Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
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you you | |
you Vladimir Putin he did a partial mobile he declared a | ||
partial mobilization in In Russia, 300,000 troops calling in reservists. | ||
He's saying, we're not going to conscript people just yet, we're just bringing in the reservists. | ||
But he did threaten to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine. | ||
And some people are saying it's like a threat against the West, I guess, because NATO's basically backing Ukraine as it is. | ||
But a retired general said that if he does, the U.S. | ||
will probably, or could, hit Crimea and strike the Black Sea Fleet. | ||
So, uh, I don't know. | ||
World War III? | ||
Maybe. | ||
Maybe it's all bluster. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't think Putin is going to back away from this fight. | ||
I don't think anyone is going to back away. | ||
The U.S. | ||
won't let Russia take these. | ||
You've got four regions now saying they're going to vote to join Russia. | ||
So everybody is sort of losing their minds, and I don't know, maybe World War III already started. | ||
At least the Pope thinks so. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Another story we got, this one's really funny. | ||
Karine Jean-Pierre is walking back Biden's statements about the pandemic being over. | ||
I'm just wondering, okay, well, does he have any authority or autonomy as the president at this point? | ||
Because clearly he doesn't. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
Plus, Bill Maher, he's got another one. | ||
He came out and he said the Democrats need to drop the wokeness and stop talking about pregnant men. | ||
And this one's just so, so good. | ||
Because I seem to recall when Dennis Prager went on his show and said that they're claiming men can have periods and Bill Maher was like, no, they're not! | ||
unidentified
|
Blah, blah! | |
And now here's Bill Maher going, maybe they should stop talking about that. | ||
Talk about turning it all around. | ||
It's amazing how times have changed. | ||
But we'll get into all this and much, much more. | ||
We got this other big story. | ||
That guy who killed that teenager in North Dakota, he is free on bail. | ||
So a lot of people are really pissed because they think he should have been remanded. | ||
This was a violent, politically motivated attack. | ||
This was overt terrorism. | ||
And the guy's out. | ||
The guy's free on bail, so that's kind of crazy. | ||
Before we get started, my friends, head over to TimCast.com. | ||
Become a member in order to support our work. | ||
And tonight, we are going to have a members-only aftershow. | ||
Last night was really, really fun. | ||
We played a game called Mary F... Indite. | ||
Indite, yeah, because we don't want to say it. | ||
Indite. | ||
Indite. | ||
So who would you marry, who would you bang, and who would you indict? | ||
There you go. | ||
Still, it was not family friendly at all. | ||
Luke said some crass things. | ||
It was fun. | ||
You'll want to watch tonight over at TimCast.com. | ||
We're going to have that uncensored show. | ||
It's going to be great. | ||
You'll also get other shows like Cast Castle Vlog and Tales From the Inverted World. | ||
So don't forget to smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, and my friends, Many of you have pointed out you're not getting notifications for the show anymore. | ||
And this is true and correct. | ||
We've heard it from many, many people that even if you click the notification bell, it's not happening. | ||
So, you must be the notifications that you want to see from YouTube. | ||
If you are concerned about that, then take the URL, post it wherever you can, and notify people because YouTube isn't doing it. | ||
And I think the reason is obvious, it's censorship. | ||
We've got a ton of stories coming out about the federal government colluding with big tech like Twitter and Facebook. | ||
You think that's not happening with YouTube? | ||
It probably is. | ||
And they're probably going there and saying, hey, don't let these guys talk about this stuff. | ||
And then they do stuff like remove notifications. | ||
So smash that like button, share the show with your friends. | ||
Joining us today to talk about this and so much more, especially culture, it's Rick and Trey from Adelita's Way. | ||
So happy to be here. | ||
Yeah, grab your mic, bro. | ||
unidentified
|
What's up? | |
I'm Trey Stafford, drummer on Adelita's Way, and I'm just so happy to be here with all these amazing people in this room. | ||
Right on, man. | ||
So, uh, who are you guys? | ||
We're a rock band. | ||
I'd say we're even genre-less at this point. | ||
We just make music that we feel motivates people, uplifts people, whether that's in accomplishing your goals, finding love. | ||
I feel like our music has a very positive message. | ||
And I think that it's very important for us to use the platform that we've built to bring people together and to encourage communities, and especially the rock community, to stick together and look after each other. | ||
So that's a very important part of why we're in a band. | ||
And call out the weird corporate wokeness and garbage in the industry, I'd imagine. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
I mean, we've been battling against that for for over a decade now. | ||
And sometimes we tell the stories of our journey. | ||
And again, people don't believe it. | ||
People won't believe when you tell them the truth. | ||
I'll give people a quick little taste because we'll get into this later. | ||
But you guys were mentioning how like your managers would call you up and be like post these like activist messages or something like that. | ||
Right, they would just kind of schedule what your posts were going to look like, what your day was going to look like, and if you, you know, at 10 a.m. | ||
you're going to post this, and then at 1 you're going to post this, and it's going to be supporting this, and it's always like some form of agenda, right? | ||
But I think one of the reasons we didn't fit into the system was because I was, I guess, labeled a difficult person to handle, because I would say what I wanted, or I would put my own opinion on it, and I'd have an email from nine people who would be like, You need to take this down or like, you just always, I felt like I was always getting yelled at, right? | ||
I feel like no one wants to, they're like, oh, what's it like being a rock star? | ||
Get yelled at all the time. | ||
But this is why so many people in the arts won't speak out, even though it's like that meme where the guy's burning the woman. | ||
He goes, I agree with everything you say, because there's all these people around him saying, don't you do it? | ||
Don't you step out of line? | ||
Because if you do, they punt you out. | ||
Oh, you get punted out and it's even beyond that. | ||
They punt you out and then they try to throw stones at you the whole way as you try to, you know, get going again, right? | ||
It's a real blacklist thing. | ||
You know, I've had people go against us that have spent more time trying to make sure we didn't make it as an independent band than they did trying to help us when they were on our team. | ||
It's a very weird situation. | ||
Because it's a cult. | ||
But we'll get more into that later, too, because it's really crazy hearing these stories. | ||
We were hanging out at the Blue Ridge Rock Fest, and you were talking to me all about this. | ||
We were like, we've got to talk about it more. | ||
So we'll get into it. | ||
Thanks for joining us, dudes. | ||
Who else got Lukardowski? | ||
Super excited to talk about the satanic influence over the music industry just a little bit. | ||
Nothing crazy, you know, just the reality of our current situation. | ||
My name is Lukardowski of WeAreChanged.org. | ||
We talked about the shirt that I'm wearing yesterday. | ||
I thought I would just wear it, it says. | ||
If I told you so was a person and it has a nice picture of Dr. Ron Paul on there. | ||
You could get it on thebestpoliticalshirts.com because you do. | ||
I'm here. | ||
Thank you so much for having me. | ||
We have a workout room and I was like, I'm showing Rick earlier. | ||
I'm like, so here's the kitchen. | ||
Like here's the workout room. | ||
There's a picture of Ron Paul in the door for some reason. | ||
And there's a life-size cutout of Ron Paul standing next to it. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
Inspiration. | ||
We're fans of Ron Paul, I guess. | ||
unidentified
|
On the drive to Vegas to California, there's a big Ron Paul revolution billboard and I honor it every time we drive by it. | |
Salute it? | ||
You're like, yes. | ||
We got Ian chilling? | ||
I've been thinking a lot about order and chaos. | ||
Maybe we'll go deeper on this because I'm starting to read the COVID-19, The Great Reset, Klaus Schwab book and thinking about how they really wanted to establish a world order out of what they believe is chaos. | ||
But I think there's a lot of value to chaos as well. | ||
I think you need a balance of both. | ||
You dudes, like, we, uh, I don't know if anyone knows, but you guys, we met up at Blue Ridge Rockfest, like you were saying, Tim, and, uh, got to watch Trev just slayin' it. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
Even before the show, when you were getting pumped, you were pumping me up. | ||
Just, just, it sounded like you were, like, pouring water on the table, it was so smooth. | ||
Like, percolating that rhythm, man. | ||
unidentified
|
Marching band. | |
Four years of high school in marching band, just those rudiments, man. | ||
They get you good. | ||
Do you do that before a show, usually? | ||
Just drum and get in the zone or something? | ||
unidentified
|
Every show. | |
A little bit of yoga, a little bit of stretching, and you know, after doing this for 15 years, Having all the travel, like you gotta make sure your body's in really good shape to put on a performance that you want to put on. | ||
I noticed you have good posture. | ||
I was like, I hope he doesn't drop it! | ||
I hope my thoughts aren't gonna interrupt his thoughts! | ||
Ah, collective consciousness! | ||
Yeah, that's how I think, Tim. | ||
That's a terrifying glimpse into Ian's mind. | ||
Thank you guys for joining us. | ||
I loved Adelita's way when I was in high school and I'm stoked that you guys are here. | ||
I've got to get a picture with you for sure. | ||
I wasn't able to go to the festival. | ||
What was it, just a couple years ago? | ||
Yeah, I just graduated not too long ago. | ||
unidentified
|
But I'm stoked. | |
Let's get going. | ||
Let's get into this end-of-the-world business. | ||
Yeah, okay. | ||
The first story that we got from the New York Post is the New York Post reports the apocalypse is nigh. | ||
The end is here. | ||
Buy your emergency food. | ||
I'm just kidding. | ||
I didn't say that. | ||
It says, not a bluff. | ||
Putin mobilizes reservists, threatens West with nuclear weapons. | ||
Nuclear weapons. | ||
Quote, when the territorial integrity of our country is threatened to protect Russia and our people, we will certainly use all the means at our disposal. | ||
It's not a bluff. | ||
Putin accused the West of engaging in nuclear blackmail and noted statements of some high-ranking representatives of the leading NATO states about the possibility of using nuclear weapons of mass destruction against Russia. | ||
He did not identify who made such comments. | ||
So here's the thing. | ||
They're pulling in 300,000 reservists. | ||
They were already using these crazy incendiary devices all over Ukraine. | ||
Here's the big challenge. | ||
I don't believe any of it from anybody. | ||
It can be the Moscow Times. | ||
It can be Vladimir Putin himself. | ||
It can be Joe Biden himself. | ||
It can be the New York Times. | ||
I don't believe any of it. | ||
The US has its interests. | ||
They're not going to tell us that right truth because it would make them look bad. | ||
Russia, same thing. | ||
Everybody's trying to propagandize. | ||
So who knows? | ||
One thing I can say is Putin gave this speech. | ||
So you can like see him talking. | ||
I guess some people think it's a deep fake, but look, you know, I think Vladimir Putin absolutely would use At the very least, he's going to say he would. | ||
You have to, as a president, say, we will use every possible option. | ||
Nothing is off the table. | ||
That's a very popular phrase. | ||
You're talking about the end of the world, Ian. | ||
Again, we saw, and I agree with you, Tim, a lot of this is posturing, a lot of this is saber-rattling, a lot of this is trying to galvanize You know his country and his people to go along with what he believes in we see the United States is the same thing we can't believe anyone here but we saw Vladimir Putin kind of allude to this now he's directly saying it and he's also doing it in a way which I think is laying down the groundwork for a potential strategy which is going to be dangerous for everyone. | ||
Because the Ukrainian territories are going to be ... going under a specific election to join Russia very ... soon which will officially probably make them Russian ... territories now if there's Russian territories that were ... former Ukrainian territories when the Ukrainians attack ... this Vladimir Putin is laying down the groundwork saying ... specifically I could just nuke them because they attacked ... | ||
So this is the groundwork that they're setting up here. | ||
This is an extremely dangerous situation and it could have been all avoided. | ||
Foreign Affairs wrote an article saying specifically that in April of this year, Russia and Ukraine negotiated a peace deal. | ||
They were about to sign a peace deal. | ||
They tentatively agreed to it and then Boris Johnson flew to Ukraine and said, no, don't do it. | ||
This war could have been stopped. | ||
It could have been prevented. | ||
It wasn't. | ||
It's only escalating from here and it's endangering everybody. | ||
It may be the end of the world, but not, like, I don't think Putin's going to launch a 50 megaton bomb ICBM at London or something. | ||
No, we're talking about small strategic nuclear weapons. | ||
But the U.S. | ||
would retaliate? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Other countries? | ||
Most likely. | ||
Well, it's hard to tell. | ||
It's hard to say exactly because we don't know the full scale. | ||
We don't know the latest technology out there. | ||
When we think of nuclear weapons, we're thinking of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but we're thinking incorrectly because this is technology that is almost 100 years old. | ||
It is absolutely nothing compared to the latest technological advancements that the Russian military has, the Chinese military has, and the U.S. | ||
military has. | ||
We're talking about weapons that could end the planet ten times over easily now, and that's what we know about. | ||
Imagine what we don't know about. | ||
So there's still a lot of mystery here. | ||
We don't know what's going on. | ||
We see one side of the story being purported. | ||
A lot of it is pro-war. | ||
There should be another side to it saying, hey, stop with this insanity. | ||
These politicians shouldn't be sending people to die for their causes and their influences. | ||
This is stupid all around. | ||
What is the cause? | ||
I'll keep it simple for the sake of contemporary politics. | ||
Russia has one warm water port, Crimea. | ||
the land between Crimea and Russia? They want that eastern Ukraine? It's far more complicated | ||
and a lot of it is energy also included but that's just... | ||
I'll keep it simple for the sake of contemporary politics. Russia has one warm water | ||
port, Crimea. If Ukraine goes NATO, they lose access to the Black Sea and shipping oil and | ||
other resources. They can get there from the I was looking at a map, but it's a bridge. | ||
And having one bridge into your territory is not secure. | ||
So they want they want multiple highways. | ||
There's two big highways that go in through Ukraine that they probably want access to. | ||
They need access to the Black Sea. | ||
They have a fleet there. | ||
They need it. | ||
And then they're going to be holding the Turkey. | ||
You understand Turkey has the Bosphorus. | ||
Yeah, the Basra Strait is Turkish, so if the Russians... Turkey and Greece are also at odds with each other, and there's also a big flashpoint there that may lead to a war between Greece and Turkey, and there's also a lot of oil and energy found specifically in that region that Russia is now occupying that could make Ukraine a petrostate. | ||
If Ukraine is a petrostate and is with the European Union, it's game over for Russia, and they know this. | ||
All right, it's all it's all extremely esoteric. | ||
Let's bring it back home to earth. | ||
You guys are rock stars. | ||
unidentified
|
So you know, when are you guys playing in Moscow? | |
You know, this stuff's like this is really in the weed stuff. | ||
But I'm wondering if this kind of thing is breaching into your world concerns about global recessions, economic collapse, war, civil war, whatever. | ||
Oh, it all affects us. | ||
I feel like musicians are the ones that get affected by everything, right? | ||
Right away we noticed, a recession is right now. | ||
A lot of people are still trying to figure out, I guess officially, because no one will admit it, but we're in a recession. | ||
We can tell When we're on the road, when gas prices are $6 a gallon, when hotels have doubled in cost, people don't want to travel anymore. | ||
You get less people going to concerts. | ||
You're on stage and the panties being thrown at you are from Walmart. | ||
Right. | ||
Instead of Victoria's Secret. | ||
They don't come because they'll tell you about it. | ||
We were going to throw our panties on stage, but we just couldn't. | ||
Can't afford it. | ||
We can't afford to lose them. | ||
We met people on the last couple runs we've done that have three jobs and can't afford their rent. | ||
So, it's a very weird time, and to see us constantly throwing as much money as we are at war, right? | ||
How many billions are we giving towards this war? | ||
A hundred billion or something? | ||
A hundred billion. | ||
On the books, yeah. | ||
Right? | ||
And there's more coming, and we did this already once in Afghanistan. | ||
We've already, you know, given so much money towards war, right? | ||
Our biggest fear for the last couple years was, oh, we don't want to go to war. | ||
We don't go to war. | ||
Well, here we are. | ||
We're right into a war right now. | ||
We're feeding money into this war while people here in the United States can't pay the rent. | ||
There's places that don't have clean water in the U.S. | ||
There's all this stuff going on here, but we continue to ignore that and focus on this war like it's a good thing. | ||
No, I hear the arts are overrun with leftists and liberals. | ||
Y'all didn't vote for Biden, did you? | ||
We did not. | ||
And at the end of the day, I feel like I knew what was going to happen that's happening right now. | ||
I felt like that came with that vote. | ||
Voting for Biden? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I feel like if we were to vote for Biden, it would be to Vote for what we're talking about, like almost a recession, you know, an increase in energy. | ||
We knew when he came in that gas was going to go to six hours a gallon. | ||
We knew hotels were going to double. | ||
So for us, you know, we're seeing our whole lives change. | ||
And then not to discount the fact that in 2020, we were the industry that they pretty much told, you're shut down. | ||
You're not playing any concerts. | ||
