Speaker | Time | Text |
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It's kind of a crazy Friday. | ||
I don't know why Elon Musk keeps insisting on having these Twitter files drop on the worst possible press day. | ||
At least yesterday, this was a Thursday, but Thursday's also a terrible day. | ||
Tuesday's good. | ||
Tuesday's the best day. | ||
Friday? | ||
Absolute worst. | ||
Like, if you put it out on Saturday, then some people will see it on Sunday, but you put it out on Friday, it just dies the next day. | ||
Everybody says, no way, I'm going out getting a burger and I'm not thinking about work. | ||
But we do got big news. | ||
The latest Twitter files shows that, uh, this is crazy, Twitter had weekly meetings with the Feds, DHS, FBI, over election-related issues. | ||
They were directing them and advising them on what to remove, how to remove, and you can see these conversations happening. | ||
This is the FBI directly interfering in public communications pertaining to the 2020 election and banning things. | ||
And you can actually see in these releases that the Twitter staff are trying to figure out how they can ban Trump, who said certain things like, uh-oh guys, this thing he said, it's actually true, because he posted a story and they're like, oh we can't remove it, that story is actually true. | ||
I wonder how many times They didn't actually bother to fact-check, or a person made a claim not by posting a link to a news story, but saying, hey, did you hear the story X? | ||
And then they go, don't care, remove it. | ||
This is crazy stuff. | ||
We're getting more and more, and there is just a wall of tweets from Matt Taibbi breaking down how this all went down. | ||
So we will be talking about that. | ||
We also have Elon Musk confirming Politicians running for re-election were shadow-banned during their election campaign, so direct election interference, FBI and law enforcement involvement, and then the craziest thing out of all of it... | ||
Earlier, Mike Cernovich tweeted that several trust and safety members of Twitter who resigned should be criminally charged because these people refused to take down child exploitation. | ||
Elon Musk made a statement, Jack Dorsey said this is not true, it's false, and then Elon responded with the receipts that Twitter was not taking down child exploitation. | ||
I wonder why it is that these people Stayed at the company for years with a child abuse problem, and the moment Elon comes in, starts cleaning it up, they go, oh, I can't, I can't be here anymore. | ||
I can't allow this. | ||
Gee, I wonder what's going through these people's minds. | ||
We got other stuff. | ||
Elton John quit. | ||
Maybe we'll talk about it. | ||
Kirsten Sinema has switched, or she's quit the Democratic Party, so there's some political stuff involved, and we'll get into a lot of it. | ||
Before we get started, head over to TimCast.com, become a member, and support our work directly. | ||
When you become a member, you are not just supporting us. | ||
We use Parallel Economy. | ||
This is a payment processor co-founded by Dan Bongino, and it is censorship-resistant. | ||
It's called Parallel Economy. | ||
We are actively seeking to build that Parallel Economy, to fight back against censorship and manipulation, and this is just one path to doing it. | ||
So, when you become a member, you'll get access to uncensored segments of this show, Monday through Thursday. | ||
You'll get Cast Castle and Tales from the Inverted World, but you will also be just generally supporting this effort to construct a parallel economy. | ||
We've got some documentaries coming out, we've got a coffee shop in the works, and we've got some other projects. | ||
I will give a brief update. | ||
Really quickly, yesterday I mentioned putting up a billboard in Fredericksburg. | ||
I had a conversation with some of the people involved and it would appear that... I'll just put it this way. | ||
It would not be appreciated if we did put up a billboard calling out the officers involved, so that's not going to happen. | ||
All right, so I don't want to step on anybody's toes, but there you go. | ||
I just want to make sure you guys knew because I was actually really, really excited for that. | ||
So don't forget to also smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends. | ||
Joining us to talk about all of this and more is Andrew Pollack. | ||
Hey, how's it going? | ||
You want to grab the mic? | ||
Oh, sorry. | ||
Yeah, so just introduce yourself. | ||
I'm Andrew Pollock. | ||
I grew up in Long Island. | ||
I moved to Florida in about 1999. | ||
I've been an entrepreneur. | ||
I moved to Florida in 99 with my family. | ||
And now I bounce back and forth from Oregon to Florida. | ||
And I'm happy to be on Tim's show tonight to discuss things, what's going on in the country and my past, what I've been through in my life. | ||
Yeah, your story is actually pretty heartbreaking. | ||
Yeah, I would say one thing I always tell people that don't know me or they always mention when they mention my daughter, they mention that she was lost or she died. | ||
And I always correct people. | ||
My daughter was murdered, okay? | ||
Dying is something peaceful. | ||
Lost is maybe you find them again. | ||
But murdered gets, you know, I just feel that's the proper way to say it. | ||
When people are talking to me, they never know what to say. | ||
My life's been changed ever since, and I've been on a mission to educate families, to better equip police departments in the country, to respond better. | ||
And I'm a pretty busy guy, and I have two children that live in Florida that I love. | ||
One of them's watching, or two, they're probably both watching. | ||
And I'm happy to be here with you guys and shoot the crap. | ||
For context, your daughter was lost in the parkland. | ||
I just told you we don't say lost. | ||
You're right. | ||
Your daughter was murdered in a school shooting. | ||
Murdered, yeah. | ||
I just don't take it the wrong way. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I'm a little wacky. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Because lost was maybe I'll find her one day, you know. | ||
So she was murdered in 2018. | ||
She was a senior. | ||
It was horrific. | ||
It was the worst thing that could ever happen to a parent ever. | ||
And there's not a moment that goes by that I don't think about my daughter and trying to make it so another family would never have to go through what I've been through and that's what drives me to come on shows and to travel the country and to help law enforcement. | ||
Right on. | ||
Well, thanks for joining us, man. | ||
We'll get into that as well. | ||
Sure. | ||
We also got Luke hanging out. | ||
It's a crazy story. | ||
We're definitely going to be talking about that plus a lot more. | ||
My name's Luke Hradowski here of WeAreChange.org. | ||
Today I'm wearing a t-shirt that says I tested positive for freedom. | ||
My symptoms are that I'm not a punk and I don't believe the government should be using force and violence to put ideas onto other people. | ||
So, if you agree with me and also have a case of the freedoms, you can get the shirt on TheBestPoliticalShirts.com because you do. | ||
That's why I'm here. | ||
Thank you again so much for having me. | ||
I'm Ian Crossland. | ||
Thank you guys for coming. | ||
Thank you for being here with me, all my fellow humans. | ||
Andrew. | ||
unidentified
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Andy. | |
Good to see you, buddy. | ||
Good, man. | ||
I'm glad. | ||
Ready to get down to business, bro! | ||
Happy to be here. | ||
Let's rock and roll. | ||
What's happening, Kellen? | ||
unidentified
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Hey, guys. | |
I'm back again. | ||
Happy Friday, everybody. | ||
Yeah, I'm really excited to talk about things, hash it out, and definitely hear your story. | ||
Right on. | ||
unidentified
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Cool. | |
So, just another quick clarification for those that don't understand. | ||
I wanted to put up a billboard of those bad cops, right? | ||
When I say it wouldn't be appreciated, it wouldn't be appreciated by those who are upset with those cops. | ||
So, I don't want to give away too much personal private information, but, you know, talk to people down there, and they were like, nah, we shouldn't do that. | ||
And I was like, okay. | ||
What happened, Tim? | ||
I'm not familiar with the story. | ||
There's a story out of Virginia where a guy refused the COVID lockdown stuff, so two years later, the cops are going in and they're screwing with his business. | ||
He filmed the cops, and then I said, let's name and shame the cops, let's put up a billboard, and a lot of people got excited for the idea, I certainly was, but I've been requested not to do that by people involved, and not the cops, but I respect it, I respect it, I'm not gonna go into someone else's town and kinda screw with them. | ||
So it's just an update, but let's get into the news here, we got this story, this Twitter thread from Matt Saiby, And it's all right here. | ||
Check this out. | ||
Post number 20 of today's Twitter files. | ||
This post is about the Hunter Biden laptop situation shows that Roth, Yoel Roth, not only met weekly with the FBI and DHS, but with the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. | ||
Take a look at this. | ||
This post. | ||
The most important thing it says, in short, FML. | ||
Weekly Sync with FBI, DHS, DNI, re-election security. | ||
The meeting happened about 15 minutes after the aforementioned hacked materials implosion, blah blah blah. | ||
That right there says one thing very very simply. | ||
Twitter was regularly meeting with federal law enforcement for quote-unquote election security. | ||
But Twitter was being advised that there was going to be hacked materials and other things like that. | ||
We know that the FBI contacted them specifically about that. | ||
We now know they had consistent weekly meetings to the point where they were actually like, oh man, gonna have to miss our weekly meetup with federal law enforcement to figure out what's not allowed. | ||
This Twitter thread's actually very, very crazy. | ||
There's one post where, let me see if I can, I can, uh, there's so many of these. | ||
Look at this one. | ||
Yoel Roth said, Very boring business meeting that is definitely not about Trump. | ||
Pretty much. | ||
Definitely not meeting with the FBI, I swear. | ||
LMAO. | ||
It would sound, and it would appear, I'm trying to be very careful, that Yoel Roth met with the FBI to discuss Donald Trump. | ||
I wonder what this was pertaining to. | ||
This Twitter thread from Matt Taibbi is specifically about banning Donald Trump. | ||
He says, after J6's internal slacks show Twitter executives getting a kick out of intensified relationships with federal agencies, here's Yoel Roth lamenting a lack of generic enough calendar descriptions to concealing his very interesting meeting partners. | ||
Sounds to me... | ||
Like, the FBI was meeting with Twitter, and, uh, they colluded, ultimately, to come to the decision to remove Donald Trump, the first sitting head of state to be suspended from a platform. | ||
And aside from that, the other information showing that they were having regular 2020 election security meetings, and we know that the FBI warned them about the Hunter Biden-Lapid situation, and they had access to this, so, to me, I think this is the bare minimum confirmation the FBI was directly interfering in the 2020 election. | ||
I mean, it's pretty clear after all the circumstantial evidence is coming together, and there's a lot of it, specifically highlighting the involvement of this. | ||
And I kind of want to bring back what U.S. | ||
Congressman Chuck Schumer said a couple years ago in 2017, when he was directly addressing Donald Trump, when Donald Trump was having problems with the intel agencies, with the FBI. | ||
He said, quote, the intel officials have six ways from Sunday at getting back at you. | ||
So I think it's fair to say that there was a lot of infighting, and it's fair to say that there was federal agencies, intel organizations, military psyops officers that were working at these big tech social media companies. | ||
There was a revolving door between all those institutions and a lot of these bigger companies, not just Twitter, but also Facebook, also Alphabet, also Google. | ||
And when you look at this revolving door, you clearly see a conflict of interest, people abusing their power, not just meeting together, but making big decisions. | ||
And this is what I said when the first Twitter files were coming out. | ||
I'm like, this is just bare minimum. | ||
This is still just scratching the surface, as there was a former FBI agent that was critically involved in this whole Trump collusion story, that was involved in censoring it from the very beginning. | ||
So now, I think we're seeing some of the layers of this onion unravel. | ||
A lot of people are going to be crying, and I think we're still only seeing the surface of what's a deeper relationship between the Intel community and, of course, big tech social media that are working hand-in-hand together. | ||
I've mentioned that it's happened before, and that I feel like—but we talk about how, like, it's a frog in the pot boiling, the water's boiling slowly and we don't feel it heating up because it's happening so slowly, but think about Nixon, man. | ||
The last time we had a corrupt government spying Explosive news piece. | ||
It was Nixon. | ||
Well, it wasn't the last time, but Nixon and Watergate. | ||
He resigned the presidency because he was found spying on another campaign. | ||
Do you remember when President Trump was still president? | ||
There was a legislature bill put in to against big tech and it went into the Senate and they knocked it down. | ||
He warned about all this, all the censorship and it didn't get passed through the Senate. | ||
Do you remember that? | ||
It was, you remember Tim? | ||
No, I was going to say from 2016 to 2018, the Republicans were actively working against Trump. | ||
Exactly. | ||
And especially with big tech, because I know he warned them about it, and they didn't follow through when they could have, when they had control. | ||
Now, you know, there's no control. | ||
I'm sorry, I need to clarify. | ||
They've always been working against Trump. | ||
But I mean, when they had full control of the Senate and the House, they were going along with the whole Russiagate lies and all of that stuff. | ||
Check this, I want to show you guys this tweet from Matt Taibbi. | ||
Check this out. | ||
Here, the FBI sends reports about a pair of tweets, the second of which involves a former Tippecanoe County, Indiana, counselor and Republican named John Basham, claiming between 2 and 25% of ballots by mail are being rejected for errors. | ||
So they said, Here, we just got a report from the FBI concerning two tweets, related to the shredding of mail-in ballots. | ||
This is proven to be false via this, PolitiFact. | ||
We have a moment ready for this one. | ||
I believe this was deemed no VO on numerous occasions. | ||
So this is the FBI contacting Twitter saying, remove this guy's speech. | ||
On what grounds? | ||
PolitiFact says it's not true. | ||
But on what authority does the federal government have to flag the speech of a private individual to be removed from a platform? | ||
Zero, none, period. | ||
It's pure corruption. | ||
Look, I don't like the idea of misinformation. | ||
I think PolitiFact is full of trash, full of garbage. | ||
They lie all the time. | ||
The fact that partisan leftist organizations can claim something's not true. | ||
The FBI then goes to Twitter and Twitter says, oh, look at that, guess we got to remove it. | ||
This is, this is... I don't know, subversion? | ||
Some people are saying collusion, other people are saying conspiracy. | ||
I think all those references could be true. | ||
They use PolitiFact as proof. | ||
They use the word, this is quote, proven. | ||
You don't take one news article and use that as quote, proof. | ||
You need to look around. | ||
If you're gonna make a big decision like that, like ending someone's Twitter experience, you gotta know. | ||
You can't just willy-nilly say like, You know, this piece of evidence indicates proof. | ||
That's a big problem. | ||
They don't have the assets to do it. | ||
Who doesn't? | ||
The FBI. | ||
They could look into anything. | ||
You know, they shouldn't just be going by one news agency. | ||
unidentified
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They don't. | |
I think at this point, we can clearly see the FBI is effectively only going after their political enemies. | ||
Yeah, I think what really happened is that they saw an article that they liked that verified what they wanted to be true, so they said it was proof. | ||
But I mean, no human realistically can look at one news article and use that as a piece of proof for something. | ||
That's ridiculous. | ||
After the plethora of crimes committed against us here, as well as people on our periphery, If the FBI lifted a single finger, I might be inclined to give them the benefit of the doubt and say, you know, it's these bad apples in D.C. | ||
But at this point, considering you've got Marjorie Taylor Greene being swatted, seemingly no action, we've been swatted now I think like 15 times, no action, and there's been other crimes in the periphery of the work we do with people we know, and zero action, to the point where I've actually had people say to me, when we're talking privately, I can't say some of this stuff because I'm hoping something does get involved, like something does happen with law enforcement, but I've had people say to me like, Well, did the FBI do anything about that? | ||
And I'm like, no, of course they didn't. | ||
It's been two years. | ||
And there's nothing being done. | ||
So I will just say, at this point, I think it's fair to say, the FBI is not going to do anything. | ||
They'll go after a garage pole rope for a NASCAR driver. | ||
But they're not going to deal with the seriousness of crimes. | ||
This is them directly interfering in the election. | ||
It is a criminal organization at this point. | ||
I can honestly tell you what happened personally to my family with the FBI. | ||
There were two tips called in to the FBI about my daughter's shooter and they dropped the ball on both of them. | ||
They didn't follow up. | ||
He was going to be a shooter. | ||
