Speaker | Time | Text |
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The latest release in the Twitter files from Elon Musk, and it could not have been on a | ||
more perfect day. | ||
A Monday afternoon. | ||
Brilliant. | ||
Because you know I've been whinging about how they keep releasing this stuff on Friday and Saturday. | ||
Well now we got possibly the biggest release, in my opinion, as it pertains to what's going on behind the scenes at Twitter. | ||
Hard evidence. | ||
That the Twitter executives knew Trump did not break any rules, and you can actually see the communications between the staff and the executives as to how to falsely justify removing a sitting president from the social media app. | ||
Of course, world leaders, leaders around the world, were angry that they did it. | ||
They said it was a bad precedent, even leftist ones in Europe. | ||
So seeing this, look, we knew, I say knew, quote unquote, because we knew because we're not stupid, but now we have the communications. | ||
Vijaya Gadde personally intervened after they said Trump broke no rules and said, well, is it coded incitement to violence perhaps? | ||
And they went, oh, oh yeah, that's right. | ||
That's our justification for removing the president from Twitter. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
Plus, Sam Bankman Freed has been arrested. | ||
Okay. | ||
Finally, I guess. | ||
And then we have that story that mainstream media loves more than the actual groundbreaking leaks. | ||
We have Elon Musk was booed while on stage with Dave Chappelle. | ||
unidentified
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All right. | |
All right. | ||
We'll play ball. | ||
We'll talk about that. | ||
Before we get started, head over to TimCast.com. | ||
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Joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more is Phil Labonte. | ||
Hello! | ||
Thank you for having me. | ||
I am Phil Labonte. | ||
I sing for the metal band All That Remains. | ||
I am philthatremains on Twitter and I run my face a lot. | ||
Right on. | ||
Well, thanks for coming, man. | ||
It's gonna be fun. | ||
That was like the most concise and to-the-point introduction. | ||
Normally, people linger, you know? | ||
You know, I didn't want to take up a whole bunch of time. | ||
There's a lot of things that we're gonna talk about. | ||
We can go ahead and talk about Luke's shirt, and then we can go ahead and talk about Ian, and then we can jump right into it. | ||
I know how things go around here, guys. | ||
He's a pro. | ||
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Before that, Phil, can we have a war cry? | |
Just a random scream. | ||
Just a random war cry. | ||
unidentified
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Yes! | |
Yeah! | ||
Thank you, Phil, for joining us. | ||
I really appreciate that. | ||
My name's Luke Godowsky here of WeAreChange.org and today I'm wearing one of my older shirts that reads, I survived 2020 and all I got was masks, riots, a lockdown, more surveillance, the Great Reset, and this shirt. | ||
And you can get this shirt on thebestpoliticalshirts.com. | ||
Because you guys do that, this is the main way to support me. | ||
And thank you so much for doing so. | ||
Ian, how are you doing? | ||
I'm great, man. | ||
I was just watching Phil's war cry. | ||
That was a good war cry. | ||
The camera was moving while it was happening because Tim was getting focused or something. | ||
It sounds like shaking. | ||
Yeah, it was really intense. | ||
Always great to hear your voice, Phil. | ||
Even better in person, my man. | ||
Thank you, sir! | ||
Thanks for coming, dawg. | ||
Kellan, tell me about it. | ||
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That war cry was like a cup of coffee. | |
I'm going to be honest with you. | ||
That woke me up. | ||
Hey, everyone. | ||
It's Kellan. | ||
I'm back again. | ||
Let's get started. | ||
And Luke, did anything happen today that you won't shut up about? | ||
No, I mean, I don't know. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
No, something big did happen. | ||
Elon Musk followed Luke because he agreed. | ||
Probably, I don't know why, but you mentioned you responded to him about the future of humanity and he seems to agree with you. | ||
Someone wrote me, congrats on getting a federal agent assigned to you. | ||
And I responded, like, I already had one for 15 years. | ||
I confronted David Rockefeller and Henry Kissinger. | ||
I think I already have one. | ||
So maybe now I have two. | ||
So wish me luck, guys. | ||
Luke walks in the front door and he's looking around all excited, trying to find somebody. | ||
He's holding up his phone, just with, like, Elon Musk follows you. | ||
It's like, okay, Luke. | ||
Luke, you didn't, you didn't have, like, you had one person before. | ||
Now you actually have a desk. | ||
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Yes. | |
I probably have a, I hope I have a floor. | ||
That's my, that's my, you know, bucket list goal. | ||
That's a big time, that's a big time when you get a whole floor. | ||
The agents are watching this show eating popcorn, being like, they're going to say something. | ||
I imagine that the things that come along with having a floor paying attention to you are bad. | ||
Usually they're attached to drones. | ||
I don't think that I want a floor of the FBI paying attention to me. | ||
They're going to be assessing all the memes? | ||
Yeah. | ||
What does this mean? | ||
Yeah, I'm all set. | ||
I don't want that much attention. | ||
Those shirts are really good. | ||
All right, let's jump to this first story. | ||
We got this one from TimCast.com. | ||
Twitter files executives acknowledged Trump did not violate terms of service, proposed, quote, coded incitement to further violence stipulation. | ||
It was really amazing. | ||
When you read Twitter's public announcement as to why they banned Trump, they say it's all assumptive language like, further incitement and additional violations will mean, and they say all of that because they never once say Trump did break the rules. | ||
But now, we have the internal communications themselves. | ||
Take a look at this. | ||
Some dissenters in Twitter, albeit one, saying, maybe because I'm from China, he says, I deeply understand how censorship can destroy public conversations. | ||
Well, let's jump right to it. | ||
You have this Annika Navaroli who says that they assessed Donald Trump's tweet and found there is no violation of our policies at this time. | ||
Now, that's interesting because this woman later went on to testify for the January 6th committee that she was trying to warn Twitter that they had to do something about this. | ||
Take a look at this. | ||
Twitter employees on the scaled enforcement team suggest that Trump's tweet may have violated Twitter's glorification of violence policy. | ||
Oh, here we go. | ||
There's Vijaya Gade. | ||
Less than 90 minutes after Twitter employees had determined that Trump's tweets were not in violation of the policy, Vijaya Gade, sorry, Vijaya Gade, Twitter's head of legal policy and trust, asked whether it could in fact be coded incitement to further violence. | ||
They knew, and get this, When you go through these messages, the amazing thing is, you can see them lying, and basically, they might as well be saying, guys, make up a reason to ban Trump and get it to me, it's gotta make sense. | ||
It's basically what they're saying. | ||
On January 6th, Trump said, no violence. | ||
He tweeted out, no violence, we're the party of law and order. | ||
On January 8th, he said, 75 million American patriots have voted for me, your voices will be heard. | ||
And then he tweeted again, I will not be going to the inauguration. | ||
They twist themselves into knots to claim that because he said American patriots, he was referring to rioters on January 6th, because he said I will not be there, he was actually saying you have the go-ahead to attack because I won't be there, therefore I'll be safe. | ||
And then Twitter employees said that Donald Trump is now viewed like the head of a terrorist organization, no different than Hitler or the Christchurch shooter. | ||
Therefore, he must be banned. | ||
How insane of a concept is that? | ||
That Donald Trump, regardless of how anyone feels about Donald Trump and the things that he said, the idea that Donald Trump is as bad as Hitler, I can't, I can't take that seriously. | ||
I cannot, I can't, I can't imagine how you sit with someone and say, alright, you said that, and now other things that come out of your mouth, I have to make believe that they're serious too. | ||
I can't even, I can't, it's just so ridiculous. | ||
People are detached from what Hitler was really like. | ||
He was like a war veteran, broken brain. | ||
I think, was it Serge maybe was telling me, he lost a bunch of his friends in the trench. | ||
He went out to run a mission, when he came back they were all dead. | ||
Yeah, nerve gas damage, a whole bunch of drugs, a whole bunch of methamphetamine. | ||
Yeah, there's a big difference between, you know, Donald Trump and his Diet Cokes and McDonald's. | ||
Now again, I'm not the biggest fan of Donald Trump, but the man was actively calling for peace, telling people on Twitter like, hey, you know, doing the opposite of what they accuse him of. | ||
So for them to construed American patriots as some kind of coded incitement is absolutely derangement-type thinking that is nonsensical, that is, as you said, insane! | ||
These people People are absolutely crazy. | ||
They lost their marbles. | ||
They lost the plot. | ||
They don't know what's going on here. | ||
And they will think of any reason just to punish any kind of political speech that they don't like because it triggers them and it activates this kind of fight-or-flight instincts in them that scares the crap out of them. | ||
It's a ball drop by administration at Twitter, because you get, as an administrator, I know this first-hand, doing it at Mines, you get the... faced with the decision, I have to do either what I want to happen, or what is right. | ||
And often, what you want is not what is right, so you have to do what's right, and you don't get what you want out of it. | ||
But here's my question, because I genuinely don't understand, like, how is there a difference between the two? | ||
You know, in my perspective, I don't want anything from any of these people. | ||
If I was a moderator on these platforms, you know, you've got, uh, the Krasensteins are back on Twitter, so... Thank God! | ||
Well, I mean, I gotta be honest, like, their return tweet was actually really funny. | ||
Did you see it? | ||
Well, I didn't, but I know that they're lolcows and I want that sweet, sweet milk. | ||
Yeah, so the Krasensteins were huge Trump reply guys. | ||
They got banned, and I believe they got banned under false pretenses. | ||
And then when they came back, I mean, they're like, they did the whole thing where, you know, I think Don Jr. | ||
blocked one of them, so he was like, free speech in quotes, and I'm like, oh, these are the kind of guys there. | ||
But they posted the ambiguously gay duo from SNL, and it said, the Krasenstein brothers return to Twitter to hunt the ghost of Donald Trump. | ||
I was like, that's actually really good. | ||
That's a good one. | ||
Back in the, when they were, before they got banned, I thought that the ambiguously gay duo was something that was associated with them regularly. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
They made a meme. | ||
They made a good meme. | ||
It's perfect. | ||
If the world wasn't in such dire straits of starvation and, like, falling apart with no electricity and disease and stuff, this would be really funny. | ||
I would be loving all this Twitter drama. | ||
It's so hilarious, because I really love all these people from all sides, you know? | ||
It's just enjoyable to watch everybody go at it if the stakes weren't so high. | ||
So here's my view, I suppose. | ||
They're on the platform, they're back, they should have never been taken off, despite the fact that I'm gonna argue with them. | ||
You know, I don't, for me, doing what right is, is doing right by the users, by people and their human rights, is what I would want. | ||
It's strange to me, but I get it, I guess. | ||
People, like, it's strange, as you mentioned, Ian, that there would be someone sitting there saying, I know the right thing to do would be let this person speak, but I hate them, so I'm gonna remove them. | ||
Like, that's crazy to me. | ||
I'd have situations where I was like, I agree with these politics, but the right thing to do is put it in the politics bucket because it's politics. | ||
Even though I want it to be on the front page and everyone to believe what I believe, so I'd have to choose to do what was right. | ||
When you need to stretch interpretations and make up things that aren't there to justify you shutting down a political voice, maybe you're the bad guy. | ||
Maybe that's when you should kind of reconsider what you're doing here. | ||
But more interestingly, Donald Trump hasn't tweeted yet. | ||
He's been back on the platform for many days. | ||
And we talked about this before on the show. | ||
And I was like, hey, there's a big chance he won't actually be using the platform. | ||
Why isn't he? | ||
He has an opportunity here. | ||
And it looks like Elon Musk is taking his place when it comes to everyone, especially the corporate media focusing and attacking him. | ||
Maybe that's one reason why. | ||
But he's still not back on the platform. | ||
He has an opportunity to reach so many people, to communicate with so many people. | ||
He's still not done yet. | ||
But he already does, though. | ||
I mean, any time he puts up a truth on Truth Social, they make their way to Twitter. | ||
Is Roseanne Barr on Truth Social? | ||
No, what I'm saying is any time that Donald Trump puts a truth up, the truth makes its way over to Twitter. | ||
So it's literally advertising for truth. | ||
Just think about the semantics of it. | ||
Puts a truth up. | ||
I know. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
It's hard to articulate these things without sounding ridiculous. | ||
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It's not the same. | |
He's not talking to governors. | ||
He's not talking to politicians. | ||
He's not talking to celebrities. | ||
He's not firing back against the corporate media like he used to be. | ||
There used to be interactions that were extremely entertaining to watch, where he was able to shine with a lot of his character. | ||
Some people said that it was his Achilles heel. | ||
Some people said it was his greatest strength. | ||
But it was something that, of course, galvanized the conversation. | ||
There's none of that right now. | ||
You know, I see what you're saying. You're right that Elon might be filling the void. I'm looking at his tweets | ||
He had a tweet that at 1.2 million likes about Morocco Morocco, you know talking about football soccer | ||
He had my pronouns are prosecute slash Fauci which got 1.1 million likes a million 1.1 million likes | ||
He seems to have taken the role of the the male strong male that young | ||
Americans or young humans around earth are looking for for inspiration right now | ||
We used to be down on Trump. | ||
That's one, but the corporate media and the establishment need a boogeyman that they go after, that they galvanize all behind, that make them responsible for all the wrongs in the world. | ||
And that person right now is Elon Musk. | ||
They're going after him with anything and everything they can. | ||
Let me address the, uh, you mentioning about Donald Trump fighting back and all that stuff. | ||
I want to pull up this tweet from 2012. | ||
Trump tweeted, The Coca-Cola Company is not happy with me. | ||
That's okay. | ||
I'll still keep drinking that garbage. | ||
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Alright, point made! | |
Take it back right now, Phil. | ||
I'll take it back. | ||
I'll take it back. | ||
That's freaking awesome. | ||
Trump was... That was his platform. | ||
It was fire. | ||
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I'll still keep drinking that garbage. | |
It was, it was fire! | ||
It was, alright, I take it back. | ||
Now he just goes on Trump social and he's like, the rigged tweety tweety and I'm just like... It's like paragraph after paragraph of him complaining about 2020 and it's like, come on man. | ||
That's all Donald Trump does anymore though and I know I'm gonna piss a lot of Donald Trump fans off. | ||
All Donald Trump does is whine anymore. | ||
He is just, even if he was like, Everyone knows that all these bad things happened and I was it was you know taken from me and blah blah blah blah blah whatever he you know whatever his line is even if he said all that stuff and then said but from here on out we're going to focus on the future and yada yada yada he'd be in a he'd be much more | ||
He'd attract more voters. | ||
People are so tired of listening to him complain because even people that were sympathetic to his takes before, people like myself and like, you know, Luke and people that at the very least... I was more critical of him. | ||
Well, what I mean was we're sympathetic to the idea that there is a problem in Washington. | ||
Sympathetic to the idea that there is an establishment that needs someone pushing back against it. | ||
People that were sympathetic to that idea are tired of poor me. | ||
They're just over it. | ||
And I think that they're right to be tired of it. | ||
If his thing is just poor me, then he's not going to get anything done. | ||
He's not going to fix anything. | ||
He's not going to make anything better. | ||
Since Trump was reinstated, I can pull this tweet up, the actual tweet, not an image of it. | ||
where he said federal judge throws out stormy daniel lawsuit great now i can go after horse face and her third-rate lawyer in the great state of texas she will confirm the letter she signed she knows nothing about me a total con he was the president dude that's a massive self own he paid to have sex with that woman why are you calling her a horse face you paid for that a lot of money too you dumb man he paid top dollar It wasn't cheap? | ||
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If you don't like, why did you purchase that product? | |
Like, seriously. | ||
