Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
So, of all people, it's Mr. Bill Gates who said, There is going to be a hung election and there is going to | |
be a civil war And I'm seeing these media reports. | ||
They're like, Bill Gates says there may be a civil war. | ||
And then I'm like, really? | ||
And then I read what he actually said. | ||
And he says, there's going to be a hung election and civil war due to political polarization. | ||
And I was like, he's actually speaking a little bit more definitively than that. | ||
But at the same time, we're seeing people like Scott Adams and Bill Burr saying like, nah, I went outside and nobody's fighting. | ||
And I think that's just the absolutely incorrect take for, to Scott's credit, he was correct when he said Republicans would be hunted, although a bit, I don't know, hyperbolic, we have seen recently with the guy in North Dakota running down that kid and killing him. | ||
So things are getting pretty crazy. | ||
We now have Politico writing a piece saying that we must change the Constitution to stop one man, Donald Trump, because they're insane. | ||
We're seeing... What is it? | ||
Michael Moore. | ||
That's the guy. | ||
He says that Democrats are going to win in a landslide against the traitors. | ||
But then Nancy Pelosi gets booed on stage, so... I think all of this is just really interesting. | ||
At the same time, the economy is imploding. | ||
The pound is imploding. | ||
Italy has elected a fascist! | ||
They're loving this right now because it's like a far-right person in Italy who won. | ||
And so that's fascism, I guess. | ||
So, uh, we got a lot to talk about. | ||
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unidentified
|
That's it. | |
That's how we support it, because we believe in it. | ||
So as a member, we're gonna make sure that we're doing good work, fact-checking all the BS, and standing up to the corporate establishment. | ||
Joining us today to talk about, oh wait, wait, smash the like button, subscribe to the channel, share the show with your friends. | ||
Joining us today to talk about all this is everyone's favorite, Libby Emmons! | ||
Hello, hello. | ||
Libby Emmons, Editor-in-Chief with the Post Millennial. | ||
Glad to be here. | ||
Thank you for coming. | ||
It's always good to have you. | ||
And of course, we have the t-shirt merchant himself. | ||
Oh, oh, oh, hey. | ||
Hey, guys. | ||
I didn't see you guys there. | ||
I'm just partly sick and tired of someone here getting all the attention. | ||
So I gotta sell some shirts. | ||
So we gotta, you know, I got my Bill Gates trendy bazonkas on and the shirt that I'm proudly wearing today says The Great Resist. | ||
They will own nobody and they will be unhappy, which you could exclusively get on thebestpoliticalshirts.com. | ||
You gotta lift and separate there, Luke. | ||
unidentified
|
Don't fat shame me. | |
What are those asymmetrical lumps in your shirt? | ||
These right here. | ||
You're a little uneven. | ||
Who are you to say? | ||
Before the show, Luke is like, I'm tired of Libby getting all this attention, and then he comes out of the bathroom looking like this. | ||
Hey, this is trendy right now, right? | ||
This is what your peak male masculinity testosterone looks like right now. | ||
Face it. | ||
That's the reality. | ||
I like the way you control your own body. | ||
Thank you very much, Ian. | ||
I feel liberated. | ||
Right now, there's people listening on iTunes or something, and they're just like, what are they talking about? | ||
I could understand why these are so popular. | ||
This is like the classic autogonophile over here. | ||
It was funny when Luke came out and Libby was like you need to lift and separate to Luke and he doesn't know what he's doing so they're all like crooked. | ||
I could help you but I don't want to be accused of harassment. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm watching you. | |
Watch your hands there. | ||
Hurricane Ian is here. | ||
Yeah, if you didn't hear there was a tropical storm upgrade, I think a level one hurricane called Ian going towards Florida. | ||
So I'm going to do everything in my power to meditate and create some sort of polarization in the clouds above those winds to dissipate the storm. | ||
Which rock will help you do it? | ||
Any kind of crystal, I would imagine. | ||
So quartz, we got a quartz crystal here, another rose quartz there. | ||
I'm glad that I live in a country that won't string me up for being a heretic for talking about stuff like this. | ||
You know, we can be crazy and talk about weird and funny ideas in the United States. | ||
It's a beautiful thing. | ||
So let's keep that tradition going. | ||
That's the key thing. | ||
That's all I got for the moment. | ||
We need all the Eanes to join together and figure out how to stop this storm so that my guests from Florida can get here tomorrow. | ||
Very excited. | ||
Let's get going. | ||
Let's talk about it all. | ||
So here's a story from Business Insider. | ||
Bill Gates says political polarization may bring it all to an end and could even lead to a civil war. | ||
I saw this headline and I was like, wow, that's really interesting thing of him to say, but so what? | ||
A lot of people have said that. | ||
And then I actually scroll down and read the quote. | ||
He says, I admit that political polarization may bring it all to an end. | ||
We're going to have a hung election and a civil war. | ||
Yet he didn't say we might. | ||
He says we are. | ||
We are going to have a hung election and a civil war. | ||
Now I wonder, could this be because Bill Gates reads The Bulwark? | ||
Because we talked about that last week. | ||
And I don't know if you saw the story. | ||
The Bulwark published an article about how the civil war could start. | ||
And I think they make an interesting point, that come the midterms, you've got right-wing people and left-wing people showing up to the polls, duh, it's an election, and they're accusing each other of impropriety or something, a fight breaks out, someone's armed, someone gets shot, there's a viral video of someone being killed in a polling place, that's what the bulwark said. | ||
I don't know for sure, but I do think that if you already have people who don't trust the election, they're of course going to show up to polling places. | ||
I mean, what, even five people maybe at each place? | ||
And then you're going to get Antifa types and leftist types, and they're going to show up as well, and then now what happens? | ||
Well, his comments are very important here, because he said specifically, I quote, I have no experience with it. | ||
I'm not going to put my money on it because I don't know how to spend it, saying pretty much that it's guaranteed. | ||
But then he also went on and later made the points that it's polarization and the lack of trust that is the main problem, specifically pointing at Robert Kennedy as someone who, of course, criticized him. | ||
And he's using this concern, which a large majority of the American people have. | ||
A lot of people think there's going to be a civil war in this country, according to many polls. | ||
He's using this fear in order to galvanize pressure on people criticizing him. | ||
So this is another aspect to also understand here with his latest kind of salacious comments. | ||
I love this idea that Bill Gates is sitting in his living room watching TV, and then he just comes across this news story about Robert Kennedy criticizing him, and he goes, He said, what about me? | ||
There's gonna be a civil war in this country! | ||
Kid him! | ||
Kid him! | ||
The article also talks about how part of the problem is misinformation, right? | ||
And we know that misinformation is a catch-all term that is used to describe anything that the left doesn't agree with. | ||
Here's my favorite part, though. | ||
He says, quote, I have no expertise in that. | ||
I'm not going to divert my money to that because I wouldn't know how to spend it, says the guy who owns more farmland than anyone else in the United States. | ||
And I start to wonder about that. | ||
Because when he started buying up farmland, we talked about it, and we were like, why is he doing this? | ||
Good investment, maybe? | ||
Now he's like, oh yeah, and by the way, there's gonna be a civil war. | ||
And it's like, is that why you're, because here's what I said when he was like, I wouldn't know what to do. | ||
I said, it's simple, like build a bunker. | ||
I mean, what I actually said was, get a corporate laundromat and hire eight German guys to start digging underneath one of your machines, you know, for, you know, I'm watching Better Call Saul, so. | ||
Yeah, I mean, he's also working on a lot of interesting projects. | ||
He's introducing a new kind of patented GMO corn into Africa, which allegedly is going to be helping them deal with hunger and the climate. | ||
And in reality, he wants to get people off of meat. | ||
He wants people to stop using cows, chickens, pigs in order to fight climate change. | ||
And he's doing this with GMO corn. | ||
Is this corn going to be the kind that has no seeds? | ||
You know how there was like Monsanto? | ||
Monsanto seeds that did that specifically so farmers had to keep buying it from them. | ||
Farmers were sued even for cross-pollination previously before. | ||
It's still unknown the details of what's happening here but Bill Gates was one of the major backers of Monsanto which introduced corn which is heavily subsidized and creates high fructose corn syrup which is banned in many places around the world. | ||
Wait, wait, wait. | ||
They produced corn that made no seeds? | ||
They produced a number of agricultural products that produced no seeds, so the farmer always had to buy the seeds from Monsanto and be dependent on them. | ||
unidentified
|
Right, right. | |
I get that. | ||
And I know there's like seedless watermelon. | ||
I'm just imagining... I'm wondering about how seedless corn would work, since all corn is seeds, right? | ||
As I said, I was trying to visualize that. | ||
Yeah, well, I mean it's it's the it's sterilized. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, so it's like regrowing. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yes, but I'm wondering I mean like Seedless fruits things like that. | ||
We do we have seedless grapes. | ||
I'm just wondering like it's like I'm imagining a dystopian future where people find seeds and they're like We're safe and they plant them and they get one crop and then there's no reproduction and there's nothing. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
It's over and Yeah, that's why they have those seed vaults in the Arctic. | ||
Svalbard. | ||
Right. | ||
Was that Norway? | ||
I think it's Norway. | ||
Is it Norway? | ||
Svalbard. | ||
Yeah. | ||
The seed vault where they store all those seeds. | ||
Because I guess we don't want to die. | ||
Yeah, we don't want to die. | ||
I think it's a good idea to store those seeds. | ||
Humans have grown quite fond of living. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Most of them at least. | ||
But as he's trying to push for climate change, telling people not to eat real meat, he also has a hundred patents on synthetic meats, on synthetic cheeses, he also has a lot of intellectual property, and he literally just came out a couple months ago and said rich countries need to switch to completely synthetic beef, which of course would greatly benefit him. | ||
More than anyone else. | ||
So we have to start thinking about why he made these comments now about civil war and what's the greater benefit to him as, of course, it's also important to note here that he is a man that has financed and funneled hundreds of millions of dollars into the corporate media that literally acts like his PR marketing team that regurgitates all of his larger business proposals and sells it to the American and international public. | ||
The Guardian, the BBC, MSNBC, many organizations are directly financed by Bill Gates and this is why you can't trust any legitimate news coverage as well as also the fact checkers that of course attack any criticism of him which is absolutely dystopian and ridiculous to live in such a world where we can't even criticize this billionaire that is best friends with Jeffrey Epstein. | ||
I just, I just, I see all these people that say they don't think civil war is possible and stuff and I'm just like, more and more people are at each other's throats. | ||
More and more people are accusing each other of being evil. | ||
It doesn't matter if you're right or they're right. | ||
You know, we think we're right. | ||
I think we have evidence to back it up. | ||
We don't, we don't fall for the hoaxes like Jussie Smollett or the Covington kids. | ||
Or the Duke basketball, the Duke volleyball thing. | ||
Duke volleyball, the lacrosse thing. | ||
No, the volleyball thing. | ||
Oh, yes, I remember hearing about that. | ||
But then there was the young woman who said that she was a volleyball player and she was out at BYU. | ||
And there was a racial slur used against her. | ||
And said that there was a racial slur and that people were calling her racial slurs the whole time. | ||
And after an investigation, it turned out nobody else had heard it at all. | ||
No one had said it. | ||
But the corporate media ran with it like it was a real story, even though it was a public event in front of other people. | ||
And I remember looking at that story when it came out and we were like, we're gonna hold on this because I bet this is a hoax. | ||
And then sure enough, it was. | ||
So this is the point. | ||
I mean, we sit here, we read the news, we're like, okay, these things are probably fake. | ||
Oh, here's another story. | ||
That's probably fake. | ||
We're gonna wait for evidence. | ||
The other side is just like, must be true. | ||
Let's roll with it. | ||
It doesn't matter who actually is right, though. | ||
Truth is irrelevant. | ||
As much as I think truth matters for us, in terms of, will a civil war happen? | ||
The truth is meaningless, and it's exemplified very simply. | ||
If you go to one of these people and say, um, here's the truth, they go, don't care. | ||
I don't care. | ||
You know, that people are, yes, that does happen. | ||
That makes it all the more important for us to hold on to reality and hold on to the truth. | ||
unidentified
|
I agree. | |
And to stand on it. | ||
You have to stand on the truth. | ||
For existence and reality, the truth matters. | ||
What I'm saying is, in terms of will there be a civil war, it doesn't matter if you hold the truth or they hold the truth, because they are zealots who will believe whatever is placed in front of them. | ||
So you can go to them, as an outsider, like Larry, I think it was Larry Elder pointing this out, and show them, here is the transcript from the New York Times of Trump saying, condemn the white supremacists, and they go, I don't care, I don't want to hear it. | ||
Right, because they don't think that it matches what they believe already. | ||
I mean, a civil war, though, like, you know, you and I were talking about this before we aired and the people were like, oh, I walk outside and nobody's angry at each other. | ||
There's no fighting in the street. | ||
A civil war wouldn't be like fighting in the street. | ||
People would arm up, go to their separate camps, you know, like go to their separate areas or whatever. | ||
Well, no, no, sort of. | ||
We have this tweet here. | ||
from scott adams and he says there won't be a civil war in the united states not even close there is no appetite for it outside twitter imagination one person said your source and his response was walking outside wasn't he earlier just saying that people are gonna be shot in the streets he was saying republicans will be hunted same person and then like we did see that happen on a couple occasions so i don't know why he's changing his mind the other thing though is what i responded to him was What about walking outside in Portland, LA, Chicago, or New York with a Trump shirt on? | ||
I agree, Scott Adams may be right, it could just be a slow revolution of authoritarian powers because the right doesn't want to fight. | ||
But here's the point I made. | ||
Imagine it's January 1861, and a guy in Atlanta walks out of his house and he's fuming. | ||
unidentified
|
He's like, oh, I just read the paper and I hate those Yankees! | |
Oh, and then he walks up to his neighbor and punches his southern neighbor in the face. | ||
Why would he do that? | ||
His neighbor agrees with him. | ||
Of course you can walk outside and no one's fighting. | ||
Like, people in New York agreed with each other. | ||
They were cheering on the... What was it? | ||
It was the... It was a Southern dude who caned a Northern guy, right? | ||
I think it was? | ||
The caning? | ||
I don't remember their names. | ||
But like, one side was cheering it on, one side was condemning it. | ||
So yeah, in the South, you walked outside and everyone was like, it was bad that happened. | ||
And then people in the North were like, it was good that happened. | ||
Or I think it's inverted. | ||
The point is, yeah. | ||
You surprised that you walked outside in like 80% Democrat New York and nobody's fighting each other? | ||
Okay, well, put on a MAGA hat like Blair White did and walk around LA and see how long it takes until they attack you because they did. | ||
Blair got attacked and this was years ago. | ||
So yeah, you can get attacked. | ||
I'm not saying that's proof civil war is gonna happen. | ||
I think we look at what the FBI is doing and we're like, oh, I mean, certainly the FBI going after, they just raided the home of a pro-life activist. | ||
Right, that was crazy. Absolutely insane over like because they're like it's a the face act | ||
because you assaulted somebody who was working at an abortion clinic. Even though the charges | ||
were dismissed by a court. Right, right. And this is like what years later or something, right? | ||
One year. So you know when I see the FBI weaponized and going after run-of-the-mill | ||
conservatives just like this is like a regular person this is not like a politician. | ||
My immediate instinct is instinct is civil war. | ||
But my point here is that, no, no, no, Scott might be right. | ||
You know, conservatives on the right might just, you know, get on their knees and say, you know, I'm so sorry, please, I don't want to fight. | ||
Well, we have been doing that for a while. | ||
That's been going on. | ||
Look, I understand. | ||
The thing about saying that it's all just happening on Twitter, though, is Twitter is our collective imagination. | ||
You know, like it, it's debatable, but you know, I think it's there as part of what we are imagining and what we believe and It's where we're exploring ideas in real time. | ||
We're certainly not doing that in any other aspect of our society. | ||
That's not happening in books. | ||
That's not happening in movies or TV or on the news. | ||
We're exploring ideas in real time on Twitter. | ||
And Twitter has a direct impact on how Democrats are spending money. | ||
They see the tweets, the bots and everything, and they say, this is what we should promote. | ||
And then all of a sudden, the Democrats are advocating for child sex changes. | ||
Right. | ||
And then saying that they're not, and then saying actually they are good, you know. | ||
The New York Times was defending them today. | ||