Was the shooter a Democrat or, you know, was it just a piece of garbage, you know, but they called | ||
in, they called it in twice to the FBI and they dropped the ball. They ended up getting held | ||
accountable. They, they're actually one of the only entities that admitted failure in the shooting, | ||
And that happens in many shootings. | ||
You know, they were constantly dropping the ball, but what's their concern with Twitter? | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
There's people getting shot, and here they are censoring and working with Twitter when they're dropping the ball on mass shootings. | ||
You're specifically mentioning the parking shooter, is that correct? | ||
unidentified
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Correct. | |
Because we see this time and time again. | ||
He was known to authorities. | ||
There's so many instances where he was either undercover or working or known to local police officers, state officers, or in the most situations, let's be honest here, federal officials, federal government officials, especially at the FBI. | ||
who were warned many times. | ||
And it's just mind-boggling and head-scratching for the average citizen to be like, oh, he was known again? | ||
And they didn't stop it? | ||
But if there's an abortion activist, if there's a parent-teacher conference activist, they're going to be on them like white on rice. | ||
They're going to be investigating them, spying on them. | ||
They're going to be jailing people just like they are for peacefully singing hymns outside of abortion clinics. | ||
That's what the FBI is spending their resources on right now. | ||
But all these mass shootings always go free when we have the biggest National Security Surveillance Dragnet in all of recorded human history. | ||
The government sees and watches almost every aspect of our life, databases it in these huge server rooms, watches over everything, and we're gonna believe them when they say, oh, you know, this convenient event that works towards our agenda, that gives us more power and authority now, that more people will have to rely on us on, just accidentally happened. | ||
We knew, you know, we knew that there was a suspect here, but he just fell through the cracks once again. | ||
And it happens over and over. | ||
I know. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
It's absolutely infuriating. | ||
It is. | ||
Were they honest? | ||
You said they came clean and said they dropped the ball. | ||
Were they honest about why they dropped the ball? | ||
It was a couple of calls and they didn't follow up on the call. | ||
And they admitted to it. | ||
And they said they made changes. | ||
I didn't find out what exactly happened to the police or the FBI agents that didn't follow up. | ||
And a lot of the times it's the same MO. | ||
It's someone who's socially isolated, someone who hurts themselves and hurts other people around them, someone who clearly is a threat, someone who even goes online and says, I'm going to be committing these threats, and that also falls through the cracks. | ||
I mean, there's just so many of these instances. | ||
I have the lady that called the threat in to the FBI that calls me like constantly, you know, not constantly, every few months she checks in with me because she just feels horrible. | ||
Yeah? | ||
she called and warned them and they never followed up on it. | ||
unidentified
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She was someone that knew the guy personally? Yeah it was like an aunt, a | |
distant aunt that knew he was you know talking about being a school shooter and she | ||
had called the FBI and the police department and they didn't follow up | ||
correctly and the rest you know we know what happened. Yeah she must feel probably | ||
She probably feels so much guilt because she knew something was going to happen. | ||
She tried to warn the authorities and then they just sat on their hands, didn't do anything. | ||
And you know, you guys don't follow it as much as I do. | ||
We just had that trial. | ||
He just, and after murdering 17 people, he still wasn't committed. | ||
He didn't get the death penalty, life without parole, you know. | ||
He killed 17 people, innocent, on video, admitted to it, and didn't get the death penalty. | ||
So it's ridiculous. | ||
Why no death penalty? | ||
A couple, it was like one or two people voted against the death penalty in the jury. | ||
So we're trying to fix that. | ||
I've been, I spoke with Governor DeSantis about it. | ||
There's a way around it where you don't need a full majority. | ||
It could be less, it could be like 70%. | ||
Because it was ridiculous. | ||
What does a person need to do in society to get the death penalty if this thing didn't get it? | ||
The killer of my daughter. | ||
Would you support the death penalty before the shooting? | ||
Well, I personally have a problem with the way the death penalty works because the average death row inmate sits there for 20 years before they're executed peacefully. | ||
So I think there could be a lot of changes to it. | ||
It should be expedited. | ||
You know, someone commits a heinous crime like that, it shouldn't take more than six months, you know, to have a trial and execute them. | ||
Then I would be all for the death penalty. | ||
But the way it's set up now with appeals and they get their own I looked into it. | ||
So a death row inmate doesn't have to work when he's in prison. | ||
He doesn't have to get his meals. | ||
It's brought to him. | ||
He gets his own TV. | ||
He gets his own security detail. | ||
So death row, a lot of people after a few years of being in general population are actually praying to be on death row. | ||
That's what I'm hoping happens to my daughter's killer. | ||
All of them on death row are getting fed meals? | ||
They're brought to them. | ||
The meals are brought to them by the correction officers. | ||
They don't have to go on a line. | ||
They don't have to go into general population. | ||
They have their own security detail, their own TV, their own computer, and they just sit. | ||
Most of them, it's over 20 years. | ||
We talk about the ethics of the death penalty on the show from time to time. | ||
I'm kind of... It's interesting because I'm like pro-choice, but pro-death penalty? | ||
Maybe I'm just a killer? | ||
Well, we're all killers in a way, but I would be more for it if it was under 20 years, you know, to sit 20 years in a cell and it's cost... You know, Broward County, where he was housed, it cost the county four million dollars just keeping him in the prison system awaiting trial. | ||
In Canada, they banned the death penalty, but they're expanding their euthanasia efforts very aggressively, which is absolutely mind-boggling, and absolutely, totally backwards, in my opinion. | ||
But if you don't mind telling us a little bit more details about this FBI story, because Again, it's either they miss it or they're either trying to find someone who's mentally ill and goading them into doing something, as there's also a lot of documented stories of people coming together saying, hey, I had a mentally ill child. | ||
The FBI worked undercover and tried to push them to be extremists. | ||
There's a lot of those stories as well. | ||
But what did this woman, do you have some of the details here? | ||
I know you don't have a lot of the notes in front of you, but there was two warnings. | ||
One was from like a chat room. | ||
The first one came from someone in a chat room to the FBI. | ||
And the other one was from like an aunt of his calling the FBI that he was going to be a school shooter. | ||
unidentified
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Wow. | |
And they failed both. | ||
You know, both of them didn't follow up. | ||
Yeah. | ||
The police and the sheriff's department didn't follow up either. | ||
What's pretty bad is there was this guy, Deputy Eason, his name was. | ||
I remember these names. | ||
He got called to follow up that he was going to be the school shooter. | ||
He doesn't go and follow up on the tip, right? | ||
So, of course he was able to go and kill my daughter that day, but he's also one of the deputies that went to the school and didn't go in the building. | ||
unidentified
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Wow. | |
You know, so he failed miserably not following up the lead, and then he goes to the high school and lets kids get killed inside a building and doesn't go in with a gun and a vest. | ||
He sits outside. | ||
Just like Yuvaldi. | ||
And again, the same kind of stories. | ||
Officers outside. | ||
This is so frustrating and so heartbreaking to hear all the time. | ||
Officers standing outside, not going in. | ||
It really affected me big time with Yuvaldi because I was so, after the Parkland shooting, I got so involved with law enforcement and we made such a Stink out of that there was just the one deputy at the school. | ||
His name was deputy Peterson Scott He didn't go in that day. | ||
He hid for 45 minutes. | ||
He didn't hide He was right by the he went within eight feet of the door. | ||
He heard the AR shots going off I know all this from Depositions we did he heard the AR shots going off and he went to reach and then he heard it He retreated and then he hid behind he stood by a wall For 45 minutes, while he heard the gunshots going off. | ||
So he is, a lot of people don't notice, but he is being held on felony child endangerment charges. | ||
I'll be at his trial, it'll be in May. | ||
But after Parkland, there was so much media attention on these cops not going in, and I did so much press that I thought there's no way in the world could a cop not know if you hear gunshots that you gotta move towards the gunfire. | ||
And then Yuvaldi happened and it really killed me, man. | ||
My son had issues, you know, with the anxiety and it was just horrible after Yuvaldi that these guys, I don't know if you noticed, they didn't even go to open the door on Yuvaldi. | ||
You know, it wasn't locked. | ||
That was all BS. | ||
They created a perimeter blocking parents, pushing parents out so they couldn't stop the shooting. | ||
There's parents that were arrested that had to run away and then get in the building and then get their children before the cops did in Uvalde, which is infuriating. | ||
And I remember carving Parkland and reading about it and being like, what were these cops thinking? | ||
They're armed. | ||
There's a number of them. | ||
They're inside of a school. | ||
Their main job is to, as they say, protect and serve. | ||
Their main job is to run into the line of fire when it comes to Safeguarding the most innocent, the most smallest, the most purest, you know, children of our society, and then they just stand there? | ||
What was it that we were talking about, I think earlier this week, how in China, if someone's driving a car and they accidentally run someone over, They'll get out of the car and then murder the person because having to be financially responsible for a person for life is worse than getting a few years in prison for an accidental, like, you know, vehicular assault or whatever. | ||
There was another story, I can't remember who brought it up, about what they do in China in a similar fashion. | ||
But when you get to a point where your society is overly litigious and lacking any kind of social cohesion, these are the stories we start to see. | ||
The reason why the cops in Uvalde bar parents from going in? | ||
I don't want to get sued! | ||
If they go in there and cause a problem, they're going to say, why didn't the police stop them from going in? | ||
And then we get sued, and then I lose my job. | ||
No, you're not allowed to go in. | ||
I'm not gonna go in either! | ||
You want me to risk my life for your kid? | ||
Never gonna happen. | ||
That's where we're at right now. | ||
People don't look at each other and say, we're all in this together. | ||
They look at it and say every man for himself. | ||
Was that the vibe you got? | ||
Not that you know the intentions of the officers on duty at the time, but did you get the vibe that they didn't want to get legal recourse? | ||
Or were they just afraid? | ||
They were just, there's an expression in law enforcement, it's called ROD, retired on duty. | ||
Parkland's listed as one of the safest cities in the state. | ||
So they just had cushy jobs, overweight cops, you know, they didn't run anywhere. | ||
The coaches, there were coaches at the school that ran in that day, unarmed. | ||
And so Deputy Peterson now, he's getting a $110,000 a year pension for letting my daughter get murdered and those other 16 people. | ||
So I'm hoping, I'll be at that trial in May in Broward, and I'm hoping if he's found guilty of felony charges, he'll lose his pension. | ||
He went, it was, it was unbelievable. | ||
We had we deposed him, you know, and I was sitting as close as I am to Tim with this guy | ||
And he came in holding a Bible, you know, he thinks he's gonna God's gonna help him now that he let all those people | ||
unidentified
|
die It's nice to hear that you said the coaches actually ran in | |
that day because you know I'm actually a high school coach myself and they tell you | ||
you can't like if there's fights You can't touch the kids like Tim was saying like out of | ||
fear of lawsuits So I'm glad the the coaches of Parkland actually had | ||
They went in to go in and go and his name was Aaron vice and they actually named a really good program after him in | ||
It's called the Aaron Feiss Guardian Program, where teachers, or not law enforcement, could go through this program and be able to carry on at the schools. | ||
Aaron died shielding. | ||
I'm reading about it. | ||
It's really intense and there's different districts that are allowing it and they named | ||
it in the bill that we got passed in Florida, the Aaron Feis Guardian Program. | ||
He went into the building and it was just horrible timing. | ||
Exactly when he opened the door, he was just blown away with the shooter. | ||
My daughter actually was on the ninth floor. | ||
She was shot nine times and she was shielded. | ||
She shielded another student and actually at point blank range, he shot her and the bullets went through her and killed the other girl too. | ||
So for 45 minutes to an hour the police were sitting outside while one guy with an AR, well multiple weapons, was walking around the school? | ||
One AR. | ||
He had an AR. | ||
Peterson, the deputy that was there, could have had a clear shot at him. | ||
He went to the door. | ||
The shooter was still on the first floor. | ||
A lot of people don't know, the shooter went to the school in an Uber, if you can believe it, with a Cabela's rifle bag. | ||
She picked him up at his house, the Uber driver, drove him to the school with his rifle bag, where he got out and walked right in through an open gate, where the gate was against protocol. | ||
The gate should have been locked. | ||
You know, that, and, you know, people didn't call the code red. | ||
People hid, adults hid in closets, didn't, you know, didn't call the code red. | ||
Police hid. | ||
It was like so many things that went wrong against my daughter that day that I could make a list. | ||
What if, just what if, if certain things would have happened, she'd be alive today? | ||
Do they have gun-free zones in these places? | ||
I think every school's like, most of them. | ||
Because I'm wondering about an Uber driver seeing someone come with a rifle bag and being like, oh, a school, you say, huh? | ||
And driving them into this place where there's, you know, I guess my view of it is the law gun-free zone is meaningless. | ||
Oh, well, people, criminals don't follow gun-free zones. | ||
But even Uber drivers don't understand. | ||
They will pick up a person with a gun and drive them right into it. | ||
With a rifle bag. | ||
Carried it. | ||
With a Cabela's rifle bag. | ||
Right into the school. | ||
And never said anything. | ||
They thought it was normal to pick up a kid before school hours. | ||
No one's even there. | ||
It was just one of the things that went against my daughter that day. | ||
So, what do you think? | ||
It sounds like the people who were armed were the people who shouldn't have been, and the people who should have been weren't armed. | ||
Yeah, the coaches. | ||
But now, with certain districts, the coaches could go get, from what happened, a coach can now go and go through this Guardian program and be able to carry on campus. | ||
But it's far, not all, you know, it depends on the county, you know. | ||
If you live in a conservative county, like I'm going to in January, The superintendent's gonna be carrying an AR pistol. | ||
You know, that's up in Bradford County, where I'm doing some things with law enforcement. | ||
So I hear a lot from these Democrat establishment gun control types. | ||
They think that it's nightmarish, this idea that teachers would be armed, that we would have special law enforcement armed in these schools. | ||
But the crazy thing is, if you go back in time, they had gun clubs at high schools. | ||
Red Rifle Clubs. | ||
Red Rifle Clubs. | ||
People had guns. | ||
People were armed. | ||
And then we slowly started banning them. | ||
Now the idea of just going back to the way things used to be is shocking. | ||
Like, oh, how could we? | ||
But I don't know. | ||
I'm curious your thoughts. | ||
What do you think? | ||
Well, the problem really with a lot of these shootings, Democrats focus on gun control before they even know the facts. | ||
Like, the kid could have been cutting animals up in his backyard. | ||
Threatening to kill people, rape people, but they don't look into any of the failures before or prior. | ||
You know, you need to see what happened before to prevent things from happening in the future. | ||
So, Democrats, when they focus just on gun control, it doesn't solve a thing. | ||
But that's one thing I could say really would happen in Florida. | ||
Under, it was Governor Scott at the time, he formed the Marjory Stoneman Safety Commission, and I was on it, and some friends and other fathers that had kids killed, and deputies, and sheriffs, and lawyers, and they dissected everything that happened in Parkland, and they made changes in the whole state. | ||
And Ron DeSantis, who I'm friends with, he actually, he put, he removed the sheriff. | ||
He was unbelievable, the guy. | ||
He removed that failed sheriff the first month in office. | ||
Ron came down. | ||
I got a call from him. | ||
He goes, Andy, we're gonna remove that sheriff. | ||
