Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
Joe Biden was caught with confidential documents again. | ||
Yeah, seriously, for the second time, more confidential documents. | ||
I guess the only thing we can do is have the FBI raid his house and arrest him. | ||
It's kind of funny that we do this story and then, like, in the middle of the day, aides find more confidential documents, just making things worse. | ||
There was one article that said that this was a massive political gift for Donald Trump, so sure, I guess. | ||
Here we go. | ||
And I'm kind of frustrated by it because it's just like, yeah, yeah, yeah, we get it. | ||
But we are seeing some action from the Republicans in terms of the House. | ||
Adam Schiff is furious, saying that their inquiry into the January 6th committee is to defend Donald Trump and protect themselves, blah, blah, blah, blah. | ||
But we'll talk about all that. | ||
Plus, we got some other news. | ||
The FAA shut down all flights this morning because the no-tam system went down from like 6 to 9 a.m. | ||
That's shocking, because it hasn't happened since 9-11. | ||
But the crazier thing about it to me was that the FAA said, notice to all of our stakeholders. | ||
Stakeholder is a World Economic Forum term. | ||
We recently heard when MIA, the musician, got cancelled from, I think it's called Field Day in London, they said, your presence would be offensive to our stakeholders, or something to that effect. | ||
You can see the language is spreading. | ||
That's the intent. | ||
You will own nothing and you will be happy. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
Plus, the Biden administration wants to ban gas stoves. | ||
They're walking this back after a major backlash, but not before AOC actively defended it because she's claiming that using a gas stove makes you stupider. | ||
It reduces your cognitive abilities. | ||
I mean, maybe that's true, but I don't believe these people. | ||
They want to get rid of your gas stove for climate change and all that stuff. | ||
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Shout out. | ||
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You'll get access to uncensored segments from the TimCast IRL podcast, but you will also, and that'll be up tonight at 11, but you will also be supporting our cultural endeavors. | ||
We're opening a skateboard shop, a coffee shop, it's multiple floors, and probably a private club. | ||
Now we're thinking about this, we were talking about it the other night, maybe a private club up top. | ||
For like a certain degree of, you know, members, and we're gonna figure that one out. | ||
But, um, in terms of the cultural endeavors, I just wanna say one thing. | ||
This Saturday, at DC's Freedom Plaza, I will be there skating, and we're bringing a big ol' crew. | ||
Phil Labonte, of All That Remains, is gonna come hang out, so we're gonna jam and play some music and just chill. | ||
I'll be skating, our skate crew will be coming with us. | ||
Apparently there's a bunch of people who watch the show who've already said they're on their way, they're gonna come hang out, I'm really excited for that. | ||
And I just want to address, you know, someone on the slap forums making the claim that I showed up last Saturday, that everyone skated on the other side of the park, and that I couldn't do a shove-it, and those are offensive lies. | ||
First of all, no one said or did anything. | ||
No one said anything to me, and I was sitting next to everybody, and not only did I do a shove-it, First try, I did a gazelle. | ||
I did a Nali gazelle. | ||
So don't even come at me, bro. | ||
I was doing Nali half-hard late flips. | ||
I was doing kickflip cancel flips. | ||
These people, all they have are lies. | ||
And you know what? | ||
Many of you may be saying, I know what you're talking about. | ||
Let me just tell you this. | ||
What these woke people are doing is trying to lie and claim Oh, Tim was just there goofing off and he's bad at skateboarding. | ||
Ignore it. | ||
No, we're showing up Saturday. | ||
I'm going to do some switch tray flips, maybe a nollie flip crook nollie flip out, and I'll shut up all the haters. | ||
Okay, I haven't been skating that much. | ||
I'm probably not going to nollie flip nollie crook. | ||
But, you know, I did a gazelle. | ||
I'll do some nollie hard flip late flips or something. | ||
If you don't know what that means, fine. | ||
Don't worry about it. | ||
Just come hang out on Saturday in DC's Freedom Plaza and bring your friends. | ||
We're going to give away a whole bunch of boards and it's going to be a lot of fun. | ||
Joining us tonight to talk about not so much that, but everything else is Jamie, uh, Michelle. | ||
Michelle. | ||
unidentified
|
Michelle. | |
I almost said it wrong. | ||
That's why I paused. | ||
It's okay. | ||
Everybody does. | ||
I'm used to it. | ||
But I really, I mean, I really appreciate it when someone gets it right. | ||
So rare. | ||
But hi. | ||
Who are you? | ||
What do you do? | ||
I'm the founder of Gays Against Groomers, an organization that started up a little over six months ago to fight the sexualization, indoctrination, and medicalization of children being done in the name of LGBTQIA+++++. | ||
But yeah, I'm the founder of that, the president, and I'm really excited to be here with you to talk about all things that and other things. | ||
So, Gays Against Groomers, actually, it's LGBT people who are concerned about what's happening with kids. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Everybody in the organization is LGB or T. We have a few trans people. | ||
We also have created a sub-coalition, partner coalition, called Trans Against Groomers, because so many trans people were reaching out, wanting to help. | ||
And yeah, so the whole organization is comprised of us. | ||
Fighting it from inside the community, because that was seriously lacking. | ||
You know, a lot of us were speaking out against it individually, but there wasn't a unified force, basically. | ||
Yeah, I was told you were gonna bust that book out. | ||
Somebody let me know. | ||
Because Ian bought Genderqueer. | ||
It's a big problem. | ||
It's a huge problem. | ||
We definitely got to talk about it. | ||
Yeah, we should talk about the book. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, for sure. | |
It's terrible. | ||
But yeah, it's just a bunch of us from within the community. | ||
We're launching chapters every day. | ||
I think we have like 20 now. | ||
We have our first international one in the UK. | ||
So yeah, things are growing very quickly. | ||
I wasn't expecting it to grow as fast as it did, to explode onto the scene, but I think that just goes to show how needed voices from inside the community were fighting this, because it's giving us a bad name too. | ||
I mean, we have skin in this game. | ||
Um, because the majority of us oppose what's being done, but they are associating all of us with it. | ||
And it's, you know, it's hurting the kids immensely. | ||
I mean, it's destroying them, but it's also hurting us. | ||
And so we needed to put our voices out there and do something about it. | ||
I mean, it's ours. | ||
It's our must to clean up. | ||
And we're here to do that. | ||
Right on. | ||
Well, thanks for joining. | ||
It should be fun. | ||
We also got Luke hanging out. | ||
Hey guys, my name's Luke Grodowski of WeAreChange.org. | ||
I hope you guys are enjoying your new normal, or as it really is, a new world order. | ||
And if you don't know what that means, you're not paying attention. | ||
To help spread awareness about what's really going on there, you could get this shirt on TheBestPoliticalShirts.com because you do. | ||
That's why I am here. | ||
Thank you again so much for having me. | ||
Well, thank you, Luke, for coming. | ||
And everyone, hello. | ||
Hi, Jamie. | ||
And last night we talked about vapes. | ||
And we may have been actually distributing some fake info or unresearched claims about the dangers of vape, vitamin E acetate, in THC vapes or in nicotine vapes when they were actually in the THC vapes. | ||
A lot of the problems coming from black market vapes in general, not the idea of vaping. | ||
Although we talked about moderation, people hitting the thing 500 times a day might also be a problem. | ||
Maybe we'll get into that later. | ||
I just want to put that out there, that that is on my radar of research. | ||
And I've talked to Luke about it also. | ||
Thanks for bringing that up, and let's move this along, Serge, tell me. | ||
Yeah, what's up guys, Serge.com as always. | ||
Alright, here's the first story from the Hill. | ||
Second batch of classified Biden documents found at new location. | ||
A second batch of classified documents belonging to President Biden was reportedly discovered by White House aides days after discovery of public documents from a former private office. | ||
The new batch was found in a separate location from the first. | ||
Okay, I just... You know, part of me was like, why even bother reporting this at this point? | ||
We get it. | ||
The Democrats do these things over and over again. | ||
Joe Biden as Vice President had no powers to declassify anything, nor did Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State. | ||
But Donald Trump should either go to jail or be ineligible for public office because they found classified documents at his house. | ||
But when it comes to Joe Biden, it's, oh, it's no big deal. | ||
He's cooperating. | ||
It's whatever. | ||
Why, why would they report, why would the White House report this about Biden? | ||
Are they trying to get out ahead on something or create like a thing that, oh, it turned out it wasn't that bad, now everything can be put to rest? | ||
Or Biden came to him as like, you know, we can't really ban Gasteau's and then the real powers that be. | ||
Yes we can, we're gonna get you in trouble. | ||
Look at all the documents you left. | ||
Documents? | ||
The poor, the poor guy's forgetful. | ||
So, I don't think he even knows what's going on here, but he was confused even a few days ago mixing up a Uniformed Salvation Army member for a Secret Service agent, specifically talking about all the great things and all the great times he had with the Secret Service. | ||
So, I mean, the guy's not there. | ||
He's not really up there. | ||
Now, the documents that were found No, no, no. | ||
were related to Intel related to of course Ukraine Iran the United Kingdom | ||
he of course was a vice president this this is all happening a few years ago | ||
this this release actually was caught the day before the midterm elections | ||
the second release I don't know I'm talking about the first release that's happening right now. | ||
And the office that it was found was related to a think tank that was also allegedly connected to a lot of money coming in from China. | ||
So a lot of questions surrounding those first documents that were classified, that were found in that private office. | ||
What are these documents related to? | ||
We don't know yet. | ||
I think we're only going to find out a few days from now. | ||
But again, they are classified. | ||
So I wonder if what we're actually going to be finding out is going to be relevant to anyone. | ||
So impeach Joe Biden? | ||
Yeah, impeach everybody. | ||
Have an impeachment party. | ||
Biden says he was unaware of which documents were found. | ||
That's even worse. | ||
Yeah, I know. | ||
I didn't even know what I was taking illegally. | ||
Okay, that's the defense. | ||
That's the thing, though, about a president leaves office, they've got all these aides moving boxes of paperwork, this and that. | ||
If, like, six papers with, like, confidential things that are, like, don't tell the guy's last name and the food he ate, like, who cares? | ||
So what? | ||
If it was, like, state secrets and it's, like, blatantly destroying our national security for some reason, now I understand. | ||
But, like, dude, just you can classify almost anything as the president. | ||
unidentified
|
So, like, But he was the vice president when- Yeah, he's not allowed to do that. | |
Yeah. | ||
He's not allowed to declassify documents as the vice president of the United States. | ||
I'm curious, Jamie, as to your thoughts. | ||
I know, like, your organization is very, very focused on one issue. | ||
Right. | ||
But you aren't just- like, you're conservative, right? | ||
I'm a conservative. | ||
I'm right-wing, yes. | ||
So what do you- I mean, do you vote for Biden? | ||
