right? | ||
How often do they propose the bills themselves to shift the market? | ||
Like, you could have, you know, a new computer chip, and then they're like, this new computer chip is gonna be bad for my stock, let's put a bill forward that will stop it and give some BS reasons. | ||
Or how often is it like, hey, I just bought a whole bunch of Ben & Jerry's stock, or I guess, what is it, Unilever. | ||
And I want it to go up, so we're gonna do the ice cream tax break stock. | ||
That would be... Intentionally pushing a bill forward to make their stocks go up. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Really definitionally fascist. | ||
They probably do it all the time. | ||
And probably should be felonious. | ||
Yeah, I know, but that's... But how can you prove it? | ||
Well, the New York Times actually found out that it was the committee members using their position on the committees in Congress that voted on particular aspects that changed the business landscape that were enriching themselves the most. | ||
Look at the Inflation Reduction Act that we just passed, and $386 billion goes towards the investment in green tech. | ||
Did anyone who voted for that in committee and who appropriated that number, do they have stock in any of these green companies? | ||
Do they have stock in SharePoint, which makes electric chargers? | ||
Do they have stock in GE, which makes a lot of our wind turbines? | ||
I mean, it's just, if you're going to spend $386 billion, someone is going to make a lot of money off of that. | ||
Didn't they make a bunch of money off the pharmaceutical companies? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Sure. | ||
The pharmaceutical industry created more billionaires than any other industry within the last few years. | ||
But I mean, like, weren't there like a bunch of, it was a big controversy, wasn't it, a bunch of members of Congress? | ||
Sold their stocks right before COVID. | ||
Richard Burr, the senator from North Carolina, that's why he's not running again right now. | ||
You gotta look at Moderna's stock. | ||
In April of 2020, it was $28. | ||
In April of 21, $145. | ||
So up 8, 7 times. | ||
And then it was $450 six months later. | ||
So I mean, that's what is that a 20 times increase in like a year and a half? | ||
This makes me angry. | ||
unidentified
|
You know why? | |
Because I didn't buy it. | ||
Richard Burr from North Carolina. | ||
$28 to turn it to $400. | ||
Richard Burr from North Carolina was the one who probably hit the hardest on that. | ||
I forget who the Democrat was, but he's the Republican. | ||
He's not running for re-elect right now. | ||
He probably could have and would have sailed, but for this. | ||
But he was one of the ones that they said, you had in a skiff, which is a secure compartmentalized secret room to have these confidential meetings. | ||
In a skiff, you had this briefing that same day you made all these purchases and all these sales. | ||
And just like I you know, what was so what's the charge and he just played innocent and Some people and people like you Luke made a big deal out of it and then he decided well I'm not gonna run for reelection next year but there are a lot of senators who you can point to the timeline and say you were in this confidential briefing and you either sold in time because remember this is this is February of 2019 the market the 20 of February of 2020 the markets were roaring and And it's like, but suddenly the markets are exploding and you sold everything, $5 million worth of stock? | ||
And the DOJ drops their investigation into all these people, which is absolutely crazy. | ||
And they start investigating Trump supporters. | ||
Look, actually I think it was fairly obvious the vaccines were going to just skyrocket in stock value. | ||
But you have to be someone who's not only in the know news-wise, you have to have the money, and you have to be knowledgeable in this market space. | ||
So even though we all were tracking the news and knew about the vaccines and stuff, I'm not a day trader, I don't know. | ||
Well, that's why Rand Paul is always beating up Fauci to say, why don't you have to disclose your royalties? | ||
And the answer is, Senator, we don't have to disclose that, and I don't have to tell you. | ||
But you do have to wear two masks! | ||
unidentified
|
Yes! | |
And Rand Paul is like, you don't have to disclose to Congress what your royalties are? | ||
So, you know, who in the CDC made a lot of money off of this? | ||
Because they knew when they were going to approve a vaccine. | ||
If you're, if you're a Tim Pool vaccine approver and you're like, we're going to give these guys the green, green light on Friday. | ||
Hmm. | ||
Maybe do you buy some stock on Thursday? | ||
And when you see it hit its top, these stocks, they, they rocketed to like 20 times their value in March of 21. | ||
And then within like. | ||
20 days they just plummeted. | ||
So somebody was holding some people and they made 20 times their investment and then just sold out on the market. | ||
And what's great is that it dropped and they bought it back up. | ||
What cracks me up is that the members of Congress who do this then hold that guy Martin Shkreli, Farmer Bro, and they were like, how dare you? | ||
How dare you look at yourself? | ||
You should have been like, have you all looked in a mirror? | ||
How much did you guys made during the COVID pandemic? | ||
It's a sham, it's a sham. | ||
Oh, it's absurd. | ||
It's just, it's criminal. | ||
It's, it's God. | ||
That's probably the whole reason they run for office, about a lot of people. | ||
They're like, you get in, you get some insider trading, you get out, you're rich for life. | ||
Paul Pelosi and some members of Congress, they're better stock pickers than Warren Buffett. | ||
They are. | ||
Why wouldn't you work on Wall Street? | ||
Yeah, go work for an investment house. | ||
I mean, you're that good? | ||
And if you have an account on social media that documents all the trades and gives the peasants advice, you get censored. | ||
Your accounts get taken down, which has happened to a number of individuals that literally created accounts about the trading of Nancy Pelosi, which has a better track record than all the other big stock guys out there. | ||
Better than Warren Buffett. | ||
Better than all the top guys that you could even imagine in this field. | ||
How is that possible? | ||
Yeah, it's amazing. | ||
Shout out to my homies at Rumble. | ||
They just went public today. | ||
Tim told me earlier. | ||
And full disclosure, I bought Rumble stock. | ||
I'm not an investment manager. | ||
They did an acquisition. | ||
So it was a SPAC acquisition. | ||
CFVI, I think, merged with Rumble, and now they're trading under RUM. | ||
Well, I don't play inside games. | ||
I'm just letting everyone know ahead of time. | ||
I did buy some of that because I have faith in the future of Rumble. | ||
I bought a bunch. | ||
I don't know if that's necessary to disclose at all. | ||
A hot basket full of Rumble stuff. | ||
I think there's nowhere to go but up with that company. | ||
Literally, like, right before the show, I was just like, I don't know. | ||
Yeah, I think Chris Pavlovsky knows what he's... Well, he's got a lot of good ideas, and I'm really excited to see what they do. | ||
I mean, for... And locals gaming, too. | ||
I'll put it this way, I'll put it this way. | ||
You know, we were in the know when it came to what was going on with the news, and we saw that the vaccines were coming, we knew who was making them, and I don't think anybody here bought any stock in those companies. | ||
No, no. | ||
And I don't think I would have. | ||
Morally, no. | ||
Hell no. | ||
I bought stock in Palantir and I didn't know much about it, but my buddy was like, it's about to skyrocket. | ||
So I bought it and then it went up times 10 and I sold it all. | ||
I remember I sold all of my airline stocks when I was doing the TV show Kennedy on Fox | ||
the night President Trump announced that he was banning air traffic from Europe. | ||
I remember thinking, I'm gonna sell all my airline, because I just had a feeling | ||
this was going in the wrong direction. | ||
And so like, yeah, so I made a great decision, but I probably was three days late. | ||
I'm sure that a lot of people who were in that confidential meeting, | ||
they sold their airline stocks a week before. | ||
This is what I wanted to say about the Moderna stuff is, We're in the know on the news, yet we didn't buy any of | ||
that stuff. | ||
We're in the know on big tech, censorship, and social media, and now Rumble is trading, I think, at like $16. | ||
So my attitude was like, I don't know if it spikes to like $400 or anything crazy like that, because it's not a mandated vaccine or anything, but I bought a bunch because I think it'll go up. | ||
Yeah, it's a company I believe in. | ||
That's why I bought it. | ||
One of the things about finance that I really don't like is that you kind of need to set your morals and ethics aside if you want to make money, and you just know if the war machine's going on that Raytheon is my man for now, and then I'm going to sell it and buy Pfizer, and then I'm out of there. | ||
I'm going to buy some oil and get fracking, I was going to say, because I'm programmed to hate the stuff. | ||
Hey, check the stock on Raytheon or Lockheed when the Ukraine war started. | ||
What, February? | ||
I bet it spiked, right? | ||
I'm sure it did. | ||
But it probably doesn't have as much room to grow because it's already a massive military-industrial company. | ||
When did we go hot in Ukraine? | ||
We just hit six months. | ||
Exactly right, Tim. | ||
It went from, at the end of December it was $82, it was $102 by March. | ||
So up 20%. | ||
What's it at now? | ||
Right now it's sitting at about $88. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, it's come down a little bit. | |
But when the war starts, but that's, what was that, Raytheon? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But are we using, what about Boeing or like Lockheed Martin? | ||
What's another, who's another one? | ||
Northrop Grumman. | ||
Northrop Grumman. | ||
Boeing's actually been up and down and then dropped in May. | ||
Boeing's biggest moneymaker is airlines, airplanes, right? | ||
And airplanes are just getting crushed. | ||
But they're doing the, oh, that's probably why, even if they make drones or whatever. | ||
We also have to understand, normal people. | ||
Northrop exploded in March. | ||
It went from 369 to 450. | ||
More than 80. | ||
How many billions have we given them in warheads? | ||
And it's just gone up since then. | ||
It's at 485 now. | ||
Who should we declare war on next to get more money? | ||
Aliens! | ||
I don't care who, just let me know in advance. | ||
unidentified
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That's all that matters. | |
But again, you won't have an advantage like the politicians have. | ||
And normal people, when they do insider trading, they get arrested. | ||
They face real prosecution. | ||
They face the justice system going down, breathing down their necks, and putting them in jail. | ||
Going down. | ||
I was like, where are you going with that? | ||
unidentified
|
Martha Stewart, head out of the gutter. | |
She's a billionaire. | ||
She went to jail for six months for a $75,000 trade. | ||
Yeah, why aren't these Congress members, why aren't these Senators going to jail for their insider trading? | ||
And then we also have to understand how nasty this is, especially when it comes to so many people struggling financially. | ||
This is a game. | ||
There's winners and there's losers. | ||
They rigged the system, so they are always the winners. | ||
Who's the losers? | ||
Everyone else, all the other peasants, the people who have their retirement accounts in the stock market that, of course, are guaranteed to lose because these people are rigging the game for the benefit of themselves. | ||
So this is absolutely seedy, disgusting behavior, especially when it comes to so many people being poor, so many blue-collar workers being screwed over, and these people are enriching themselves while taking money away from everyone else. | ||
Do you think the lottery is, like, unethical? | ||
Yeah, because most of that money goes to the state and it's and it's taxed and absolutely. | ||
Yeah, I think the tax like what like half almost almost half of it So you're you're literally financing the state through the lotteries legalized. | ||
They call it a poor tax. | ||
Yeah, it's gambling and then you know if a hundred bucks go into the pot 50 bucks goes to the government the 50 bucks goes to the Jack, you know the jackpot and then you pay taxes on that even and Yeah, like the person who won the 1.2 billion dollars, who still hasn't come forward, which is odd, I think they were taking home at the end of the day like 400 million, which is nothing to sneeze at, but basically government stole 800 million dollars from that person. | ||
But then you gotta pay taxes, so it's like, not only is the pot split between the person and the government's cut, but then the money you get actually gets cut again. | ||
It's money out of that world. | ||
So of the 1.2, it was 2.4, half of it had gone to the government and they're getting taxed another 60% or 70. | ||
That's why they were walking away with $400 million because 1.2, right off the bat, you know, half of it goes to education and then you have half and then your half gets cut in half by taxes. | ||
I don't like saying, like, this should be illegal, this should be illegal, but that lottery has really always set me really, really awry. | ||
Let's get back to the 60 Minutes interview. | ||
We have this tweet here from Benny Johnson. | ||
What do you think of people who say you are unfit for the job of president? | ||
Biden says, watch me. | ||
The proof of the pudding is in the eating. | ||
Now, uh, this is a real quote and I think younger people just don't know it because we go by the shorter, the proof is in the pudding. | ||
But the actual old idiom, I guess, is as Biden expressed it. | ||
But it's not, it's not just that. | ||
I want to, I want to play for you this clip and then we will, we will roast Joe Biden. | ||
unidentified
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You are the oldest president ever. | |
Pretty good shape, huh? | ||
Which leads to my next question. | ||
unidentified
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You are more aware of this than anyone. | |
Some people ask whether you are fit for the job. | ||
And when you hear that, I wonder what you think. | ||
Watch me. | ||
Watch me. | ||
I mean, honest to God, that's all I think. | ||
Watch me. | ||
If you think I don't have the energy level or the mental acuity, then, you know, that's one thing. | ||
It's another thing of just watching and, you know, keep my schedule. | ||
unidentified
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What? | |
Do what I'm doing. | ||
I think that, you know, I don't, when I sit down with our NATO allies and keep them together, I don't have them saying, wait a minute, how old are you, what do you want to say? | ||
You know, I mean, it's a matter of, you know, That old expression, the proof of the pudding is in the eating. | ||
I mean, I respect the fact that people would say, you know, you're old. | ||
But I think it relates to how much energy you have and whether or not the job you're doing is one consistent with what any person of any age would be able to do. | ||
How would you say your mental focus is? | ||
Oh, it's focused. | ||
I think it's, I haven't, look, I have trouble even mentioning, even saying to myself in my own head the number of years. | ||
I no more think of myself as being as old as I am than fly. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, it's just not... He is fly. | |
What did he just say? | ||
Okay, he said, I have trouble even mentioning, saying to myself the number of years in my head. | ||
unidentified
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Yep. | |
The number of years of what? | ||
What's he talking about? | ||
How old he is? | ||
I can't believe I'm 75, he wanted to say. | ||
Is that what he's trying to say? | ||
78. | ||
And then he says, I know... What does he say? | ||
I don't think of myself as old as I am, then fly? | ||
Then fly. | ||
At the very beginning, he's like, so people think you're old. | ||
And he was like, looking pretty good, huh? | ||
And then Scott Pelley just looks away. | ||
He can't even look him in the eyes when he says it. | ||
Maybe he's stuck in the 80s. | ||
He's like, I'm pretty fly. | ||
It's like, well, we stopped saying that when like Marky Mark stopped rapping. | ||
This was by no, it's like full defense mode. | ||
He's whining. | ||
He keeps talking like this. | ||