Uh, and I go, how are you going to do that? | ||
He goes, well, I'm just going to remove him, I'll be in Tallahassee. | ||
I go, no, Governor, you need to come down to Broward, go right in his office, and you yank that guy right out of, right, it was so great, he came, flew down to Broward, he had an emergency landing on the way down. | ||
So it's like hours we're waiting, like everyone's waiting at the sheriff's office. | ||
And he came down and he removed the sheriff within the first month. | ||
It was like national news that he got rid of him. | ||
You know, he was the guy that was on CNN talking about his amazing leadership. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
He's actually, so, and he ran again. | ||
Broward is such a cesspool. | ||
So he actually ran again for office and almost won. | ||
That's how bad Broward, how blue and evil Broward County is. | ||
What do you think about these kids who got really famous from what happened in Parkland? | ||
They started becoming, I think for the most part, the media props up this group of young people who are very much gun control activists. | ||
But then you had Kyle Kashuv, I'm probably pronouncing your name wrong, Kyle, who is more pro-2A. | ||
I'm curious your thoughts on how the media handled it. | ||
Well, like I said, they focused on just the gun control and they didn't accomplish anything but registered Democrats. | ||
That's all those kids accomplished. | ||
When it came time for running school board races, they were nowhere to be seen. | ||
When it came time to get rid of the sheriff, nowhere to be seen. | ||
Getting bills passed, common sense bills for school safety, they were nowhere to be seen. | ||
But me and other couple of parents and my family, my sons, we were at it like non-stop to hold people accountable. | ||
Ron, I call him Ron, I should, people don't know him, but go by Governor DeSantis, actually after we removed him, he put a grand jury investigation into the Broward County School Board and just recently within the last six months, four school board members were removed. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
And the superintendent was arrested. | ||
So there's been like when you really want to make a difference and you go for accountability, you could make a difference. | ||
Yeah, Ron really got involved on the local level, especially when it came to local school board elections. | ||
And a lot of people are saying that he did a really good job. | ||
How would you rank his kind of response to everything that happened in Parkland? | ||
He did unbelievable for my family and myself for accountability. | ||
You know, getting the superintendent arrested on felony charges. | ||
You know, Broward is so bad that so the superintendent gets arrested, right, on felony perjury charges through the grand jury. | ||
Wouldn't you know that same year they had that in Broward they had that superintendent speak at the school where my daughter was murdered at graduation? | ||
That's how bad these people are in Broward. | ||
So he got that done, four school board members, he cleaned house, the deputy was arrested, and the sheriff was removed. | ||
And he just did, like where could that ever happen? | ||
Where I could tell you that I met him and he told me he was going to hold these people accountable, and we did. | ||
We removed them all, they got arrested, they're on charges. | ||
The city, the school board lawyer was arrested. | ||
So the media doesn't tell the rest of the country what really happened. | ||
They don't want to focus. | ||
They're on to the next mass shooting, and they're going to blame that black rifle, and then they'll move on to the next one. | ||
That's where they get all their attention. | ||
You know, we on this show, we talk about a lot of the problems that are going on. | ||
We open up the show with discussing, you know, FBI interference in elections and stuff, and it very much feels like we're constantly pushing this boulder uphill, endlessly pushing back against this. | ||
But for your story, and what we've seen with similar stories, it's not just pushing a boulder uphill, it's like being on fire at the same time, where something so devastating, so destructive to your life, this problem that you've not only experienced, the pain you've experienced, but you see the solutions, you want the solutions, I can't imagine what it must be like to have people Working against you. | ||
These political forces that we complain about, I couldn't imagine being in your situation. | ||
Well, the worst, one of the worst, well, my daughter getting murdered, that tops everything. | ||
But that day my daughter got murdered, I had a Trump 2020 shirt on. | ||
And some reporter, I was waiting at the hospital praying that my daughter was alive, takes a picture of my Trump shirt and the hate that I got, even what my daughter, like the people were blaming me for my daughter getting killed on social media because I had a Trump 2020 shirt on. | ||
You know, there's a lot of things that I've been working on to try and prevent these shootings and working with law enforcement. | ||
One thing I'd like to tell you guys, one of the biggest problems that society doesn't realize, because you talk about mental health, It's such a failed system, the mental health treatment in this country and what happens to these people that are mentally ill and I know this factually because my wife is an ER physician so she constantly sees mentally ill people coming into the hospital. | ||
What happens with these mentally ill people is The police pick them up, they threaten to shoot the neighbor, they run a dog over, they kill a cat, or they're threatening to rape people. | ||
The police just use the hospital as dumping grounds. | ||
It doesn't get put on their background whether they threaten to kill 10 people, blow up a building, they go right through the system, they drop them off at the hospital, they're out in 24 hours with no background. | ||
So they can make, Democrats can make all the laws they want. | ||
You know, for backgrounds, so you can't buy a rifle, but if someone who's mentally ill or a criminal doesn't get a background, all the gun laws in the country are never gonna prevent it. | ||
And it's not just that. | ||
I think it's also fair to say that a lot of these people just get thrown pills, specifically SSRIs. | ||
I don't know if you heard that conversation or have any kind of understanding of it from a lot of these kind of sickos who just get thrown these pills that mess up their brain chemistry. | ||
Do you have any knowledge of that? | ||
And was that related to Parkland as well? | ||
Uh, he was on those type of medications, but there's so many kids that are on it that don't commit these crimes. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Like there's kids that play violent video games, you know, and don't go out and kill people. | ||
So there's, I, I've heard of that and I, and the one that, uh, my daughter's murderer was on those types of medications. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It was like SSRIs? | ||
SSRIs. | ||
Do you know the name of them by any chance? | ||
I forget. | ||
Okay, yeah. | ||
Well, a lot of them, you know, that's usually one of the common connections between a lot of these kind of lunatics is that, you know, they go on some of these medications and it just kind of makes them go crazy. | ||
Again, correlation does not mean causation. | ||
A lot of people like to stretch and just say it's fully that. | ||
I think there's a lot of failures in our society, especially when it comes to fatherless homes, especially when it comes to the medical industry, especially when it comes to law enforcement. | ||
I mean, there's so many things that we could address when it comes to the rising amount of gun violence in this country. | ||
Which one do you think is maybe more prominent? | ||
I think the worst is the mentally ill not getting a background, you know, when they do something that deserves it. | ||
They just go like... There's what's called the Baker Act in Florida, that if you get committed and you go through the full Baker Act where you put in front of a judge and a psychiatrist, it'll go on your background. | ||
But 99.9% of that never happens. | ||
They just get released. | ||
And that's, you know, the failure. | ||
There's no more mental institutions. | ||
So you take away if you take you take away 50% of the mass shootings probably in the country if the mentally ill that really a violent you know you have to be careful there they have to have due process and and if they had a background on them they wouldn't be able to purchase. | ||
Do you think that decline in religion plays a role in a lot of this stuff? | ||
That, and the fatherless home, like you've said, you know, the Latin, you know, families, look, with inflation now, look what parents have to do just to stay afloat, man, even if there are two parents, you know, they're working, you know, they're working, you know, just to be able to afford a dozen eggs now, you know, the price of everything, food, gas. | ||
A parent, you know, years ago, my mom stayed home, you know, when I was growing up, How many parents now have that ability where they don't need two parents working? | ||
So it is a problem in society. | ||
People looking at me like I'm trying to find out what drug the guy was on. | ||
I couldn't figure it out. | ||
I think a big part of it really wasn't focusing on the drugs, you know, because they want they wanted a death penalty, you know, so they're not gonna they don't want any outs with any drugs or any mental illness, you know, I asked about the, you know, religion, but it's not just about religion. | ||
It's about a cohesive cultural structure. | ||
It's everything. | ||
It's the whole family unit that I see is struggling. | ||
And I couldn't help but notice, too, because Ian's copy of Genderqueer is sitting next to you. | ||
You're familiar with that whole controversy? | ||
I don't follow it that much, but I know... I follow it with the sports and stuff, with men competing and women's sports and different bathrooms and genders. | ||
This book is in grade schools, and I can't show you what's in it because it's a violation of YouTube's rules to show the content that's in that book. | ||
That's horrible. | ||
It's adult graphic content that they're having kids see. | ||
And this is a component. | ||
I don't want to... Sure. | ||
The governor in Florida was attacked for just... They put this bill in place. | ||
You guys must have heard it. | ||
They wanted to make it the Don't Say Gay Bill. | ||
The protocols in education. | ||
But really it was, teachers have no right teaching anything about sexuality in kindergarten, first grade, and second grade. | ||
And that's all it was. | ||
And they attacked the guy. | ||
Like, what parent would want you sending your child to school in kindergarten? | ||
They're talking about gender identity. | ||
And then they lied about it. | ||
They said it was the Don't Say Gay Bill. | ||
There was nothing in there about that at all. | ||
They just wanted to attack him. | ||
And then the national media and the Democratic Party all march in lockstep saying anybody who brings it up is lying about it. | ||
Including Disney. | ||
It's like, what the heck? | ||
Why is the guy even saying anything? | ||
But what's great is, Governor DeSantis went at Disney. | ||
They were getting all these special tax breaks for being a Florida corp, and he pulled them all from them. | ||
So now they're paying regular taxes. | ||
DeSantis is doing great stuff. | ||
He's a savage, the guy. | ||
He's a savage. | ||
He's a great guy. | ||
Well, so, you know, I bring this up because the stuff we're seeing in schools, the decline, I should say the rise of secularism and the decline of religion, all seem to be components in not just shootings at schools, shootings in cities, a rise in violent crime in all the major cities, but also an unwillingness from people in the community to actually try to save each other. | ||
So, you know, talking about having a Parkland, talking about that with Uvalde, like I said, it's kind of like what we see with Communist China. | ||
These cops are like, you can't go in, I'll get sued, and I'm not going to save him because I don't care about you, I don't know who you are, and you don't mean anything to me. | ||
Well, it depends. | ||
You know, it's a serious thing. | ||
You know, I get a lot of calls from parents and emails about their children in the schools and what's going on, about everything, gender identity, security, what they're teaching in the schools, restorative justice programs. | ||
And my first answer to them is, because it's really painful, I can't answer everybody about their kid getting bullied or another kid getting murdered. | ||
But the quickest response would be, if you could afford it, you send your kid to private school. | ||
When did you guys ever hear of the last school shooting that was at a private school? | ||
You never hear about it. | ||
That's a great point. | ||
And if you can't afford private school, your home school, or you move to a district where that's not going on. | ||
Homeschooling has been increasing dramatically, but I think that latest Project Veritas video came from a very elite private school where people are spending about $30,000 to $40,000 a kid per year, and they have teachers there that are doing unspeakable things that if we mentioned here on this YouTube channel, we would get cut off automatically. | ||
Let's put it this way. | ||
Project Veritas put out an expose where the dean of students said that they pass around adult toys and discuss the difference between lube and spit and instruct the children on how to insert these things into their bodies. | ||
And this is an elite private high school with 14 year olds being told this. | ||
What's the school name? | ||
I'm gonna have to double check Francis. | ||
Francis Park or something like that? | ||
Francis W Park. | ||
Well it goes back to like every community the parents have the power to make a change with their elections and it all starts like you mentioned the school board elections are more important than who's living in the White House. | ||
But you look at what's happening, it's all tied together. | ||
When we see the economy start imploding, these parents don't have time to go to these meetings, they gotta work two jobs, and they gotta work two jobs each. | ||
So now you don't got parents who can be at home with their kids. | ||
This is breaking up the family. | ||
Then, they're using the schools as daycare centers, also bad for the family. | ||
Then you get teachers who are trying to subvert the parents' guidance, like what we saw in Florida, resulting in Ron DeSantis, you know, pushing, along with Republicans, the parental rights in education. | ||
You actually see now the craziest thing out of Chicago with this private school, $40,000 a year. | ||
This guy on camera is saying it's really cool that he gets to do this, and when Veritas exposed them for showing children, young kids, these adult objects and describing their use and insertion, the school defended the dean, the school defamed Veritas, in my opinion, said that they were malicious, Actively defending the depraved behavior. | ||
So that's the power of the parents, you know? | ||
Who would send their child to a school like that? | ||
Take your kid out of that school and make them go bankrupt. | ||
It's only because of Project Veritas that they might know about it right now. | ||
They didn't know. | ||
Because they're working. | ||
The economy's in the gutter. | ||
What are you supposed to do? | ||
You go to work and you pray that your kids are in... Both parents are working. | ||
Right. | ||
So the family is being gutted and destroyed. | ||
And it's affecting, like you said, crime, shootings, kids taking drugs, fentanyl, it's all, it implodes, it starts back at the bottom. | ||
you know, plus social media influencing the minds of children early on. | ||
Parents just giving a phone to children and then they're in the hands of social media | ||
that is essentially creating a kind of thought control where they're curated particular content | ||
that they want them to see. | ||
You add that with a horrible diet, you add that with people not having, you know, the | ||
right gut, the right brain working correctly. | ||
It's a recipe for disaster. | ||
And I think we're going to be seeing a lot more violent events, especially with the increase | ||
in poverty and especially with the increase of fatherless homes. | ||
I think it's almost guaranteed that there's going to be a lot more shootings, a lot more | ||
violent acts with children coming our way because all the ingredients are there and | ||
there's nothing taking away from this larger problem that I think is sadly unavoidable | ||
right now. | ||
I hear all this and I'm saying to myself how fortunate it was to grow up in the 80s and | ||
party like a rock star. | ||
My biggest worry was, like, where was the party that week, and where are we going to go get a cold keg of Budweiser? | ||
Oh, even the 90s. | ||
And the 90s, it was just so incredible and I see these kids now and it's such a difference, you know, they're glued to the phones, glued to the cell phone, we're all having an addiction with it, you know, and it's just so much different than when I grew up and, you know, we went on beer runs in high school and we just had a good time and we didn't have all, you'd never heard of a school shooting. | ||
Yeah, it's just horrible. | ||
The next 10 years, it's going to get more interesting than people realize, right? | ||
We start this show talking about these Twitter files. | ||
You've got talk about censorship, manipulation. | ||
We've got a breakdown of the family. | ||
But right now, those kids you mentioned that are addicted to those phones, that are growing up in these strange times, 10 years old, let's say, in 10 years, they're going to be voting. | ||
And how do you think they're going to affect the political system? | ||
What's happening to particularly young girls, they go on Instagram, they go on Snapchat, they go on TikTok, and they get depressed when they don't get enough likes on their posts, views on their videos, and it's causing a massive spike in depression. | ||
Alongside COVID and all of the crazy mass stuff that's happening, we are going to have two generations, Gen Z and Alpha, and the next generation, and the next, they're going to be so negatively impacted by this. | ||
I fear that You know, I hope that we're headed towards something better, right? | ||