As much as I can be like, you know, I've been critical of Trump's, I guess, decorum in the | ||
past, like, you know, he can be better. | ||
People kept saying this is exactly why they liked him. | ||
Because he would just, he'd just say what he felt like saying, you know? | ||
He'd just say it. | ||
I mean, he was ridiculous, and that was the funny thing about him, but that was also the thing that made people hate him the most, and that was the thing that did align the establishment against him. | ||
I think saying what you think is a valuable ability, but if what you think is evil, horrible, dirty things, then saying what you think is going to be bad. | ||
If it's good things, then saying what you think is going to be good. | ||
I think you're right, but I think delivery has a lot to do with it, because there are plenty of people saying plenty terrible things in a very gentle way nowadays, and it's getting right by people. | ||
Well, let's be honest. | ||
Donald Trump was funny. | ||
He was humorous, and he made us laugh about very serious issues. | ||
Some people he would push back on when they needed to be pushed back on, but when it came to establishment powers, he laughed at them, and that has its own presence that is missing. | ||
So I want to pull up this tweet. | ||
We were just talking about how Elon said my pronouns are prosecute slash Fauci. | ||
And in a lot of ways, Elon's filling that void that Trump filled. | ||
I gotta wonder. | ||
Did Elon look at what made Twitter big, saw that it was Trump, and then said, if I'm going to fix this platform, we need a new Trump-like figure. | ||
So Twitter was actually dying. | ||
Then Donald Trump starts running for president, starts tweeting up a storm, and all of a sudden Twitter just takes off. | ||
Then when Trump is out, Twitter starts going down. | ||
Elon comes in and now he's doing very similar things. | ||
Tweeting things that rile people up, posting memes, responding to people. | ||
He has very much filled that void on Twitter of what Trump was. | ||
So we have this interaction that went viral over the weekend. | ||
Elon Musk said, my pronouns are prosecute slash Fauci. | ||
And Scott Kelly, the astronaut, says, Elon, please don't mock and promote hate towards already marginalized and at risk of violence members of the LGBTQ plus community. | ||
They are real people with real feelings. | ||
Furthermore, Dr. Fauci is a dedicated public servant whose sole motivation was saving lives. | ||
And Elon said, I strongly disagree. | ||
Forcing your pronouns upon others when they didn't ask and implicitly ostracizing those who don't is neither good nor kind to anyone. | ||
As for Fauci, he lied to Congress and funded gain-of-function research that killed millions of people. | ||
Not awesome in my opinion. | ||
Concise. | ||
Holy smokes. | ||
He got the joke in there? | ||
And the pushback of the narrative. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And so Fauci was working with, what, EcoHealth Alliance and, what's that guy's name? | ||
Peter Daszak. | ||
Peter Daszak. | ||
And they were sending money, was it with Fauci's company? | ||
Fauci's... Government. | ||
It was like the National Institute of Health. | ||
Donald Trump approved gain-of-function work and as soon as he did, Dr. Fauci in his office authorized it with EcoHealth Alliance and Peter Daszak, who's alleged to be working with the CIA to do it, in Wuhan, China, specifically at the Level 3 Laboratory of Virology there, where they worked on activated, weaponized coronavirus. | ||
That's all confirmed? | ||
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Yes. | |
Okay, so then when he went under Congress to testify, Anthony Fauci, he testified and said, we didn't do gain-of-function research. | ||
He lied. | ||
He lied. | ||
But he was redefining the word. | ||
He was trying to use semantics. | ||
Hold on. | ||
He outright lied. | ||
Like, it wasn't even that. | ||
He just straight-up lied, and then Rand Paul actually pulled up the study where he's like, it literally says here, gain-of-function. | ||
It's one thing if the study said, we're doing research with viruses to do X, Y, and Z. It's another thing when the study literally says, gain-of-function research. | ||
And in fact, he's like, no, no. | ||
Yeah, Barack Obama specifically banned it, and Dr. Fauci couldn't do it, and the government couldn't do it under Barack Obama because Barack Obama said there's too many inherent risks towards making a virus as lethal as possible. | ||
But the point I wanted to get to with this is how Elon Musk has become a more articulate Trump on Twitter. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Yeah, he's not American, so there's no fear of him running for president, so I don't think the deep states are too concerned with him. | ||
He is an American, but he can't be the president. | ||
He's not a naturalized citizen. | ||
He's a citizen, but he wasn't born here. | ||
He wasn't born in the United States, so he's not available to run for president. | ||
So I think that the establishment may not be nearly as concerned about Elon as they are about Donald Trump. | ||
I don't know. | ||
He started releasing their communications. | ||
And Elon did more when it comes to the battle of free speech than any Republican in the recent decade ever did anything for free speech. | ||
I'm at a crossroads kind of where I'm like, what do we do? | ||
Do we side with the liberal economic order or do we side with the BRICS, the Chinese economic order? | ||
Or is there a third option? | ||
There's another option? | ||
Like just a decentralized world? | ||
You don't have to side with a superpower all the time, Ian. | ||
You don't have to side with an overlord. | ||
You don't need an overlord, Ian. | ||
You don't need a government. | ||
You don't need people telling you what to do. | ||
You could focus on yourself and you could be central. | ||
Anarchism is alright. | ||
I'm real romantic. | ||
I'm really romantic for anarchism. | ||
I'm not the guy that's like, I think that anarchism is the right solution for every... But we should be striving towards it. | ||
But it is a good goal to have. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Voluntary interactions in all human interactions is a good goal to have. | ||
Exactly. | ||
We should always strive for that. | ||
The United States is... People say the United States is gonna... No, no. | ||
The United States are doing things because it's a bunch of... It's not an entity. | ||
It's a bunch of states that have opted to work together. | ||
The federal government is an entity that is independent and separate from the states. | ||
So to say the United States are is no longer accurate because you're talking about what the United States federal government, one entity, is doing. | ||
I see the logic. | ||
This is why Luke likes Ian. | ||
Because Ian gives him a layup. | ||
That's why I'm here, baby. | ||
I'm playing support. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Regeneration. | ||
Healing. | ||
That's what I'm doing. | ||
Ian's like, but which overlord should I pick? | ||
And then Luke does, the more you know. | ||
Big question. | ||
I've been so concerned about the liberal economic order since Zeitgeist, since 2005 and 2006. | ||
And I'm like, oh, the buildings came down in a free fall, near free fall. | ||
What the hell? | ||
So they were like almost my enemy in my mind. | ||
I'm like, how do we, but now I'm seeing the Chinese, there's more than one economic order. | ||
So you want to get a little weird. | ||
Think about this. | ||
And this is something that I've been thinking about that I think Elon Musk is doing. | ||
He's looking at Twitter, Starlink, SpaceX. | ||
It's all one thing for him. | ||
As much as they are different businesses, essentially he is laying the groundwork with those companies to make interplanetary life possible. | ||
And that's they all will they all have a certain synergy together if you can get big heavy stuff off of the planet and get to Mars and you can colonize Mars and you then you could put Starlink you would want to put Starlink around that planet as well because you would want to be able to communicate he all of this stuff works together If you're thinking, how do we make human beings interplanetary, or multi-planetary? | ||
Because obviously the first star is Mars, and then from there on... I don't think... I think Twitter and Starlink are rudiment... I'll stop. | ||
People are saying that Twitter would be a really great way to communicate if you're interplanetary, because there's short burst messages. | ||
You can say a thing, and then after a few minutes it lands, everybody sees it, it lasts forever. | ||
So it's, you know, effective for interplanetary communication. | ||
I disagree. | ||
I think quantum entanglement is how we're going to do interplanetary communication. | ||
Or sympathetic vibration using crystalline communication. | ||
Like you vibrate one crystal in Earth's atmosphere and then the crystal in Mars' atmosphere starts to vibrate too. | ||
It's different than entanglement, but similar. | ||
But none of those things have the technology now. | ||
Elon's taking existing technology and pushing it as far as it can go, seeing How much we have, and really kind of, it's really testing where is the line that the things that we have can perform a task and what needs to be innovated to perform tasks that need to be done to allow for interstellar travel. | ||
I like Elon because he's like, take what we have and start. | ||
He went, he's at least using rockets to get us up there. | ||
It's not cost efficient. | ||
We need an elevator. | ||
We need space elevators. | ||
And this graphene material looks like it'll be the tether that we'll use. | ||
I knew graphene was coming. | ||
Yeah, super strong tether material. | ||
You can send stuff up into orbit all day. | ||
You have like 60 different elevators going up and down all day at this one base station in Mexico or something. | ||
Everyone drink. | ||
He said it. | ||
Also, I found it very interesting to see him tweet after this, Elon Musk specifically saying, quote, the branch covidians are upset, specifically talking about the covid cult. | ||
Of people who wanted lockdowns, who wanted restrictions, who wanted to mask everyone, who wanted a procedure to be forced onto everyone. | ||
They're still pushing for it. | ||
And those people represent a lot of big interests, especially when it comes to Big Pharma, especially when it comes to the corporate media and the government working for Big Pharma. | ||
That is essentially their marketing arm right now. | ||
So seeing him push back against this, he also had a meeting with the Stanford professor that was censored for trying to stop the lockdowns. | ||
He also is talking about starting a new science board on Twitter that's going to be able to judge information and actually call it out for being either honest or dishonest. | ||
So he's pushing back against a lot of powerful people. | ||
And when you truly do look at what he's been doing, especially with the people that he has freed, Especially with the people that he is allowed to still have a voice on a platform that is relevant more than ever. | ||
This is a progression towards free speech, and I think it's the right road to be on. | ||
And if he's unraveling all of this on Twitter, just imagine what's happening at Alphabet, what's happening at TikTok, what's happening on Reddit, what's happening on Facebook, on Instagram. | ||
You can only imagine, as of course, these organizations all work in unison when it comes to stifling dissent, banning people, and censoring ideas that they don't like, which they work in tandem with. | ||
Elon just tweeted, follow and a rabbit emoji. | ||
Yeah, follow the white rabbit. | ||
Down the rabbit hole. | ||
Is that a white rabbit? | ||
Follow the white rabbit. | ||
So he's been talking, yeah, Ian Milestrong says, all the way down the rabbit hole. | ||
I wonder what he's got coming next. | ||
You know what you're saying. | ||
I gotta say one thing in regards to this. | ||
The Twitter files have shown in order to censor someone with more than 10,000 followers and people who are high-profile needed special teams to intervene. | ||
This means that the word groomer, the banning of James Lindsay were direct manual intervention. | ||
This means that they have conversations about James Lindsay and why they banned him and when they suspended my account for having said groomer about an adult man who was showing sexual images to children They locked my account and I have 1.4 million followers. | ||
That means... I would... I would... I'd be willing to bet it was Yoel Roth himself. | ||
Saying, okay, apply a ban on his channel until he deletes it. | ||
How long until you got that one back? | ||
Instant, instant. | ||
It said, if you want to use Twitter, delete this tweet. | ||
And I was like, I gotta be honest, I don't think there's any moral victory in keeping a tweet up that just has a sentence from like three months ago. | ||
So I said, sure, whatever, deleted it, then posted about it. | ||
I thought posting about it was more effective. | ||
But I want to see the communications about their justifications for this, because the other big story here is that Yoel Roth, who was the top guy of their moderation, was actively posting about children, consenting, and other creepy things like this that people have basically pointed to, saying the dude was obsessed with gay porn. | ||
He was posting nonsense about it. | ||
He had a dummy account, a sock puppet, where he would post lewd things, apparently. | ||
And Elon Musk called him out, saying his PhD thesis was arguing for minors to have access to adult sex apps. | ||
So the PhD thesis thing, I read some stuff about it, and the thing that I read, I don't think that he was arguing for underage people to be encouraged to use those things the way that People are saying that he was arguing he was saying look kids Get into apps kids get porn kids get these things so trying to say That they trying to just keep them off doesn't work now I don't think he's right and I disagree with the point that he was trying to make but I don't think that | ||
In his PhD thesis, he was intending to say that we should. | ||
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What was his topic? | |
He did a PhD thesis on the use of Grindr and stuff like that. | ||
I'm not going to come out and say that the dude actively said children should be hooking up with adults on these apps. | ||
The issue is that he said, kids are already on these apps. | ||
Therefore, we need to consider that there needs to be something for them to use, blah, blah, blah. | ||
And I'm like, yeah, that's the erosion. | ||
That's how we get from... If you went back in time 14 years and said, if this bill passes or if gay marriage is legalized, they're gonna be teaching kids how to have gay sex in schools, they'd laugh at you. | ||
I mean, that was a common talking point. | ||
Now... | ||
Project Veritas releases a video showing the dean in a Chicago school, was it Francis W. Parker, talking about how he was there as he brought someone in to hand around adult toys. | ||
And that's a private school, right? | ||
Private school. | ||
And when I talk to these leftists, they're like, well, they're just teaching sex ed, but, you know, queer sex ed. | ||
And I'm like, and there it is. | ||
They said it wouldn't happen. | ||
Of course it happened. | ||
If Yoel Roth is going to come out and say, look, they're already on these apps. | ||
He's basically saying the solution isn't to enforce the policies saying minors shouldn't be using adult hookup apps. | ||
He's saying, well, you know, they're already there. | ||
So, uh, this is the issue here. | ||
And I really want to bring this up because you add that to the fact that when he was running things at Twitter, which essentially he was, he was calling all the shots. | ||
He was deciding who was going to be banned and not banned. | ||
There was children that came to the company and said, Hey, Yes. | ||
My photos were uploaded when I was a child of me committing adult actions. | ||
Please take it off. | ||
Twitter said, no, it doesn't violate our policy. | ||
He kept it on the platform as it was on their servers. | ||
As they were meeting with the FBI weekly. | ||
You're supposed to report those things to the FBI immediately. | ||
They were sitting and chatting with the FBI almost once a week, if not even more. | ||
And you add this to the fact of if you want to go down the rabbit hole, we can. | ||
And Jack Posobiec actually kind of pointed at this and hinted at this too. | ||
There is a possibility that the Feds caught somebody, let's just say someone like Yoel, in a precarious situation, or on a website, and potentially said, hey, we have you on this particular charge, you have to act on our behest, unless we expose you and make you go to jail. | ||
That's one possibility that could be happening here. | ||
I'm not saying that there's actual proof here, but with the way that the FBI has been operating within the United States, it's fair to speculate that this is a major possibility here. | ||
Okay, there is literally nothing that I would put past the FBI. | ||
I have absolutely zero confidence in the FBI as an organization, and I think it's corrupt as it gets. | ||
That being said, I don't know that there is any kind of evidence that makes me think that they have something on Yoel that would make Yoel ignore child pornography. | ||
What about Jeffrey Epstein? | ||
Hold on, hold on, but he was. | ||
He was ignoring it. | ||
I'm not saying that he wasn't. | ||
I'm saying that I don't know that the FBI has anything on him. | ||
So my question is then, why? | ||
Why were they ignoring it? | ||
I just think Yoel's kind of a bad person. | ||
But there was more than just him. | ||
There was a bunch of people that they knew it was happening, and they outright were like, nah. | ||
I can't even speculate. | ||
I can't even... I can't wrap my head around how you justify leaving that kind of stuff up without taking... and not taking time. | ||
Maybe it was like, you complained or person A complained, but they couldn't confirm that it was actually person A? | ||
No, families and children came to them and said, hey, this is me. | ||
This is on my platform. | ||
Yeah, this is fine. | ||
This is totally cool. | ||
And when we look at the FBI, this is not something that's uncommon. | ||
This is something that is common. | ||