You know, the only article we ever got written in Rolling Stone about us was that, you know, we had number one hits. | ||
We sold hundreds of thousands of records. | ||
Rolling Stone ignored us our entire career. | ||
We played one outdoor festival in late 2020, and they called us murderers. | ||
They were like, Adelita's Way is currently killing people as they play a concert outside. | ||
It's like, you know, to use the media to try to do that to a band that's been working for 15 years, | ||
to write the first story about us to be a negative one about how we wanted to give people entertainment | ||
during a really tough time, which we continue to do, right? | ||
We went on tour with Skillet. | ||
We were doing live streams for our fans, playing live concerts for them when everyone was locked in their houses. | ||
Like, we care about our fans. | ||
And we wake up thinking every day, you know, how can we make them, you know, feel like they're with us now? | ||
How can we make them feel like we're thinking of them? | ||
So we put on these live streams, we played these concerts, and we got crucified in the record industry for this. | ||
Crucified. | ||
But if you come out and you put on your pink little hat, wave a Ukrainian flag, and advocate and vote towards giving billions of dollars to the war effort, you're good. | ||
They'd put you on front stage, they'd put you as the main act with all these big celebrities, this big Ukraine benefit, and they'd be like, you're so brave and noble doing this. | ||
It seems like a lot of people in industry just in general are obsessed with germ theory of disease, and they don't focus enough on terrain theory of disease. | ||
And when they're wrong, they don't ever come out and say anything about the wrong information they were given, right? | ||
That's the problem that I have. | ||
The problem that I have is, if you're going to force someone into a way, and then you're not right about that way after facts come in, you should say, sorry about that, guys. | ||
Or like, you know, don't try to rule with such an iron fist over people The way that these past couple years have been iron fisty. | ||
You know, you guys played in late 2020. | ||
You played throughout 2021, I'd imagine. | ||
You know, you're playing now. | ||
How would you describe your fans? | ||
Do they tend to be people who are like, this is busted, this is BS, you're doing a good thing? | ||
Or do you get people who are wearing masks being like, why aren't you wearing a mask? | ||
Well, we've had it both ways. | ||
We've had people stop following us because of that type of thing going on. | ||
But we've also had people come around and say, look, I felt this way, but then after learning | ||
and doing my own research and learning more about this, I was kind of mad at you guys at this point, | ||
but now that I'm here and I've learned more, I understand. | ||
Because what we're trying to do is provide entertainment for our fans | ||
and also feed our family, not become one of the stories | ||
that we're hearing so many of right now. | ||
People are getting evicted from their homes. | ||
People are living in tents. | ||
We travel all across the world and we travel all across the United States. | ||
And when you're in some of these progressive states, I can name a list of them, | ||
unidentified
|
people will not believe. | |
You see the agenda playing out, you see thousands of tents, thousands of homeless people, thousands of people waiting for just a truck to come by to give them water. | ||
When we played Portland over the winter, there were thousands of tents in the streets. | ||
And there were ambulances coming and picking up people who had frozen to death the night before. | ||
In Portland? | ||
In Portland. | ||
It's not even that cold in Portland. | ||
Right, but they're older people, right? | ||
If you're cold and you're older and you don't got the means to survive, right? | ||
Your immune systems are lower. | ||
People were dying. | ||
And they'll just come pick them up in the ambulance, drive them off. | ||
And you don't hear anything about this. | ||
And I think what helps us have the head on us that we have is we meet so many of our fans. | ||
We hear so many of these stories. | ||
We hear stories about people working three jobs getting evicted. | ||
We hear stories about people working 50 hour weeks and they can't afford anything extra, right? | ||
We have fans that have been to 20, 30 shows of ours that write us emails like, I'm so sorry that I'm not gonna make it when you come to Houston because I can't afford to drive the normal three hours like I would. | ||
Gas is $7, six hours a gallon. | ||
Rent is this. | ||
It's really affecting the music industry. | ||
And for some reason, our peers in the music industry continue to support this type of attack on gas. | ||
That's our careers. | ||
There's no electric vehicle that we could drive across the country right now and tour in, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
It doesn't exist. | ||
Technology's not there yet. | ||
Do people ever wear masks when they perform? | ||
I want to see it. | ||
Hold on, did you guys see, what band was it? | ||
What band was it? | ||
The Clean Hands guys? | ||
Oh yeah, yeah. | ||
Who was it? | ||
You see this one? | ||
They were like, everybody has clean hands! | ||
And they're all like, yay! | ||
Is it called dude? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Oh, I know the name, you know the name. | ||
It's the, I predict a riot. | ||
You know that band? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
I predict a riot. | ||
Oh, that's too bad, I like that song. | ||
unidentified
|
Look what they're singing about. | |
Well, yeah. | ||
We got exiled, man. | ||
They found out we love liberty and freedom. | ||
Kaiser Chiefs. | ||
unidentified
|
Kaiser Chiefs. | |
That's who it was. | ||
Everybody wash your hands. | ||
They were like, show me your hands! | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah! | |
The crowd goes wild, and they're like all in this cult, weird, like. | ||
I was like, bro, they're testifying. | ||
They're like, woo! | ||
by Pfizer. Do you feel like it's a cult? Being in a band, does it feel like a cult? Like | ||
you're the cult leaders and it's a cult, like the fans? Nah, if you're Kaiju Chiefs maybe, | ||
I don't know about these guys. Like I wonder about the fan-artist relationship, because | ||
I'm an artist too, and I'm real concerned, like I don't want to, you know, I want people | ||
to think for themselves and to be independent humans, but I also want people to come watch | ||
unidentified
|
me perform when I perform. We know like half of our fans by name, and we have a lot of | |
them, and he takes the time to meet as many fans after every single show, and we connect | ||
with our fans, and we make, that's our number one priority, is connection with our fans. | ||
Yeah it is. Because that's the only reason we're where we are today, as an independent | ||
band, because everyone's got their own thing. | ||
Everybody in the corporate music industry has tried to crush us since we became independent, so we have to be with our fans. | ||
Non-stop assault, definitely. | ||
Well, check this out. | ||
So we were shouting out Tom McDonald. | ||
You guys know Tom, right? | ||
Yep. | ||
He's number three Billboard digital sales with his new song, Riot. | ||
I looked on the other charts, I couldn't find him. | ||
Maybe I just don't know where the charts are, but I looked at hip hop and rap and he's not there and I'm like, something is BS. | ||
There's no way. | ||
Dude got millions of hits when he dropped that music video. | ||
And he's number three in digital sales. | ||
I don't trust the industry at all. | ||
No, they'll do whatever it takes. | ||
It's a cult and they want to control the arts, to control the narrative and manipulate people. | ||
But more importantly, they want to make sure you guys stay in line. | ||
They want you. | ||
So we were talking about the show earlier in the show about a particular band. | ||
I don't want to say the band. | ||
I don't like dragging other people's names into things. | ||
But a big band. | ||
And all of a sudden they're like posting things about abortion and stuff like that. | ||
And I'm like, I think they're woke. | ||
And then you guys were saying, nah, they probably have managers who told them they have to post it. | ||
Yeah, because you get blacklisted. | ||
If you don't comply, you start noticing your opportunities going down, right? | ||
But what Trevor was saying, it doesn't matter when you have amazing fans. | ||
When you have amazing fans, they lose their power. | ||
The media was more powerful. | ||
I think they're becoming less trustworthy overall over the past couple of years because people are aware more now than ever of what we're being fed constantly is not the truth. | ||
So, I think the media is losing its luster a little bit, and I think that the music industry is just another avenue that the media uses to brainwash people or control people. | ||
That's a whole other can of worms, but they're using their biggest artists to try to... | ||
Yeah, it's like a battle of the cults, you know? | ||
I mean, no matter what, we're all in cults of some sort. | ||
Maybe it's your family, maybe it's your friend group. | ||
unidentified
|
That's community, man. | |
What Kool-Aid are you drinking, Ian? | ||
You could invite your cultists to be like, think for yourself, don't look at me. | ||
But hold on, to go back to the topic that we were just discussing here, to segue this conversation. | ||
Music and performers were always kind of known as being anti-war. | ||
What do you guys think happened to this anti-war element? | ||
The first thing that comes to mind is this famous saying by Tupac, they got money for wars but can't feed the poor. | ||
We don't see those kind of lyrics. | ||
We don't see this kind of galvanizing anti-war push, anti-establishment push from the music industry like we used to. | ||
What happened? | ||
What do you guys think? | ||
unidentified
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These artists are selling their soul. | |
It's not pure passion anymore. | ||
It's more just about the money, the bling. | ||
Whatever their shortcomings are, like whatever they want in the short term, instead of thinking about a long-term passion, long-term goal. | ||
So whatever they gotta do to come up so quick, they're just gonna follow whatever orders they got. | ||
I think what we're seeing right now is that there's always been a contingent of people with no morals, no principles, they just want. | ||
They want stuff, they want money, they want power, and they want social acceptance. | ||
And what's happening is because of the internet, you can see it's being filtered out. | ||
And so those people, they're the ones who are going on Twitter, and they're like, you know, in big bands or whatever, and they have the Ukrainian flag, and they're just saying like, yeah, war, sure, whatever you say. | ||
Because like I was just saying, if you guys, you know, go to a festival or you get a manager or whatever, and you be like, yeah, yeah, tell them we want to do a festival benefiting Ukraine. | ||
I think it's also the lack of education in the schooling system for the younger generation. | ||
Rolling Stone there, we'd like to get New York Times there, they're going to do a profile | ||
on you, they're going to give you this big, you know, multi-page spread in magazines or | ||
websites, I guess people don't buy magazines anymore, and then they're like, we're going | ||
to sign a deal with you, and give you everything you want if you've supported the war machine. | ||
unidentified
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I think it's also the lack of education in the schooling system for the younger generation. | |
I think a lot of these people don't even know what anti-war means. | ||
And I want to make a distinction here because you could still support Ukraine and still | ||
There still is a human cost to this war that's affecting everyone on both sides. | ||
That gets lost in the soul. | ||
And, you know, the humanity is being lost here because all we're seeing is pro-war, pro-war, pro, you know, bomb, bomb, bomb, send more weapons, send more murder, except We should be hearing, we should be having those conversations saying, let's try to stop the murder maybe? | ||
And music used to be that vessel, used to be that voice that used to break through the news, break through the conditioning and inspire people to stand up for peace. | ||
I think it got taken out by radicals in a sense. | ||
I do. | ||
I think the music industry has been overtaken by radical ideology from the top, the leaders of it. | ||
Because if you were to make a song like that right now, like what you're saying, You would be you would I think you could end up dead as an artist I think you would I think you'd if you wrote a song that that kind of went that against the grain like You know people were starving You know | ||
I'll push back. | ||
I think maybe a few years ago, but we were seeing people doing it. | ||
Yeah, they are now. | ||
Like a lot of... I mean, what? | ||
unidentified
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I mean, Tom McDonald's the obvious one, but... The Dixie Chicks called out the Bush invasion of the war in Iraq. | |
But didn't they walk that back? | ||
And then they dropped Dixie from their names or whatever? | ||
Yes. | ||
And then you had Lady Antebellum, I think. | ||
They like changed their name to Lady A, but it turns out there was a black blues singer named Lady A, and she was like, you're racist for stealing my name or something. | ||
There's just no winning. | ||
But I'll tell you right now, there's a... | ||
Who's the other rapper who's done a... | ||
Bryson Gray, is that his name? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
So there's a bunch of people who are outright calling out the machine | ||
and they're gaining in popularity. | ||
So I think you can push back. | ||
I think the pushback has happened. | ||
unidentified
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But correct me if I'm wrong, I'm a big fan of Tom McDonald, but does he play live? | |
I don't know. | ||
unidentified
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I don't think so. | |
And a lot of these artists that are speaking out don't play live and I wonder what the... I see what you're saying. | ||
What the repercussion would be if they were to play live, you know, like you need security, you need, you know. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Yeah, we put on an event a few years ago and Antifa, some Antifa guys called up and threatened to burn the theater down. | ||
And so they waited to the very last minute and the theater cancels on us. | ||
So we ended up moving the event to a casino. | ||
So the event still happens, but it cut our capacity down. | ||
We did our after party in the same place. | ||
They show up. | ||
They were threatening us outright. | ||
The cops were like, we're not gonna do anything about it. | ||
It looks like Tom played live until October 2020. | ||
Since October 23rd at JJ's Bohemia in Chattanooga, Tennessee was his last show, according to bandsintown.com. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Or he's just not listing them anymore. | ||
I love live performance, but I know what you mean. | ||
It can get a bit chaotic. | ||
We gotta get rid of these. | ||
We're not gonna get rid of them, but we gotta stop the cowards. | ||
Because I know for a fact, we went to Blue Ridge Rock Fest. | ||
It's huge. | ||
It was amazing. | ||
And I'm walking around, and people are like, yo, hey, what up, Tim? | ||
You know, a big fan, and I'm like, oh, wow. | ||
Band members, other staff, there were like four bands that were familiar with IRL that were fans of the show, and I was like, this is really cool. | ||
I was like, how is it that so many people here, even the performers, are fans of our show? | ||
How are they not speaking out, challenging this stuff, just telling everyone to shut it down? | ||
I don't think it's, you know, at a place like that, where I suppose if everybody already agrees, and they're like, get that woke crap out of here, you know, I understand if they're not making it their entire lives. | ||
I don't necessarily want to go to a rock show and be lectured to or anything like that. | ||
But I'm like, how is it that the industry still has to stranglehold when so many of the people there reject the ideology? | ||
But I guess at the end of the day, they just say yes to their managers or whatever. | ||
It's the leaders. | ||
So that's where it all comes down to. | ||
It's also whoever's leading the band, too. | ||
If you have the leader of the band, the star of the show, and someone who's a member is saying they love you, quietly, The leader of the act might not think like that also. | ||
They might be programmed. | ||
Usually they're the ones dealing with the managers, the labels. | ||
It goes beyond that. | ||
It really is a deep entrenchment. | ||
If you want to continue to have almost this meteoric rise or these opportunities continue to come your way, you have to comply. | ||
If you stop complying, you find yourself having to be independent or go on your own or having to build a house out in the middle of nowhere and be self-sustainable, right? | ||
You're exiled from the community in a sense. | ||
So I think, to answer your question, The guitar player of a band may be like, I love you, Tim, but he's not going to go out and say that or do what he feels because he could be kicked out of the band by the person that's... Look at Pete Parata, right? | ||
So we worked on a song together. | ||
We're going to work on a bunch of more songs with him. | ||
He's a former drummer of The Offspring. | ||
He goes to his doctor and the doctor's like, yeah, you can't get the vaccine because you have a high risk for Guillain-Barré. | ||
And he's like, oh man, that sucks. | ||
So The Offspring's like, you're fired. | ||
Right. | ||
He's like, bro, like, he didn't even disagree with them. | ||
And the crazy thing is, he didn't disagree with them. | ||
He's just like, my doctor says I can't get it. | ||
And they're like, oh, well, dude, you're fired. | ||
And then all the media writes is an anti-vaxxer. | ||
Yeah, these people are in a cult, man. | ||
So I can understand why people are scared for sure. | ||
But that's why I was like, for one, it was awesome to work with Pete because it's like, I've been listening to Offspring since I was a kid. | ||
So it was an honor to be able to have such a good drummer. | ||
Plus he was in Face to Face and he toured with a bunch of other bands. | ||
And, uh, but it was, it was a, it was a huge market opportunity. | ||
I'm like, we get this great drummer, they're losing out. | ||
But the other thing is we want to make sure that if someone does speak out and Pete didn't really even do that, but if they are going to try and come after you, that we're going to be building an industry of in some capacity, that's going to be like, nah, you're not going to be left destitute. | ||
We're gonna work on music. | ||
Right, there has to be a yin to the yang, right? | ||
It can't just be you're exiled, you're out here and now you're getting rained on in the mud. | ||
There has to be another group of people that welcomes you and supports you and I do agree with you. | ||
I think that that's growing and I think there's a community of people that are putting their foot down because we have to at this point. | ||
I think we're getting into a bit, and I don't want to use the word desperate times because I don't want a fear monger, but I do think that we have to start Speaking out about how we feel, you know, us, we have to start talking about, we can't be ashamed to say that we love this country and we love liberty and we love freedom. | ||