When we get these exposés on Twitter and the FBI, it's shining a light in the darkness. | ||
It's sending a signal to people that victory is possible. | ||
Republicans take the House, maybe we'll see some changes. | ||
But when you start thinking about demographics and what's happening with the young people, it may be inevitable that as the older generation, the boomers and the older Gen X, start aging out, retiring, they're not voting, they're passing on, we lose that level of stability despite, look, I think the greatest generation was just that. | ||
I think the boomer generation has some issues. | ||
Gen Xers have a little bit more. | ||
Millennials have a lot more. | ||
Gen Z is going to have way more. | ||
And it's just this cascade effect of generations getting worse and worse and worse. | ||
I fear that for all the issues we can complain about with boomers, When the boomers are gone, it's gonna be apocalyptic. | ||
Like, we need that level of stability among them, despite the criticisms the younger generations have. | ||
Same thing is true for Gen X. Millennials are a psychotic generation. | ||
It's split down the middle between woke insanity, and then you've got classically liberal to conservatives countering that. | ||
Gen Z's gonna be crazier. | ||
Alpha's gonna be crazier. | ||
These kids who are addicted to these machines, who have no sense of family, who don't know their dads, or haven't seen their families because they've been raised by the state, When they get in the vote, I think the system just implodes. | ||
And you can see now, it's the biggest generation of kids that are still living home in their parents' basement. | ||
You know, not that I'm knocking that, I got a son that's still living home. | ||
But they don't have that many economic opportunities compared to what people had before. | ||
If you look at the financial situation, you know, I was in business by the time I was 19. | ||
I moved out when I was 18. | ||
I was rocking and rolling like in New York. | ||
How old are you? | ||
Fifty-six. | ||
Fifty-six. | ||
So, what is that, Gen X or is that Boomer? | ||
I couldn't tell you. | ||
unidentified
|
One of the two. | |
It's like... Fifty-eight. | ||
I'm on the cusp. | ||
Maybe I got both. | ||
Boom X. Fifty-seven. | ||
Fifty-seven. | ||
Is that the year you were born? | ||
Fifty-six. | ||
Sixty-six. | ||
Sixty-six. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So, I think that's Boomer generation. | ||
Early, early, early. | ||
Oh, you're late Boomer? | ||
Early X. Maybe I'm a Boomer. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm late X. | ||
Well, so you see what the Gen Z, the meme, OK Boomer, like dismissive of this. | ||
They're growing up. | ||
You're seeing a lot of socialism. | ||
Why? | ||
These kids don't have jobs. | ||
They go to school. | ||
At school, you're told what to do. | ||
Don't push back. | ||
We give you your food. | ||
We give you your books. | ||
Then they go to college. | ||
These are young people who never had a job. | ||
I'm not saying not like every Gen Z person has never had a job. | ||
I'm saying there's a generation. | ||
In this generation is a large swath of young people. | ||
They're now 22 years old getting out of college and never worked a job in their lives. | ||
How are they going to enter the workforce? | ||
They can't. | ||
They end up going to places like Twitter where they walk in and have red wine on tap and they go to the Lego room where they can do building blocks. | ||
Then they have the meditation room because they're just so stressed out and they think these mean words online are pure violence. | ||
I'm not excited about where this country is going, because we're losing the generation that are like, I started a business when I was 18, and we're gaining the people who are like, I went to school till I was 28 and don't know how to write anymore. | ||
And it's pretty amazing that everyone I grew up, like all my good friends, one of them went to college, became a pilot. | ||
But all the others are like, one's in construction, one's in tile, one's a contractor, one's in the jewelry business. | ||
We all did very well for ourselves, and I'm hoping that it continues, but you're not really seeing it like you're saying. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm not hopeful. | |
I mean, dude, my peers, they're always complaining, they don't want to work, they're unmotivated, they're lazy, and they're sad. | ||
It's scary. | ||
That's why they're sad. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I'll tell you, I live on a ranch out in Oregon, and there's this one college I respect. | ||
I have these neighbors, these kids, they're about 30 years old, about your guy's age, and they all went to this Oregon Technical Institute in Klamath Falls, and they all came out with a profession. | ||
One's a dental hygienist, the other one does sonograms, and then there's all engineers, and they're all good kids, man. | ||
They're all conservative kids. | ||
They're not on their phones. | ||
Like, I hang out with these kids down the street, And they're just really good, solid kids. | ||
So it gives me some hope, but they're so outnumbered, these kids. | ||
And they all are working or doing something. | ||
And they all got great professions from this one college. | ||
But they're in the minority. | ||
Speaking up and speaking out is a key. | ||
It requires a lot of brain. | ||
You could argue, LOL, is that really that much work? | ||
You're on a TV show talking, but like, you know, physically, I'm not exhausted. | ||
I'm mentally exhausted. | ||
But we just need people to be honest and public. | ||
The more people from Gen X that are honest and public, I blame my own generation. | ||
I see a lot of my old friends from high school just like floating, just waiting until they die, basically enjoying the fruits of what our grandfathers did for us. | ||
Well, you know, Klaus Schwab said, you will own nothing and you will be happy. | ||
That's the plan that they have implemented. | ||
That's essentially where we're headed towards and the society that we're at. | ||
But people aren't happy. | ||
They're just drugged up. | ||
They're just given a lot of pills. | ||
Well, that's the point. | ||
They're making marijuana legal everywhere. | ||
That can't be helping all these kids. | ||
Smoking weed every day. | ||
Overdosing on any drug is a problem. | ||
Alcohol too. | ||
That's one that's insidious in our society. | ||
I think South Park put it really well. | ||
South Park did an episode on P.O.T. | ||
and then, it was actually funny, they hired this company where people pretend to be their kids from the future and they're drug-addled losers who are like, you know what, there's smoke behind me, look at me! | ||
And then, you know, the kids are not stupid, and they're like, this is ridiculous, we don't believe it. | ||
Then at the end, Stan's dad says, look, we just don't want you smoking marijuana. | ||
And he's like, why don't you just be honest with me? | ||
And he's like, well, son, the truth is, marijuana makes you okay with being bored. | ||
And then when you're older, you'll find that you're not good at anything. | ||
And that was just like the simplest explanation of when kids are out partying and drinking, it doesn't matter if it's pot or anything else, without direction, without discipline, without stability, they end up, you know, as young adults with no capabilities, so they have no mission, they have no drive, they have no skills, and they're angry. | ||
Why can't I buy that new car? | ||
Why can't I get a nice, why is life so hard for me? | ||
And it's like, well, you spent your teenage years doing nothing. | ||
You know, for the people who are successful, like you, you said you started, you went into business when you were 19. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I don't know, what's the answer then? | ||
You guys are younger than me. | ||
What are we going to do with this generation? | ||
Family, religion maybe? | ||
I've been thinking a lot about finding peace with the past. | ||
That's a big part of it for everybody, for people in general. | ||
Just find, accept what happened, and then prophesy good things for the future. | ||
Because sometimes what we'll do is we'll look at the past and then say, because that happened, because there was so much change, it indicates that it will happen again. | ||
But we are offering our versions of the future to the world. | ||
You know, Tim mentions religion, and there's one thing. | ||
I'm in a circle with some religious Jews. | ||
They're Chabad, and my rabbis are Chabad rabbi. | ||
They really do something right. | ||
They honor the Sabbath. | ||
So every Friday, which is great for the family. | ||
I wish I did it with my kids. | ||
Everyone should do it. | ||
Friday comes sundown. | ||
They shut everything down. | ||
The phones, the TV, everything. | ||
All the family gets together Friday night. | ||
They pray. | ||
They have a big dinner. | ||
They have some drinks. | ||
They chill out all the way till Saturday sundown. | ||
How much better would society be if every family did that? | ||
You know, it's rarely one day I respect it. | ||
And what else is awesome? | ||
This is what a lot of people attribute to a lot of the success. | ||
One of the most epic things about Islam is fasting. | ||
I've been looking into the tenets of Islam. | ||
There's five pillars, and one of them is Ramadan. | ||
It's this month-long scorching heat. | ||
Ramadan means scorching heat. | ||
When they lived in the ninth month of the year, like September, and they just had to live under the burning sun. | ||
So they were fasting to survive, because if you eat in the burning sun, you're going to burn. | ||
And now, in solidarity with those that did it to survive, people will fast for a month straight. | ||
But man, clearing out your gut, because like you were saying earlier, Luke, it's another type of brain. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
And it's being ruined, uh, you know, deliberately. | ||
I think that's a fantastic offering from Islam, is fasting. | ||
One of the things that, uh, we've been working on is, uh, I call it Saturday morning cartoons. | ||
There are a lot of people that, uh, don't have that Sabbath, where Friday night they stay with their families and they have dinner, and there's a lot of people that don't go to church. | ||
So, what we want to do is, Saturday morning, we got a new location we're setting up, it's going to be a public, we're going to do café on the first floor, games and stuff, skate shop maybe second floor. | ||
And Saturday morning, you come in, you bring the family, and the kids will watch cartoons that are not degenerate or, you know, like they'll be normal, fun. | ||
Like I watch Bugs Bunny. | ||
You know, like, I don't mind Bugs Bunny. | ||
Show Elmer Fudd walking around with a double barrel, you know, trying to hunt ducks or whatever. | ||
I got no issue with that. | ||
But there's cartoons that I think kids could watch. | ||
I mean, the stuff I grew up with, I think, in the 90s wasn't so bad, but now you got really, really weird stuff, like Blue's Clues had, like, one episode where it showed a beaver with double mastectomy scars. | ||
And, like, you know, so we want to create a space where Parents can come in the morning. | ||
Everybody can meet each other. | ||
People who live nearby can become friends. | ||
We can build community. | ||
Because the reason I say religion is not because I think, you know, I'm not an overly religious person. | ||
I don't think the solution necessarily is that people need to find God. | ||
People need to find each other. | ||
Religion is one mechanism for that. | ||
When people used to go to church, They'd be with their community once a week. | ||
They would talk with each other. | ||
They would learn what's going on in the community. | ||
With Shabbat dinner, you've got families sticking together, cutting everything out, saying, no, no, no, we're here together as a family, strengthening the family unit. | ||
All of that leads to success. | ||
Like they said, a family that prays together stays together. | ||
You always heard that, right? | ||
Have you been absorbing any of the Shabbat goodness? | ||
Yeah, I really love it. | ||
Whenever I'm in town, I go to my rabbi's house, and I just shut it down. | ||
You know, a lot of times my sons will come with me, and we'll just sit with the rabbi, and he talks, gives you a little Torah, something, you know, he'll give you a Torah story. | ||
And I have a rabbi in Ashlan, when I go, when I'm in Oregon, that I'll hit up his house or the temple once in a while for the holidays. | ||
But it's important. | ||
They always stay in touch with me. | ||
We built, through my foundation, we built two playgrounds. | ||
I was able to raise money and we built a playground in Florida and Coral Springs at the temple and I built one in Ashland also. | ||
What do they look like? | ||
Just cool little playgrounds for kids to play and have fun, you know? | ||
Like swinging ropes and stuff? | ||
Yeah, if we got a slide, you got a swing, you got something, you know, the kids hit the drum, you know, they love all that stuff. | ||
But through my foundation of raising money, we were able to do that for the temples. | ||
And I enjoy going. | ||
I think it's, like Tim mentioned a few times, it's very important, a family staying together and doing things like that, even if, you know, not so much religion, but it's the getting together and just being with your family. | ||
This is why I think they shut the churches down during a COVID pandemic. | ||
Walmart was allowed. | ||
Small businesses weren't. | ||
Churches weren't. | ||
Parks weren't. | ||
Not Florida, though. | ||
They shut down playgrounds. | ||
Not Florida. | ||
DeSantis. | ||
Yeah, DeSantis. | ||
My rabbi made sure to thank him when we were at a rally recently with the governor. | ||
And that was one of the biggest things. | ||
My rabbi was so happy. | ||
to thank the governor for was keeping the place of religion so people could come and pray. | ||
It meant a lot to him and he wanted to make sure he thanked the governor. | ||
People don't understand how big that was, especially when even the federal government | ||
was saying, you got to lock down. What Sweden is doing is wrong. And that was from the Trump | ||
administration, which is absolutely insane. So I think truly with so much pressure from | ||
the federal government, from the corporate media on Florida specifically, there was other states | ||
that also didn't lock down. But specifically Florida was where everyone was pointing to | ||
criticizing saying this is going to be the bloodbath. They're going to... | ||
Everyone's going to be dead here. | ||
Everyone's going to die. | ||
They have such a big elderly population. | ||
It's a given. | ||
Everyone's dying here. | ||
DeSantis is a murderer. | ||
And DeSantis said, no, I'm gonna not bow down to your emotional extortion, and I think truly it was Florida standing up against all these pressures that allowed the United States to not be as draconian as a lot of people planned it to be. | ||
And what was interesting, all the people from the Northeast that moved down to Florida, and it turned out voting Republican, as you saw in the election, he won like 20 basis points or something like that. | ||
Like a record, he won by I relocated there. | ||
I moved down to Florida. | ||
My residency's in Florida. | ||
I'll never give it up. | ||
Oh, so you do both? | ||
You go back and forth? | ||
I bounce back and forth, but majority, I'm in Florida. | ||
And that's where I vote. | ||
That's the first thing the governor asked me when he saw me. | ||
He didn't change residency, did he? | ||
No, don't worry, Ron. | ||
I'm voting for you. | ||
You got it. | ||
We did a rally for him. | ||
It was great. | ||
Double-digit victory? | ||
What did he win, like a million votes? | ||
1.5 or 1.6. | ||
It was like we almost got stuck with that other guy, Gillum, if you guys remember him. | ||
He's caught in a hotel room with gay prostitutes and drugs. | ||
He almost won it, you know, that's how terrible it was. | ||
Florida, it's amazing how Florida went from being a swing state to so red, it's one of the reddest states. | ||
Everyone in the state that's running something is Republican. | ||
So there's... I'm going to butcher this, so Prager, I apologize. | ||
What is it? | ||
Cut flower politics? | ||
I think he calls it. | ||
Was that what it was? | ||
I think so, yeah. | ||
He says that you have this beautiful flower in a pot and then you pick it and hold it up and show how beautiful it is, but then as it's been separated from its roots, it slowly withers and dies. | ||
And that's what we're dealing with now as a society. | ||
I feel like right now we don't realize the wave has already hit in this country as we believe it doesn't exist anymore. | ||
We talk about the FBI. | ||
They're seemingly only going after enemies of their tribal ideology. | ||
So a garage pole rope? | ||
Twelve agents. | ||
But a bunch of people showing up to the Supreme Court justices' homes illegally protesting? | ||
Eh, we're not getting involved in that. | ||
Pro-life activists, however? | ||
Gotta track them down, lock them up. | ||
January 6th, two years solitary, no trial. | ||
Mass shootings, too, like we spoke about. | ||
Mass shootings. | ||
They drop the ball. | ||
I mean, look at that. | ||
There's a meme from, remember on the Simpsons episode, where Bart says, what was it, woozle-wozzle or something like that? | ||
No, no, no, I didn't do it. | ||
Is that what the line was? | ||
I don't remember. | ||
But he gets a catchphrase, and then all the students look and turn to him, and they say, say the line, Bart! | ||
The meme is, he goes, it's like, he's got the FBI hat, and he goes, the suspect was known to us, and we took no action. | ||
And then they're like, yay! | ||
Because it's happened so many times. | ||
We could only hope that the House now could do something. | ||
You know, maybe they'll look into it. | ||
Because if they don't, who's going to do it? | ||
Even the Department of Justice, you know, they do whatever they want. | ||
Well, this is the issue. | ||
The reason I bring up the cut flower politics idea. | ||
The flower is dying and there's no reattaching it to the roots. | ||
It's not gonna happen. | ||
I think you can splice it back on, can't you? | ||
Okay, come on. | ||
Okay. | ||
I'm talking about a political metaphor here. | ||
I'm trying to be positive, okay? | ||