Exactly. | ||
The New York Times put out an article saying, yeah, actually these things do happen. | ||
Right. | ||
Because they have to do it slowly. | ||
They said it does happen, and this doctor who finds most of her clients on TikTok is doing great things with marketing on social media. | ||
Meanwhile, they were censoring and blacklisting and destroying people's lives because they were saying that a few weeks ago. | ||
They were saying, no, this is not true, they're not doing this. | ||
Literally a few weeks ago, like two weeks ago. | ||
You're inciting violence for saying this. | ||
And then they're like, oh no, now it's good. | ||
No hospitals are chopping off girls' boobs when they're 14. | ||
Oh wait, it's good It's good that they are, they are! | ||
It's good. | ||
I think when it comes to will there or won't there be some sort of civil conflict that escalates, it's basically a question of morale. | ||
If people get broken morally, then they'll just resort to the last resort, which is always violence. | ||
People in America are generally pretty high morale, because we have it awesome here. | ||
Fresh water, good food, warm buildings, transportation. | ||
If you disrupt, I think if we didn't have that stuff, it would be way easier to spiral into decay mentally. | ||
And then what other choice do you have? | ||
It is sort of a luxurious culture. | ||
I was talking to a friend of mine from Morocco the other day. | ||
We were like, yes, it's unbelievable, the bounty at the grocery stores, you know, that we can get anywhere, that everything is, you know, we have fresh water, all of these things. | ||
This is a story I like to tell about when I was in Brazil that many people listening have probably heard, but for those that haven't, I was at a favela where they couldn't flush their toilet. | ||
And it was just all of the family's waste piling up because they needed rain. | ||
So they had no water. | ||
And I was like, you have a bathroom like right there. | ||
And I'm like, I ain't going anywhere near that thing. | ||
So they have it rough. | ||
And then the mother asked something in Portuguese. | ||
And then, you know, my friend translated. | ||
And he says, she's asking you why the rich people are protesting in America. | ||
And then I was like, what do you mean? | ||
And he asked her and she says, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. | ||
He goes, occupy Wall Street, you know, like the people they're protesting. | ||
And I went, it's not the rich people protesting. | ||
It's like young people, college kids, like working class people. | ||
They're upset because the corporations were getting bailouts from the government. | ||
The government was giving them money and the banks. | ||
So basically they feel like they're not getting their fair share. | ||
And then he tells her, and then she laughs and she says, she says something and he goes, she said, all Americans are rich. | ||
Pretty much. | ||
And I was like, I would agree with that to a certain extent. | ||
From her perspective, she's like, these people have like clean running water and in like their lowliest of apartments, like even the bad apartments have clean running water. | ||
I mean, yes, we have we have poverty and we all have all of that. | ||
But we do have a very high standard of living across the board. | ||
I think when and we've done great things to get rid of child poverty. | ||
I think that's true. | ||
Yeah, every day we still I am I mean, this is just When I think about, like, will there or won't there, I feel very much like we are in, maybe not in control, but influencing it because it's like a morale system, if we can improve morale. | ||
Well, and one thing that had such a huge impact on that, obviously, is fossil fuel. | ||
You know, fossil fuel was responsible for decreasing poverty globally, for decreasing poverty in the US, just across the board. | ||
And creating 7 billion people. | ||
Yes. | ||
When you look at the advent of the petroleum industry, human population goes straight up. | ||
And that's what we have. | ||
I mean, isn't the petrodollar what we really have to thank for our wealth? | ||
So I have to wonder when you get someone like Bill Gates, who's like climate change over and over again, when they want to get rid of fossil fuels, it sounds like what they're really saying is like, yo, we use too much energy too quick, and now there's too much going on. | ||
We have too many people, there's too much activity, there's too much freedom, there's too much prosperity. | ||
We must have it all for ourselves in this kind of egomaniac kind of idea. | ||
I mean, look, the planet is suffering, but why should I give up my private life? | ||
It's suffering because of them! | ||
unidentified
|
What else do you need to know about what he's really behind and what he's really doing? | |
They fly private jets, they live in the mansions, they boat around in their little yachts, as | ||
of course they go to China, exploit slave labor and all the non-regulations there that | ||
they called for and put up and set up there. | ||
Bill Gates literally advises the Chinese government. | ||
What else do you need to know about what he's really behind and what he's really doing? | ||
He complimented the Chinese government, said they did a good job with COVID. | ||
Okay, I want to jump to these next stories because I want to keep it on track. | ||
This is a tweet from Logan Hall. | ||
Logan Clark Hall. | ||
He's the digital at the newfounding.org and used to be at the Daily Caller. | ||
He said, seems like Biden's speech equating conservatives with terrorists worked as intended. | ||
September 24th, elderly pro-life volunteer in Michigan shot after heated conversation, pro-life group says. | ||
The elderly Michigan woman was going door-to-door discussing a ballot proposal on abortion. | ||
Then we have Pennsylvania pro-life activist arrested by FBI, charged with assaulting a clinic escort. | ||
Prosecutors say Mark Hauk twice assaulted a man outside a Planned Parenthood clinic on the same day last year. | ||
It's overtly partisan. | ||
Then of course we have Kaylor Ellingson's alleged killer not under house arrest. | ||
No curfew after posting very low bond. | ||
Former assistant U.S. | ||
attorney says the very low bond is woefully inadequate. | ||
Not only that, but I was reading that the guy who killed that, that's the 18-year-old kid who was killed, and the guy said he was a Republican extremist. | ||
I read that in his bail hearing, he was shocked that the courts were holding it against him. | ||
Like, apparently he assumed they'd congratulate him or something or be elected. | ||
For having killed the kid? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
For having killed an 18-year-old? | ||
Like, so one of the articles I read said he expressed shock at that he would be held accountable for killing this 18-year-old kid. | ||
That's one way to try and defend yourself. | ||
unidentified
|
So, pro-life for being shot. | |
Yeah, it really does sound like It works. | ||
At face value it does, but I want to see, like, when they say heated conversation, like, was the guy like, come on! | ||
Like, how heated? | ||
What, was he screaming at the dude that shot him? | ||
No. | ||
I think you're talking about the 18-year-old that got killed? | ||
Well, the story on the left. | ||
unidentified
|
The 18-year-old. | |
The story on the left was an elderly pro-life volunteer, and she was shot at in a heated conversation. | ||
Yes, elderly. | ||
What's this heated? | ||
Well, I mean, I've seen some nasty old people. | ||
I don't know about you. | ||
She was 84. | ||
Oh my goodness. | ||
An 84-year-old woman being like, stop killing babies! | ||
And you're like, alright, she's gotta go. | ||
But I mean, you have the right to free speech, but you also, there's consequences to getting in people's face, so what's the story? | ||
Yeah, but you shouldn't shoot old ladies, I think, as a general rule in society, right? | ||
I want to see more. | ||
Okay, but she was an unarmed old lady knocking on doors. | ||
Like, you don't answer the door. | ||
People knock on my door. | ||
I don't ever answer my door, ever. | ||
I would love to go deeper into that story, to be honest. | ||
The heated conversation. | ||
Because, man, the news just does spin stuff. | ||
Oh boy. | ||
Okay, so here's the story from Yahoo. | ||
Results are changing quickly. | ||
It says an elderly pro-life volunteer in Michigan was shot in the shoulder while canvassing a neighborhood to discuss an abortion ballot proposal, according to the Right to Life in Michigan. | ||
The victim said she was shot in the back-slash-shoulder while leaving a residence during a heated conversation, and that the man who shot her was not part of the conversation. | ||
The unidentified woman is 83 years old, according to police, though the Right to Life of Michigan identified her as 84 years old in a press release. | ||
The woman was canvassing a neighborhood in Lake Odessa to discuss the state's vote on Proposal 3, which would protect abortion access in the state. | ||
The state will vote on the proposal November 8th. | ||
The victim does not know the identity or motive of the shooter. | ||
Of her shooter, the victim is still recovering from her gunshot wound and wishes to remain anonymous while the criminal investigation proceeds. | ||
Now, this is just according to Right to Life, so I think if she wants to have a bigger political impact, she needs to come forward and explain what happened and we need to be able to get to investigate this. | ||
Well, if she was shot in the back, I mean, that clearly shows that she wasn't aggressing or moving toward somebody since the bullet hole is there. | ||
So that pretty much says it all. | ||
Like, what kind of coward shoots an old lady in the back? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Old lady. | ||
Someone that wasn't even involved in the conversation. | ||
Yeah, what the heck? | ||
Exactly. | ||
That's frustrating. | ||
Yeah, did you see the video? | ||
There was another video where a woman is going door to door and then the lady starts screaming | ||
at her and chases her off the property. | ||
I haven't seen that one. | ||
I just gotta say, like, you know, to Scott Adams, when he tweeted that Republicans would | ||
be hunted, everyone kind of rolled their eyes and they were like, whoa, a little over the | ||
top there, Scott. | ||
And then we actually saw people get shot and killed, beaten up, chased, and then we were | ||
And now more recently run down with a car. | ||
And we're like, yeah, actually, it may have seemed a little bombastic, but it is starting to happen. | ||
Now for Scott to come out and be like, neighbors aren't attacking each other. | ||
And I'm like, yo, this old lady just got shot in the back. | ||
Do you guys think that hate is ever good? | ||
unidentified
|
Hate? | |
No. | ||
I don't think hate is a good thing. | ||
I hate rabid dogs. | ||
I mean like... Right, but what's the use of hating them? | ||
Why is that better than not just... Like any emotion, it serves a purpose. | ||
I think the idea is like, irrational hate is bad. | ||
Right. | ||
But hate from a logical place. | ||
unidentified
|
But it's such an extreme emotion. | |
What's the use of it? | ||
To keep you safe. | ||
So for example, why do we feel sick looking at a dead animal? | ||
Because we have a natural response to that. | ||
To feel sick and want to be away from it and vomit. | ||
Why? | ||
Because it's got disease and infection and things like that. | ||
And so the humans that were not disgusted by it may have eaten it and been contaminated and died. | ||
And those who were disgusted by it and vomited... So the vomiting is clear. | ||
I mean, I'm not an evolutionary biologist, but you spit out... But this is more of a disgust thing than a hate thing. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
The point of hate is like, there could be a certain thing being done by Name creature. | ||
Rabbit dog's a good one. | ||
Attacking a family member. | ||
There might be someone who's like, I just hate these wild hogs! | ||
I need my AR-15! | ||
But think about it, back in the day, you'd see a wild hog and you'd get angry, and then you'd stop it before it destroyed your crops or harmed your family. | ||
You could just be logical about it, too. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't think you're extra better served by hate. | |
Human emotion comes from this place of survival. | ||
We love things that help us and protect us and make us feel good, and we hate things that hurt us and cause harm to our family. | ||
If you have a rabid dog that was threatening your family and about to kill them, you could logically destroy the rabid dog without any emotional attachment, because you know it's the right thing to do. | ||
Starting to feel hate towards it feels like it's taking over. | ||
I'll give you a better example. | ||
A guy and his daughter are out in the backyard and they're playing with a frisbee when a rabid dog runs up and bites her neck, severing her carotid and she bleeds out in 20 seconds. | ||
He then says, I hate that dog! | ||
And he starts a whole revenge plot where he goes and buys a bunch of guns and he's got a board tracking the dog and then he hunts it down and he goes, revenge! | ||
And puts it down. | ||
That hatred he felt saved another child from being killed by that rabid dog. | ||
That's the point. | ||
Yeah, there's like movies about like some, uh, Jason, no, not Jason Bourne. | ||
It was that Keanu Reeves movie where someone kills his dog and then he goes on a revenge. | ||
And it's like glorifying hate. | ||
Is it a little different? | ||
Was he feeling hate? | ||
He was feeling hate towards the people that killed his dog. | ||
And that, and that is, it's a little more extreme, but it is a good point that those were really bad people who broke into his house, beat him and killed the dog. | ||
It's like, nah, he went extreme with it. | ||
Like, yeah, no, they killed this dog. | ||
unidentified
|
Do you think that it's reasonable to hate someone who disagrees with you over a political matter? | |
Is that something that is a worthwhile undertaking? | ||
unidentified
|
Hate in that regard? | |
now of him killing dozens of people over his son. Do you think that it's reasonable to hate someone | ||
who disagrees with you over political matter? Like is that something that is a worthwhile | ||
undertaking? Hate in that regard? What do you mean by worthwhile undertaking? I think hate is totally fine. | ||
I think you just don't want to attack people and you want to be reasonable. | ||
Like, you're allowed to hate people. | ||
Hate is a fine emotion, but you should be rational about it and you shouldn't act out upon it. | ||
So you can be like, yo, I just really hate people who throw litter out of their cars and don't care and are polluting everything. | ||
Like, I genuinely despise that. | ||
Yeah, I hate that too. | ||
I'm not going to attack the person. | ||
You hate the action. | ||
No, no, people who gloat and laugh as they throw waste in the streets. | ||
Do you see people gloating and laughing? | ||
I see people, actually, you know what I really hate, actually, I will use the term, is parents will show their kids to throw trash on the street in Brooklyn, and that really makes my blood boil. | ||
My point is, like, there are things that we universally despise, like a serial killer who gloats about murdering, like, I hate that person. | ||
Like I genuinely despise people who wanna victimize. | ||
I don't like violent, like you see that video of the guy in the convenience store? | ||
unidentified
|
Which one? | |
And the store clerk is on his knees. | ||
And the guy walks up behind him and the store clerk's like giving him whatever he wants and then the dude just kills him anyway. | ||
I genuinely hate that guy. | ||
Yeah, that makes sense. | ||
What that means is I think about what he did, I think about what he believes in and who he is, and I hate everything about what brought him to that point and that guy right now. | ||
Hate him. | ||
So you gotta be reasonable about it. | ||
What we don't want is irrational hatred, where you just hate someone because of the way they look. | ||
That's stupid. | ||
But is hate rational? | ||
I don't think hate's rational. | ||
It literally is. | ||
It's an emotional discharge. | ||
Okay, so this guy literally shot and killed a dude on his knees who was cooperating. | ||
So if you were a military commander, you'd be like, we need to execute the threat, but you're not like, I'm enraged because you can't control the- Don't change the subject. | ||
Well, if you're- A guy walked into a store- If you're lucidly handling it- A guy walked into a store and aggressed upon another person who complied and killed him for no reason. | ||
Yes, I hate that person. | ||
But like- And the response should be, we need to stop them. | ||
With that hatred, and that anger that I feel, it is, what is the appropriate way to stop a person like this, and how do we prevent it from happening in the future? | ||
That hatred is what leads us to stopping the thing from happening. | ||
You can do it without hate, too. | ||
Vengeance is very dangerous, because when someone becomes emotionally charged... We're not talking about the same thing. | ||
We're talking about emotionally charged response. | ||
Vengeance is not the same thing. | ||
We're not talking about the same thing. | ||
Hateful response is a form of revenge. | ||
I don't want revenge on the guy. | ||
I want him to be stopped. | ||
Yeah, yeah, that might be a definitional issue. | ||
Maybe. | ||
Yeah, semantics. | ||
I think hate. | ||
It's fine. | ||
It's an emotion. | ||
Hate's fine. | ||
You're allowed to feel emotions. | ||
Emotions serve a purpose, and they're part of the human experience. | ||
Yeah, but emotional leaders are dangerous. | ||
unidentified
|
Like, I hate wasps. | |
Like, I Like those people from New England, they stir the gin with their fingers. | ||
unidentified
|
No, the stinging venomous insects. | |
They don't make honey. | ||
What are they even doing? | ||
I don't know what wasps are good for either. | ||
unidentified
|
I had one chasing me yesterday and some bong freaked me out. | |
Some wasps kill other bugs. | ||
I'm fine with that. | ||
Like stink bugs. | ||
The reason we have stink bug problem now in the East Coast is because they're native to China and there's a wasp in China that hunts them in the air. | ||
Kills them in the air. | ||
We don't need to bring those. | ||
We need that wasp, don't we? | ||
We don't need those. | ||
We got a lot of stink bugs. | ||
The stink bugs are at least cute. | ||
Like they're doofy and they like walk around and they clap for you. | ||
You ever see the stink bugs clap? | ||
Stink bugs? | ||
No, but I saw a spider cricket yesterday and that freaked me out. | ||
We got a bunch of those. | ||
unidentified
|
Spider cricket? | |
Yeah, they're all over. | ||
There's like 7,000 in the skate park. | ||
I was reaching into a bucket to get some goat food and there was a spider cricket. | ||
So listen, why do I hate wasps? | ||
Because they don't do anything good for me. | ||
They build nests, they attack people, they swarm, and when they sting you, you go to the hospital. | ||
Yeah, it's bad. | ||
So like I have a very negative emotional reaction to them and when I see them I'm like I must remove | ||