No. | ||
You look so angry. | ||
Oh my god, no. | ||
I'm incredibly offended that that could even possibly be up for question. | ||
No, I'm basically with Luke here, where the guy has no idea, like, what he's doing. | ||
I mean, I don't know how long he's been suffering from such severe dementia, but I think it's been a while. | ||
I don't think back then he was, though. | ||
But, you know, we don't know what the documents are exactly, but I think that, you know, it's telling that the left seems to not give a single crap about the issue. | ||
You know, they're running cover for him when, you know, they were trying to prosecute Trump for the same thing. | ||
You made a good point, you said that you didn't think his brain, like, how do you say it, that back then his brain wasn't as broken? | ||
Not as broken, I feel like. | ||
It was pretty broken. | ||
No, but hold on, but hold on. | ||
In terms of, like, dementia, you know. | ||
Yeah, and Ian just said that Biden didn't know. | ||
He knew back then! | ||
I can understand him not knowing now. | ||
Yeah, now he doesn't know, I mean, he doesn't know where he is. | ||
He walked up to a Salvation Army guy and was like, I spent a lot of time with the Secret Service, and the Salvation Army guy is wearing, it says Salvation Army on his chest, and he's just like, what's happening? | ||
Honestly, I live for these moments with Joe Biden. | ||
They give me so much entertainment. | ||
You have to laugh at the state of things. | ||
Otherwise, you're going to be very, very depressed every single day. | ||
Humor and human. | ||
It's a basic part of what we are as human. | ||
Can we even be human without humor? | ||
But that, you know, laughing at this, sometimes it feels like riding the nuclear bomb down while, you know, doing the Yeehaw thing straddling, like in, was it Dr. Strangelove? | ||
Yeah, yeah, The End of Strange Love. | ||
But this leaves me with a question. | ||
Is he just an old man with dementia? | ||
Is he a puppet or is he a criminal mastermind selling secrets to China so they give him lucrative contracts to his son? | ||
What's going on here? | ||
What do you think is going on here? | ||
What's your take on it? | ||
What if Hunter is weakened at Bernie Zeng, his dad? | ||
I mean, I think he initially started as, you know, he was not always a very mentally incapacitated man. | ||
I think he has had deals with China going on for a long time. | ||
I think now he doesn't know what deal is what or what exists and what doesn't. | ||
Maybe a little. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I think they pump him full of a lot of meds that give him a little bit of clarity for moments in time. | ||
But I think he definitely knew what was going on when these deals were originally created. | ||
And I'm sure he knows about them now, but doesn't really focus on it too much to know much about it anymore. | ||
What do you think, Ian? | ||
I think he's certainly a puppet of a greater scheme. | ||
I was thinking last night about the world in general, and like, most of the world is | ||
sex trafficking, murder, bribery, destruction, prostitution, slavery kind of thing. | ||
Like that's most of the world. | ||
We happen to be in this like ivory tower of the United States where we have kind of led | ||
ourselves to believe that's not the way things are, and that when it comes up and when we | ||
see it, it's like an aberration of the reality, but the reality is like kids are being trafficked. | ||
That's the largest business on earth is human trafficking, I'm pretty sure. | ||
And so that government, I was like picturing talking to Obama about it. | ||
He's like, yo, I have no, I mean, there's people, I don't know who's running the show. | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's, we are a part of, no, I think he would be straight up. | ||
I think a lot of past presidents, if you get them to be straight up, will be like, dude, we are such a small part of what's going on in the world, even though we think we have the best military. | ||
So I think Biden's a puppet. | ||
Long story short, I think they're being controlled by big money, the liberal economic order, the Bank for International Settlements deciding where the money goes if the Federal Reserve is even going to give the U.S. | ||
government money. | ||
And so we're kind of beholden to the stakeholders in that sense, or at least we think we are. | ||
Stakeholders. | ||
I wouldn't even say he's a puppet at this point. | ||
I think he's just like a little figurehead that sits there in the chair in the Oval Office and goes to these things, but everything he says is completely in his ear at all times. | ||
He doesn't know what he's doing. | ||
But he just, I think, is just kind of put there for show. | ||
Yeah, all presidents really, you know, they always have people behind the scenes. | ||
It feels like aliens took the country over and then just like placed Biden there. | ||
Yeah, because Bernie Sanders was going to win in 2020. | ||
He was dominating that. | ||
I don't know what that has to do with aliens, Ian. | ||
Well, all of a sudden, like seven, eight weeks after the Bernie had been running or four weeks or something, all of a sudden Biden is running now. | ||
He didn't even mention running for president for four years before that. | ||
Someone picked him and put him there. | ||
I mean, that's my... It's surprising to me that that's, you know, out of all the people that they could have picked, the Democrats could have picked, like, they went with this senile old man. | ||
But it's because he's the sacrificial lamb, right? | ||
Their attitude is, whoever we put in place for this next term is going to be hated by everybody because there's so much bad stuff going on. | ||
Yeah, they know he's not going to sell them out either because he's so involved in it. | ||
Why waste a Buttigieg? | ||
You know, Buttigieg has got his whole life ahead of him. | ||
It's like Joe Biden's on his way out. | ||
So they're like, you know, it's like, you know, when you go to a grocery store, and you're looking at the milk, the milk right up front by the glass expires in like three days. | ||
But if you go in the back, it like it'll last another week. | ||
Which one do you take? | ||
Well, you take the one in the back. | ||
I'm not buying the milk that's going to expire in three days. | ||
That's like voting for Joe Biden. | ||
And going in the back is DeSantis. | ||
And going to your local farm and getting raw milk is a form of anarchy, which I think more people should do more than ever. | ||
No, but even Biden himself would say that he's like a bridge. | ||
He's like a bridge president to go from like this one era to another. | ||
And so he even knows his place like in this, you know, and I don't know if he's going to run again. | ||
He's already campaigning. | ||
I guess, but... | ||
Does his own party even want him to run again? | ||
The reality is Joe Biden will never run again. | ||
He's too old. | ||
I made that joke twice. | ||
I think he's gonna try it. | ||
Maybe he'll run. | ||
I hope he's got physical health. | ||
He sprinted up the stairs. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
I think they inject him with stuff right before he's gonna be on camera. | ||
You see his IV? | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
unidentified
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He held up his hands and you could see track marks. | |
They pump that man full of plenty of stuff. | ||
They put him in as a placeholder knowing he won't squawk on the liberal economic order because his son is so deeply involved with Burisma and with China and he himself has been so involved with it. | ||
Is this considered stealing classified documents if you walk out of there as the vice president and take them? | ||
Well, the reason why Biden is a perfect puppet is because there's so much dirt on him. | ||
He's known as being one of the sleaziest politicians in Washington, D.C. | ||
He's been in there for decades, and he's known as the politician for the lobbyists. | ||
Even Barack Obama warned specifically, hey, if Biden ever becomes in power, the lobbyist will have a lot of control over Washington, D.C. | ||
And now I'm paraphrasing here. | ||
I don't remember the exact words, but I remember talking about this a few years ago, where even Barack Obama was worried about the special interests that were involved with Biden. | ||
And when you're in D.C. | ||
for so long, when you're in that private club, when you go to a lot of these private meetings and get ups and islands and whatever it may be, there is So much dirt on you. | ||
There is so much bad things that you have done. | ||
There's so much room, ample opportunities for corrupted deals to go through. | ||
And it's pretty clear, whether it's China, whether it's Ukraine, whether it's even Russia, a lot of money exchanged hands, especially with his family. | ||
So to think that he is doing something that's great, I think his dimension, I think his cognitive abilities are used as a distraction for who he really is, the larger swamp monster That isn't really in charge, but is a conduit for the real people who are in charge. | ||
Yeah, I mean, if you want to go personal on the guy, you've got to look at Tara Reade, because her allegations against him and what he did to her in, I don't know if it was the Capitol building or one of those buildings there, was pretty grotesque. | ||
I mean, she says that he sexually assaulted her, and she's very graphic about what he did to her up against a wall. | ||
Sounds like what he does. | ||
And before he walked away, she rebuffed him, and he was like, you're dead to me. | ||
Or you're nothing. | ||
You're nothing. | ||
I think that's what he said. | ||
This is a guy who's on camera sniffing little girls and pinching and groping them. | ||
So it's like when you hear an allegation, it's kind of like, oh, you know. | ||
Whose own daughter in her own diary wrote... Granddaughter. | ||
Granddaughter, excuse me. | ||
Ashley, right? | ||
Wrote specifically how she had to take showers at night because she was afraid that he would come in there. | ||
unidentified
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Wow. | |
Freaking horrific. | ||
Anecdotal, but horrific. | ||
Remember when he broke his leg and he said the dog did it? | ||
Maybe he was trying to sneak in the shower on his granddaughter. | ||
And they decided to fight back. | ||
And they broke his leg. | ||
unidentified
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Not this time, Grandpa! | |
Hey, hey, hey! | ||
With the way things go down, that's plausible. | ||
Again, we don't have any direct evidence of this. | ||
We're kind of speculating here. | ||
But... If you look how sinister and evil a lot of these people are, I could see the granddaughter just saying, I need to practice martial law, putting him in like a... Martial law? | ||
I'm sorry, martial... What's the correct term? | ||
unidentified
|
Arts? | |
Martial arts. | ||
Practicing martial arts and then snapping the leg of the president. | ||
And when you imagine this, you need to imagine that it's very dark, there's a thunderstorm, Biden's got a gigantic grin. | ||
As usual. | ||
I think you're right, Luke, to not make the dementia a smokescreen for his behavior. | ||
Ronald Reagan, I remember near the end of his second term, got Alzheimer's. | ||
I think they were saying he's coming out with Alzheimer's. | ||
But he was also concerned that he had done some illegal things. | ||
I don't know the whole story. | ||
Maybe you guys know more about it. | ||
Didn't he think that Matthew Broderick movie was real? | ||
That was a thing. | ||
War games? | ||
Yeah, yeah, he thought that was real or something. | ||
Well, he started claiming that he didn't remember a lot of stuff from his term as president. | ||
That's the thing, like, Biden had, you know, when he committed all these crimes and did all this shady stuff, he didn't have dementia then, I don't think. | ||
I mean, you know, now he does, which everybody can clearly see, but this is a different Joe Biden in this era that we're dealing with than, like, who he used to be. | ||
And he's been in politics for, what, like, 40 years? | ||
He's been something like that. 50. | ||
Has it really? | ||
I'm pretty sure it's 50 years. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
He's been in there for such a long time, and he looks pretty different, especially from the last few years. | ||