Sure, sure, no, I mean, to be fair, perhaps, perhaps there is a way to reconnect with our roots, and that's actually a good way to put it, so I actually, I stand corrected. | ||
If we can restore our roots and get back to what made this country function better, maybe we can turn things around. | ||
I think there's a good opportunity for that. | ||
But right now what I see around us Well, actually, you know, maybe you were completely right. | ||
What I see around us is a light at the end of the tunnel. | ||
With the Republicans taking the House, this may be the point where we start turning things around. | ||
If more shows like this, more people like Crowder, more people like Stick, Sex and Hammer, more shows pushing through the noise, more people able to counter the narrative, Elon Musk taking over Twitter... That was great. | ||
This is a potential opportunity to start rejecting societal collapse and degeneracy and saying there's got to be some degree of responsibility, meritocracy, protecting the family. | ||
Maybe we actually are restoring those things. | ||
I was thinking, I like this metaphor, but when was the flower cut? | ||
Was it the Federal Reserve Act 1913? | ||
Woodrow Wilson? | ||
Did he slice? | ||
No! | ||
Was it the 90s? | ||
Because Reagan was awesome! | ||
I remember Reagan was pulling down the Berlin Wall and like ending the Cold War. | ||
It's the 2000s. | ||
And I think it was social media. | ||
It was the Internet. | ||
Yeah, the Internet, algorithms, algorithmic manipulation. | ||
And the financial collapse. | ||
These things all happened right around the same time. | ||
But didn't you guys feel that we got a little reprieve when Trump won? | ||
Like I thought the country was going, it was so horrible. | ||
2016's the first time I voted. | ||
You know, I just couldn't, I had to get involved and vote. | ||
The way the country was going, like it was now. | ||
It's just no different from when Obama ran things, from when Biden's running things. | ||
So I thought that, you know, him getting elected, I thought, you know, patriotism. | ||
Look, there's no patriotism now in this country. | ||
He brought back patriotism, and the country was definitely doing a lot better then than it is now. | ||
There's two ways to look at it, I guess. | ||
I've heard these stories about old people on their deathbed, you know, they're lethargic, they're dying. | ||
And then one day, all of a sudden, they sit up, Tons of energy, they're talking, they're laughing, they say, get my family in here, I'm feeling great, and they're like, whoa! | ||
The family comes in, they all share laughs and memories, and then say goodbye, and the next day the person dies. | ||
Like, all of their energy is mustered up for one last goodbye and I love you. | ||
That scares me, that idea, that the resurgence of Trump was the last mustering force of people who care about this country and believe in the values that made it great. | ||
You believe that? | ||
No, I think it's a possibility, but it's also possible that Donald Trump was a shot of adrenaline. | ||
That he was that EpiPen straight into the thigh, and now we as a country went... So as we have these bad things still happening around us, we now have the rise of people like DeSantis. | ||
We now have the narrative machine crumbling. | ||
We now have Elon buying Twitter. | ||
Far from perfect, this guy Elon, but he's releasing these documents. | ||
He did more for social media than any GOP that GOP ever did. | ||
What Elon Musk did to beat the big tech just recently. | ||
Private sector. | ||
Yep. | ||
But maybe Donald Trump was, we were all sitting around, feeling our heart tighten, and then Trump came along like an EpiPen, for all his faults, he was a shot of adrenaline. | ||
And now the vision's very clear, and all this transparent nonsense, you're like, what? | ||
Like the FBI's directly involved with it? | ||
I mean, we kind of had the feeling this was going on. | ||
He was screaming it from the top of his lungs about it for years, you know, the FBI, the Department of Justice, the collusion, the Russian BS, you know, and it was all, it all came out to be true. | ||
Let's talk about what's going on here because this is a dark subject I want to bring up. | ||
We got Mike Cernovich here. | ||
He says, ask anyone inside a large organization who is really in control. | ||
The answer is always HR. | ||
Twitter's trust and safety was HR on liver king levels of steroids. | ||
You crossed them and you're out for being dangerous and a threat. | ||
He said that in response to this tweet from Daniel Bostic, who says, uh, either, uh, he says, uh, Cernovich just exposed a divide between Elon and Jack. | ||
Either Jack was lying all along and is carrying on the deception, not super likely, or his company was totally hijacked by far-left activists and lawless corporate bureaucrats, very likely. | ||
Let's get into it. | ||
Mike Cernovich responded to a tweet from Twitter's Trust and Safety saying they were resigning. | ||
He said, you all belong in jail and linked to a story from the New York Post. | ||
Twitter refused to remove child porn because it didn't violate their rules. | ||
Elon Musk says, it is a crime that they refuse to take action on child exploitation for years. | ||
Jack Dorsey said, this is false. | ||
Elon Musk responded. | ||
No it is not. | ||
When Ella Irwin, who now runs Trust and Safety, joined Twitter earlier this year, almost no one was working on child safety. | ||
She raised this with Ned and Parag, but they rejected her staffing request. | ||
I made it top priority immediately. | ||
This is the level of corruption we have seen in this country. | ||
On Twitter for years, on social media, they were posting pictures of children in disgusting ways, and they did nothing. | ||
So when we say that Elon Musk did more than the GOP ever did, more than the FBI ever did, he gets in, day one he says, my top priority, ending child exploitation. | ||
It gets even worse than that. | ||
There was victims of a lot of this CP, a lot of this adult child content, that were coming to Twitter and were saying, hey, this is happening to me. | ||
I'm being targeted. | ||
My photos here are being released here. | ||
I was a child. | ||
This is illegal. | ||
Please get rid of it. | ||
Twitter was like, Too bad. | ||
We're going after all the Republicans. | ||
We're going after... We're gonna ban Laura Lewin. | ||
Yeah, we're gonna ban people for their political speech. | ||
And that right there shows you the priority that they had there. | ||
As, of course, I was screaming about this years ago. | ||
I was like, there's ISIS on the platform. | ||
There's people beheading people. | ||
There's radical Islamist recruiting on the platform, and your main priority is a satire comedian? | ||
Are you freaking kidding me? | ||
You have so much to do, and you fail us time and time again. | ||
You have the Ayatollah of Iran saying, death to Israel, death to America, and nothing happened with his Twitter. | ||
Chinese propaganda? | ||
Chinese government actors coming on? | ||
Nope, nope, that's fine. | ||
Yeah, so seeing Jack come out and then being smacked down by Elon Musk is absolutely promising because what Elon Musk is talking about here is criminal. | ||
If you know a crime is going on and you don't do anything about it, you're a part of that act. | ||
A lot of people get charged for this, for being an accomplice. | ||
There was children coming to Twitter and they ignored them. | ||
That is absolutely just, that should boil your blood right now. | ||
Let's contextualize this. | ||
It's not like, you know, what was the last episode of Seinfeld? | ||
The Good Samaritan Law, they get arrested. | ||
It wasn't like someone was standing on the side of the road, they saw someone getting kidnapped and went, I'm not getting involved. | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
This was, they're driving the car, and they get an Uber, and they pick someone up who's like, grabbing a woman off the street and throwing her in the car, and they're like, hey man, I'm just a driver, don't mind me. | ||
That's what it was. | ||
Twitter was facilitating this. | ||
Twitter had created a platform allowing these people to do these things, to post these things. | ||
They were the vehicle by which this stuff was delivered. | ||
And they had an obligation to say, we can't have that illegal activity in our bus. | ||
And they did nothing. | ||
It's not just Twitter, it's every social media platform. | ||
Because they're smart, man. | ||
Give it, you got to give it to them. | ||
They control all the social media. | ||
They won these elections. | ||
And they control the universities, like before you were saying, they control education. | ||
The Democrats, you got to put, you got to tell them, you know, they did something right. | ||
All the social media, mainstream media, education, they control everything. | ||
And they're ruining society. | ||
So if we don't do anything about it now, like Tim says, we're going down a terrible path. | ||
We built Mines, the social network, and I was an administrator for like five years, and we had to deal with this. | ||
Fortunately, it was a smaller amount of people per day, probably 1% of what Twitter gets, so it was still manageable centrally. | ||
We still had centralized administratorship, which is a fault of a system. | ||
A centralized, planned system cannot handle that amount of child porn that will come on. | ||
But you'd send it immediately to the FBI. | ||
If you find something illegal, particularly something as egregious as child porn, FBI immediately is notified. | ||
And that is, it's removed. | ||
You can't even have it there in a holding pattern because having it is illegal. | ||
So you need to immediately reference and take care of it. | ||
It was on Twitter servers as Twitter was meeting with the FBI as they were ignoring the problem. | ||
You never saw the Feds investigate Twitter for this, but now they're investigating him because Elon Musk took the company over and is prioritizing going after child pornography on the damn program, on the damn platform? | ||
Are you kidding me? | ||
I think Twitter would have hired, who Clinton hired, when she cleaned all our emails, right? | ||
How did they not know, you know what I mean, he's gonna come in and go through everything and expose them all? | ||
Like, how did they not bleach it all? | ||
I could see the argument of, like, it's just too much data, like, there's no way we can handle this, but that's, like, I agree, so maybe you shouldn't be in control of it if you can't handle it. | ||
That's not the argument here. | ||
I'm surprised. | ||
They knowingly knew it was happening, they knew the victims, and they said, we're just gonna keep it up. | ||
What Jack said when they said Twitter did nothing to prevent this, Jack said this is not true. | ||
I think what Jack, it's kind of like doublespeak, what he's saying is, no, we did some things to try and prevent it, but what Elon's saying is it wasn't prevented. | ||
You may have done some. | ||
That wasn't their top priority. | ||
Their top priority was to censor conservatives, right? | ||
That's what they were getting at. | ||
Somebody posted a super chat. | ||
Murph tries. | ||
I want to read this one. | ||
He says, Elon, we are going after CP. | ||
Celebrities. | ||
Quote, this platform just isn't what it used to be. | ||
I'm leaving. | ||
You think about that and you think it's a joke, right? | ||
But then you think about people like, you know, Harvey over in Hollywood and what he was into. | ||
And then, you know, I'm thinking about These Twitter employees who refuse to quit, but then Elon comes in and starts cleaning stuff up, and then all of a sudden they're like, oh no, no, no, now I have to leave. | ||
And then you take a look at books like that, Genderqueer, where it's got adult activities in it, and they're showing it to kids, and you have this school in Chicago that Project Veritas exposes, where the dean talks about how he brings people in to share adult toys with children, and explain how to insert them, and the difference between lube and spit, And you have to wonder, are we just being naive in assuming these people don't want to target and prey upon children? | ||
Yes, because there's also the Balenciaga scandal. | ||
There's also the corporate media advocating for child love. | ||
There's also, of course, politicians trying to normalize a lot of this nonsense and insanity, especially in California. | ||
There's also the FBI, for over 30 years, that were helping Jeffrey Epstein run an international trafficking and extortion operation as the children and victims were coming forward to the FBI, and the FBI said, screw off. | ||
So, this is not a coincidence. | ||
I don't think this is an accident. | ||
On top of that is Sam Bankman Freed. | ||
No child porn involved in the Sam Bankman Freed thing, but he had, like, sleeping with, like, eight or nine different women that he was working with. | ||
That's not the same thing. | ||
But it's highly sexualized. | ||
No, no, no, no, no. | ||
There's a better point in there, Ian, and it's that they're not going after him. | ||
They haven't talked about the sex- I mean, not that there's anything wrong with sleeping with nine different women that work for you, I don't care, but you could argue about the ethics involved in that, but where's the talk about it? | ||
Like, it's so... | ||
Underground sexual, you know? | ||
But it's not... I don't care about the SBF orgy stuff. | ||
I care about the SBF illegality that they're not going after. | ||
Why? | ||
Because he aligned with them politically. | ||
There's also cuties on Netflix. | ||
There's so many examples of this. | ||
Just to go back on this particular topic related to this larger discussion that Elon Musk is talking about. | ||
I mean, how more blatant do you need it to get? | ||
Do you need politicians ditching their Secret Service and going to private islands? | ||
Oh, wait. | ||
Hold on. | ||
Yeah. | ||
How more obvious do you need to make it? | ||
Seriously. | ||
Yeah, what happened with Menendez? | ||
Remember that one? | ||
Yeah. | ||
What happened with Trump's, what was it, Transportation Secretary? | ||
Who gave him the sweetheart deal of a lifetime. | ||
Again, we can keep going on here. | ||
This is a problem. | ||
It's just there in your face. | ||
My problem with repealing Section 230 protections for these social networks is that someone in the FBI could put child porn on the Twitter server and then go arrest the CEO for holding child porn. | ||
You're like, what? | ||
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And you can try and track it, but they're so good at hiding where it came from. | |
Section 230 pertains to civil litigation, civil tort. | ||
I hope so. | ||
But I mean, I think you really do need to protect these platforms. | ||
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As egregious as it seems, it's hard to navigate. | |
Under that premise, Ian, you're saying that Section 230 actually allows someone to legally hold child exploitative material. | ||
It doesn't. | ||
These platforms, like you were saying, you can't have it. | ||
Section 230 does not protect that. | ||
Okay. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
It's a long-term conversation about things other than child porn as well, but things that may be deemed illegal and about who's in trouble for having the illegal content. | ||
Is it Twitter or is it this person that uploaded it? | ||
I have a friend who's a sheriff in Florida. | ||
Everybody knows him. | ||
His name is Grady Judd. | ||
He's pretty famous. | ||
And they're constantly setting up these child pornography rings, you know, always online. | ||
You always read about them. | ||
They're arresting. | ||
So they should be doing more stuff like that. | ||
But counties could do that, you know? | ||
You don't have to leave it to the main social media platform. | ||
If it's happening in your county, then they could set these people up and hold them accountable where they should be. | ||
I think it was crazy, the last time he made an arrest in Polk County, a lot of these people were working at Disney. | ||
You know, they did a sting operation. | ||
You remember that? | ||
Grady Judd did, Sheriff Grady, he did a sting operation and like, I don't know, like 10 people were working at Disney. | ||
Imagine that, you know, you have your kid, you're strolling around, and you got one of those Mickey Mouse kids. | ||
And that routinely happens. | ||
There's a lot of news stories, month after month, caught at Disney, caught at Disney, Disney employee or Disney network. | ||
Again, they employ a lot of people, but there's also a lot of coincidences, especially with some of their symbolism and some of their child movies, that is also very disturbing and deserves a conversation on its own. | ||
So these people get a job at Disney, it's obvious, right? | ||
They want to target kids. | ||
What other place do you think these people might try and find employment where they can surround themselves with children? | ||
Is there another job? | ||
Like, you know, public service inside of a... Nursery school? | ||
Where the kids go, you know? | ||
unidentified
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I'm trying to allude... You're talking about school? | |
Oh, school! | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Oh, that's an interesting point. | ||
Oh, that's right. | ||
If they're gonna go to Disneyland or World or whatever because there's a lot of kids there, maybe many of these people will go to grade schools, too, to be surrounded by kids there as well. | ||
Well, I could talk about the school sexualization, but I mean, you made a good point about the entertainment industry. | ||
You said, you guys mentioned Disney, but that whole industry, man, it is dirty for kids. | ||
It is dangerous to get kids into that. | ||
I was there as an adult and they were trying to sexually get me to do porn. | ||
Scary, you can't, yeah, raising a kid these days, you just can't. | ||
You guys, any of you have kids? | ||
unidentified
|
Nope. | |
Negative. | ||
If I would, I wouldn't be telling anybody. | ||
One day you guys will have kids and you'll see. | ||
You know, you're just gonna have to keep an eye on them and private school's the answer. | ||
The world is so crazy. | ||
If I were to have a kid, I would never be posting photos of it. | ||
I would never tell anybody about it because of how vicious and crazy some people are. | ||
Smart. | ||
I worry all the time about my sons. | ||
Every day I worry where they are. | ||