If I talk to you guys like this, it would sound like I was trying to hide something. | ||
If I always talk like this. | ||
It's such an annoying tone. | ||
If somebody, if I was sitting down with an interviewer and they were like, Tim, some people think that you are unfit to host this show. | ||
I'll go, why? | ||
Well, here's what they said. | ||
I'm like, oh, okay. | ||
Well, I disagree. | ||
I don't know what else you want me to say. | ||
The fact that Biden gave all of these answers shows that he knows exactly what his problems are and he has to try and address them in a way or counter them. | ||
Because the reality is he knows exactly why people are saying it. | ||
Thus he gave this long-winded, drawn-out, wishy-washy response that ultimately ended in nonsense. | ||
Yeah, but look at how polite that he gets the open-ended question. | ||
Like, some people are saying this, you know, how does that make you feel? | ||
What would you say in that? | ||
If it was someone who Scott Pelley didn't like, it would be like, why should we believe you when you say you're healthy enough to be president? | ||
Like, why should we trust that you have the mental acuity? | ||
Like, it would be so much more defensive, so much more attacking, but with Biden it's this open-ended thing. | ||
How does that make you feel? | ||
He says, do what I do. | ||
Are you telling the people who think you're unfit to copy your schedule and see if they can do it? | ||
Is that his point? | ||
This is him also allegedly being drugged up because there's some sources, there's some rumors out there that he's being fed a whole bunch of drugs right before these interviews. | ||
And then the interviewer here is still not doing his job. | ||
You counter, be like, seven times five, right now. | ||
Or just look shocked and be like, explain yourself more here, because this absolutely makes no sense at all. | ||
And if there ever was an argument that there is a shadowy, secretive government ruling things behind the scenes, this is it right there. | ||
Just because I recently finished watching Breaking Bad, the instant joke I get is that we should do a gag where it's this interview, and then it cuts to slightly behind the scenes with Walter White being like, Get it right. | ||
Say it. | ||
Biden's all hopped up on blue sky meth. | ||
Biden got these questions ahead of time and then, I assume. | ||
They do all the time. | ||
And then CBS sent this interview to the White House before they aired it to make sure everything was clear. | ||
If the interviewer had actually been like, okay, you're saying you're fine, I'm watching you walk around the Oval Office and you're shuffling left and right and looking like an old man, they would have been like, Interview's over, get them out of here, and they wouldn't have run it. | ||
If this was a real interview, the interview would have been like, you're kidding me, right? | ||
Like, you're joking, right? | ||
Look at the Leslie Stahl interview, also 60 minutes of President Trump, how hostile it was, how nasty. | ||
I mean, it was a vicious interview, because she hates him, and they let their true colors fly. | ||
I tweeted this earlier today, Daniel Turner, Power of the Future, Daniel Turner, PTF on Twitter, I tweeted this earlier today, if you were the President's White House comms team, and it's been 210 days since he's done an interview, and you're like, holy crap, we gotta break the streak. | ||
They chose 60 Minutes and Scott Pelley for a reason, and it's not because they're top-notch journalists. | ||
They wanted softballs. | ||
This is what people need to understand, too. | ||
These interviews have always been selectively edited. | ||
Always. | ||
I love how they like to rag on Project Veritas, like, the video's been selectively edited, and it's like, they're doing an undercover operation. | ||
I do think, in many circumstances, James should publish the raw archives. | ||
Be like, here's our editorial, like, that we published, here's the raw footage, make up your own mind. | ||
I thought one of the most- But this, these interviews, Since the inception of 60 Minutes have always been edited and people don't understand that, I guarantee you, he asks a question. | ||
There are certain points in the interview, because I watched it, where it'll show Joe Biden talking and then it'll cut to Scott Pelley just shaking his head and nodding. | ||
That's a trick so they can edit the audio of Biden. | ||
Without making it seem like they did an edit, because they get a still shot of a solid 30 seconds of Peli, but then they take two 45-second Bidens, mash them together, and put his video over it so you don't see a jump cut. | ||
Thank you for bringing that up, especially when he asked him about Taiwan. | ||
And this is an old thing they used to do in the 80s too, I remember, but I didn't realize it was the media manipulation like you're talking about till today. | ||
He asked him, would you use military troops? | ||
Would you put American troops in Taiwan if China were invaded? | ||
And Biden goes, Yes. | ||
And then Biden starts to clarify, he goes, and then immediately it edits to Scott Pelley and his voice talking over Biden's response to arguably the most important question ever asked of a U.S. | ||
president in the last month or year or whatever. | ||
Of our generation. | ||
Literally, going to war with China. | ||
And it's Scott Pelley talking over Biden's response. | ||
You can't even understand what Biden was saying. | ||
And then it cuts back to Biden saying the end of his response. | ||
And they edited out Biden's response. | ||
People need to get this. | ||
This interview was probably substantially longer and then way cut down. | ||
I guarantee you. | ||
In this video, I'm willing to bet, Biden probably went, and then they were like, okay, we'll cut that out and then we'll get his answer. | ||
Because here's what we know. | ||
We know that when Biden's speaking live, he says things like Nexnel-Ressent, Bata-Kaf-Ker, Tru-Ni-Neh-Neh-Shabba-Da-Pressure, Tru-Ni-Neh-Neh-Shabba-Da-Pressure, what else has he said? | ||
I got those three, there's a few more. | ||
He says things that make no sense. | ||
And he's angry. | ||
And he gets angry. | ||
Very angry. | ||
But here's the important piece. | ||
I will listen to Joe Biden and he'll say something like, you know, we got an economy, man, you gotta short up, strengthen, inflation's bad. | ||
And then you'll read NBC and it'll say, the president said the economy needs to be short up its strength because inflation is getting bad. | ||
And you're like, he did not say that. | ||
Yeah, Daily Wire took a great... You read that one? | ||
Yeah, I don't know where to pull that tweet up. | ||
They gave it a play-by-play. | ||
And I hope, I hope that... Well, I'm glad The Daily Wire understands this. | ||
When you read an article from The Daily Wire, they quote Biden. | ||
And it says, I, I, what's it, you know, well, the economy is dot, dot, dot, and I, they put it all in there. | ||
Yeah, here's the quote, Biden on his mental focus. | ||
Oh, focused, ha ha ha, I'd say it's, it's, it is, I haven't, here, look, I have trouble even mentioning, even saying to myself in my head the number of years. | ||
I no more think of myself being old as I am then, fly. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm older than dirt. | |
I'm fly. I love that he used fly. | ||
It's like fetch. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
I'm surprised that the White House ran that response. | ||
That's insane. | ||
He's not saying I'm fly. | ||
No, but that's how I'm interpreting you. | ||
Oh, right. | ||
I think what he's trying to say is... | ||
I'm older than dirt? | ||
No, no, no. | ||
He's saying... | ||
Let me try and give a different sentence. | ||
He's saying something like, I wouldn't do a backflip as soon as... | ||
He's basically saying, to the same degree of which I fly, | ||
I think of myself as old, which is not. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
That's what he's trying to... Right. | ||
Exactly. | ||
And I'm translating for him. | ||
And now Tim Pool translates Joe Biden. | ||
But this is the point. | ||
The media has to try and decode. | ||
It's like we're sitting in a bunker and we've got like a little wheel. | ||
We're spinning it like, I'm trying to figure out what he's saying. | ||
It's like, I can't figure it out. | ||
Can you play the fly part again? | ||
Just the part where he says, I no longer think of me being... Focus is. | ||
Oh, it's focused. | ||
Hold on a minute. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I got to stop right there. | ||
How's your mental focus? | ||
It's focused. | ||
Exactly. | ||
There's a cut there. | ||
There's a cut there. | ||
Hold on. | ||
Let me play the question again. | ||
How would you say your mental focus is? | ||
Oh, it's focused. | ||
I believe, he said, how would you say your mental focus is? | ||
There was some kind of back and forth, and then they edited that response in, because it's focused. | ||
What did the subject change to when he said that question? | ||
Because the subject was Biden. | ||
He's referring to himself as it, or his mental focus as it? | ||
No, no, mental focus was the subject, or he was the subject. | ||
So we wouldn't say my, when he says it, he's saying my mental focus is focused. | ||
Yeah, but he was the subject, not the focus. | ||
You're right. | ||
So he's calling himself it. | ||
No, they edited something out of there. | ||
Let's play more. | ||
I think it's, I haven't, look, I have trouble even mentioning, even saying to myself in my own head the number of years. | ||
I no more think of myself as being as old as I am than fly. | ||
I think I get it now. | ||
When he said the years, there's a missing context. | ||
They edited out a chunk of that. | ||
I think you're right. | ||
When he said, I have trouble mentioning, saying even myself the number of years. | ||
They must have had a back and forth following up on what the question was, confusing Biden. | ||
Mentioned something about, well, you know, you've been in for how many years, right? | ||
So you've been in for 50 some odd years. | ||
So how would you say, how would you say it's going? | ||
And then, well, it's focused, you know? | ||
And I know more, I have trouble mentioning myself the number of years. | ||
The context of where the years fits into this conversation makes no sense. | ||
It's not his age, it's how long he's been working at this, it sounds like to me. | ||
It sounds like they cut out a huge chunk of this, and Biden was probably rambling in there. | ||
That's why the White House okayed that response, because it was the best they got out of that response. | ||
Because, how's your mental focus? | ||
It's focused. | ||
It's not something you want someone to respond. | ||
It makes no sense! | ||
Yeah, so I don't think I'm too old to do this job anymore than I think I can fly? | ||
Is that what he was going to say? | ||
Something like that? | ||
Or I don't think I'm... He's saying, like, I don't think of myself as... He's basically saying, I think of myself as old as often as I fly. | ||
Which is never. | ||
Gotcha. | ||
But it's confusing because he flies in planes all the time. | ||
So it's like, are you talking about flapping your wings? | ||
Like, you know, when I first heard that I had to sit down and actually I'm like looking at the quote and transcript. | ||
First you read the transcript and you're like, this makes no sense. | ||
I have no idea what he's trying to convey. | ||
Then you hear him say it and you go, wait, hold on. | ||
When I saw the first transcript, it was T-H-E-N. | ||
Then I saw The Daily Wire write T-H-A-N. | ||
And I'm like, this guy's out of his mind. | ||
Is Tham fly a thing we don't know about? | ||
Is there a Tham fly? | ||
So it's then or than. | ||
Than fly. | ||
Like he's saying, I think of myself as old as often as I fly. | ||
Now if he says this, and the five of us sitting around this table who are all fairly intelligent are struggling, the beginning of his comment he talks about, look, when I sit down with the NATO partners, imagine what they're really thinking, like, what, are we going to war? | ||
He went to the G7 and he said, we're going after Libya, Libya, Libya, and everybody did go, what? | ||
When is this happening? | ||
Oh, did he mean Syria? | ||
Syria, Libya. | ||
And I tell people, when they try and downplay this stuff, the severity of it is, Joe Biden's going to be in the Situation Room and he's going to be like, so give me the brief. | ||
And they're going to be like, we've got, you know, Baghdadi, we've got these guys, we've got this guy, here's the region they're moving in. | ||
And the Middle East and North Africa, it's a large swath of territory that has overlap between some of these groups. | ||
and he's gonna go, we need to get a missile strike in Libya. | ||
And they'll be like, the Libyan target? | ||
I'll be like, yeah, yeah, Libya. | ||
And they'll go, well, the problem is centered over here and I said Libya and they'll go, okay. | ||
They'll go to the generals and be like, he wants to strike and move in on Libya | ||
and they're gonna be like, why? | ||
What, nothing's happening now, but this is what the commander in chief has ordered. | ||
Now, I don't think they would actually follow through because I think the White House has gone rogue. | ||
Let's jump to this next story, and I'll tell you, but I'll wrap up that thought. | ||
Basically, imagine a circumstance where they go, you got a boss, and then all of a sudden you got terrorists outside of Syria, and then Libya is being bombed repeatedly. | ||
Well, a situation like that is like, go get him, go kick his door down, go to Donald Trump's house and get blah blah. | ||
Like these erratic, you know, almost nonsensical moves are like really intense, weird, out of the sideways things, and they will go for it sometimes. | ||
So you're saying the raid on Trump was actually a... It could have been like an old man anger rage thing. | ||
It was an, oh, won't someone rid me of this priest? | ||
I don't know. | ||
He says he didn't know anything about it beforehand. | ||
unidentified
|
He's like, Donald Trump, somebody got a raid at his house. | |
Take some documents from him. | ||
He says, go get them. | ||
I don't care what about the borders or the means. | ||
Justify the ends. | ||
Justify the ends. | ||
So here's where we go. | ||
Check it out. | ||
We got this story. | ||
It's an update. | ||
China lodges complaint after Biden says U.S. | ||
would defend Taiwan in a Chinese invasion. | ||
So this is it. | ||
I'm going to say this first and foremost. | ||
The White House has gone rogue. | ||
Now, I know. | ||
Hold on. | ||
We just had a long segment talking about how Biden's brain is completely broken. | ||
And so you would assume the White House must do something to stop a Mad King, right? | ||
You know, like, uh, what was it, Robert Baratheon? | ||
He was the one who slayed the Mad- No, no, no, I'm sorry, that's not true. | ||
That was, um, it was Lannister. | ||
Jamie Lannister. | ||
Jamie Lannister killed the Mad King. | ||
Because the Mad King was nuts! | ||
And he regretted it and he felt bad about it. | ||
What is it, A.S. | ||
Targaryen? | ||
What was that his name? | ||
unidentified
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I don't know. | |
It was the Targaryen. | ||
The Mad King. | ||
And so here we have Joe Biden, who I don't think mad is the right word. | ||
What's the right word? | ||
The daft? | ||
The diluted? | ||
Dotard. | ||
The dotard king. | ||
And so the White House is basically Intervening and rejecting and denying the stated policies of the commander-in-chief. | ||
Now, here's what I'm going to say. | ||
The executive branch has gone completely rogue. | ||
I firmly believe that. | ||
I was thinking about this today because Joe Biden has now said four times, it is the U.S. | ||
policy, four times, to militarily defend Taiwan. | ||
And every time he does, the White House goes, actually, that's not true. | ||
And it's like, well, I don't know who the spokesperson is, but the commander-in-chief just went to a press conference in Tokyo and said, we will. | ||
And the president, commander-in-chief, just went in 60 minutes and said, this is our policy. | ||
And when Scott Pelley said, you saying the US Army would defend, he goes, yes. | ||
Definitively, when the president says it, the duly elected commander-in-chief, that is the policy. | ||
He sets the policy. | ||
The White House intervened and says, no, it isn't. | ||
The DOJ intervenes. | ||
They do what they want. | ||
Look at Donald Trump. | ||
This has been happening under Trump and Biden. | ||
Plain as day, the executive branch has gone rogue. | ||
Under Donald Trump, they lied to him about the number of troops in Syria, rejecting his orders to get our troops out. | ||