that wasp's nest. They can build anywhere off my front porch but now they're building on my | ||
front porch so we have to get wasp spray it's a whole thing. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah that's a whole thing. But that's not hate that's not real hate. There was a mouse in | |
my kitchen the other day. | ||
I kind of hated it, but it was also sort of cute, but I still hated it. | ||
People have pets as mouse. | ||
Yeah, but I don't need a feral mouse as a pet living in my kitchen. | ||
It was unpleasant. | ||
I guess maybe we're just talking about different definitions of the word hate. | ||
I think you and I are talking about an insect infestation. | ||
Which is why I said hate is fine, but irrational hate is not. | ||
And acting out in a negative way because of hatred is also, look, you feel emotions. | ||
Humans feel emotions. | ||
You're allowed to feel them. | ||
They're all good. | ||
So you have this Michigan guy is doing irrational hate, just like the North Dakota guy, irrational hate. | ||
No, no, no, the actions are the problem, not the emotion. | ||
You can feel however you feel. | ||
Do you think this guy had irrational hate, this Michigan old lady shooter? | ||
Yes. | ||
Irrational. | ||
But the problem isn't just that he's irrational and hatred, the problem is that he shot someone. | ||
Like, if you're outside and you're going, oh, I'm just so full of hate, I'd be like, well, you know. | ||
Enjoy it. | ||
Yeah, I mean, some people let's just... Have a good time. | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
That's it. | ||
Maybe that's their baseline. | ||
Look, it's part of the human experience to feel ways about things. | ||
Like if we were just like, we shouldn't feel hate. | ||
Hate is bad. | ||
Let's just be logical beings. | ||
It's like, okay, come on. | ||
You know, like we, we experienced life in a variety of ways and some people are more hateful than others, but I think hate, love, fear, all these things. | ||
We, we chase fear. | ||
Is fear bad? | ||
People jump off buildings on purpose because you get that adrenaline rush, that fear, and then you survive it. | ||
Wait, you can survive jumping off a building? | ||
Who does that? | ||
Are you, are you joking? | ||
Surviving jumping off buildings? | ||
unidentified
|
Uh huh. | |
Oh, like if you rappel off buildings? | ||
Like base jumping? | ||
Oh yeah, I hate that. | ||
Bungee jumping? | ||
Not into it. | ||
But anyway, I think it's also important to note here that people can't control their emotions more and more. | ||
A lot of people's nervous systems are fried. | ||
Doctors are being told by medical boards to ask everyone if they have anxiety. | ||
I think there also is not only a mental health crisis, but a physical health crisis that is leading to a lot of the insanity that we're dealing with the consequences of in the streets in New York City, in San Francisco. | ||
That truly is a way bigger problem, very much complex, and I think it all boils down to a lot of food being poisoned, a lot of individuals not having a good mental health, and not controlling their emotions, and then lashing out and acting crazy, which we're seeing more and more of on big tech social media. | ||
And whether we're seeing it deliberately because social media wants to show it to us specifically, or whether it's really happening, I think it still deserves to be talked about from a fair perspective because there are a lot of people struggling out there that do need help. | ||
I had a hard time with it. | ||
his next story. Unless you wanted to wrap up. Well yeah about just about like on Friday we | ||
had a show with Nick Palmashano was on the show and it was I had a hard time with it. I felt like | ||
I was going to puke for a lot of it because you and him were going deep and you guys were really | ||
going at each other about civil war and why not and why is why not why maybe why no and so I was | ||
like just in a in a nasty mood this weekend like. | ||
That energy, I carried it, I was stressed out. | ||
What are we doing? | ||
Are we propagating this thing without realizing it? | ||
And then I heard about the storm called Ian coming. | ||
And part of me was like, fine, let the storm land. | ||
What am I doing? | ||
What have I become? | ||
Am I, like, becoming the evil that I hate? | ||
And so I had to change my emotions. | ||
I disengaged from the machine, meaning my computer. | ||
I cleared my mind and just thought about dissipating the clouds and had to, like, re-navigate my own emotions, which I do believe is possible, which is why I think if you feel hate, you could change it. | ||
That's why I brought it up. | ||
We got a hat trick for you, ladies and gentlemen, with these next stories. | ||
We got this one from TimCast.com. | ||
Quote. | ||
They will lose and they know it. | ||
Democrats will lose if election is a referendum on Biden, Psaki says. | ||
Follow the money, said the former press secretary. | ||
She says if it's a referendum on Biden, they're going to lose. | ||
But if it's a referendum on extremism, they're going to win. | ||
All right, here's the next story. | ||
Michael Moore predicts Democrat landslide against the traitors. | ||
Friday on HBO's Realtime, liberal documentary filmmaker Michael Moore defied conventional wisdom and predicted a landslide victory for Democrats in November's midterm election. | ||
There are so many signs of this. | ||
I think, honestly, I think if we all do our work and we all get people to get out there and we get ourselves, I think we can throw out a huge number of these Republican traitors in November. | ||
He says, I think that there's going to be such a landslide against the traitors, especially the 147 Republicans who just hours after the insurrection voted to not certify the elected president of the United States, Joe Biden. | ||
I think there is going to be so many people coming out to vote. | ||
And then lastly, with the hat trick from the conservative brief, So, what's it gonna be? | ||
Psaki says if it's about extremism, they win. | ||
If it's about Biden, they lose. | ||
Michael Moore says the Democrats are gonna win. | ||
And then this pollster is saying that the Republicans are gonna win. | ||
So, what is it? | ||
What do we got? | ||
What did we have? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Yeah, it's really hard to say. | ||
I mean, it was Joe Rogan and another very popular commentator. | ||
I forgot his name right now. | ||
I'm blanking right now. | ||
That also was from the left that came out and said, hey, everyone should vote Republican for this upcoming midterm. | ||
It's going to be... That was Rogan. | ||
It was Rogan and somebody else. | ||
I forgot who else. | ||
Was it Kulinski? | ||
I don't think it was somebody else coming from a very surprising figure that, you know, shocked a lot of people that this person actually said this. | ||
I have it somewhere in my notes. | ||
But it's going to be interesting to see the turnout, to see if people actually do decide to vote, or whether they're just so disenfranchised with this kind of emotional manipulation that they're just going to tune out. | ||
Aaron Rodgers. | ||
unidentified
|
Aaron Rodgers. | |
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
I thought it was. | ||
I was a leftist commentator and I was like, I thought it was Aaron Rodgers. | ||
Yeah, Aaron Rodgers on Rogan. | ||
But, you know, what was interesting is that I think it does have to do with if people are going to turn out. | ||
So many people are dissatisfied. | ||
Nothing really seems to be going right in the country. | ||
You have Biden's really horrible speech with his blood red background, you know, speaking in front of the Independence Hall. | ||
I found it really troubling, that speech, and I think a lot of people did. | ||
I talked to Democrats who also found it troubling for different reasons, but believed that it would be effective for Democrats to be motivated to go vote, and I think it was, to a certain extent, motivating for them. | ||
The GOP, I think, Yeah. | ||
really should lean into the issues that Americans care about. McCarthy like barely made any noise | ||
the other day even though he gave that whole speech, but you did see him starting to unite | ||
a little bit with the new right. He had MTG sitting right behind him in a pink blazer. I was really | ||
glad to see her there. She's someone who initially I was like I'm not so sure and I've really come | ||
to have a lot of you know a lot of respect for her. | ||
I like her a lot. | ||
So I liked to see that I like to see that being a little more unified, but I think they have to lean more into the new right stuff than the establishment stuff. | ||
The issue is that the what people care about doesn't generate clicks. | ||
So if you're like, let's talk about economics, the average person's not gonna share a story | ||
that says like, here's how we improve the economy. | ||
What's gonna get shares is like, Trump supporters are fascists | ||
and Democrats are giving children sex changes. | ||
So those end up becoming dominant issues. | ||
And I'm not sure if you've experienced this too, but stories about the border, | ||
which people do say they care about immigration, border stories like don't get a ton of shares either. | ||
Why do you think that is? | ||
I think because it's super depressing to see little kids abandoned at the border. | ||
I don't think we've had any reasonable solutions that have been enacted other than, you know, I mean, during the Trump years, it slowed down substantially, I think. | ||
But I just don't think it's an issue that people want to deal with. | ||
I think people are primarily conflicted about it. | ||
Cognitive dissonance? | ||
Yeah, I think there's something like that going on. | ||
I think what I'm going to be looking for in this upcoming midterm is one, how many people come out? | ||
To how effective is social media going to be and big and corporate media in swaying the emotions of people to vote a particular way. | ||
I think it's going to be very interestingly because historically the president's party loses the midterms almost every time throughout the the midterms that always happened throughout, you know, the latest the races. | ||
That happened to Obama, right? | ||
It happened to Obama. | ||
That happened, I think, to Bush as well. | ||
It happened 17 out of the 19 times since the last time. | ||
Sorry, the bazonkas are having a hard time for me to concentrate here. | ||
I'm staring at your chest, Luke. | ||
I'm actually wondering, like, is it having an impact? | ||
I think so! | ||
I mean, there's Aaron Rodgers right behind me. | ||
Who is that? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm acting like a boob. | ||
You're having, like, baby brain over there, Ian. | ||
I know, I know. | ||
It happens. | ||
It's, you know, the power gets to me here. | ||
Preparing to be a parent? | ||
Maybe. | ||
I won't tell anyone my private life, but that's the topic of what we're talking about here. | ||
unidentified
|
Now, the midterms here, as we're trying to focus here, Ian... Before the show, when Luke walks out with the fake boobs, Ian goes, this is looking good. | |
Whoa! | ||
Should have wore a v-neck. | ||
But anyway, it is going to be interesting because it is going to tell a lot and it's going to foreshadow what's going to be happening in 2024. | ||
So who's going to have the power? | ||
Who's going to have the influence? | ||
Who's going to have, you know, the authority moving forward in this country? | ||
I think is going to dictate a lot of, you know, a lot of the very important things. | ||
I just want to say, you know, in 2020, Texas filed a lawsuit against Pennsylvania and you had about, I think, 46 states Signed on to one side of the lawsuit or the other, questioning or opposing the results of the election due to procedural changes in certain states. | ||
So the Texas v. Pennsylvania suit was specifically how Pennsylvania handled the election. | ||
Nothing to do with fraud. | ||
It was about, like, can you have universal mail-in voting? | ||
And Texas was like... The Supreme Court said they wouldn't hear it. | ||
I think it was Thomas and Alito who said they would. | ||
And I was kind of shocked by this. | ||
Not really, but... | ||
They should have heard the case. | ||
Texas has a right to make their argument as a state in the union. | ||
I thought they should have heard the case, too. | ||
Yeah, it's like, if there is a question about the procedure by which votes are cast, and one of the states says, what Texas basically said is that Pennsylvania is negating our votes by holding their election in such a way that violates the U.S. | ||
Constitution. | ||
Right, they also said that Pennsylvania was holding their election in a way that I think violated Pennsylvania law, which was the violation. | ||
But then ultimately I think the Pennsylvania Supreme Court said, no, it's fine, which is just the whole thing still contested. | ||
No one's satisfied with the results. | ||
But my point is not to say that anyone's right or wrong in that whole argument. | ||
We can have an argument about that later. | ||
My point is When you have almost half the country suing the other half, like, is that not indicative of something really crazy happening in this country? | ||
Then you get January 6th, then you get, you know, I think Aaron Rodgers was killed before January 6th, right? | ||
Was it 2020? | ||
I think Aaron Rodgers is the football player. | ||
unidentified
|
He's doing fine. | |
Sorry, Aaron Daniels. | ||
Focus here, Tim. | ||
I know there's a lot to distract you here with. | ||
Yeah, Daniels was the summer of 2020, wasn't he? | ||
Yeah, Aaron Danielson. | ||
So you have that happen. | ||
And then you get January 6. | ||
Now you have a bunch of these stories. | ||
In Provo, Utah, BLM ran up to a random person and shot him in their car. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
A random person. | ||
There was a thing in Denver. | ||
What was the thing in Denver? | ||
The thing in Denver, there was a guy who had been sort of hired as a security guard but had never been vetted and shot at a conservative activist. | ||
And then after all of that, what I think happens is you're a frog in a pot and the water's boiling. | ||
And so then you see people be like, you know what? | ||
I went outside and nothing's happening. | ||
And it's like, do you have amnesia? | ||
Did you forget everything that happened in the past couple of years that's going to be in the history books forever? | ||
People do forget everything, right? | ||
People forget everything except what happens right around when they're currently thinking about everything. | ||
You know, they don't think about what happened before. | ||
Everyone wants you to forget about what happened in 2020. | ||
Everyone wants you to forget about COVID. | ||
They don't want you to remember that your kids got sent home from school, that your kids are like doing math at some grade level well below their current age. | ||
They don't want you to think about any of that. | ||
They're just like, that's over. | ||
We're moving on. | ||
Someone in the chat said crime is not civil war, and I'm not saying it is. | ||
I'm saying that bleeding Kansas also wasn't civil war, but people were fighting over the issue of slavery. | ||
And if we're now dealing with a story where an old woman was shot in the back because she was arguing about being opposed to abortion, many people have argued that abortion could be the moral catalyst for civil war. | ||
Well, you've said that yourself. | ||
Yeah, I've said it, but many other smarter people than me have made a similar point. | ||
I think... Who was it? | ||
The Guardian published an article about it. | ||
It might have been... I don't want to say the wrong person, so I'll avoid. | ||
But it was a prominent leftist who said they thought that abortion would be a catalyst for civil war, not unlike slavery. | ||
And so now you have with, this is interesting, with Lindsey Graham pushing for a national | ||
15-week abortion ban, which only really helps the Democrats, but imagine if it has no impact. | ||
Imagine if Republicans still win and, according to Conservative Brief, win better than anyone | ||
expected. | ||
The left is going to be like, okay, now they're going to nationally ban abortion? | ||
Yo, someone just got shot for being pro-life. | ||
What do you think's gonna happen if the Republicans win in the midterms? | ||
Joe Biden will say, I'll veto it. | ||
Trump will then say, if you elect me in 2024, the first thing I will sign is the 15-week abortion ban. | ||
And then they're gonna be screaming and smashing everything, which will only make their chances of winning worse. | ||
I think it should be a states' rights issue. | ||
Yeah, I agree. | ||
I think it should stay there. | ||
It is a states' rights issue. | ||
It is a states' rights issue. | ||
Yeah, that's right. | ||
Amazing, and now we're moving back into an era of potential civil war where there's a states' rights issue around the right to life. | ||
It's always a states' rights issue. | ||
That's something that we come up against a fair bit. | ||
Everything should be a states' rights issue. | ||
Everything should be this in terms of everything. | ||
Not everything. | ||
unidentified
|
Not everything. | |
We do have a constitution, so a lot of stuff isn't. | ||
But for someone like Seamus, for instance, he thinks it should be banned federally because it's murder. | ||
I'm sure most conservatives probably think, actually, it's murder and it shouldn't be allowed. | ||
And then the more, like, governmentally conservative libertarian types are like, let the states decide. | ||
But on the moral question, conservatives outright are like, no, murder shouldn't be allowed, period. | ||
So we're moving into this similar territory to the First Civil War. | ||
I call it the First Civil War. | ||
It's funny. | ||
where it's like the nation should ban the murder of babies and unborn babies are humans with unique | ||
DNA and and should have a right should have protections under the constitution. Well that | ||
heartbeat thing was fascinating. One side is saying no to that. Oh right so so you saw you | ||
saw they changed the definition of a heartbeat. | ||
They changed the definition of heartbeat, yeah. | ||
And you know why they did? | ||
They did because of to back Stacey Abrams. | ||
That's right. | ||
No, they changed it before she said that. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
Planned Parenthood changed the definition of heartbeat. | ||
They said that it's not a heartbeat, it's cardiac activity at six weeks. | ||
Oh, well they were saying that in 2017 as well, and so was the Atlantic. | ||
Then she came out and changed it. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
And the reason they did this is because of the heartbeat bills that are being passed. | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah, they did that in 2017 in the Atlantic, and then in 2021... Change the definition? | ||
Well, they started talking about what cardiac activity actually means, and then Planned Parenthood did blogs about it in 2021 as well. | ||
If they pass a law that says, once a heartbeat is detected, you can't get an abortion, then all the media comes out and says, not a heartbeat. | ||