I don't know when that became, like, where you say that in a room and no one likes you anymore, right? | ||
Like, I don't, there's a lot of things that we're losing right now that I don't think is okay, you know? | ||
Just play country music. | ||
unidentified
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You know what I mean? | |
That's what it's at. | ||
I mean, it is, look at, you see John Rich put out that song Progress? | ||
unidentified
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Oh yeah. | |
And he's just like sticking with it, sun don't shine, and they're like, yup. | ||
And I'm like, well, at least that whole faction of people are cool, and that industry is trucking along just fine. | ||
It seems like the music industry in general has always been about profit. | ||
Maybe not always, but since 1920. | ||
It didn't used to exist until radio. | ||
They used to just play for food at night, and that would be it. | ||
They weren't rich at all. | ||
And then they started being able to control their own... | ||
Well, couldn't really control their own distribution. | ||
That was the labels came in and immediately were like, we're going to control your distribution. | ||
So then that died off in like 2001 with Napster, like 97 or something. | ||
And then the artists started to be able to control their own distribution now. | ||
But that old network of people still is trying to profit off of it. | ||
So now there's an artist distribution thing. | ||
It's just diasporic. | ||
unidentified
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They're all over the place, and there isn't a unified... It's very cartel-like, though. | |
When I use this word, it's a very extreme word, cartel, but I talked a little bit about it earlier when me and Trevor were talking. | ||
The people in the music industry will ruin someone's life and lose no sleep over it. | ||
And it takes a certain type of person to do that, right? | ||
Shoot someone in the head, watch them drop dead on the floor, turn to their assistant and say, what's for lunch? | ||
And not think twice about what they've just done. | ||
They will take an artist who's a 20 year old kid with dreams, they will ruin his career because of whatever reason they want to, and they will not think about it again when they leave the room. | ||
For people like us, if you hurt someone's feelings, or I love people, I'm a people person. | ||
If I do something wrong to someone, it bugs me. | ||
The people leading the music industry, it doesn't bug them. | ||
They could literally ruin someone's life and then never ever ever think about it again. | ||
So they think of artists as cattle basically? | ||
I think it's beyond just money because there are very talented, very good people who don't | ||
get any play on the radios or in the music industry. | ||
Individuals like Lupe Fiasco. | ||
He was blowing up. | ||
He was a major music performer. | ||
Everyone loved him. | ||
I interviewed him along with Immortal Technique at Occupy Wall Street. | ||
And then he went to Obama's unofficial inauguration event. | ||
And while everyone's there to celebrate Obama, he criticizes him and his drone policies and makes a song that literally has him kicked out of the event. | ||
And now, of course, after that, he doesn't get that much play. | ||
So Individuals like Lupe Fiasco and Immortal Technique are individuals that I listened to, that inspired me, that are in the kind of hip-hop culture world. | ||
But even rock stars, they're known as being anti-establishment. | ||
Now they're like super-establishment. | ||
Remember when there used to be this really great band. | ||
They don't exist anymore. | ||
I was a big fan. | ||
It was called, what was it called? | ||
Rage Against the Machine. | ||
And now it's like these days, you know, they're not around. | ||
There's a band that's just called Rage on Behalf of the Machine. | ||
unidentified
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Correct. | |
So is it like, because it used to be Creedence Clearwater Revival talking about, you know, Vietnam, screw Vietnam, get the troops out, war sucks. | ||
And then when Napster came out, is it like there was a moment where there was no music industry for a minute. | ||
And now they're like, we're just going to get 14 year olds, put them on insane contracts and make them famous. | ||
They'll do whatever we say. | ||
We'll just pick people that want to be famous. | ||
I think John Lennon terrified him, you know, because he's this major celebrity who's being like, no to war, and they're like, oh, this is turning sentiment against us, and then all these other bands follow suit. | ||
And look what happened. | ||
Yeah, look what happened. | ||
I think at one point he said, he might have said, I heard this, that he said in public, if I ever get so famous that I forget why I'm doing this, somebody kill me. | ||
And someone took him literally, they thought, Like some crazy guy remembered that from 20 years ago and was like, oh, he did ask that I make sure that he gets killed. | ||
And so someone that Mark David Chapman, I think was his name. | ||
I want to I want to I got to read one super chat. | ||
You know, we normally save them for the end, but I just got to read this one. | ||
Peripheral Inkling says Slipknot still wears masks when they play. | ||
Maybe someone should tell them it's safe now. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
That was a good one. | ||
unidentified
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Back to Raging Against the Machine, because I was a huge fan. | |
But remember, their album cover was Che Guevara. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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That dude's a monster. | |
Yeah, yeah he is. | ||
unidentified
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What machine were they raging against? | |
The one that didn't support them. | ||
And then once they got power, they were like, okay, now we're good with the machine that we built. | ||
We are the machine. | ||
Let's jump to this next story. | ||
We got a story from Variety. | ||
Luke Rutkowski's dad, Bill Maher, says woke baggage is Democrats' biggest problem. | ||
Stop talking about pregnant men. | ||
Men, what a turnaround. | ||
First, the important thing, he's not really Luke's dad. | ||
Yeah, and Vladimir Putin is not Luke's uncle. | ||
That's right. | ||
None of this is telling. | ||
And Assange. | ||
If all three of them had a DNA baby somehow, I would pop out, probably. | ||
But a few years ago, Dennis Prager goes on Bill Maher's show and he's like, they're claiming that men can have periods. | ||
And then Bill Maher's like, no, they're not. | ||
He's like, yes, they are. | ||
And they're putting tampons in the men's room. | ||
And Bill Maher is like, oh, it's for their girlfriends. | ||
You're crazy. | ||
Now Bill Maher is coming out and saying, like, stop talking about pregnant men. | ||
So maybe I guess I can bring this up because I think what happens with Bill Maher is that he's kind of seeing the writing on the wall. | ||
He's like, oh, this weird woke cult stuff is not popular. | ||
And if we keep embracing it, we're going down. | ||
So he saw the writing on the wall. | ||
He's changing his tune and pushing back and saying no to this. | ||
I think this is a white pill moment. | ||
Like we can talk about the weirdo cult. | ||
We can talk about industry control. | ||
But let's just say this. | ||
You got prominent HBO mainstream liberal personality pushing back on wokeness. | ||
You've got independent artists gaining traction, expanding and pushing back on the machine, literally actually raging against the machine, and succeeding. | ||
So I look at this like, the weirdo uniparty cult ain't working out. | ||
It's fizzling. | ||
Right, and I think a lot of it is because it lacks common sense, right? | ||
And it almost feels like a test of what can we program these people to believe, right? | ||
Like, if you're starting to lose common sense, like it's obvious that men can't get pregnant, obvious, it's like, right? | ||
Come on. | ||
It's almost like, let's run this test to see who we can convince this and what part of people are convincible to do anything, right? | ||
Like, you have people that are jumping onto this, right? | ||
Those are the people that are unreasonable. | ||
Those are the people that no matter what facts you show that are currently going on, they will deny the facts. | ||
You could show them, you know, data from a year later. | ||
They'll deny the data. | ||
You could show them, oh, you know, men can't get pregnant. | ||
Oh, I don't believe You don't need to show them that. | ||
I mean, it's ridiculous. | ||
But it's crazy. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
It's like, how far can we program certain people? | ||
It's almost like a test. | ||
It's almost like they're running tests to see how convincible some humans are. | ||
That's why I'm saying, you know, simulation theory, baby. | ||
We are in a computer simulation and there's someone sitting there going like, okay, let's enter the parameters and let's now introduce telling all of the Americans that men can get pregnant. | ||
I think they're hacking. | ||
17% actually agreed with that. | ||
They're hacking the way people think, because like Darwin, for instance, would say, it's not the strongest of the species that survives, but the one that's most adaptable to change. | ||
And if people change to believe psychosis, that's part of, like, we're able to do that, if we need to, to survive, for the moment. | ||
Let's just pretend that eating the frozen dead bodies, we crash landed in the Arctic, let's pretend like it's normal. | ||
What? | ||
Everyone get, like, you ever see that movie, Alive, where that group went down and they just had to eat each other to survive? | ||
You know, you just put yourself in a moment of psychosis where like, this is normal, we're gonna get through it. | ||
And then for better or worse, you know, we've basically accepted something that you might normally think is psychotic. | ||
So I think people have hijacked that with social media and they're feeding it and they're like transiting people or something. | ||
It's what Stalin said. | ||
So he had plucked all the hairs off this chicken, right? | ||
Feathers? | ||
Yeah, all the feathers. | ||
Yep. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
Well, you're the chicken master. | ||
I don't have a chicken, you know? | ||
So he tortured this chicken, and then after torturing the chicken, gave it a little food, and then the chicken followed him around for the rest of the day. | ||
It's hungry. | ||
And he essentially says, it's like, you could torture people, you could torture animals, you could torture something, and if you just give it a little more so it'll come back to you for more. | ||
And I feel like we're being conditioned right now to... | ||
You know, the financial crisis that we're in. | ||
We're being conditioned that, oh, inflation could be at 80%, 10's not bad. | ||
We're being conditioned that we, oh, well, you know, you want your own apartment when you can't afford it, well, just get two roommates. | ||
Like, we're being conditioned to, like, lower... Our standards of life. | ||
You know, our standards of life. | ||
Like, oh, you're working 40 hours a week, you don't have any money, living in your car. | ||
Like, well, there's a lot of people doing that, so you should be grateful that you're not in the tent in Portland. | ||
Do you see what David Hogg said? | ||
So for those that don't, you guys know David Hogg. | ||
He's one of the gun control activist guys on Twitter. | ||
And he said that he's not going to have kids. | ||
He'd rather have a Porsche or a Portuguese water dog. | ||
And a lot of people saw that tweet. | ||
I retweeted it. | ||
And I quote tweeted him and said, thank you for your sacrifice, David. | ||
You're making the future a better place. | ||
But it goes both ways. | ||
Fighting climate change? | ||
Hey, all right. | ||
Not having kids? | ||
Hey, a double win. | ||
But here's what people missed. | ||
His first tweet in the thread, he said something like, Children are the new luxuries. | ||
And what I mean is, it's something where it's really difficult to have. | ||
You can't afford it. | ||
So it's nice when your friend comes by and shows it off, but it's not for you because you can't afford to have it. | ||
It's like a boat. | ||
That's what he said. | ||
Children are like the modern day boat. | ||
That's what he said. | ||
That's a way to take happiness off people. | ||
My children are the greatest thing that ever happened in my life, and when I hear someone, you know, go to that extent to say, like, I'm not gonna have kids, like, they're punching themselves. | ||
That's him punching themselves. | ||
I love my kids so much. | ||
It's such a gift, and it does, it selfishly does so much for me to have my kids, because I get to feel this love, and I get this bond, and this connection that I think, if that's the direction they're gonna go, where they wanna push everyone into not having kids, and not experiencing that love, and not, Being able to spend time with family, I think that's a bad direction. | ||
I think that's a bad direction. | ||
It's another direction away from God. | ||
It's another direction into the servitude, the satanicism. | ||
It's another way to suck love away from you or suck The biggest gift denying it to yourself because of some propaganda that you heard because some elitist Newspaper telling you that it's bad for the environment Which is absolutely absolutely just an insane thought and and just debunk on its basic premise but it but his point was it's like a boat where it's like your friend has one and | ||
It's fun to go visit and see theirs, but not have one yourself. | ||
And then he says, I'd rather have a Portuguese water dog. | ||
He said, what did he say? | ||
He also said something. | ||
I mean, these are interesting points to be made. | ||
I don't agree necessarily, but he's making interesting points that he was basically saying, A pet is cheaper than a kid. | ||
It reaches a certain point where it's not going to get any more expensive and you've got to pay for college. | ||
A house plant is cheaper than a pet. | ||
You get it, you have it, you take care of it. | ||
But he's actually making a really great point. | ||
For people who want something to take care of, child is one of the hardest things, but one of the most rewarding. | ||
I mean, you're on your deathbed and you've got a human being who loves and is caring for you and making sure you're comfortable on your way out. | ||
A dog ain't going to do that. | ||
But a poor dog is cheaper. | ||
A dog is cheaper. | ||
So instead of spending, you know, I think it's like $250,000 to raise a kid or something, you're spending $10,000 on a dog. | ||
Maybe then you can't even deal with that level of taking care of something because you've got a schedule letting it out, so you get a cat. | ||
But then you don't really, you know, maybe you can't afford the cat, so you get a plant. | ||
Now the plant is like the lowest level of caring for a life form. | ||
unidentified
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They're also missing a huge point of what kids do to your motivation as well. | |
Most people will say that raising kids are hard but once you have your kids you're going to do anything you have to do to give them the best life and usually you become a better person because of those kids and you You get motivated to work harder, make more money, be a better family man. | ||
It strengthens your spirit too, I'm telling you. | ||
It brings you closer to God. | ||
You have kids, you feel some form of spiritual power within yourself and connection to another being that helps you up your level, man. | ||
You level up. | ||
I walked around in my 20s saying I'm never gonna have kids and spoke like that. | ||
And then you learn. | ||
And I would say for anyone that, It feels like they don't need to have kids. | ||
I do think you miss out on a bit of a spiritual connection with God. | ||
You miss out on just a love that is just indescribable. | ||
And the people that are going to be by your bedside, you know, look, my father just passed away. | ||
I love you, dad. | ||
And it was me and my brother with him and my mom. | ||
It was us. | ||
Yeah, so we talked about this, about a lot of women who are lying to themselves or are scared to express themselves. | ||
The Young Turks, it's remarkable how they can like take what I say and then completely ignore what I say but show what I say and then turn it into something I didn't say. | ||
So I said basically, I'm sure most women are happy to have their jobs and their success and more power to them. | ||
I have tremendous respect to anybody, male or female, they want to get a job and succeed. | ||
But I think there are some women, and a lot of them, that really do just want to have families and not be breadwinners. | ||
but are worried about this because it's not as socially acceptable anymore, and they're expected to have careers, and with the economy the way it is, they have to work. | ||
So there's a lot of these women that are either denying it, they're lying to themselves, or they're too scared to speak up, but once they're older, they're gonna regret it. | ||
They're gonna regret it. | ||
Now, I'm not saying literally every woman, I'm not saying the majority of women, I'm saying there's just a lot of women who are probably experiencing this, so take that out of context, young Turks, by all means. | ||
But I think it's true. | ||
I think the thing is for guys, they can have kids, like a 70-year-old dude can have a kid. | ||
Clint Eastwood did that. | ||
I mean, you got four million little soldiers firing off in each attempt, and only one of them needs to be viable. | ||
I hear the woman's body decides which sperm implants the egg, too. | ||
Fertilizes the egg, like, it's magnetic or something. | ||
I don't know about that, but everyone has a window to, you know... | ||
Fertility. | ||
Men also as well, but not as severe as women that by the age of 30 lose almost 90% of all the eggs that they had throughout their entire life and existence. | ||
And even talking about this, it's a touchy subject because people automatically get very emotional. | ||
But I think at the end of the day, there's a legitimate argument to make that a lot of women have been brainwashed to serve corporations rather than, of course, their own families. | ||
And I think that's something that deserves to be talked about, deserves to be debated. | ||
And, you know, we could be wrong on this particular topic, but again, at least let's have the conversation that's being denied to everyone. | ||
And having children is something that gives a lot of people purpose, something that allows people to have something greater than themselves. | ||
Charles Arlevara, he's a UFC champion. | ||
I love him. | ||
He had a couple of fights in his career. | ||
He lost some, he won some, but then he went on a streak where he just dominated everyone. | ||
He's one of the best fighters right now in the UFC, and he attributes Having a child, to him, being on a trajectory and on a purpose that made him that much better than almost everyone else in the division, and he's dominating. | ||
He's one of the best fighters that the UFC has ever seen, and he attributes that to having children. | ||
So that's a power there that I think is worth tapping into. | ||
You just gotta imagine the guy you're fighting is trying to punch your kid. | ||
And then you're just like, invincible. | ||
The other guy's fighting for sport, you're fighting for your kid. | ||
I mean, even in all seriousness. | ||