And they're adults. | ||
Just because I'm damaged from what I went through. | ||
I can't imagine something happening to one of them. | ||
I would see pictures of people with their newborn babies, but they'll put like a block the face out. | ||
A lot of people in the last 15 years were putting the full baby face and everything online so everyone knows what their kid looks like. | ||
Beautiful baby. | ||
It's a chance for us to be like, yeah, let's support the beauty of the child. | ||
And I think collective consciousness, I think that it actually enhances the beauty of humans when we can all appreciate each other. | ||
It also lets everyone in the world know what your baby looks like. | ||
And that's, like you were saying, Luke, I mean, that's pretty wickedly terrifying. | ||
You know, because we know that governments will go after people's kids. | ||
They'll be like, you should have had a better father. | ||
There was a Jamal, what's his name? | ||
Is this Khashoggi is the guy? | ||
unidentified
|
No, Khashoggi's a different guy. | |
It was the kid, the 16-year-old, was killed by Obama on a drone strike. | ||
Oh, Abdur Rahman al-Awlaki. | ||
And he's the son of a terrorist. | ||
You know, what they call the terrorists. | ||
So they killed his son. | ||
What was he though? | ||
He was working with the Pentagon before when it came to de-radicalization. | ||
So he was working with also the intelligence agencies. | ||
The father? | ||
Yes. | ||
Yeah, Anwar, I don't think his dad committed any crimes. | ||
He was a preacher. | ||
He preached jihad against America. | ||
I see. | ||
And they said, well, his speeches, you know, weren't... I could be wrong about that, but let's just... That's why I usually stick to discussing Abdulrahman. | ||
Sixteen-year-old kid from Boulder, lives in San Diego, goes... I think that's what it was. | ||
Then he goes and flies to Yemen to visit family, and then Obama blows him up. | ||
Well, the father had a lot of connections to the government and the Pentagon, and then he became radicalized and became a cleric and then started preaching radical Islam. | ||
And then the son was killed. | ||
Yeah, he was killed, the son was killed, and then there's reports of the daughter being killed off of the first few days of the Trump administration on a commando raid that Obama wouldn't call off on, but Trump allegedly called off on. | ||
That's the official version of events. | ||
Could have been an accident. | ||
Could have been North Korea-style family targeted execution. | ||
I don't claim to know what's going on. | ||
I think the United States sent a clear message that if you screw with us, we kill your kids. | ||
I thought so too. | ||
I mean, that's the vibe I'm getting and partly why I don't want to put pictures of my kids all over the internet. | ||
I mean, if you look at the extradition and torture that the intelligence agencies were doing, especially when it came to flying people to Egypt, What's his name that talks about this? | ||
Mahij? | ||
Mahij? | ||
Oh, Majid Nawaz. | ||
Majid Nawaz talks about this all the time. | ||
Sorry for butchering your name. | ||
I think I'm just dyslexic and I'm just horrible with pronouncing names. | ||
But he talks about how, you know, many times routinely people get picked up, sent to Egypt, and again, we can't even discuss some of the horrible things, the torture that people have gone through. | ||
officially under the rendition flights and the torture flights that were conducted with your tax dollars, including children, including hurting children in front of parents, and doing unspeakable things that you can't even mention. | ||
How do you say his name again? | ||
Oh, it's Magid. | ||
Yeah, Magid talks about this in detail, but it's a conversation that a lot of people aren't ready for. | ||
You'll always remember Magid's name because it's like magic. | ||
I grew up with a kid in high school whose last name was Magid. | ||
Dude, Majid Nawaz is a brilliant, I don't know what you call him, a scholar. | ||
I don't know how you define the guy. | ||
Reformed terrorist, I believe. | ||
Yeah, he's a brilliant guy. | ||
He was in that prison in Egypt. | ||
He describes his situation. | ||
He's a brilliant, fascinating thinker, and his content is top-notch right now when it comes to speaking out against a lot of the craziness that society is dealing with. | ||
And now he's helping de-radicalize a lot of people. | ||
Which I think is absolutely critically key and important, and in many instances doing the opposite of what the Intel agencies are doing. | ||
I think a lot of the benefit people could get right now is don't worry so much about showing the world your life. | ||
I kind of went through a phase where I was like, I want to document everything so I can get my likes, and also I'll be remembered. | ||
Who doesn't want to be remembered? | ||
It can be like less is more sometimes. | ||
I think you guys got a good, uh, what you do when you move to rural areas. | ||
I think it's great. | ||
I live like chickens, goats, chicken cam. | ||
You got to do a goat cam at my place. | ||
We could do a goat cam. | ||
Goats are awful. | ||
So, living rural, I think, is going to be the future for a lot of families. | ||
Doing some homesteading, raising your own beef, that's a way to get your family to be involved with them. | ||
Raw milk, that's what I did. | ||
Eggs, nature, fresh air, no pollution. | ||
People go tap their sink water in the city, and then they're like, I gotta go to the grocery store to buy my food. | ||
You think it's your food? | ||
You think that's your water? | ||
They can turn it off. | ||
If the grocery store doesn't have it, you don't have it. | ||
It happened. | ||
You saw it with COVID. | ||
You couldn't get a lot of the things. | ||
Where I live, you know, I'm hungry, I'll just go out and kill a goat. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
No more chickens. | ||
The dog ate all my chickens. | ||
But I have like, you know, 120 goats. | ||
They're great to watch. | ||
They have two to three a year, you know, so they're constantly growing. | ||
I don't name any of them. | ||
They're all numbered. | ||
You know, on the ranch, you never name any. | ||
I heard something really clever from, I think it was from Kim. | ||
She's our chicken tender. | ||
She said a friend names their birds after holidays. | ||
So that one's Christmas, you know. | ||
Thanksgiving. | ||
That one's Thanksgiving. | ||
And then, you know, when you eat them. | ||
Yeah, that's pretty cool. | ||
The only thing that has names on my ranch is dogs. | ||
How many dogs? | ||
We have three dogs, two livestock guardian dogs, and I have a Malinois. | ||
Which one ate the shepherds? | ||
The Anatolian shepherd, I couldn't knock that out. | ||
I have a German shepherd too. | ||
I raised it on a farm and I made sure to teach it. | ||
I was like, hey, you stay away from the chickens, you respect the chickens. | ||
It was tough because they have that drive, especially the shepherds. | ||
They love to chase things around. | ||
They love to run around. | ||
They're like, we need to get it. | ||
It was, it was a lot of, I have a Malinois that's trained to a T like I love him. | ||
I got him when he was two months old and he was like, I training him to not go after the chickens, | ||
but he collar is a really good tool for anyone that, that's training the dog. | ||
Seriously. | ||
I have a collar and he, it didn't take me too long for him to keep him off the | ||
chickens. | ||
But what's pretty interesting now is, you know, He's a protection dog and he does everything for me, but | ||
now I got him hurting till he He loves it, man. | ||
I'll go out, like, you know, there'll be a hundred goats out there, and he could move them. | ||
You know, I got to be really quick with the button, because his drive will get too high, and he could easily, like, just break one's neck. | ||
How much land do you need for a hundred goats? | ||
Well, I have about 750 acres. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
And we move them, it's pretty, I live in this area that it's free, open range. | ||
So lately the price of hay went from like $7 a bale to now $21 a bale. | ||
So a lot of times I just open my gates and I just say, you know, this is, nothing's for free here, you know what I mean? | ||
It's not like in the city where you get your food stamps and you don't have to go work for yourself. | ||
So I send the goats. | ||
Okay, go out there get find something to eat or you're not gonna get you're not gonna have anything You're gonna go hungry. | ||
So it's pretty interesting. | ||
I wake up in the morning. | ||
I'm looking out my ranch I see him going out the front my front the gate that going down the street like a mile and then I'm telling you It's unbelievable. | ||
They come back the end of the day. | ||
They're coming back. | ||
They know where it's safe And there's such interesting animals to watch. | ||
I I went to California during the drought to interview farmers, and we went to a bunch of dairy farms. | ||
I go to one, and we literally just walked up to houses, knocked on doors, and a guy answers, and we were like, hey, we're reporters. | ||
We wanted to get the opinion of farmers because of the drought, because of the regulations. | ||
And he's like, yeah, for sure. | ||
And he walks out, and he shows us around the other side of his building, and there's a whole bunch of cows just eating. | ||
And there's no fencing or anything. | ||
They had their machine where the cows could go in and get milked. | ||
They had the thing where all the food was being put. | ||
And I can't remember, it was probably hay or something. | ||
And I don't know what they were eating. | ||
But then I was like, there's no fences. | ||
And he's like, yeah. | ||
And I was like, can they just leave? | ||
And he goes, where would they go? | ||
And I was like, I don't know, just like randomly walking off and going somewhere. | ||
And he was like, But where? | ||
Like, why would they leave their house where the food is? | ||
Yeah, they got it so made. | ||
Yeah, they're not going anywhere. | ||
He's like, I don't need to put a fence up. | ||
I'm not worried about it. | ||
He's like, there's no predators. | ||
That's like the kid that doesn't leave his house living in the basement. | ||
He's got the refrigerators full. | ||
He's got heat, air conditioning. | ||
He's got a car. | ||
There's no need to go anywhere. | ||
Yeah, the cows got it made. | ||
They don't want to leave. | ||
Yeah, these goats, when I first got them, they were like, I thought they would never come back. | ||
And it's just interesting. | ||
They're creatures and they're coming back. | ||
So how much does the average goat weigh? | ||
Average goat I would say is about, the mama goat's probably about 130, 140 pounds. | ||
So how long, how much food does one goat produce? | ||
Oh, the food? | ||
Probably about 40 pounds. | ||
You probably get 40 pounds of meat for each goat. | ||
It's delicious, like I don't want to bite, like I'm at the point now, I just started a herd of cattle too. | ||
So we have about five, you learn a lot about the cow business, you know, when living on a ranch, what a heifer is, what a cow, what a bull heifer is. | ||
There's just so many cows, you know, I'll teach you something. | ||
So if a cow's pregnant, you don't say pregnant, it's covered. | ||
Or open. | ||
If they're not pregnant, they're open. | ||
If they're pregnant, they're covered. | ||
This is what I learned from East Coast out to Oregon. | ||
How long does that 40 pound of meat last you got, your family? | ||
Well, we're usually like pretty generous with it, you know, all the time with friends and family. | ||
We're always like, we gave it away, or we're always constantly eating it. | ||
It's really great to be able to raise your own meat. | ||
I explain it to people. | ||
It's like, what's the difference between having a garden and raising tomatoes? | ||
I'm just raising beef or goat. | ||
That's the dream right there. | ||
That's the life. | ||
I love it, man. | ||
Using the stuff that you raise and I know what they're eating, I have no problem killing them or eating them. | ||
What about the udders and, like, the internal organs? | ||
Do you eat that stuff, too? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
No. | ||
No beef liver? | ||
I gotta turn you into beef liver. | ||
We gotta have a conversation about this. | ||
Well, as a kid, I used to eat liver all the time when I was growing up, but I haven't. | ||
I have my first steer now, so he's about 700, about 600 pounds, so I won't butcher him till the fall. | ||
He was born in June, but I have another five that are covered that'll be given birth, and they They take about nine months, you know, to give birth a cow and a goat's about five months. | ||
If you're not going to be doing anything with the liver, I'll gladly take it off of your hands. | ||
But I would love to have a conversation about the organ meat, because there's a lot of important stuff that a lot of people don't get, especially when it comes to a lot of the American diets, comparatively to a lot of other international diets that do prioritize organs, because they're usually more nutrient dense than, of course, a lot of the meat. | ||
It makes sense, but I'm definitely not going to let anything go to The saying is usually nose to tail. | ||
You know the butchers, it's crazy, they're so busy like where we live that you could make an appointment like if you want to butcher a cow it could be like seven, eight months out for the butcher to come. | ||
So I'm almost have to like for next fall soon I'll have to make, unless my neighbor, I got a neighbor that's a pretty good butcher. | ||
There's a huge shortage and it's so expensive. | ||
Many people don't understand that's one of the biggest expensive you know parts when it comes to raising animals. | ||
Yeah, it costs me if I want one of my neighbors he'll do a goat for me for about a hundred. | ||
You know, you're raising these animals. | ||
Do you have concerns about parasites in them when you're eating them? | ||
No. | ||
We constantly, you know, not all the time. | ||
If I see, I know now from watching when an animal's sick and we'll treat it. | ||
Once a year I'll treat them and everybody heard of ivermectin. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah. | |
So the ivermectin works great for the parasites with goats. | ||
You know, you just put a syringe, you just fill it and they need it, you know. | ||
Is that all you use? | ||
Ivermectin? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And what the goats is, I'm fortunate. | ||
I have a lot of pasture and irrigation so I can move them around. | ||
It's when these animals sit in like their own pasture and they'll eat stuff down and they get sick a lot more because they're eating down to the ground where their feces are. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
So I learned all, you know, I went from looking at scrap metal to looking at real estate, now I look at goat shit on my ranch to see if they're sick or not. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
You do have cows though, right? | ||
Yeah, we have some cows. | ||
How much milk per day does a cow make? | ||
Oh, we don't, these are beef cows. | ||
unidentified
|
These are beef cows, alright. | |
It's different, there's beef cows, there's Angus, there's Herefords, there's Charleys, you know, you'll learn all these things. | ||
Oh yeah, yeah, if you're, we want to get a cow and we were told no because they produce like 8 to 12 gallons per day. | ||
What they're not telling you is, like, even with the goats, like, if you start milking a goat, it's like a full-time job if they don't have a kid on them. | ||
You've got to milk, like, twice a day, or they go through, like, some serious pain. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
But I don't. | ||
You're going to get a beef cow, you buy a steer, and you've got enough acres, you put a steer on it, and you feed them, or you probably have enough feed. | ||
You said you had how many acres you got? | ||
Like 50. | ||
So you've got enough. | ||
A lot of trees, though. | ||
Yeah, but I don't know. | ||
They'll be able to find one. | ||
Goats eat everything, right? | ||
They eat the bark off the tree? | ||
Oh, that's right. | ||
They eat the blackberries. | ||
You've got to see. | ||
I'm like a blackberry eater. | ||
That's their favorite food, the blackberries. | ||
Really? | ||
And blackberries grow like four feet a year. | ||
If I didn't have these goats eating, it would be unbelievable what they do to keep my place looking nice. | ||
How often do you move them? | ||
Like, do you do paddock to paddock? | ||
It's usually you don't want them in because the parasites have a cycle so you don't really want them in there more | ||
than a Month in one area and I'll move them to another pasture | ||
right now winter with not a lot of stuff I've been letting them go up the mountain and they got | ||
there on their own Are they smart enough where if it's like poop grass and not | ||
poop grass delete the non poop grass? | ||
Poop grass. Well, they usually they go find the best stuff like they won't eat like the stuff you want them to eat | ||
They don't eat it like, you know the stuff that's growing where it's like at they go to the good stuff | ||
You know like in life, it's like a kid who opens the refrigerator | ||
He's gonna grab go for the ice cream before he goes for the vegetables to go to the same way they go for the | ||
We're going to go to Super Chats! | ||
If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, and share the show with your friends. | ||
My mom did that to me one night when I wouldn't finish on no electric fence involved. | ||
It was a similar... | ||
We're going to go to Super Chats. | ||
If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, | ||
subscribe to this channel, and share the show with your friends. | ||
Become a member at timcast.com to support our work directly. | ||
When you do, you are using the financial system Parallel Economy, co-founded by Dan Bongino. | ||
So we're trying to get away from PayPal and these other companies. | ||
We're trying to build a parallel economy. | ||
And that's why we have secured a new location for a physical enterprise where we want to do the Saturday morning cartoons. | ||
We want to have a game shop, a skate shop. | ||
We're going to have a whole bunch of good fun stuff happening. | ||
We have this little nook area we're going to call Ian's Crystal Cove or something like that. | ||