Children and other people were coming to them in the 90s saying, hey, there's this guy with the private island who's doing these things to us. | ||
They ignored them for over 30 years. | ||
We know the FBI ignored the Simone Bile, I think his letter name, the Olympic athlete, Simone Biles was his name, I think. | ||
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And there was other people that... And that other gym trainer, yeah, specifically. | |
They went to the FBI, and the FBI didn't do anything. | ||
And Nassar? | ||
Nassler, I think was his name. | ||
Larry Nassler, yeah. | ||
Larry Nassler, there you go. | ||
So yeah, like I said, my faith in the FBI is almost non-existent. | ||
I have no use for it, and I'm the guy that wants to get rid of Abolish cabinet-level bureaucracies. | ||
Abolish cabinet-level bureaucracies. | ||
Get rid of them, a lot of them. | ||
So, I wanted to get that out. | ||
I don't think he needs dirt on Yoel to get him to cooperate. | ||
I think FBI probably reached out and he went, whoa, cool, the FBI. | ||
Yeah, I think he was like, sick, let's do this. | ||
There's the messages in the Twitter files where he's like, definitely not meeting with the FBI right now about Trump. | ||
There was no need to encourage anyone at Twitter to get them to behave in a hostile manner towards Donald Trump or anyone else that they possibly would conceive of as a deplorable. | ||
I have one big regret from that interview I did with Joe Rogan. | ||
And it's that it did not occur to me to ask Vijaya and Jack if they had been in communication with the government at all. | ||
And that was so, I look back on that, so stupid. | ||
Because it should have been question number one. | ||
Okay, you're banning people. | ||
Is the government in any way involved in directing you or advising you or requesting you take anybody down? | ||
Didn't even occur to me to ask that. | ||
Because we weren't, you know, it's the context of the time. | ||
At the time, the big question was private companies and what they were doing. | ||
But now I look back, like, just to get it out of the way, like, just as a formality, government, are they involved in any way? | ||
They probably would have lied, you know. | ||
That would have been good, though. | ||
Get him on tape lying or telling the truth on that one. | ||
You know, in regard to Yoel, before we get too far away from this dissertation that he did, this PhD thesis, I think it's called Gay Data is the name of it. | ||
I think what he was indicating is not—he's saying, like you were mentioning, Tim, earlier, that we have Grindr and kids are getting on Grindr and that's a problem. | ||
How do we solve it? | ||
I think what he was suggesting is that we have an app for minors. | ||
I mean, that's only marginally horrifying. | ||
Contemplate this. | ||
or tinder for minors but where that falls short is like how the hell can you stop adults | ||
from getting in there? | ||
I mean that's only marginally horrifying. | ||
That sounded absolutely... | ||
I mean that's like... | ||
I mean contemplate this, tinder for children. | ||
F no! | ||
But also I'm pretty sure he talks about how Grindr isn't actually a dating app, it's a | ||
How these guys aren't meeting to find love, they're geolocating each other for hookups. | ||
That's what I was reading about it. | ||
I don't want to disparage any of these guys who may be trying to find love, I don't know. | ||
I don't know about, you know, I don't know. | ||
I don't know how it works, but the idea of children being on Tinder? | ||
Like, I've got a Tinder account, and it's a mess out there! | ||
It is craziness! | ||
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And so, no, I can't... Right, this is the point. | |
Recommending. | ||
But they're already using these apps because they want to meet people, right? | ||
We should make apps for them. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
No, you shouldn't. | ||
That's how they move the line. | ||
They keep moving the line. | ||
They're like, well, kids are gonna, yeah, kids are gonna date. | ||
When a kid's in high school, he hangs out with his high school kids. | ||
He hangs out with his classmates and the kids, the chick from seventh period's got gym and he's got homeroom, whatever. | ||
They meet. | ||
They don't go on dating apps and then just start swiping right on random people in their neighborhood. | ||
It's bad enough adults do it. | ||
Yeah, there's no... I can't come up with a justification to give children... That's the erosion. | ||
Look, I'm not giving this guy Yoel the benefit of the doubt at all because the dude literally was the head of this stuff when exploitation was on Twitter and they weren't taking it down. | ||
So my assumption is he must enjoy it. | ||
So I'm not going to give him the benefit of the doubt. | ||
I look at what's going on, and you get people who say something like, oh, a drag show isn't sexualized, and I'm like, they literally take their clothes off, do the splits, drop low, twerk in front of people. | ||
It is. | ||
It is. | ||
To say that a drag show is not sexualized? | ||
Again, that's another thing where it's like, all right, well, I can't seriously engage in a conversation with you because you're not gonna come from a place of honesty. | ||
But then there's no moving forward with solving these issues. | ||
That's such a black pill take. | ||
Well, hold on, like, look, I got... Because no moving forward, like, if you're actually saying no moving forward, no moving forward is real bad. | ||
Have you had a conversation when they left us about this stuff? | ||
I see him on Twitter all the time. | ||
I know they're insane. | ||
They're insane. | ||
There are friends of mine that we've had calm conversations. | ||
There's a friend of mine on Facebook. | ||
People need to understand this because the leftists refuse to acknowledge it. | ||
Luke and I were both at Occupy Wall Street. | ||
3,000 people follow me. | ||
They're all leftist Occupy people. | ||
When the death threats came in, I get a message from a few people. | ||
They're on the left, and they're like, look, man, I know we disagree. | ||
I disagree with the things you've said, but this is wrong. | ||
We obviously don't want this. | ||
Same regular people don't want it. | ||
These are the kind of messages I get. | ||
I then ask them. | ||
I'm like, here's the video from Project Veritas. | ||
This teacher was giving these things to kids. | ||
And the response from them is, this is acceptable and fine because it's sex ed for kids on queer issues. | ||
And I'm like, you see, that's it right there. | ||
Look, if you go If you want to justify going to, like, sixth graders, 12-year-olds, and being like, here's anatomy and biology design, and you don't explain to them how to do anything, you just say, like, you know, here's, like, what happened with me when I was in grade school is they brought all the boys in one room, all the girls in another room, they said, here's the anatomy, here's how it works, here's sex ed, and that was it. | ||
What they're doing now is, under the guise of LGBT plus curriculum, handing children butt plugs. | ||
And other adult toys and explaining spitting and lubing. | ||
Okay, that is well beyond sex-ed. | ||
That is something different. | ||
They're not explaining to them how to reproduce or how the organs work. | ||
Sex-ed used to mean... It's kink class. | ||
Yes, sex-ed used to be anatomy and technical understanding of the function and operation as opposed to now it seems like these classes are more about... Kink class. | ||
And the dangers. | ||
Well, I remember they told you, hey, you could get these diseases, you could get pregnant this way. | ||
There wasn't a conversation in like a step-by-step program on how to have butt sex, right? | ||
I don't remember that in high school! | ||
But the realism is that the sex ed is happening on the internet on porn websites, whether we want it to or not. | ||
Any kid that wants to find it It is, which is readily available, which is free, and it's out there, which should make people question, why is it so readily available? | ||
Why is it so... Why is there so much out there? | ||
Why is it so free? | ||
I want to take it down a bigger level. | ||
I want to say one thing to that. | ||
Even if you're right, that doesn't mean that the state is in a position to say, well, Your kids probably have cell phones or their friends have cell phones that can access pornography on the internet. | ||
So because of that, we're just gonna go ahead and step on in here and insert ourselves into this aspect of your child's life. | ||
They don't have any right to do that just because there's pornography on the internet. | ||
And to make that leap, like that's not a logical leap that says, oh, because there's porn, then the state must do this thing. | ||
That is not an argument for it, in my opinion at all. | ||
Parents need to make sure their kids aren't going on these websites, don't have phones. | ||
But this is a problem with more fatherless homes, with more parents not being able to be there for their children. | ||
It's less for a lot of these devices to raise them. | ||
And if you look at the devices that a lot of the children surround themselves with, whether it's Instagram or TikTok, what's on those platforms? | ||
What is suggested to you? | ||
What is on the explore options for a lot of these apps and applications? | ||
What is it? | ||
It's people shaking their asses. | ||
Big fat booty hose. | ||
The thumbnails on Instagram, it's like always some kind of suggestive thing. | ||
I think it was Alex Stein. | ||
I think it was him. | ||
He pulled up Instagram and there was a video of like a woman on her knees sticking her tongue out | ||
and it was like that when you played the video, it was her like kneeling down and tying his shoe | ||
or something. | ||
Yeah, so to take it to another level, right? | ||
So we know the FBI plays a key critical role on big tech social media platforms, deciding who stays, deciding what gets played, what gets talked about, what gets trending in the algorithm. | ||
I would even go as far as to say their involvement revolves around all those issues. | ||
Especially when it came to the banning of people with all these companies working in unison. | ||
So I think that it even goes even further with them dictating a lot of this content and providing a lot of this over-sexualization of children, which is essentially destroying people's childhoods. | ||
And robbing them of their innocence, but also creating a situation where they're less likely to have families in the future, essentially destroying a strong family unit, essentially making individuals that are more easily to be conquered and more easily to be enslaved with this larger social engineering which is happening on all these apps. | ||
I heard as a pushback to the people that are complaining about drag shows, a lot of people are, and you might say the left, people on the left, the counter is like, well what about beauty pageants? | ||
What about seven-year-olds with makeup? | ||
That too! | ||
I think so too! | ||
That red makeup and lipstick is supposed to simulate a woman that's ready to have sex. | ||
Jordan Peterson talked about this extensively, and he made a lot of good references and points, especially when it came to a lot of the makeup that is suggestive of procreation. | ||
Let's just be honest here. | ||
Let's just be real with each other. | ||
So putting that on small children, putting them in heels, is something that, again, should be pushed back on. | ||
Even if it's those beauty pageants, absolutely push back on them immediately, because they're just strange. | ||
I never understood why they're doing this, and it's just as bad. | ||
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We've moved on so fast from this is not happening, this is not happening, to this is happening, so what? | |
It's okay. | ||
That's the meme. | ||
It's not happening. | ||
Okay, it's not happening, but if it was, then it would be fine. | ||
Now it's happening, it's a good thing. | ||
So on and so forth. | ||
Is it because the kids that were 15, 5, 6 years ago were getting, watching porn, they think, okay, I guess it's normal to see this stuff, now they're 22, or whatever the ages are, and they're making decisions, and they're like, yo, I was exposed to it, I'm 13, I'm fine. | ||
So... | ||
Maybe, but are you? | ||
Everyone thinks they're fine! | ||
You're not fine! | ||
You're a pigsty, I'm sure of it! | ||
We've got issues, all of us. | ||
We've got breaking news. | ||
This is from the Postmillennial. | ||
Twitter has disbanded its infamous Trust and Safety Council. | ||
Huzzah! | ||
As Twitter moves into a new phase, we are reevaluating how best to bring external insights into our product and policy development work. | ||
As a part of this process, we have decided that the Trust and Safety Council is not the best structure to do this. | ||
Ooh, there you go. | ||
Well, to be fair, it wasn't very trustworthy and it didn't keep a lot of people safe. | ||
Yeah, double speak all the way. | ||
It didn't do any of that. | ||
It just banned political speech. | ||
That's exactly what it did. | ||
Also, it's very curious to see a lot of these members of the Trust and Safety Council kind of publicly resign after Elon Musk specifically said that he's going to be going after child exploitation and adult content on their website. | ||
A little curious about how that happened. | ||
Do you think that they were asked to keep it on as like honeypot stuff? | ||
That crosses my mind. | ||
There is some speculation, but it's all speculation. | ||
But the Daily Wire also reported that there was allegedly 10 million views of child adult content material that was watched on the old Twitter. | ||
10 million views. | ||
That's a lot of views. | ||
But what, this is confusing. | ||
This is what the Daily Wire is reporting. | ||
There's a big difference between a nine-year-old that's, you know, some horrible thing is happening and a 17-year-old. | ||
There's a big difference. | ||
In some states, 16 is the age of consent. | ||
Yeah, but because of the fact that you can't make a law that is arbitrary, you have to have a dividing, you know, you have to have some point where it says, okay, this is where we make the decision. | ||
You can't have laws that are arbitrary like that, so you have to say someplace, and 18 is as good a place as any, and I think that the argument should only be going for older, just because of the way that the brain develops, you know? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I think that people that say, oh, we should make sure that the age to drink and buy a gun and to vote and all that stuff is the same, I don't see why they think it should be made younger. | ||
That just doesn't make any sense to me at all. | ||
Well, they've been trying to get everything. | ||
They want the voting age to be 16. | ||
Democrats. | ||
Because low information voters is how they win. | ||
Then you get 16-year-olds, you get universal mail-in ballots, and then there you go. | ||
Simple as that. | ||
Well, they eliminated the Trust and Safety Council. | ||
They say, our work is to make Twitter a safe and formative place. | ||
We'll be moving faster and more aggressively than ever before. | ||
And we will continue, oh, say we will be moving faster, and we will continue to welcome your | ||
ideas going forward about how to achieve this goal. | ||
We'll also continue to explore opportunities to provide focused and timely input into our | ||
work, whether through bilateral or small group meetings. | ||
I don't think that there's a whole lot of argument about the fact that Twitter is far | ||
more responsive now to most people's inquiries than they ever were before Elon Musk. | ||
Yeah, he's on the platform. | ||
It's not like you could tweet at Jack and expect Jack to do anything, or you could tweet at, you know, Parag and expect Parag to do anything. | ||
They would just ignore you. | ||
He's responding and even explaining a lot of his unpopular actions, like not allowing Alex Jones on the platform. | ||
He at least gave an explanation. | ||
We didn't like it. | ||
It wasn't a good explanation. | ||
But would we get that ever with Google? | ||
No. | ||
With YouTube? | ||
Yeah, I love when the CEO's involved. | ||
But at the same time, I'm concerned about centralized systems, because we were saying earlier, it's cool that Tesla and SpaceX and Twitter are coming together to form this uber mind of communications and travel, but if the FBI hacks into it, if some foreign government hacks into it, if someone buys the companies away from Elon and then wants to just own humanity, so we gotta decentralize these systems, these software codes, get it out of any individual's hands as fast as possible, because I do not like one guy making the decision of who gets to stay and who has to go. | ||
I gotta push back on that, because Elon Musk as the one guy that owns Tesla and Starlink and Twitter and stuff, that's fine because the option is government, which is run by bureaucracies and is not responsive. | ||
And all the problems that we had with Twitter You get from government because there's nameless, faceless bureaucrats that literally comprise the entrenched bureaucracy or the deep state. | ||
You either get So Sargon of Akkad, Carl Benjamin has been talking about this idea, which I forget the way that he articulates it, but it's essentially where one guy is in the right place at the right time and is the right person to do something. | ||
And it's kind of like a convergence of The conditions and the person. | ||
And without the person, it doesn't happen. | ||
And Elon Musk is kind of the person that has found himself in the position to do the things that he's doing. | ||
It's not just that... If it wasn't for the fact that it's Elon Musk doing it, it wouldn't happen. | ||
It's not like it's replaceable. | ||
It's not like anyone could be there doing it. | ||
So the idea of breaking it up and having other people handle it, if you break it up and have other people handling it, there's no guarantee that it gets done because there's not one person with the vision and the drive to push to make this thing happen. | ||
And sometimes it comes down to one individual pushing with the drive and everyone coalescing around him or people coalescing around that idea, but it's that one person pushing that really kind of becomes the catalyst. | ||