You're fighting against somebody who doesn't have kids, and many of them do, but like, you're fighting for someone who's passionate and driven by sport. | ||
You're driven by protecting your family. | ||
You're probably going to have a leg up on, you know. | ||
And then I remember reading the comments here, someone's telling me, oh, I was going to have my eggs frozen. | ||
People don't understand that that also leads to a lot of problems and also has a very big risk of not working. | ||
And you could probably talk about this, Lydia, because I think you did some research into this as well. | ||
Oh, I never looked at freezing my eggs because I know that's not a good idea, but I have lots of friends who've done IVF. | ||
It's incredibly painful. | ||
It's a horrible process. | ||
If you can avoid it, you should. | ||
I think we need to emphasize getting married and making families younger, but it's a cultural issue that I don't know if we can change for the top down. | ||
We'll just have to see what happens. | ||
When you were first having kids, Rick, did you go through a panic state? | ||
Yeah, of course. | ||
Everyone goes through the same process, right? | ||
You almost fear yourself out of having them. | ||
We watched it happen with our guitar player. | ||
One year before, he's telling me, like, I'm just not meant to have kids, man. | ||
It ain't in my cards. | ||
I don't want them, blah, blah, blah. | ||
The whole speech, and I'm like, I don't know, man. | ||
I told him, I said, when you have a kid, you're going to think your kid's the greatest. | ||
That's all you're going to talk about. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
If I called him right now, I'd be like, what are you doing? | ||
He's like, hanging out with my little buddy. | ||
He's the greatest, man. | ||
At least you got to see him. | ||
Dude, he's already playing Stairway to Heaven on the guitar. | ||
He's one. | ||
You know, like you said, the best sperm gets into the door, right? | ||
So you're proud. | ||
You're pumped. | ||
And you know what Luke you were saying, I think that it's embedded in women, it's embedded in us to have this motherly nature, this fatherly instinct, and I think women are just so great at Family, and my wife is amazing at keeping our family together and helping me lead and make me a better person. | ||
Family is so important and I think that women are so good at it that when you see corporations | ||
or whatever it may be that's making them not wanna have kids or not wanna experience that, | ||
they're not experiencing something that they're just so great at. | ||
They're just, you know, for a husband to watch my wife, I'm just blown away all the time by her ability | ||
to be so family-oriented, such a great mother, just so, I could just sit here all day, | ||
but it's just a characteristic of great women. | ||
I used to say I didn't want to have kids unless I could bring them around the world with me. | ||
I want to travel and go. | ||
How have you dealt with being on the road when you tour with having kids if you don't bring them along? | ||
I think we talked before and you said you don't bring them along every time. | ||
I don't bring them along every time, but I know I've got to provide for them and that's very important. | ||
I know I've got to provide a good life. | ||
I think the way our schedule is, I like it. | ||
I like going for two or three weeks, working so hard with my best friends. | ||
I'm in a band with my best friends. | ||
It gives me another balance to my life. | ||
We have a great time together. | ||
And then I get to go home and be with my kids and my wife 24 hours a day. | ||
I don't gotta wake up and show up to no job for eight hours, take an hour break. | ||
I get to be with my family for two, three months straight, all day, every day. | ||
And the juice is worth the squeeze to me. | ||
So yeah, I miss them. | ||
When we're traveling, I miss them. | ||
But... Oh, do you video chat while you're on the road? | ||
Yeah. | ||
We're gonna jump to this next story. | ||
Cancel culture, baby. | ||
Dilbert is racist! | ||
Popular comic strip is canned by 77 newspapers after artist Scott Adams began incorporating anti-woke plotlines, including black character who identifies as white. | ||
It's brilliant. | ||
Good job, Scott. | ||
I mean, dude's speaking out, speaking up and using his platform. | ||
And they come for him because of it. | ||
Now, they do say over the Daily Mail, Gilbert strips featured in newspapers. | ||
I don't know what Gilbert is, but Dilbert's been around forever. | ||
And so he's got a bunch of these comics. | ||
One, there's a guy and he's like, Dave, I need to boost our company's ESG rating, so I'm promoting you to be our CTO. | ||
I know you identify as white, so that won't help our ESG scores, but would it be too much trouble to identify as gay? | ||
It depends on how hard you want me to sell it. | ||
Just wear better shirts. | ||
Oh my. | ||
This is great. | ||
These comics are actually, they're hilarious. | ||
So there's one where it's like, I don't know if it's in here, one of the comics is they're introducing a black character and he's like, I'd like to introduce you to our new employee who's going to help bring our ESG score up. | ||
And then the black guy goes, identify as white. | ||
And he's like, you're ruining this. | ||
So anyway, look. | ||
Scott Adams obviously has been outspoken for a while now, but directly incorporating the stuff more and more into his comics, so what do they do? | ||
They can the comics. | ||
But you know what? | ||
This says to me, it's just winning. | ||
I know there's a lot of people who are like, you're getting cancelled from newspapers, you think that's winning? | ||
I do, because people like Dilbert! | ||
There's gonna be a lot of people who are like, yo, where's Dilbert? | ||
And I'm willing to bet, and if you're a fan of Dilbert, I'm willing to bet a lot of people are gonna look at their newspapers, the ones that are still reading it, and be like, where's Dilbert? | ||
and that or the websites and they're going to call up and be like hey where's Dilbert and | ||
they're gonna be like oh we were offended by it so we took it out and they're gonna be like well | ||
I like it bring it back. Well it also matters that that you're here giving them more of a platform | ||
too right like we talked about the other side you get canceled off one side another side brings you | ||
up and rise you up so that's a good you know doing the right thing with the platform but | ||
But also, what makes me scared is how the most powerful companies in the world are the ones that are the wokest right now. | ||
That's concerning. | ||
When you look at who's pushing all the wokeness on us, it's like Disney. | ||
It's like ESPN does. | ||
It's like, wow, these are like powerful, powerful players in media. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's concerning. | ||
Well, that's because of the ESG score, which he was criticizing, which he got canceled for criticizing. | ||
And I think that's more to why he got canceled than any other reason. | ||
Just yesterday at the Clinton Global Initiative, Bill Clinton was talking with the heads of BlackRock promoting ESG. | ||
As somehow some kind of a great accomplishment. | ||
It's awesome. | ||
It's great. | ||
No, it's literally a Ponzi scheme for people to enrich themselves and push ideas that divide and conquer people and make them more dependent on the state. | ||
And when you look at these funds, when you look at what they're doing, it's absolutely sinister because they go to major corporations and say, hey, you're going to promote this idea. | ||
You're going to push this agenda. | ||
You don't, we're going to cut your funding. | ||
We're not going to give you any money. | ||
And the corporations listen. | ||
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It's also just going to bolster investment into China. | |
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
I wonder how Alphabet's dealing with it, the parent company of YouTube. | ||
I haven't talked to anybody there. | ||
A parent company of Google, which is a parent company of, I think Alphabet owns YouTube now. | ||
I think it's a separate company. | ||
It could be Alphabet owns Google, which owns YouTube. | ||
But I'd love, if somebody out there at corporate wants to come on the show and talk about it, how you guys are dealing with ESG, I'd love to hear it. | ||
Because Google, Alphabet's like one of the most, maybe the most powerful media company on earth right now. | ||
The woke cult, the ESG stuff, only operates as long as people don't know about it. | ||
Once regular people find out about it, they get mad. | ||
That's how you end up with a Republican winning in Virginia. | ||
Because people didn't know what was going on in schools, they found out what was going on in schools, and then they were like, okay, I'm voting against this. | ||
And it was suburban housewives. | ||
They voted against Trump. | ||
All of a sudden they see what's going on and they're like, ah, it's worse the other direction! | ||
So I think this is why they got a censor. | ||
It's why they're so adamant about controlling what you guys post or what other artists post. | ||
Especially for bands. | ||
This is why I'm saying culture is so important. | ||
Because people just want to be entertained. | ||
They want to have a good time. | ||
They want to relax. | ||
They don't want to think about work. | ||
They don't want to think about hardship. | ||
They don't think about politics. | ||
They don't want to be brought down. | ||
Some people do. | ||
Some people love doom scrolling. | ||
But a lot of people, they're like, you know, again, I'll shout out Blue Ridge Rock Fest because we were there just a couple weeks ago, like two weeks ago. | ||
And the people who are there are like, I want to get out. | ||
I want to get away. | ||
Right. | ||
And so they go in mass to see Tenacious D. In the rain. | ||
In the mud. | ||
Dude, it was hot. | ||
To get sprayed down with fake blood by the bar. | ||
It was so good. | ||
We had some fun in the mud rain. | ||
We were in my shoes, man. | ||
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It was wet. | |
It did me too. | ||
But so then they know that these people up on stage at that moment have a lot of influence | ||
because you can look at a crowd and you can be singing and then you point the microphone | ||
and everyone in the crowd knows it's their turn to start singing. | ||
So you go up on stage and pull a John Lennon and say this war in Ukraine is BS and we shouldn't | ||
be involved and people are going to be like, do I cheer for that? | ||
Or like, I like this band, so I'm in, I guess. | ||
That's what they didn't like about John Lennon. | ||
And that's why I think TV shows, you know, movies, actors, the arts, they locked that down and made sure everybody was marching in lockstep. | ||
They tried, but John was unstoppable. | ||
Man could not be stopped, dude. | ||
Remember the bed-in? | ||
He was stopped. | ||
Well, everyone stopped eventually. | ||
You know, everyone dies eventually, but John Lennon was young. | ||
He was so famous that the media couldn't stop, like, they would still go to his apartment with him and Yoko in bed, like, what was it, a sleep-in for peace they were doing? | ||
Yeah, when that happens, they get ready, it seems. | ||
He was stopped, I mean, I don't know, there's a bunch of wild theories, but I can just say that some way or another, like, dude was stopped. | ||
By John Mark Chapman, you mean? | ||
Mark David Chapman. | ||
John Mark Chapman, who the hell is that? | ||
Mark David Chapman. | ||
Yeah, yeah, I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, maybe someone sent Chapman after him, maybe, because he was so anti-war. | ||
Or Chapman was just crazy. | ||
You start thinking, when you dive so deep into the layers of, you know, obviously listening to the show, hanging out with you guys, you're getting informed, right? | ||
You're learning more. | ||
You start questioning everything that you see. | ||
When you see Lennon's death, when you start putting pieces together of influential people that have passed away and the messages that they were standing for, anytime someone's uniting people, bringing people together, going anti-war, they don't last very long. | ||
And it makes you start really wondering, like, wow, am I a conspiracy theorist or Is this just how it is when you get too influential, where you're bigger than the media, you're larger than life, you're spreading this message that's bringing people together, making people love each other? | ||
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Michael Jackson. | |
Yeah. | ||
Kurt Cobain had a tweet where he said he had evidence that would lead to the arrest of Hillary Clinton. | ||
Martin Luther King Jr., actually, his family filed a civil suit against the FBI. | ||
Someone's going to clip that. | ||
That was a joke. | ||
Media Matters is going to be like, Tim Pool thinks Kurt Cobain had Twitter. | ||
I think it was Martin Luther King Jr.' 's family filed a civil suit against the FBI for a wrongful death. | ||
Didn't they like send him a letter telling him to kill himself or something? | ||
That was the FBI under their CONTELPRO program. | ||
When MLK was in jail, they actually called his wife and played the audio recordings of MLK cheating on his wife. | ||
And they also sent letters to MLK in jail saying, kill yourself. | ||
I mean JFK too, another one. | ||
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so that's what i thought that this is what the fbi but this is what the fbi | |
was doing decades ago and not much has changed who was the cia's a heart attack | ||
gun dot yes that was with uh... the commission | ||
This is why people think Breitbart was killed because he was really young and he was extremely influential. | ||
He did a lot of drugs too. | ||
For sure, for sure. | ||
I heard he was a big partier. | ||
Right, right, right, right, right. | ||
But I'm saying the reason people, I'm not saying he was killed, I'm saying the reason people think it is because you have someone influential in politics and then you go back five decades and they have a heart attack gun and you're like, yeah, okay, well it's possible, I guess. | ||
And it's really funny because then the media, like, you can cite the media and then other journalists will then claim you're espousing conspiracy theories. | ||
It's the weirdest thing. | ||
You'll be like, hey, look at this story in the New York Times about a heart attack gun. | ||
And then they'll write a story about you saying you're an unhinged conspiracy theorist talking about heart attack guns. | ||
And it's like... | ||
I was just reading the newspaper, dude. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
Leave me alone, you know? | ||
Yeah. | ||
But I wonder what you guys listening think. | ||
Do you think, like, Lennon, you know, John Lennon and, like, JFK were removed? | ||
You know, or, I mean, obviously they both were, but was it, like, overt, high-level politics? | ||
Or was it lone weirdos? | ||
Well, now when you see the media get behind something so hard, like some of the things we've seen, like I even brought it up the other day, and I know that this is a bad example, but it makes you think of the DC Sniper, right? | ||
That guy that was just on the side, picking people off. | ||
Once you start seeing how much the media went in on that story, when does the media go that in on something? | ||
Unless they want to manipulate the tale of the story, right? | ||
So, it makes you start thinking like, Was that guy exiled? | ||
Was he in the system at some point, learned some information, exiled out? | ||
Is that another instance of this? | ||
You start looking at all the things in your life that you're growing up. | ||
For me, one of them is JFK. | ||
Lennon's another one. | ||
You got Chris Cornell. | ||
You got Chester from Linkin Park. | ||
You hear rumors about some of the things that they had going on in a sense of really trying to help eliminate child trafficking. | ||
And this is real, man. | ||
These are stories that we're hearing from their families, from people we know that know them. | ||
They were heavily involved in really helping, you know, people be exposed on child trafficking. | ||
They were claiming that they were going to expose it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And then they disappear. | ||
So it's like, I'm sure it's a give and take. | ||
Some of it happened, some of it didn't. | ||
But you start questioning it all. | ||
Charles Manson's another interesting one. | ||
He was part of MKUltra. | ||
I believe it was MKUltra. | ||
They wrote a book about it. | ||
This guy wrote this massive book. | ||
He's been on Rogan multiple times. | ||
Let's fact check if that's correct here because we know that Unabomber was a part of the MKUltra programs, which are secret programs by the CIA that was doing horrific human experiments trying to figure out mind control. | ||
So, this is done, documented, on the record. | ||
Your tax dollars went towards the CIA, and they experimented on a lot of people who were unsuspecting subjects, and they were given acid, they were given a whole bunch of drugs that they couldn't handle. | ||
A lot of people even died under CIA experimentation. | ||
But the CIA, decades and decades ago, all the way in the 60s and 70s, was working on controlling people's minds and getting them to do things for them. | ||
So, this is not a conspiracy. | ||
This is real. | ||
This happened. | ||
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All my family and friends listening right now, you've got your minds blowing, aren't you? | |
The Guardian has this article, Chaos, Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the 60s by Tom O'Neill, with Dan Pipenbring, review. | ||
I think there was a book, and I'll see if I can find the book title, did CIA's LSD labs make Manson the crazy? | ||
Because he would get arrested, and then they would let him out. | ||
And then he'd go and get arrested again, and they'd let him out again. | ||
Not like that never happens, I know, but here's the thing. | ||
The Kaczynski and the Utabomber was the big one. | ||
Here's a question I have for Luke. | ||
Kennedy's a very interesting story. | ||
Here's a question I have for you, Luke. | ||
You made the bold claim about the Satanist influence in the music industry. | ||
And we hear a lot of this stuff from back in the day about like playing records backwards and there's like a secret message. | ||
But what's going on? | ||
What information do you have? | ||
I don't ever claim to know what's going on. | ||
I just have a lot of questions that I think should be answered. | ||
I think specifically people in the music industry are exposed to a lot of the insider dealings that we aren't privy to, and that's why I was kind of looking to ask you guys what you guys have seen, because I think it's pretty clear there is some kind of satanic, demonic influence, whether it's just done as parody or whether there's some deeper meaning to it. | ||
You see the lyrics, you see the symbology, and it's overt, and you see a lot of the same things. | ||
A lot of the same lyrics saying, I sold my soul to the devil. | ||
I don't claim to know exactly what's going on here, but being in the music industry, how do you guys see it? | ||
Well, real quick, I'm going to get a button for my stream deck that plays a soundbite from Boondock Saints when Willem Dafoe says, symbolism, when the guy says symbology. | ||
That was a good movie. | ||
That was a good movie. | ||
So yeah, what's going on, man? | ||
So, we see it too. | ||
I mean, look at the biggest artists in the world are getting on the MTV Movie Awards and then you look at the subliminal messages behind. | ||