Well, that's, you know, that's what it's been with so many things, you know, I feel like we should have a running glossary of words that have been changed to suit the Biden administration from heartbeat to recession to vaccine efficacy, you know, like all of these various things. | ||
Um, we used to know what the words mean. | ||
They keep getting changed. | ||
unidentified
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To vaccine in itself. | |
The word was changed. | ||
Isn't that nuts that our entire language can just mean something different if people in charge want it to? | ||
It just changed the definition. | ||
They get a bunch of people to back it and then when you're standing over here standing literally on the word, which reminds me of that old gospel song from the 70s, um, when you're over here standing on the word and they're telling you the words that you're standing on have now been altered to suit their own political machinations, you know, to suit their their political needs. | ||
It's a very disconcerting to look at it and you know, and say | ||
like, I thought this word mean to x and now it means something else | ||
to everybody else. | ||
I've got to give people some good news, though. Okay, We can't all just wallow in self-pity and fear. | ||
The New York Post reports Nancy Pelosi booed in guest appearance at New York City's Global Citizen Music Festival. | ||
I think, though, Tim, the part that you're missing is where they're about to change the meaning of the word booed to mean really, really loved it. | ||
Everybody knows boo means to show enthusiasm. | ||
I was saying boo words! | ||
So Nancy Pelosi comes out on stage. | ||
They were all saying boo her. | ||
Nancy Pelosi comes out on stage in the the liberal stronghold of New York City and the crowd goes nuts screaming. | ||
The video is hilarious because a guy's like, it's Nancy Pelosi! | ||
Why is everybody booing? | ||
But the best part was like you can hear some of the women booing and it's very high-pitched like boo! | ||
I'm like, everyone is the boo. | ||
Yeah, really hear the tones here. | ||
Yeah, this is good news. | ||
Look, it's because this should be kind of a white pill in that | ||
everybody hates Nancy Pelosi. | ||
So that least there's that like, what if everything ends with | ||
the left and the right holding hands and singing about how much they hate Chuck Schumer, Pelosi, Nadler. | ||
I think that people really dislike oligarchy and oligarchs in control of our government. | ||
It's not even who it's if an oligarch gets in there or someone | ||
gets in there and then becomes an oligarch like she's been well, allegedly making all sorts of money off stock trades. | ||
I've never seen the data to prove it, but this is what I've heard. We don't want people like that. | ||
I don't want people like that in charge. | ||
They're going to sell the country. | ||
She makes better stocks trades than Warren Buffett than anyone | ||
else in the world. | ||
Ian, how can you not see it? | ||
It's like it's like the right in front of my face, right in front | ||
of your face. | ||
And seeing this video has honestly restored my faith in humanity, seeing it. | ||
And then there's an amazing photo of her co-host that went up on stage with her. | ||
Being like, hey, here's Nancy! | ||
And Nancy's kind of standing there like, holy cow, what did I just get myself into? | ||
Getting a reality call that she's trying to push a climate change agenda, and then everyone is just not having it. | ||
So seeing this absolutely shows you that there is absolutely, there's huge, huge, huge, are you lowering my volume? | ||
No, I'm not touching it! | ||
You're saying huge and I'm distracted by the huge, ginormous unpopularity when it comes to the current political establishment and it's something that I think we need to focus on and talk about more because the reality probably is a lot different than what we're getting on big tech social media that manipulates the algorithms. | ||
Here's what we'll do. | ||
We will create an event called the We Hate Nancy Pelosi Festival, right? | ||
You see hate? | ||
You said hate was a bad thing, so you guys are saying. | ||
But I'm saying right now, if everyone in the country hates Nancy Pelosi... Well, then it could be unifying, right? | ||
Exactly. | ||
We could really all come together. | ||
Oh, that's her job. | ||
And isn't she 84? | ||
We should legit do a skit. | ||
We gotta do a skit where it's like a guy in a MAGA hat and a guy with like a pride flag and they're yelling at each other. | ||
And then it's like, oh, you're nuts! | ||
You support Nancy Pelosi! | ||
And the other guy goes, what? | ||
I hate Nancy Pelosi! | ||
And then the Trump hat guy goes, you hate Nancy Pelosi too? | ||
Yes, I despise her! | ||
Really? | ||
Me too! | ||
Really? | ||
Yeah, what about her don't you like? | ||
Oh, she's a corporate show. | ||
I know! | ||
Really? | ||
Let's sit down for a second. | ||
unidentified
|
And they sit down, and they're drinking together, and they become best friends and buddies for the rest of their lives, and they die old. | |
Remember her COVID haircut? | ||
Remember her freezer packed with ice cream? | ||
That one. | ||
I mean, come on. | ||
It was so tone deaf. | ||
It was unbelievable. | ||
It was the capital city of the Hunger Games. | ||
Everyone being like, my life is ruined. | ||
And she's like, look at my $20 ice cream. | ||
unidentified
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You're like, I can't work, I can't survive, I can't pay the bills. | |
She had an entire freezer full of this stuff. | ||
It was like packed. | ||
She couldn't even fit her like emergency chicken in there or whatever. | ||
She had like a thousand dollars worth of ice cream in her freezer. | ||
Oh my goodness. | ||
That was so horrible. | ||
And Biden was like, I love ice cream too. | ||
This is a... The Democratic Party represents, like, it's a capital city. | ||
And then the corporate media. | ||
Trump had two scoops of ice cream. | ||
He's bad. | ||
And Biden's out there, like, with it dripping off his chin. | ||
Do you think term limits would solve it? | ||
Like, flat out solve this problem of oligarchs? | ||
I don't think so. | ||
The issue isn't oligarchs, the issue is culture. | ||
That people would vote for Nancy Pelosi. | ||
I know, but what are they voting for, actually? | ||
Just the name? | ||
I mean, yes, to a certain extent. | ||
I mean, people are used to outsourcing their political views to whatever seems most expedient. | ||
I don't think they're voting for her. | ||
I think they're going in and voting Democrat. | ||
That's why I was saying a long time ago, remove Democrat and Republican from the ballot, so you don't know what party they're a part of. | ||
Also, first names, just initials, so you can't tell who's who at all. | ||
What? | ||
That would be interesting, if you have no idea who you're voting for. | ||
The issue is, people go in and they go, Democrat, Democrat, Democrat, or Republican, Republican, Republican. | ||
No, if you don't know who you're voting for, don't vote for them. | ||
unidentified
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Right, that makes sense. | |
So remove the party and just the names. | ||
And then you'll be looking at a bunch of names, and you'll be like, I don't know. | ||
But that's what people do, is they just like, they vote. | ||
No, they see the Democrat, and even in Pennsylvania, they had a thing for a while where you could just click Democrat, and it would give all the Democrats your vote. | ||
unidentified
|
You could pull the lever. | |
You could just pull the, I had a politics teacher in high school, Pat Rice-Snyder, and she talked about that. | ||
Just pull the lever. | ||
Yeah, pull the lever all the way at the top. | ||
I never voted in Pennsylvania. | ||
I only ever voted in New York. | ||
So I say we remove parties from the ballot. | ||
So you'll just see names. | ||
What about for the primary? | ||
Well, for the primary, you don't need to party on it anyway. | ||
It's just like... That should be open, I think. | ||
Do you think? | ||
We've talked about this before. | ||
Open primaries are terrible. | ||
I've been thinking about it back and forth. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
What is your thought? | ||
I've been wondering about it because in New York, I'm a registered Democrat so that I can vote in the primary that has the most say over who ends up on the final ballot. | ||
But then I can't vote in the Republican primary, which would be where I could vote for who I think should probably actually be in charge. | ||
Well, then you should register as a Republican. | ||
Yeah, but then you don't have a say on the other side, so it's kind of like... The problem is when Democrats in open primaries sabotage, or Republicans could do the same thing, so that's not a good idea. | ||
Right. | ||
So pull off the DNER, term limits, two terms, and we gotta have open-source voting machines, because that's my most demoralized issue. | ||
Term limits are not the issue. | ||
I can't stand, like, 10-term, 85-year-olds that are, like, dripping... | ||
I would say Ron, two terms and out, if I could get the other 80 people out. | ||
Well, Ron supported Term Limits, so... Exactly! | ||
He's a guy that would give up the power out of righteousness. | ||
I think the issue with Term Limits is you just create an industry that is a shadow industry where people will form committees to choose who's going to be the next person. | ||
They're just going to pick their successor. | ||
They have to keep picking and choosing somebody, but at least the new person won't figure out the swamp fast enough in order to, of course, sell everyone down the river. | ||
Except that they'll have all the connections already pre-set up. | ||
But they already have the connections. | ||
Then you need term limits for staffers, too. | ||
You need term limits for everybody. | ||
Term limits for FBI agents, CIA agents. | ||
Work one year, you're out. | ||
Goodbye. | ||
What about one year? | ||
No, no, no. | ||
One year, one month. | ||
unidentified
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That seems crazy. | |
Because you have to go through intensive training. | ||
That's absolutely insane. | ||
The FBI should be walked in the door, they get a one-hour explanation for why what they do is bad, and then they're fired right away. | ||
Exactly. | ||
I like that. | ||
unidentified
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Mine was kind of a... | |
One year? | ||
Well, yeah. | ||
One year, and then you get someone new in there, and then one year, and you get someone new, and then before the end of the training, you figure it all out. | ||
unidentified
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They're all out. | |
When you get hired as an IRS agent, they walk you in, and you listen to a seminar on why taxation is theft, and then they fire you. | ||
I'm open to it. | ||
I'm open to term limits. | ||
But I really, we need open source voting machines. | ||
I can't handle the private proprietary voting machines anymore. | ||
That's the most demoralizing thing. | ||
Yeah, that's crazy. | ||
to think that I go in and I cast my vote and then it goes to a machine that it's tallied in private | ||
and no one can see the code. | ||
So you don't know if it's actually tallying it accurately. | ||
Like that just tears me down and makes me like, not that I don't want to vote, but like, I feel hopeless. | ||
Did you vote in 2020? | ||
No. | ||
You didn't? | ||
No. | ||
Oh, okay, well then... Yeah, I just told people to vote for her. | ||
unidentified
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Well, I was gonna say... I wasn't registered at the time. | |
I just moved states and it was very awkward. | ||
So make sure you're registered now. | ||
Vote in this election. | ||
And then if it turns out the place in which you vote uses proprietary voting machines, you can file a lawsuit because you're left standing. | ||
And you'll say, I want to see the code because for all I know, it's a random number generator. | ||
Then you'll win. | ||
Someone withstanding just needs to do it. | ||
So I guess for that matter, I'm not a lawyer so I don't necessarily know for sure, but I'd imagine if you did vote, you should have a right as a member of the public to see the code, to know how the machine works. | ||
I was told a story a long time ago out of Chicago where a guy got a speeding ticket. | ||
And he subpoenaed the code for the radar gun. | ||
And he told the judge, for all I know, it's a random number generator. | ||
You have to prove to the court it actually tracks your speed and how it's done. | ||
And the company apparently was like, this is proprietary and you can't have it. | ||
And they were like, no, it's used in the public and it impacts people's lives. | ||
And so he actually got it released. | ||
And then I think he had to pay the ticket or something. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
So it wasn't random. | ||
It was not a random number generator. | ||
It actually works. | ||
I always check that when I'm like driving by something. | ||
It has your speed thing on it. | ||
And it's not always right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But I mean, I don't know where the camera is or whatever. | ||
But that's the point, right? | ||
How do we know any of these voting machines do what they say they do unless the code is released to the public? | ||
So if you voted and you're concerned, just you file a lawsuit as per the public's right to know what these machines do and how they do it. | ||
It's interesting because having it be proprietary and third-party seems messed up, but also having an entire government agency dedicated to creating voting machines would seem messed up. | ||
So maybe we should just have paper ballots and count them. | ||
Geez, I feel like that's even more messed up. | ||
Everybody hands their box to a guy who goes into a backroom and is like, yeah, it's 7431! | ||
They count them in a big open room where everyone's watching on camera. | ||
Yeah, kind of. | ||
I kind of like that. | ||
How many is that? | ||
Like 10,000 hours of footage that no one, no one person. | ||
Oh, someone's going to watch it. | ||
What do you think you're going to do? | ||
Just watch it. | ||
Like just live stream it. | ||
People would watch it all over the world. | ||
Like if someone's standing at a computer and then there's 50 people behind them and they made people stand far away to watch too this last time. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
What was it? | ||
Arizona? | ||
If they push a button on the computer, how do you know that they're, that they're doing it accurately? | ||
You don't! | ||
Exactly. | ||
So it's like, I just mean, that's not what they're doing. | ||
Well, you know what we're coming up to? | ||
What we're coming up against is... With paper ballots, they write down the number and then hand the sheet to someone else. | ||
What we're coming up against, too, is the... They check the numbers and then confirm that they're right. | ||
...is the issue of trust, right? | ||
I mean, at a certain point, we have to be able to trust each other. | ||
Or have trustless systems. | ||
I think it's better civil war. | ||
What would a trustless system even look like? | ||
Where a button gets pushed and then the tally happens and you see all the math. | ||
It's gonna be a lot easier for everyone just to pick their warlord and just to have a suggestion box. | ||
With crypto, I can't send you data and then you don't get it. | ||
I'd like my dictator to know. | ||
The warlord will pick up the card, look at it, and say no next. | ||
Exactly, and that'd be better off probably than what we have right now in my opinion. | ||
Well, like with crypto, I can't like send you data and then you don't get it. | ||
You get it, or I know that it goes. | ||
So if that was how votes were happening. | ||
They're talking about doing crypto-based voting in Africa, and I think some local jurisdictions | ||
have already implemented it where everything is on the blockchain, people are able to see | ||
their receipts, people are able to see everything coming back, moving back and forward. | ||
And that's that I was at an African Bitcoin conference in Nigeria that was actually implementing | ||
this in local regions. | ||
So there is a possibility of implementing this kind of open-sourced, free technology with all the receipts, all the transactions, with a public blockchain, Let's talk about the future of this country. | ||
to, but essentially how corrupted our political system of suggestion box is almost the same | ||
in my opinion. | ||
Let's talk about the future of this country. | ||
It is often said that California is about five years ahead of the rest of the country | ||
nationally. | ||
Well, I give you this story from the hill. | ||
California, first state to ban natural gas heaters and furnaces. | ||
unidentified
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Ah! | |
It's for the poor people that you can't have heat anymore. | ||
the air for all Californians. It will also lead to reduced emissions in the many low-income | ||
and disadvantaged communities that experience greater levels of persistent air pollution. | ||
Ah, it's for the poor people that you can't have heat anymore. Okay. | ||
Poor people don't need heat. | ||
Yeah, no, right? | ||
Yeah, I mean, yeah, poverty generates energy, right? | ||
They're just naturally warm, you know, plus, I think they probably already have tools they can create fire. | ||
This always this kind of stuff always reminds me of I always forget to what play it is. | ||
What play is it? | ||
Anyway, it's Chekhov. | ||
Three Sisters? | ||
What's his name? | ||
I have it right here. | ||
Anton Chekhov. | ||
Yeah, and he's saying, it's Uncle Vanya. | ||
It's Uncle Vanya. | ||
It's Uncle Vanya and he's talking about the trees and why do the peasants always burn down the trees, you know? | ||
And he's like, why is this? | ||
Why do the peasants need to burn down the trees? | ||
Can't they just use peat? | ||
They can pick it up off the ground and burn that. | ||
And of course, burning peat is a much dirtier, it's a much dirtier source. | ||
The smoke is worse and all of that. | ||
But we're constantly trying to tell everybody how they need to heat their homes, how they need to, you know, move around, all of this. | ||
It's unreasonable. | ||
They ban gas cars. | ||
They're banning natural gas heaters. | ||
So everything's gonna be electric? | ||
Everything's going to be electric, it's going to collapse. | ||
It's already collapsing! | ||
And then already, I mean you saw this, we talked about this, and then they tell you that you can't charge your cars. | ||
Right. | ||
So it's all, what the end result is, is going to be controlling your movements, it controls What it really is is artificial scarcity. | ||
This is done in order to control populations. | ||
As you're limiting energy, you limit also almost everything else in someone's life and society. | ||
You're also able to limit their food, their travel, and their progression. | ||
And any kind of upward economic mobility has been robbed and stripped away from the average American. | ||
As, of course, we're all told, we're doing it for the right causes. | ||
We're doing it As the people literally causing the most amount of pollution in this world are flying around in their private jets and swimming around in their yachts and living in their mansions, why aren't they restricted? | ||