Under Joe Biden, he is stating definitively over and over again our policies. | ||
Our position on Putin? | ||
No, they said that's not true. | ||
Our position on Taiwan? | ||
No, it's not true. | ||
If the president says it, you listen. | ||
Who is the person under Trump and now under Biden, who are the people who are outright saying we will not listen to the commander-in-chief? | ||
Yeah, no, it's more than more than one look at Deborah Birx right when she was going back to kovat stuff and in her book She talks about how yeah, I wouldn't give Trump those numbers. | ||
Yeah, I wouldn't I wouldn't share that data Like I wasn't gonna share it with them because it would have screwed everything up So she made a decision that I don't have to tell the president so he can make decisions I'm more powerful than the president and I think at every policy issue There's someone who calls those shots, but the clean house has to be here But there's no coincidence, especially when you look at the presidency when it changes from Democratic to Republican. | ||
The national security state, American foreign policy, usually stays the same. | ||
It's usually very hawkish, it's very neoconservative, it's very pro-war, and it's very pro-globalization, pro-IMF, World Bank policies that of course are spreading all this globalization around the world. | ||
What I think is happening here, if I could put on my conspiratorial hat, is that they literally wheel Biden into an interview, which he does very few of, and then they wheel him off after they take him off all the drugs, they put him at a table, just like a Fisher-Price table, and it has a button, it has a phone, but none of it actually works. | ||
And there's people behind the scenes truly calling the shots, just like they do in almost every other presidency. | ||
And Biden legitimately could be pressing the nuke button, could be calling people, talking to people, but it's all make-pretend. | ||
It's all make-believe. | ||
It's not real. | ||
And the people truly calling the shots are people who have more power than the president of the United States. | ||
And they probably meet in private, organize, and set policies that, of course, we've been following for many decades now that always go unquestioned. | ||
That every president promises to change when he's going to become president. | ||
Every president when he runs on that campaign trail says, I'm going to stop the wars, I'm going to stop the spying, I'm going to bring back American liberties, I'm going to bring back America, and none of them are able to do it. | ||
I love the idea of, this is a skit for you Tim, I love the idea of a president with his fake Phone is fake buttons that when he calls and he's like get me the president of France and it's like do you French accent French accent? | ||
It's like we miss you president. | ||
unidentified
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This isn't it? | |
Like give me Germany. | ||
It's like who does German who does German? | ||
unidentified
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Uh, I this is the German prime minister. | |
It's like this one guy The president of Germany Hello, this is president of Germany. Why do you sound | ||
unidentified
|
Russian? | |
Regarding whether or not Joe Biden is the president of the Congo. It's like no man. I'm not | ||
What other evidence do you need than the current president of the United States to understand that there's a shadowy | ||
secretive group early Kong's The things behind the scenes | ||
What other evidence do you need? | ||
It's not even a secret! | ||
It's not a secret! | ||
Under Donald Trump, they outright lied and blocked him from doing the things he ordered. | ||
Yeah, if I went on CBS as the president and made a statement about my political agenda and then someone in my administration came out and secretly countered it, I'd fire them. | ||
That moment. | ||
You're fired. | ||
Seriously! | ||
Trump said he was going to release the JFK documents. | ||
He didn't do it. | ||
He couldn't do it because there was someone above him who said, no, you're not. | ||
unidentified
|
It's one of the reasons why I love You say yeah? | |
You said lizard person? | ||
unidentified
|
No, I didn't say yeah to that. | |
The person I'm most excited about running for office right now is running in Washington State, Dan Crenshaw. | ||
But one of the things that got him to run was that his wife was in Syria when they lied about the numbers. | ||
Dan Crenshaw? | ||
I'm sorry, Dan Crenshaw. | ||
Dan Crenshaw. | ||
I can't believe I said Dan Crenshaw. | ||
Joe Kent. | ||
Joe Kent. | ||
And his wife was one of the ones who died because they lied to him when Trump was like, what's going on in Syria? | ||
And they were like, just tell him this. | ||
unidentified
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Tell him this. | |
I wasn't on that show. | ||
And it's like his wife was one of the ones who died because they lied to him when Trump | ||
was like, what's going on in Syria? | ||
And they were like, just tell him this, tell him this, tell him this. | ||
They lie. | ||
And so Joe Kennedy's like, you guys killed my wife because you're more powerful than | ||
President Trump? | ||
Bill Gates, by the way, is bragging today. | ||
Bill Gates came out on MSNBC. | ||
They were playing a video clip of him, and he says, you know, the President of the United States, Donald Trump at the time, came to me. | ||
He asked to be an advisor. | ||
I said no. | ||
And then Donald Trump asked me if I needed to do an independent commission on the effects of vaccines. | ||
Bill Gates says he told them to absolutely not to do it, not to do it because it was a quote dead end and the President of the United States listened to him and listened to the advice of Bill Gates and didn't do a commission investigation into what's really happening right now and now the data is still being hidden away from everyone with the FDA hiding information about what actually happened and transpired within the last few years, which is absolutely crazy. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And it's got to be all financially, going back to this issue of the stocks, it's all financial incentives. | ||
It's not just because people like, I believe so passionately about Syria that I'm going to lie about the data. | ||
It's like, no, like you're doing this because you have ulterior motives. | ||
We've got, we call it a cult, but it's mass formation psychosis. | ||
Well, here's, I'm looking at the definition of madness, a state of severe mental illness, not non-technical. | ||
So you could argue that Biden's in a state of madness right now, that he's the mad president or a mad president. | ||
Behavior of thinking that is very foolish or dangerous. | ||
Yeah, but... Saying that we're going to invade Taiwan when apparently the White House's statement is... Invade Taiwan? | ||
Right, right. | ||
Defend Taiwan. | ||
Send troops there against the will of the people. | ||
No, Taiwan wants us to defend it. | ||
If they want us, then it wouldn't be an invasion, but if they didn't ask for it and we went there to defend democracy, then it would technically be a counter-invasion. | ||
Unless you think it is China, then we are invading. | ||
Uh, and so apparently the policy is we're not going to mention it, but he mentioned it anyway, so that's a state of foolish or dangerous thinking. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Well, look, look, look. | ||
The problem here is I think a lot of people recognized that it was dangerous what Biden said, that he's risking World War III. | ||
I think the Hodge twins said grandpa's about to get us into World War III. | ||
And I thought about it. | ||
I'm like, yeah, but Trump had that phone call where he was like, they thought we would nuke them. | ||
If they took Russia, if Russia took Ukraine, or China took Taiwan. | ||
And it's like, I don't know, they believe me, but maybe 5%. | ||
So it was enough. | ||
And I'm like, that's that's crazy and scary. | ||
But see, that's Trump being like, that level of aggression. | ||
So my issue here is not that Joe Biden said we will defend Taiwan. | ||
I actually can respect that. | ||
Because when he was asked about twice, he goes, Yes. | ||
Like definitively, no question. | ||
My problem is somebody in the White House is defying him and trying to assert some kind | ||
of authority over his stated policy positions. | ||
And is super pro-China. | ||
This entire White House is. | ||
And I always have to go back to environmental issues, but if you really want to defend Taiwan | ||
so sincerely from an invasion of China, then you would be seeking policies that weaken China. | ||
And yet we're spending $386 billion to buy solar panels and wind turbines from China. | ||
And lithium batteries. | ||
And lithium, exactly. | ||
Our whole policy is pro-China. | ||
And we gave them Afghanistan. | ||
We literally gave them Afghanistan on a silver platter and all the raw minerals. | ||
As soon as the United States military left, the Chinese engineers and the Chinese companies came right in. | ||
And now we're going to be going through a green revolution, going to be energy independent. | ||
We're not going to be independent. | ||
We're just buying lithium batteries from China. | ||
China, that of course, has record CO2 emissions. | ||
They're doing this to help the environment. | ||
The environment's going to be screwed over even more, allegedly, according to their own But what's going to change is we're going to be investing in China, and China is going to be controlling our energy sector, which is crazy. | ||
Going to be? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And we're removing tariffs from China. | ||
If we move away from fossil fuels and we go towards lithium batteries and solar panels, China essentially will have a control on the market. | ||
They don't have it yet because of fossil fuels. | ||
The petrodollar has the control on the market, but China will have a huge control. | ||
Thanks for the plug. | ||
Elon also has mentioned that lithium's not the future of battery power. | ||
He knows that as well. | ||
I don't know the story pulled up about it. | ||
Graphene, maybe. | ||
He actually has recently been looking into graphene batteries. | ||
Oh, wow, yeah, graphene. | ||
Yeah, graphene. | ||
Power of the future. | ||
With graphene. | ||
When I was in Texas doing this youth conference, because there were a bunch of rural folks, and I love rural America, and we talked about the Ford F-150, the lightning one, and I just told them about how a Wall Street Journal guy was driving it with an empty two-horse trailer, and after 100 miles, the battery was dead. | ||
And I was like, how many of you haul 15? | ||
The electric one. | ||
The electric one. | ||
Empty two-horse trailer, a hundred miles dead. | ||
And I was like, how many of you haul 15,000, 20,000 pounds of cattle on a weekly basis? | ||
And so, you know, so of course Elon knows the future of lithium is, it doesn't have the horsepower. | ||
It doesn't have the strength. | ||
It doesn't, that's why, you know, and it's cool. | ||
And that's why little Duracells are great. | ||
And that's why batteries in your iPhones are great. | ||
But to compare just the potential energy of what is needed to power elevators and to power airplanes, you know, just it's, well, It's nonsensical and it's moving towards a pathway where of course they will be limiting people's movement and that is the endgame towards the green revolution that we're going towards. | ||
It's the thing behind the screen, it's behind the cover, that's essentially where we're heading towards. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
So there's this story that I'm seeing going around. | ||
They're saying that Ram's gonna drop the EcoDiesel V6 or whatever. | ||
So a lot of people are, it's 33 miles per gallon, it's the Ram TurboDiesel 3 liter V6 or whatever. | ||
A lot of people are bringing this up because, you know, Ram's gonna be moving forward with like an electric truck of some sort, but you were just talking about how it went 100 miles and then died. | ||
Yeah, so I mean if you need to haul anything of weight you're as of now the electric vehicles can't make it They may revolutionize electric cars and electric trucks someday and the future is bright We may get there, but the fact of the matter is we're not there so if you think I'm just gonna get my electric truck and And do what I do with my fossil fuel truck. | ||
You're kidding yourself. | ||
You can't haul substantial weight. | ||
The same reason why when they said we finally got this airplane to fly from JFK to France on battery power or on solar panels, I was like, yeah, it was unmanned and it had nothing but batteries. | ||
It was a toy, you know? | ||
You just can't compete with the actual energy released from the hydrocarbons of fossil fuels. | ||
You can't. | ||
Nuclear could. | ||
They're saying with Motor Trend writes the 2024 Ram 1500 electric vehicle is going to get 500 miles to the charge or whatever. | ||
200 kilowatt hours provide a promised 500 miles of range and the 800 volt architecture will speed up the fast charging. | ||
Yeah, I don't think it's going to work out. | ||
Put some weight in it. | ||
Yeah, so people need to understand this, too, because Luke knows this. | ||
We have Teslas. | ||
You put weight in those things, those batteries go down quick. | ||
Fill the back of that with a couple of round bales of hay and now do it in February. | ||
Especially when it's cold, which has a direct effect on the batteries, which is a negative one. | ||
What are they thinking with this stuff? | ||
They're not thinking. | ||
It's all Biden money. | ||
It's all Biden money. | ||
It's all investment into foreign globalist corporations that, of course, are going to be giving you a product that doesn't work half as good, that is meant to, of course, deny you the ability to move. | ||
That's essentially what they're doing here. | ||
Electric trucks. | ||
Man, that's a crazy concept. | ||
But I'm willing to bet Tesla will do it better, to be honest. | ||
Yeah, they're moving away from it. | ||
Didn't they create, like, a semi-truck? | ||
Tesla? | ||
Yeah, didn't they have something like that? | ||
They had a cyber truck. | ||
No, they had the cyber truck, but they had another big one that's going to be automated, but also the automation and the self-driving is also going to have a huge, vast effect on humanity as well. | ||
Fast charging is bad. | ||
For the battery. | ||
Yeah, it's really bad for the battery. | ||
You get warnings. | ||
Tesla has only let you charge by default up to 80% unless you manually override. | ||
And if you're doing standard charging, which is like 10% of the speed, then you can go up to 90%. | ||
But so, what is it like? | ||
What does it add, Luke? | ||
Like 10 miles per hour or something? | ||
A standard charge? | ||
I'm not sure the exact... I think it's 40. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I think, because I've got a Tesla plug, and I think it gives you 40 miles of range every hour. | ||
So you use that car for one day for errands, and you've got to plug it in for several hours. | ||
You go to the supercharger, it'll be done in 20 minutes, but it damages the battery and warns you to only go up to 80%. | ||
Now imagine you're in a truck, and imagine you're in a Ram 1500. | ||
How much weight do you think a 1500 normally would be towing? | ||
Oh, gosh, that thing isn't more than four tons. | ||
I can't imagine. | ||
Four tons? | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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Wow. | |
1500? | ||
Yeah, I don't think it could weigh more than that. | ||
But I mean, like, regularly. | ||
I mean, people in the chat probably know. | ||
Like, what's the amount of weight? | ||
Probably two tons. | ||
It depends on the hardware underneath that we can't even mention on this YouTube channel. | ||
The hardware? | ||
The hardware underneath the truck that we can't say on this YouTube channel. | ||
unidentified
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What? | |
Get it? | ||
Get it? | ||
The transmission! | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
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What a world, dude. | |
What a world! | ||
But no, no, no, of course, of course. | ||
But my question is just like, if somebody buys a Ram 1500, they're not going to be hauling commercially. | ||
I mean, it's going to be for what, like semi-personal, semi-professional? | ||
Yeah, this says here approximately 990 to 2,000 pounds. | ||
Right, right. | ||
So that's it. | ||
Wow. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
unidentified
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1500. | |
That's nothing. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, wow. | |