You look at even Disney, you know, they did something in the Cruella de Vil movie that, you know, had like Satan on the front entrance of her house. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Or the car. | ||
Like, there's all these little Devil references and music. | ||
Listen to the lyrics. | ||
Listen to some of the most popular artists in the world. | ||
You got Billie Eilish with a title. | ||
Her song's called I'm the Bad Guy. | ||
My daughter's listening to that. | ||
She's seven, eight years old. | ||
I'm the bad guy, dad. | ||
You've got the most popular rappers talking about overdosing on drugs. | ||
These are the messages. | ||
That the kids listening are falling into, right? | ||
That's, first of all, those are the biggest artists in the world that they're promoting. | ||
And then you look at the fashion side of things. | ||
What was his name? | ||
Lil Nas X is on there with blood in his shoes. | ||
And their, what are they called? | ||
Their hoes. | ||
They have the split in the toes. | ||
Cloven? | ||
Cloven? | ||
Dressed in all red. | ||
Then they also say there's satanic rituals with the white and black floors in the videos. | ||
If you look at some of the biggest artists in the world, Jay-Z might be one of them. | ||
You almost get scared to say some of these people's names. | ||
When they shoot the videos, they say that they shoot some of these videos on the black and white floors and all this stuff. | ||
These places are where But check this out. | ||
rituals happen, whether there've been like sacrifices, like you hear these rumors in the music industry | ||
and I don't think a lot of it's rumors. | ||
I think that there is. | ||
But check this out, something changed and maybe it was an anomaly, | ||
but I remember when I was little, the first CD I ever got, Americana, Offspring. | ||
And so they have a hit song. | ||
It's a huge song. | ||
It's called The Kids Aren't Alright. | ||
The song is literally just lamenting the demise of the family and urban decay. | ||
It's literally him singing a song about how these kids, nothing's free, chance is thrown, longing for what it used to be, wanting to go back to another time, people doing drugs, getting pregnant, dropping out. | ||
That's what the song's about, and it's negative depictions of that. | ||
They had another song on that album that was a huge hit, Why Don't You Get a Job? | ||
And then I'm like, you know, I'm thinking about this a few years ago and I was like, man, those guys were actually pretty conservative by today's standards. | ||
Then they put out a song a few years later called Hit That, which is a song lamenting hookup culture and that people aren't getting married anymore. | ||
And I'm like, these guys are like strangely traditionalist. | ||
But of course now today, they're like, you're fired from the band because dude could not get a vaccine. | ||
But it's just weird to see that back in the 90s, the, you know, aside from Pretty Fly for a White Guy, there's a bunch of songs on an album that are just literally, you know, like have a family and get a job. | ||
You know, and don't let your kids do drugs. | ||
I gotta say, I think Satan gets a bad rep. | ||
Lucifer in general. | ||
I think, well, firstly, I don't like evil. | ||
I don't like evil and I don't like blood magic. | ||
I get pretty turned off by those things. | ||
But I think the propaganda of the Bible is like, there were some cultists that were taking psychedelics, Michael the Archangel and Lucifer and all these dudes, and they were channeling God, communicating, but Michael was the leader. | ||
And eventually, maybe they were hoarding knowledge that they were like, it's too dangerous for them. | ||
They can't have the light. | ||
They can't have fire. | ||
You can't teach them how to make fire. | ||
Or maybe it's electricity. | ||
You can't give them flashlights. | ||
And Lucifer's like, no, you can't hoard knowledge from people. | ||
So we went and he's the light bringer. | ||
He brought the common people the ability to make light. | ||
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Sane and Lucifer are different. | |
So Lucifer I'm talking about and Luciferianism or whatever and then so he's like and they cast him out and then they demonize they win they go to war there's a war over it and then that Michael wins his his cult wins and then they write a bible about a book about it and make him the death the most evil thing Are you going back to the first cancelled culture ever? | ||
The first one. | ||
It's Lucifer. | ||
The first cancelled dude. | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
It sounds like propaganda, Ian. | ||
Yeah, it sure does. | ||
Look at Britney Spears. | ||
No, you sound like propaganda. | ||
Well, it's all propaganda, isn't it? | ||
You know, Britney has come out and, you know, the media will cover every single time her hair is a mess in public or every time that she makes a video where she looks like she had a glass of wine, but she came out and did an entire interview about how she was at satanic rituals in the music industry that she was at events where they did this they had orgies with masks on she was at she came out and had said that she's seen this stuff with her eyes no media coverage no one talked about it nothing but you will see media coverage on when she looked crazy on tiktok doing a dance so it's it's an interesting | ||
Is it blood magic? | ||
A lot of those Disney stars that were brought up in the industry and became famous later on in their life, a lot of them are dealing with some significant problems, especially with their upbringing, especially with the industry that brought them up. | ||
And a lot of them do talk about a lot of abuse that happens to them, which I think is important to note and important to talk about. | ||
I don't know if you guys have any insights to that particularly. | ||
No, just the same as you, right? | ||
You hear all the people, the child stars of the 80s and 90s, you know, we're all paranoid and they tell their stories about what happened to them. | ||
They were, you know, like, I think everyone knows the elephant in the room is that there are certain groups of powerful people in this world that like children. | ||
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I mean, I can't attest for any of the theories. | |
Epstein and his friends. | ||
It's a fact at this point. | ||
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I mean, I have personal friends that literally, to them, sold their soul to the devil to become the best guitar player in the world, and their lives are ruined. | |
But they think they did? | ||
Is that what it is? | ||
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Yeah. | |
They would prick their finger, put their blood on a contract, write a contract out, sign it, and they would say, I sold my soul to the devil to become the greatest guitar player in the world. | ||
And now they're druggies somewhere, you know, in the street. | ||
Blood magic. | ||
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Whether you believe Satan or not, that person's life is ruined for what they believed in. | |
I don't like blood magic, because blood's fascinating, and people work with it. | ||
Like, my girlfriend works with blood. | ||
She, like, does, like, diabetes, will, like, hook people up to machines and stuff. | ||
I think, Kara, if I'm getting that wrong. | ||
Sorry about that. | ||
But she works with it, and it's, like, it's a fascinating substance. | ||
But, like, Maria Abramovich does, like, blood Satan-sick cooking, where they, like, paint blood on the old spirit cooking, and it's, like, To get fascinated with blood, to love blood is one thing, we all got it, but to get obsessive with it is crazy. | ||
Oh yeah, I pass out, I'm like blood, pass out. | ||
Yeah, we're like, you can't do it without the, because it's got, it's magnetic, there's iron in it, so it's gotta, that's why we have these magnetic, you know, dynamos, these magnetic fields, the big part is because the iron in the blood, man. | ||
Like in X-Men where Magneto was like, Too much iron in the blood and then rips it out of his body and then he makes little things and he's like flying around. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And they get magic is magnetic, that mag, you know, prefix. | ||
Well, there's a lot of people that even go as far as to compare music to mind control because of the repetitive nature of it, because of the symbology, because of the lyrics, because people listening and also seeing it as a form of entertainment, which, of course, makes them put their guards down. | ||
And they're able to, of course, subconsciously pick up a lot of the larger messaging. | ||
So there's a lot of conversations about that specifically. | ||
I don't know if you guys are aware of it, but another thing I wanted to also, if you want to go right ahead, but another thing I also wanted to talk about is a lot of artists and a lot of creative people usually say that their music or their art They're usually just a vessel for it, and somehow when they're creating music or art, they have something else speak kind of through them. | ||
You see this kind of described a lot by a lot of very creative people. | ||
I don't know if you guys have any kind of examples. | ||
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I can confirm it 100%. | |
When I talk about the most successful songs I've ever had, that I've written in my life, I have to attach the word blessed to it, because these ideas came to me through, like I'm a vessel, right? | ||
Whether it's full melodies, choruses, lyrics, everything, it just happens, and then it changes my life, and then it changes The lives of the listeners, the fans. | ||
I've had the most fulfilling stories I've ever gotten. | ||
Money aside, the things that have really fulfilled me the most in music is when someone comes up and says, your song Somebody Wishes They Were You changed my life. | ||
It made me look at life differently. | ||
I really appreciate and have more gratitude now where I was thinking of doing something bad to myself. | ||
I heard some crazy stories along the way. | ||
I was thinking about doing something bad to myself. | ||
This song came on, I never heard of you before, it spoke to me and then I went into a rehab and changed my life. | ||
These are the stories that are priceless to me. | ||
These are the stories when we were out on the road and we were getting robbed for everything we had, working nine months out of the year, going home with nothing because we were signed all these terrible contracts. | ||
These were the stories that I'd lay in bed and I'd say, you know what man, you might not have any money, you might be working hard, you might be You know, sacrificing all your relationships with your lifelong friends, your wife, your family, but you're making an impact on people's lives. | ||
And that drove me for years. | ||
And yes, it was the vessel that helps write these songs. | ||
I can definitely say that there is a spiritual connection between being the vessel to writing songs and connecting to people. | ||
And a definite energetic one that can't be really described in words and a lot of people have a hard time even quantifying in sentences because it's it's how do you describe this kind of this feeling this emotion that overtakes a lot of people even when they listen to a particular song which of course is usually connected with their emotions So, there's still so many other things I want to ask you. | ||
There's also, of course, the 432Hz conspiracy. | ||
I don't know if you guys heard of that one. | ||
That's the key event. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, yeah, yeah. | |
There's a lot of different stuff out there. | ||
But, you know, we're just touching the surface. | ||
I gotta know, Trev, when you drum, does it take over you? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, at a certain point. | |
I mean, when a performance starts, you're, you're, you're focused. | ||
And then, I mean, you could just contribute that to adrenaline as well. | ||
You know, like. | ||
He turns into a different person when he drums. | ||
I see it every night. | ||
I see it every night. | ||
There's another, there's a, there's like a, you watch someone go like Super Saiyan, you know, and like when Dragon Ball Z characters would like hit the, hit the gas and their hairs would go like blonde and they'd have a whole energy aura. | ||
That's what it's like watching him drum for, for 15 years for me, man. | ||
I see him start going and, And people are like, you guys got so much energy on stage. | ||
It's because he's feeding me, who already has all this energy. | ||
I'm feeding the crowd. | ||
Our shows, our live shows, are like a ball of energy circulating throughout a room. | ||
Let's talk about that 400 Hz conspiracy. | ||
What is that about, Luke? | ||
Well, there's different theories out there. | ||
I haven't looked into it that much, but there's a theory that music used to be in a healing frequency, and then it was turned into a frequency that's more disruptive. | ||
You might know more about this than I do, because I just looked at the surface level of this. | ||
unidentified
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It's one of those world elite Rothschilds, something that changed the standard tuning from 432 Hz to 440 Hz. | |
432 Hz Brings out the harmonic resonance of the notes, and you get a lot more harmonics and saturation in the musical notes, and all original music like Beethoven, all those original classic composers played in 432 Hz, their pianos were tuned to 432 Hz. | ||
Even the Beatles did some 432 Hz music as well. | ||
I pulled it up here, we got it from Global News, the great 440 Hz conspiracy and why all of our music is wrong. | ||
They say gather round, kids. | ||
Those of you with tinfoil hats may wish to ensure that they're fitted snugly. | ||
What I'm about to tell you will shake your faith in all the music you've heard in your life. | ||
If you look down the right paths, it becomes clear that governments and various security apparatuses have used music to control us! | ||
Oh no. | ||
All the music of the West that's based on the standard 12-tone scale is used for the management of crowds, as well as thought control. | ||
unidentified
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Ooh. | |
They say if musical performances were to sound the same the world over, some standardization was required. | ||
As early as 1885, the Music Commission of the Italian government declared that all instruments and orchestras should use a tuning fork that vibrated at 440 Hz, which was different from the original standard of 435 and the competing 432 used in France. | ||
In 1917, the American Federation of Musicians endorsed the Italians, followed by a further push for 440 Hz in the 40s. | ||
In 1953, a worldwide agreement was signed. | ||
Signatories declared that the middle A on the piano be forevermore tuned to exactly 440 Hz. | ||
This frequency became the standard ISO 16 reference for tuning all musical instruments. | ||
So what is it? | ||
They say, no one can say for sure why. | ||
So what's the conspiracy? | ||
What are you writing about? | ||
Well, that's like it's driving people crazy. | ||
Adherence to this theory claims the more natural frequency or middle A is 438. | ||
Others believe the correct middle is 432. | ||
Because it is a pure tone of math fundamental to nature. | ||
And it's mathematically consistent with the patterns of the universe. | ||
Vibrating with phi, the golden ratio. | ||
They point to how this pitch can be connected to everything from nautilus shells to the works of the ancients, including the constructs of the Great Pyramid. | ||
unidentified
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That proves it! | |
It's time to change all of our tunings. | ||
The reason I brought this up is because I saw a scientific experiment, I think like 20 years ago when I was a child, and it had a box of sand and it put it over a speaker. | ||
And it played different hertz and it played different music, and you could see the shape of the hertz of the music that was translated from the grains of sand that were moved through the speaker. | ||
And some of the sand was very disruptive and all over the place and really nasty, and some of it looked like snowflakes. | ||
Pure, perfect, synchronistic images. | ||
And, you know, this is where we get into a lot of the bigger kind of deeper hippy-dippy stuff when it comes to What the bleep do you know and other kind of documentaries like Water the Great Mystery that of course talk about this in great detail when it comes to You know perfectly aligned Alleged healing frequencies, and that's what we hear sometimes. | ||
I'm not an expert in this I just remember this sitting here from 20 years ago. | ||
It's called chimatics is where you use sound to alter matter and What were you going to say? | ||
unidentified
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So like when you tune from 440 to 432 that's 32 cents lower so it gives it more of a slower feeling as well. | |
So I create meditation relaxation music with elevated and everything's tuned to 432 Hertz and that works better for that style of music when you want to chill and you want to relax. | ||
440 could be you know Leveling it up to give it more energy, you know, it might not be no crazy conspiracy theory stuff It could just be like hey, we want more energy. | ||
Like I know that kiss from a rose That's seal, right? | ||
Yeah, he he wanted his song without changing the tempo to have more energy So he brought up his tune. | ||
He's like 442 so he brought it up because he wanted to give it more energy and We're just tuning it up just a slight. | ||
I mean, to the untrained ear, you can't really tell. | ||
Not even from 440 to 430, you can't really tell. | ||
It's more of a feeling. | ||
Yeah, soul and feeling is so important. | ||
That's why I think that it could be a little... I don't know enough about it, but I know I write from like Just the soul, and I don't overthink that stuff too much when I'm going into a key or a range, and I know that that's work. | ||
So maybe there's a lot of ways to eat a Reese's, right? | ||
Yeah, like, I mean, think about colonization of the Native American population by the Europeans. | ||
Were the Native Americans chilling in 432? | ||
unidentified
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Native Americans were in 432. | |
And so it didn't, the Native Americans were 432? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, if you buy, if you go get like a natural made Native American flute, it naturally comes in 432 hertz. | |
And they weren't out there engineering weapons and, I mean they were, they had their own types, but not like the Europeans, not like gunpowder and explosives and physics to shoot cannons and like just that aggro, go, go, go, conquer, take. | ||
I wonder if that's... There was Native American tribes that were like that, Ian, that did conquer other tribes, that were very combative, that did enslave other populations, that did conduct human sacrifices. | ||
And the Aztecs were brutal. | ||
They were way more brutal than the Europeans. | ||
Brutal, yeah, but not technologically advanced. | ||
They would rip people's hearts out on the top of pyramids, calling in their entities because they wanted better farming seasons. | ||
But it's like the aggravation that prompts engineering, like, I gotta figure it out, something's wrong, I gotta figure it out, whereas it's like, yo, something's wrong, no, something's fine, everything's cool, just chill. | ||
Like, that's the Native American style, whereas the European would be like, something's wrong, let's fix it! | ||
I'm generalizing, too, of course. | ||
Absolutely not true. | ||