There's a lot of different photos of him. | ||
In the ear lobes, you can tell. | ||
I mean, I think he's... He's gotten a lot of plastic surgery too, but also a lot of the things just look totally different on him than they ever did before. | ||
I'm calling it here. | ||
I think he's going to run. | ||
He's going to win the next upcoming election, and then the third one, and then the fourth one, just like FDR, who was partly paralyzed and still was able to, of course, successfully be president of the United States for a very long time. | ||
That was before the amendment. | ||
Of course. | ||
Now it's term limits. | ||
Hey, that could be overturned during a national emergency. | ||
Would you vote for Hunter Biden? | ||
Might as well. | ||
Right now, Biden-Federman. | ||
I'm calling it. | ||
It's going to happen. | ||
Hunter Biden is kind of like the anarchy vote, in my opinion, because it all comes crashing down if you vote for someone like Hunter Biden. | ||
I'd rather vote for Kanye West than anybody else. | ||
Sorry, Kanye. | ||
I know that's your name, though. | ||
We talked about it before, but I'd love to watch a Hunter Biden YouTube channel. | ||
Yeah, it would just be like, like a live stream, just a 24 hour live stream. | ||
I don't know, but no, like a vlog of him just being like, yo, what up, everybody? | ||
Hunter Biden here just scored some crack! | ||
I'm ready for like, the kids and grandkids of the Rockefeller, like the young Rockefellers, young Rothschilds, young Bidens to come out and tell the world what really has been happening. | ||
I would love to see that stuff. | ||
Wouldn't that be amazing if they did one day they just like, you know, they just decided like, they're done with being these evil people and they want to expose it all. | ||
Same with the royal family. | ||
The young, like, Harry. | ||
I got so much faith that he and- Nobody thinks they're evil, though. | ||
Who doesn't think they're evil? | ||
The Rothschilds and stuff? | ||
Like, no person. | ||
Like, there are some people, like, I can't remember which serial killer, but there was like a serial killer who was like, yep, I know what I'm doing. | ||
It might have been Dahmer. | ||
And he's like, what I'm doing is wrong, and I know it, and I should be locked up, but I can't stop. | ||
But when you're taking, you know, human excrement and blood and writing messages on the wall trying to summon in demons, I think that that crosses a different level here of what people actually see and understand themselves with. | ||
These people doing it don't think that they are evil people. | ||
They think they're heroes. | ||
Or they're entitled or something. | ||
So you were questioning whether other people think about it? | ||
Yeah, no, I'm talking about how other people see the Rothschilds and stuff. | ||
And I feel like, you know, maybe the kids of these families, like, they're not kids anymore now, but like, I don't know, or their kids, you know, the younger people in the families that maybe don't feel the same, don't want to be part of the same cabal, can see through it. | ||
I don't know, maybe one day they'll decide to tell all. | ||
A lot of them are sociopaths. | ||
So I don't know if sociopaths recognize that they are evil. | ||
We would have to get someone who's studied this topic to talk about this specifically. | ||
When we look at Washington, D.C., it has the highest per capita sociopaths than almost anywhere else in the United States. | ||
And there also is a theory that what Hunter Biden is doing is trying to get some sort of redemption against the father who wasn't there for him or might have potentially hurt him before. | ||
And this is Hunter Biden kind of releasing a lot of this information, getting it out there to the general public on purpose. | ||
That's one of the theories out there in order to hurt his father and get some kind of justice. | ||
Let's jump to this next story. | ||
We have this from the Daily Mail. | ||
Corrupt file and system reboot caused all US flights to be grounded for the first time since 9-11. | ||
NOTAM system and backup were both infected with corrupt file as pilots slam ridiculous decision to ground planes. | ||
I don't believe these people. | ||
I almost feel like when you get AOC coming out calling for a Green New Deal saying we gotta get rid of planes and farting cows, that when these people ground every single plane in the country, maybe it's political or ideological. | ||
Now, I don't know anything about that for sure, but I can tell you this. | ||
The FAA verified on Twitter. | ||
Tweeted out, cleared update number two for all stakeholders. | ||
The FAA is still working to fully restore blah blah blah, you get the point. | ||
I noticed the word stakeholders. | ||
Yes, I know, some people mentioned that stakeholders have been used in certain contexts like this for some time. | ||
But in 2021, October, the FAA announced they'd be changing their language to be more inclusive. | ||
They then start talking about how they're stakeholders, blah blah blah. | ||
The World Economic Forum is pushing what's called stakeholder capitalism. | ||
The idea is a shareholder is represented by those who own shares. | ||
State capitalism is represented by the state. | ||
And stakeholder is better because it's everyone. | ||
The environment, the neighbors, the people downstream, the people upstream, the people on the other side of the planet. | ||
Yeah, it basically sounds like communism. | ||
Oh, 100%. | ||
Basically sounds like state capitalism except for the planet instead of an individual state. | ||
Where they're basically like, they actually say this on the, there's a website called Advanced ESG, and they're like, basically saying that, with a guiding force, stakeholder capitalism, blah blah blah. | ||
This is why it's important, because I want to show you this one. | ||
I know they're different stories, I talked about this this morning, but MIA, the musician, mentioned that she got booted from a concert. | ||
The email says, We have not taken this decision lightly but we must consider the wider risks to the festival and its stakeholders. | ||
There's an important connection between these stories. | ||
The phrase stakeholder. | ||
Did this concert that banned M.I.A. | ||
call all of their stakeholders? | ||
Doubtful. | ||
Did they email the people who bought tickets who are stakeholders? | ||
Did they even define who the stakeholders are? | ||
Exactly. | ||
What they're basically saying is, we're doing this for you! | ||
We're doing all of this for you! | ||
So when the F.A.A. | ||
is coming out saying all the planes are shut down, everyone We're all in this together, but you know we're not because they're not consulting us, they're not asking us what we want, they're telling us what they want, and they're using stakeholder as a word to make you think you're part of it. | ||
But my friends, that's like the chickens thinking they work with me when I own them. | ||
The thing about shareholder capitalism is that it's on contract. | ||
If you have a percentage of a company or shares in a company, you have a contract to verify. | ||
Stakeholder is just, it's subjective. | ||
Like, one day I could dump trash up river and say everyone down river is a stakeholder in my behavior because they're all going to be affected by it, but then the next day I could say, no, no, I put a dam in there or a sifting mechanism, now those people aren't stakeholders anymore because I changed the way my system works. | ||
So, you have no Recourse as a stakeholder in those systems is completely controlled from the top. | ||
I highly warn against it. | ||
I think Klaus is taking us down or attempting to take us down a very dangerous road. | ||
Klaus Schwab with his World Economic Forum, Stakeholder Capitalism, and you're right, Tim, it is communism. | ||
It's a form of communism. | ||
All I know is Pete Buttigieg is having a bad week. | ||
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Why's that? | |
Bad few months. | ||
He's had all these disasters happen and crises happen under, you know, on his watch, basically. | ||
I mean, what, it was like the railroad strike, and then the shipping container issue, and wasn't there, there was one other one before this that, like, just happened recently. | ||
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Remember? | |
He, like, went on vacation, disappeared. | ||
Oh yeah, it was, like, in Port, um, not Puerto Rico. | ||
Look at me, I can't remember. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Something like that. | ||
There's been like four or five issues consecutively that just have, you know, he hasn't been dealing with that great, but that's what happens when you make a diversity hire. | ||
You hire the gay guy just because he's gay, right? | ||
I mean, he really had no experience or accomplishments to really put him in this position. | ||
I don't necessarily think it was a diversity hire for Buttigieg. | ||
No? | ||
No, I think it's they're trying to tee him up for a future political career, and he needed something beyond just being a mayor. | ||
I guess, I guess. | ||
It's just really, I mean, that job, that position is just a weird one. | ||
But he's CIS, so it's like he doesn't even qualify as diversity at this point. | ||
He's what? | ||
CIS. | ||
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Oh, cis! | |
When they were talking about him, all the activists on Twitter were like, he doesn't count as LGBT because he's a white man. | ||
Just being gay isn't enough anymore, especially being white and gay. | ||
No, no, that's very low on the ranks now. | ||
Yeah, he's not a diversity hire. | ||
I guess not. | ||
You've proved me wrong. | ||
Do you guys think that this FAA issue with the computer program is a false flag and or a computer virus that a foreign country put in the system? | ||
Many people speculated it might have been a cyber attack. | ||
The Biden administration said it wasn't. | ||
I would lean more towards their intentionally crippling the economy, and this had a profound impact. | ||
We were affected by this. | ||
We had people who needed to fly out for work, and we had a hiccup that delays us. | ||
What y'all need to understand about economic warfare, let me tell you something. | ||
China and the US, they're both at war. | ||
A component of that war, and a component of every war is, let's go all the way to the beginning, putting food in bellies. | ||
The saying goes that soldiers march on their stomachs. | ||
If you can't feed your soldiers, you lose the war. | ||
That is to say, you need to find food, and you need to be growing that food, there need to be people who are working farms, otherwise there's no war. | ||
So for someone like China or Russia or anyone else at war, shutting down our capability of flight means all this economic activity just ceases and that means our ability to develop tech, our ability to run our businesses is diminished. | ||
Simply put, it's very similar to if You were at war with someone thousands of years ago and you set fire to all their farms so they couldn't feed their soldiers. | ||
Our planes getting shut down may seem like, well, we can't fly and have fun and go travel on vacation, but in reality it means with tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of flights canceled, business is shutting down. | ||
For days, too, because it'll be people trying to catch up. | ||
I think when we talk about insurrection, people say they marched into the Capitol building and stood there. | ||
that they destroyed or disrupted the government, maybe in part, this is the kind of thing that's an insurrection. | ||
If these were American citizens that implanted a virus, like, shutting down the electrical grid, the transportation system, the food supply, that's real insurrection in an economic warfare state. | ||
The fact that they're using the World Economic Forum terminology just says to me, like, outright, I don't trust them. | ||
Because these are the same people who are like, we shouldn't be flying on planes. | ||
Planes are bad. | ||
But they They all fly on private jets. | ||
With their 5,000 jets at the climate, like, summit. | ||
Exactly. | ||
They don't want you to have it because you're a pleb, but they should have it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Because... Well, that's not fair. | ||
Well, it's bad for our stakeholders. | ||
But me flying on a private jet to do the work that I do to save the world is good for our stakeholders. | ||