I didn't think it was going to be that crazy. | ||
That's a 2014 Dodge Ram. | ||
Okay, well that's old. | ||
It could probably do way better these days. | ||
So if you're getting the electric one, they're expecting it to pull that much. | ||
If you think you're getting 500 miles of range on that battery, and then don't expect to do any weekend work jobs, because you've got to stop that thing, plug it in for five hours. | ||
And don't go up any hills. | ||
And don't do it in winter. | ||
Like if you charge your battery and you just let it sit, how long does it stay charged? | ||
That's a good question on an electric car. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Tesla owners, if you plug in your Tesla and it's fully charged and you unplug it and you just let it sit, does it last for a day, two days, five days, a week? | ||
I filled up my gas tank like a year ago and I haven't moved my car and it's still got like... | ||
Well, gas goes bad too, and your car battery goes bad as well. | ||
Yeah, the car is totally defunct. | ||
It just sits there. | ||
I think it's like 10 to 15% per day, depending if you have sentry mode on. | ||
So you lose about 10 to 15% per day. | ||
And it's connected to the internet. | ||
It's got a cell signal, but it doesn't get that much battery at all. | ||
So how would we make a nuclear power truck? | ||
How would we do that? | ||
That's what I love about Back to the Future, remember? | ||
He comes back, Doc comes back at the end and he's got Mr. Fission in the back of the DeLorean, right? | ||
And he's putting in all the food scraps. | ||
Why are we not there? | ||
What if we made like a nuclear-powered steam train? | ||
You know? | ||
I just put water in it and it just goes. | ||
The Navy has all nuclear-powered ships. | ||
Nuclear is not legal for commercial or private use, but the military uses it. | ||
All the aircraft carriers, submarines are all nuclear-powered. | ||
Why can't, if you want to go on carnival cruise from here to Jamaica, why can't you take a nuclear-powered cruise ship? | ||
And you're like, well, it's dangerous. | ||
Well, you let the poor 18-year-old farm boy from Iowa get on a nuclear-powered ship and he goes around the world. | ||
So I don't know why they don't all have nuclear power. | ||
You wouldn't need that much nuclear material. | ||
You know how they would shovel the coal? | ||
Make a steam engine work? | ||
Just put, you know, a couple of nuclear rods in there and it's good for a really long time. | ||
I guess it's just remarkably dangerous. | ||
The size of those tankers that bring all of our crap from China, right? | ||
Those things that are the size of five football fields and they've got 40,000... Imagine if they were nuclear powered. | ||
How much greener for the earth to not burn hundreds of thousands of gallons of diesel? | ||
But they're not allowed to be nuclear powered. | ||
But they go in international waters. | ||
What if they made, like, nuclear auto ferries that stopped before they get to territorial waters and then switch to gas? | ||
They should. | ||
For some reason, right now, only military is allowed to have nuclear power. | ||
If you have a little fancy yacht, you should have a small nuclear engine. | ||
I should have a nuclear reactor in my backyard. | ||
You should have one. | ||
It's like Fallout. | ||
You ever play the Fallout games? | ||
It's what everybody had. | ||
Their cars were nuclear, so in the game they explode, which makes no sense for nuclear power. | ||
No. | ||
But people think, like, nuke means bomb, so, you know. | ||
Exactly. | ||
And it's the exact same technology, also. | ||
They're a little small, except they just build a big wall around it so that the explosion is contained. | ||
That's how nuclear power works. | ||
I'm joking. | ||
It's not how it works. | ||
What's the end result of this? | ||
People talk about how Tesla cars can be remote-controlled and all that stuff. | ||
It's like, oh, you buy the electric vehicle, they're not gonna let you charge. | ||
And I'm like, they can just shut your gas station down. | ||
Like, if they can stop you from charging your car, they can just shut down the gas station. | ||
I mean, if they don't want you driving, you're not driving. | ||
Yeah, if the power goes out of the gas station, the pumps don't work. | ||
Right, exactly. | ||
So, people are like, in California it said, don't charge your electric car, and it's like, and? | ||
Well, I think the biggest difference, and this is where I agree with you 100%, for good, the fossil fuel industry is still in private hands. | ||
If you need gas, you're not dependent upon, now your government can shut it down, true, but the government doesn't provide you with gas. | ||
The government doesn't produce it, they don't manufacture it, they don't refine it, it's in the hands of the private sector. | ||
The government, for good or for ill, I would think for ill, the government does provide your power. | ||
Absolutely ill. | ||
The government does provide your power, and so if what charges your vehicle is gas and it's free, or it's electricity and it's government, then you're in the hands of the government. | ||
unidentified
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100%. | |
And that is a scary, scary prospect. | ||
They're like, well, I'll just put solar panels around my house. | ||
But, you know, solar does not generate enough electricity to charge your car. | ||
I'm going to build a sail car. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Just, well, they work as well as wind turbines. | ||
I'm gonna build a Flintstone car and then beat all of you guys. | ||
But now, also, another layer to understand here, with smart meters and smart grids and smart cities, they'll be able to calculate what you used your electricity for, since everything is connected to Wi-Fi, everything's connected to the Internet. | ||
And just like they start denying drones access to particular territory, they could do the same thing with electric vehicles that, of course, have cameras inside of cars, watch your every move, and, of course, could control and database you on such a level where you could literally be brought to a police station if you commit a thought crime inside of your Tesla. | ||
The Tesla will automatically snitch on you to the central controllers. | ||
The central controllers will literally drive you to the gulag. | ||
You don't have enough credit. | ||
Yeah, you have no social credit. | ||
You didn't do enough good deeds. | ||
No, you used too much carbon. | ||
Too much carbon. | ||
The endgame here is also a social credit carbon score that, of course, the World Economic Forum has been talking about. | ||
They just released an article talking about how great was it for people to be locked down during the last two and a half years and how that gives us hope to lock people down for a new social carbon credit score that they're going to be implementing. | ||
And it gives them the possibility to do this as they were celebrating the previous lockdowns, looking for future lockdowns that they want to put on you, and they can only put them on you if you, of course, acquiesce and comply with this utter nonsense that they have already put us through within the last few years. | ||
Well, that's why a lot of the Greens keep talking about climate change as a public health emergency. | ||
Exactly. | ||
But as soon as you compare it to COVID, then you can use the same protocols of COVID. | ||
And the Greens have wanted to do, heck, the Greens have wanted to make meat illegal for 40 years, right? | ||
They want to make, the Greens are so envious. | ||
I wrote an article about this a couple of months ago about COVID envy. | ||
The Greens look at the COVID people and like, how did you guys do this in a couple of months? | ||
We've tried for 40 years to get people to not go to church. | ||
But under COVID, it was like, whoop, sorry, churches are closed. | ||
Just think about the kind of person that would try to forcefully take away your steak. | ||
Have you ever had a good tenderloin? | ||
unidentified
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It's amazing. | |
It's Beyond Meat is just as good. | ||
Ask Bill Gates! | ||
He also did that freaky 60 Minutes interview where he talked about how it was just as good with Anderson Cooper. | ||
Just as good. | ||
And guess who owns all like the Beyond Meat factory freak show world? | ||
Or who buys up all the farmland and says you can't produce cows anymore? | ||
And has man bazongas out there in the general public and is clearly a very unhealthy individual! | ||
Didn't Elon Musk post a pregnant man meme? | ||
Exactly! | ||
I made a t-shirt out of it and it's one of our bestsellers and it absolutely is true! | ||
I went to the Frederick County Fair this past weekend, and I love the county fairs. | ||
They're amazing. | ||
The Frederick one's really big, because Frederick's like, I think, 300,000 people or some massive city. | ||
And they had chickens. | ||
You get to go in, and there's animals all over. | ||
And there were bunnies, and the bantams are always just so funny. | ||
And there were chickens, and the chickens... None of them looked anywhere near as cool as our chickens, for real. | ||
Like, I looked at the Brahmas, I was like, they got nothing on Sarah. | ||
But I just think about that, how it is not difficult to have chickens, right? | ||
Even if you want to live sustainably, you get chickens, all you have to do is protect them. | ||
They just eat. | ||
They walk around, they eat grass, they eat bugs, they eat. | ||
Then there's berries and there's other stuff. | ||
They just eat all day, nonstop. | ||
You don't got to do anything. | ||
You just fence them off and make sure nothing kills them. | ||
And then the best part is you can eat their babies. | ||
Like, well, you can eat the babies before they're babies. | ||
You don't want to eat the baby chicks. | ||
And then you can eat them when it's time to eat them. | ||
Why take that away and make us eat crickets? | ||
When you can literally just have the chickens eat the crickets and then you get the chicken meat and the eggs and their feet. | ||
You can eat all the chicken parts. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
And then you can even use chicken bones and whatever for whatever it is you want to do. | ||
I don't know. | ||
You can make a little car out of them or something. | ||
Yeah, the fascination with crickets, I see all the videos all the time, the images of all the cricket snacks. | ||
We had, one of the times I was here with that awesome Canadian, Keean. | ||
Keean Beckstein. | ||
Right, he's big into all the different cricket manufacturers and cricket and I hope Keean's watching. | ||
Keean Beckstein, I follow him on Twitter. | ||
But he was big into all the companies that make cricket food. | ||
Have you ever looked at the sodium levels of fake meat? | ||
I was probably through the roof. Lethal. Like it's it's crazy. I was looking at I think I can't remember which fake | ||
meat company It was but the sodium it was like one burger patty was like | ||
73% of your daily sodium intake because it tastes like crap Yeah, now look I don't mind some of I don't mind veggie | ||
burgers like a black bean burger can be very good. Oh Ah, they're delicious! | ||
Quinoa burger I've had, those are fine. | ||
I love, you know, and it's its own thing. | ||
You get like a quinoa black bean with like peas or whatever, and then you can put like onions. | ||
It's good when it's meant to be good. | ||
But sometimes you want hard protein. | ||
You want just to get some protein. | ||
Maybe you're trying to get all ripped like, you know, Hemsworth. | ||
You gotta eat a lot of fish, and you gotta eat a lot of chicken. | ||
And beef is okay. | ||
I don't like to eat too much beef, because it's rough, it's tough. | ||
Chicken and fish is really, really great. | ||
But they're taking all of that away. | ||
Why fish? | ||
Get a pond, throw fish in it, and then make sure you're not eating too much of it. | ||
But they're literally like, despite the fact that it's easily possible to have sustainable farms for yourself and a homestead, they're like, no, no, no, no, you should eat the bugs. | ||
Nothing is better for those farmers who are watching also than a pig, because the pig eats the chicken. | ||
Have you ever seen a pig eat everything? | ||
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I watched a pig eat a chicken bone, and it just shatters that in one bite. | |
If you fall in a pig trough while pigs are eating, and your hand is in the way, watch out. | ||
Not to say that they're violent like that, but if they are eating and you put your hand there, sorry. | ||
Watch your hand, buddy. | ||
Um, I want to make a pig horror movie. | ||
Let's do it. | ||
We got a budget. | ||
Who wants to make a- I'm sure there's many. | ||
And it'd be like, like the pigs cometh. | ||
And it'll be like, a bunch of hogs break out of a pig farm. | ||
A bunch of people in New York State that only have five rounds in their magazine, and there's like 50, 50 hogs. | ||
And they're like, no! | ||
No, let's do it! | ||
Let's do it! | ||
Let's do it, let's make a comedy horror where it's like New York City, a pig farm just north of New York City erupts and there's like a thousand pigs that rampage through the city and no one has any weapons so it's just like people running and the pigs are like Oh, and they would eat so well in New York City because there are so many homeless and drug addicts just like sleeping on the street. | ||
The pigs, when they get so fat, they wouldn't be able to be violent after a while. | ||
It'd be funny if like we do a parody film that's like meant to be silly, but then it turns out to be so good that it spawns like an AMC drama series that lasts like six seasons, becomes like multiple movies in a universe. | ||
The pig cometh cinematic universe. | ||
Andrew plug. | ||
I'm gonna write that down. | ||
No plugging here. | ||
Andrew's my husband and I want to talk about pigs. | ||
He's Australian and Australian Outback. | ||
You're husband and you want to talk about pigs. | ||
What are you saying about pigs? | ||
Because in Australia they hunt wild boar and they would do it for fun because Australians are all a | ||
little crazy. | ||
They would do it without any weapons. | ||
They would just use dogs. | ||
And their dogs were so well trained that they knew which ear to grab, and if they grabbed the wrong one, they would switch. | ||
So I'm the left ear, I'm the right ear. | ||
And Andrew will tell you, if you just get a pig from the behind, any farmer knows this, pigs can't turn around. | ||
You just have to grab its hind legs. | ||
And I'm like, so this is a wild pig with two dogs on its ears, and you would just grab its leg? | ||
Yeah, you grab its leg, and you pull out your knife, and you And he says it with an Australian accent, which I'm not going to imitate, and you pull out your knife and you just stab it in the neck. | ||
And I'm like, Australians are crazy. | ||
Australians are very weird. | ||
No, hey, legit, I want to make a pig horror movie. | ||
Pig horror movie. | ||
So make it Australian. | ||
But look, that's a really good idea. | ||
The conflict should be that people can only have three rounds in their magazines. | ||
And most don't even have guns, because people who live there tend not to, like in New York, don't have them. | ||
And so then, like, the superhero turns out to be some, like, he's a big, fat, redneck guy with a MAGA hat, and he's got, like, a 100-round drum, and he's like, I'll save ya. | ||
And then he goes to the city, just mowing down pigs. | ||
And they team up with all the gangbangers, and the gangbangers and the MAGA people come together, and they fight off the Monsanto pig invasion. | ||
Oh, dude, I legit wanna make it. | ||
How much money do we need to make something like that? | ||
That would be an amazing movie. | ||
You guys know it. | ||
New York doesn't have enough guns for the pigs, probably. | ||
Six million?! | ||
I mean, it'd be really good for six million. | ||
With the pigs, though. | ||
Unless we did, like, really crappy CGI pigs. | ||
I just saw a pig trap where they get, like, these big cylindrical wire, like, gates that are hanging in the air, and then the... | ||
20 pigs go in, like feral pigs, and they throw all this food in there, and all these pigs come in, they start eating the food, and then the wire things just drop and hit the ground, and they encase like 40, and trap like 40 hogs at a time. | ||
Because the whole thing, going out there and killing them one by one, is you can't stop the spread of the pig. | ||
Because they keep breeding the ones that survive. | ||
And we have a huge feral pig problem in this country. | ||