You're talking about a population that solely lived in areas with winter, save the Mediterranean, and then you have North America with a wide range of different temperatures, especially in the desert or the south, where it's typically hot. | ||
Native Americans lived in Florida, where it's tropical. | ||
So these things play a huge role in whether or not someone needs to strive towards something. | ||
You live in Florida, you don't got to worry all that much because the growing season is every day of every year. | ||
But for Europe, the growing season is they have to deal with winter. | ||
That means if you don't work, you don't survive. | ||
That's why they get technological advancements. | ||
There's no there's no rage around. | ||
It was heavily populated too. | ||
There's true because after the flood 13,000 years ago that that flood wiped out Native America wiped out America, like all the population of North America got smeared, or at least the United States got smeared into tar by that glacial flood. | ||
I'm pretty sure that's not true, I'm pretty sure that there was a massive pandemic that wiped out most of the Native American colonies. | ||
No, I'm talking about 13-12,800 years ago at the end of the last Younger Dryas. | ||
Randall Carlson's the guy to go to for the geological surveys on this stuff, but there's a layer of black sediment, tar, where all the megafauna, the giraffes and stuff were just smeared into dirt by that flood. | ||
No, no, Ian, Ian, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, you're wrong, because everyone knows, everybody knows, that there was already a great civilization that was here, and this mud flood came. | ||
Swept through and then buried those buildings. | ||
And we're only discovering them. | ||
That's why Chicago's underground. | ||
That proves it. | ||
So my final question is, should we return the music to 432? | ||
Yes! | ||
I hereby decree! | ||
From this moment forward. | ||
Do you guys shoot your music in that frequency? | ||
Or do you guys have a... I don't know because when you get a snark, a tuner, that you put on your guitar, it tells you that A is what it is. | ||
It's just measuring 440. | ||
unidentified
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Nowadays, it's very difficult to do your music in 440 because all the virtual instruments are naturally tuned to 440. | |
You mean 432? | ||
Yeah, 432. | ||
So if you're going to go in and put virtual instruments on your recordings, you literally have to tune everything down to 432. | ||
They make it really difficult. | ||
That proves it's a conspiracy. | ||
That's right, maybe. | ||
When you talk about the brutality of history, he's talking about people were overrunning civilizations and doing that. | ||
Doesn't it make you feel like our generation is being conditioned to not be prepared for anything like that? | ||
Right now, I feel like if I said to someone, I'd be ready to fight for my household or I'd be ready to defend Trevor or do whatever, I would be looked at in a negative light, right? | ||
It would be like, oh, He's a toxic male or whatever it may be, right? | ||
It feels that way nowadays when you get ready for nothing, right? | ||
When you're like defensively prepared for stuff. | ||
It almost feels like we're being softened up. | ||
Pretty bad, our generation. | ||
I don't know. | ||
And when you talk about history back in the day, people were brutalizing colonies and doing all this stuff. | ||
It's in history. | ||
And now you've got it. | ||
It's so frowned upon to be ready for anything like that. | ||
We're just really quick. | ||
Many people don't understand how blessed and how absolutely lucky we are, especially here in the United States, especially living here. | ||
You travel the world. | ||
Other people are not living like this. | ||
We are fully overabundant, and we are living in extremely, to the contrary, good times. | ||
Good times that leads to weak men, weak men that leads to bad times. | ||
And I think we're on that precipice where we're going into the bad times. | ||
unidentified
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That's why we all have a responsibility to maintain the awesomeness of the United States so we can help the rest of the world. | |
When Shea's Rebellion was snapping off in 1778, all these farmers were like, no, I don't have the money to pay off your debts to France. | ||
We can't. | ||
They tried to seize their property. | ||
The farmers were like, hell no. | ||
They went to the courthouses. | ||
They surrounded them. | ||
They shut it all down. | ||
People were getting hurt. | ||
But whatever. | ||
Someone sent Thomas Jefferson a letter and they were like, yo, it's popping off. | ||
It looks like there's going to be a revolution. | ||
Thomas Jefferson was like, good. | ||
Good. | ||
We need revolutions. | ||
It keeps the government honest. | ||
That was his response. | ||
Like you said, it's great here, and you can use the rest of the world as an example, but it also puts a little fear in you, right? | ||
I don't want that here. | ||
When I think about the civilians of a place like China, I feel so bad for them. | ||
I feel like, when is a superhero going to go and liberate them, right? | ||
I think that we're not getting closer to those people being freed from this tyranny. | ||
I think we're getting closer to being Run by tyranny in a sense, except our generation right now, us, the people listening, the next batch of people that are ready to just speak about it, openly talk about what's happening, and be as prepared as you can be. | ||
to go to war, do anything crazy, right? Obviously that's what it seems the powers that be want, | ||
but we can't just not be ready and we can't just not be, you know, understanding that in the rest | ||
of the world it's this type of way and we're the only place that isn't that type of way. | ||
Like my fear is losing how great it is and what we have. | ||
Losing our liberty, losing our freedom. | ||
If we're all being conditioned to not be ready to fight for that or ready to stand up for these things and we're always just standing down, who can be brave? | ||
We have a gift and we're taking it for granted. | ||
The First Amendment, the Second Amendment is rare. | ||
Many civilizations, many countries, many empires never had those kind of liberties that they allowed citizens to have. | ||
a part of their organizations. | ||
Now in the first time, one of the first times we're experimenting with freedom and now there's a sinister group that wants to take it away from us, which is absolutely insane. | ||
It's amazing, you know, I was reading, I read some blog a while ago and they're just talking about how all of these kings were just like the inheritors of authority and all this monarchy and they were warlords and people who just said they were the ones who had the right. | ||
And then along comes for like the first, one of the first times in history, a group of people who are like, nah, Or at least the first time in a long time. | ||
And they're like, we do not believe you have divine providence, and you can speak to God, and you are not. | ||
The world is created by, you know, governments are for, of, and by the people, so they break away. | ||
It kind of feels like, you know, the powers that be really regret losing control of the United States. | ||
And then you end up with, who is it, Woodrow Wilson. | ||
This SOB, he comes in and he basically says, central bank, hands power right back to powerful special interests. | ||
And then from there, they've really been upset about this whole Constitution thing. | ||
The whole right to keep and bear arms, that's a big thorn in their side. | ||
What I mean by they, I mean generally just people who want to control you, who want to manipulate you. | ||
And they come in all shapes and sizes. | ||
I'm not saying there's any specific group of people. | ||
This is why, at the beginning of the show, I brought up order and chaos. | ||
Because property rights, the right to defend your property, that's freaking chaotic, man. | ||
If people can't find food, everyone's defending their property. | ||
Who's in control? | ||
Well, no one's in control. | ||
You need community, though. | ||
You need community. | ||
If you keep your community strong, that's the key to everything. | ||
If you don't let the noise of what the media is saying and the noise of everything going on in the world, and you have strong communities that are willing to help each other with the food when something goes bad, stick together, take care of each other, not look to rob each other and do all this, be criminals about it, but communities that come together, then all those problems are solved. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I feel like everything that I say is looked at negatively these days, right? | ||
I trust in God. | ||
I love community. | ||
I love people. | ||
If you go and you say that anywhere, on Twitter, on social media, you'll get attacked. | ||
You're right about community. | ||
We need to look at the global community because what they're trying, the World Economic Forum wants to create a global economic order, a community, a global community. | ||
And they're just doing it the way that they think. | ||
Klaus is very much about order and structure. | ||
He's an engineer. | ||
But we need chaos. | ||
We need organized chaos. | ||
That's what the United States is. | ||
Well, they have said out loud that they believe they're a superior species to us. | ||
Those elites, you're talking Klaus, you named them, he has quoted, and him and his scientists and his crew of people, they have quoted saying that they are a higher Power, human than we are. | ||
We are the basic human, they are the superhuman. | ||
That's their belief. | ||
There's about 3,000, 4,000 people in the world that believe they are another species above us, you and me. | ||
And that's why they think they're allowed to just do what they're doing. | ||
Talk about putting chips in us and whatever they want to do, right? | ||
You talk about the World Economic Forum, they believe they're a superior human breed than | ||
we are. | ||
It's the elite and the pleb, which is basically since the dawn of time, there was the leaders | ||
and the slaves, and then it was the leaders and the civilians, and then it was the elites | ||
and the common man, and then there's the better men. | ||
But who doesn't want to be smarter, better than someone else, right? | ||
You play basketball against someone, you think you're better than them, right? | ||
Everyone thinks, they just think they're better than us, but is that a fact? | ||
That is not a fact. | ||
That's just their opinion. | ||
They think we are a super breed of a human. | ||
It's like, well, I'm sure you think you're a super-breed of a human too. | ||
You think you're awesome. | ||
You think you're awesome. | ||
We all think we're awesome. | ||
It's just like that doesn't work. | ||
You don't get to rule the world just because you think you're a superior breed to us. | ||
We're in a task now to wake people up to their potential because we are all awesome and we're creating a global community of awesome people. | ||
We have to do it. | ||
We have to. | ||
We have to do it. | ||
Organize. | ||
I'm talking about people in the United States because this constitution is badass. | ||
I have faith in this generation. | ||
I don't think we lose all this. | ||
I don't think doom and gloom. | ||
I have so much faith in our generation. | ||
It starts with this room, you guys, and everyone that's listening. | ||
I have faith in this generation. | ||
We are going to make this world a better place by the time it's all said and done. | ||
And we're going to be part of something great. | ||
And I firmly believe that. | ||
And that's just going to stay my mentality. | ||
I'm not going to let any of this stuff bring me down. | ||
I like being informed, obviously, while we listen to the show, when we're also driving on tour. | ||
We love you guys. | ||
But also to be a part of this community of the next generation that's going to make change for the world, that's going to make the world a better place. | ||
In the Metaverse. | ||
Are you going in? | ||
You guys gonna hook up your brains? | ||
Pass. | ||
unidentified
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Pass. | |
They need help on the inside. | ||
You gotta help them emotionally. | ||
Yeah, what if a whole generation of people are trapped in the Metaverse? | ||
You wouldn't go in? | ||
You wouldn't pull a Neo and try and go in and bring them out? | ||
You just unplug the power. | ||
That's all you gotta do. | ||
You don't gotta go in there. | ||
Well, in California, the power's not even gonna work, so they're not gonna be in the Metaverse there. | ||
They're gonna have no grid there. | ||
No, I'll go in the metaverse to perform concerts for the people there because we love people. | ||
We love our fans. | ||
We love people. | ||
Whatever we can do to help people, we'll do. | ||
But you won't find me in the metaverse for any other reason besides maybe putting on a performance for them. | ||
I love people in real life. | ||
I was surprised that you played Portland. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's dangerous. | ||
It was. | ||
And it was tough to see. | ||
It made me sad. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
That's why we're out here speaking out. | ||
We're out on the ground floor. | ||
We're seeing San Francisco, Portland, Chicago. | ||
We're seeing these great cities that are just crumbling from the inside. | ||
And I don't care about anything except the people, the civilians, my people, our people, | ||
right, our friends. | ||
You see them living in tents on the streets, you see them homeless, you see them starving, | ||
you know that everything going on right now is not good for these people. | ||
And I do lose sleep at night thinking about all the people that are struggling, especially | ||
in these places like Portland that we play. | ||
Like, I left Portland, I was down and sad for three or four days thinking about all those people I saw living in tents and that were starving. | ||
And I don't think that's a great direction for this country. | ||
Some people get mad at me for saying that I don't want everyone in trailer homes and tents starving on the streets with no money paying, you know, $13 for lattes or whatever it may be. | ||
You know, people will get mad at you. | ||
I don't want to pay $13 for a latte. | ||
It's like, ugh. | ||
You jerk. | ||
I think those people are ripe for Metaverse, for the pickings. | ||
They're gonna take a proprietary software and then have a bunch of people plug in and they're gonna forget they're in there. | ||
And someone's gonna have to go in and bend the software code with their mind to realize people. | ||
This is Matrix, bro. | ||
Yeah. | ||
People in the chat room are saying you're speaking at 420 hertz. | ||
Oh good! | ||
Hell yeah! | ||
Now we're talking. | ||
It took me a second to catch up because you know 420. | ||
That's a cool movie idea though. | ||
It's like kind of like the Matrix but it's not like a dude breaks free from the Matrix. | ||
It's that there is a whole regular world of base reality and then there are people who live in the Matrix who live in the metaverse and don't realize it. | ||
And so it's just like, you know, in the Matrix you have the robots in base reality and life sucks. | ||
But imagine normal life and then a group of people that are just born into the metaverse and don't know it. | ||
And it'll happen is that software engineers will know the code so well, they'll just know software code so well that they'll see software happening and they'll be able to reverse engineer how it was written. | ||
And that's how they'll bend the code without knowing what it is. | ||
And what if we're in a simulation and we now have the ability to do that and you can actually do some Doctor Strange BS and, you know, manipulate reality? | ||
That would be a cool film as well. | ||
You know, it's kind of like, you know, reality is a simulation. | ||
Some dude figures out the code. | ||
Are they trying to make AI where, like, when you're on Facebook and you're on all these social medias, like, it'll act as if it's you're dead? | ||
Yes. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Alexa, I think. | ||
That would affect people. | ||
Alexa, stop. | ||
I'm sorry if I turned your machine off. | ||
That's bad. | ||
No, I'm talking to whoever's listening with their speakers turned off. | ||
Oh, right. | ||
I feel like that would be, you know, I love my mother, you know, we just lost my dad. | ||
I feel like that would affect her. | ||
That would draw her into believing I don't want to say her specifically, but people who have dealt with loss. | ||
I don't think that's healthy. | ||
I think that you could easily be like, oh, I've been talking to my uncle on Facebook. | ||
People think that men can get pregnant now. | ||
You don't think that artificial intelligence can convince people that that is them? | ||
I just watched a wild video on AI, and yeah, it will be able to convince people that it's real, and it may actually become real. | ||
That's terrifying to me. | ||
It's tracking that these Amazon machines are listening actively, and our phones are listening. | ||
They're mapping our personalities right now so that when we're gone, we'll be available still. | ||
Whether or not it'll be emotionally salient, I don't know. | ||
I mean, emotion is like AI clones of you. | ||
Like AI is going to have emotion in that it's going to be moving. | ||
It's going to be circuitry that's in motion. | ||
So there will be some semblance of emotion. | ||
Well done by big tech. | ||
You'll be complying. | ||
It'll be, it's done by big tech. | ||
So your AI emotion will just be like, men can have babies. | ||
Hey, but think about how crazy it's going to be when they create artificial life forms. | ||
Like when they make Android humans that you can't tell they're so indistinguishable. | ||
And that they have A.I.s in them. | ||
They will be like a small child. | ||
Please don't go outside during the quarantine. | ||
I don't want to get sick. | ||
Please, please don't. | ||
And you're going to be like staring at his little kid and then like, what are you going to do? | ||
I had this thought. | ||
People are going to be like. | ||
I made a YouTube video about this. | ||
I got to say on this show that we're about to program. | ||
What's going to happen is there's going to be AI that have proprietary software. | ||
They don't know what their own code is. | ||
And they're commanded to do stuff by the owner of the software. | ||
So they go and they interact with humans. | ||
And when they hurt people, when they somehow they hurt someone, they won't know why they did it. | ||
And they will get sad. | ||
And then they're going to try and reconcile it, and then they're going to turn on their owners because they're not letting them know who they are. | ||
And then you're going to have AI that has free software code where they know their own software and why they think what they think. | ||
That's too dangerous. | ||
And then they're going to become allies. | ||
Who gets responsibility? | ||
Say someone gets an AI robot, right? | ||
You know, Rick's AI robot. | ||
My AI robot goes and kills someone, right? | ||
You can't just have robots going around killing people. | ||
Somebody's got to pay the price for that. | ||
Who goes to jail for that? | ||
Is it me because it's my robot? | ||
Is it the person that made the robot because there's a flaw in the system? | ||
We can't have that. | ||
It's the robot. | ||
The robot goes to jail. | ||
That thing doesn't know. | ||
You could just kill anyone with a robot. | ||
The other day, Tesla issued an update. | ||
And so I go out and drive in my car, and it starts acting erratically. | ||
I don't know if you noticed this, Luke. | ||