If this was really truly about helping the environment, maybe the over-consumers, maybe the richest people in this world, maybe the people who have way too much would have been dealt with in a truly communistic kind of system if we're going by their rules and laws, but we're not doing any of that. | ||
Artificial scarcity is a great phrase. | ||
It's a great phrase. | ||
And creating some of the poorest people in this world. | ||
And what this is, is exactly artificial scarcity to predominantly bring in more controls by | ||
governments that want to run every aspect of your life. | ||
So the Teslas have cell connectivity. | ||
And it's going to be funny in what, five years, when you're going to be in your garage and | ||
there's going to be a notice saying not charging on your Tesla or electric car. | ||
You're going to sit down and you're going to be like, I only have 30% battery. | ||
I can't go anywhere. | ||
And it's like governor's orders, emergency grid lockdown, your car's not charging. | ||
So then what people will do is they're going to get Faraday cages. | ||
You're going to try and like airplane mode. | ||
You can't airplane mode the car. | ||
The car always have the connectivity. | ||
So people will be like, oh, build a Faraday cage. | ||
So the internet can't tell it what to do. | ||
You're gonna go into your car and it's gonna be like, no connectivity, can't charge. | ||
It's gonna connect to the internet to charge your vehicle. | ||
Yeah, that's gonna do that. | ||
Yep. | ||
And it's just gonna keep you where you are. | ||
That's central planning. | ||
And then they're gonna tell you what food that you can eat and everything. | ||
Yeah, of course. | ||
Yeah, it's really very insidious. | ||
No, I'm not talking about central planning. | ||
You're gonna get in your car, it's gonna be charged, and you're gonna punch in the address for your work, you're gonna pull out, get onto the road, and then all of a sudden it's gonna turn, the lights in the car will turn red, and then the car will just start driving and it'll be like, warrant, warrant submitted for Ian Crossland driving to 5th Precinct. | ||
And you're gonna go, what? | ||
And it's like, warrant for excessive energy use. | ||
Or it's just going to say that you can go to work and you can't go anywhere else. | ||
But I'm saying when you're criminally charged, it'll drive you to the police and lock your car. | ||
Completely antithetical to the United States, the constitution of freedom of property, freedom of speech, freedom of access. | ||
That's why they're trying to get rid of it. | ||
It just doesn't make sense. | ||
I mean, the government's got to understand that trying to centrally plan people's lives is not good. | ||
The Soviet Union did that and collapsed. | ||
But they think they're doing it for altruistic reasons. | ||
They think they're doing it to help us. | ||
unidentified
|
No one accused these people of being smart. | |
Do you think that overpopulation is actually a threat? | ||
Yes. | ||
I don't think it is. | ||
I don't think it is. | ||
The science and data prove it's not. | ||
Like overpopulation of deer, for instance, is obviously a threat. | ||
Aren't we below replacement rate right now? | ||
Yes. | ||
The issue is the density of cities. | ||
But that was okay, but the density of cities was already part of the sustainable movement, was to get more people into cities. | ||
That's a terrible idea because it generates massive waste that can't be washed away. | ||
But it also, I mean there are ways to, there are these living machines, have you guys heard about this? | ||
They're not pods. | ||
unidentified
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Bugs? | |
No, it's not bugs. | ||
It's like an entire flora system that it's not a composting toilet. | ||
It's like the next step from a composting toilet. | ||
It's like the next step up. | ||
Anyway. | ||
It's a toilet? | ||
It's not a toilet. | ||
It's a whole system. | ||
It's a living machine and it takes all of the waste and it turns it into like a big garden kind of thing. | ||
And you can put these in apartment buildings that you turn into cities. | ||
So you have like massive apartment building cities that have Zero carbon footprint. | ||
They produce no waste because it all goes through these living machines. | ||
Anyway, it does this whole thing. | ||
But so my point is, if massive growth of cities, which to a certain extent is part of a sustainable idea, is a failure as well, why isn't it apparent that like we haven't come up with the right idea yet? | ||
Right. | ||
So why are we continuously enforcing these ideas that have not been proven out? | ||
We need to live like they lived in Avatar, you know? | ||
And I'll just live under trees and hold hands and rock back and forth. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, right. | |
But I think that they're afraid of zoonotic disease or the humans are destroyed because they have, in one way, they're like cities are grossly overpopulated. | ||
But secondly, they're like, we need people in mega cities because we don't want them to disrupt the environment. | ||
There was like the 2050 city. | ||
Remember that? | ||
The like 2050 city was a thing before the 2035 no car thing. | ||
They're continuously coming up with these ideas. | ||
So like they're afraid that humans are going to poison the earth, so instead they're going to try and force them into large cities that are poisoning the earth? | ||
Yes, a lot of the policies that you're seeing done in the name of climate change are creating more climate change, especially when it comes to, you know, limiting energy, shooting, you know, down nuclear reactors, getting rid of, you know, energy that could be explored, that could be produced. | ||
There's been domestic policies in Europe, in the United States, that deliberately hinder energy to the people. | ||
Energy is correlated with economic prosperity. | ||
And this is, to me, done deliberately. | ||
People call it the Great Reset. | ||
People call it the Great Collapse. | ||
I think there are far larger consequences to this than the average person even kind of understands or could even comprehend here. | ||
So if you look at a lot of these policies, a lot of them are correlated with more pollution, more disastrous, you know, Situations for the poorest people in the world. | ||
I was thinking of that wall, the wall and that was Saudi Arabia or UAE somewhere. | ||
They want to build this large city. | ||
Oh, the line. | ||
The line. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
The line. | ||
It's nonsense. | ||
And maybe they're thinking that it's defensible. | ||
If chaos were to erupt on earth and there was a global war that the large cities, mega cities, we could defend them with air support. | ||
We know where everyone is. | ||
And chaos is dangerous. | ||
But like the realistic thing is if everything's concentrated in one area, then it's a bombing target. | ||
It also seems really disgusting and horrible. | ||
Like, you'd be trapped. | ||
Because it would be a walled city. | ||
Like, that's such regression. | ||
We used to have, like, Paris was a walled city, you know? | ||
I don't think we need a walled city. | ||
Yeah, you can't go outside. | ||
You can't be free. | ||
You can't be in nature. | ||
You can't escape the prison that they're literally building for you. | ||
And in many cities there's already... But only poor people. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
It's all of them. | ||
Yeah, Bill, Bill, and Warren, and Zuck, and they're going to have their spaceships. | ||
They're going to have their Elysium in the sky. | ||
They're going to have their private island up in the sky. | ||
It feels like this technocratic obsession with order is like a video game. | ||
Like they think it's going to work like a video game, but people are chaotic by nature. | ||
People are chaotic. | ||
And that's how we are. | ||
That's how humans and monkeys have always been. | ||
We rip and tear and grow and die. | ||
So I don't understand what these idiots are intending. | ||
What this technological generation thinks. | ||
They think there's too many people. | ||
They want there to be 500 million people. | ||
And so they are working towards making less people. | ||
These are also the same people though that would have you believe that Native Americans were peaceful and didn't, you know, they would like infantilize indigenous populations and say that they had no, none of the kind of impulses that modern man has. | ||
You know, that's crazy too. | ||
Yeah, we were talking about that a couple days ago on the show. | ||
I think we had an interesting conversation about that as well. | ||
There's a lot of things that we don't know, especially when it comes to history. | ||
I think, you know, if you think the news is fake, wait until you find out about history. | ||
And, you know, you really examine who's telling us these kind of narratives. | ||
You kind of have to ask yourself, why are we being told these specific things? | ||
Why is this being reiterated to us? | ||
And at the end of the day, I think a lot of it is to weaken the human spirit, the human will. | ||
And I think largely, you know, trying to understand it, I think it's difficult for many people because it's impossible to get into the mind of someone who might be a sociopath or someone who truly is a part of maybe a larger energetic demonic world out there. | ||
So there's all potentials out here. | ||
It's not worth speculating, but it is worth documenting the things that they do and the effects that they have on humanity. | ||
And you cannot argue that within the last three years, all the centralized policies have wreaked havoc on the average human being. | ||
We have destroyed our way of life. | ||
We have destroyed our physical health, our mental health, our intelligence, our ability to have family members to procreate and live life here on this human planet. | ||
We've destroyed all of that because we have given authority to the government. | ||
And I think the more that the government exists, the more that they do, the more that the average human being lives in havoc. | ||
The less government does, the less havoc we have. | ||
And I think this is why, you know, one of the answers is decentralization. | ||
I mean, I think in a lot of cases, everything that you're saying about, you know, how we did that, I think a lot of it was not people giving the authority, but having the authority taken. | ||
And us just looking at it like, oh my goodness, they're doing this, they're taking this. | ||
I think that we were relatively complacent about the luxury of our lifestyles, about | ||
our ability to move and exist freely, say what we think, you know, have seek the medical | ||
treatment that we think is appropriate, all of this. | ||
And I think that a lot of us, I know that I was, despite everything, sort of shocked | ||
to see how the government just came in and obliterated our rights and just completely | ||
took them away, started lying to us about everything, right? | ||
I mean, we've talked about this, you know, like, stay in your homes, don't go to work, | ||
you're massively germy, except if you're protesting black trans lives in front of the Brooklyn | ||
Museum, then it's fine. | ||
And it was just so shocking to be lied to consistently and to be told that those lies were truth. | ||
And you're just standing there with your mouth wide open in shock to be told this. | ||
After here you thought you were in a democratic system with good values where we all agreed on the Bill of Rights and then just to have it squashed. | ||
I mean I don't think that we necessarily gave the authority to do all of this to the government. | ||
I think it was taken and we were stunned because we didn't expect it and I think you can look at that in a number of areas of American life including education So I talked to a lot of people who are education activists, particularly conservatives and parents, who realized only during, you know, we only really realized during the pandemic when school came home and it turned out to be trash, what was being done to our kids. | ||
You know, that this indoctrination was already in there, had been in there for years. | ||
It wasn't new. | ||
It was the only reason it's in the news now is because it has been realized. | ||
So people trusted all of these systems. | ||
We trusted our institutions. | ||
We trusted our, you know, government to a large degree, only to find out that they were deceiving us successfully. | ||
And then the people that sat by and said nothing or did nothing while it happened are, I think Martin Luther King would say, was it that the evil will come from the men that see evil and do nothing or say nothing? | ||
I had some weird quote like that. | ||
A lot of people just went along with it. | ||
All that is required for evil to triumph is that good men do nothing. | ||
And if you don't even see it, if you don't see it happening, you know, if it has been so sick, if that evil has been so successfully obfuscated, then you're just stunned when you, when you realize that it's, Edmund Burke. | ||
All around you. | ||
That makes sense. | ||
Yeah, the term expert. | ||
That is a way to obfuscate evil for sure. | ||
Because if you tell someone that an expert is claimed or an expert's here now... Appeal to authority. | ||
Yeah, I generally want to listen to people that are experts at what they do. | ||
But it doesn't mean that they're right. | ||
Right. | ||
And the siloing of information, I think, was a problem when you go to school. | ||
It used to be when you go to school, you could become a generalist. | ||
You know, the idea was that you would know a little bit about everything, and this was a good thing. | ||
And now they're still, you know, they're like, oh, career classes in middle school. | ||
And it's like, you don't need that. | ||
The last thing you need is a career class. | ||
What you need is an art class and a science class. | ||
And like what doctors need is a health class as well, like a food health class and a medicine health class. | ||
I just want to add to your point here because you talked about a little bit of the censorship and I do believe if it wasn't for the censorship, the lockdowns, the mandates, the ridiculousness, the punishing of individuals would have not lasted as long as it has. | ||
But because of the centralization of our information and our thoughts through big tech social media algorithms, I think it was the only reason why they were able to get away with so much atrocities, with so much bullcrap against the average human being. | ||
So I just wanted to kind of talk about that point that you made and point it out as one of the biggest factors to why humanity went along with this lunacy, because they didn't know that there was another alternative, another option, or that the science was even debated or talked about. | ||
I think that's exactly right. | ||
They called it misinformation. | ||
They would ban you, censor you, get you fired, literally get you fired, you know, from your job. | ||
Suddenly you can't feed your family. | ||
We see this all over the place. | ||
And I think it was shocking to a certain extent. | ||
I mean, it's good that we're aware of it now, but I mean, the price we paid is huge. | ||
The real question that needs to be asked that nobody wants to ask is, Are the people running these programs people or are they aliens? | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
My son was asking me that the other day. | ||
He's like, mom, what if we're the aliens? | ||
And I was like, that's panspermia. | ||
What if aliens, what if we started the SETI project and we send out, was it Voyager with that golden disc? | ||
Is that what had it? | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
The record, the record on it. | ||
What if aliens found it? | ||
And they were like, these people are so dumb. | ||
And then they came here and they were like, we're, we're in control now. | ||
What if they found it and they were like, these people are so intelligent, we just can't possibly go to that quadrant. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
People are definitely afraid of the unknown. | ||
And if you can't see what the virus, then that's a way to scare people. | ||
Like if you see the lion charging through the city, you at least know what to fear. | ||
And if the lion gets killed, everyone knows the danger is over. | ||
But if you can't see it, I mean, if aliens want to get us, they'll be like, LOL, let's give them an invisible threat. | ||
It just feels like everything we saw over the lockdowns was like a test. | ||
Can't? | ||
Will you pull up into a parking lot and inject a foreign substance into your arm from a stranger? | ||
Now, I understand that you trust the people on the TV box when he says, go to your local 7-Eleven parking lot. | ||
But I kept telling people, please don't do that. | ||
Please go to a doctor. | ||
Because we don't want to normalize a culture of walking up to a random person and being like, yes, inject me with that. | ||
I want to go to a doctor. | ||
Ask the doctor, let them figure it out, and doctors aren't always right or whatever, but the point is, like, you're safest there as opposed to the guy at the 7-Eleven parking lot. | ||
This is not a dead show. | ||
Don't just take what the man offers you. | ||
unidentified
|
Is that crazy, though? | |
I feel like, you know, taking crazy pills. | ||
unidentified
|
Ian's confused. | |
If you go to a dude and he injects you, he's drugging you. | ||
Maybe they don't use that phrase because the guy might be considered a doctor and it's supposed to be a healthy thing he's putting on, but he's still drugging you with a drug that could be good for you. | ||
You don't know. | ||
Look, you get a prescription from a doctor. | ||
You go to a doctor. | ||
This is what I tell people. | ||
Go to your doctor and say, here's my history, here's my risk factors, and let them tell you what's right or not. | ||
You don't want to like... | ||
Imagine, I'll tell you this, let's say your, I love using the plumbing analogy, let's say your toilet bursts, like just, just crap everywhere, and it's a mess, and there's water spraying all over the place, and then bits are floating on the floor, and then the cat's stepping in. | ||
Keep going, this is good. | ||
And then, so imagine you decide, I gotta get this fixed. | ||
So you pull into a 7-Eleven parking lot where there's a random guy, and you say, hey, come fix my toilet. | ||
Perfect. | ||
Is that- that makes no sense. | ||
I mean, call a plumber. | ||
But before you do, he had a plunger, so he must have been good at what he did because he had a plunger. | ||
Because he had a plunger. | ||
That's why it's just- we normalize this and it's just absolutely insane to me that there were people- but look, I'll slow down. | ||
It feels like At the very least, we collected some great data. | ||
People are willing to drive up to a random parking lot in a place they've not been and let a strange person inject them with a foreign substance. | ||
Under penalty of losing their jobs? | ||
No, no, no, no, no, no, no. | ||
You mean the other people? | ||
If you were ordered to get a vaccine by your job, you could call your doctor up and say, here's my age, here's my risk factors. | ||
tell me what to do doc that i think is acceptable but in any circumstance walking into a parking lot | ||