And we could argue that Twitter is just acting as an arm of the government with the FBI getting involved in manipulating the public perception on things with cyber command operations, psyops, etc. | ||
It's just essentially a function of government. | ||
I mean, I'm sympathetic to the The intent behind what you're saying, which is you want to make sure that an individual doesn't become corrupt and derail progress towards a certain goal, but I think that having the option between the right person pushing for an idea or for a result versus a bureaucracy trying to come up with a result, I feel like the right person | ||
is the better option. | ||
Not to say that every individual is the right person. | ||
Just because you have a person in a position that's, you know, has authority doesn't mean that that person's going to get it done because charisma and the ability to work with people and so many other things go into it. | ||
That's why it has to be the right person. | ||
But I think that the right person is better than a bureaucracy. | ||
The two people I think of in this example would be Julius Caesar and George Washington. | ||
Both of them, ultimately, ultimate military power behind one man. | ||
Washington, it was a group of thinkers that said, hey, George, you're going to take this for now. | ||
Yeah. | ||
George was able to let it go. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And we need people like that. | ||
I think Caesar was not. | ||
I think that that's that's I think you're right. | ||
I think that that is a very wise take, because it is it does the matter of the person. | ||
And you're right, because Washington is the guy that said, I have to get I want to give this power back. | ||
And I think you're right. | ||
Yeah, yeah, could have either been stolen from him, he held onto it, someone could have assassinated him and become the next king, or any number of god-awful things could happen if he tried to hold onto the power. | ||
I understand what you're saying, that one guy can move quickly. | ||
You can get a lot done. | ||
Authoritarian regimes, including corporations, move quickly because there's one guy making the decision, or girl. | ||
But the danger of that for the social public square, ooh, I don't like that. | ||
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I don't see the danger of Elon, though, because someone tweeted at him and said, hey, I hope SpaceX and Tesla are running well with how much time you spend on Twitter. | |
He's like, actually, the teams that are in place are really good at what they do. | ||
So he's already kind of passing the torch down. | ||
He kind of just oversees and puts his name on the companies. | ||
Yeah, plus, he's gotta post spicy memes, way more important than rockets. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Go Morocco. | ||
Someone's gotta milk the log cows. | ||
The meme of the digging up Twitter secrets in the grave, you saw that he posted that? | ||
Yeah, that was pretty good. | ||
Look, every segment we've had so far has been about Elon. | ||
He's just the main character at this point, I guess, isn't he? | ||
Unfortunately, he's the guy that's especially considering it's the holidays. | ||
He's the guy that's driving the national conversation and thankfully things have kind of chilled out in the Ukrainian war and I say thankfully because that means fewer people are dying every day when there's less fighting and that to me is good you know and so I guess that Elon Musk is the thing to talk about now. | ||
It didn't chill out. | ||
It just kind of temporarily stopped because of the winter. | ||
It stopped some of the fighting, but they're still using drone-on-drone warfare, which is absolutely crazy. | ||
I just gotta give a shout-out to the latest episode of Rick and Morty. | ||
I don't know if you guys watch it, but there's the president's in it, and he makes a joke where something happens and he goes, well, we'll just blame it on the Saudis. | ||
They do this kind of thing. | ||
They've done this kind of thing. | ||
They did do this thing. | ||
It was just so well done. | ||
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I was like, that's exactly what happens. | |
They did do this thing. | ||
I wouldn't mind seeing a meme of Elon in a graveyard cross-legged meditating and all the spirits of the ghosts are coming out of the graves of all this Twitter. | ||
You heard it on the internet. | ||
I think it's fair to say he is the new mass formation psychosis target. | ||
He's the one that the corporate media is They're centralizing their attacks against. | ||
They're attacking them more than they are actually covering the corruption that was at Twitter, that was at the FBI, which is very telling. | ||
They're trying to make Yoel some kind of victim here. | ||
They're trying to make Dr. Fauci some kind of victim here. | ||
These are not actual victims here. | ||
Yoel Roth literally tweeted about how high school teachers calling for them to have meaningful consent with their teachers. | ||
Like, come on, Dr. Fauci. | ||
Teachers with their teachers. | ||
He asked if they could. | ||
He said they should. | ||
But how do you even ask if they could? | ||
The answer is just no. | ||
So instead of asking, you just say, they can't. | ||
Why would you be even asking that specific question? | ||
I agree. | ||
But you see, hold on, you see the game he's playing. | ||
A regular person doesn't ask, they just say, a child can't consent to be with their teacher. | ||
He goes, but can they? | ||
No! | ||
Literally the only reason that I say that is so that way, like tomorrow or in a couple days when someone's like, oh, blah, blah, blah. | ||
Like I can say, no, like I said, You know, I said the actual thing and then I can be like, you know, but why the hell does he say it? | ||
That's an example of doing what's right versus doing what you want. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Like sometimes you just got to acknowledge the objectivity of these psychopaths. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Or acknowledge the fact that he's, that he's, you know, that he's, he might be playing word games or whatever. | ||
And, you know, it might be just the way that he's articulating stuff. | ||
Let's talk about this next story here. | ||
The headline from CNBC is, Elon Musk is the most famous guy in the world. | ||
He's dominated every story. | ||
He's the main character. | ||
It's all we can talk about. | ||
No one can talk about anything else. | ||
Anyway, the actual headline is, Elon Musk booed by crowd after Dave Chappelle brings him on stage at comedy gig. | ||
Okay, he was booed. | ||
He said it wasn't that many people. | ||
I don't think it was, you know, some people are saying he was mercilessly booed offstage. | ||
I think the bigger story is, you know, Elon Musk figured out how to make himself famous, and that's for damn sure. | ||
He figured out how to make himself the richest guy on the planet, and then he was like, now I'll be the most famous guy on the planet, and that's what's happening. | ||
Dave Chappelle, what did Dave Chappelle even bring him out for? | ||
Chappelle apparently joked, you can't boo him because he bought me a jet pack for Christmas, or something like that? | ||
Is that how Elon got on stage with Dave Chappelle? | ||
Maybe. | ||
He led them on as the richest man on earth, and everyone booed. | ||
I think maybe because of that, because they're, you know, envy and anger. | ||
But also, I don't think he's the richest man on earth. | ||
I think maybe on the books. | ||
Yeah, he is. | ||
Well, on the books. | ||
Oh, yeah, Putin. | ||
I'm talking like, yeah, Putin, you got Saudi princes that are worth trillions. | ||
I mean, what's the Rothschild family worth right now? | ||
The Clinton Global Initiative, Bill Gates, the Rothschilds. | ||
I read an article that said Evelyn Rothschild was worth $240 trillion in 2011. | ||
I read that article. | ||
Well, the real richest people will never be known to the general public because they keep their wealth secret. | ||
They don't want to be on the Forbes list. | ||
They don't want to be known to everyone, and they have a lot of assets and resources, and they have more convincing ways of hiding their money and their assets in other ways that people can't track down to actually see where they link from. | ||
There's a reason journalists that broke the Panama story were essentially assassinated and exterminated. | ||
And that was just one small banking institution. | ||
Imagine all the international global institutions where the big powerful people hide all their money. The King of England, I'm sure. The | ||
Panama Papers. Are you familiar with them? | ||
I'm familiar with them. I kind of thought that they came out and like nothing, like people were | ||
like, oh yeah, they, you know, kind of like what Chappelle said, oh, you know, all the stuff that | ||
you think they're doing in that house, they're doing. And everyone's just like, oh, well, I guess | ||
that they just do it. And then everyone just went back to doing whatever they normally do. | ||
Radio silence on the Panama Papers. | ||
After two weeks, it went back underground. | ||
You said people got killed that exposed it? | ||
Yeah, the journalists. | ||
How many people? | ||
Are you familiar? | ||
I knew nothing about that. | ||
Yeah, that's pretty telling. | ||
So, I mean, global oligarchy running bank accounts out of Panama, basically tax-free, I think is the idea. | ||
Well, the real people hide their money, right? | ||
And they never brag about it. | ||
They never highlight it. | ||
They never show it to everyone. | ||
They never try to show off. | ||
They never try to be in the headlines. | ||
And there's a lot of those families out there that we have no idea about, which I think is important. | ||
It's important to note here. | ||
But Dave Chappelle also made a very interesting comment, trying to joke about the situation, saying that it was only people in the poor section that were booing him. | ||
And then Elon Musk kind of responded, saying that he's rich, and then said that famous slogan by Dave Chappelle, which he did on his show, saying, you know, female dog, which kind of came off a little weird. | ||
Family friendly. | ||
Well, no, apparently someone asked Chris Rock to say it. | ||
And then someone told Musk to say it or something. | ||
The funny thing about this is there's a conspiracy theory now on the left where they're like, Elon is deleting the video because it shows him being booed. | ||
And it's like, yo. | ||
It's everywhere. | ||
Twitter is deleting the video because it's a DMCA violation. | ||
You can't film comedy specials at events. | ||
It's like being in a movie theater and filming. | ||
You can't do it. | ||
That's why they're deleting it. | ||
You don't hear, you never hear, unless there's something going on, like that little thing, you don't see comedy events. | ||
You'll see clips of concerts and stuff like that, and bands playing songs, but it's not like you see the jokes from, it's always the Netflix specials at the end when they've already come up with, they've gone out and toured and selected the best jokes and put them together so that way they can shoot the comedy special. | ||
The clips you see are the comedy special of their best jokes and stuff. | ||
Yeah, with some comedy specials, you have to leave your phone at the door. | ||
You don't even let them, they don't even allow you to come in there with your phone. | ||
They put it in a bag. | ||
That's like, I get it, man. | ||
But it's stupid because, bring two phones. | ||
Like, if you want to do it, you can. | ||
And all that really happens, that is, people can't access their phone to call 9-1-1 in an emergency. | ||
So it's kind of like, I think it's kind of dumb. | ||
Do you like try and limit the crowd at all the remains concerts? | ||
Never. | ||
No, we're, we've always been a very, uh, we've always been one of the bands that's like, we want people to experience the show the way that they want to. | ||
There's a lot of artists that are like, Oh, you know, put your phone down and be present and dah, dah, dah. | ||
It is not in any way going to affect my show if you hold your phone up because If you watch people that are filming, they are almost never filming or never watching what they're filming. | ||
They're holding it up and they're looking at, at least me, if I go in front of them and they're holding up their phone, they're not looking at their phone, they look at me because I'll put my hand out or something and so it becomes an interaction. | ||
And you know why people film most of these shows, at least my opinion of it is? | ||
It's not to share, it's so that they can remember it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And so they can pull up their phone and be like, that was awesome, dude, I remember being there. | ||
But a lot of people have this idea that people go to shows to hold their phones and there's like a joke where it's, what are you gonna do, no one can see it, you're gonna share that video and no one's gonna even... No, it's for the people. | ||
It's for the people who were there to never forget it. | ||
They're taking a piece of the show with them. | ||
Or fireworks. | ||
It'd be interesting if we could record each other at the shows, and then you'd get my video of you, I'd get your video of me. | ||
I've got oodles of recordings of other people at shows. | ||
I mean, we had people filming our entire—the last tour we did was this spring. | ||
We went out for the Fall of Ideals anniversary tour, and we were out for two months, and we had a film crew with us the entire time, and we were filming and taking video and stuff. | ||
Plenty of video of people filming our guys Filming them you ever take camera out on stage and film the audience and all that live Instagram all that 360 cameras on the stick and stuff. | ||
So yeah, we've done a bunch of that stuff It's super cool a bunch of that's on our tick tock the it's tick tock comm slash all that remains or whatever I thought this Elon thing was kind of blown out of proportion. | ||
The booing kind of thing was blown out of proportion. | ||
It didn't feel like the crowd was booing. | ||
It was a lot of mixed emotions. | ||
Did you guys see the video? | ||
Elon said it was like 10% booing. | ||
And then the left started saying, like, haha, he's lying. | ||
And it's like, or I don't know, why would he lie? | ||
And they're like, he was booed off stage. | ||
He's like, no, I actually just stood there for a little while. | ||
Like, what did you think he was coming on stage to do anyway? | ||
Yeah, I mean, it's not like he's going to get up there and transform into a Tesla or something. | ||
Yeah, or even make jokes. | ||
That's why I'm like, you know, it's kind of weird that he called him on stage in the first place, but he did. | ||
Yeah. | ||
What do you expect from Elon? | ||
But they wanted this narrative. | ||
unidentified
|
This is why I was complaining about... Crap out of battery. | |
Twitter file released on Saturday evening. | ||
So we're at Korean barbecue having dinner. | ||
And I'm like, it's not it's not about the fact that it's like the weekend. | ||
It's about dinner time. | ||
You know, when Elon did the Twitter spaces on a Saturday, I was at Whole Foods doing my grocery shopping, and I'm listening the whole time. | ||
And I'm like, and I'm tweeting, I'm like, this is big news. | ||
But they put out a story, the Twitter files, that was like medium-tier news on a Saturday during dinnertime, and it's like, okay, now you've just killed that story. | ||
It wasn't the strongest Twitter file to begin with. | ||
They put out at a time to ensure nobody would ever see it and remember what it was. | ||
And then, the next day, Elon goes on stage with Dave Chappelle. | ||
If you wanted to make sure a story dies, that was a masterclass. | ||
And now, what were Saturday's Twitter files again? | ||
Uneventful. | ||
I have no idea. | ||
I didn't look at them until later. | ||
So they could have waited for that news cycle for today. | ||
We wouldn't have had as big of a news story, I guess, because the next one they released was bigger. | ||
My next question is, did you catch the Twitter files on Saturday? | ||
How were they? | ||
I vaguely remember them, because we were sitting down, it was at 7 something, it was like 6 30, we're sitting down to have dinner on a weekend, and then, you know, I'm checking my phone all the time, and I'm reading through it, and we're waiting for food, and I'm reading through these things, and then, you know, look, try and remember what you can when you are eating dinner. | ||
That's the thing. | ||
It's not just about being on the weekend. | ||
Like, when, like I mentioned, when Elon did the Twitter spaces on the weekend, it was a huge story, what he was talking about. | ||
So, you know, we were all there for it. | ||
Huge, huge Twitter spaces, 100,000 people. | ||
But when they put out a smaller story on a Saturday at dinner time, it's just like, you've just executed the story. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
It was a nice dinner we had, though. | ||
So good. | ||
unidentified
|
Did you stay off your phone? | |
Garlic pork belly? | ||
No, I was kind of reading halfway too, but it was kind of difficult because you're there at the table and you got really good food and you're just trying to relax and, you know, sometimes you just can't be glued to the phone all the time. | ||
And usually that's the weekend is when people usually put down the phone and when people, especially, you know, in the Jewish faith, kind of sit down with their family members and hang out with them and spend time with family and friends. | ||
Shabbat? | ||
The big issue for me is I would love nothing more than to work on weekends, and I used to. | ||
But anybody who works in PR, marketing, media, otherwise, knows it's everyone else who will not listen to a word you have to say on Saturday. | ||
It's Saturday, so I say, okay, fine. | ||
I'm gonna go get dinner. | ||
I put out a video on a Saturday, it's the views are the lowest of any day of the week. | ||
That's marketing 101. | ||
PRs, if you want the big press release, it's Tuesday at 11. | ||
Tuesday at noon or something like that. | ||
So Monday, it was Monday I think at 1pm. | ||
That's a really, really great time to drop a story. | ||
So we got it. | ||
I enjoy the break. | ||
I enjoy being able to clear my mind, not think about anything political. | ||
I might share a meme or two, but other than that, I'm like, I don't want to get into this kind of larger political, social psychology of what's really going on. | ||