I'm going to put up a curtain, and we're going to put a sofa, and like lava lamps, and like a TV for movies. | ||
How about a couple of goats? | ||
Well, we can't put them in a city. | ||
You can't? | ||
You can't put a couple of goats in there? | ||
Nah. | ||
You know, have that goat yoga now and everything. | ||
Urban? | ||
Yeah, that's fun. | ||
But the way it's shaped, there's this little nook area where I think we can put up like curtains, and then you'll walk in with your coffee and sit down, and there'll be like a TV with a movie playing, and you know, rocks everywhere. | ||
It'll be good fun. | ||
So let's read those superchats. | ||
Alright, Gemcast says, Tim, this is my last five bucks. | ||
Please pull up title 18 USC section 241. | ||
Twitter directly violated it. | ||
Well, there you go. | ||
Give me that again. | ||
Title 18 USC section 241. | ||
unidentified
|
Alright. | |
I prefer rumble says Tim. | ||
In response to your 90s commercial today about Taco Bell, their slogan was run for the border. | ||
Not sure how well that would go over today lol. | ||
Yeah, it's funny too. | ||
I heard that they tried to open Taco Bell in Mexico as American food but nobody wanted to eat it. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
We used to joke about that, make a run for the border, and they'd be like, make a run for the toilet, is what the joke was. | ||
That's right! | ||
Stopped using the... We have, in Oregon, you have the best food, Mexican food trucks that you could ever... Oh, man. | ||
It's unbelievable. | ||
The food, it's better than any restaurant. | ||
You go to the food trucks, they're the best. | ||
unidentified
|
L.A. | |
Did you find the law? | ||
Yeah, conspiracy against rights. | ||
It's a U.S. | ||
federal crime. | ||
Really? | ||
What does it say? | ||
Conspiracy against rights is a federal offense in the United States of America under 18 U.S.C. | ||
241 if two or more persons conspire to injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate any person in the free exercise of enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him by the Constitution. | ||
It goes on. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow! | |
Yeah, it's pretty broad. | ||
So we need the FBI to investigate itself. | ||
Conspiracy against rights. | ||
Good luck with that. | ||
Right, exactly. | ||
That would be the law. | ||
Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
says the year is 2029. | ||
Liberty was so 1990s ago. | ||
For Damastan, the hub of culture, news, politics is kept safe by armed patrols, drones. | ||
Historians will link the shift in tactics by Tim Pool back to this week. | ||
Yeah, maybe, I guess. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Part of me wants to say, start moving to cities. | ||
You know, move into the urban centers and then vote against all these people, but I could not advocate for that. | ||
You know, get out, take care of yourself, get some goats, get some chickens. | ||
I like the starting new city effort. | ||
You ever think about starting a new city? | ||
Like... | ||
John Astor did in New York. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I like keeping people away from me. | ||
It's better. | ||
I got goats and cattle and dogs. | ||
Well, we'll do it. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
There are people moving. | ||
That's what's going on now. | ||
People are moving to states that are more like-minded like they are. | ||
You can see it's like steps. | ||
People are moving. | ||
They move to Florida. | ||
They're moving to Tennessee. | ||
Everyone you talk to, every retired cop's moving to Tennessee. | ||
That's really what's going on. | ||
We'll do it. | ||
I'm in. | ||
What we'll do is we'll buy acreage in West Virginia. | ||
We'll set up a designated space as the downtown. | ||
And then what you do is you basically lease or sell small plots, like half acre plots, | ||
to people who want to set up businesses. | ||
And then we create a market strip that people can go and hang out and, you know. | ||
I already have the land. | ||
You can bring it out to me. | ||
In Florida? | ||
Awesome. | ||
No, Oregon. | ||
Oh, in Oregon. | ||
There you go. | ||
Just can't bring any Democrats out. | ||
Yeah, none of those. | ||
Well. | ||
unidentified
|
we could find a spot for him. | |
Where are we at? | ||
Tory Brettlian says, so we release a well-known international arms dealer while Russia is fighting Ukraine, after we left billions in weapons in Afghanistan, while we also can't find all of the Ukraine aid. | ||
Interesting. | ||
Uh-huh. | ||
That's right. | ||
As Biden is calling for gun control, as he just released what is known to be one of the most dangerous arms dealers in the world. | ||
Yeah, he's worried about that risk. | ||
The merchant of death. | ||
All right, let's see. | ||
TheRealHydroPX says, the evidence that Luke and Tim are the best hosts ever. | ||
I'm such a big fan of this show. | ||
I super chat all the time. | ||
You guys are the greatest. | ||
Tim, I think you're my favorite journalist. | ||
And Luke, you have to be one of the most handsome people ever. | ||
Hydro, how could you say such nice things about us? | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
Hydro's always got the commentary. | ||
He says, the evidence that Luke and Tim and most of these so-called journalists are conformists, they will never be mentioned on Twitter files. | ||
Sure thing, buddy. | ||
But I do appreciate the superchats. | ||
We do appreciate that you're voicing your criticisms. | ||
And I'm glad not everybody's here just to say nice things. | ||
You had me in the first quarter. | ||
In the first one? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I wonder if Hydro's like, I didn't say that! | ||
He's fake news! | ||
Waffle Sensei says, I am very happy to see Twitter gaining traffic for the story coming out there. | ||
But coming out on a Friday on Twitter is killing the story and giving the press the ability to avoid it. | ||
I think the reason they're doing it, I think Elon told them it has to be released, you know, on Twitter at these times because these are probably low traffic times for Twitter. | ||
The weekend, look, it's Friday night. | ||
I think we had like 33,000 people watch. | ||
We normally do, you know, 40, 45, but that's Friday. | ||
You know, who wants to be indoors listening to commentary on news and stuff and politics? | ||
unidentified
|
Oof. | |
It's, uh, Christmas is coming up, it's time to get out, go have a good night and enjoy yourself and forget about all the bad stuff. | ||
So, uh, viewership is lower on the weekends. | ||
I think that was it, like, do this so that people come and get on Twitter on the weekends. | ||
I just looked and saw that Eliza Blue did a conversation with Elon six hours ago or so. | ||
unidentified
|
Really? | |
Eliza's known for being an advocate against child pornography or exploitation. | ||
She herself was a victim. | ||
And I don't know, is that the right phrasing, Eliza? | ||
Sorry if I'm misphrasing things that you've gone through, but I'm so glad to see that Eliza and Elon have gotten together. | ||
It's on Twitter now. | ||
Right on. | ||
unidentified
|
That's interesting. | |
We have answers. | ||
The issue is, only law enforcement can actually act upon those answers. | ||
swatting you, hire someone, private investigator, some kind of black hat hacker, get some answers. | ||
We have answers. | ||
The issue is only law enforcement can actually act upon those answers. | ||
And they're not. | ||
What is swatting? | ||
It's when someone calls 9-1-1. | ||
Oh, I heard about that. | ||
You got that happen to you? | ||
Fifteen times this year. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Bomb squads come out twice. | ||
Maybe even three times. | ||
Third time wasn't as crazy as the first time. | ||
You think they call you after the first time, right? | ||
What the heck? | ||
They keep coming out. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
People don't understand. | ||
They think a swatting is like every single time a SWAT team barges in. | ||
No, no. | ||
After the first time, they show up in a patrol car Say, is everything good? | ||
All right, have a nice day, guys. | ||
But we have private security, so now what happens is they just relay with our armed guards. | ||
And so, you know, the SWAT team comes in, they make a phone call, they say, we're all good. | ||
Okay, they're gonna come by and do a checkup, and then everything's fine. | ||
It probably came from, like, the earlier days of the internet when people would call in, like, oh, there's a violent thing, and then the SWAT team would go bust in the door. | ||
Right. | ||
On the ground, on the ground, and someone's like, what the hell is happening? | ||
Yep. | ||
But, I mean, people get killed. | ||
People have been killed. | ||
So, has this happened to you 15 times? | ||
Yeah, I think 15. | ||
Here, in this facility? | ||
And then also at some other locations, like my private home was targeted. | ||
So, we have information that I believe would lead to the arrest of individuals involved, but law enforcement is, the FBI just doesn't care. | ||
Like, that's why, maybe it's my bias, because seeing that happen, but I think a better thing is, you know, take it off myself, Marjorie Taylor Greene gets swatted six times, I think? | ||
Was it six? | ||
You'd think the FBI would be stopping that. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
They only operate to protect their political ideological track. | ||
So that should make you feel not bad, if they're not helping our... Right? | ||
Well, it makes me feel like this country doesn't exist. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, it's terrible that they would just not look into it. | |
In California, they're releasing criminals while crime is skyrocketing and shutting down prisons. | ||
There is no functioning executive... | ||
In Oregon you can walk around with two grams of coke or meth and not get arrested. | ||
I do work with law enforcement, so I did recently, I did a drive around with one of the sergeants, | ||
and he said, you could pick these guys up with two grams of coke or meth or mushrooms, | ||
and there's nothing that happened, no arrests. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Not even a ticket or anything? | ||
Nothing, nothing. | ||
They don't even bother. | ||
They don't even have, now, you know, I'm into, I have a Malinois, so I train with a lot of canine units. | ||
They don't even get dogs that are drug dogs anymore, only apprehension, | ||
because they don't even care about the drugs anymore. | ||
just because they just have more on their hands to deal with more violence? | ||
I guess they're just taking that approach, you know, they're just not going to arrest, they're not going to put them through the system. | ||
And it's just horrible, you see the homeless, like the homeless populations, like California, Oregon, it's the same. | ||
I did a ride-along in Miami. | ||
First thing, within a few minutes, a high-speed chase. | ||
It was crazy. | ||
It was insane. | ||
I went night crawling in Chicago. | ||
Man, that's not for the faint of heart. | ||
Night crawling, you guys know what that is? | ||
Journalists go out at like 10 p.m. | ||
and they get the police scanner and they drive around and then they speed, they get as fast as they can to the crime scenes to film and document and sell it to the local news agencies. | ||
I think we saw what, five murders in the span of a couple hours? | ||
There was one where there was a house and it's Chicago so it's not like everyone's a homeowner. | ||
The top floor was where the guys lived, the bottom floor was like the house homeowner renting at the top floor, and the guys up top owed money to somebody, or I don't know, I can't remember exactly what happened, the car pulls up, just unloads into the house, kills, like I think killed the woman or something, I can't remember exactly what happened. | ||
Strictest gun laws in the country. | ||
How many murders could take place every weekend, how many kids are getting killed, right? | ||
This is an important super chat here. | ||
Slane Hope with a really, really good point. | ||
He says, the death penalty is tricky because of Vegeta from Dragon Ball. | ||
Had Goku not spared him, Trunks would have never been born and Earth would be lost. | ||
Well, that proves it. | ||
I mean, right there, that's just, you know, death penalty. | ||
Out the door. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Completely esoteric, over everyone's head. | ||
Except for those that are big Dragon Ball Z fans. | ||
All right, TH says, just heard SCNR subverse settled. | ||
What next, Tim? | ||
You may have seen that there was a lawsuit, subverse, settled. | ||
There is information available on the WeFunder website, and the only thing that I can say is that I can't say anything just yet. | ||
So a lot of people are saying, like, we want answers, what's going on, why aren't we getting answers? | ||
Legal restrictions. | ||
Like, it's basically how these things work. | ||
But we probably have a bunch of updates soon, maybe. | ||
And what you can do is you can read all the files from the lawsuit, as well as a decision that was issued by the California Department of Industrial Relations, to get an understanding of what happened. | ||
And I will leave it at that. | ||
And then hopefully, as we continue to work on this, we'll have more for you soon. | ||
All right, where are we at? | ||
unidentified
|
We'll grab some more Super Chats. | |
Oh, let's see. | ||
Skyler says, Utah, any staff or parent with a concealed carry on campus, why doesn't Utah have school shootings? | ||
I don't know, maybe it's because even Utah employment law protects CCWs at schools. | ||
unidentified
|
I would also argue with how religious Utah is. | |
You know, you're going to get less of those mental health problems and the less hopelessness that a lot of these kids are facing these days. | ||
Alright, let's see. | ||
Ms. | ||
This Martin Muses says, how Meadow died is a must read for anyone even thinking of having | ||
children in any school. | ||
As a teacher, I can say that it is an accurate portrayal of who is at school with your kids. | ||
unidentified
|
You wrote it? | |
Did you write it? | ||
Yeah, I wrote it, and every parent should read it that wants to send their child into a public school. | ||
It's very educational. | ||
It's all the facts, what I uncovered in the shooting, all the failures. | ||
I put it into this book. | ||
It's like a handbook for parents, you know, because the media, they focus on gun control. | ||
That's what happened. | ||
That's all those kids. | ||
Everyone knows those kids got so much media attention. | ||
But when it came time to get anything done, The cameras left, and so did they. | ||
They left, and they didn't do crap. | ||
You know, we got so much. | ||
I told you about the accountability we got done in Florida. | ||
We got a bill passed that made it a law for every school in the state of Florida to have a deputy, one per every 500. | ||
That's something that we got done after the shooting. | ||
Single-pointer entries at every school. | ||
Teachers are allowed, you know, the Aaron Feist Guardian Program. | ||
So a lot of things got done in Florida after the shooting that the media doesn't want to cover because their main focus is just more gun control. | ||
Right on. | ||
EF says, Mr. Pollack, I am sorry for you and your family. | ||
It sounds like your daughter was a heroic woman trying to protect others. | ||
Thank you for working to protect other kids. | ||
Is there any way we can help you? | ||
Oh, they could just follow me on my Twitter, AndrewPollackFL. | ||
I do a lot of fundraising on my own with some corporations. | ||
I hate, it's the worst thing in the world to ask people for money. | ||
I hate doing it in campaigns. | ||
I just, I don't like doing it, asking people for funds. | ||
But I do what I have to do, and I'm helping law enforcement agencies. | ||
I'll be in Bradford County, Florida, January 4th with their Sheriff's Department, donating AR pistols with ballistic backpacks for their school resource officers and their school superintendent. | ||
He'll be the first superintendent to carry an AR pistol in the country. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Right on. | ||
It's pretty cool. | ||
Can people help support financially? | ||
I won't really push for it, but I guess I could put a link sometimes up. | ||
I don't even have a link where they could donate, but, you know, I'm with this company, it's called Berna.com, and people should... We got some of those. | ||
Yeah, I gotta get... I'm gonna get you some more stuff. | ||
Oh, is that what you were talking about earlier? | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
You guys were mentioning it. | ||
We have a couple of those. | ||
They're basically like... | ||
paintball pistol. A serious one. Right. Like they have like a tear gas pellet. | ||
Anyone out there that has a student in college or anywhere they have a bad guy | ||
repellent. So I was fortunate enough to be able to work with this company. I'm | ||
the chief public safety officer and through sales they donate money to my | ||
foundation. Wow. | ||
And then I'm able to use that money and donate, like, the rifles and backpacks to law enforcement. | ||
Yeah, we got a bunch of those. | ||
We got a bunch of the, you know, the downstairs. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
You'll show me and I'll like to get you some more stuff. | ||
They also have a product that's called a shield that I think parents could get for around $100 and it could go in a backpack or a suitcase and it makes it bulletproof. | ||
One of the things that we wanted to do was to build a couple auto-defense turrets that shoot the Berna projectiles. | ||
So we have a couple. | ||
There's the tear gas one. | ||
They don't call it tear gas. | ||
It's called something else, right? | ||
Max Pro. | ||
I think it's the Max. | ||
Well, the Max Pro is a combination, isn't it? | ||
Isn't that one like... No, I think the Max Pro is the tear gas. | ||
And then they have a pepper ball. | ||
Pepper ball one. | ||
And they're just extremely powerful. | ||
You know, my son was talking about something like that. | ||
Like how they have like automatic lights that go on in the corner of your house. | ||
You could have that, like a launcher set up at your house that'll automatically shoot if it picks up something. | ||