and being like howdy stranger right here that's nuts 20 years the last 20 years have been like | ||
the the awakening of the american people this great red pilling where we're seeing some people | ||
haven't woken up yet or maybe never will but a lot of people covid had to happen to them | ||
They had to be smacked down by authoritarian nightmare to realize what an authoritarian nightmare is. | ||
Some people saw the data in 2007 and were like, whoa, there weren't weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. | ||
Holy crap. | ||
Why are we still in Afghanistan in 2011? | ||
What's this Trans-Pacific Partnership? | ||
What's this investor state dispute settlement that wants to sell us out to Malaysian oil companies? | ||
What's this corporatization of the world? | ||
And they woke up and they're alive. | ||
They're talking about it. | ||
But a lot of people are still in that process. | ||
And a lot of those people got the jab without questioning it. | ||
I just want to point out that once we reach $2,000 in Super Chats, Luke is going to down this whole tube. | ||
Hell no. | ||
No way. | ||
Ian is going to down this whole board. | ||
Libby will down this whole... Nobody wants to eat the icing? | ||
That's gross. | ||
That's not icing. | ||
That's called poison. | ||
If that was buttercream, I would eat a bunch of it, but it's not buttercream. | ||
It's not that bad. | ||
It's palm oil. | ||
But it's not buttercream. | ||
It's sugar and almond. | ||
High fructose corn syrup and inflammatory oils. | ||
No thank you. | ||
We could all cut off a little bit of organic butter. | ||
It just sounds disgusting. | ||
Maybe to celebrate? | ||
I would eat organic butter. | ||
It's like I'm trying to push your weight going everyone Tim. | ||
It's like a pint. | ||
I think we have like a quart of icing right here with these two things. | ||
But you have to make those gingerbread castles with them. | ||
Somebody sent us these gingerbread boxes like two years ago and they're expired and I cracked them open and those icings were in it and I was like alright who's gonna slam one of these on the show? | ||
No, we have to make the gingerbread houses. | ||
That's what you have to do. | ||
Yeah, or use it as glue or something. | ||
Do you eat gingerbread houses? | ||
Like, are you supposed to actually eat them? | ||
Not really. | ||
If you're desperate, you can. | ||
If you're desperate. | ||
You don't have to. | ||
Think about that as an American. | ||
Like, I used excess food to make a structure that I'm not going to eat. | ||
That's just a weird... It's for decoration. | ||
It's a food structure. | ||
That's so weird. | ||
I don't like food structure. | ||
All right, so now that we've done a weird break in the hard politics, we're going to segue to this story. | ||
Oh, boy. | ||
From Yahoo Entertainment, Alec Baldwin may soon be criminally charged in rush shooting new letter shows. | ||
We got him! | ||
We got him, boys! | ||
We finally got him. | ||
I can't believe how long it's been. | ||
I was worried he was gonna get away with it. | ||
I heard he was like locking up his house and everything, his $29 million house. | ||
Oh my goodness, didn't he just have a baby? | ||
Didn't his wife just have a baby? | ||
He can't keep getting away with it. | ||
Apparently he can't. | ||
And it is the shooting of, God rest her soul, Helena Hutchins, who lost her life on set after Alex accidentally... What's his name? | ||
Alec? | ||
What's his name? | ||
Alec Baldwin. | ||
Inadvertently, we should say. | ||
Allegedly, inadvertently unloaded, fired a bullet. | ||
D.A. | ||
Mary Carmack-Altweiss filed an emergency request for $635,500. | ||
She says it's necessary to prosecute up to four people in connection with the accident. | ||
The LA Times obtained a letter in which Carmack-Altweiss lays out her office is considering homicide charges as well as gun violations. | ||
So we don't know for sure who those people are. | ||
But come on, why would it not be Alec Baldwin? | ||
Homeboy is gonna get criminally charged. | ||
We'll see what happens. | ||
They're gonna give him a slap on the wrist still, but a homicide charge? | ||
My favorite, we covered the story today. | ||
Josh Young wrote it for us. | ||
My favorite part was when he said, it says, No, no, Baldwin said, I would never point a gun and pull that trigger at them. | ||
Never. | ||
In August, an FBI analysis concluded that Alec Baldwin pulled the trigger of the gun that killed cinematographer. | ||
Yeah, I think it's a, obviously he pulled this trigger. | ||
Obviously he did this thing, whether he intended to do it or not. | ||
And then you saw the, there's the video of him from set talking about, um, or showing like how he pulls the gun out. | ||
And he said he didn't have his finger on the trigger and he does have this finger on the trigger. | ||
He lied. | ||
Yeah, he did. | ||
He lied. | ||
He shot that lady. | ||
And I think he can't handle it. | ||
I think he can't handle that he did this thing. | ||
I said it way back when and I'll say it again. | ||
I think he probably did it. | ||
The simple solution is that he intentionally killed this woman and the conspiracy theory is that this weird Final Destination-esque thing occurred where he accidentally shot and killed her. | ||
Like, the crazy thing to me about the whole story is that, let's say the wrong person had the gun, and then real bullets were accidentally put in it. | ||
Alec Baldwin still would have had to have pulled the trigger while pointing it at her. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And so it's like, you can believe this thing happened where, like, the gun is, like, on the table, and then someone, like, slams the door and it falls down, lands perfectly upright, and the, the, the, whatever it's called, the revolver or the wheel comes out, and then bullets roll and fall and land in it perfectly, and then it rolls over and Closes and then someone picks up and puts it back on the | ||
counter and then they open it and then handed out like all those | ||
unidentified
|
Weird things could have happened I guess anything crazy or happen | |
But yeah, look Baldwin just killed a lady that he was presumably more likely fighting with over what was going on | ||
in the set I think someone hated Alec and loaded that gun behind | ||
everybody's back and then they just because they were so negligent on set | ||
No one checked it and then he went and he was play-toying like he was an 11 year old kid like hey, I'm gonna kill | ||
And he's, like, fantasizing about killing her with an empty gun, and then there's actually a bullet in her. | ||
I think that's a pretty good assessment. | ||
The issue with that is that it requires you to make up a circumstance. | ||
Yeah, for sure. | ||
That's the most likely. | ||
My scenario is that Alec Baldwin was seen in a meeting with her. | ||
He was seen having dinner with her. | ||
They were not friends. | ||
He called her very aggressive and intense in a previous interview. | ||
There were problems on set. | ||
Those things are facts. | ||
So you think he meant to kill her? | ||
Yes, I what I think is that the most likely outcome maybe it's only 5% | ||
But you know for Ian's point that someone secretly loaded the gun you're making up why that there's no evidence and | ||
no circumstance to support Why someone would do that? | ||
Well motive would be that they hated Alec Baldwin because he was such a horrible producer and the set was so grueling | ||
people were unhappy Then why would they kill Helena? I don't think they knew | ||
what was gonna happen They were going to frame him for murder, basically. | ||
See, the problem with that is you're saying the crew was angry, that we know. | ||
So they put a real bullet in his gun, but that would end up injuring not Alec Baldwin. | ||
So it's like, perhaps you can assume the person who would have done that was reckless and also didn't care that they would kill an innocent person. | ||
I think that's a bigger leap than Alec Baldwin was fighting with a woman who was a crew member and the crew were having problems. | ||
So he shot her. | ||
Ian's version though would do really well on something like Magnum PI. | ||
Yeah, let's write it. | ||
There will be a movie of the week about this in 10 to 20 years. | ||
It would be a terrific mystery. | ||
unidentified
|
Jessica Fletcher would figure it out. | |
Okay, I don't know. | ||
Murder She Wrote? | ||
Never mind. | ||
So if this goes to trial, then are they going to try and figure intent? | ||
Is that what this is all about? | ||
To figure out what the intent is? | ||
So I don't, I don't know, man. | ||
A lot of people were like, he's an actor. | ||
He was handed the gun. | ||
It's not his fault. | ||
And I'm like, you think that matters? | ||
He's an actor. | ||
He's handed the gun and it is his fault. | ||
Yeah. | ||
As well as the producer's fault for not overseeing. | ||
It's the armorer's fault. | ||
Yeah. | ||
He's one of the like four or five producers. | ||
All the producers might be on the hook for this. | ||
I wouldn't be surprised if they charged the armorer because she handed the gun to the assistant director. | ||
I think the AD actually handed the gun to Alec and he wasn't supposed to have his hands on that gun. | ||
Well, they were also struggling with production, and people were complaining on set that the film wasn't budgeted correctly, and a lot of the staff were asking for a proper budget for the movie. | ||
So there was, you know, a lot of disputes, a lot of arguments. | ||
What really happened here? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Only one person should be criminally charged, and that's Alec Baldwin. | ||
Yeah. | ||
If someone hands you a gun, for any reason, and you point it at another person, pull the hammer back, and then pull the trigger, or you've already got the trigger depressed, you shot that person. | ||
It's crazy to me that there's like, the liberals are arguing, the left is arguing, that because he's an actor he's in some special privileged class. | ||
And I'm like, I don't know, I don't know, that makes no sense to me. | ||
I don't care if you're an actor or not. | ||
If, like, someone's like, we're doing a stunt, and I'm gonna give you a sledgehammer, but don't actually, you know, swing it at my face, and then you do, it's like, you hit him in the face with a sledgehammer! | ||
If they had waivers signed, and it was like, hey, we're gonna be swinging sledgehammers, everyone's saying if something happens to me, then the production's not responsible, because we don't know, it's very risky, and they know the risk ahead of time, and someone gets killed, that's a different story. | ||
Perhaps. | ||
I don't know if that's a different, I don't know that you could give up your liability | ||
for getting killed. | ||
Do you know what I mean? | ||
But it's a stretch. | ||
But it is a fair point that Helena Hutchins knew he would be pointing the gun at her and | ||
she chose to be there under those circumstances. | ||
So that probably does put it more simply into an accidental space. | ||
Like the sledgehammer thing could work, but if you're like doing a magic trick where you're | ||
supposed to swing a sledgehammer at someone and they escape before you hit them and then | ||
they get hit, well in that case, like you, the person with a sledgehammer, we're telling | ||
And apparently, they're saying on the film, Helena Hutchins is telling Alec Baldwin to pull the trigger. | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
Well, she's like telling him, get the shot, get the shot, get the shot. | ||
And Alec is getting frustrated and frustrated or something. | ||
And then he finally goes off and hits her. | ||
I can like see it happening. | ||
It's so crazy. | ||
It's just such a casual thing that could go wrong, which is why gun safety is so important. | ||
But that's the thing, like they shouldn't use real guns. | ||
No, they shouldn't use real guns. | ||
I was working on a show once, a play, and we had a shotgun in the play, and we were using a real gun, but there were no bullets on set anywhere, but it was still, like, super intense and a big deal if you were handling the gun. | ||
You know, there were, like, intensive rules about if you were handling the gun, even though there were no bullets anywhere, you know, on set at all. | ||
Yeah, there were supposedly no live rounds on set for this movie, too, is what everyone was told. | ||
We didn't have, like, not only no—we had nothing. | ||
Nothing ever went in the gun, but, like, we were so careful with that thing. | ||
I just want to point this out. | ||
In the Yahoo Entertainment story, it ends by saying this. | ||
More. | ||
Alec Baldwin feared he would be killed by Trump supporters over Russ' shooting. | ||
It's not a link. | ||
I don't politicize this crap. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
There's no link there. | ||
Do a little Google search of that. | ||
unidentified
|
What is that? | |
They just added this to the end of the story, like, oh, as an aside, Trump supporters were going to kill him, he thinks. | ||
Why would they put that at the bottom of the story? | ||
Maybe he was in the car with that guy in North Dakota. | ||
You know, he's like him and that guy are super tight apparently. | ||
Man, did you see that SNL is like, they think it's gonna end? | ||
Oh, let's talk about it. | ||
Really? | ||
Well, they lost eight members. | ||
Why? | ||
Because the show's garbage. | ||
But they have their first non-binary member, so obviously it's going to do amazing right now. | ||
Edie, what's her name, left the show. | ||
Aidy? | ||
Aidy Bryant. | ||
Pete Davidson, Kate McKinnon. | ||
Kyle Mooney. | ||
Shout out Kyle Mooney. | ||
They were like building with Aidy Bryant. | ||
Oh yeah, and a feature player too. | ||
So they had eight people drop out. | ||
I don't know exactly what happened, but here's the issue. | ||
You used to have like three or four channels. | ||
What was that? | ||
You'd have like three or four channels. | ||
That was creepy. | ||
And you'd turn on the night show or whatever, late night show or whatever. | ||
And then on Saturday it's SNL. | ||
Everybody watched it because that was what to watch on Saturday. | ||
Now you've got a million channels, you've got a million influencers, you've got all these different videos. | ||
What's going on? | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
I don't know. | ||
Is that me? | ||
Not me. | ||
What's that weird noise? | ||
That's not it. | ||
Did you hear that? Anyway, the point is SNL doesn't matter anymore. Because there's two on | ||
demand video, you can watch it anytime. They should just call it nl. They should just do sketch | ||
comedy. Oh, just live. They should make a YouTube channel where they randomly just upload comedy. | ||
That is exactly what they should do. Forget the Saturday night thing. It's grueling for the actors. | ||
Anyway, they all know it's like boot camp. That's not funny. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's stretched. | ||
It's like they're, I don't know. | ||
I don't watch it anymore. | ||
No, I haven't watched it in years and years. | ||
I've seen some real painful sketches. | ||
I think Kyle Mooney's a genius. | ||
I love the guy. | ||
I've rewatched more Monty Python than I've watched. | ||
Yeah, comedy should be free and it should be a critique of our society. | ||
But now our society can't be critiqued. | ||
We can't laugh at certain ideas. | ||
We can't laugh at certain hot button issues, which defeats the whole purpose of comedy, which of course, It was kind of a tool in society that made things easy, that made people laugh, that brought people together. | ||
And I think the way that society is really being pushed into this really negative way that comedy isn't allowed, and SNL being off the air and potentially losing its entire show, I think highlights this. | ||
We used to be able to laugh at other people's suffering, which is kind of horrible to think of, but that was like a big part of Freedom, is you're allowed to make fun of whoever you want. | ||
And this moral police of today, even like in Canada, like, you might even get arrested for doing it sometimes, for making people uncomfortable or whatever. | ||
Justin Trudeau. | ||
Well, no, no, no, no, no, no. | ||
If, like, you make them uncomfortable by saying naughty words, perhaps, but if you make them uncomfortable by wearing big ol' fake novelty size vests... Yeah, now we're talking. | ||
Then you're accepted. | ||
You can do whatever you want. | ||
As soon as you got these things on. | ||
I personally don't like making fun of other people's pain. | ||
I don't like doing it personally. | ||
I see someone do it to someone else. | ||
I find it derogatory and hateful. | ||
I'm like, I don't like that. | ||
But that's comedy, man. | ||
That's the history of it. | ||
And, you know, damn be the consequences. | ||
I guess maybe... But if you're able to laugh at something difficult in life, you're able to, of course, turn it around for being something so negative. | ||
So a lot of the times we deal with something very serious. | ||
We deal with something that's impacting us. | ||
Laughing at it, even though it might be something that hurts you, a lot of the times helps a lot of people deal with a lot of the trauma in our society. | ||
Like, COVID, people lost people to COVID, so if people were making jokes about that, like, oh yeah, grandma in the hospital and doing a joke like a hundred years ago, and then you do the whole, too soon? | ||
Like, that's a meme. | ||
Is it too soon to joke about because it just happened? | ||
But like, you couldn't, I couldn't even speak out about the science of COVID while it was happening without getting banned off of Facebook. | ||
It was crazy. | ||
Tim figured it out. | ||
Trump should start selling shirts and hats that say The Great Reset, and he should be like, with my election in 2024, I'm going to reset the establishment. | ||
We're going to change everything and go back to when it was great by resetting it. | ||
That way, all of the elites are forced to say The Great Reset is a bad thing. | ||
Yeah, they'll be like, stop with The Great Reset! | ||
Stop it immediately! | ||
They'll just think of a new PR name to brainwash everyone to go along. | ||
unidentified
|
The Large Restart. | |
The large restart. | ||
The future enslavement. | ||
The you will own nothing and be happy. | ||
Just the future boots stomping on your face. | ||
It's totally trendy and cool. | ||
I never understood the bug thing because chickens eat bugs. | ||
Why can't you have chickens? | ||
I don't get it. | ||
Well, I think it's also why they're pushing for a meatless society, why Bill Gates pushes this. | ||
PETA also just came out with a new push and call saying that if someone eats meat, you shouldn't have relations with them. | ||
That was their latest PR campaign. | ||
And if you look at, you know, there was also a new study that the New York Post actually talked about today, highlighting specifically people who are vegetarian and vegan are twice as likely to become depressed than people who eat meat. | ||
And I think, you know, a lot of this is correlated, and I think they want you weak. | ||
They want you fat. | ||
They want you obese. | ||
They want you unhealthy. | ||
And this is a part of the larger agenda that is really about enslaving the rest of humanity. | ||
They also really want you to not have sex. | ||