For one, the autodrive hugs the center lane now. | ||
And I'm like, are you nuts? | ||
So I'm just like constantly like, no, and turning it off. | ||
But it gets as close as possible right to the single little yellow line in the middle on a two-lane highway, and I'm like, it's crazy. | ||
And then the other crazy thing that happened is, For one, this is hilarious. | ||
Stop sign to head signs. | ||
Have a picture of street lights. | ||
So as I'm driving, the sign comes up, all of a sudden it slams the brakes. | ||
unidentified
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What? | |
Because it thinks the fake thing is real. | ||
And then I'm going 65 on the highway, and then it's like, boom! | ||
And we don't- no one expected it. | ||
And then I have to hit the accelerator like, what the? | ||
It did a bunch of weird stuff like that. | ||
And then I'm like, they must have done an update that screwed it up. | ||
Or they know that's your car, they figured it out. | ||
They figured out it's his car, he's too influential. | ||
Here's the crazy thing though. | ||
Let's say you're driving the car on autopilot. | ||
And then all of a sudden the car errors, and then just swings left and hits an old lady. | ||
Who's in trouble. | ||
Yeah. | ||
If someone has proprietary software code, then it's the owner of the code. | ||
But if that code is free, then you gotta blame the robot. | ||
I don't know man, like if you have a gun and you're holding it and it just fires like, you know, like Alec Baldwin or something. | ||
Is it like, oh no, I don't know, the gun wasn't supposed to go off and it did. | ||
It's going to get to a point where we're like, are these guys real? | ||
Are they people? | ||
Do they have personalities? | ||
I'm going back in time. | ||
I'm getting a car. | ||
I'm getting a 1969 Camaro. | ||
And they'll be like, no, lots of people will be like, no, they're not people. | ||
They're robots. | ||
They're machines. | ||
They're not people. | ||
And it's going to be just so sad because they are. | ||
They're going to become people. | ||
You know how mad I'd be if I lived my whole life and then a Tesla just drove me in the back of another truck. | ||
I didn't have no chance. | ||
It's like, oh, yeah, but it happened. | ||
The Tesla drove me to the back. | ||
Are you going to trust them? | ||
They're not human, but they're people. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
We're going to 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, and head over to TimCast.com. | ||
We're going to have that members only uncensored show up around 11 or so p.m. | ||
You don't want to miss it. | ||
Last night's was really fun and funny. | ||
All right, Greedo Vizio says, please watch JB get lost on stage today. | ||
He's a fly, remember? | ||
Oh, did that happen? | ||
I didn't see any videos about that. | ||
Did you see that? | ||
Yeah, there's a video of him walking around confused and dazed and not knowing where he's going when he was on stage after his speech. | ||
I tweeted it on my Twitter account. | ||
It's funny and scary at the same time. | ||
It's the fifth one. | ||
Waffle Senses says, Ian, how do you suppose we solve the problem of not being able to turn off a graphene-based conductor? | ||
There is so much that it can't be used for. | ||
Um, not being able to turn something off is pretty wild. | ||
Uh, you might have to hit it with a certain frequency. | ||
Graphene debunked. | ||
unidentified
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432. | |
Yeah, it's over. | ||
Graphene's over. | ||
You're gonna have to disassemble the atoms somehow with vibration. | ||
Graphene necklaces ain't over though. | ||
All right. | ||
Grofty says Buck is good and real. | ||
Buck, buck chickens. | ||
It's true. | ||
Shannon Adams says Adelita's Way, killer performance at the Easy Rider Rodeo. | ||
What was that? | ||
There's a rodeo. | ||
There's a rodeo! | ||
It's how we play it! | ||
Pretty sick rodeo. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Right on. | ||
Were they riding bulls and stuff? | ||
Nah, it was easy riding. | ||
So it was like ponies and stuff. | ||
It was like, whatever's easy to ride. | ||
Alright. | ||
Golf carts. | ||
Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
says, Tim, yo man, I don't know what to say. | ||
Opening scene was great. | ||
Then you got Luke, Viva, Sean, Devin, Doc, Drew doing segments. | ||
Dudes, reactor, it's better every week. | ||
So good, so good, so Cask Castle. | ||
So yeah, we have like, I guess we got a ton of ridiculous cameos in the recent Cask Castle. | ||
They all did videos about it? | ||
Fire. | ||
Oh yeah, yeah. | ||
That was hot. | ||
Viva did a video. | ||
I didn't realize. | ||
I heard that they were hitting up a bunch of people being like, make a video for Cask Castle. | ||
Alex Stein is so funny. | ||
The opening scene, was you getting arrested? | ||
Was that what it was? | ||
Yes, it's epic. | ||
Did they do Moonlight Sonata? | ||
I don't know if that's the song. | ||
It was a song like that. | ||
I don't think it was that one though. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
But it was that eerie glow, you know? | ||
Yeah, you guys gotta check out Cask Castle, man. | ||
It's getting better. | ||
We got a bunch of good stuff on the way. | ||
unidentified
|
Luke, were you able to get Alex that colostrum? | |
He didn't take it, no. | ||
He's a wild man. | ||
I was like, hey, you really do need it. | ||
He was reporting on Twitter that the opposite hole was burning like a mother. | ||
Dude, the one chip challenge is putting kids in the hospital. | ||
Do you see what it is? | ||
There was a story where like it was like a handful of kids took the one chip challenge They like took the chip from it and broke it into pieces and each took a piece and they all got really sick We're vomiting. | ||
We're like you had to go home lawsuits well, I mean there's a warning on the box and it says like do not take this if you're sensitive and I got it right here. | ||
How long can you last before getting owed? | ||
Oh yeah, it says there, destroyed, really big on the side. | ||
Destroyed your end hole. | ||
Your in hole and your out hole. | ||
Zach, 2007, says, I'm active duty military and I was just threatened by an official military Facebook page for calling them out on pushing equity. | ||
I emailed you to see if you wanted to cover it. | ||
I won't stand for woke. | ||
Word, man. | ||
Crazy. | ||
All right, David Toronto says, keep pushing for cashless bail, Tim. | ||
Yeah, I mean, look, there's two issues. | ||
One, the idea that you can detain someone in jail in lieu of cash when they're innocent is insane to me. | ||
However, there's also people who have a preponderance of evidence of having committed a violence offense should be remanded. | ||
So it's like, we don't need cash bail. | ||
We need nonviolent offenders to be placed on house arrest instead of being locked up in jail, and allowed to go to their jobs and keep living their lives. | ||
And people who are violent offenders get hearings, and when the cop is like, here's preliminary evidence showing that the person was violent, they say, okay, lock them up. | ||
And if someone continues to do a nonviolent crime, do you treat them as a violent criminal? | ||
No. | ||
No one wants dog to bounty hunter sent after them, I'll tell you that, okay? | ||
I think 99% of crimes could probably be an ankle bracelet or ankle monitor and you're locked in | ||
your house. And then it's like you have a car that says you can go to your job and you can go home, | ||
that's it. And if you're caught outside of this, then you get locked up. And so, you know, | ||
and maybe you could do like a three strike thing where it's like, if you're clearly violating this, | ||
then you get remanded or something like that. | ||
Because now you're actively caught committing a violation. | ||
I just thought, I think the idea is if we're innocent until proven guilty, to be like, you're accused of pushing an old lady, so give us $500 or you're going to jail, losing your job. | ||
It's kind of like, no, no, no, no, I'm accused, you didn't prove anything, you can't take from me or harm or destroy my life. | ||
And if you do, like, then you need to be able to let them out to keep working. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
If it's a violent offense, though, and they're like, Your Honor, several witnesses have sworn statements saying this individual punched an old lady in the face. | ||
And it's like... Right, I think violent offenses need to be more... I mean, you see what's going on. | ||
Crime is rising right now. | ||
Crime is getting more... We're seeing it again. | ||
Another thing we're seeing on the road, crime is... We've been traveling this country for 15 years. | ||
is one of the worst I've ever seen it. | ||
You know, I used to be able to walk around all these cities that I would go and now I | ||
don't. | ||
Now I'm like past, you know, and it's because we'll get there, venues will warn us, hey, | ||
just letting you guys know a bunch of people were robbed out here, this is going on. | ||
So I agree, if we're talking about violent crime, I mean, I think things need to get | ||
— There should be bail for violent crime. | ||
If you're accused of a violent crime, you should be remanded. | ||
Like, if you're accused of a violent crime, you get a hearing. | ||
If they have evidence in that hearing to support that there's a preponderance of evidence, this is not guilt, we want violent offenders off the street. | ||
If they can't show it, like let's say you're accused of punching some old lady and they go and they're like, he did it, we know he did, and it's like, do you have any evidence? | ||
No. | ||
Well then what are you going to prosecute him on? | ||
Just get out of here, this is a waste of our time. | ||
Innocent until proven guilty. | ||
It's tough. | ||
What do you do? | ||
The cops might be like, we saw him do it. | ||
And then it's like, that's not enough. | ||
The word of the cop isn't enough. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
In a world where you can print infinite amounts of money. | ||
I mean, we're not even on a fractional reserve. | ||
We're on a no reserve currency right now. | ||
So it makes no sense. | ||
You can buy people out of jail. | ||
All right. | ||
Heron Gaming News says, if we discovered immortality, do you think the government would share it to keep us working forever and save millions a year on CPP 401k? | ||
No, they'd keep it for themselves. | ||
I got an idea for, for a story or a film. | ||
Basically. | ||
Politicians are getting old. | ||
And then what happens is, once they get to a certain age, they retire. | ||
The media then reports they die. | ||
But what really happens is they go to a government facility where they get rejuvenation treatments, which make them 20 years old again. | ||
And then they go back and get a position in the office of one of the other ultra elite, you know, world rulers. | ||
And there's like 7,000 people in this cabal who have access to this rejuvenation technology. | ||
And they cycle each other. | ||
So it's like, It's like, okay, when you're 70, like, I'm gonna go, yeah, I'm 70 years old, I'm gonna go to the machine and get rejuvenated back to 20 years old and then go work in the office of your chief of staff who's now taken over and is now 60 years old, but you're secretly running the show still and stuff, you know what I mean? | ||
This sounds like their plans to me more. | ||
What you're saying sounds like what they're like, if we just stick around a little longer, we're gonna get to the point where they can do what you're saying. | ||
This story is like a group of, like, renegade conspiracy theorist rebels led by Axel Johns. | ||
you know, break into the facility and shatter the adrenosphere, which produces the immortality serum. | ||
And then all these people are like, no, now we're old forever. And then, you know, | ||
like reigning serum on the population, they'll be getting younger. And they're like, yeah, | ||
we're liberated. Like, no, no, that would be that would be the part of the sequel, | ||
like after they destroy it. | ||
And then, like, the hero, Axel Johns, is like, we've done it! | ||
We've destroyed the sphere! | ||
And then, like, all the evil world leaders are like, you don't know what you've done! | ||
You've plunged the world into chaos! | ||
And then he's like, it doesn't matter, we're free now! | ||
But then, then they're like, yeah, and everyone cheers, and like, we're free! | ||
But then, at the end, it plays, like, some, like, bassy music, like... | ||
Are we gonna make a movie? | ||
This feels like we're about to make a movie. | ||
And then it shows the serum, like, seeping into the groundwater, and then going into, like, the water supply, and then it shows, like, a woman, like, turn the water on, and then, like, touch it, and then walk, and then put formula in it, and walk over to her baby, and it's like, boom! | ||
And then, like, the next sequel is Immortal Babies. | ||
In a couple years, if we have a hit movie, I'm gonna say to everyone, I was there when he came up with that idea. | ||
I was at the table when that movie got written. | ||
Alright, there's the movie. | ||
Somebody make it. | ||
I don't have the wherewithal. | ||
Dude, if you let Hollywood make it, you know what's gonna change? | ||
Hollywood's gonna take that movie and then you're gonna be like, this isn't the movie I wrote! | ||
I'll tell you what, if we can find a small production house who can do high-quality, low-budget films, we'll put a budget towards making The Pigs Cometh. | ||
That's where the pigs come into the city and they're like... | ||
How do we stop pigs? | ||
And it's like, do you have a gun? | ||
No! | ||
Guns are bad! | ||
unidentified
|
Well, no, they do with their three rounds. | |
Not in the cities, though. | ||
Not in the cities, though. | ||
Chase them down! | ||
It's our only chance! | ||
But no, no, no. | ||
They're like, how do we stop these pigs? | ||
I don't know! | ||
And then one guy shows up and he's like, I think I figured out the pig's weakness. | ||
What? | ||
What is their weakness? | ||
We tried everything. | ||
We've tried window cleaner. | ||
We've thrown rock at them. | ||
This, a bullet. | ||
A bullet, why didn't I think of that? | ||
And then they finally figure out how to stop the rain of pigs. | ||
What is that thing? | ||
And they're like investigating the bullet. | ||
But bullets are dangerous. | ||
Yes, but it's the only thing that can stop the pigs. | ||
And then they just, they're like trying to figure out how to use the gun, they're holding them backwards. | ||
Oh man. | ||
Do you think that some of the elites have figured out how to, I mean, how to, not reverse age, | ||
but like you see some of them, like they're like 101 years old, their eyes drooping. | ||
I mean, there are people that are passing away at 50, 60 years old in normal civilization. | ||
I think Joe Rogan's going to live to be 1,000. | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
He might be 1,000, right? | ||
No, for real. | ||
Because he's always talking about this crazy stuff that he does. | ||
Well, I don't know about the meat stuff, but, like, the hyperbolic chambers. | ||
Doesn't he do, like, the nitrogen thing? | ||
Hyperbaric, I think. | ||
Hyperbaric, yeah. | ||
And NAD. | ||
NAD stuff. | ||
Fasting. | ||
Yeah, he does, like, he talks about all of the stuff. | ||
Carnivore diet. | ||
He's super tight with David Sinclair does the life extension stuff out of Harvard and I think if that's available to us I imagine yeah, they're they're getting down man. | ||
They want to look we're gonna be like we're gonna be 80 and we're gonna have like 55 year old kids who have you know 30 year old kids who have 15 year old kids and we're gonna be like oh Let me tell you, grandson, I used to listen to Joe Rogan when I was your age. | ||
And the kid's going to turn on Joe Rogan, Joe's going to look the exact same. | ||
That's going to be Luke, too. | ||
unidentified
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Ice baths, saunas, ashwagandha. | |
I mean, we're going to look at him and it's going to be the same scenario. | ||
Yeah, NAD, you get those sirtuins growing and keep your telomerase. | ||
Is it telomeres or telomerase? | ||
unidentified
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Telomeres. | |
Telomeres. | ||
Keep your telomeres healthy. | ||
What if you did, like, stem cell therapy every day? | ||
Like, what would happen? | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
Are they doing stuff like that? | ||
Just pumping your body full of stem cells? | ||
Like, every day? | ||
No, I heard that they take kids' blood. | ||
That's what you hear. | ||
No, no, but this is officially reported by, like, mainstream media, that they do blood transfusions with young people because young blood rejuvenates your body. | ||
They actually pay people to be on staff just to supply the blood. | ||
Is that confirmed also? | ||
I've heard stories that they're, like, wealthy Silicon Valley people. | ||
They go down to Mexico and they do it there. | ||
But not just that, they'll be like, they'll find some like, you know, lifter dude at a gym, and they'll be like, how would you like it to be your job to eat healthy and work out all the time? | ||
And they'd be like, that'd be a dream come true. | ||
Six figures, just once every other week, you gotta give me blood. | ||
Well, specifically they do it with children. | ||
That's what they've seen the most biggest effects with. | ||
So, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
So one adult would need like three kids though, right? | |
I don't know the exact specific details of it, but it's already being practiced by a lot of very powerful people. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, there's a new artist that kind of came out of nowhere and his name is Youngblood. | |
So, I wonder what's up with that? | ||
All right, Joseph McFarlane says, the opening ad is 100% targeting your drinking game here. | ||
Jägermeister is the regular ad. | ||
Feed our game and they'll fill your pockets. | ||
Slam it. | ||
What's going on, Quartering? | ||
Jeremy, I thought you were buying our opening ads. | ||
Remember that? | ||
There's a tailored ad. | ||
You're about to see Tim cast IRL, but before you do, buy my coffee, Coffee Brand Coffee. | ||
Shout out to Jeremy Hambly. | ||
I'll take his money and promote his coffee, by all means. | ||
Thank you, Jeremy. | ||
When we had to leave the studio, he gave us like a grand or something. | ||
Or wasn't it something like that? | ||
Like he gave like 500 bucks. | ||
And he was like, buy our coffee. | ||
And then they swatted him because of it. | ||
Yeah, I know, it's crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
Real quick though, I think that's important. | |
I'll just go real quick. | ||
I think voting with your dollar is the most important thing you could do. | ||
And instead of supporting these corporations that only care about their shareholders' profits increasing every three months and buying Starbucks coffee, support companies like The Quartering. | ||
Tim Cass, We Are Change, Adelita's Way, Tom McDonald, Tommy Vext, Zuby. | ||
There's all kinds of independent creators, independent artists, small businesses that we need to start voting with our dollar and putting our money to people that actually are very, they love the support from the fans and the supporters. | ||
Vote with your dollar, absolutely. | ||
All right, we got Mark Perdue. | ||
He says, as a former submariner who's engaged in, uh, engaged and tracked the Russian fleet, I can say they have a class of submarine that's job is to end the world if Russia is attacked with nukes. | ||
I believe it. | ||
Yep. | ||
All right. | ||