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Right. | |
You see how that works? | ||
Yeah, they consider that, like, you know, a benefit for the Earth because they're so important and they're such geniuses that they're gonna go solve it. | ||
But they need to take their private jet and cruise on their private yachts, mega yachts. | ||
You know, it's all part of the process. | ||
You have to trust the process and the science. | ||
That's right. | ||
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That's right. | |
Yeah. | ||
Stakeholder capitalism is the future, my friend. | ||
It makes no sense. | ||
I don't understand. | ||
I still don't understand it. | ||
It's communism. | ||
You're not supposed to understand it. | ||
You're supposed to be confused. | ||
I'll tell you exactly what it is. | ||
It is Chinese-style communism. | ||
If you read their website, they say Yeah, this is about the centralization of power. | ||
takes into consideration anyone impacted by a business, not just the shareholders and the customers. | ||
This allows free market opportunities to flourish while still being responsible, and that's meaningless. | ||
And also- Yeah, this is about the centralization of power. | ||
Very few people have a lot of power. | ||
They want all of it. | ||
They want more of it. | ||
So what better way to do it than to think of these new buzzwords that of course amount to anything and essentially what they're building up to here. | ||
Some people have called it the Great Reset. | ||
Some people have called it the UN 2030 agenda. | ||
Some people have called it the New World Order. | ||
At the end of the day, all of it leads to is the massive centralization of power for themselves. | ||
Davos is about to start next week. | ||
And their theme for next week is, quote, cooperation in a fragmented world. | ||
The list of attendees was released, and it's the FBI director, the CEOs of Amazon, BlackRock, Pfizer, the Gates Foundation, the Soros Network, 52 heads of state, 600 CEOs are going to be meeting at one of the highest points in all of Europe, where they, of course, will meet privately, talk about a lot of things publicly as well. | ||
But at the end of the day, this is a list of just absolute Lunatic criminals coming together that are going to ... come together in a way that benefits them and they're ... going to think of more schemes more buzzwords in order to ... convince you to give up your power and authority to them. | ||
You know what this makes me think of is the Bilderberg group, or the Bilderberg meetings. | ||
Remember that? | ||
Whatever happened to those? | ||
They still happen. | ||
I covered it last year, and it was me and my friend Josh Friedman that covered it, and we were the only two journalists there. | ||
Wow. | ||
And you can still see that coverage on my YouTube channel, but no one else really talks about it. | ||
I thought they dropped off and this was their new gig, but it's still happening. | ||
Well, there's private meetings amongst other private meetings. | ||
There's smaller groups and bigger groups. | ||
And, you know, when you have so many powerful people come together in one room, when you have the FBI director coming and meeting with the heads of Pfizer, there's a lot of ability there for them to, of course, hey, say, I'm going to give you this money in this way. | ||
You just kind of make sure you weaponize the intelligence states to go after our critics. | ||
And to think that that's not happening, that these people aren't colluding together and conspiring together for their own personal benefit, is absolutely naive. | ||
I mean, that's the sole purpose. | ||
Does anybody believe otherwise, truly? | ||
Well, when we look at these meetings and we look at what these people say, especially Yoel Roth Harari, they're coming on and saying there's going to be, you know, a time very soon where people are going to be useless. | ||
There's going to be a lot of people that are going to need to adjust themselves to live in virtual reality. | ||
A lot of individuals who won't have any meeting, who won't have any jobs, who will be absolutely meaningless in our world. | ||
And we won't need them. | ||
So this is what they're thinking about. | ||
This is a part of also their fourth industrial revolution. | ||
Klaus Schwab likes to talk about this as well. | ||
But essentially, this is the larger takeover of our life and our society for the benefit of the very few. | ||
You got a couple of names mixed up. | ||
It's Yuval Noah Harari. | ||
Yoel Roth is the Twitter guy. | ||
They look very similar, by the way. | ||
Similar names. | ||
They look extremely similar. | ||
Thank you for that fact check. | ||
Yuval Noah Harari is a fascinating guy. | ||
He wrote Sabians, the book. | ||
And I mean, in a way, they're talking about the transhumanist, you know, evolution and how we are, you know, in a lot of ways we're becoming cyborgs, you know, maybe inevitably, maybe. | ||
So I think it's not like they're completely wrong about everything and pure evil. | ||
They're just trying to find a way to make things not go to World War III, but I don't agree with that direction. | ||
Where did you get that? | ||
They're obsessed with chaos. | ||
They do not want chaos. | ||
They're obsessed with preventing chaos. | ||
They're the masters of chaos. | ||
They're sowing chaos. | ||
There's a thing called order out of chaos. | ||
They sow the chaos in order to create the problem in order to create the solution which benefits them. | ||
That's their kind of code That they've been working from for a very long time because you look at a lot of our problems that humanity deals with these problems are usually engineered from a top level and done in a way where of course people will galvanize towards them asking them to please stop or only when they give up their money or their rights does it stop and then it never does stop it's just a larger con game that people keep playing into that's screwing them over | ||
Yeah, I thought 9-11 was like that. | ||
Just whip people up into a frenzy, got them all to go to war in the Middle East for weapons that didn't exist, and then... So you think the next one's aliens or something? | ||
I mean, the pandemic is a great example, too. | ||
I mean, they manufactured this fear, you know, by the indoctrination. | ||
They honestly groomed society with this. | ||
Big Pharma groomed them and all of their cohorts, but to make them basically beg for a vaccine to open back up, you know, to give them their lives back. | ||
What? | ||
Trump was the one who spent... Operation Warped was all him. | ||
Don't get me started on that. | ||
They engineered a lot of things with that. | ||
Exactly. | ||
But then they come in with their solutions to the problems they create. | ||
Like if COVID wasn't put on TV and just blasted everywhere 24-7 for like a year and a half, two years, people would not think anything of it. | ||
They'd think they were getting a cold or like, you know, a flu or whatever. | ||
I think it was substantially worse than that. | ||
No, I'm not saying it's just the common cold. | ||
I'll tell you. | ||
From what I've talked to people and from my experience, I don't know, did you get COVID? | ||
I did. | ||
But what we had? | ||
Yeah. | ||
It felt like something strange. | ||
Okay, no, I had it and so did my fiancé. | ||
We had it at the same time and it presented in me as a horrible headache. | ||
Like, I feel like my head was smashed in with like an axe. | ||
You know I mean just the the excruciating pain it was mostly that for me and and it felt very much like a flu besides that like it was like an extreme flu for me but I know that obviously I know it has killed people I know it has put people in hospitals I'm not saying it's it was nothing I'm just saying like I feel like if it wasn't so manufactured like the media um Spotlighting it and just, you know, running the numbers 24-7. | ||
Like, I don't think people would have thought it was some massive pandemic, like global pandemic. | ||
I think they would have thought something was going around, you know, that was not good. | ||
But I don't, you know, now like... I half agree. | ||
Okay, fair enough. | ||
It was so bad for me that I actually had to stop working. | ||
Really? | ||
And that's like... That never happened. | ||
And I actually called the hospital. | ||
Okay. | ||
Early variant. | ||
I was ready to go and get put in a hospital bed. | ||
That's how bad it was. | ||
I was basically hyperventilating. | ||
My temperature dropped by like eight degrees. | ||
And then I did the only thing a smart person would do is I called Joe Rogan. | ||
Yeah, you have to call Joe Rogan. | ||
Joe, help please! | ||
No, but I called the hospital, and they were like, good luck, and then I was like, okay, and then I was like, I guess I'll just, I'll probably be fine, because I know all the data and everything. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And that, that, as it was getting late, it was so intensely bad, I was like, if this doesn't peak here, I will be in the hospital on a ventilator. | ||
You're very lucky you didn't go to the hospital, because a lot of people that did were put on certain drugs and put down, put on ventilators that gave them organ failure. | ||
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Yeah. | |
I called Joe, Joe talked to me, I ended up calling a private doctor, private doctor gave me a prescription, cured me overnight. | ||
Isn't that amazing? | ||
Monoclonal antibodies. | ||
And that's the thing. | ||
The government, the media, whoever, the puppet masters, they didn't want you to have ivermectin or whatever these things are that would clear it up very fast. | ||
I disagree with that. | ||
But they banned discussing it. | ||
You think they wanted us to have ivermectin? | ||
No, I think they didn't want you to have it, but I don't think ivermectin does anything. | ||
It helped a lot of people. | ||
It's a worm stunner. | ||
Well, there's a new study that just came out. | ||
Well, whatever Joe Rogan, whatever you're talking about. | ||
Joe Rogan outright told me to get monoclonal antibodies, and I didn't take the Evermectin because I didn't want it, and then the doctor made me take it several days later when I was already better, and then the Daily Beast smeared me claiming that I was the poster boy for Evermectin when I was like, I didn't even want it! | ||
Yeah, I had a different experience. | ||
I was, you know, prophylactically taking it and I had a totally different experience than a lot of other people do. | ||
And now there's a new study that came out specifically with ivermectin highlighting a lot of very surprising findings, especially if there's early treatment that actually did support a lot of help for a lot of individuals and a lot of people. | ||
But again, we're not medical doctors. | ||
We're not here giving you any kind of medical advice. | ||
But it wasn't just that. | ||
It was also the antibodies that the government went after and tried to deny to the American people as the federal government was saying, hey, Florida is having a lot of success with this. | ||
Florida, give us all of your antibody treatments right now. | ||
And Florida, luckily, was one of the few states that said, no, we're going to keep giving it out. | ||
And this is why Florida had such a success compared to, of course, New York and Michigan, where they took sick people and put them in nursing homes. | ||
I don't like the censorship, but I don't like the tribal, I'll agree with something because the other side said it. | ||
So like, when I was going through all the ivermectin data and I was like, eh, I don't know what we see here, you've got one side saying no one's allowed to talk about it, another side saying it's a miracle cure, and I think neither are true. | ||
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Or I think you should be able to talk about it, but I don't think it's a miracle I wasn't, like, pushing just Ivermectin. | |
Like, I don't care about Ivermectin. | ||
I was just saying, in general, all the other things that were available to help people feel better and get better were suppressed, completely silenced, deplatformed, if you brought them up, because I'm, like, back to the subject of, you know, creating chaos to bring order. | ||
Like, their desired order was the vaccine, and, you know, so they suppressed all of these other things that were actually helping people to bring the vaccine, which is, you know, the order they created out of their chaos. | ||