I just kind of want to get away from it all, disassociate, and take a breather. | ||
Yeah, you got to let your body and mind rest. | ||
It's similar with singing. | ||
I was giving it my all a couple days ago, I was telling you. | ||
And then you just got to let the next day, you just got to do nothing. | ||
Just like meditation. | ||
Because this is my life. | ||
As soon as I wake up, all the way till I go to sleep, like six days a week. | ||
So Saturday is my only day off. | ||
So I try to enjoy it as much as I can. | ||
You're talking about singing. | ||
Singing, there's a physical aspect with singing too. | ||
There is a certain amount of recovery that your vocal cords need. | ||
So, it's not just a matter of mental or psychological tiredness from that kind of stuff. | ||
It really matters how much effort you're putting in or how much work you're putting on your vocal cords. | ||
Do you eat oil? | ||
And I think your brain also works in the same way. | ||
Where you gotta relax, you gotta meditate, you gotta take some time off. | ||
Because if your brain is always running, running, running, running, but also during the day, having some meaningful time to be able to sit down and being quiet, I think is one of the most underrated, super powerful actions that many human beings should be taking, but sadly aren't. | ||
And there isn't even a moment in time where a lot of people have quiet. | ||
They always have something playing in the background. | ||
They always have some kind of TV on or some kind of YouTube video on. | ||
And I think that is also distracting people from the larger power of what is now. | ||
Also, gut. | ||
I think your gut needs a rest from time to time. | ||
That's why fasting has been found to be so beneficial and good for people. | ||
Just like the muscles have neurons and they need to rest. | ||
The brain has neurons. | ||
The stomach has neurons. | ||
The heart has neurons. | ||
The heart needs a rest from time to time. | ||
Probably stress. | ||
Just turn your heart off. | ||
See what it lacks. | ||
But I think cutting out food for a while... I don't want to give my heart any rest. | ||
I'm going to push back on that idea. | ||
I don't want my heart to stop. | ||
Well, it needs... No, no, not stop. | ||
unidentified
|
Keep going. | |
It needs to be rested. | ||
Go slow a little bit. | ||
Yeah, right, just chill out. | ||
I think that's dietary. | ||
Let's jump to this big news, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Sam Bankman Freed arrested in the Bahamas. | ||
I am astounded that it took this long. | ||
Apparently Democrats were like, well, we're not going to go after him. | ||
It's like, okay, we get it. | ||
He gave you money. | ||
Unbelievable. | ||
Unbelievable. | ||
Martin Shkreli said that it could take them up to five years to prosecute. | ||
So he was like, a couple days ago, I think on his YouTube channel, was saying it's not that big of a deal. | ||
They took four years and nine months to go after him, is what he was saying. | ||
But then the next thing I saw is he's arrested. | ||
How long did it take him to go after Bernie Madoff? | ||
Good question. | ||
Right away. | ||
As soon as they found out, but he was doing that. | ||
How long was he doing the scam? | ||
Exactly, but we found out about this scam a while. | ||
They had a chance to lawyer up. | ||
They had a chance to destroy evidence. | ||
They had a chance to cover up their tracks. | ||
They had a chance. | ||
They lawyered up with Ghislaine Maxwell's lawyers, okay? | ||
So they have some of the most powerful attorneys in the world right now working with them as they had an advantage to be able to do a lot of crazy stuff that they could have hidden so much. | ||
They could have covered up so much. | ||
They could have got the lava bit. | ||
They could have got so many different Actions that could have derailed the larger possible justice here. | ||
And I truly do believe that it's only because of the pressure, only because of the coverage of independent journalists, specifically on Twitter, that made them do something. | ||
And if it wasn't for this particular pressure from Twitter, from independent media, I wouldn't see them doing anything. | ||
It was broken by a Twitter user, wasn't it? | ||
I think it was CryptoBitBoy or something was the guy's name. | ||
There was a Twitter user that just followed some leads or whatever and started exposing it and started really putting out the information on Sam Bankman Freed. | ||
It was like Autism Capital also did a bunch of good work on it. | ||
And it was like these independent Twitter users. | ||
And Elon started picking the independent Twitter users up. | ||
That's the internet, man! | ||
Come on! | ||
I love it. | ||
Shout out to Autism Capital. | ||
Autism Capital exposed that, like, right when the crash was happening, there was a hack at FTX and $300 million in crypto disappeared off their network. | ||
I want to know where that money went. | ||
Find that money and bring it back. | ||
I think that Sam should have to... I don't want to see him get his life annihilated. | ||
I want to see him pay those people back. | ||
Yeah, but how? | ||
Raise- crowdfund the money. | ||
You know people, obviously, Sam. | ||
Like, if he knows enough people that he's paying hundreds of millions to, like, Democratic donors- find for the democracy to get back to Sam. | ||
Pay him back. | ||
The thing is, like, I don't know- well, I mean, I don't know- I don't know enough about the actual- the actual scheme that he had going on to- to speak on it, so I can't really say. | ||
But I just can't imagine him- I know that he was lying about having the money, so I can't imagine him being able to produce the money that he stole. | ||
I- I just don't see how anyone would- would- I mean, who's gonna fund him? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I suggested, what if we use tax money? | ||
And everyone's like, you statists! | ||
You communists! | ||
unidentified
|
No! | |
I was like, okay, what if we do a crowdfunding campaign to help these people out? | ||
Because there's people that lost their last $70,000. | ||
It was all on FTX, and now it's at zero. | ||
Yeah, I lost a hundred bucks. | ||
I was mad. | ||
Some people lost everything. | ||
What happened? | ||
You just logged into your account? | ||
I tried to take my hundred dollars out. | ||
And it's so similar to the Great Depression, what happened when all these margin calls got pulled back, all these people were investing on margin loans, and then when the crash happens, they call your margin, they take your money to pay off the undervalued asset or whatever. | ||
And these people, it's a different situation because he was actually, it looks like he was advertently frauding his investors. | ||
He was telling them, your money's going to be safe in this account at FTX, but what's happening is they're funneling it to Alameda Research and then using that to invest. | ||
Wait until people find out about the American banking system. | ||
The American banking system is backed by nuclear weapons. | ||
No one's going to do anything with, anyone's going to do anything about the American banking system. | ||
Man, I really do want to see Sam pay these people back. | ||
I think the righteous thing to do. | ||
I think the best thing to hope for is him going to jail. | ||
They only pay like a few cents an hour in jail, though. | ||
He's got to raise the money. | ||
He's got to know people. | ||
Well, no, hold on, you know, a few billion hours, well, a few hundred billion hours, and maybe he can pay them back. | ||
Or at least pay back the small investors, the people that were in for like nine grand and that was all they had. | ||
I don't know what there is to be done. | ||
again, making like a $30 a week, you know, extra than what they can afford or | ||
something like that. Like people, it's cold, it's cold outside. It's not, it's | ||
got to do something. We can do something. What? I don't know what, I don't know | ||
what there is to be done. Um, I think the best thing that I don't know that | ||
there is, I don't know that there is anything that can be done to the people | ||
that lost money. | ||
I don't think there's anything that can be done to make them whole. | ||
I don't see him... I'm sure when you signed up too, you signed an agreement saying that you recognize Risk and blah, blah, blah. | ||
But they were blatantly told, we are not touching your money. | ||
FTX will not touch this money. | ||
It's going into an account. | ||
It's going to be safe. | ||
We're going to hold it and then give it back to you. | ||
And they were taking it into these other sludge funds that they had, where all the money was mixed together. | ||
The thing is, that's why Sam Bankman Freed needs to suffer. | ||
Not physically suffer, but suffer. | ||
He belongs in prison. | ||
There needs to be repercussions that disincentivize people from doing what he did. | ||
Now the honeypot's big because you're talking about billions of dollars. | ||
So the payoff is really, really, really, really worth the risk to a lot of people. | ||
But if you make the penalty, you know, bad enough, Hopefully it would deter people. | ||
I don't think it will, man. | ||
I think there's always going to be people that are going to break the law. | ||
Right. | ||
You know, we've got Chicago, you got gun laws, you got murder laws, you got death penalty, and people are just... Oh, is Illinois a death penalty? | ||
I'm pretty sure Illinois is a death penalty, right? | ||
Electric chair? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe. | ||
You're right. | ||
Maybe not because it is a blue state. | ||
Let me double check. | ||
And to be honest with you, even if it is death penalty, most of your street crime like that doesn't get death penalty because usually it has to be something like premeditated murder or something. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah. | |
No. | ||
Since 2011, no more death penalty. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Yeah. | ||
So there you go. | ||
So I've looked at that stuff and I just don't think criminal charges deter people from committing crimes. | ||
They're supposed to. | ||
They're supposed to, but I think the issue with all the crime we've seen and the collapse that we're seeing in this country is based on a lack of community. | ||
That people don't respect each other, they don't fear each other, they don't care. | ||
Used to be that the reason you wouldn't rob your neighbor's house was because you were scared about what your neighbors would say when they found out you were a robber. | ||
You wouldn't be able to go to the grocery store, you wouldn't be able to buy bread or meat. | ||
Now it's just, you go to a city and they're like, don't know you, don't care. | ||
Yeah, Sam's lack of compassion for the people that used FTX is stark. | ||
He's done a lot of interviews which people have said this is a terrible move for someone right after they commit a multi-billion dollar fraud like he did, or at least... I don't know if it's... Is it okay to say he committed fraud? | ||
Oh, yes. | ||
Even if I don't... I mean, it just looks like he admitted it to CoffeeZilla and Twitter. | ||
Yeah, he said what he did was wrong. | ||
He said that, you know, what he did qualifies as fraud. | ||
So what he admitted to Meets the definition of fraud, so it's okay to call it fraud. | ||
Is he a patsy? | ||
Is there somebody else that stole his money? | ||
Because he doesn't seem like the smartest guy, you know? | ||
He's playing the idiot now, but yeah, he was known as like the next Warren Buffett, they were saying. | ||
Yeah, but go to MIT. | ||
That's who was saying that, the media organization that he was funneling money into. | ||
Probably, yeah. | ||
Yeah, some of the most discredited names in corporate media. | ||
He was financing a lot of the media organizations. | ||
Just like Bill Gates, he was giving them a lot of money. | ||
That money buys you a lot of influence, and then the corporate media kisses your ass. | ||
Let's be real, though. | ||
It seems like if you do the opposite of what Jim Cramer says, you'll be rich. | ||
I believe there are bots that counter-trade Jim Cramer. | ||
I'm going at this as I hope that people get their money back, but you're right, Phil. | ||
There needs to be strict, harsh penalties for what he did, because he defrauded billions of dollars out of, I don't know how many tens of thousands of humans lost their life savings on this. | ||
How many thousands? | ||
Maybe we've got to bring back some unusual punishment, you know? | ||
Like tarring and feathering. | ||
Something like that. I mean you could you could make an argument to allow the people that he | ||
actually defrauded to take it into their own hands but I mean yeah it's not a good argument. | ||
It's not a good it's not a good solution but it's a solution that might deter people if | ||
you know everyone everyone you defraud gets to beat the absolute crap out of you. | ||
We're in the age of, like, impact investment right now, where people think the ends justify the means. | ||
If we're giving to things we believe in, then if other people get screwed along the way, it's worth it. | ||
I think that's Sam's sick mentality. | ||
I mean, how many—what drugs was he using different? | ||
Do you think that—that—I don't know if he's made any remarks. | ||
About this other than he the fact that I've read Headlines that talked about his philanthropy. | ||
I read I don't remember who wrote the the headline, but I recall a headline that was something like this is gonna mess up his ability to to Do the the projects that he was looking to help people It was one of the more sycophantic headlines I've ever seen about a person that was accused of such such a I think it was something like, now his dream projects won't be visualized. | ||
I mean, it's not philanthropy. | ||
They use this cover word in order to just buy people off. | ||
I mean, especially when it comes to the whole nonprofit sector, there's a lot of criminals in that whole sector that are just acting like they're giving away their money, when in reality, they're just making money for themselves. | ||
You look at Bill Gates. | ||
He was like, I'm going to give away all my money. | ||
He doubled his money since saying that a couple years ago. | ||
That's not a coincidence. | ||
It's not an accident. | ||
And I think, you know, thinking deeper here, I think there's a big possibility that this SBF guy was a patsy. | ||
He was the last man holding the bag. | ||
And that there was a bigger operation at hand here that was moving around the billions of dollars in secret shadow funds that are still unaccounted for. | ||
They call it, global corporations are calling it impact investment, where you invest in things that you want to see happen, regardless of the return on your investment. | ||
It's just about giving money to things you believe in. | ||
In the tech sector, they're calling it effective altruism. | ||
They're mutilating the word altruism and saying, if there's a net benefit, if we have to hurt 99 people, but we help 100, it's worth it. | ||
It's effectively altruistic. | ||
Yeah, to me, that's utilitarianism. | ||
Yeah, it is absolutely utilitarianism. | ||
And a lot of people got hurt in this risk, this unnecessary risk. | ||
Like Thanos. | ||
Like, like Thanos from Marvel, you know? | ||
He wants to save the universe by killing half of them, right? | ||
There you go. | ||
Yeah, like Bill Gates. | ||
There's people that are making an argument now. | ||
Yeah, you know what? | ||
You should make a... Well, I don't know if the meme translates if like some kind of bargain bin Thanos is Bill Gates. | ||
Expectation versus reality. | ||
Thanos snapping and then in reality it's Bill Gates going, there are too many people. | ||
And that's what you get. | ||
Let's talk about this story here. | ||
The snap and then there's just like weird mosquitoes that are flying around. | ||
Snaps and mosquitoes go fly out. | ||
Here we go from the Daily Mail. | ||
Biden's non-binary nuclear waste worker Sam Brenton leaves the Department of Energy after being accused of stealing suitcases from two airports. | ||
Let me stop you there, Daily Mail. | ||
He wasn't accused. | ||
He was criminally charged and he's on camera doing it. | ||
You even posted the videos. | ||
Oh, no, they didn't post the videos here. | ||
Maybe if we refresh it, we'll get something. | ||
Well, no, there's just him wearing a dress. | ||
There we go. | ||
They posted the actual photo of him stealing some woman's luggage. | ||
So I guess what they're saying now, and then here's him. | ||
Look at this. | ||
Here's him wearing this shirt in an airport, stealing the bag. | ||
And then here's him posting a selfie, confirming it was in fact him wearing that shirt. | ||
Sam! | ||
That's not yours! | ||
unidentified
|
Put it back! | |
So what they're saying now is, They're saying he's not non-binary, he gets off on stealing women's clothes and then wearing them in public and making people watch him do it. | ||
So it's like a klepto fetish thing. | ||
unidentified
|
That's so weird. | |
When this guy joined the department. | ||
Really? | ||
Well, he's on camera doing it more than once, stealing women's clothing. | ||
I want you to be right. | ||
I'm not saying I know for sure. | ||
I'm saying this is what people are saying now about what's happening. | ||
That's a better story than non-binary. | ||
Non-binary is boring now. | ||
There's plenty of non-binary people out there. | ||
The speculation is that he steals women's clothing and gets off on having people watch him wear it. | ||
So it's not about gender identity, it's about him stealing from them and then, you know... So it's like autogynephilia, where he's just walking around kind of... Autogynecleptic... Wait... Yeah, that's a klepto-autogynephilia, where he's walking around kind of... Walking around with someone else's stuff, like kind of semi-hard... Autocleptophilia? | ||
I don't know. | ||
No, that would be like stealing from yourself somehow. | ||
Yeah, it'd be klepto-autogynephilia because you're stealing. | ||
Voyeuristic, right? | ||
Is that where you want people to watch you? | ||
Yeah, it'd be klepto-voyeuristic-autogynephilia. | ||
No, exhibitionist. | ||
No, wait. | ||
Is it exhibitionist? | ||
Because we said voyeur before and someone claimed like, no, no, you have it backwards. | ||
What's the, is there a word for it? | ||