I'm sure a lot of the listeners who are from that part of the world, and every time there's an AR story like, no one should have an AR-15, I go to Texas ranches and they're like, if I don't come out here every night with my AR, from this distance, for my protection and safety, the only thing strong enough to kill those, and they do amazing, they kill cows! | ||
We have a huge feral pig problem in this country. | ||
I gotta pull up this story. | ||
Somebody in the chat mentioned it. | ||
Is irony the right word? | ||
I saw this. | ||
Beyond Meat COO arrested for biting man's nose near Razorback Stadium. | ||
He just wanted some meat. | ||
He was hungry. | ||
You go that long without it. | ||
You're just so desperate for it. | ||
You'll take whatever you can get. | ||
I know. | ||
I also like the idea we could do a movie where it's like, after eating nothing but meat, you become a zombie. | ||
Your brain is like, I need meat! | ||
And then you just start eating people. | ||
You do! | ||
You kind of do when you look at a lot of the people who don't eat meat. | ||
The brain is largely fat for a reason. | ||
You could tell. | ||
You could usually tell someone when they're on an all-vegan diet, and there is a big correlation with unhealthiness. | ||
Let's just be real. | ||
Let's be real with each other. | ||
Let's be honest with each other. | ||
We could talk about pigs all we want, but I think the biggest attack target always has been cows. | ||
Cows are one of the most nutritious, one of the most amazing animals on the face of the earth. | ||
Ian loves them because of many different reasons that I won't mention here. | ||
I do love cows. | ||
But cows also are linked to the progression of humanity because of the amino acids, the macronutrients, and just the amount of nutrition that they provide human beings is essential. | ||
A few decades ago, the majority of people had cows. | ||
We no longer have cows. | ||
Every family had a cow. | ||
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Yeah. | |
Every family had a cow. | ||
Majority. | ||
Majority of them had a cow because they needed it. | ||
There was a period where, like, I was reading about it in the city, like, or in the quote-unquote scenes, they were smaller. | ||
Every family had a cow. | ||
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Yeah. | |
And whether it's raw milk or beef liver, you can't underestimate the amount of nutrition that they provide the human beings that beyond meat does not, doesn't even compare. | ||
And we're also finding out that a lot of the studies with beyond meat being comparable in nutritional value have been doctored, have been altered and have been faked. | ||
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No. | |
You can't pay scientists off to come up with stuff. | ||
I want to read this. | ||
This is really fascinating about what happened. | ||
It says, just after 10 p.m., an officer saw the man shuffling and groaning down the sidewalk with his leg twisted in the wrong direction. | ||
He raised his hands vertically and started saying, brains! | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
unidentified
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I'm kidding. | |
I didn't say that at all. | ||
unidentified
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I didn't say that at all. | |
You had me there for a second. | ||
Maybe he tripped. | ||
Maybe he hurt himself. | ||
It says, the owner of the Subaru got out and stated that Ramsey pulled him in close and started punching his body. | ||
Ramsey also bit the owner's nose, ripping the flesh off the tip of his nose. | ||
Oh man, he really just wanted meat! | ||
He couldn't take it anymore! | ||
I mean, imagine what happens to your psyche when you, he's like, no one was forcing him per se to eat nothing but Beyond Meat, but as the CEO, oh, he had to keep up appearances. | ||
So he like shows up to a Burger King and he's like, I just want a burger. | ||
And then someone goes, hey, You're the guy from Beyond Meat! | ||
And he's like, That's right! | ||
I'll have the Beyond Burger! | ||
I don't like- He walks in a restaurant, and then he's like, I'm just gonna get the Flamin' Yon, and the guy goes, Hey, I know you! | ||
You're from Beyond Meat! | ||
We got your burger ready to go! | ||
Just like you like it! | ||
Here's your salad! | ||
No, here's your salad! | ||
When I was vegan for a few years, three or four years ago, Luke, kind of what you were saying, my skin started deteriorating, I wasn't getting enough B vitamins, and I got really angry. | ||
I would get really angry at people eating animals. | ||
I would be like, these bloodsuckers, these mosquitoes, these vampires eating flesh, sucking blood. | ||
I would get like, how gross they are, like they need to feast off of the animal living. | ||
It was so weird. | ||
It's just biology. | ||
I've made this point before, but I just got to say it in lieu of what Ian was saying. | ||
Vegans are the real bad guys. | ||
Now, hold on. | ||
I don't mind if you're vegan. | ||
I don't mind if you're carnitarian. | ||
I don't care if you're omnitarian or whatever you'd call it, I guess. | ||
Pescatarian. | ||
Pescatarian. | ||
Well, you know, you eat fish and chicken, but you don't eat steak and mammal. | ||
My point is, this whole argument that people are bad for eating mammals because they feel pain, I look at it this way. | ||
If you've got two guys, one guy is growing his own food and eating it, and one guy is ransacking and killing other farmers and eating their crops, which one is the bad guy? | ||
It's obvious. | ||
The dude who's going around and ransacking is the bad guy. | ||
We don't like him, right? | ||
We want him to stop. | ||
Now think about animals and plant life. | ||
Plants, minding their own business, absorbing free and abundant sunlight, taking in rainwater, and only what they get to grow and live their beautiful lives. | ||
And then along comes this boar, That just destroys the plant, just annihilates it. | ||
And the plant was minding its own business. | ||
And I'm like, yo, that boar just killed that innocent thing. | ||
It did nothing wrong. | ||
And those boars, they attack people too. | ||
So you know what I'm saying? | ||
You should be killing and eating these wild animals. | ||
The plants are the ones who deserve to live. | ||
Now, you wanna eat fruit? | ||
An animal? | ||
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Okay. | |
But you just gotta make sure you plant the seeds afterwards, because that's the point of the fruit. | ||
But to destroy the plant that did no harm, and in no way negatively impacts you. | ||
You see deer? | ||
Deer are real villains. | ||
Going around, just eating all the green, like, those trees didn't do anything to anybody. | ||
But those deer? | ||
Mmm, you gotta watch out for them. | ||
Part of what you're saying about replanting the seeds of what you eat is concerning about the fish population because I heard you guys talking about that before I wasn't in the room, but that were maybe they believe that we're running out of fish that were overpopulated. | ||
There's not enough fish to feed the population. | ||
There's this technology called iron fertilization where they take iron dust and they put it in the ocean. | ||
And then it creates plankton. | ||
The plankton eat the iron. | ||
It oxidizes and they eat it. | ||
And then all this plankton bloom appears, and that's food for fish. | ||
And then all these fish appear, and you get these massive blooms of salmon off the northwest coast of the U.S. | ||
They did it a few years ago. | ||
People are like, oh, we got to hold back on this technology because it might damage the environment. | ||
Dude, iron fertilization is the key. | ||
And you can see the river of blood in Antarctica is the earth naturally fertilizing the ocean. | ||
It's a river of iron. | ||
It's this red, blood red river just flowing in. | ||
I remember looking into this. | ||
You're right. | ||
Yeah, you're absolutely right. | ||
You can see a glacier. | ||
It'll break and then red water cuz iron right? | ||
Yeah It's preparing for the flood because we're about to exit the ice age and so it's giving me a really good idea. | ||
Imagine this There's there's there's this big cylindrical tube, you know big tube and then it goes up to a gigantic What do you call it, um, what is it called when you make those little terrariums that are self-sustaining? | ||
I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
Ecosystem? | ||
Yeah, like a closed ecosystem. | ||
Like the biospheres? | ||
Yeah, something like that. | ||
But you can make your own where you get like a little jar and then you put certain things in it and close it and then the life will keep... because the humidity will come out and then it'll... Terrarium, yeah. | ||
Imagine you made a self-sustaining fish tube that had everything in it so that the fish could grow. | ||
And then it absorbs enough to where you could actually, like a vending machine, go up and put in five bucks, and then it spits a fish out for you. | ||
And that fish is gross. | ||
And it's totally automatic. | ||
Taking care of itself. | ||
And then you have fresh fish. | ||
Nobody needs to go fishing. | ||
You don't gotta run out of fish. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, no jellyfish to worry about. | ||
And you don't have to exert energy to catch the fish. | ||
Yeah, you just fold the bag up, and then it sprays the fish, and then you bring it home, and then you cut it, and you eat it. | ||
Boom. | ||
So cool. | ||
We could streamline this whole farming process. | ||
You could try. | ||
You could try. | ||
As long as they're not eating their own feces. | ||
Well, it's got, it gets recycled. | ||
The plants will do it. | ||
And then, you know. | ||
Oh, one thing I was thinking, I was out of the room, but like at gas stations, I mentioned that if the power goes out, you can't pump gas. | ||
Do they have them set up so that they use their own gasoline to power generators so that you can continue to pump the gas? | ||
Every gas station. | ||
I've never seen a gas station, not when their power is out, but they all have, Fossil fuel redundancies, because that's the most essential thing that you need when the power is out. | ||
You need gas, you need to run your diesel generator, you need whatever. | ||
I've never seen a gas station like have no power. | ||
It could have happened, but... I think one of the main reasons nuclear is illegal is not because of the danger, because batteries are dangerous. | ||
The lithium-ion batteries, remember the note was exploding or whatever? | ||
Those are dangerous too. | ||
If you puncture a lithium-ion battery, it's extremely dangerous. | ||
You ever see it in water? | ||
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
And the crazy thing is, this is really crazy, is you can buy lithium batteries in airports. | ||
And they oxidize. | ||
When you expose lithium to air, it starts getting hot. | ||
You put water on it, it bursts into flames. | ||
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Exactly. | |
It bursts into flames. | ||
Put it on a plane. | ||
But that's why they give you warnings when you're going on planes. | ||
You can't bring lithium batteries in. | ||
So I don't think, I think the issue is, you got people like Bill Gates. | ||
You know, Bill Gates is a— Luke, how would you describe the moral— A very blossom, big man. | ||
How would you judge him morally? | ||
How would you describe him morally? | ||
Mordor? | ||
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Mordor. | |
So, you've got people like him. | ||
Here's the problem. | ||
We've got fusion breakthroughs. | ||
Ignition, right? | ||
Ignition was reached. | ||
Basically, this means we're going to have extremely cheap and abundant energy if we get this process streamlined. | ||
Because, you know, petroleum is extremely energy dense. | ||
Nuclear is extremely energy dense. | ||
And fusion is even better. | ||
But that's bad news. | ||
You know why? | ||
For Bill Gates. | ||
Because cheap, free energy means cheap, free food. | ||
It means humans are going to be able to populate, expand, and expand dramatically, because energy is being provided extremely cheaply. | ||
Here's how it started. | ||
Back in the early days of humanity, energy was human energy. | ||
You would eat stuff, and then you would do stuff. | ||
And it was extremely difficult. | ||
Then one day some dude was like, I don't want to carry these logs. | ||
Yo, That big critter right there, I'm gonna tie him up and make him do it. | ||
They just eat grass all day. | ||
So then we started, we used animals and converted, you know, we used animals to convert food into, you know, to move things, convert our energy. | ||
Then we discovered we could burn stuff. | ||
Wood. | ||
We would use wood for fuel, then coal burned better, then petroleum, now we got nuclear, now we got fusion. | ||
All of these are dramatic escalations in our energy output minus energy costs. | ||
So it's way more difficult to cut a tree down and then use a tree for fuel. | ||
Once you get fusion going, you got crazy clean energy for a long time. | ||
People are going to use it to power machines. | ||
They're going to use it to make food. | ||
They're going to have tons and tons of babies. | ||
And then we're going to have too many people for Bill Gates. | ||
They're all big population control freaks. | ||
It's a huge part of the agenda, no doubt. | ||
But there was a, on Twitter earlier today, I would love to show you to pull up the chart, but it was the world population, population of the world from basically as early as records go, and you see the spike at around 1880, and we started drilling our first wells in 1880, and you see the population And it's not a curve. | ||
It is just an absolute. | ||
It's flat, and then it explodes, and it explodes because of fossil fuels. | ||
And if you are petrified of that, and the people who hate that, the people who hate population, who want population control, they don't consider themselves to be the peasants. | ||
They consider themselves to be the aristocracy. | ||
And before then, what was there? | ||
There were the super, super rich, and everyone else served them. | ||
And they want to go back to that. | ||
I honestly believe that. | ||
They don't want a middle class that's arguing and in their way. | ||
They want poor people who serve and they want... There it is! | ||
There's the chart. | ||
Thank you, Tim. | ||
Look at how crazy this is. | ||
Look at the population from literally the first commercial oil well was 1888, I believe. | ||
But just look how from like 700 to 1800, the population barely grows. It's everyone who wants reduced population | ||
considers themselves the aristocracy. Just the way I always say like | ||
when Bernie Sanders says he wants to you know be a socialist it's like well | ||
because you yourself you see yourself as the party elite. You know you don't see | ||
yourself as the peasant you see yourself as the ruler. Also the US barely grows. What's | ||
causing this dip? | ||
Now there's a dip in... | ||
This is a projection. | ||
Bill Gates. | ||
You think I'm kidding? | ||
The dude gives TED Talks about how we need to have slower... This is what people need to understand. | ||
Africa. | ||
He said Africa. | ||
He said Africa needs to control their population. | ||
If you say that Bill Gates wants to reduce the population, they will tell you you're a conspiracy theorist and wrong. | ||
What Bill Gates has said, fact check, is that we want to slow population growth. | ||
It's like, oh, okay. | ||
So what happens if you slow population growth? | ||
The older population dies, there's less younger people, and you see this chart. | ||
The populations will decrease because Generation X, for instance, is larger. | ||
Then the millennial generation, well I think millennials are larger than the next generation, but we're getting to the point now where the generations are going to become even, then with slower population growth you will come a point to where the older generation dies in large numbers just due to age, and then the next generation is smaller and population declines. | ||
We'll see this in China as a result of their two-child, one-child policy. | ||
It's going to take a little while still, but eventually their numbers will, they're plateauing right now, but their numbers will start to dip dramatically. | ||
Absolutely, and if you look at the projections worldwide, population is going to go down dramatically to the point where we are going to be facing a civilization crash that's going to be very severe and something that we might even see in our lifetime because the numbers are clear as day. | ||
The population is going down dramatically. | ||
And we are seeing that in Japan. | ||
What's happening in Japan is going to hit the rest of the Western world in a very severe way. | ||