Including early treatment. | ||
The big one was monoclonal antibodies. | ||
The Biden administration was trying to stop that. | ||
When it was an FDA-approved treatment, when we knew that it worked, for those of us that got sick here, within like six, maybe like eight to ten hours of me getting it, I was better. | ||
And I told you how bad I had it. | ||
That night, it was like 4 a.m. | ||
and I felt like everything was better. | ||
And they did stop it. | ||
The federal government said, you have to stop using this because there's allegedly a new strain. | ||
It was still helping some people that were dealing with the old strain, but the federal government said, no, no, no, no, we're stopping the use of antibodies. | ||
And a lot of states had to stop it. | ||
They also made sure and prevented any kind of early treatment, which, as we know now, was key to, of course, helping people not deal with severe COVID. | ||
They also made sure that the post office was confiscating packages of ivermectin even when doctors were giving it out to their patients, not just for COVID, but for actual parasite infections that people had. | ||
People were denied medications because of this, as the Rolling Stones was writing fake hit news pieces about ERs being overwhelmed with people taking too much ivermectin, which never ever happened. | ||
Now there's a lot of new studies, there's a lot of new data, and again, early treatment Early use of that stuff is showing in these latest studies is having a tremendous effect and is helping people. | ||
The government never wanted to help you. | ||
They wanted you to be as weak, as sick as you possibly could so you would need them and you would buy a product from their friends. | ||
Exactly. | ||
I agree. | ||
The hardest thing to figure out about all of this is that the data is wild across the board and correlation is not causation. | ||
So we look at Sweden and people say stuff like they didn't lock down or they didn't mask or things like that, but they're also a population of 8 million people in relatively sparse population settings in a relatively cold environment, which is very, very different from, say, Florida, which is higher population density in a very warm environment. | ||
So looking at data across the board from state like those two places it's hard to actually figure out if you're looking at New York or you're looking at California or Haiti or Africa right specifically with other countries like Singapore or Israel. | ||
So my issue is I think everybody's lying about everything. | ||
I think I think it's all political. | ||
I get frustrated by all of it because I desperately am trying to sort out what's true and what isn't. | ||
And you get people saying, pull into a 7-Eleven parking lot and get injected from a stranger, which is the stupidest thing I ever heard. | ||
But then you have people coming out and asserting, and I'm going to say it again because I know people are big on ivermectin. | ||
I'm like, dude, I've looked at a lot of the data. | ||
There's some good data. | ||
There's a lot of bad data. | ||
There's a lot of propaganda on both sides. | ||
And when I was like, when I was talking to Joe about it, this is like two years ago, I said, I'm not convinced. | ||
I've been looking at the data, I've been desperately trying to find what people are claiming to see. | ||
And I think what it is, is a lot of people are just like, I believe it. | ||
And I'm like, why, dude? | ||
Tell me, why? | ||
Show me a study. | ||
I've gone over, like, there's a website showing you all these different studies and they're like, look at all these positive studies. | ||
And then I go through them and I'm like, okay, this one is bad, this one is good, this one looks bad, this one looks stupid, this one looks real. | ||
CNN's lying about it, WAPO's lying about it, YouTube's banning people who talk about it. | ||
But I'm still only seeing like, They were taking groups of studies and then doing meta-analysis on all of them. | ||
And I'm just like, that's not definitive. | ||
Then you had in Uttar Pradesh, they were suggesting that one of the reasons Ivermectin potentially showed promise was that it was actually curing people of parasites, which then allowed their immune systems and their gut to work better. | ||
And then when I said that to Joe, Joe just goes, nah, it's a protease inhibitor. | ||
And I'm like, Joe, for what reason are you saying this to me? | ||
Like, no offense, I like Joe, he's a smart guy, but like, you just believing that it's a protease inhibitor because someone told you that doesn't convince me when we're actually looking at people who are actually being cured of worms by this thing. | ||
Could it not be a protease inhibitor and a worm stunner? | ||
It stuns the worms and then your body kills them all. | ||
There was also a lot of preliminary data showing other coronaviruses being affected by ivermectin. | ||
This is why ivermectin has been talked about in so many circles, even before it was called horse medicine, because it was found to have positive effects in people that were dealing not just with COVID-19, but other previous coronaviruses, like I think it was SARS and MERS out there, and there was some early data showing that it did help with those specific viruses And there are studies that show that it didn't, and there are people who are like, I choose not to believe that study. | ||
And then every time someone says, I saw a study that says this, and I'm like, I saw a study that says it didn't. | ||
And I'm going through all the data, man. | ||
My gauge for that is basically what's forcibly censored. | ||
What can't you talk about? | ||
What is being hidden? | ||
And I am more inclined to then Want to learn more about that thing or think that thing is good. | ||
But I do agree with you that like this whole, you know, he said, she said versus like, you know, this person hates it, so that means it's great type thing. | ||
Exactly what I'm talking about. | ||
I think it's really dangerous. | ||
And I think it's I don't agree with that way of thinking. | ||
It seems very childish and just not, you know, based on anything reasonable. | ||
Except for a popularity contest or who you like more. | ||
That shouldn't be how people base their decisions. | ||
We got treatment. | ||
They gave us monoclonal antibodies, NAD, and a vitamin drip. | ||
That night, fever broke, pain went away. | ||
I woke up at 4am and I was like, wow. | ||
It was crazy. | ||
Three days later, the prescription for ivermectin the doctor sent arrives, and I said, Doc, I don't think I need it. | ||
And the doctor said, I want you to take it anyway. | ||
And I said, I am completely fine now. | ||
This is amazing. | ||
And they said, if it relapses or comes back, you're going to be mad you didn't follow my instructions. | ||
And I said, fine, whatever you say, Doc. | ||
trust your doctor. | ||
But my issue is, it's exactly this. | ||
It gets censored and then people assume because it's censored it must be good. | ||
And that's not a good answer for me. | ||
I don't care what you guys believe. | ||
If you guys think I'm wrong, you're allowed to do it. | ||
Comment, tell me I'm wrong, all of that stuff, it's fine. | ||
I sit here all day, every day, and I'm reading this stuff, and I have people saying that I'm either naive or ignorant, | ||
and it's like, bro, the only thing I do for 12 hours a day is just read constantly, | ||
desperately trying to figure out why people think these things. | ||
And what I've concluded is that, while there is some promising data, | ||
there's a ton of censorship, which breeds mistrust. | ||
What I'm finding is that a lot of this stuff is pure tribalism. | ||
Donald Trump recommended this, therefore people say it's good. | ||
Then they start censoring it, and I'm like, I think people are losing it. | ||
He didn't even recommend it. | ||
He was talking about possibilities. | ||
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No, HCQ. | |
Yeah, hydroxychloroquine specifically. | ||
He was talking about how, hey, there's some early data here looking at this. | ||
But ivermectin in a whole has been a breakthrough medication that has helped so many people deal with things like river blindness. | ||
And to have it just relocated as horse medicine was absolutely crazy, but the same people that were disingenuously attacking it were also trying to deny people antibody help. | ||
In New York, white people were told not to even try to get monoclonal antibodies because their doctors have prioritized it for non-white people. | ||
They did the same thing in Texas. | ||
So these are crazy individuals that know, hey, this is going to help people, But we're going to make sure that we're not going to give it to you because of the way you were born. | ||
This is how our scientific community, our medical community was being run. | ||
That's no way to run anything, any kind of business, any kind of institution, especially when it comes to people's lives. | ||
It was absolutely crazy what was happening during COVID. | ||
Absolutely insane. | ||
Let's jump to this next story because I've been sitting on this one. | ||
We got this from the Daily Mail. | ||
AOC says that gas stoves are linked to reduced cognitive performance in spat with Republican Ronny Jackson after he said he would never give his up. | ||
You may have heard the news. | ||
The Biden administration wants to ban gas stoves. | ||
This is PSYOP. | ||
Sort of. | ||
Here's what happens. | ||
The Biden administration consumer protection group literally says on TV, we want to potentially ban gas stoves. | ||
CNN and the Washington Post then report definitively they want to ban gas stoves. | ||
Huge backlash ensues. | ||
Politicians and personalities like AOC come out and say, well, gas stoves are bad and there's indoor pollution. | ||
Then the backlash gets bigger and bigger and bigger and they look really stupid and they're pissing people off. | ||
So they issue a statement saying, no, no, We never wanted to ban gas stoves, you're all crazy. | ||
Snopes then issues a story, does the Biden administration want to ban gas stoves? | ||
False. | ||
And now anybody who claimed they did is gonna look stupid, they're reversing. | ||
Someone posted on Twitter, it's a trial balloon. | ||
They say something, and if the backlash is too big, they walk it back. | ||
Yeah, same with the invasion of Syria, that's what Obama did. | ||
Because people were like, hell no, we're not going to war in Syria, they didn't invade. | ||
They like to see how far they can get or what they can get away with, you know. | ||
Or it's just they tried to do it and they were forced to pull back. | ||
Right. | ||
So it's like that story we talk about where eBay had a yellow website and then wanted to be white, but then everybody got mad when they changed it from yellow to white, so then they changed it back, and then every day they slowly incremented the shade one degree, and then a year later the website was white and nobody cared. | ||
I think Cortez said that they're gonna, Alex, AOC said that they're gonna not ban gas stoves but start only after 2030 creating electric stoves from here on out and no new apartments will have anything other than electric stoves. | ||
Well many states have already implemented a lot of these very similar policies. | ||
I think New York and California already have it. | ||
Where if you're building a building, you cannot have a gas stove inside of it. | ||
So that already is very disproportionately attacking a lot of ethnic communities, especially that make their own food in their own kind of specific way, using a fire in order to do so. | ||
And when you use electric, this is going to mean that we're going to, of course, use more electricity, which is going to hurt the grid, which California already is dealing with a very serious problem with. | ||
Why are they doing this? | ||
Are they trying to deliberately destroy our energy sector? | ||
Yes. | ||
Also, I like electric better than gas. | ||
I like gas better because you can pick up the pan and turn it sideways and get heat all over the pan to get a more even cook. | ||
No, you can do that with electric. | ||
No, because if you lift it up, you lose the heat off electric. | ||
You can turn it sideways and you can... You gotta keep touching it, though. | ||
And the problem with... Have you ever felt near the electric stove? | ||
It's not hot enough. | ||