There's not a... A voyeur would be someone that wants to watch. | ||
A voyer would be someone that wants to be watched. | ||
So it's exhibitionist. | ||
He wants to be watched. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So it's exhibitionist kleptoautogynephilia. | ||
He likes attention. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It is he, right? | ||
We're not misgendering him? | ||
I think that's safe. | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's a sexual male, but identifies as cis. | ||
I just don't want someone to be able to be like, oh, you were misgendering him, and make the focus the fact that there was a misgendering. | ||
If you focus on sex, the biology of this guy when he was born was male, and I think he has at some point transitioned his gender to cis. | ||
Oh, yeah, yeah. | ||
Non-cis. | ||
Voyeurism is when you get off watching other people. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So exhibitionist is, I think, right? | ||
When he joined the Biden administration, I was kind of like, this is end game for me. | ||
I guess we get people like this with lipstick, bald guy looking weird, acting like dancing around a dragon. | ||
He's a risk taker too. | ||
unidentified
|
He doesn't know what's in those suitcases. | |
He just knows it's women's clothing. | ||
You know, it'd be a lot funnier if it turns out that like his early life story was that he was like a skydiver and a snowboarder and he gets off on adrenaline rushes. | ||
Crazier the better, man. | ||
So he just like steals women's clothing. | ||
The more outlandish, the more. | ||
I love it. | ||
And then he's like, he's wearing the evidence of his felonies and he's getting an adrenaline rush from people watching him do it. | ||
Dude, he didn't even check the bag. | ||
Hey, he's a more honest politician than the other politicians in Washington, D.C. | ||
Okay? | ||
He's a bureaucrat, not a politician. | ||
He's almost worse. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Even still, I mean, I have to give this story two thumbs up because I'm enjoying it so much. | ||
I appreciate your service, Sam. | ||
It feels like I've been praying, and this is kind of what happens when you pray, is that people be— I'm praying that someone that works for the government steals women's bags and wears the clothes? | ||
That's an interesting prayer you got there! | ||
People reveal who they really are. | ||
When you're deep in prayer with God, people start to reveal who they really are, and people like this, this thief, uh, is now, it's apparent that he's a thief. | ||
Yeah? | ||
So that's good. | ||
This is like stealing someone's, like, he stole bags that were worth thousands of dollars. | ||
It's like, it's demonic, but in not, like, the worst way. | ||
Like, demonic that freaks me out is when... Demonic in the most bourgeois way. | ||
Yeah, like, you know, demonic usually, I'm imagining Epstein stuff, like high-level demonic, satanic, evil. | ||
This is like mischief. | ||
Yeah, you know, it's criminal. | ||
Stealing the person's luggage, that's freak, it might have been insulin in there. | ||
I don't know, it might have been something, and that guy didn't even check in with a bag, but walked out with one. | ||
Well not, I don't think insulin, because it has to be refrigerated. | ||
Probably not insulin, but something life-saving, something you need. | ||
Thermos, who put in a thermos? | ||
Hopefully you'll check that stuff, but there might be stuff you need that you can't check, or that you can't, hopefully you'll take it on, carry it on with you. | ||
Medication is one of them. | ||
People sometimes are addicted to, like, painkillers. | ||
What happens if someone had their painkillers inside of, you know, one of the, you know, luggages? | ||
Stealing a bag from a store, I understand, it's not, it's not like you're beating someone's face in, but stealing someone's personal belonging is very different than stealing something from a store, in my opinion. | ||
Evil people, man. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I'm glad he was exposed. | ||
Like I said, I'm happy that it happened because I get to imbibe the story and enjoy it, but that's the extent of it. | ||
So he's on leave now from Biden? | ||
He's no longer an employee. | ||
And criminally charged. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Going to prison. | ||
Gonna get locked up. | ||
Well, it depends on the district attorney that he gets. | ||
The crazy thing is, apparently the first time Brenton got caught doing this, he told the cop like, oh, I accidentally grabbed the wrong bag and didn't realize it, and then I panicked because people thought I stole it, so I just left it, and then I brought it back to the airport or whatever, and it's like, bro, you're on camera with no bag. | ||
And that was the day he didn't check a bag. | ||
The airport was like, he didn't have a bag. | ||
You go to the airport, no bag, and you take someone's bag, we know you stole it. | ||
Yep. | ||
At the very least, you know, like, he could get a generic black travel bag, but the dude just not even smart enough to do that. | ||
He got caught twice. | ||
Now imagine how many times he wasn't caught. | ||
Because how many times will officers or security actually go through the whole footage, actually look at the whole scenario, and actually do a full investigation to find out who stole a luggage bag? | ||
I mean, I had a bag once missing, and they were like, yeah, screw you, tough luck. | ||
So how many times did he get away with it is the larger question. | ||
I want it to be double digits, and I want to hear about every one of them. | ||
I'd be willing to bet the clothing he's wearing all the time is clothing he stole from women. | ||
God, I hope that's true. | ||
unidentified
|
Why? | |
I don't know. | ||
Because I think it's a hilarious, crazy story. | ||
I just like the fact that it's such a crazy, chaotic story. | ||
Like, so outlandish. | ||
This person gets hired and then just flies around the country stealing people's bags and wears clothing of the opposite sex. | ||
And then wears a lot of weird dog stuff, too. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
A lot of dog stuff. | ||
Yeah. | ||
A lot of dog masks. | ||
I love him. | ||
I love him. | ||
Bald dude with lipstick. | ||
He looks like Matt Damon, too. | ||
I love him. | ||
Absolutely like Matt Damon. | ||
Sorry, Matt. | ||
Or congratulations, Matt. | ||
Congratulations. | ||
Nice job, guys. | ||
Yeah, he looks like a bald Matt Damon. | ||
Maybe Matt can play him in the movie. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, there we go. | |
It'll be the older Brinton. | ||
Is that his name? | ||
The older Brinton. | ||
The biopic about the dude who stole luggage from the airport. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Matt Damon! | ||
How did I get here? | ||
Phil's dying. | ||
Get it. | ||
He can't do it. | ||
unidentified
|
I love it. | |
Can we hire Matt Damon to do this? | ||
Maybe at some point. | ||
Did he do an FTX commercial? | ||
He did not. | ||
Oh, he did, didn't he? | ||
I don't know, but no, he did a crypto commercial. | ||
Was it? | ||
Was it? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
It was a Matt Damon crypto commercial. | ||
unidentified
|
That was crypto.com. | |
People are getting sued, like Larry David for this FTX thing. | ||
Are they actually getting sued? | ||
Do you guys know? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I think so, but it's kind of dumb. | ||
Doing a commercial is not the same as, like, running and committing the fraud, you know what I mean? | ||
For sure, yeah. | ||
Like, there's no way these guys knew. | ||
It's a crypto exchange. | ||
Yeah, and the exchange outwardly said they were gonna do it righteously, and they lied. | ||
If the exchange had been saying they're gonna do it illegally, and then, you know, Tom Brady was still doing commercials for them, he'd be implicated, in my opinion. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, Tom Brady was an investor. | |
He's probably super angry about that. | ||
I mean, just, like, not only the people that had their money in FTX, but it's also the people that were investors, you know, along the way. | ||
That's why him and Giselle are getting divorced. | ||
She's mad. | ||
She's like, I can't believe you, Tom! | ||
No, no, she was the one who pushed him to do it. | ||
She's the one who did it. | ||
It's a bad idea. | ||
And then she's like, just do it! | ||
It's money! | ||
I'm the one that makes the money in this family here with your stupid football She makes so much more money than he does. | ||
He was able to take a low contract because of that. | ||
And the Patriots have a huge amount of money to spend on players. | ||
Nice job. | ||
I got a, you know, Media Matters is mad at me because I was talking about, what story were we talking about? | ||
I think it was Elon or something. | ||
Yeah, it was the Elon story. | ||
I said, woke people want companies to keep on bad employees based on their identity. | ||
Yeah, they do. | ||
And the left got mad at me for saying that, but I'm like, but that's a fact statement. | ||
That's true. | ||
Media Matters is always mad at someone. | ||
My favorite person at Media Matters is the girl that watches Tucker Carlson. | ||
Her whole job is just to watch Tucker Carlson and be a bitch. | ||
And I'm like, you're the best. | ||
I love her. | ||
She's great. | ||
Who is it? | ||
Her name's Kat. | ||
Kat. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And she works for Media Matters. | ||
Her job is to watch Tucker Carlson and just be a complete... We should do that. | ||
We should just hire someone. | ||
Well, there are people that do that. | ||
I mean, there's people that watch, like, Media Matters stuff and, like, Sean, Actual Justice Warrior, he's great. | ||
His job is just to shhh crap all over the Young Turks. | ||
It's awful. | ||
We gotta do, like, a mystery science theater thing with MSNBC, where we just get, like, people to watch it and comment on it in real time. | ||
That would be so much fun. | ||
You'd probably get three comedians just to watch, you know, Rachel Maddow specials. | ||
Yeah, Joy Reid. | ||
Joy Reid! | ||
I wouldn't wish that horror on anyone. | ||
Are you kidding me? | ||
That's a torture. | ||
It'd be hilarious! | ||
Yeah, seriously, Joy Reid says the most ridiculous shit. | ||
It would be friggin' awesome to have three silhouettes just sitting there, trashing every ridiculous thing that comes out of her mouth. | ||
Joy Reid, huh? | ||
Yeah. | ||
She's great. | ||
She got hacked once. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, wait. | |
You remember that story? | ||
Oh, she actually tweeted something and then said it was a hack. | ||
No, she posted a blog that was like opposing gay marriage or something. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And then she's like, they hacked me! | ||
They hacked me! | ||
They hacked me! | ||
And then you want to be like, who's they, Joy? | ||
Yeah, but who's they, though? | ||
What do you mean, Joy? | ||
That's the crazy thing about modern cancel culture stuff is that these people know that the whims of the left rotate randomly, and so they have to say something today that they have to disagree with tomorrow. | ||
So then they just deny it and make up a reason. | ||
I didn't really say that. | ||
I was hacked. | ||
Like, is it a system that's trying to constantly subvert the system? | ||
And if the system changes, it needs to create a different type of subversion. | ||
So you're always... It's the continuous revolution. | ||
As soon as something becomes old, as soon as something becomes the norm or part of the status quo, then it becomes counter-revolutionary. | ||
And so the revolutionaries have to oppose anything that's considered status quo. | ||
So it's all it's all about constantly performing the dialectic or constantly pushing the envelope constantly being a revolution. | ||
That's why when you listen to like when you listen to old videos of like Castro talking or whatever he's always talking about counter revolutionaries and the revolution continues like the revolution happened. | ||
Castro got into power in Cuba and then you listen to Castro talk for the next whatever 60 or whatever years however long He was he was alive. | ||
It's the revolution the revolution the revolution the revolution. | ||
It's continuous It's it's constant if it stops if the revolution ends then it becomes the status quo It becomes conservative it becomes the old things and the bat, you know, and that's all the bad stuff according to you know, the revolutionaries So you're staying on the offensive, psychologically? | ||
I think that might be might be accurate. I'm not sure if that's the way they conceive of it | ||
But if you're a revolutionary leftist, then you need to make sure that the revolution is continuous | ||
Somebody said that Biden's person looks like the daughter from Coneheads | ||
What Biden's person? | ||
They look more personable. | ||
unidentified
|
That's the first thing I thought when I saw this guy. | |
But I don't think they look alike. | ||
unidentified
|
They just have cone heads. | |
I'm going to stand on principle and not mock people that are bald. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I'm in no position to mock anyone. | ||
That's not it, though. | ||
Is it a cone-shaped head or not? | ||
That's the question. | ||
But more importantly, the young woman who... Well, I don't think she's young anymore, but the one who played the daughter in the conehead doesn't look like that guy. | ||
What? | ||
Who is that? | ||
Not at all. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Someone just super chatted that they were like, it looks like the daughter from the comics. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
He does have like a very conical head. | ||
It's not that he's bald. | ||
Put the picture on stream side by side. | ||
I want to, part of me wants to make fun of Sam Brinton because I, he, I think he looks like funny kind of like, you know, he wears big bald head, lipstick, wearing women's clothes, like. | ||
For me it's the stealing. | ||
Not funny, haha. | ||
It's the stealing that's awesome. | ||
I want to stay focused on the crimes. | ||
That the Biden administration put someone into there, I believe, because of his sexual identity or gender identity. | ||
And then it turns out it's a thief. | ||
The Biden administration has made it clear that identity is the is the most important thing. | ||
And he made it clear before he was the president. | ||
He made it clear when he said that he was going to pick a person of color woman, that a woman of color to be his running mate. | ||
He specifically said that before he picked Kamala Harris, like out like there's there was no no No ambiguity to it. | ||
It was purely said that he was going to select a woman of color. | ||
Identity has been a defining factor throughout the whole Biden administration. | ||
Whether or not you approve of that is a different topic, but you can't deny the fact that the Biden administration has made identity a definitive aspect when it comes to hiring. | ||
There's no question about it. | ||
unidentified
|
Marine Jean-Pierre, she's terrible at her job. | |
And have they cared about her skin color or her sexuality? | ||
I mean, I don't know her personally, but she's obviously lying a lot. | ||
She's terrible at her job. | ||
She looks like she's lying a lot of times and doesn't answer a question, repeats herself, goes, uh, uh, uh. | ||
And you're like, dude, I mean, but I mean, what can you do at that point? | ||
Are you going to be like, yeah, actually the administration's full of it. | ||
You can't. | ||
I mean, you're supposed to be the mouthpiece of the dog, you know? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know, man. | |
Listen, Kayleigh McEnany, she went and she did a really, really great job and Donald Trump did his... | ||
Absolute best to throw that poor woman under the bus every chance he got. | ||
If you listen to Kayleigh McEnany, like, dodging not just the press, but also dodging stuff that Donald Trump said that she just found out about, that she didn't know about. | ||
She was really, really good, and she had to deal with not only a hostile press, but Donald Trump, who was completely and totally unpredictable for a press secretary. | ||
You watch the way that she behaved compared to the way that Jean-Pierre does her job and it is striking the difference in professional preparedness that Kayleigh McEnany had compared to Kareem Jean-Pierre. | ||
I get this vibe that the the reporters in the room with her are like, I'm so lucky | ||
to be here. If I upset the queen, we will be ostracized and banished. And so when, when Kareem | ||
gets angry, if you see her, her, her face or get contort, like that's her about to be like, you're | ||
out of here. If you do, if you don't shut up, you're out of here. I imagine that the DNC, the | ||
people that, that are in the, the press room in the white house are mostly Democrats and they don't | ||
want to, I mean, it's all about access. | ||
They don't want to upset the access that they have. | ||
They don't want to upset the administration because if the administration is upset with them, then they might get kicked out. | ||
They might not get the good beat. | ||
They might not get the leads. | ||
They might not get the... | ||
People in the administration calling them saying, hey, I got a scoop for you, etc, etc. | ||
That's just the way that that kind of stuff goes when you're in those positions. | ||
Access is everything. | ||
And if you upset the president or the administration, the administration cuts off your access. | ||
And if you don't have access, then you're not valuable to the the organization that you're supposed to be the White House, you know, liaison for whatever. | ||
We're gonna go to Super Chats, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, and become a member over at TimCast.com. | ||
We're gonna have that members-only uncensored show coming up tonight, so if you wanna hang out with Phil and the crew for the uncensored, not family-friendly version, go to TimCast.com and sign up. | ||
Let's read your Super Chats. | ||
Smash that like button, by the way. | ||
All right. | ||
Butters Creamy Goo says, any chance you'll have the Hodge twins on? | ||
That would be amazing. | ||
Don't forget to bring the goo. | ||
Oh. | ||
Yes, maybe. | ||