That's gonna have some very negative consequences. | ||
Are they just slowing their growth or are they actually losing net numbers? | ||
Losing, absolutely losing. | ||
They sell more adult diapers now in Japan than they do baby diapers. | ||
Wow. | ||
Yeah, you can tell CB, that 60 minutes thing was geared towards 75 year olds. | ||
There's like an old segment. | ||
Dude, when I looked at this dip, I thought, okay, what would cause a dip like that? | ||
Starvation and war. | ||
But then I realized, no, those are the people that are going to Mars. | ||
They're just doing Earth's population. | ||
That's what that dip is. | ||
Those are colonists that leave. | ||
Well, there's a natural progression that many scientists are saying this will just naturally happen on its own. | ||
The population will peak and then decline naturally. | ||
But now, with so many external factors, with so many choices when it comes to what's happening in our society, in our culture, with our diet, that number is going to be even far worse off as of course there's propaganda on the corporate media telling people don't have children it's really bad for you it's bad for the environment and people are listening to that and deciding not to have children which is one of the biggest best gifts that you could have on the face of this world so and again it's absolutely mind-boggling to see this unfold right in front of us and the population is extremely declining in very dangerous which is why the good | ||
Good people need to have children. | ||
Good people need to have children. | ||
Every time I see the lunatic liberal couple who's like, for the sake of the climate, we're not going to have children. | ||
I'm like, good. | ||
I don't want you yahoos to reproduce anyway. | ||
So I think you're doing us all a service. | ||
But those people who are good, There's one of them at the head of the table. | ||
Should have as many kids as possible. | ||
Because the good people should reproduce. | ||
Are you gonna have kids? | ||
I saw you tweet it out that you were like, saw some abused kid and you were like, I can't take this anymore. | ||
That made me so angry. | ||
What was that tweet? | ||
Do you remember? | ||
Yeah, it was on an airplane and this... I hate to say anyone is trailer trash but trailer trash Mom and you know, I can't I and I got a lot of flack for people like you don't know her backstory But like you can't talk to a two-year-old like that. | ||
This was not like oh my god, you're driving me crazy This was and I can't say the words because we're on YouTube but to like to a two-year-old it was her own kid She had another one in her arm and she was saying how much she doesn't like them and then when the kid was finally crying She just laid into him and I was like, oh god, and so we can't have kids biologically I think that's pretty obvious. | ||
Is that confirmed? | ||
That's a bigoted point of view. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
We're probably trying to adopt, and I keep putting out feelers for like, if you have a kid, and you're a pro-life mom, and you're like, I got pregnant, but it's a mistake, and I'm in high school, Daniel Turner PTF on Twitter. | ||
We'll pay for everything, and we'll get to keep the baby though. | ||
There you go. | ||
I do like babies. | ||
Good people should have babies, even if they are... I understand people's tank, but they should have babies. | ||
And I hear you're going to be feeding the baby fine steaks. | ||
And a lot of lamb. | ||
We haven't talked about the lamb. | ||
How's the lamb? | ||
We have so many lamb, and the population just grows and grows and grows. | ||
Can we have one? | ||
I will bring you one. | ||
Wait, can we keep one to, like, own? | ||
Wait, if you give us two, then, like, in a few years we'll have a ton. | ||
Yes, but you just can't like have them I mean you can if you're gonna eat them But they really shouldn't inbreed too much so I can get we can we can we can Sell you a boy and a girl who are not related and you can eat all of their kids Save the girls and then you swap out the ram for another one and then get the daughters pregnant Swap out the ram. | ||
You can do it one generation. | ||
You're not really supposed to. | ||
Just like, you know, you always need new bloodlines. | ||
You know, even with chickens, to a certain extent, like not the eggs is fine, but if you're actually growing your chicken population, you shouldn't have like roosters mate with their own. | ||
That's not good for them. | ||
One of our chickens went broody and it's only like seven months. | ||
It's not the best. | ||
Stop it. | ||
When they go broody, how they pancake. | ||
It's like, how did you get so fat? | ||
I love them. | ||
What do you do for the lamb when you're ready to eat them? | ||
It depends upon weight, how they're, you know, get them to the right weight. | ||
And then, yeah, we just, it's kind of sad because they know us so well and they're so sweet and they are sheep. | ||
There's a reason why we call them sheep and you just wave the little grain bucket and they get on the back of the trailer and they eat and you just close the door. | ||
Say, and then drive them to the slaughterhouse! | ||
No, I don't, I don't actually, I bring them to a place that does it. | ||
unidentified
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A slaughter. | |
Yeah, a butcher. | ||
Abattoir, I think is the proper, like, fancy word, but it's, but we use a very good humane one, and you pay a little more for it, and it's, it's fine. | ||
Do they march them down and they put a bolt in their head? | ||
I don't watch that part. | ||
No, no, what they do is they lock the sheep in a room and chain their legs up, and then psychologically terrorize them. | ||
Make them watch Clockwork Orange. | ||
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Unnecessarily cruel to the sheep. | |
What do they do? | ||
They do a bolt to the head, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And the good ones do it with that, you know, that the other sheep aren't there, you know, so like you don't see your brother get, you know, but I understand sometimes you have to, we do have to feed a big population. | ||
You want to do the most humane way. | ||
I think we're best off trying to get as much food as possible from ourselves, from the work we do, you know. | ||
But geez, anyone that has a reaction of thinking putting a bolt in the back of a sheep's head is like, dude, do you eat meat? | ||
Well then get over it. | ||
Yeah, you should know. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, so we got to start cycling the chickens at some point. | ||
The rooster has got to go. | ||
But, you know, we got to eat the roosters. | ||
There's too many of them. | ||
Roberto is safe. | ||
Roberto, he's a good dude. | ||
They're all his kids. | ||
He has too many. | ||
So he's going to retire into old age and live a good rooster life. | ||
He's actually really small. | ||
You know, when he was the only rooster, he was big to us. | ||
And then once his kids grew up, we went, whoa, the dude must have been a runt. | ||
They thought it was a girl. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know, we've got some Jersey Giants, by the way. | ||
We bought four. | ||
Turns out one of them, I think, is a boy. | ||
Well, I just think it's great that you went to the Frederick County Fair and looked at the chickens and didn't tell anyone that your chickens have been on billboards in Times Square. | ||
Oh, my chickens are way cooler! | ||
You know, it's so cute. | ||
They're putting their little chickens in a cage so we can come see them. | ||
My chicken was seen by like 3.5 million people, I think, per week. | ||
That's right. | ||
Roberto Jr. | ||
Do you trade chickens with other chicken farmers? | ||
I don't, but you do, right? | ||
Yeah, and you can usually, and this is where, you know, Social media groups can be really helpful. | ||
Farmers are the most cooperative people in the world. | ||
They're the original socialists. | ||
But the good socialists, right? | ||
They do swap and change. | ||
And if I have a ram and you have a ram, we need to change the bloodline. | ||
A lot of times it's just, you know, if it's the same breed. | ||
Do you do like blood work on them? | ||
Make sure they don't have diseases and stuff before they get traded around? | ||
Is that normal? | ||
Sometimes people do a whole bunch of testing like that. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But I mean, Honestly, I've gone to people's farms for sale that I can just tell in a couple seconds. | ||
And there are lots of things you can look at. | ||
You can look at their eyes. | ||
You can hear their breathing. | ||
You can see their weight. | ||
But you can see in a person's farm within five seconds if their farm is good or not. | ||
We have two barred Plymouth rock chickens, Vanessa and Dorothy. | ||
Vanessa's got a furrowed brow. | ||
She always looks really angry. | ||
Dorothy's eyes are big and round and she always looks kind of doofy. | ||
And then we have a bunch of these rooster boys that came from these two hens and you can tell which one was the mom. | ||
Isn't it great? | ||
Because they have the same eyes. | ||
It's funny. | ||
It's like a bunch of the boys are walking around with furrowed brows all angry and they're like yelling and they're really aggressive. | ||
And then the other ones are like really much, they're much more docile and their eyes are big and round and they're like walking around all goofy like. | ||
I love how they all have different personalities. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
They are, every chicken does have a different personality. | ||
I want to eat them. | ||
And they're pretty funny. | ||
But my brother doesn't want to eat them. | ||
He wants to let them fend for themselves. | ||
Have you ever processed? | ||
We can come do that with you if you want. | ||
It's a little gross. | ||
Our layers are still laying. | ||
It's gross, but you gotta do it. | ||
Cut their head off and then pull their feathers out? | ||
There's a big cylinder, the thing that de-feathers them, it spins them around. | ||
Oh, we do it by hand. | ||
Oh, by hand. | ||
Really? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
There's a machine I saw, it steam blasts them, and then spins them around, it rips all the feathers out, and then you just pick it right out. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But the chickens, the hens, they're still laying, so... No, yeah, hold on. | ||
Yeah, you gotta keep them. | ||
And then what, by the time they stop laying, though, it's like, not as good, right? | ||
And eggs are the greatest things. | ||
I love eggs. | ||
I could eat eggs all the time. | ||
Oh, I love making eggs. | ||
We're getting 20 eggs per day. | ||
A little vinegar, and a little cream, salt. | ||
What else you put in there? | ||
Oregano. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You mentioned raw milk earlier, and I was surprised that you did, because it's highly illegal, right? | ||
The way the government cracks down on raw milk fascinates me, but... It's absolutely nonsensical. | ||
It's insane. | ||
Yep. | ||
It's insane. | ||
I'm sorry, I don't want to interrupt, but like with collecting your own rainwater, but continue, is it because they're afraid of disease? | ||
I don't understand what the crackdown on raw milk is. | ||
It makes absolutely no sense at all. | ||
The rainwater thing is typically in denser areas. | ||
They just don't want it to fester bacteria in stagnant water. | ||
They don't want it to, I forgot what it was, but I was talking to a guy in the suburbs of Jersey and he mentioned that if everybody was collecting it, it would like limit runoff or something like that. | ||
And then, you know, I can't remember exactly what he said, but it's not necessarily about stopping you from having your own water to drink. | ||
It's about pollution and stuff. | ||
Maybe something like what you were saying. | ||
We gotta go to Super Chats. | ||
If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends. | ||
We've got a members-only show coming up at 11 p.m. | ||
It's an update on a story about, we're gonna talk about this teacher who has large, oversized, novelty adult toys. | ||
Are they related to Bill Gates? | ||
Maybe, maybe. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
But we'll talk about that and what it means. | ||
But we're gonna read your Super Chats now. | ||
Grofty says, Bocas, a fine actor, was snubbed. | ||
Only one line, just saying. | ||
I was actually really impressed by that. | ||
In the episode last week, when I think Charles picks up Bocas, he yells. | ||
And so we have it on camera, him going, like he's being picked away. | ||
Yeah, it was an excellent performance. | ||
You know, Bocas, he did a great job. | ||
I was telling him what a great actor he is. | ||
Tubin B. Lubin says, oh, good name, I don't think Joe Biden lied about Taiwan. | ||
My friends who are MP and Air Force are being deployed in less than two weeks. | ||
unidentified
|
Whoa, what's happening in two weeks? | |
Right before midterm, huh? | ||
Wait, buy Raytheon stocks, everyone buy Northrop Grumman. | ||
Wow. | ||
Yeah, I don't think he was lying either. | ||
Biden has a statement, I was watching an old interview where he says, a president's approval rating goes up during a crisis. | ||
And then in this interview, he's like, your approval rating, Scott Pelley's like, is below 50%. | ||
If they're being deployed in two weeks, that's literally right before the midterms. | ||
What's crazy is if two governments get together, like Xi Jinping and Joe Biden, they're like, we both need to drum up some support. | ||
Let's create a fake conflict so that everyone supports us. | ||
So was that when Biden said, watch what I'll do? | ||
What context did he say that in? | ||
I don't know. | ||
That was during the 60 Minutes interview. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
Yeah, I thought so. | ||
The one about when they were like, what if Russia deployed nuclear weapons? | ||
He'd be like, the reign of Hell God would come down upon them. | ||
He said something like that. | ||
He didn't use cool words like that. | ||
But it was like, we will annihilate everything if they do that. | ||
He was real dark. | ||
Nylan Hinnick says, I have to wear collared shirts at work. | ||
Can TimKast and WeAreChange produce collared shirts so we can look good at work and support you at the same time? | ||
Oh, sure. | ||
Why not? | ||
Well, Luke's more of a t-shirt guy than me. | ||
I'll look into it. | ||
All right. | ||
Lee Fagan says, any updates on reviewing the Freedom Phone or are you guys scrapping that one? | ||
Saw Candace Owens peddling them a few days ago. | ||
Cool. | ||
We never got it. | ||
It was just overloaded. | ||
We had orders issuing it, or issues ordering it rather. | ||
The issue is this. | ||
We can't get orders from them because if we're going to review them, we can't have taken special, they could tamper with them. | ||
I'm not saying they would, but that's why it's not legitimate. | ||
Because we were going to do a security review, not just like a function review. | ||
And then the issue was, to buy it, it would have to be bought through an individual that they wouldn't know, but it was backed up like crazy. | ||
Yeah, and it was giving me errors. | ||
There was returning errors on the website when I was trying to buy them. | ||
We tried for like two or three weeks, and then it just lost the trail. | ||
Mike Hillier says, Ian, you have to take this opportunity Luke is giving you. | ||
I wish I had worked- I wish I had a workout friend. | ||
You will enjoy the benefits. | ||
That's true. | ||
Yeah, Ian. | ||
It's true, but other people are like, don't do it if you don't want to do it. | ||
Like, don't- don't let yourself get coerced into working out because you think it'll be cool. | ||
What? | ||
But I- I agree. | ||
unidentified
|
I want to- What kind of rationale is that? | |
Are you- you just- you just did a Joe Biden. | ||
Everyone should work out. | ||
unidentified
|
Everyone. | |
Yeah, but I mean I do isometrics, like I do planks and pushups and stuff. | ||
Sounds like a scam. | ||
I don't do heavy weight training, although I have been working with the kettlebell a little bit lately. | ||
I'm into the kick, I mean I'm into the... Soldier fit. | ||
Yeah, I'm into soldier fit on Friday. | ||
Because that's gonna be a lot of that stuff and it's gonna be just like good regular working out. | ||
I like that cardio. | ||
Yeah, agility training. | ||
All right, Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
says, Tim, I failed. | ||
I did the gas station thing, talked some good peeps, but registered zero. | ||
I'm optimistic, though. | ||
Why, you ask? | ||
Watch me. | ||
Long pause. | ||
The proof of the pudding is in the eating. | ||