The problem with gas, in my opinion, is that the fire moves and it creates an uneven cook no matter what you do. | ||
But that's fun. | ||
Uh-huh. | ||
See, I like a consistent, stable, even cook, and you like chaos. | ||
I think that it's more consistent with fire, because you can get the sides and stuff. | ||
I like the chaos. | ||
I'm with you, Ian. | ||
When my pan is on full contact with the electric, the bacon cooks perfectly all around. | ||
I think for more exquisite long-term cooks, you want to be able to mediate your temperature at will. | ||
Like, in a split second, you want to go from— You can do that on electric. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
Well, you gotta go—you want it 70 degrees cooler, then you want it 45 degrees cooler over here. | ||
It's easier on electric. | ||
And you want to—I don't think so, because if you pick it up to shake it around, you lose the heat contact. | ||
You have a flat disk of heat. | ||
That you can move in any direction you want. | ||
With fire, the fire's going all crazy and all over the place, you have no idea where the heat is. | ||
Yeah, but the point is you've got to maintain physical contact with the electric element. | ||
Because if you lift it up with... No, you don't. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Otherwise you lose... But if you're working with, like, woks, right? | ||
Which a lot of people in the Asian communities are, you need a fire. | ||
You can't have an electric... Okay, fair point. | ||
A problem is that people will use wood. | ||
They'll end up using dirtier things than gas if they don't have access to flame. | ||
That's what I'm concerned about. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Do you want good Chinese food or crappy Chinese food? | ||
I want good Chinese food. | ||
I want that wok in there. | ||
I want that rice prepared nicely. | ||
Ian makes a good point. | ||
People in rural areas, without access to gas, will start burning wood. | ||
And that is so dirty! | ||
Yeah, that's what happened in South Africa, man. | ||
All the gas became, I don't remember the whole story, but basically people started using fire and it depleted all of the natural forests in the area because they just used it to make fire to warm their houses. | ||
And the carbon! | ||
It's gonna put all that carbon back in the atmosphere. | ||
Yeah, which is terrible for your lungs. | ||
And on top of that, if your power goes out and you have an electric stove, good luck getting some heat to light a fire to warm yourself up if it's the middle of the winter. | ||
Or cook food. | ||
At least back in the day you had a gas thing you could get the element on, light a candle on fire. | ||
For me, this is happening in order to push the kind of digitization of everything. | ||
To fully have a technocratic society, you need everyone dependent on technology. | ||
And if you're able to cut off that technology, you're able to control people more. | ||
And cutting people's ability to heat their own food by just simply clicking a button? | ||
That could be easily done with this new policy, and I think that's why they're really doing it, in my opinion. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I personally prefer electric, but I don't want them to eliminate the gas because of this reason exactly. | ||
I mean, I really don't think we're far from, like, a social credit score, you know, what we see in China, like, and I really think that with the push for electric everything, electric cars especially, you know, and now this and everything else, Oh, you liked gays for groomers, no cooking for you for a week. | ||
Oh, your Tesla's also going to be off, too. | ||
Gays against groomers, by the way. | ||
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Proper grooming. | |
Goodness. | ||
Let's talk about grooming. | ||
I tell groomers, like actual pet groomers, that they should just refer to themselves as pet stylists from now on because... | ||
If they ban gas stoves nationwide, that means rural people won't have access, and a lot of those people have gas tanks at their houses, which would put their cooking on the grid, and the grid can be controlled by external forces. | ||
So it's just centralization. | ||
Just like electric cars, you know? | ||
I think that's also another reason. | ||
Yeah, you'll never be able to leave. | ||
You have a kill switch, which a lot of governments are working on, especially in Europe right now, where they could just turn off your car whenever they want to. | ||
That's so scary. | ||
It's freakish, dude. | ||
I want to get a heating element on my phone, on the new Android model, where I can, like a cigarette lighter, push a button and it'll heat up. | ||
Oh, they have those, I'm pretty sure. | ||
Oh, good! | ||
Hell yeah. | ||
Yeah, I think they have those. | ||
I think I saw that. | ||
Get me off the grid. | ||
Of course, they can shut my phone off if they wanted. | ||
That's how they track you, Ian, with the cell phone. | ||
But you can also get solar. | ||
The problem with solar systems is they're also hooked up to the grid. | ||
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Yeah. | |
So if this system, like if anything did happen where they're trying to control everything, you'd have to create your own electrical grid. | ||
Like, small one, off the grid. | ||
Like, we have the van that has its own electrical system. | ||
I can plug into it without having to worry about anything. | ||
But even our solar system, which is like, we generate our own electricity with solar panels, we have to get permission from the grid to activate. | ||
Can you plug the RV into the grid as well as have it off grid? | ||
Yes. | ||
That's cool. | ||
Yes, shore power. | ||
So you can actually sync the battery up to the grid if you want. | ||
And that doesn't, you don't need permission for that, you just plug it in. | ||
But like a big solar system, before we can even turn it on, we gotta, the government has to come and do an inspection and all that stuff. | ||
I know methane's dirty. | ||
I know that. | ||
And you don't want to breathe in direct methane. | ||
Obviously, you cook with a ventilation system. | ||
But I mean, what's the other option is burning wood. | ||
I mean, that's the reality of it is. | ||
Everybody's yelling at me saying that gas is the way to go. | ||
I'm just saying when I'm cooking bacon, I got this nice, even cook on the bacon. | ||
It's done super quick. | ||
I don't got to worry about it. | ||
I want to give a special shout out to Chef Andrew Gruel for being extremely vocal about this and making noise, going on TV, talking about this. | ||
He was talking about this on the show before this even became an issue. | ||
If you remember, that time he came on the broadcast. | ||
It was a great podcast. | ||
If you haven't listened to it, check it out. | ||
How do you say his name again? | ||
Andrew Gruel, I believe. | ||
How do you spell it? | ||
G-R-U-E-L, I think? | ||
Yeah, that was a great podcast, and he was warning about that very specific issue, and now it's here. | ||
He's a professional chef. | ||
Yeah, he's awesome. | ||
That would be chefcruel.com. | ||
And then he cooked for us. | ||
Oh, that was great! | ||
Which I enjoyed more than anything else. | ||
We have an electric downstairs, and I'm always sad about it. | ||
I'm always wishing I had an open flame. | ||
I have an open flame in my RV. | ||
We'll make a brick wood oven. | ||
Yeah! | ||
At Freedomistan. | ||
That's how you do it. | ||
We'll throw some wood in there, and then some charcoal. | ||
Wood! | ||
Natural wood. | ||
You go to the forest, you'll get your own wood. | ||
Get a little carbon. | ||
There's probably a bunch of trees that already fell down. | ||
You'll chop them up and you'll do the work, Ian. | ||
I'm into it. | ||
To convert the energy to cook the food. | ||
I gotta get a really nice chainsaw. | ||
You ever use a chainsaw? | ||
I haven't, but you know what, this is a random side note. | ||
I used to be, well not long ago, I was really into bushcraft, so like this all sounds really fun to me. | ||
I never got into it, but I would watch endless hours of bushcraft videos on YouTube. | ||
It was, like, relaxing to me. | ||
And I was thinking, like, why am I so into this? | ||
And I think maybe my subconscious was, like, to prepare you. | ||
Like, you might need these skills sometime in the near future, but no. | ||
But that sounds fun to me. | ||
I'd be totally game for that. | ||
I was watching The Island with Bear Grylls. | ||
Did you guys ever see that show a couple years ago? | ||
The Island? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Something called The Island where they go twelve, fourteen people on an island trying to survive. | ||
Men versus women. | ||
Last night I was just pouring over episode after episode of it. | ||
Same thing. | ||
I've got this fascination with the survival life, although I'm eternally grateful for the things I have. | ||
There's the really famous ones where they have the men and women separate. | ||
Yeah, that's the one. | ||
The men, like, within 10 minutes have, like, a functioning society. | ||
That's how I fell into it. | ||
I was watching, like, Andrew Tate stuff. | ||
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And the women are lost walking around crying. | |
That's transphobic. | ||
There's numerous episodes of these shows, and it's like... It's almost like there are differences between the sexes. | ||
It's like the guys have, like, a cabana, and they're, like, serving drinks. | ||
There was one I watched, I think it was Bear Grylls, where, like, the women kept going in circles. | ||
That's the one I watched last night. | ||
And they were crying. | ||
For days. | ||
Yeah, for days. | ||
They couldn't find their base camp, so the girls at the base camp were just like, they've abandoned us. | ||
Oh my god. | ||
For three, they, three, twice or three times, they were going in giant circles. | ||
They were going in giant circles. | ||
But what got me there was I was watching Andrew Tate's stuff about misogyny, and then they were like, oh yeah, are men and women even as good at survival? | ||
And then I was like, well, let's watch this thing. | ||
So you watch some Andrew Tate content? | ||
I've been really diving deep on the Andrew Tate stuff lately. | ||
Destiny and Pearl, Just Pearly Things, did an episode about it today that came out. | ||
I have like no interest in the Andrew Tate saga. | ||
What do you get? | ||
What's your vibe from the distance? | ||
I mean, I think he's a You know, piece of... I don't know what I... If I can... I can't swear. | ||
Whatever. | ||
I don't think he's a good guy. | ||
I don't like him. | ||
I don't like his method. | ||
Obviously, you know, I'm anti-Matrix, you know, his whole thing with the Matrix, which I think the way he just markets that is very corny. | ||
But, you know, there's... I just feel bad that these are... This is one of the role models, the most prominent role models for, like, young men in our society. | ||
Like, I just think they deserve better. | ||
Right. | ||
I'm with you. | ||
I'm not a fan personally and I just, I don't keep up with the drama of it, personally. | ||
I'm with you, I wanna like him because of some of the stuff he said, | ||
but it just is devastating. | ||
Yeah, I agree with some of the stuff he said, I just, I don't like him. | ||
I think he's a sleazy character. | ||
Obviously, he's stringing these young men along, promising them great things, | ||
like to make something great out of themselves and honestly, I did watch one video | ||
kind of on his tenants program or whatever, like the Matrix, I don't even know what it's called, | ||
like you join this program and he's basically promising to teach you how to achieve financial freedom | ||
and own 10 Lamborghinis like him or whatever and it's basically just like a basic Shopify 101 course. | ||
You know? | ||
And like, it teaches you dropshipping, which you could learn for free on YouTube in like a day. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
I don't like people that take advantage of, you know, people. | ||
Do you think you should wait for the evidence until you think that? | ||
Oh, definitely evidence. | ||
Wait for the evidence. | ||
I mean, I think that in order to hold him like he says that the matrix is against him | ||
I don't know I think that you know | ||
I do remember he put out that he was on some podcast or whatever and kind of | ||