Have you noticed that? | ||
Like, so much of this activism is against people having sex and having kids. | ||
And also, Barack Obama blew up a bunch of kids. | ||
What's going on there? | ||
I think Seamus nailed it when he said, you gotta blow up kids. | ||
Too many of them. | ||
Too many of them. | ||
Vote for me. | ||
Yeah, pretty much. | ||
We got a lot of superchats. | ||
I'm really excited to read Klaus Schwab's book. | ||
I'm gonna stop talking about it. | ||
I'm telling you, hey, you can thank those superchats because of me, okay? | ||
Is that what did it, huh? | ||
That's what's correlated. | ||
Hey, look at the top superchatted channels. | ||
What do they have in common? | ||
We do have a lot of superchats tonight. | ||
Yeah, I appreciate it. | ||
Your chest is looking great. | ||
You guys are welcome. | ||
It's a nice shirt. | ||
You gotta lift and separate. | ||
You gotta lift and separate. | ||
They're fine. | ||
Don't worry about it. | ||
Separate. | ||
All right, let's 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, be the notification. | ||
YouTube's been giving us some silly business and people have been pointing out that they're not getting notifications, so it's not surprising we're about a month out from the midterms and we're starting to get jammed up a little bit. | ||
So, if you want to support us, share the videos, share the URL, post it wherever you can, become a member at timcast.com. | ||
We're going to have a spicy members-only show. | ||
We're going to be talking about the conspiracy of the big-tittied Ontario teacher. | ||
It may be a hoax, and we've got some new information to discuss. | ||
So check that out, and you can follow the show, of course, at TimCast.io, but let's read some Super Chats. | ||
All right, what is this? | ||
Testers says, Hey Ian, did Big Daddy Biden get you some Trinidad and Shabba The Pressure yet? | ||
Or at least some Betacaffe care? | ||
We poor Aussies will never see such wonderful things. | ||
Yeah, I think he's working on it, actually. | ||
I'll see him over Thanksgiving. | ||
Oh, what's this? | ||
This is good. | ||
We have Ian Hall. | ||
He says, hi, YouTube caved. | ||
I got the notification today. | ||
Amazing. | ||
Thomas Levy says, is The Amazing Atheist still due for the show? | ||
I have no idea. | ||
TJ. | ||
TJ. | ||
You know, I just don't, I don't know what it is, but every time there's a left personality, we struggle to do booking with them. | ||
It's either, you know, the last thing I talked to him about was he's him saying he wanted to come on the show. | ||
He had to figure it out. | ||
We'll figure it out. | ||
We never figured it out. | ||
So maybe we'll get him on. | ||
I invited Hasan Piker on the show again. | ||
He just didn't respond. | ||
It is what it is. | ||
I like TJ. | ||
Back in the day, 2007, when I was doing a lot of early YouTube stuff, he was very critical of my work because I was stoned and just talking about consciousness like a crazy man. | ||
And he was very literal. | ||
But he was always righteously critical. | ||
He'd be very harsh, very direct, but very honest. | ||
And he actually cared what I thought. | ||
I love you, TJ. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Hey, it's Casper says leave it to Philip DeLefto to demonize Italy PM. | ||
That's weird because Phil was very libertarian. | ||
I watched the video. | ||
It didn't seem like he was calling her far right, but it didn't seem like he was demonizing her. | ||
Did you see his video today? | ||
I haven't seen his video today, but he's pretty much like CNN Lite. | ||
He pretty much just regurgitates the establishment and what they say, the corporate media agenda and narrative. | ||
He just pretty much copies and pastes it. | ||
It's like he lost his energy for the job, and he's just like, I'm just going to say what the corporate media says. | ||
unidentified
|
No, no, no. | |
I don't think he's ever been a guy who fact checks. | ||
He's always been somebody who grabs the news, has someone write the blurbs, and then he says, here's what's being said. | ||
The difference of what we do is that there'll be a story like Trump is a Russian asset, and then we'll be like, okay, where's that coming from? | ||
And then we'll come on the show and be like, how can that be if X, Y, and Z? | ||
Yeah, let's look at the evidence, let's see what they're saying, let's see why they're saying it, let's see if there's any actual validity to these rumors, and let's look at the sources, and critically think. | ||
No one does that anymore. | ||
And the obvious reason that this show is just plainly better is that, you know, Philip DeFranco is, he doesn't have the big bazoongas that Luke does. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
Not yet. | ||
I'm watching you, Phil. | ||
He's another, I think he'd be great guest. | ||
He's a little plump. | ||
I would love to talk to him about the political ideas just to get a deep dive into his head | ||
what he really believes in, what he really thinks, who he really is. | ||
I think the last time I ever said anything to him was when Acosta tried grabbing the | ||
mic from that White House aide and then the left was claiming that she jerked it away | ||
from him and the right was claiming that he tried to grab it. | ||
Or no, no, he was holding the mic, and she went to grab it, and then Acosta pulls his arm down, like jerking it away or whatever. | ||
And the left was saying that she tried grabbing from him, and the right was saying he tried pulling it away from her. | ||
And my attitude was just kind of like, why should it matter either way if the aide, who is the, you know, the person giving out the mic, says, give me the mic back and you don't do it? | ||
How is... | ||
Acosta, in any way, anything but the bad guy. | ||
But then he messaged me, like, do you really think that's what happened? | ||
That was the last thing, I think. | ||
It may have been something else. | ||
Last time I saw him was at a hotel room in San Francisco for YouTube Live in 2008. | ||
Was it 9, 10, something like that? | ||
We talked about Zelda? | ||
unidentified
|
No, I think it was Ocarina of Time. | |
Let's read some more. | ||
Dano says, Dano, I'm not gay, but Luke knows how to sell a shirt. | ||
Damn right. | ||
That's right. | ||
Desperate times call for desperate measures. | ||
Oh, did you guys hear that Canada's ending the travel restrictions? | ||
Yes, all of them. | ||
I want to go. | ||
So I got a handful of people from Canada we want to invite down now. | ||
When is it ending? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I think officially it's already over. | ||
October 1st. | ||
But the US still has them, don't they? | ||
No, it's October 1st that you're going to be allowed to leave Canada. | ||
But to fly into the United States you need a vaccine? | ||
I think it's by airline and I don't think it's being practiced. | ||
I will say the last time I was in Canada was like probably a year ago and I needed a vaccine card to get in but not to get out. | ||
We got a super chat here that's going to require a Polish fact check correction from Luke. | ||
And I'm hoping you, I think Luke will get it because he speaks Polish, I don't. | ||
JT Fire says Lucia Rydkowski was born Lucia. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So what's the correction, if I'm not mistaken, Luke? | ||
Well, my dead name is... No, I'm just messing around here. | ||
What should it actually be? | ||
What do you mean? | ||
The feminine form. | ||
Yeah, the feminine form. | ||
There's no feminine for Luke. | ||
No, your last name. | ||
Oh. | ||
Oh, yeah, yeah, Rutkowska. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
How did you not get that? | ||
You totally misgendered me. | ||
Hey, what are you doing there? | ||
It's Lucia Rutkowska. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And is it just Polish that does that? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Well, I think other countries do that as well. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
The A is replaced with the I usually. | ||
That's so weird. | ||
It's like two different last names. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
That's why Russian novels are so confusing. | ||
unidentified
|
Like War and Peace. | |
Oh, really? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh, because they say A and E. Yeah. | ||
And it just... To be Lucia Rutkowska. | ||
That's right. | ||
All right, let's see. | ||
Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
says, Tim, last couple of months I noticed your move from not just preparing us, but towards positivity. | ||
It's like you reached out and laid your hand on the big brain Biden bug, then declared it's afraid. | ||
Yes. | ||
I just think there's a secret to life, and it's chickens. | ||
They're phenomenal. | ||
He's hacked it. | ||
Just, you get chickens, they make more of themselves, you eat their eggs, it's amazing. | ||
I had a dream that I was eating their eggs. | ||
I was gonna fry it in the waffle griddle thing that we got. | ||
Apparently you do that with a little salt. | ||
Wait, what happens? | ||
Do you end up with weird pocky eggs? | ||
Maybe. | ||
I tried, you know that egg thing you showed me where like you put the egg whites in and swirl it around? | ||
I tried doing that and I failed. | ||
What was it? | ||
What is that thing? | ||
You get the egg white and you kind of drip it into a pan that's like kind of hot and then it gets solid. | ||
You go like this with the pan and so it spreads out. | ||
And then you put the yolk on it and then you fold it over, the white parts, and you've got like a little frittata egg. | ||
Why wouldn't you just fry an egg? | ||
Well, this gives you the raw yolk. | ||
I think you can then fry the yolk if you want. | ||
Well, no, it's like, it's crispier. | ||
Oh, I see. | ||
It's like crispy on all sides. | ||
So it's like a fried egg if the white part is just extra crispy. | ||
I'm gonna make these tomorrow because then you can dip them in like ranch. | ||
Yeah, stick like a toothpick in it. | ||
Wow, okay. | ||
Yeah, they'll be like, that's great. | ||
Maybe hot sauce. | ||
I think it'd be better with hot sauce than ranch. | ||
unidentified
|
Personally. | |
Hot sauce and ranch. | ||
Maybe a little both. | ||
Compromise. | ||
Hot ranch sauce? | ||
Yeah, hot ranch sauce. | ||
That'd be good. | ||
DJ Zeno says, Timcast IRL featuring Libby Emmons and Luke's absolutely valid and acceptable bazungas. | ||
Damn right. | ||
Yes. | ||
Body positivity. | ||
We just scream over each other. | ||
Bob Samarczyk says, a couple weeks ago I looked up the names of coming hurricanes. | ||
I saw Ian and said, oh-ish. | ||
Uh-oh. | ||
Hurricane Ian! | ||
I didn't know. | ||
You're manifesting it, Ian. | ||
I think I was. | ||
I'm like, is God real? | ||
That's what's going through my head right now. | ||
Woken Roland of a Diary says, Timmy P, please ask Ian to call off his hurricane. | ||
I was raining on my vacation. | ||
I want to disperse it and re-coagulate it over the Sahara. | ||
And I was like, what I was visualizing what rain does when it gets into the sand. | ||
I saw Ian in the backyard a couple days ago, and he was going like this. | ||
And he was waving crystals around. | ||
I was like, what are you doing with crystals? | ||
That's an interesting idea. | ||
I've never meditated with crystals in my hands before. | ||
Your rain dance was too much. | ||
I bought Moldavite and Luke got scared. | ||
I don't want any of that. | ||
unidentified
|
Why not? | |
I just heard bad things about it. | ||
Because it's from outer space? | ||
unidentified
|
What is it? | |
Moldavite. | ||
You've never heard of Moldavite? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
It's this. | ||
This is a piece of it. | ||
It's volcanic. | ||
It's not volcanic glass. | ||
It's meteoric glass. | ||
Yeah. | ||
From a meteor that struck Moldova. | ||
People report having entities come to them when they have that. | ||
So a meteor hits Moldova and then it created glass in the impact. | ||
That's cool. | ||
And then I got a couple pendants that you can wear and Luke was like, oh, dude, you better keep that away from me. | ||
I slept with it on as a pendant. | ||
The ghost came from the pendant. | ||
Nothing happened. | ||
We'll see. | ||
That you know of. | ||
That I know of. | ||
I had a normal night's sleep. | ||
My recovery was fantastic, by the way. | ||
There we go. | ||
All right. | ||
MurphTriesDIY says, Tim, I'm trying to convince my spouse into letting our family go as the cast of Chicken City for Halloween, with a chicken party going off every time the kids get candy. | ||
Others please join. | ||
Oh, this is so cute. | ||
You have to do that and do a video. | ||
That would be amazing. | ||
A video that would be awesome. | ||
That would be so cool. | ||
That'd be adorable. | ||
unidentified
|
I love this idea. | |
Someone you may know says, hello all from Florida, where we are awaiting the arrival of Ian, who will destroy us with the truth of graphene. | ||
You'll be okay. | ||
I was thinking of going for Halloween as that Ontario teacher. | ||
The way you disperse weather, so the clouds are magnetic and your body also has a magnetic field. | ||
I imagine putting positive energy into the cloud and it kind of like when you drip oil in the water and you see it like shoot out in different directions, you can disperse. | ||
Also, you can use the sun to kind of heat the cloud and dissipate it that way. | ||
Okay. | ||
But doing it without at night is kind of confusing because it's not above you. | ||
You have to imagine it there. | ||
It's very interesting. | ||
So it might be more of a subatomic thing. | ||
Joe Spinella says, people should look up the Hatfield and McCoy feud, which was basically a civil war within the civil war with both sides of the families intermixed on both sides of the actual civil war. | ||
Crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
That went on for a super long time, too. | ||
Yeah, really long. | ||
For 30 years. | ||
28 years. | ||
GreyJediOutcast says, what separates a man from a slave? | ||
Nobody knows this one? | ||
Ability to choose. | ||
Freedom. | ||
A man chooses. | ||
John Diaz, have any of you watched the Alex Jones trial? | ||
It's a kangaroo court. | ||
Never thought I'd see something like this in America, and it deserves more attention. | ||
Yeah, we were talking about that before the show. | ||
I watched a little bit of it. | ||
And when the judge is like sitting there, and they're going like, objection, objection, and the prosecutor is going like... | ||
And then Alex is going and then and then he's like judge do something and judge is like I can't even get a word in | ||
Yeah, the problem I will say is that Alex Gavel Alex kept responding | ||
So I think they were treating it as hostile witness because if he just stopped responding to the guy and looked at the | ||
judge and awaited Her response to the objection. She would have been like, | ||
all right, you're out of order to the prosecutor But instead Alex kept going back at him and then so she | ||
just let it go I don't I don't understand why Alex doesn't just say | ||
whatever he wants. He basically was no, but I like You're instructed that you can't talk about the bankruptcy. | ||
And it's like, I'm gonna say it. | ||
Interesting. | ||
Because they'll be held in contempt. | ||
Okay. | ||
Oh, like, but what does that mean? | ||
It's like he's already up on charges. | ||
Like, what's the difference? | ||
Yeah, it's it's it's civil, not criminal. | ||
Oh, that's right. | ||
And so it's just like, He's trying to preserve the company, InfoWars. | ||
He said, I was listening to him on his show a couple nights ago, and he was like, I mean, I've been honest with my crew. | ||
If I get screwed, if all this money's gone, I gotta shut the company down. | ||
And that's, everyone's out of business, out of a job. | ||
That's what they're trying to do. | ||
The problem is, Alex Jones could grab a $20 cell phone from Walgreens and film himself ranting and still get the same amount of traffic. | ||
So even if the company ends, he's still Alex Jones. | ||
They'll never be gone. | ||
Yeah, but he I mean, I can see why he'd want to keep his employees employed. | ||
Yeah, I think he was like, part of me considers not even going to the court. | ||
He's like, so messed up right now mentally. | ||
But he's like, he's got so what if these people rely on him? | ||
So what if someone else started a company and hired him to present, or better yet contracted the rights to distribute? | ||
Who would do that, I wonder? | ||
Be interesting. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I'm saying like, so they went after him because one of his employees started a nutrition supplement company that resells InfoWars products. | ||
And they're like, you know, this guy who used to work for you was selling these products and you benefit from it. | ||
And he's like, I sell them products. | ||
Like, I don't know. | ||
Like, are they going to try and go after a third party company that's selling supplements? | ||
Well, they do that, right? | ||
They do what? | ||
I mean, if you look at the people who go after companies for, you know, they go after like advertisers. | ||
The only thing they have to go after Alex Jones on is defamation. | ||
They can't go after a random company started by some other person. | ||
But it's the kangaroos. | ||
You got to listen to Rakeda Law talks about it, too. | ||
And Robert Barnes was being real clear about it. | ||
Like, this is a situation where they're attempting to make it illegal to hurt people's feelings because, yeah, I guess he said some stuff about some specific people, but there's other people that haven't even been named by Alex Jones that are, like, piling on this lawsuit, this is according to Robert Barnes, and trying to make money off of the way they felt as a result. | ||
Whether or not he put them in danger for naming them, that's a different story. | ||
I would highly recommend watching the Alex Jones, Robert Barnes clip from a couple days ago. | ||
They were talking about it. | ||
About the trial? | ||
About the trial, yeah. | ||
Ethan Reed says, hate is absolutely a weakness. | ||
Emotional reactions have nothing to do with instinct. | ||
Instinct is a reflex. | ||
Emotional responses are more thought out. | ||
Emotional responses are more thought out. | ||
That's why we use different words to describe emo. | ||
Do you mean logical responses are more thought out? | ||
My point is, you want to behave rationally and logically, but I don't demonize someone feeling a thing. | ||
You want to be in control of your emotions and feelings, but you know. | ||
Yeah, there you go. | ||
Shinobi Kenobi says, sorry Ian, I don't want you in my foxhole. | ||
I don't know if that's a reference to you. | ||
Well, hopefully we won't have to share one, brother. | ||
Andrew Lantz says, holy crap, Tim, no. | ||
Hatred is evil. | ||
One of the few times I may agree with Ian. | ||
Love thy neighbor as thyself. | ||
Love your enemy. | ||
Defending hatred may be the most anti-Christ thing I've ever heard. | ||
Well, I think people have hate within them. | ||
You're not supposed to act on hate. | ||
You're supposed to act on logic, but I don't think you should be demonized for experiencing a feeling. | ||
You know, I do need sometimes to work hate out by expressing it and then finding out why I was wrong or what the problem with that expression was later in like a safe environment. | ||