I think we're working on some with the Hodge twins. | ||
They'd be really great. | ||
They're hilarious. | ||
So we'll see. | ||
Noah Poa says, Hey Phil, it's been a while. | ||
Welcome back. | ||
When can we expect some new music? | ||
I'm experiencing withdrawal symptoms, lol. 2023. | ||
Anything more? | ||
There's a couple things that Jason has been working on that Jason has put up. | ||
I've got a couple parts that I've been messing around with, but we don't have anything in any kind of position to show anyone. | ||
There is some business stuff that we are dealing with on the back end that we are trying to sort out that is also affecting release schedules, and that is being handled As fast as we possibly can, but things are moving and I understand that there are a lot of people that are, you know, anticipating the project because this will be the first record that we do with Jason Richardson and, you know, it's been a long time since we put a record out, so I appreciate people that are being patient, but follow me, PhilThatRemains on Twitter. | ||
You can follow the band, All That Remains, and the updates will be there. | ||
Stuff is coming, I promise. | ||
Right on. | ||
Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
says, I remember when Mr. Bocas would interrupt IRL jumping on the table to dip his head in a glass of water. | ||
Tim, I really hope he gets back to being healthy. | ||
I mean, it was only about a month ago. | ||
Not even a month ago, it was like two weeks ago. | ||
It was, I think, when Savannah was here. | ||
He was at the door yelling to try and come in. | ||
So, what happened is, over the past, I guess, two months, we've been noticing him acting a little weird, but nothing alarming. | ||
And then in the past couple of weeks, I was like, well, a couple months ago, I was like, we need to bring him to the vet. | ||
We brought him to the vet. | ||
And then they were like, yeah, he's okay. | ||
Just, you know, blah, blah, blah. | ||
And they missed it, I guess, because it's chronic kidney disease and they don't present symptoms until it's getting really, you know, almost too late. | ||
And then we saw Mr. Bocas was sleeping. | ||
We, uh, we carried him, you know, into the house to the studio, we put him down, and then he just slumped onto the ground and his head went straight to the floor in a weird way we never saw before, and I was like, okay, and I picked him up, placed him on the sofa, and then he started, like, shaking a little bit. | ||
So we had him rushed to the ER, and they said that, uh, he didn't have much time left. | ||
He had, like, a, like, renal failure. | ||
And so they gave him, we rushed him from there to a specialist, like a special ER, a bigger one, where they gave him two blood transfusions and IV fluids, which dramatically improved his condition. | ||
But they said he's in stage three kidney failure. | ||
Stage four is total kidney failure. | ||
There is some stuff they can do, a hormone to generate more red blood cells, injections, but even with all the medication, it's maybe a year. | ||
There is another option, and it is a cat kidney transplant. | ||
Where what they do is, yeah, Phil's looking at me like, what? | ||
No, I'm not kidding. | ||
They said there's specialist facilities where they'll find a shelter cat with no family, and in exchange for you adopting it, they will do a kidney transplant to your sick cat, so that way, otherwise the other cat gets euthanized. | ||
So you save two cats in the process. | ||
That is beautiful, and I love this. | ||
And I'm not even a cat fan. | ||
And it's $20,000. | ||
Oh, I hate that part. | ||
That part's awful. | ||
Yeah, man, yup, yup. | ||
And it's, like, hard to find a place that will actually do it. | ||
It's probably, like, a California thing for super-rich celebrity types. | ||
So, uh, you know, my response is, uh, adopting another cat that would otherwise be killed. | ||
Saving Mr. Bocas sounds like the appropriate thing to do. | ||
Um, but with even one kidney, they're not gonna live that long, but they'll live. | ||
And, uh, the other issue is that, um, Mr. Bocas has other problems due to being a gutter cat. | ||
I'll continue, please. | ||
When you rescue, it comes with health issues. | ||
He's a wild cat. | ||
I don't want to interrupt you. | ||
I've been crying about this, actually. | ||
Yeah, he was born in the streets, and so he has underdeveloped kidneys, which put him at risk for kidney failure, and then he's also got a heart issue. | ||
So they said they don't even know if they can give him a kidney transplant because he's got a heart problem. | ||
So we might be able to get him hormone treatment, IV fluids, regular medicine, and then maybe he could live for another year. | ||
And he's like four years old. | ||
And binders to help clear the urine. | ||
You've been good to him. | ||
You said once to me that he was inside a lot and we were like, gotta keep him in. | ||
But you're like, I think it's just best just to let him out and live life out there. | ||
That's no way to live for a cat. | ||
And we live on a farm. | ||
I mean, we basically live out in the woods. | ||
You gotta let that guy eat parasitic rats and whatever the hell he's doing out there. | ||
He's a wild man, you know? | ||
So, he was indoors all the time, sleeping, and just morbidly depressed. | ||
And he would, you know, just never move. | ||
And we were like, this is terrible. | ||
Like, this is not life. | ||
Dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery. | ||
So we let him go outside. | ||
We were worried because, like, you know, he's gonna get sick or something. | ||
When we first found out he got sick, I got a ton of regret, like, you know, | ||
if we kept him inside. | ||
But we talked about it, and it's like, no, no, no. | ||
That's no way to live. | ||
To lock someone up because you don't want them to be hurt is ridiculous. | ||
But then I'm like, yeah, but he's four, he's gonna die. | ||
Then when we found out, actually, it seems to be genetic, and he's got underdeveloped kidneys, that made me feel even better, like, if we didn't let him out, and what little time he had, we locked him up the whole time, he never got to go out and experience the joys of life, That would have made me feel worse. | ||
So I think back to, you know, when he's outside laying in the grass and just torturing birds. | ||
He would catch a bird and then injure it, and then just stare at it, and when it tried to escape, he'd run up and whack it again, and just pure torture small animals. | ||
And then I had to put the bird out of its misery, like, yo, like, it's so brutal. | ||
And he would yell, angry. | ||
So, but we'll see what happens. | ||
Right now he's still in the animal hospital. | ||
He's, they said that he has minor improvement from the blood transfusions, antibiotics. | ||
He went from like 18% to 24%, whatever that means, but they think he's in stage 3 failure, so he's not going to get better. | ||
It's not reversible. | ||
We asked them about stem cells. | ||
They said they didn't know, but apparently stem cells are an option. | ||
They do, they take, they harvest the stem cells from the animal's fat. | ||
And then replicate them and then put them through the bloodstream, which regenerates organs. | ||
So, I don't know. | ||
I hear good things about stem cells. | ||
And it's not like people think. | ||
It's not like we're taking baby cats. | ||
They harvest it from the fat cells of the cat itself. | ||
So he's four? | ||
Yeah, he's four. | ||
Four, okay. | ||
That's young. | ||
It is, yeah. | ||
He should be 15, 20 years old, but he's got a genetic... | ||
Look, he was a gutter cat. | ||
For six months, unknown. | ||
Who knows what he was eating, what he was going through, if he was born incest or in a rut. | ||
Maybe he was underfed for the first six weeks of his life, you know? | ||
It's just tough to tell. | ||
Kidneys weren't growing properly because he wasn't eating proper diet. | ||
And then we brought him in, gave him real food. | ||
It kicked him up, but you can only get a few years out of it. | ||
He's so friendly. | ||
The night I met him, he just came right up to me. | ||
One of those cats. | ||
It's kind of sad because I was looking on the website, if you go to the Join Us, Become a Member at TimCast, he's the center column of our talent roster. | ||
And then we got Roberto Jr. | ||
on there as well, our rooster. | ||
But I'm looking at the photo of him and I was like, wow, that was like six months ago and he looks so much healthier. | ||
And we didn't even realize, now when you look at him, how gaunt he had gotten. | ||
unidentified
|
And I don't know, man. | |
We'll read more Super Chats here. | ||
We'll read some more Super Chats. | ||
All right. | ||
Glacia says, Tim, could you spare some words on Brazil? | ||
One of indigenous chieftain protesting elections got arrested and fighting has broken out in Brasilia. | ||
It's unknown if police have used live bolts or not. | ||
Wow, man. | ||
So there's still there's still fighting about whether or not Lula and or whether it was Lula or Bolsonaro. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
Yeah, I mean, they called it for Lula, I think, right, when Bolsonaro was contesting it or something? | ||
Well, I knew they called it. | ||
I didn't know. | ||
Last I had heard, and I only know very, very little superficial information about this, is that Bolsonaro conceded, Lula won, and then the people were kind of like, no. | ||
Demanding the military intervene to deal with it, because that's what their military is supposed to do in terms of contested elections or something. | ||
I don't know. | ||
What I do know is I love Brazil. | ||
I've been there several times. | ||
I actually have a visa to Brazil, which, you know, you have to apply to get. | ||
And it's amazing. | ||
You've been? | ||
I love it. | ||
It's absolutely awesome. | ||
So it's sad to see what's going on there. | ||
I hope things get better. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's great. | ||
It's a lot of fun. | ||
I've had really, really good times. | ||
Too much fun in Brazil for me. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
Copacabana, man. | ||
Just sit on the beach with a coconut. | ||
Sao Paulo was better for me. | ||
I liked it way better than Rio. | ||
I like Sao Paulo. | ||
Sao Paulo was way better. | ||
unidentified
|
It was the best. | |
What was better? | ||
The people, the culture, the energy, the vibe. | ||
In Rio, you kind of got to look over your back the whole time you're there. | ||
Shout out. | ||
In Sao Paulo, you do, but in certain areas, but mostly you're fine. | ||
I liked Copacabana. | ||
Shout out to Rafinha Bastos, for those that are familiar with his work. | ||
He's a very famous Brazilian comedian. | ||
I did an interview with him a few months ago. | ||
He's working up in New York a little bit. | ||
He's got a studio, but I think he's still based in Brazil. | ||
I'm not sure what's going on, but I hung out at his comedy club when I went down there the first time. | ||
Cool stuff. | ||
I had a nice Brazilian girlfriend as soon as I went down there. | ||
Oh yeah? | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Michael Diamond says, I was amazed to see Elon following and responding to Luke today. | ||
Congrats. | ||
What was that tweet exactly, too? | ||
You made a good point and he basically agreed with your point. | ||
Oh, it's nothing. | ||
We're just like, you know, best friends now. | ||
I think you were saying... | ||
The future of humanity, either we're about to awaken as a species, or everything's going to fall apart. | ||
Well, there's a point that I made on the show a couple days ago, specifically saying we're either in the worst of times or the best of times. | ||
We're either in a mass awakening, or we're in a total societal collapse. | ||
So we were talking about it a few days ago, and it just kind of reminded me what he was saying, and that's why I kind of responded to him essentially saying the same thing, but saying it in a different way. | ||
Alpha Freedom Fighter says, hey Tim, I finally got my CCW in New Jersey. | ||
Holy... Yeah, wow, I can't believe that. | ||
Congratulations. | ||
Is that because of the Supreme Court ruling, I guess? | ||
Does that mean that he actually threw the One Ring into the lava in Mordor? | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's how you get it, right? | ||
You have to throw the One Ring into the lava and actually destroy it. | ||
You have to travel barefoot for three months. | ||
Three months to Mordor. | ||
They're not banning guns. | ||
No. | ||
It just takes you three months. | ||
You gotta travel to the center of Mount Doom. | ||
In Hoboken. | ||
In Hoboken. | ||
But I suppose this means that the Supreme Court ruling saying they can't deny it anymore has forced New Jersey to start granting people concealed carry permits. | ||
Thank goodness. | ||
Hey, that's fantastic. | ||
All right. | ||
FiveAgainstEight says, Come on, Phil, when Luke asks for a war cry, expect something crispy like the beginning of this calling. | ||
LOLHUGE, all that remains, fans, since the darkened heart, great to see you back on IRL. | ||
My two worlds colliding. | ||
Cheers! | ||
We could do one at the end of the show. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
We'll save it for the members only. | ||
We'll get a, you know. | ||
Well, no. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Get the crispy one. | ||
Get the crispy one. | ||
All right. | ||
We'll grab some more Super Chats. | ||
Where are we at? | ||
Simulant says you guys should get CoffeeZilla in here for a talk. | ||
He's doing great work exposing crypto scams and was able to get SBF to pretty much admit fraud. | ||
Yeah. | ||
CoffeeZilla is the guy on a call on a Twitter space is the one that he asked Sam directly if they'd co-mingled funds and Sam said that they had. | ||
Wow. | ||
Is CoffeeZilla that was he the actor? | ||
The dude that broke the story? | ||
No, I don't think that was him. | ||
He's just a journalist that's gone deep in the last three weeks. | ||
He went on Lex Friedman about four days ago. | ||
I saw a small clip of the Lex Friedman thing, and it was pretty impressive. | ||
I haven't heard of him before, but I think it would be great to have a conversation with him, because there's a lot of scams and scammers out there. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
And speaking of coffee, I have two medium-tier announcements. | ||
We've got the location for our soon-to-be cafe. | ||
It's going to be epic. | ||
There's a multi-story building, cafe first floor, games and skate shop second floor, and then probably recording studio on the top floor. | ||
unidentified
|
Nice. | |
It's going to be super awesome. | ||
Where's it going to be? | ||
I don't want to say just yet, but West Virginia. | ||
Okay. | ||
And I think we're going to actually have, we're going to be able to announce the coffee for the coffee shop soon. | ||
So we have graphics. | ||
I'm really excited for I'll just say it. | ||
I'm just going to say it. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I might piss people off who are working on it, but I can't keep it in. | ||
It's Rise with Roberto Jr. | ||
Breakfast Blend. | ||
unidentified
|
Nice. | |
That's awesome. | ||
Yeah, Roberto Jr. | ||
is on the bag. | ||
Perfect. | ||
I was like, it's a rooster. | ||
You wake up and he's your coffee. | ||
Very cocky of you, Tim. | ||
I'm so excited because I just want to have tons of those bags with Roberto Jr. | ||
on it and a rooster. | ||
That's cool. | ||
Yeah, but the reason we decided to do our own brand of coffee was because we wanted to open a coffee shop. | ||
I've been talking about that all year. | ||
Just to mess with the quartering, right? | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
I actually talked to him, and we were talking about actually using Coffee Brand Coffee as our supplier. | ||
And it may happen in the future, but I don't think it can happen now, just because he's further away. | ||
There's a lot of logistical issues and the costs associated with it, but we talked about it, and I was like, I don't want to use any other company other than Coffee Brand Coffee because we want to build a parallel economy out. | ||
We went over the numbers and for a variety of reasons, notably like shipping and location, it's like, you guys are east coast, he's midwest, it's probably not as easy. | ||
And then I was like, let's circle back in like six to twelve months and figure out if we can go from there. | ||
So we have a supplier east coast to do distribution for us. | ||
But we're only doing a few basic blends and it's because we're going to have the coffee shop. | ||
You know, we have like a light, dark and medium roast. | ||
And then we have like my favorite, which is like psychotically dark. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Super dark. | ||
Awesome. | ||
unidentified
|
I love it. | |
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's going to always lighten it up, but you can't make it darker. | ||
Yeah. | ||
No, I love true. | ||
Very, very dark roast. | ||
It's like maximum darkness. | ||
It's going to be fantastic. | ||
unidentified
|
Not burned, but very dark roast. | |
You know, what we're doing with it is not political, like Rise with Roberto Jr. | ||
It's just, you know, we're going to have a coffee shop. | ||
The coffee shop's not going to be political. | ||
One of the things we're going to do... Goth roast. | ||
Goth roast, yeah. | ||
But one of the things I want to do is actually, whenever you purchase something, we're going to figure it out, you get to play a game of craps. | ||
I'm quote-unquote street dice and you get a chance to win a free coffee. | ||
So we thought it would be fun to like some kind of game where you can come in and just like when you buy something you can roll the die and if 7 or 11 comes up you get a free coupon for a coffee or whatever. | ||
That's cool. | ||
Yeah something like that and then you could actually bet on specific numbers of people who know how to play craps will totally get it. | ||
You could be like you know I want to put my coupon on yo and then it's like 15 cups of coffee if you roll 11. | ||
And then it's like you put your coupon on ACES and it's like 30 cups of coffee. | ||
You get a gift card for that. | ||
Or a $30 gift card or something like that. | ||
That's a good idea. | ||
That's a really good idea. | ||