Primered it that like, you know, they're coming after me just because I'm so successful and I'm breaking the matrix | ||
and whatever So they're gonna arrest me | ||
I think he probably knew that something was coming down the pipeline | ||
and so he put that out as kind of like, you know to set the Stage for it basically and like he didn't do anything wrong | ||
because they're just out to get him like he planted that idea | ||
But I'm sure there is evidence like I'm sure there is something but I am NOT gonna judge him until right | ||
That's fully known. | ||
I think he admitted to a lot of it, which is like—I don't know if you would call what he admitted to sex trafficking. | ||
I'm not sure the exact definition of sex trafficking, but if you invite a woman out to work for you and then Or you invite a woman out because she's in love with you and then she gets there and you're like, by the way, why don't you start doing this cam work for me? | ||
Is that? | ||
No, that's not what it is. | ||
It's that you say, I love you. | ||
Come work with me. | ||
We're going to do this thing. | ||
And then when she gets there, you're like, if you don't do it, I'm kicking you out and taking your money away, forcing her into the position. | ||
Pull the rug. | ||
But here's the issue I see with Tate is because I've been looking at a lot of stuff as well, and some of it I really do feel like... You guys ever see that movie, The Life of David Gale? | ||
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Yeah. | |
I love that movie. | ||
It's a good movie. | ||
It's really good. | ||
That is such an underrated movie. | ||
Yes, I know. | ||
Back when Kevin Spacey was... It was okay to like him. | ||
That's right. | ||
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That's right. | |
He was so great in that. | ||
Alright, so basically what happens is... | ||
This professor is at a party. | ||
He sees this young woman who got expelled or something. | ||
And then she's like, let's go in the bathroom and hook up. | ||
And then she says, be rough with me. | ||
And then he's like, banger. | ||
And then she's like, rip him off. | ||
Rip off my panties. | ||
And then he rips him off. | ||
And then she's like, yeah, yeah. | ||
And then she scratches him. | ||
And he's like, yeah. | ||
Then she says he raped her. | ||
Ripped her clothes off, and she scratched him in self-defense, making it look like she planned the whole thing. | ||
So, the reason I bring that up is not that I'm saying Andrew Tate is necessarily being falsely accused, but I'm wondering, when you look at a lot of these quotes, and I'm like, it sounds like they were kink playing. | ||
When he's, like, when he says things that are so over, like, I was reading one quote where it's like, according to a transcript, he was saying, like, oh, yes, baby, I enjoy raping you. | ||
This is so good. | ||
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I was like, No rapist would actually... That doesn't sound real, man! | |
No, it's a little incriminating, don't you say? | ||
Right, right, but like, there's that viral video where apparently he's like beating a woman, and the woman said that they were just like, they were, it was kink. | ||
Like, she wanted him to be rough, and she was totally into it, but they, what they do is they take it out of context, and they make it seem like you shouldn't be allowed to do those things. | ||
Now I'm not, I'm not trying to defend the guy saying he didn't do these things, I'm just saying some of them are so over the top, I have to wonder if like, He's just playing. | ||
Oh, if there's ever going to be false allegations against Andrew Tate, now is the time for them to come out. | ||
And some of the people, what they're suggesting is that one of the girls that was working for him got really loud mouth, smashing stuff up kind of person, and then she went and kind of caused this big scene, and then other people kind of piled on. | ||
That's one suggestion. | ||
Well, this has been an ongoing investigation since April, so we're going to see what the Romanian authorities kind of put out there. | ||
So far, I mean, we got some text messages from Vice that were allegedly reduplicated. | ||
Who knows what the whole conversation was really about? | ||
They only show Andrew texting, but not the responses. | ||
What was the response? | ||
What was the conversation? | ||
I'm waiting to find out more before making any kind of judgment calls. | ||
Whatever people think, both scenarios could be true here. | ||
It could be, you know, the Matrix or whatever you call it, and he could be a bad guy. | ||
It could be both. | ||
It could be one of them. | ||
It could be neither of them. | ||
Who knows? | ||
Let's wait until we actually see the real evidence. | ||
Let's jump to the story from Fox News. | ||
Harvard Medical School offers course about health care for LGBTQIA plus infants. | ||
The course promises to focus on serving gender and sexual minority people across the lifespan. | ||
What does that mean, an LGBTQI infant? | ||
Prebubescent human beings who haven't formed the ability to speak have already formed sexual identity? | ||
Is that what they're saying? | ||
I think that's what they're trying to say, yes. | ||
I mean, and this is coming from Harvard. | ||
This, yeah, this story, we were made aware of this story today and we did a video on it, one of our members did a video on it, and it's just, it's... I don't have the proper words to describe it, you know? | ||
It's like, There is no red line. | ||
How can they claim that infants are LGBTQIA, but then also claim it's social conditioning? | ||
Right, yeah. | ||
That's an interesting one, isn't it? | ||
This argument is that it's inherent within all people. | ||
So pick one. | ||
Which is it? | ||
Right. | ||
I mean, how... | ||
Okay, so my thing is, children, that includes infants and babies, they cannot, they don't understand what sexuality is, you know, they don't have these feelings, so they cannot be... | ||
Any sexuality. | ||
Like, they're just not developmentally there yet. | ||
And the fact that babies are even being thrown into this, I mean, it's almost like a mockery. | ||
I mean, they just keep, you know, making things worse and throwing more and more at the wall. | ||
And just, I think it's to shame everybody. | ||
Just a humiliation ritual, basically, of like, this is what our country is turning into. | ||
It's also for profit. | ||
Well, of course. | ||
Oh, no, that is the main thing behind it all. | ||
I mean, you know, Big Pharma and all these hospitals with their gender clinics, they just see these walking dollar signs. | ||
I mean, to get a child hooked up into this system, And get on these, you know, hormones and puberty blockers and then eventually the surgeries and what else. | ||
The maintenance that that requires is a lifetime. | ||
I mean, they are lifetime patients. | ||
And so when they get them young, I mean, these are a million dollars each, maybe more than a million dollars each throughout their lifetime. | ||
You know, it's an ongoing thing. | ||
Till the day they die, they're going to be needing these things to maintain it. | ||
So I think that that is like the number one motivator behind this entire movement. | ||
But yeah, it's... Talk about loyal customers. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Because you have to keep buying the pills. | ||
You have to keep doing the procedures, and there's a lot of complications with them. | ||
I believe there's a monetary incentive, but I also think there's a larger, kind of deeper incentive when it comes to breaking down the family unit. | ||
And I think there's even potentially an even bigger agenda when it comes to A transhumanist agenda which of course is also going to be very important with the fourth industrial revolution that the World Economic Forum is pushing where they want to have people that are non-binary, non-identified with their actual sex and are just cyborgs of the machine. | ||
Yeah, I can see that for sure. | ||
I don't think that, you know, pharma is the only motivator here, but I think it's a big one. | ||
But yeah, there's a bunch. | ||
There's others. | ||
But Tim, I see you holding an interesting book. | ||
Did you read this? | ||
I haven't read it. | ||
I've seen enough. | ||
You need to read it. | ||
I've seen pictures and I haven't seen enough. | ||
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OK. | |
Okay, well, it's easy enough to know that it belongs nowhere near children, and you know, like, these, uh, these people, um, these activists, these radical activists that have hijacked our movement and people that use our community, you know, to, like, to push all this stuff, they're up in arms over book banning. | ||
They call it book banning, and it's like, it's pornography in kids' schools and libraries. | ||
Like, pornography for kids should be banned. | ||
Like, I'm sorry. | ||
What, what, they, you know, they always try to- It's kink education. | ||
Kink, oh. | ||
Got it. | ||
So it's like, a lot of people on the right are calling it porn. | ||
And I'm like, well, some of it, yeah, but I think it's more kink education, which is worse. | ||
It's one thing for like an adult to be like, I am aroused and enjoy watching this. | ||
It's another thing if you have like a curriculum where it's like, here's how to use an insertion device. | ||
When I say pornography, like I don't mean, you know, like it's literal pornography, but you know, the writing, it's suggesting, I mean, it's sexual activities. | ||
Uh, in great detail and exploring that encouraging, you know, young children to explore that within themselves. | ||
The reason I ask if you read it is because we talked about this quite a bit the other day. | ||
The book is actually very little about the weird sexually explicit stuff and overtly about how her parents were extremely abusive towards her. | ||
And she couldn't read till she was 12. | ||
She would pee in the yard. | ||
She smelled so bad the counselor had to pull her out of class and tell her, like, people are complaining about your stench. | ||
And she was wearing menstrual pads that were so old they were crusted with blood that was flaking off into her pants. | ||
It's no wonder she doesn't want to be a woman. | ||
Oh, right. | ||
It's not an issue of like, I feel a different way. | ||
It's that her parents were extremely abusive towards her. | ||
So when we're talking about LGBTQIA kids, no, I think they're totally wrong about this. | ||
We were talking to the Hodge twins, and they were saying that they thought | ||
that a lot of this stuff is learned. | ||
And I said, I don't think so. | ||
And they said, well, if it's not learned, then how could you groom a kid? | ||
And I was like, you can abuse and traumatize a kid into doing all sorts of crazy things. | ||
You can get someone to smoke cigarettes. | ||
Smoking cigarettes isn't good for you, right? | ||
You can get people to do things. | ||
But what I was saying is if you take humans. | ||
Free of anything else and have them run around. | ||
Once they grow up, they will figure out how to procreate. | ||
If you traumatize and abuse them, you will cause fear, panic, and, you know, problems in their future. | ||
So they're talking about LGBTQIA kids. | ||
That's why I'm telling everybody to at least, you know, figure out how to look at the beginning of this book. | ||
Because what's really showing is how these people get traumatized and beaten into being terrified of who they are. | ||
Sure. | ||
Hating who they are. | ||
I understand that. | ||
Like the thing in question in this book where she's like, is getting the pleasure, you know, the adult act, she says she hates it. | ||
And in the end says she doesn't want to do any of this and is asexual and doesn't want to be involved. | ||
And it's like, yeah, just absolute trauma, trauma and abuse. | ||
And so what's happening is these people who are traumatized want to share that trauma with the next generation and push it onto them. | ||
I think that's definitely part of it. | ||
I think that the people that are traumatized, they do want to do that. | ||
I think there's much more behind it, though, too. | ||
I mean, yeah, I mean, this book is one of many, right, that are just, you know, that cover this topic and other inappropriate topics. | ||
But, uh, yeah, and in terms of grooming kids, I mean, you can— I believe that you were born gay. | ||