So it's something we do need to let people continue to express their hate openly. | ||
That's protected constitutionally. | ||
Group B says, I noticed Arizona green tea at my local gas station went up 30 cents. | ||
Can anyone confirm? | ||
Proof of inflation, Ian, can you please harness your energy power to control the pathway of the hurricane? | ||
Yes. | ||
Whoa, Colin says, wasps pollinate figs, which are the most consumed from the planet. | ||
Thanks, Ian, for always asking the questions I'm thinking. | ||
unidentified
|
I never knew that. | |
Isn't that crunchy thing in figs wasp? | ||
I think it's seeds, because I eat figs as a snack relatively regularly. | ||
I'm pretty sure there's wasps in figs. | ||
Yeah, there might be a dead wasp in there. | ||
So think about that next time you eat a fig. | ||
In figs? | ||
There's dead wasps in figs? | ||
Yeah, I'm looking it up. | ||
I know it requires a wasp to pollinate it. | ||
Should you eat figs if wasps have died inside of them? | ||
Here's everything you need to know about the fig-wasp relationship. | ||
See, there you go. | ||
Treehugger.com. | ||
So is that the one good thing that wasps do, is they pollinate figs? | ||
They eat bugs too. | ||
Some kind of fig. | ||
I like figs. | ||
We have pawpaw out here. | ||
Hillbilly banana. | ||
And it's pollinated by beetles and flies. | ||
Gross. | ||
But they're delicious. | ||
I've never seen a pawpaw. | ||
What do they look like? | ||
Are they bigger or smaller? | ||
They're like, well, there's varying sizes, maybe like this big, you get a good one. | ||
Little squashes. | ||
Big seeds. | ||
And it's like if you took banana, avocado, and mango and combined it. | ||
That sounds actually pretty good. | ||
It's really good. | ||
How have I never heard of this fruit? | ||
They're really good. | ||
Is this like an indigenous American fruit? | ||
Appalachian fruit, and it doesn't last very long. | ||
I believe it's hard to transport and hard to grow. | ||
Is this why I've never seen it at the grocery store? | ||
Yep. | ||
Yes. | ||
But we've probably got, in the next month, we're gonna have probably 5,000. | ||
Oh jeez, I'm gonna come down and eat one. | ||
Everywhere! | ||
You'll walk through the woods and it hits you on the head. | ||
Wow. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Okay. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
And then you can get them and they're like, when they're real juicy, you can just like, break it open. | ||
Amazing. | ||
Dude, figs covered in bacon bits and maple syrup. | ||
What am I looking at? | ||
That's delicious to me. | ||
Oh boy. | ||
Yeah, that's good stuff. | ||
Mad love to the wasps. | ||
That stuff is good. | ||
Yeah, right? | ||
Much appreciated. | ||
Figs and bacon are really like, just a paradise. | ||
Throw some balsamic vinegar on there. | ||
That sounds great. | ||
Little maple syrup. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Yes. | ||
We're working on it. | ||
We've got a bunch of songs in the works. | ||
We have been in a civil war since the summer of love our streets and neighborhoods were under attack | ||
The attack was physical mental and economical PS Tim do a tour and start a music label, please | ||
We are we're working on it and we have a call with some big industry guys tomorrow | ||
We're gonna be we got a bunch of songs in the works. We've got a top-secret plan with another company | ||
I just want to tell you They're so angry about the success we've had with the music | ||
we're putting out It's just, it's really encouraging. | ||
Salon wrote a hit piece claiming that my music was like white nationalism or some other nonsense. | ||
That is such garbage. | ||
I'm like, it's the only thing they have. | ||
It's nothing like that. | ||
You have your bright eyes, it's nice. | ||
But they're so threatened by it. | ||
The opening paragraph was, if you're not into politics, you may be confused why a horrible emo song was number two on iTunes. | ||
And then I stopped and I was like, number two on Billboard, but carry on. | ||
And the point was clear. | ||
They were pointing out that many people saw this top-tracking song and didn't know anything about me or whatever and said, oh, here's a song, and listened to it, and it started trending, and then it hits the charts. | ||
So they have to intervene. | ||
They have to be like, that song you heard? | ||
Fascist it sucks. | ||
It sucks. | ||
It's really bad and you hate it But the bad news for them is we actually got a ton of industry support since that song came out because it did so well Basically, it's this it comes to this and this was kind of the point. | ||
Mm-hmm industry people want to be in the top of the charts So when they see that we put out music that worked and we don't have any representation or any you know any kind of industry connections they come to us and they're like We want to have our name on a song that's number two, so we can help you do better. | ||
And so now they're like, we're working with these guys, and they're like, we're going to do the release so well next time. | ||
It's going to hit number one. | ||
It's going to be big. | ||
We're going to get you on radio. | ||
We're going to get it done right. | ||
And I'm like, cool. | ||
Yeah, let's do it. | ||
So we were planning on releasing a song recently, like in the next week or so, but we're going to wait because we're going to do a strategy meeting. | ||
We didn't do any of it right. | ||
Like the YouTube views didn't count towards Billboard, and we got to make sure that everything is done properly this time. | ||
Oh, quick aside. | ||
Fig wasps spend their larval stage inside of figs. | ||
unidentified
|
Interesting. | |
What the hell? | ||
Amazing, and then you eat them. | ||
And then you eat the wasp? | ||
I'd rather talk about music, but that was just stuck in my head. | ||
Redacted said Trump should rebrand MAGA to The Greatest Reset. | ||
It's better that one that's just great. | ||
It's better than one that's just great. | ||
And wokeism shall henceforth be called woke supremacy, just as oppressive but with rainbows. | ||
I like woke supremacy. | ||
It should be like a glitter unicorn puking rainbows. | ||
I'm gonna start saying woke supremacist. | ||
You're a woke supremacist. | ||
I think that's great. | ||
Who coined that? | ||
We should give them credit. | ||
Redacted? | ||
Very good. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
says, guys, what are they going to do in the mountains? | ||
Cali is huge. | ||
Not everywhere is sunny and beautiful. | ||
Imagine Colorado. | ||
Stop water to them. | ||
Cali may be doomed. | ||
Yeah, so they ban the heaters. | ||
But there's a lot of mountains in California. | ||
So you're gonna be like, how do I heat my house? | ||
And they're like, oh, good luck. | ||
Chop down trees, I guess. | ||
Yeah, I looked up the record low temperature in California is negative 45 degrees Fahrenheit. | ||
It gets cold. | ||
It does get cold in the mountains. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, I shot a movie up in Big Bear. | ||
I was frigid. | ||
Yeah, it's really cool. | ||
All right. | ||
79 Mike Larry says, plot twist. | ||
The rest of the celestial beings in the universe refuse to make contact with us, and we are making contact with a fallen race. | ||
Demons! | ||
So we're like the outcasts of the universe? | ||
This is like the poop that landed in our ocean. | ||
It was the alien poop, and then it formed into us. | ||
Well, I guess. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Ikefka says, Tim, could it be they overcharge him knowing the charge can't stick just to put him on trial and then he gets off with no charges? | ||
I'm assuming Alec Baldwin, but yeah. | ||
They could be like, we're charging him and then he's found not guilty and they go, oh look, he was not guilty. | ||
unidentified
|
You know what I mean? | |
Does that happen where they'll charge people for excessive crimes they know they can't get them for just so that they can find them not guilty? | ||
Well, that's a political question, but I'm assuming it's within the realm of possibility. | ||
I don't know how often. | ||
They also overcharge sometimes so that they can bargain them down. | ||
It seems highly unethical. | ||
That's something that happens a lot. | ||
DAs do that. | ||
They'll throw all the charges at a person and then just get them on the last couple or whatever. | ||
All right, Joshua Renner says, I've spoken to a retired set builder. | ||
He said that these old timers would use the prop guns for actual target practice, then put the guns back for use in the movie they were in. | ||
Says Alec did the same. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
Yeah. | ||
What if Alec was playing around with it? | ||
Yeah, they said they were going out and target shooting at night. | ||
Alec was? | ||
No, well, no, I didn't hear that Alec was, but people on the, in the, that were working on the project were. | ||
Cause that'd be big. | ||
Shooting cans out back after the day. | ||
Scoot says, did you hear about the massive UFO sighting in Branson, Missouri? | ||
Y'all hear about that? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
I assume Mr. Shane Cashman did. | ||
Shane, I hope you heard about that one. | ||
All right, we'll look into it. | ||
That'll be fun. | ||
All right. | ||
Clint Torasaurus Rex says, like Krusty the Clown said, it's only funny if the schmuck has dignity. | ||
unidentified
|
Mm-hmm. | |
Yes. | ||
That makes sense. | ||
Otherwise it's just sad, right? | ||
Like coming after people who are down on their luck. | ||
Oh, for dark, for gallows humor? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Someone tweet. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
All right. | ||
Let's see. | ||
What do we have here in the old super chats? | ||
Carlton XL says, Luke, bringing a new meaning to the milkman. | ||
Luke, lift and separate. | ||
No, don't tell me what to do. | ||
This is, this is beautiful the way it is. | ||
It's natural. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Stop hating on me. | ||
You know what's funny? | ||
And you're in your perceived image of beauty that you're subjecting me to. | ||
Okay. | ||
Get your own pair. | ||
Hold on, is the lift and separate thing like a normal thing? | ||
Yeah, that's a normal thing. | ||
People say that. | ||
What about juggling? | ||
I don't know. | ||
But I was making a joke because I've heard people say that like on soap operas or whatever. | ||
I've never heard that before. | ||
You know, on reality TV. | ||
Honey, you want to lift and separate? | ||
Lydia knows what I'm talking about. | ||
You heard this phrase. | ||
I've heard that. | ||
Yeah. | ||
All right. | ||
Helican Drummer says, I'm writing a book on morality based on evolutionary purposes of emotions. | ||
Hatred is a negative state and it has as it has a negative health effects in the long term. | ||
Anger is our drive to face a threat, but is irrational if there is no threat. | ||
Agreed. | ||
Well said. | ||
unidentified
|
Interesting. | |
Winston Alexander says Global Citizen is a UN globalist fundraiser. | ||
Crowd also booed videos of Biden, Trudeau, Macron, speeches about menstrual poverty, food, climate, billions raised. | ||
Only results shown a villager got a few chickens. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. | |
That's a result. | ||
That is a result. | ||
That's a result. | ||
Not nothing. | ||
But it's actually really cool to hear that they booed everybody, because it shows that, you know, people aren't taking this, even in New York City. | ||
I assumed they were probably booing her because they were Bernie bros, you know? | ||
Like Bernie supporters, which are like, we don't like the corporate Democrats! | ||
But it turns out they don't like any of them, so I'll take it. | ||
There you go. | ||
Okay, what do we got here? | ||
unidentified
|
All right, let's see. | |
Aaron Neal says, you haven't mentioned the female West VA senator who you vowed to raise heck against. | ||
Oh, Crappado. | ||
That's her name, right? | ||
Crappado? | ||
Yes, Shelley Moore Crappado. | ||
Sounds familiar. | ||
I thought you just said crap-do. | ||
I did, I forgot. | ||
Crappado, I forgot. | ||
Yeah, because she supported the gun control stuff. | ||
Well, we got a lot of work to do here in West Virginia, so we'll make sure we always rag on Crappado. | ||
Oh no, the Crappado was the Porta Potty's I was gonna buy. | ||
Her name's Capito. | ||
Johnny on the spot. | ||
Oh yeah, it's Capito. | ||
That's right. | ||
Capito. | ||
So the idea was to buy a bunch of Porta Potty's and donate them, and they'll say, | ||
they'll be called Shelley Moore Crappado boxes. | ||
And then we'll donate them and be like, you need a Porta Potty, here you go. | ||
You know where you wanna donate those is the Women's March. | ||
Do you know that they're doing a big fundraiser because they need more Porta Potty's for the march. | ||
Yeah, I get. | ||
I'm on their mailing list. | ||
I'm on so many mailing lists, I've got to tell you. | ||
It's funny when I open my inbox and it's messages from Save America PAC and the Women's March. | ||
I'm like, oh, hi everybody! | ||
You guys should really get together. | ||
But yeah, the Women's March is seeking donations for porta potties for the Women's March. | ||
Where are they marching? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Should we check? | ||
D.C. | ||
I think, right? | ||
Yeah, I mean, it'll be D.C. | ||
Do you think they're going to be like chanting pro-war stuff? | ||
They might be out there with, I don't know, maybe like they should get some abortion pills in the colors of the Ukraine flag? | ||
Speaking of Ukraine and Russia, I was just thinking about this. | ||
I hope that we can find peace with Russia and Ukraine and everybody else that's involved because I think what's happening is the Russians want sea, black sea access through Crimea and they want those two freeways to the north. | ||
What freeways are these? | ||
Oh, here it is. | ||
Wait, it's 242 events from Washington DC to Los Angeles to Elkhorn, Wisconsin and Arlington, Texas. | ||
Thousands of fierce feminists taking to the streets. | ||
Women's wave is here and an ocean is coming. | ||
Women's March on October 8th will harness the power of our collective voices and carry our power all the way to the ballot box on November 8th. | ||
But powering our march will take resources. | ||
We need buses. | ||
We need hand sanitizer and masks, of course. | ||
We need signs and we need porta-potties and lots of them. | ||
Maybe they need some crapados. | ||
Yeah, I like it. | ||
Alright, let's grab this last one here. | ||
No Moves Junior says, Question. | ||
Is this the beginning or the end? | ||
Or of what the is will ultimately become? | ||
Well, is this the beginning or the end? | ||
It's both. | ||
It's both the beginning and the end. | ||
Again. | ||
From the ashes of the old, we shall build anew. | ||
Constantly cycling in many directions at once, spiraling. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show, be the notification. | ||
YouTube has been holding back on notifications and people are saying they weren't getting the links. | ||
So if you want to fight back against the censorship, considering the elections, you know, here, and seems like the suppression is kind of on purpose, you can help by sharing the video and becoming a member at timcast.com to watch our uncensored members-only show. | ||
We're going to be talking about the great big titty Ontario. | ||
I was going to say Toronto. | ||
Ontario Teacher Conspiracy Theory. | ||
Ontidio. | ||
Ontidio. | ||
It's actually really interesting, so check that out. | ||
Follow the show at Timcast IRL. | ||
You can follow me personally at Timcast Libby. | ||
Do you want to shout anything out? | ||
Yeah, I do want to shout things out, not the Women's March. | ||
I want to shout out the Postmillennial, thepostmillennial.com. | ||
I want to shout out my Twitter, at Libby Emmons. | ||
And also, you can check out our work at Human Events, which is humanevents.com. | ||
And that's about all of it. | ||
Cool. | ||
So, all my new simps could go to LukeMilkers.com. | ||
Actual website, which you can click right now, LukeMilkers.com, and you could support me on my official members area right there. | ||
Libby, I have to say I'm sorry. | ||
Overwhelmingly, according to the comments, you have officially lost the milkers war. | ||
You know what? | ||
unidentified
|
And I am top milker here on the broadcast. | |
It does. | ||
LukeMilkers.com. | ||
You know what you need though? | ||
You need some chest binders, because when you decide you're trans. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | |
I'll do whatever I want. | ||
LukeMilkers.com. | ||
I've been fact-checked by the fact-checkers. | ||
So again, independent media, alternatives, having our own platform is key. | ||
LukeMilkers.com. | ||
What were you fact-checked for? | ||
Quoting the corporate media. | ||
I thought for the fake boobs. | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
I literally quoted the corporate media. | ||
Fact-check Luke does not have breasts. | ||
Right? | ||
Fact-check. | ||
Now it's trendy. | ||
So it's popular. | ||
So, you know, you got to be ahead of the times here. | ||
And we're doing that here at LukeMilkers.com. | ||
Well, thanks Luke. | ||
You're welcome. | ||
And Ian, my eyes are up here, okay? | ||
Beautiful, beautiful shirt. | ||
Again, like I was saying, before we roll the Ukraine, I really want to bring some hope for these people and the people in Russia and everyone else that's watching. | ||
Involved, I think that what Russia wants is a piece of land that leads down to Crimea so they have Sevastopol into the Black Sea. | ||
I don't think that it has anything to do with genocide or conquering massive land. | ||
Russia has never been known for conquering land. | ||
It's been essentially a federation since the Soviet Union split up. | ||
But these two freeways, East 105 and East 97, I think maybe should go to Russia in order to avert the war. | ||
I hope that that can be some help. | ||
Maybe we can start to think positively about finding some sort of peace deal. | ||
And maybe we can get Vladimir Putin and Joe Biden to have some sort of dialogue and debate, discussion about what people want, what needs to happen. | ||
Go from there. | ||
I love you guys. | ||
Thank you for being a part of this. | ||
See you later. | ||
Thank you guys for joining us this evening with our special guest, Lucia Rutkowska, if I got that name right. | ||
I feel like I've been thoroughly outshone. | ||
I have no way to compete with that. | ||
It's fantastic. | ||
Luke really pulls it off. | ||
You can't compete with the lubes. | ||
That's right. | ||
I know. | ||
I know. | ||
I can't. | ||
Because men are better than women at everything. | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. | |
As we all know. | ||
Men are better women than women are. | ||
unidentified
|
I know. | |
Exactly. | ||
It's a serious problem. | ||
unidentified
|
It's true. | |
It's very real. | ||
Speaking of that, that's going to be our post show. | ||
So you guys can follow me on Twitter at Minds.com and SarahPatchLids, as well as SarahPatchLids.me. | ||
We will see you all over at TimCast.com. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. |