Well, the whole point of the place is not to become ultra-wealthy out of a coffee shop. | ||
It's to make a community center where people can hang out and have a good time. | ||
So we're setting up in one part of Ian's Crystal Cove. | ||
Ooh, let's get a crystal ball in there. | ||
Yes. | ||
And what it's going to be is the way the building is an L-shaped building. | ||
So the L portion is going to be curtained off. | ||
And when you go in, there's going to be crystals and like lights. | ||
hanging and then there'll be like a movie playing and you can sit down and like read a book with a lamp and have your coffee in a quieter, chill, crystal environment. | ||
You know what's really good is hookahs. | ||
All I can think of is the scene from Mall Rats when Jay and Silent Bob went to the dirt mall and they sat down with the psychic woman. | ||
And I just imagine Ian in the room, obviously not with a third nipple like clothed. | ||
You don't know that. | ||
I just imagine Ian in there, you know, sitting there with the coffee around and just kind of vibing out like in Jameson or like in Mallrats. | ||
Yeah, and we could do hookahs. | ||
You guys ever? | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
I guess it's technically not smoking hookah, you're vaping. | ||
I don't know if we would do hookahs. | ||
They go good with coffee. | ||
It's going to be an Ian kind of space with rocks and dye and stuff and you know you can it's basically a place where it's like dip like if you're in the main area it's well lit then you go through the curtains and it's dimly lit with a movie playing and it's very very chill but then upstairs you walk up the stairs and there's going to be a skate shop section and like board games table games and some skeeball. | ||
So it's really just about creating a place that's fun to go and hang out. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Because my whole thing is like, when you're done with work and you've taken care of your chores and stuff and you just want to chill, what do you do? | ||
And so there's a variety of things people do. | ||
And I'm like, well, you should need like a cool hangout spot. | ||
So you'll have a coffee downstairs. | ||
It's gonna be very, very simple. | ||
It's gonna be like coffee and cappuccinos, you know, lattes, espressos, nothing super fancy. | ||
And then there's food across the street, you can bring your own food or whatever. | ||
Yeah, or we could work out with local restaurants to have delivery on demand, where you have a menu and you can pick from like four different restaurants. | ||
We're gonna have a stage, so we can do comedy and music stuff. | ||
But let's read some more. | ||
That's cool. | ||
First, Thessalonian says, Elon Musk is a globalist advancing the Great Reset. | ||
He was part of the 2008 Young Global Leaders. | ||
He is the enemy. | ||
I've heard that a lot of people have. | ||
How old is he? | ||
Actually, Magic Noir is extremely concerned about this Elon love right now because for similar reasons. | ||
How old is Elon? | ||
My guess? | ||
unidentified
|
52. | |
Let's find out. | ||
50? | ||
51? | ||
Elon Musk age. | ||
unidentified
|
51. | |
What's he got? | ||
Give me your guesses. | ||
Give me your guesses. | ||
Born in 71, so 51. | ||
I did the price of right thing there, Ian. | ||
Oh, you undercut me by one. | ||
Or you're supposed to go over by one, I guess. | ||
That way he's older than it. | ||
No, actually, I did the inverse prices right thing. | ||
I was probably hurting myself by giving myself no room. | ||
I wasn't aware that he was a young World Economic Forum leader. | ||
I'm going to try to fact check that right now, but I haven't heard of it personally myself, so I don't know if it's true or not. | ||
You know, I think there certainly are a bunch of Musk bros or whatever, people who are just like defending him no matter what. | ||
But there's people like that for everybody. | ||
Trump's got his people. | ||
Bernie's got his people. | ||
You know, it is what it is. | ||
I think he's doing good things, and I'll take it. | ||
I'll take the win. | ||
You celebrate people when they do good things, you criticize them when they do bad things, and more importantly, you never put anyone above yourself. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah, I don't... Aside from the culture war implications, I don't see what people could be really significantly upset with Elon Musk about. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
Like, if you're, you know, Knee-deep in the culture war and you're on the left. | ||
I get it He represents the things that you're opposed to so that at least I can wrap my head around But if you're not steeped in the culture war, I don't understand what it is that people find objectionable about Elon Musk like if you're if you're not on Twitter and And you're not involved in the culture war other than, like, you know, what you see and hear on the news? | ||
What is it about Elon Musk that you could, in the past six months, now decide, okay, this guy embodies all of the bad things that I used to place on Donald Trump? | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know? | ||
Let's read this one. | ||
We got this from Bronson Hollins, says, happy to see a metalhead on the show again. | ||
With that said, from a professional standpoint, how full of soy is heavy metal in your opinion? | ||
Uh, it is just like every other thing. | ||
There is a, or at least it's just like down the middle, like there's like a woke contingent and a... | ||
Well, I say, I think it's probably like every other thing in entertainment. | ||
So it's heavily, heavily left leaning because it's entertainment. | ||
It's so weird. | ||
But, but yeah, I mean, there's, I mean, I've had hit pieces done on me by, you know, blogs that are straight up communists. | ||
The blog has like the sickle and hammer, you know, up and, and then complains about Donald Trump, like right after Trump was elected and, and, uh, There's other guys in blogs that are act like their, their name in their name, they had actual so like socialist pig and stuff like that. | ||
So it's just as, as heavily influenced by the left in the metal community as you know, as any other art would be, you know, whether it be rock or pop or whatever. | ||
Do you find that the metal gets hotter when you eat meat and keep like a heavily heavy meat based diet? | ||
No, I don't. | ||
I don't. | ||
I don't. | ||
I don't ascribe to the idea that personality has much influence on your ability to write heavy stuff. | ||
There's this meme of going around that I saw where it's just like, it's this dude that looks like he's from the Revenge of the Nerds. | ||
And it says, if your guitar player looks like this, you're about to die in that pit. | ||
And it's true, because if your guitar player's got horn-rimmed glasses, they're probably like math nerds, and they probably wrote some kind of crazy breakdown, and dudes that look like mountains are gonna smash your face in. | ||
Because some dude that looks like, you know, Poindexter wrote some crazy riffs, it's true. | ||
Alright. | ||
It really is. | ||
Eric Miller says Mars doesn't have gas stations, so electric cars. | ||
Boring Company handles the drilling. | ||
He also has robots, which doesn't require oxygen to work. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Everything Musk is doing is all a part of getting us to Mars. | ||
I mean, he's talked about it over and over and over again. | ||
It's all about making interstellar human beings because it's like, so like the idea that like, oh, we have to save the planet because the idea is essentially like, well, for some of them, some of them think that the human race should die off. | ||
So. | ||
Maybe this is an incomplete thought here or not well thought out, but the whole idea that like saving the human race, save the planet, to save the human race, the best way to save the human race is to make sure the human race isn't limited to the earth because eventually the sun is going to turn into a red giant and swallow the Although I think you can charge it with hydrogen to keep it the same size, because it's only expanding because it's losing hydrogen. | ||
The sun? | ||
Yeah, it loses fuel, so it expands. | ||
But if you can keep fueling it, I think you can preserve it. | ||
Sure, if we can find a magnitude of hydrogen and transport it to such a degree that the sun survives. | ||
You absorb Saturn's hydrogen and shoot it with an electrolaser into the sun. | ||
The complexity of doing that is probably a similar complexity to being able to survive interstellar space. | ||
Well, the sentiment of what you're saying, that we are vulnerable, is true. | ||
I think we're more vulnerable to meteor strikes, to meteorites. | ||
So, here's the other thing. | ||
Neuralink. | ||
If you guys have watched Altered Carbon, have you seen Altered Carbon at all? | ||
No. | ||
So here's what I think Elon might be thinking right now. | ||
Based on the technology we have, not what we might achieve, he's trying to build interstellar travel. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's entirely possible we develop a means of conveyance much, much faster than we have today, and you don't need rocketry, it can be something else. | ||
That being said, at our current level of technology, Elon is building Starship. | ||
Let's say Starship decides to go to Alpha Centauri or something. | ||
I don't even know, how long will it take to get there? | ||
A thousand years, something like that? | ||
It's like 13 light years away, so that's, you know, at the speed of, at almost the speed of light, it's 13 years. | ||
So let's, humans, finally make it there. | ||
And then start colonizing, they will need to use quantum entanglement to communicate between Centauri and Earth in real time, which they could. | ||
So, you know, you mentioned earlier, I think you were mentioning technology's not quite there yet for, but it's there enough to where we've done it. | ||
We've messed with entangled, I think, electrons or something? | ||
I don't know exactly, photons probably. | ||
Photons maybe? | ||
And so, like, you energize one and the other one reacts the same way, as if they're connected in another dimension. | ||
So it's like, it looks far apart to us, but actually in the fourth dimension it's the same thing. | ||
So that means we can have one on the planet in Alpha Centauri or whatever. | ||
Is there a simplification of the theories, like, in the fourth dimension they're actually in the same spot? | ||
Dramatic oversimplification, like, you know, I'm probably way wrong about it, but it's like a general idea, like they're attached for some reason. | ||
But so, what happens is, if you can vibrate it in binary, then you can transmit data in real time, in real time, not even at the speed of, faster than the speed of light, because it's not actually traveling at all, it's just, and then you do data transfer, and then with Neuralink, you can data transfer your mind from planet to planet, like in altered carbon. | ||
So that may be what they're thinking. | ||
Like, how do humans travel to different planets? | ||
You don't. | ||
You transport your brain. | ||
The only thing is, if you're a religious person, you're not actually going there. | ||
You're cloning, you're copying your brain. | ||
So there's... I heard Richard Dawkins talking about this, and someone was... I've heard you guys talk about whether or not you can upload your brain or upload your consciousness to a computer and stuff. | ||
And personally, I don't think that it's possible. | ||
I think that you are... | ||
Your brain is you Right again. | ||
I don't think that there I don't think that it's possible to create you without your brain I think that the experience that you have of existence is Intrinsic to your brain so there is no Ian without Ian's brain so you can't upload Ian to the computer because Ian's brain is always inside Ian so you're Even if all of the information in your brain was uploaded to the computer, it's not going to be your consciousness, because your consciousness exists in the meat in your head. | ||
Do you think that we could extract the brainstem creature from a body, put it in a vat, and then let it still be the person? | ||
That seems possible. | ||
Like, I mean, like, you know, whatever the monster from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles where the brain was in his stomach or whatever. | ||
Maybe that's possible, but I just don't think that human beings exist in absence of a brain. | ||
Have you guys watched The Peripheral on Amazon? | ||
No. | ||
So, yeah, it's really good. | ||
I'm watching it now. | ||
But basically, it's also like Surrogates or Avatar. | ||
If we can do quantum entanglement communications, high-speed data transfer, then you could put on a headset, and then pilot a body on the other planet, and go around and do stuff. | ||
You'd also have, you'd be able to see the future, because if you know, if I know what you know before you throw the ball at me, I see it coming. | ||
Let's read some more. | ||
We got this from Zach D'Arce. | ||
He says, Tim, Jordan Peterson should stand his ground and not delete the tweet. | ||
Also, Tim, I don't think there's any moral victory in keeping a tweet up so I delete it to get my account back. | ||
Why the flip-flop on principles, Tim? | ||
I'm pretty sure that I said there's no point in keeping up the single tweet for Jordan Peterson and he'd be more effective just communicating with his audience. | ||
Abandoning his millions of followers for one single tweet is probably less effective in terms of winning the culture war. | ||
Like, I'm pretty sure that's what I said, right? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Or either way, then, if that wasn't the case... | ||
I don't know. | ||
My current opinion is, if Jordan Peterson gets locked out for a single tweet, and he can remove it and gain access to millions of people, why retreat from the battleground? | ||
It's been my position on everything, like, Tim, why don't you get off YouTube? | ||
Because YouTube is central battleground. | ||
It's where younger people get their content. | ||
It's the most popular social media platform. | ||
So why get off the battlefield? | ||
Get off when you're forced off. | ||
You know? | ||
So my view on Twitter was, I'm more effective tweeting about how stupid Twitter is than just keeping up one tweet from three months ago that no one remembers anyway. | ||
Yeah, and in those environments, if you keep up the fight, I don't really like that metaphor much, but if you stay on the platform, you may find that you actually end up winning the war. | ||
Like, Elon bought the platform, so Jordan, if he had stayed on and deleted that tweet, maybe he could just reinstall the tweet now, so you could argue that there was a net loss there by being vacant from the platform for a year. | ||
Ooh, uh, I'll read one more. | ||
Descent says, cock brand coffee, best coffee beanies, graph-ian dark roast roost, uh, roast dark rooster. | ||
Um, okay. | ||
Graph-ian or Ian's graphene blend for a dark roast is a really smart idea. | ||
I don't want people eating graphene. | ||
It's not really graphene. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
Yeah, I know. | ||
Dude, yeah, let's do it. | ||
Put like the hexagon. | ||
Right, yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
We'll put like, yeah, hexagonal thing and it'll be Ian's dark roast. | ||
We'll have to figure out the right blend. | ||
So we'll get some samples, and then you should formulate, you know, what you think works, and then... Vanilla, dark vanilla blend, or some... We'll figure it out. | ||
Dark vanilla. | ||
Vanilla flavoring coffees. | ||
Avoid flavoring coffees, you found? | ||
Yeah, I'd say what you want to do is you want to just look at, like, Italian, French, or other dark roasts, then figure out what percentage blend you think works. | ||
We'll have to get some trade fair coffee. | ||
Hopefully everything... Fair trade. | ||
Fair trade coffee. | ||
So that means that slave labor wasn't involved in producing the coffee beans. | ||
That's important to me. | ||
All right, everybody, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, become a member at TimCast.com. | ||
Hang out with us for the uncensored, not-so-family-friendly portion of the show, which should be live on the website at about 11 p.m. | ||
Go to TimCast.com, click join us. | ||
When you sign up, you are also supporting Parallel Economy. | ||
They handle all of our financial transactions, so you're helping build the actual parallel economy and help us get away from certain companies like PayPal and other censorious financial institutions. | ||
You can follow the show at TimCastIRL. | ||
You can follow me at TimCastPhil. | ||
Do you want to shout anything out? | ||
I am Phil Labonte. | ||
I sing for the metal band All That Remains. | ||
Follow me on Twitter. | ||
It is at PhilThatRemains. | ||
I'm closing in on 100,000. | ||
Give me a follow. | ||
Phil, that was great. | ||
Thank you so much for coming on. | ||
You were awesome. | ||
My YouTube channel is youtube.com forward slash we are change. | ||
YouTube is showing no one my video today because it's pretty spicy. | ||
I talked about artificial intelligence, human harvesting, Elon, really interesting topics, youtube.com forward slash we are change. | ||
I'm going to be engaging with everyone in the comment section there right now. | ||
And check it out. | ||
Thanks for having me. | ||
Always a pleasure, Phil. | ||
Great to see you again, my man. | ||
Love it when you come out here. | ||
I'm Ian Crossland. | ||
Follow me at iancrossland.net and get through to me on any of my social networks from there. | ||
And I will see you later. | ||
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It was a great show. | |
Great to meet you, Phil. | ||
You can find me everywhere at kellenpdl. | ||
Thanks, guys. | ||
One last thing, too, I want to mention. | ||
We're also working on cold brew, getting a cold brew blend of our own. | ||
The only problem is we have to order 15,000 cans per order. | ||
So it's like you got to make a very serious investment if you want to do your own proprietary cold brew cans. | ||
And I do. | ||
So we've got to figure it out. | ||
But I think we can pull it off. | ||
Cardboard cans usually have plastic lined with them. | ||
But we'll talk about that later. | ||
All right, everybody. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. | ||
We will see you all over at TimCast.com. | ||
Phil, war cry. |