You did not fail, sir. | ||
You did not fail. | ||
You went out and you talked to people, and that's the first and most important step. | ||
When I used to work for nonprofits, they would say, outright, the most important thing you can do is talk to people. | ||
You are spreading those ideas. | ||
You are explaining it. | ||
It will be in their mind, whether they're passionate about it or not. | ||
The first step is letting them know about it. | ||
There you go, man. | ||
Shootin' on a shot without pressure, Batacavcare says. | ||
Tag Team YouTube in Twitter about the notification problem. | ||
Uh, tag team? | ||
Tag them? | ||
It helps when they get enough people tagging them. | ||
Okay, everybody. | ||
Um, you can try. | ||
And tag at Team YouTube, I guess. | ||
Oh, tag Team YouTube. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
I thought you said tag Team YouTube. | ||
Like, team up together against them. | ||
I noticed when I go to YouTube, I see the video in the queue, 7.50pm, there's a button that says, notify me when this goes live. | ||
It's not the bell button, it's not the subscribe button, I have to go in and click it. | ||
But if I don't do that, am I going to get, I don't think I'm going to get a notification for it. | ||
But if it's not in the holding pattern until 10 minutes before the show, how do people click the notify me now? | ||
Here's what I want to say. | ||
Over the past week, people weren't getting notifications. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
Our video views on the clips were up like 30-40%. | ||
Way, way up. | ||
So our metrics were really high. | ||
On the live show, however, the metrics were slightly down. | ||
People weren't getting notified about it. | ||
This is why I can't stand about YouTube, is if they don't explain to you the algorithm, because their fear of people will exploit it, then you try to say, like, right now they're saying shorts is a big thing, like, you should do shorts, we really want to promote it. | ||
And I'm like, every time YouTube's ever come to me and said, hey, I remember when premieres came out, why don't you premiere some of these clips? | ||
And I said, no, because you will punish my channel. | ||
Well, what do you mean? | ||
If we do premieres, we're gonna change everything, disrupt our audience, and then your algorithm is gonna punish our channel and reduce visibility because of something you changed. | ||
And then they go, oh. | ||
Well, I don't think that'll happen. | ||
And then I was like, so what happens if people don't react positively to premieres, watch them less, or don't like jumping into the middle of the video so they don't watch it at all? | ||
Now our retention goes way down, and they're like, yeah, that would hurt your channel, yeah. | ||
And I'm like, okay, so I'm not using your new weird things and hurting my and confusing my audience and making everything worse for me. | ||
All right, Daniel Nemes says, my wife is a nurse. | ||
She's looking for a new job. | ||
95% of the places she is looking at require the jab. | ||
When the efficacy is next to nothing now, Biden announces the pandemic is over. | ||
Come on, Luke. | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
Joe Figueroa says, Tim has to be a Bills fan. | ||
What's the Bills? | ||
Buffalo Bills? | ||
Buffalo Bills, what is that? | ||
Football? | ||
Is that football? | ||
unidentified
|
That's where Drew Bledsoe got his... I don't know anything about football. | |
Ask me about skateboarding! | ||
I can explain to you what a switch stance backside tailslide big flip out is, but I wouldn't begin to explain the line of scrimmage. | ||
That's a thing, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, it is. | |
That's where it all begins. | ||
Very football-y. | ||
When I was a kid, my friend was explaining the rules and he said that. | ||
I laughed. | ||
I said, you're making that up. | ||
And he's like, no, I'm not. | ||
I'm like, you just made up a gibberish. | ||
That's not real. | ||
A line of scrimmage. | ||
I was like, get out of here with this. | ||
And then I was just skateboarding. | ||
Well, all right, all right. | ||
I feel so butch all of a sudden. | ||
Holy cow. | ||
Wrath of falses. | ||
I don't think it's a coincidence that Biden declares the pandemic over six weeks before a big midterm election. | ||
Yo, if people are really deploying out to the Pacific Theater right before the midterms, I would not be surprised. | ||
You make a good point. | ||
She hates Trump. | ||
He doesn't like him. | ||
He didn't like, you know, Biden is good for Trump. | ||
So if they came together and said, Biden's good for she. | ||
Biden's good for Xi, and Xi is good for Biden. | ||
So I wouldn't be surprised if they were like, we're gonna have a little skirmish here, wink wink, nudge nudge. | ||
And Xi is jockeying for re-election again. | ||
You're not supposed to be a third term, but he wants lifetime premiership. | ||
And so the Politburo, the Central Committee, etc., has to vote him in. | ||
And so he is doing a lot of things right now because he wants to stay in power. | ||
It's gonna happen, isn't it? | ||
So Xi saying to Biden, You help me, I help you, everyone's happy. | ||
Makes perfect sense. | ||
Biden's just like, come on man, just drop a few bombs, huh? | ||
And we'll come in, we'll sweep it up, you'll look strong. | ||
You know, we'll all go get the votes. | ||
Maybe. | ||
Maybe, but that would be a conspiracy and we knows those things don't happen. | ||
No. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Let's see what we got here. | ||
Johnny Derp says, Ian dismissed obesity as a cause of death because it is a comorbidity. | ||
Can anyone else think of an illness, a chew, which itself was a comorbidity? | ||
Or I think with COVID, it was like 90 some odd percent of people who had COVID and died had a comorbidity. | ||
Like five comorbidities, I think. | ||
There you go. | ||
Or there's a large percentage of people that had like five comorbidities or more. | ||
Ola Schoberg, I'm probably pronouncing it wrong, Schoberg, for the Friday show. | ||
That was a good one. | ||
That was Dr. Drew, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Drew Pinsky. | ||
He was great. | ||
We went and we played some blackjack afterwards. | ||
That was fun. | ||
Oh, cool. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh, this is a great story. | ||
So we went to Casino ride for the show and we're playing blackjack and there's this guy, he's standing up and playing and then he looks over and he goes, you look just like Anderson Cooper. | ||
And then he's like, yeah, I've heard that. | ||
And then the guy's like, the guy at the table looks around and he goes, that's Anderson Cooper, isn't it? | ||
And then I look at him like, that is not Anderson Cooper. | ||
And he goes, that's Anderson Cooper. | ||
I know it is. | ||
But then he keeps playing. | ||
And then, you know, maybe like 20 minutes of playing. | ||
Drew's like, all right, I'm gonna get out of here, guys. | ||
It's been a blast. | ||
Thanks for having me. | ||
And he gets up and walks away. | ||
And the guy goes, that was Anderson Cooper. | ||
No, it wasn't. | ||
It was Dr. Drew. | ||
And he goes, who? | ||
And then the lady to his right, she goes, from MTV. | ||
And he went, she goes, Loveline. | ||
unidentified
|
He was, I knew I knew that guy! | |
It wasn't Anderson Cooper though. | ||
I was like, Anderson Cooper's like a longer head. | ||
Miss Mary says, FYI, no notification received, nothing in my recommended either. | ||
I had to type in Tim Kast IRL in the search bar and find you to listen to you. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
But you know what? | ||
So this is the power of, you know, when you have a show people really do want to watch, they will try to suppress it. | ||
Our metrics are behaving weirdly. | ||
I don't want to say they're down, but they're just behaving weirdly. | ||
Like one thing I'm noticing, and people watching might notice this, it'll be like 35k viewers, spike to 40, and then 10 minutes later, drop back down to 35, which makes no sense that 5k people all at the same time just decided to leave. | ||
Like something weird's going on. | ||
People not getting notifications. | ||
So I'll tell you this, if you want to support the show, Be the notifications. | ||
That's right. | ||
You guys can share the video. | ||
For those that are big, big fans that watch every episode, whenever the show starts, take the URL and just share it. | ||
Then that's more powerful than notifications. | ||
What Mary's saying here is that she searched for the show and then came to find it. | ||
That's basically give an old bop to the head of YouTube being like, even when you suppress us, people still come to watch the show. | ||
You can't do nothing about it. | ||
But we are doing our best. | ||
If you go to TimCast.com, the live player is on the front page now, and we're trying to find ways so that people who actually are fans of the show will keep watching it regardless of the algorithms in the machine. | ||
All right, R.C. | ||
Jim R. Not financial advice. | ||
Good graphene stocks, Ian. | ||
I have a graphene spot. | ||
You got a few? | ||
There's a company I'm working with, Ecofein. | ||
I would highly recommend checking these guys out. | ||
They're studying pulling carbon dioxide out of the air and converting it into graphene. | ||
That's going to be the future of making it, or one of the futures. | ||
Big12Sport says, why exactly does Tim want us to smash a but no? | ||
And secondly, what's a but no? | ||
It's a typo. | ||
I wrote, smash the like button, but an O went up, so smash the like button-o. | ||
If you haven't already, would you kindly smash the like button-o? | ||
Yes. | ||
The button-o. | ||
And then I just, I saw it after it went up and I was like, it is kind of funny. | ||
So you know what, we'll just let it, we'll let it go. | ||
All right, Roscoe P says, dairy queen chicken strip basket, four or six piece? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
What do you think? | ||
Six pieces? | ||
Of chicken? | ||
Of chicken tenders? | ||
I opt for more than just store it and eat it later. | ||
Is that the question? | ||
Chicken is the best. | ||
I like eat nothing but chicken. | ||
I don't like those boneless ones. | ||
Stakeover chicken any day. | ||
Is it true that boneless chicken is all genetically modified to grow like in a vat without, or just to grow without bones? | ||
So they have these like deformed chickens that they just harvest? | ||
What are those big meat chickens? | ||
Have you ever gone to a restaurant? | ||
Actually, you've been to KFC. | ||
Those drumsticks are insane. | ||
Like, what does that come from? | ||
When I first got chickens, I was like, there's no way that thing came from that thing. | ||
So they have like the big mutant chickens, I guess. | ||
unidentified
|
Probably. | |
They're genetically modifying chickens and messing with their DNA so they're fatter quicker and they have more heart attacks and bigger and they grow a lot faster than they usually did and they're a lot bigger and they're genetically not the same thing that they were a couple And all of our chickens look like shop teachers from Canada. | ||
What if they genetically modified chicken DNA to make a big hunk of breast and dark meat with no central nervous system, just a respiratory system? | ||
But there's no brain. | ||
What if we genetically engineered it and it just grows the meat? | ||
Yeah, I'd rather take things so neat than genetically modified chickens. | ||
No, but I think we're closer to plugging into the Neuralink metaverse and then getting fed a tube of, you know, weird soy protein. | ||
But thinking it's chicken? | ||
Like tasting chicken and seeing chicken while you're eating it? | ||
Think about it this way. | ||
They could feed you nothing but cricket paste, but you plug in the Neuralink, and then you see filet mignon, and when you're cutting it and eating it, it tastes like it, but you're actually eating cricket paste. | ||
That's a bright future to look forward to. | ||
I mean, I gotta be honest, it is creepy, but imagine if you could plug in a Neuralink and then modify your food to be like Gordon Ramsay, elite, five star, delicious, perfect, every time, and you're eating Soylent Cube. | ||
We'll just put it on our metaverse thing and pretend we're not in this world and look at our metaverse hands and it's like, oh look, I'm eating a steak and you're really just eating cricket. | ||
But look, yes, but there, you know, what was the guy's name? | ||
Cypher in the Matrix? | ||
unidentified
|
The bad guy? | |
Yeah. | ||
He made a point. | ||
Joey Pants. | ||
He's in the Matrix and he's eating a delicious piece of steak. | ||
In the real world, it's white paste. | ||
Which would you rather do? | ||
I'd rather eat something healthy that tastes terrible but think it's good than eat something unhealthy that tastes good. | ||
Yeah, I'm just saying we're probably never going to have that weird chicken monster because we're going to get rid of all of this and everyone's going to eat cricket protein paste. | ||
It's going to come in cubes, but all it's going to happen is you're going to put on some wireless brain modification thing and it's like, what do you want to eat today? | ||
And the wife's going to like shovel, like spatula the cubes on the plate. | ||
And then the kid's gonna be like, I want pizza and birthday cake! | ||
And you're like, whatever you want! | ||
And he goes, beep! | ||
And then it turns into pizza, birthday cake, mashed, and whatever nonsense. | ||
unidentified
|
And the husband is like, I believe I'll have fresh, fresh halibut! | |
And then he, beep! | ||
And then he's, there you go. | ||
Everybody's eating whatever they want. | ||
Well, the crickets aren't that nutritious. | ||
They're not that good for you. | ||
There's a lot of health consequences to that as well. | ||
And someone's going to come to the crickets' defense. | ||
Eventually there's going to be people united for the protection of crickets. | ||
There's no way they're going to allow us to create all these crickets and kill them. | ||
Someone will come to the cricket party. | ||
The cricket, you know... Festival? | ||
Yeah. | ||
All right. | ||
Ready to Rumble says, I'm pretty fly for an old guy. | ||
Joe Biden. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
I think that's what I was doing. | ||
That's where I was going. | ||
That's what I was thinking. | ||
That song was hot in 1992. | ||
That's right-set Fred, by the way. | ||
Oh, no, no, that's I'm Too Sexy. | ||
Pretty fly for a white guy's offspring. | ||
Zach Williams says, I no longer think of being as old as myself than a fly, is what I think he meant, due to flies not thinking about how old they are. | ||
You see, I was thinking that at first, like, what does a fly do? | ||
Is there an idiom? | ||
A lot of people mocked the proof of the pudding is in the eating, and that's actually the original idiom. | ||
And a lot of people didn't know that. | ||
I didn't know that, because we don't say that, because, you know, younger people just say the proof is in the pudding. | ||
It's because you're stupid. | ||
That's because all young people are stupid. | ||
Remember when Joe Biden said he's been in office, what, 720 years or whatever? | ||
Remember when he had cancer? | ||
Oh yeah, he told us that. | ||
80% of his friends did as well. | ||
Remember when he got arrested freeing Nelson Mandela? | ||
Remember when he said, end of quote, repeat the line? | ||
Remember when he cured cancer? | ||
OMGPUPPY says the Soviets built a nuclear turbojet engine that flew a plane for several days without landing. | ||
unidentified
|
Really? | |
Wow. | ||
I mean, if you think about it, like, the nuclear material just gets hot. | ||
It'll boil water for a long time. | ||
So what do you really need? | ||
Yeah, I didn't know the Soviets did it. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
I know that nuclear material will boil water. | ||
That's how they do nuclear power. | ||
Nuclear turbines and everything, they spin them. | ||
But I'm wondering, do you know how a nuclear submarine generates power? | ||
It's probably steam in a turbine, right? | ||
I think it literally does the exact same thing as a diesel engine would do, but rather than burning diesel, it creates heat from the nuclear reactor. | ||
But it would need to use, it would expand water, right? | ||
So diesel explodes, so the expansion can cause We got the General Electric J87 nuclear powered turbojet engine the aircraft nuclear propulsion program and proceeding nuclear energy for the propulsion of aircraft project were developed in 1946 by the Air Force, the United States Air Force. | ||
That's so if that's what Wow, 70 years ago, almost. | ||
I can't imagine that they don't have that technology available for modern cars. | ||