On a big property, there's no reason for someone to be anywhere near certain areas. | ||
And so my plan was to create maybe seven auto-defense turrets, each holding about a thousand of the burner rounds in them. | ||
And non-lethal, of course. | ||
So when something comes with proximity to the animals, be it a wild animal or a trespasser of some sort, you get lights turned on, then a warning, and then it goes, bop, bop, bop. | ||
Yeah, but they have ones that I've seen with law enforcement that are for crowd control, that you fill with like a bucket of the pellets. | ||
Like if you had them like on a turret, it would be unbelievable. | ||
If they got to that where it could do the software for that, it'd be pretty amazing. | ||
Then what I want to do is, we just have a switch, so at the end of the day when you're going inside and locking up, you flick a switch and then four, you know, maybe like six around your house are just slowly like looking, and then they lock on and it's like, you are being warned. | ||
Autodefense shirts will engage in fights. | ||
They had it with the car alarms, you know, staying back, so there's no reason that that technology isn't going to be here shortly. | ||
I wonder about the legalities. | ||
I just have a Malinois, you know, I just put him out there. | ||
They're great, yeah. | ||
No one's coming on my property. | ||
That's the real answer, you know. | ||
I'm only half kidding about the auto-defense turrets. | ||
We probably won't do that. | ||
We'll probably just get dogs. | ||
But I think you're onto something, though. | ||
I think eventually there's going to be something like that with technology. | ||
Or a drone. | ||
Imagine a drone. | ||
Imagine putting your drone up and you have some pellets, you know. | ||
The reason I think the dog is probably the better bet is because not only can they help protect the perimeter of your house, but you can give them belly rubs. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, dogs are nice. | |
Well, you let me know when you're ready for a Malinois. | ||
You've got to be ready for them and be prepared to do the right training. | ||
They don't make good pets. | ||
Do you have a male or a female? | ||
Male. | ||
Let's talk. | ||
You've got a female? | ||
I've got a female. | ||
Sonny, I love that dog. | ||
He's a beast. | ||
I'll show you her when we come down after the show. | ||
She's here too. | ||
She's awesome. | ||
See, I bred Sonny once. | ||
Did a good job. | ||
And I'll probably breed him again soon. | ||
Yeah, the one I have now is super smart. | ||
You have to really, when it comes to these dogs, training is just so important. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Like lawyers, you need a good lawyer, you need a good dog trainer, you need a good doctor. | ||
My dog had nine trainers. | ||
Let's read some more. | ||
We got Ready to Rumble says National Geographic says Gen X is 1962 to 1982. | ||
There you go. | ||
Gen X. Gen X. I'm a Gen X. To what? | ||
82, they said? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, X. | ||
unidentified
|
79. | |
79, yeah. | ||
Gen X. You guys are the same generation. | ||
It's up to us. | ||
Samurai says Gen Z is the first generation to not watch Looney Tunes. | ||
unidentified
|
That's not true. | |
I loved Looney Tunes. | ||
I hated it. | ||
It's 79. | ||
I absolutely despise Looney Tunes. | ||
A little bit of Daffy Duck. | ||
I watched it. | ||
Yeah, Looney Tunes. | ||
Not that much. | ||
Saturday mornings, like you were talking about. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Cartoon Saturdays. | ||
No, I liked Saturday mornings. | ||
I liked X-Men and Pokemon. | ||
I think Pokemon was on Sunday. | ||
I can't remember in my area. | ||
That's past my time, Pokemon. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
My sons watched. | ||
Oh, that tortured me, going to those Pokemon movies. | ||
But, you know, I stopped watching it after Ash lost the Pokemon League. | ||
And I was really angry, you know, as a little kid, and I was just like, he lost? | ||
Like, did you save any of those Pokémon cards? | ||
Uh, no, I lost them on the train when I was a kid. | ||
Oh, snap. | ||
Uh, yeah. | ||
All my Magic cards, too. | ||
I had Time Vault. | ||
All at once? | ||
All at once. | ||
In a backpack. | ||
They're worth money now. | ||
My son buried them. | ||
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
We got, we have Magic the Gathering cards. | ||
We had a bunch of those. | ||
We played them last, yesterday, actually. | ||
Yeah, with Veradark. | ||
That was fun. | ||
I was reminded how imbalanced the game is. | ||
Yeah, I obliterated, just totally obliterated. | ||
Wiped the floor of them. | ||
Yeah, it was a Power Artifact on a Grim Monolith. | ||
And then I had, yeah, I'll just leave it at that. | ||
So many other things you had. | ||
Your play cards? | ||
Magic or any of that? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
No, Magic's awesome. | ||
Nah, yeah, it's... Poker. | ||
Blackjack. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah! | |
Yeah, Poker. | ||
I like Hold'em. | ||
Hand and Foot, that's a game. | ||
You guys ever play Hand and Foot? | ||
It's like Canasta. | ||
You ever hear of Canasta? | ||
No. | ||
Hand and Foot. | ||
All right, here we go. | ||
Guy Allgood says, Ian, love ya, but you don't know squat about Islam. | ||
Ramadan happens during a lunar month, so it is about 29 days earlier each calendar year. | ||
Stick to what you know. | ||
All religions fast. | ||
Details differ. | ||
Yeah, yeah, I think the word Ramadan means burning or searing heat. | ||
So that made me think that it originated in a time of searing heat. | ||
But like you said, it could be in a different month every year. | ||
I really don't know that much into it. | ||
So thank you for keeping me humble. | ||
JN says, Timcast Crew, how confident are you that there is no infiltrated personnel in the company? | ||
Also, it would be awesome if you guys can invite Amir Sarfati. | ||
If not, look up his videos on YouTube, Behold Israel. | ||
Infiltrated personnel. | ||
No idea. | ||
Don't even know how you would deal with that. | ||
But my thing is basically this, look, I don't have a personal computer. | ||
Like, there's only work machines, and when I get up and do my show, the only thing that I do on it is read the news and then do reporting. | ||
So there's like, not a whole lot. | ||
The issue though with any company is that, you know, people can lie and make stuff up, and they can compromise your security by sharing details that seemingly are innocuous. | ||
And so, you know, I have to constantly remind people, People don't understand this, right? | ||
That if you're working somewhere that's under a security threat and you give someone information as simple as, oh yeah, so-and-so just took the garbage out, that can be used against you. | ||
So when you have people that are like, I don't care, it's meaningless, that causes very serious security problems and we can't tolerate that. | ||
Basically, the issues that we've had with swatting, the only ones that have ever been serious, have been due to information leaks. | ||
So that's the only thing I'm worried about. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, uh, I don't think the commenter is wrong personally, but if you can't do it, you can't do anything about it. | ||
Maybe, maybe you can, uh, you know, write it down on this piece of paper and hand it to me and say, just keep it to yourself. | ||
I don't, I don't keep anything to myself. | ||
I let all my crazy ideas out on here on the show. | ||
You know that. | ||
Cheddar Bob says, it's a big super chat, he says, an escalator can never be broken, just temporarily stairs. | ||
But I'm sorry Cheddar Bob, that's not correct. | ||
It can be broken. | ||
I've seen the videos where the guy walks on this escalator and then starts falling down and then people start getting like crushed and stuff, so. | ||
Yeah, I've seen it break. | ||
Yeah, they break, it's bad. | ||
Alex Hilbert says, I work in military intel. | ||
Most military intel is just telling the commander where enemy tanks are and whatnot, but there are people that use it to get their foot in the door in agencies. | ||
Watch out for them. | ||
All right. | ||
Dan Stanger says, about Kristi Noem, SD governor for president? | ||
I don't know, what do you guys think? | ||
Kristi Noem is a president? | ||
I don't know anything about her. | ||
Yeah, same. | ||
I met her in Florida once. | ||
Presidential? | ||
Uh, I don't, she might have a stab at it, right? | ||
But she's got some competition. | ||
Maybe, you know, how many more terms, how many more years are left in her term? | ||
And is it her first term? | ||
Does she have another one? | ||
unidentified
|
I really don't know. | |
I think more governors should just follow what Governor DeSantis is doing, and they'd be rock stars just like him. | ||
Do what the people want, common sense. | ||
Really, that's what he's doing in Florida. | ||
The Real Hydro says, again with the cliche BS, while you guys may never want to post a picture of your kids, good luck stopping your wife. | ||
Let me just say that... | ||
I'm pretty sure as it pertains to like, I don't know, the three of us here, you know, we're the more cavalier about being publicly exposed and our significant others are substantially more concerned with being private. | ||
So I'm not worried about that. | ||
And it's a, that's like a unified front thing between me and my spouse. | ||
How, what we do with our kids' pictures. | ||
I appreciate the sentiment. | ||
I really don't bother, you know, I post pictures. | ||
I'm not really worried about the public. | ||
It's the babies in this modern age. | ||
It's the babies. | ||
Your kids are a little older. | ||
I'm in grandfather stage. | ||
If my kids ever marry, I don't know. | ||
I doubt it. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm getting really jealous right here. | ||
Born Mexican, raised in America. | ||
Said, Tim, I spent my summers in Mexico. | ||
I had fresh goat milk and fresh grilled goat and beef. | ||
There is nothing like fresh. | ||
Hearing this takes me back. | ||
I am jealous. | ||
But we do have, we're surrounded by farms here. | ||
I drive for five minutes and I can get farm fresh steaks, tenderloins, whatever, bacon, the farm bacon. | ||
The farm milk you can't drink. | ||
It says pet milk and they say, you can't drink it. | ||
Wink. | ||
And then people just drink it. | ||
I've tasted it. | ||
It's pretty tasty. | ||
It's great. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
It tastes very different. | ||
The store-bought milk is weird, pasty garbage. | ||
I remember the first time I had real milk was because I went to Europe. | ||
And American milk is like bland and flat. | ||
Is it the pasteurization that destroys the flavor? | ||
It has to be. | ||
Garbage diet. | ||
And who even drinks milk? | ||
Are people even drinking milk? | ||
I remember when I was a kid, it was like everyone was drinking milk. | ||
Now it's like you rarely see people drinking milk anyway. | ||
I basically chug a whole thing of heavy whipping cream every day. | ||
I'm exaggerating, by the way. | ||
But I use heavy cream. | ||
I don't use milk. | ||
Well, that's good fat for you. | ||
Yeah, I put it in my coffee. | ||
Cut out the sugars, increase the fats, all that good stuff. | ||
unidentified
|
That's good stuff. | |
Did well. | ||
Where are we at? | ||
We'll grab some more Super Chats, as per usual. | ||
Skyler Bertman says, I'd love to see an episode dedicated to picking Ian's brain. | ||
He seems so fluid on everything, I can't figure out what he thinks. | ||
In that regard, I have bad news. | ||
The Bryson Gray episode did not record. | ||
Tragic. | ||
No, it's true. | ||
It actually is pretty tragic, because Bryson and I went for about an hour and a half. | ||
We had an amazing conversation about Judaism. | ||
Kellen, you were here with us for the second half thereabout. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it is quite sad. | |
It wasn't good. | ||
But there was an audio glitch about 15 minutes in, and the setting wasn't right on the OBS. | ||
It didn't come out very good, so I think we're going to scrap it. | ||
Is there anything recoverable? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
An hour and a half of no audio. | ||
So Bryson, I owe you another conversation, man. | ||
That was great. | ||
We'll do it again. | ||
And yes, we should pick my brain more often, I agree. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Well, we never did the you and Seamus conversation. | ||
We still can. | ||
What's going on, Seamus? | ||
Seamus, actually, I think Shane Cashman might be a good guy. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Ooh. | ||
Shane Cashman. | ||
Have you met Shane? | ||
Seen any of his work? | ||
He's like, I mean, the closest thing to Hunter S. Thompson that the world has right now. | ||
But he's like, I think he's clean and sober with a beautiful family and like a normal | ||
guy that was like— If Hunter made it out. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, Hunter made it out. | ||
All right, here we go. | ||
Christopher Kinley says, hey all my band, American Dharma is playing in Baltimore, Maryland at Zen West next Friday, December 16th, doors at 7. | ||
Come on out and rock with us. | ||
I think we're flying to Phoenix. | ||
I think we're going to be in Phoenix for Turning Point that week, so I don't think we'll be around. | ||
Direct flights from Phoenix to my ranch, if you guys want to come out. | ||
unidentified
|
You're welcome. | |
Oh man. | ||
It's going to be, this next week is just, I'm sorry, this month is going to be crazy. | ||
Not only is it Christmas and work slows down because everyone's with family, we're also increasing our workload flying out to Phoenix. | ||
We're going to do this event with Turning Point. | ||
It's going to be awesome. | ||
When is it? | ||
This next week we're here and the week after that we're in Phoenix for the Turning Point event. | ||
It starts on the 17th? | ||
I've been out there with Turning Point. | ||
We're going to do IRL on stage. | ||
Cool. | ||
Yeah, it's going to be awesome. | ||
That'll be great for you guys. | ||
They've got a good bunch of kids in that organization. | ||
It's going to be, I think they said 15,000 people. | ||
It's going to be weird. | ||
I was like, can they handle sitting there for two hours? | ||
Do we just like shoot the shit and talk? | ||
Gives you hope, 15,000 conservative kids getting together. | ||
Yeah, man, that's great stuff. | ||
Yeah, you see these numbers right now with 25,000 people listening. | ||
29. | ||
29 you got. | ||
But then when you see it in real life, like, yeah, whoa. | ||
All right. | ||
In person. | ||
Mit M.T.B. | ||
Fishiak says the merchant of death was entrapped by the D.E.A. | ||
entrapped by the D.E.A. | ||
He had never committed a crime punishable within the U.S.A. | ||
until said entrapment stopped the tyranny. | ||
Well, I don't know a whole lot about that. | ||
So, uh, thanks for the super chat. | ||
Alright, let's, uh, we'll grab one more super chat. | ||
Juan Rio says, dogs with bees in their mouths and when they bark they shoot bees at you. | ||
That's a great Simpsons reference. | ||
My friends, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends. | ||
Become a member at TimCast.com to support our work directly and help us build this parallel economy. | ||
I'm really excited because I think we're going to be launching this cafe, community space, game shop. | ||
In the next few months. | ||
And it's a beautiful place. | ||
It's going to be really, really fun. | ||
I'm really excited for this. | ||
You can follow the show at Timcast IRL. | ||
You can follow me personally at Timcast. | ||
Andrew, do you want to shout anything out? | ||
I just want to wish you luck on that new venture. | ||
And I'll be in Bradford County, Florida, January 4th. | ||
I'll probably be on Fox that day. | ||
They're going to cover the event, Cavuto. | ||
And I'm just happy to be here and shoot the crap with you guys. | ||
It's nice to see some nice young men making a business for themselves. | ||
I wish you all the luck. | ||
What was your Twitter again? | ||
Andrew Pollack, FL. | ||
Andrew, thank you so much for coming on. | ||
That was a really awesome conversation. | ||
My website is LukeUncensored.com. | ||
I did a very interesting video about coffee and a lot of other stuff, including the topic that got everyone talking two days ago on this channel. | ||
You want to learn about that, plus a lot more. | ||
LukeUncensored.com. | ||
Thank you guys so much for having me. | ||
Ian? | ||
Thanks for having me too, man. | ||
Great to see you, dude. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Thanks again for everything, and the expertise on the show, too. | ||
That was really cool. | ||
And people will ask, where can they find your organization? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Do you have a website? | ||
byrna.com, and I suggest to every parent out there, b-y-r-n-a.com. | ||
Go on there. | ||
There's a whole school safety platform that I list for parents to look at their children's | ||
school to make sure it's safe. | ||
And go out and buy some products for your kids. Go buy that BGR, that bad guy repellent. | ||
There's no reason why any college student, after you saw that one, what state was that? | ||
unidentified
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We're legal. | |
Idaho and then that woman too that got on the highway somewhere she got killed | ||
recently but there's no reason why anyone shouldn't be carrying this bad | ||
guy repellent and keep it in on you and and just you know always have your head | ||
on a swivel. We're illegal. Some states are pretty bad with it but but | ||
there's states where you can't concealed carry and those are the states you got | ||
to really look out for your own protection because the least we know | ||
sometimes they're not going to show up. | ||
Thank you so much again for coming, Andrew. | ||
Thank you, guys. | ||
Good to see you, buddy. | ||
unidentified
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Happy Friday, everybody. | |
Thanks for coming on the show. | ||
I will add your Twitter handle in the description of all the clips that I do, if that's okay with you. | ||
That way people can come and find you and go into Burna. | ||
But thanks for letting me hang out, everybody. | ||
It's been a good Friday. | ||
All right, everybody. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. |