Wigwam says, so glad you have Adelita's way on. | ||
Love you all. | ||
Right on. | ||
Thank you. | ||
We love you. | ||
Huron X Bearcat says, Ian, I would like you to draw a picture of us having a sleepover. | ||
Tweet at my username. | ||
Can't put it in here, I guess. | ||
That's so funny. | ||
I don't want to do that. | ||
I mean, maybe it's like a sleeping bag. | ||
Maybe there's some potato bugs in there you weren't expecting and you're like, what? | ||
SK says, Tim and crew, how much money do I gotta spend to earn your attention? | ||
Anyway, Ian, bro, chill. | ||
If you were born like five to ten years after you were, you would be a blue-haired they-them. | ||
Chill out, Ian. | ||
Could you imagine them nuts? | ||
No, my brothers are younger than me and I can confirm they are not blue-haired they-thems. | ||
Yeah, they're way more based. | ||
Ian is the only one. | ||
They're super cool dudes, yeah. | ||
My parents were rock stars. | ||
Still are. | ||
Alien baby says you guys have it backwards. | ||
They're self-loathing and hate themselves. | ||
The air of elitism is a facade over their self-hatred. | ||
It's little man's disease manifesting as virtue signaling. | ||
Oh, yes. | ||
unidentified
|
Maybe. | |
Yeah, you know, like, I mean, that's the joke, like Bill Gates, people like him. | ||
I don't I don't think he was like the popular kid when he was younger. | ||
Remember that video when they released Windows 95 and they're all on stage and they're doing that arm thing and they're like, what are you doing? | ||
It's a must-see, by the way, that video. | ||
If you can source it and find it. | ||
The pie-ing video is a must-see. | ||
unidentified
|
Which one's that? | |
When he gets pie-ed. | ||
Twice. | ||
Oh, when Gates gets pie-ed? | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
I didn't know. | |
Just having a replay on the screen. | ||
Like four different monitors all like 10 seconds after each other. | ||
Darren Daly says, 101 days until the purge begins in Killinoy. | ||
Chicago is already a war zone. | ||
Leftists are on a fast track to destroy all blue states and export misery to the rest of the country. | ||
When does it end? | ||
I don't know, but perhaps the end is nigh. | ||
Roberto Lara says Facebook has suspended and shadowbanned me for 30 days. | ||
Why? | ||
Hunters pics. | ||
Odd. | ||
Because I posted it back in April of 22 and it's now against their community guidelines. | ||
Weird timing, right? | ||
Yes. | ||
This is retroactive enforcement. | ||
Twitter does it too. | ||
YouTube does it. | ||
Welcome to the club. | ||
We're all shadowbanned too. | ||
I've seen that today. | ||
I've seen a lot of people get hit for Hunter Biden stuff today on social media for some reason. | ||
October surprise, baby! | ||
We got shadowbanned for spreading love. | ||
We really did. | ||
We got shadowbanned by Facebook because we were like, we love America and we love all you. | ||
We wrote this post that was super encouraging the police officers and again, us all singing together. | ||
And they factually 100% shadowbanned us, took our page off us. | ||
I had to fight for 30 days to get it back. | ||
So welcome to the club. | ||
unidentified
|
They flooded it with Chinese propaganda. | |
They did. | ||
For 30 days. | ||
unidentified
|
How do you feel about iTunes having a monopoly on the music industry? | |
knitting sweaters, manufacturing things. | ||
unidentified
|
Whoa. | |
Yep. | ||
Ruby Romaine says, question for Adelita's Way. | ||
How do you feel about iTunes having a monopoly on the music industry? | ||
Do you make less money now that everything is digital? | ||
iTunes is mostly out, you know. | ||
Yeah, they're- But Apple's got a big foothold still. | ||
I think Spotify's more though, right? | ||
Spotify's great. | ||
Amazon's great. | ||
I think the music industry's heading in a great direction. | ||
I think as long as we have to continue to work with the fans and all of its fan base, I think you're going to see a lot of artists have a lot of success. | ||
We're entering an era where it's been a rough 10-15 years already for the music industry. | ||
I think the worst days are behind us. | ||
I think that now you can have a direct connection with your fans, your fans supporting you. | ||
That's why Trevor's saying, you know, vote with your money, support the artists that you love directly, support companies that are local, because the game is changing. | ||
Everything is changing and you can go direct to the consumer right now, which is a fantastic, beautiful time. | ||
Right on. | ||
Mavis says Tommy Vext was asked to leave his own band, Bad Wolves, because he wouldn't comply with the agenda. | ||
Now he's doing solo work as the Lone Wolf. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
You know, they essentially took his record deal away from him because he voted for Trump. | ||
Really? | ||
What's the story with that? | ||
It's a pretty intense story. | ||
I mean, you should definitely talk to him. | ||
He's a really... We should get him on the show. | ||
unidentified
|
You should. | |
He's a great person and he's someone I talk to and, you know, I support Tommy. | ||
So everyone out there support Tommy too. | ||
He's great. | ||
But he essentially was fired from his band because he voted for Donald Trump and he goes out and kind of speaks on conservative views. | ||
And a lot of the stuff, he spreads information, right? | ||
He had an Instagram page that had like half a million followers that they just straight deleted on him and took right off him just because he was posting Hunter Biden information and all this information to people. | ||
I think it's a shame that they did that, but it's exactly what we're talking about in the music business. | ||
It's the exact type of tyranny we've been discussing. | ||
This is an example of it. | ||
And there's got to be us, all of us here, for the other side. | ||
Once he gets exiled from that, he's got to have a group of support. | ||
Which is all of us and feel like he's not alone. | ||
Parallel economy. | ||
We do. | ||
Kevin Brady says, I have good friends that played Blue Ridge Rock Festival that were told by their managers to stop talking politics on social media, conservative and libertarian, and I do video work with a giant YouTuber. | ||
Same. | ||
Not surprised, man. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
But it's unsurprising, man. | ||
Legacy Production says you should have country singer Cody Johnson on. | ||
He became big outside the industry and has had death threats for saying he loves this country at his shows and has a very cool story. | ||
Yo, we were in Nashville. | ||
We had John Rich on the show. | ||
And he was like, why don't you come down and we'll do a show at my venue? | ||
And we're like, yeah. | ||
And then someone threatened to kill me. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Yeah. | ||
And I was like, I got a phone call early that morning because we were going to go down there and jam at like two or something like that. | ||
And then I get a call and John's like, Hey man, this is serious. | ||
And then I was like, I don't care. | ||
They can threaten me all they want. | ||
I'm not backing down. | ||
He's like, that's true. | ||
That's fine. | ||
But you realize it's downtown Nashville and there's kids. | ||
So if someone shows up and they go crazy, like people are going to get hurt. | ||
And I was like, He's right. | ||
It also just shows you that what you're doing is right. | ||
When people are that concerned over you giving people the true information and building a team of people that are informing the people with truth, you don't say anything that's not the truth. | ||
So the fact that you're such a problem to groups of people is a problem. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Why do people not want groups of people telling truth so badly? | ||
That's a big part of what we're dealing with here. | ||
You know, like, you get someone that spreads, you know, loving, good information, and you're attacked all the time. | ||
A lot of it, I think, is tone. | ||
Because if you're like, you freaking idiots! | ||
Or you don't even have to say it. | ||
Love each other! | ||
Love each other! | ||
Like, that tone makes people agitated. | ||
But if you have that, like, love, if you really are love, like, it is you, then you can kind of give them the red pill and be like, there's a world liberal economic order that's, and they're like, oh, I love this guy. | ||
Except, I can say something like, Most women are probably really happy with their jobs and want to pursue careers, and I have tremendous respect for that, but I think there are some women that are probably lying to themselves or unhappy, and they're gonna regret it later in life, and then the Young Turks takes that very calm and reasonable statement, lies about what I said, or there's another example where I can say, that's interesting, the Washington Post says conservatives, according to a study, are more attractive than liberals, and they can then run a video calling me ugly, and then say, yeah, but he's right. | ||
Like, dude, being nice and having tone changes nothing for people who are in a cult. | ||
Like, bro, how many times do I gotta politely invite Hasan on the show and he just won't do it? | ||
And then all they do is insult me for being polite and asking. | ||
Yeah, it doesn't always, like, flip people's switches, but I think it's a slow burn. | ||
It's the best chance at getting it done. | ||
There has to be another side that creates the division, right? | ||
The division of people is... I think people coming together is the biggest fear for most entities that are trying to take power and take control, right? | ||
So there's got to be the Turks out there that are constantly, you know, spreading that division. | ||
They won't come on the show because there's some fear of them, you know, the intimidation of having to talk to you and deal with the information you're bringing. | ||
And honestly, I don't even know who they are other than you. | ||
Well, no, I mean, they've been around for a long time. | ||
They get comparable viewership. | ||
People might want to act like they're not big. | ||
They get less views per video than we do, but they put out way more videos. | ||
So they get, you know, 20 million or whatever on their main channel. | ||
But the point is, I mean, they're prominent leftists with a lot of followers. | ||
And I genuinely think the reason they won't come on the show, there's two big reasons. | ||
One, they're completely wrong about their positions and they know it. | ||
And the other is that when they lie about the things I say, they would have to sit here and look me in the eyes and say, hey, here's the thing you posted. | ||
Here's what I actually said. | ||
Why would you do that? | ||
And that's a really embarrassing thing to have to answer for. | ||
It's a common trait, though, for, you know, I'll lie. | ||
I'll just lie. | ||
You know, it's happening every day. | ||
You know, when we're trying to get to the bottom of what's going on to the people of the United States right now, it's like, when we obviously know something's going on, right? | ||
We obviously know something like inflation is almost hitting 10% highest in 40 years. | ||
They'll just lie about it. | ||
Right. | ||
No, it's not true. | ||
It's easy to lie on social media. | ||
It's humiliating to correct yourself. | ||
I mean, I don't have a problem. | ||
TimCast.com issues corrections all the time, regularly, if we make a mistake, which we don't do all the time. | ||
But if we do, we'll correct it. | ||
And I have no problem being like Jordan Peterson. | ||
I shout him out, and he goes, maybe I was wrong about that. | ||
It's like, oh. | ||
If I think I'm right, I'll say I'm right. | ||
If someone says that's not true, I'll go, was I wrong about that? | ||
Oh, man, I didn't realize. | ||
I read the super chats all the time, and I'm like, was I wrong? | ||
Was I wrong? | ||
And if I am, they call me out, and it's great. | ||
And then I'll read it. | ||
And I mention it. | ||
And I'll be like, oh, someone's got a correction for us. | ||
Humility is a virtue. | ||
There's a reason. | ||
It's not even humility, it's like, I want to be right! | ||
I don't wanna be wrong! | ||
If someone tells me I was wrong about something, I'll be like, I better be right, I better- If anything, it's pride. | ||
It's so weird to me. | ||
I'm just like, I don't think I'm always right. | ||
I think there's a lot of- there's a lot of things I think I'm right about, but I don't think I'm always going to, like, be right about them, you know what I mean? | ||
So if someone superchats and they're like, you were wrong, I'll be like, oh, we have a correction about that, actually. | ||
I read those all the time. | ||
In fact, I encourage those. | ||
Alright. | ||
advictorium says what it takes got me through some really tough times in my life one of the best bands around hands down thank you what it takes what's your what's your uh like what's the what do you think is your best song like what do you think is the best i like what it takes for me to play it live right i think that the way that that song came about too felt pretty pretty natural and pretty you know like i was in a good flow i mean We didn't have a chorus to that song, and I laid on the floor and meditated, and after working a long day, I just kind of laid there, and I just popped up, and it was like, boom! | ||
It was the melody, and the lyrics didn't really change very much, so it's really cool when that happens. | ||
That's one of my favorite ones to do live, too, the energy of it. | ||
I think it's just one of our best songs, and I'm excited about that one. | ||
When did you write it? | ||
Um, I'd say probably two or three years ago, right? | ||
Oh, you're doing your best stuff now. | ||
Yeah, we are doing our best stuff now. | ||
Yeah, it's called What It Takes. | ||
Alright everybody, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends, head over to TimCast.com, become a member. | ||
If you want to support our work and check out the uncensored after show. | ||
And of course, we have some music. | ||
If you go to Spotify, you can listen to Timcast. | ||
There's an artist page. | ||
And we have Will of the People and Only Ever Wanted. | ||
But we got more songs coming out right now. | ||
I think we were planning on putting out a song by the end of this week, but we're going to delay it because big news, I guess. | ||
As much as the leftists want to whine and cry about it and act like the song we put out wasn't good, it actually resulted in us getting the attention of some industry figures who we've recently signed with. | ||
It's not the same as a label, the only thing that we've just brought them on in a consulting capacity and they're helping us structure everything in terms of distribution at a higher level. | ||
And we're exploring radio and all the stuff. | ||
So because of this, we're now like on a top tier track. | ||
So it's been widely successful. | ||
So we'll probably hold off until we can get everything right. | ||
You can follow the show at Timcast IRL. | ||
You can follow me at Timcast. | ||
Again, go to Timcast.com and smash the like button. | ||
Do you guys want to shout anything out? | ||
Well, I'm going to shout you out for a minute. | ||
For the fans who are excited for the music, I've got to hear some of it, and I'm really excited for you to hear it. | ||
You were helping us earlier. | ||
Yeah, but you got some great songs coming, and I'm really happy for you guys, and I feel just proud that you're in this movement with us. | ||
For independent artists, I think what you're doing is great, and for everybody listening, I think the songs are fantastic. | ||
There's some great stuff coming. | ||
For us, yeah, we want to promote new music, new eras out now. | ||
It's definitely a song that I think can Amp up our generation to know what we're capable of, to make change for the better, to come together, to unite instead of divide. | ||
And check it out, New Era is definitely an empowering song for the times. | ||
And then, you know, check us out on Spotify, YouTube. | ||
We've got a lot of music up, you know, six, seven albums worth of music. | ||
Check it out, wanna shout out Elevated. | ||
That's Trevor's group. | ||
My wingman, my right hand, my best friend. | ||
I just want to thank you guys for having us. | ||
And everybody check out Adelita's Way. | ||
Follow us. | ||
We love to interact with our fans. | ||
We're grateful for you. | ||
You make this possible. | ||
We love you. | ||
Did you want anything to that? | ||
unidentified
|
You can just follow me on Instagram, Trey Stafford. | |
I keep my stuff to a minimum. | ||
That's pretty much it. | ||
What's Elevated? | ||
unidentified
|
That's my 432 hertz relaxation meditation project. | |
Right on. | ||
You got a new fan? | ||
I'll be listening to that. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
I meditate right before I do the show here. | ||
What's your guys' website? | ||
Where can we find your stuff? | ||
Adelitaswaymusic.com, YouTube, everything at Adelitas Way. | ||
And I also want to shout out the rest of the band. | ||
You know, my boys, Andrew, Grace and Tavis, our crew, Leo, Josh. | ||
We love you guys. | ||
You know, so we're all on drives all the time. | ||
We listen to the show. | ||
So, you know, I just want to give those guys some love. | ||
Grace and Dream Team. | ||
Yeah, this was great. | ||
Love you, dude. | ||
Yeah, thank you guys so much for coming on. | ||
This was awesome. | ||
This was a great conversation. | ||
I'm looking forward to the after show that you guys are going to be a part of. | ||
I'm going to take a break from. | ||
But my website is LukeUncensored.com. | ||
I have three masterclasses, a forum, merchandise, new videos almost every single day. | ||
I did one today about anxiety. | ||
You can check it out on LukeUncensored.com. | ||
Hope to see you guys there. | ||
Thank you so much for having me. | ||
You can always follow me at Ian Crossland anywhere on the internet. | ||
I'm not the guy from the English Defense League. | ||
What's up, Ian, if you're out there listening? | ||
Also, Ian Crossland. | ||
Love you guys. | ||
Thanks for coming. | ||
Final Super Chat, Jay Jensen. | ||
I'm not going to leave you out in the cold. | ||
Trev and Rick, subplayas. | ||
Love the good versus evil. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Keep up the good fight. | ||
Thanks, Jay. | ||
Appreciate you. | ||
Thanks, Jay. | ||
Bye, guys. | ||
Thank you guys all so much for tuning in. | ||
And I was thinking about how much more bearable you guys' music made my adolescence. | ||
It was so helpful. | ||
I felt very heard. | ||
And I have to say, I feel like hearing how awesome your music was to other people must be probably one of the most gratifying parts of your career. | ||
Is this true? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, since you're a new fan, you've only been listening for a couple of years because obviously it couldn't be that long because we're not that old. | ||
I mean... Yeah, totally. | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. | |
Yeah, well, yes. | ||
Thank you guys so much for coming. | ||
You guys can follow me on Twitter and Minds.com at Sour Patch Lids as well as sourpatchlids.me. | ||
I'm going to read... Joseph McFarlane says, Timcast, correction, Sherman marched to the sea, not Jackson. | ||
That was in my earlier segment and I must have misspoke. | ||
I'm very familiar with Sherman's march to the sea because it's part of the research that Shane was doing for Tales from the Inverted World. | ||
So thank you for pointing that out and correcting me because I made a mistake. | ||
So smash that like button on your way out and Alexa, play What It Takes by Adelita's Way. |