I mean, all of our planes should be using that. | ||
Everything should be using that. | ||
I guess the problem is if it gets shot down, they don't want the enemy to get the nuclear generator and then reverse engineer the plans or something? | ||
That's the idea? | ||
Maybe. | ||
John Gagner says, that's literally an episode of China, Illinois. | ||
The hog episode is so hilarious. | ||
Well, we just came up with an original idea to do a horror movie about pigs. | ||
unidentified
|
The pigs cometh! | |
I'm thinking about that Winnie the Pooh. | ||
Did you see the Winnie the Pooh, Blood and Honey? | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Piglets. | ||
Their tusks are vicious. | ||
You get those feral pigs with the tusks, you could have some really gory scenes. | ||
People die all the time for me. | ||
Broke fundraising records. | ||
Stronger than stones says a sheriff in Texas opened an investigation into Ron DeSantis | ||
for the Martha's Vineyard thing today. | ||
Just proves there's a civil war. | ||
Yeah, and also, Ron DeSantis got a standing ovation over the Martha's Vineyard thing. | ||
Broke fundraising records. | ||
Yeah, he's got, he raised like $177 million, I think. | ||
So I think dude's gonna run for president. | ||
You should. | ||
I mean the Martha's Vineyard thing. | ||
I see a lot in DeSantis that he's done so much better than Trump has. | ||
Especially the Martha's Vineyard thing. | ||
I think he should immediately do it again. | ||
Do more. | ||
Alright, let's see what we got here. | ||
Katie Jinks says, since Dan is here, I want to comment that the nation's largest nuclear power plant is in the middle of the Arizona desert. | ||
States like California have no excuse. | ||
Yeah, put it in the middle of the desert. | ||
Put it in a mountain or something, you know? | ||
Put it in your back. | ||
Everyone should have one. | ||
We should be building nuclear power plants left and right. | ||
Instead, we gave $80 billion to Ukraine. | ||
So your company, Power for the Future, you're more interested in just literally creating sustainable power than you are in one in particular? | ||
We're about protecting American energy independence. | ||
So it's primarily fossil fuels. | ||
I got nothing wrong with nuclear. | ||
But just the conversation we were having earlier, fossil fuels run our country. | ||
They run our freedom, really. | ||
And the more we get rid of them because we're going to quote unquote go green, the more we're surrendering our agency. | ||
And we're surrendering it to the government or we're surrendering it to China. | ||
Fossil fuels are pure freedom, and that's what we advocate for. | ||
Alright, Publius Valerius Publicola says, Fusion is never going to work. | ||
I don't like Bill Gates. | ||
He has a reactor design that consumes nuclear fuel waste. | ||
Of course he is withholding it till the economy is crippled solely for profit. | ||
Well, he's working with China on that specific project, and he had to move it because of... I forgot the exact reason as well, but he's doing a lot of research and development with the Chinese government, which should concern a lot of people, because, again, the technology is going to be in their hands, and they're going to use it for their own political purposes. | ||
It's a company called TerraPower, American nuclear reactor design and development engineering company in Bellevue, Washington, which is Bill Gates' home state. | ||
This is from Washington. | ||
This is an important one. | ||
Hal Edwards says, white-tailed deer are rats with hooves. | ||
Do they have hooves? | ||
They have something else, though, don't they? | ||
It's like a hoof, but it's like kind of different. | ||
They're just not colon, I think. | ||
They're not what? | ||
Cloven? | ||
Like cows? | ||
Yeah. | ||
We have a family of deer that live right in front of the house and they're always coming out trespassing and eating my plants. | ||
They eat everything. | ||
And I yell at them and shake my fist and they just stare at me and keep eating. | ||
On the 4th of July a family of deer came out on Freedomistan and just watched and ate as things were blowing up. | ||
They did not care at all. | ||
But recently, sad story, Bambi died. | ||
How? | ||
I don't know, but one day we came home and there were like 50 vultures all over the property. | ||
Big ones, just everywhere. | ||
And then I saw where they were hanging out, cruised over on my little bike, and sure enough there was a baby deer that had died. | ||
Don't know exactly how, but they annihilated that thing and now it's gone. | ||
My drive home takes twice as long than my drive here because it's dark when I leave, and it's just deer dodging. | ||
It's just non-stop. | ||
It's all back roads, and it's just non-stop deer. | ||
And when it's raining, it's worse because you get all the possums. | ||
It's like a video game, just dodging creatures. | ||
It might say 35 miles an hour, you go 20. | ||
It depends how fast you're going, but you're not supposed to dodge them. | ||
I won't go into traffic, don't get me wrong. | ||
unidentified
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I'll just go, yeah. | |
When I leave here after the show every night, there's just like seven or eight deer just like everywhere all over the property. | ||
And they just stare at you because they're really dumb. | ||
It cracks me up that we have a deer hunting season. | ||
You should be able to hunt deer all the damn time. | ||
We have so many deer. | ||
Can we train them though? | ||
Can you train the deer? | ||
Because I'm wondering if we can get them to do something functional for us. | ||
Like if we can train them, I'm thinking we can tie them up and then have them spin a turbine for us. | ||
Sure. | ||
That's the original power as well, right? | ||
How can we get our deer to generate energy for us as they mill about and do nothing but eat and crap? | ||
That's a great question. | ||
I looked up, can you train deer? | ||
And it just keeps saying, can you train a dog to track deer? | ||
Can you train a dog? | ||
I got it. | ||
Can you train a dog? | ||
They're pretty delicious. | ||
A treadmill. | ||
Hamster wheel. | ||
Lock them in. | ||
Yeah, but as they walk, food slowly comes out. | ||
And so we just need the cost of energy they generate to be more valuable than the cost of the food we give them. | ||
And I think we can do it. | ||
unidentified
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We got this. | |
You've got to withhold the food so that they're constantly trying to get it. | ||
But they have to eventually get it. | ||
See, I'm thinking like a World Economic Forum agent. | ||
They never actually get the food. | ||
Stop it, Ian. | ||
No. | ||
Here's an important one. | ||
It's Justin Amie. | ||
Amie? | ||
Amie? | ||
Says, unless they change copyright laws again, Mickey Mouse character will be public domain in 2024. | ||
Disney lobbied to change the copyright laws to the current law last time Mickey Mouse, the pig slayer. | ||
What is the pig slayer? | ||
Oh, so he'd be the hero, he'd be the protagonist in the movie, the swine. | ||
All I know is if Mickey Mouse goes public domain, yo, it's gonna be lit. | ||
I'm gonna make crazy Mickey stuff. | ||
Anime Mickey, drug dealer Mickey, Breaking Bad Mickey. | ||
How did South Park get away with all their Mickey Mouse episodes? | ||
You're allowed to satirize it. | ||
Yeah, so it's like, the only thing that changes is that you're allowed to make legitimate, standard Mickey Mouse stuff. | ||
Okay. | ||
So you could actually just make, you know, Steamboat Mickey and it's like public domains. | ||
Their Mickey COVID episode was brilliant. | ||
I loved it. | ||
And I love that he was like, he was like so hardcore pro-China. | ||
unidentified
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He speaks Chinese with his Mickey Mouse accent. | |
Oh, it was great. | ||
unidentified
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Just great. | |
All right. | ||
Tina Collette says, you are on the same time every day. | ||
I just tune in at 6 p.m. | ||
Mountain. | ||
I don't miss a show. | ||
Nice. | ||
And there's a but there, but I don't know. | ||
Is there something else? | ||
When did you start doing clips? | ||
Because some people are explaining that it's because of the clips. | ||
We've always done clips. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
On this channel or a separate channel? | ||
On this channel. | ||
No, not always. | ||
Some people are saying that YouTube gives you only three notifications per 24 hours and that the notifications are going out for the clips but not the live shows. | ||
And that's probably true because our clips have started doing way way better. | ||
Exactly. | ||
So what likely happened is that Cause didn't you have a clips channel? | ||
I think you just figured it out. | ||
I think some people have a clips channel. | ||
Here's what changed. | ||
We didn't always put our full length episodes up on the channel. | ||
That's the only thing that's changed. | ||
We did not always have our full length episodes visible. | ||
Yeah, but that was only a couple of months. | ||
They were coming up unlisted in the beginning. | ||
And now we put them on a playlist. | ||
So you think a clips channel is better than a... Well, I know YouTube only gives you three notifications in 24 hours, right? | ||
I think that's it. | ||
You've nailed it. | ||
If there's clips or if there's other things going out to the audience... Shorts. | ||
Shorts or whatever, then the regular channel's not being notified. | ||
See, I'm telling you, everyone's like, YouTube's prioritizing shorts. | ||
And I'm like, it's probably a bad idea. | ||
So we did create a Timcast clips channel. | ||
Needs a new channel. | ||
It is a new channel, TimCastClips. | ||
TimCastClips is a new channel that's been around for like a year now where we put clips on it. | ||
Yes. | ||
I'm talking about like the new thing. | ||
And I don't even know if we should even bother with them at this point. | ||
It's about a week old, but like you're saying, I think it's muting the notifications for people. | ||
No, the muting was happening before this. | ||
Before Shorts. | ||
Just for the clips. | ||
Nothing on our end changed. | ||
And I want to clarify too, that when this weird thing did happen, the website broke as well. | ||
So something changed on YouTube's end. | ||
You know, whatever. | ||
But good, if the clips go out, that's great. | ||
The clips are basically, it's actually, here's how it works. | ||
If we do a live show, most people who like the live show will come and watch the live show regularly. | ||
The titles of the live show are the biggest story that we have today. | ||
It's Biden declares pandemic is over on 60 Minutes. | ||
There's a good amount of people that will see this and say, I don't normally watch that show, but that story is interesting, and they'll click it. | ||
In this whole show, we've talked about a variety of subjects. | ||
Some people might say, I don't care to watch the show and I don't care to learn about Biden and the pandemic. | ||
But we have a segment about a Ford truck or a Dodge truck being discontinued. | ||
That clip will likely to get clicked. | ||
So by breaking it up into clips, you have a combination of some people will watch certain clips and not the full show. | ||
And so it maximizes the amount of reach and interest and everything. | ||
Is there a setting when you upload a video to have it not send out a notification? | ||
Yes, but you don't want to do that. | ||
If you just want to do three a day, like focus on the main show and two clips or something? | ||
The fact that our viewership was way, way up, but our live viewership was slightly down. | ||
And not even slightly down, it's not even necessarily the issue. | ||
It's like, all in all, it's still just good for the show. | ||
The goal is that the clips will attract new audience members, the people who like the show know when to come and watch the show. | ||
So I'm not super worried about the notifications. | ||
Moral of the story, set your own notification. | ||
Be the notification. | ||
Remind yourself, yeah. | ||
Tell your friends, hey, are you watching Tim Cast IRO? | ||
The greatest show in all the land. | ||
I tweet it out every day and on Mines, I post it on Mines every day before we go live. | ||
Shout it to the wind. | ||
All right, all right, all right. | ||
If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button? | ||
Subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, become a member at TimCast.com because that's where the uncensored shenanigans happens Monday through Thursday at 11pm. | ||
You can follow the show at TimCast IRL and follow it everywhere. | ||
You can follow me personally at TimCast. | ||
We do have a Clips channel, it's called TimCast Clips. | ||
I don't think we've ever actually shouted it out one time. | ||
No. | ||
But, so, the idea was we want to use the clips on that channel to naturally find its algorithmic push. | ||
So, like, YouTube will be like, here's who likes this, and then it will be a separate way to, you know, find new people. | ||
Ultimately, I'll put it this way. | ||
YouTube silos you. | ||
After a certain amount of time, they say, okay, this group of people likes this channel, and that's it. | ||
So you have different channels and different promotion to try and find different areas. | ||
So follow me on Twitter at Timcast and everywhere else. | ||
And of course I have my other channels, youtube.com slash Timcast and Timcast News. | ||
Daniel, do you want to shout anything out? | ||
Yeah, Daniel Turner, Power of the Future, powerofthefuture.com. | ||
Always good to be here. | ||
You can follow me, Daniel Turner, PTF on all platforms. | ||
And as always, the shameless plug for the greatest Virginia sheep farmers, Bristol Farm Virginia on Instagram, Bristol Farm Virginia. | ||
Follow your favorite sheep farmers. | ||
We got to swing by maybe in a couple of weeks. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You got pumpkins or something? | ||
No, I don't grow anything. | ||
I don't grow any vegetables. | ||
We just raise animals. | ||
I don't want to hurt the innocent vegetables anyway. | ||
I want to slaughter those ransacking animals who just destroy. | ||
I've been pulling for cows on the property so much. | ||
I could buy one, but just someone here has to take care of it. | ||
But anyway, my YouTube channel is youtube.com forward slash wearechange. | ||
You can see my adoration for cows, especially on lukeuncensored.com. | ||
I talk about them all the time. | ||
I think they're fascinating, amazing, beautiful animals. | ||
And I'm not going to say what I was going to say. | ||
What are you going to say, Luke? | ||
Save it for the after show. | ||
Are you going to work out with me? | ||
Yes. | ||
Are you going to work out with me, Ian? | ||
unidentified
|
I think so. | |
That's the question here. | ||
I want to point you guys in my book. | ||
There's also magical stuff from the cows. | ||
Well, you want to put your finger in a cow's mouth so it sucks on it. | ||
No, no, no, I'm not going there. | ||
Ian, Ian, I'm going down the pathway that has allegedly helped civilization progress to the poop. | ||
Oh, because they poop and then psilocybin mushrooms grow in the feces. | ||
I think that's part of why they revere them in India, in ancient culture, the Brahman. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Because they would eat the mushrooms, they would trip balls, they would do yoga, then they would smoke opium, you know, they did all sorts of crazy stuff back in the day. | ||
Hey, check these out. | ||
Well, check this out. | ||
This is Klaus Schwab's book and this is my book. | ||
I just want to show you how similar they are, isn't that weird? | ||
But if you'd like to get deep inside my mind on your own time, check out my book. | ||
It's on Amazon, Writing in the Dark by Ian Crosland. | ||
I'm just imagining, like, people are like, I really do want to understand Ian's mind. | ||
And then they pick the book up and open the first page and then five minutes later the book's at the end and their hair is on end. | ||
Yeah, it's an easy read. | ||
It's only like 70 pages. | ||
It's more of a manuscript of psychosis, so have fun with it. | ||
I love you guys. | ||
Follow me at Ian Crossland. | ||
I'll see you around. | ||
That was quite the selling point for a book for sure. | ||
Now I wish I had a book to hawk also. | ||
You guys can follow me on Twitter, which is almost as good as books, at Sour Patchlets, as well as minds.com, and also on sourpatchlets.me. | ||
We will see all of you over at timcast.com in the member segment, which is going to get Spicy, I guess, because this story just won't stop and it's getting crazy and there's so much going on. |