Like, I believe that, um, you can be born gay, and, like, nothing happened to me as a kid, nothing— I know so many gay people, they had great childhoods, nothing hap— you know, a lot of people say, like, oh, you were traumatized or abused or whatever, like, a myriad of different, um, possibilities. | ||
Well, to clarify, I'm referring to someone who says, I am not a woman, and I don't want to be romantic with anybody. | ||
It's like, That feeling right there is because her parents were abusing her. | ||
Yeah, no. | ||
I know. | ||
I'm getting there. | ||
I'm saying. | ||
But, uh, you were saying, like, um, that... What did you say exactly? | ||
You were saying that, like, uh, kids can't be... None of this stuff can be learned. | ||
Or, um... I'm referring to, like, the non-binary gender stuff. | ||
Yeah. | ||
We're talking about, like, LGBTQIA plus infants or whatever. | ||
I'm saying that... I agree with you. | ||
Like, I think people... Like, I think some people are just gay. | ||
Some people, like... Yeah. | ||
But as far as like the non-binary and when we're getting into like gender ideology and gender identity I mean I think that that can very very strongly be manufactured and implanted in kids heads and like even be seen as trendy now which it is you know like I have My fiance's sister, she's in her teens and she goes to school, obviously, and she was telling us how it's not even okay, it's not even, you're not cool enough if you're just gay anymore, you know? | ||
So these kids are, this is just being, this culture being put into these schools and just into society, you know, through media and everything, that it's very trendy. | ||
And I think that, I mean, I think that gender identity is definitely something that can be manufactured, and to lead these kids into believing that they were born in the wrong body because they don't fit perfectly into like a little binary stereotype box, you know? | ||
Well, that's exactly it. | ||
Like, this book really outlines that, and I think if people are trying to understand what's causing people to experience this, look at what happens. | ||
You get a little girl, her parents let her run around wild in the yard, peeing in the yard, there's like no supervision. | ||
Like she couldn't read till she was 12. | ||
That's a big one right there. | ||
It's a huge indicator of abuse. | ||
But she draws a picture of a menstrual pad crusted with black blood. | ||
It's in the first portion of the book and she's like, I would wear these for days with the blood flaking off like coffee grounds. | ||
And it's just like, this person isn't non-binary. | ||
They had a mother who didn't tell her How to live and how to be hygienic, how to clean her body, and how to socialize so when she was rejected by society for being a, and I mean this without, like I'm not trying to be mean, but filthy, literally, and unhygienic and smelling like feces, | ||
She rejects it and says it's an issue of being a woman. | ||
No, that's not being a woman. | ||
Right. | ||
Being a woman isn't smelling bad and being made fun of and insulted, but she associates those things because she's, like, you really read it and it's like she lives in the wilderness, basically. | ||
And then when she tries socializing with normal kids, she can't read and communicate properly or socialize. | ||
I've heard of other stories about that, like where these children are so abused and neglected. | ||
Like, I forget the name, but, you know, she was locked in a basement for like the first 12 years of her life, didn't know how to talk at all, like knew nothing. | ||
And obviously, you know, that's a rare case. | ||
I mean, maybe not so rare. | ||
I don't know. | ||
But that case in terms of becoming genderqueer or non-binary or whatever, I don't know. | ||
I mean, that's one reaction to this kind of abuse. | ||
But the fact that, yeah, but there's a saying that's like hurt people hurt people, right? | ||
So now this person is writing her story, and that's fine, share your story, | ||
but it's one thing to write it and get it out there and share it with the world, | ||
and then another to want it in kids' hands. | ||
You know? | ||
Even that topic of just abuse, truthfully, I didn't know that was all in that book. | ||
I've seen bits of it online, but I've never... And then with all that abuse, she writes about how she goes to the Queer Straight Alliance and they're all cheering for her and saying how much they love her. | ||
So imagine you smell like crap, you've got dry blood in your pants for days, your counselor is telling you you smell like crap, something's wrong with you, you've got hairy legs the girls are making fun of, And you can't read, and you're peeing on the floor, and then someone comes and says, I affirm you, you're okay, and I love you, all of a sudden you feel good, and you say, please, I will do anything, give me more of this feeling. | ||
Right. | ||
Sad, man. | ||
That's a cycle of abuse. | ||
It is sad, that is very sad. | ||
The abuse that the person takes on, they start to rationalize as normal and okay, and it wasn't the abuse that was the problem, it was the gender or whatever. | ||
And then when they get older and they're around kids, they're like, you know what, that abuse that I experienced, it is okay. | ||
So if I do it to you, there's nothing wrong with that. | ||
And then that cycle You know, you gotta accept, like, it wasn't okay what your mom did to you, Maya. | ||
That wasn't okay. | ||
You should have had clean pants, man. | ||
They should have been there for you. | ||
Yeah, that's a, you know, important issue. | ||
People who are, you know, abused sometimes come out as abusers themselves. | ||
Or they go the other direction and they become advocates against the abuse. | ||
And it could go either one of those two ways, depending on the human being, depending on how they're raised. | ||
But I just kind of wanted to ask you, since you're kind of looking into this, you know, a lot of this is in our schools, in our entertainment, in our social media. | ||
I mean, this is going to have a lot of long-term effects, not only on the family unit, but of course on everyone being dependent on Big Pharma, everyone's emotions and hormones being all dysregulated. | ||
What do you see here as the endgame? | ||
How would you even quantify it? | ||
Why do you—this is the question—why is this happening? | ||
Yeah, that's a big question. | ||
Like I touched on before, I truly think Big Pharma is one of the main two motivators. | ||
Well, maybe there are more than two, but Big Pharma, the profits, obviously, getting them hooked up to that system. | ||
I also think pedophilia is a huge motivator behind it because, I mean, It's not just about the transitioning of children medically. | ||
It's the whole thing. | ||
It's the sexualization, the introducing them to sexual content and material and events with the drag stuff, having them now dance on stage for dollar bills. | ||
All of this, I think, is definitely rooted in the normalization of pedophilia. | ||
I think that that has been happening for a long time. | ||
That's been the goal for a long time. | ||
And, you know, back when when we were fighting for just the right to get married and people would warn of the slippery slope, you know, like, well, what's going to come next? | ||
Pedophilia is next. | ||
And I genuinely thought these people were insane because all I wanted was the right to marry. | ||
And I was happy to pack it up and go home after that. | ||
I think we all should have gone home after that. | ||
Like, I don't know why these events are still taking place when we have all of our rights. | ||
Like, we won the game, go home. | ||
And now, you know, so I, back then I thought those people were absolutely insane that were warning of the slippery slope, but now we're here and I'm like, They were right. | ||
Turns out they were right. | ||
And the push has always been to normalize pedophilia. | ||
And I think the endgame here is to get a P attached to our acronym, our ever-growing acronym. | ||
There's a few P's already. | ||
Is there? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Pan. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
Well, it's not in the official acronym. | ||
Who makes the official acronym? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't abide by it. | ||
None of us do. | ||
We don't like that. | ||
Who makes the flag, for that matter, you know? | ||
That's a good question. | ||
I was in Donut Frederick and I saw it was the pride flag with the black and brown on it. | ||
It's so ugly. | ||
And an eagle. | ||
unidentified
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An eagle! | |
I haven't seen the eagle one. | ||
I've seen the one with the circle, the yellow circle with like a purple circle in it or something. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
I don't know what any of this means. | ||
And then another one just came out recently with like, do you remember like the red umbrella? | ||
Yeah, the puckered anus. | ||
What is that? | ||
It's a symbol of sex work. | ||
They call it an umbrella, but, you know, you know what it is. | ||
It's a booty hole. | ||
Yeah, it's a booty hole. | ||
Perfect. | ||
I've always been really... LGB is like its own, to me, someone's gay, they're bi, they're lesbian, whatever. | ||
Lesbian is a kind of gay, so it's almost like redundant. | ||
But like, what's the difference? | ||
Just like, it's a label, you say your name, is it the way you want? | ||
Is it what you want? | ||
Like, what makes you gay in your opinion? | ||
Wanting it or the act and not wanting it at all, but having the act happen? | ||
Um, being gay is, uh, I mean, I'm romantically attracted to women, you know? | ||
I am physically attracted to women. | ||
I only want to be with women. | ||
You know, I can, I can appreciate if a man is handsome or not, but I feel nothing towards them. | ||
So it's, being gay isn't an act for me. | ||
It's a feeling. | ||
I mean, it's who I am. | ||
Like, you know, it's part of me. | ||
But at the same time, I cannot stand people that make being gay or whatever they are, trans, their entire identity. | ||
I look at being gay, me being gay, as the same as I have dark hair. | ||
I'm also gay. | ||
I also like wearing Adidas jackets. | ||
I don't know, it's just something about me. | ||
It's part of me. | ||
But it's not all of me. | ||
It's not all of who I am. | ||
Do you find that scale, the Kinsey scale? | ||
I was told when my buddy in college was a gay dude, he was like, oh yeah, everyone's on the Kinsey scale. | ||
Now I'm finding out Alfred Kinsey was a psychopath trying to sexualize people. | ||
I went to Indiana University, and I took a lot of psychology classes, and I was in the Kinsey building a lot, the Kinsey Institute of whatever psychology, and now they just recently they put up a statue of him. | ||
Right outside. | ||
And so, you know, Gays Against Rumors, we want to have a protest down there actually to get that statue removed because he's sick. | ||
I mean, he experimented sexually on babies. | ||
I think like as young as two. | ||
Yeah. | ||
To come up with the Kinsey scale. | ||
You know, I watched that. | ||
You ever see the movie Kinsey with like Liam Neeson or whatever I think his name is? | ||
And it was like they made him look good. | ||
He was the hero, obviously, you know, like he was good. | ||
He was the Hollywood hero. | ||
But this was before I knew all this insidious stuff about Kinsey. | ||
I loved that movie. | ||
I used to rate myself on the Kinsey scale, you know, before I knew all this. | ||
But basically the Kinsey scale is that zero, you're completely heterosexual. | ||
six you're completely homosexual and that the idea was like the majority of | ||
the population falls somewhere in between not necessarily exactly in the | ||
middle but maybe like a 5.5 or like a 2.3 you know like it's not always so | ||
black and white but that that's yeah and this was the father of the sexual | ||
revolution right i think so yeah Him and John Money. | ||
John Money, we actually just wrote an article. | ||
We have a team of writers and we just put up an article on our site, GaysAgainstGroomers.com, on our blog about John Money. | ||
He is the godfather of gender identity and gender theory. | ||
He tortured some kids. | ||
He did. | ||
He's famous for the David, I think his name is David Reimar. | ||
Basically, David was born, I think, a hermaphrodite. | ||
Twin boys. | ||
Yeah, no, they were twin boys, but one of them was a hermaphrodite. | ||
No? | ||
They botched circumcision. | ||
Oh, is that what it was? | ||
Okay. | ||
They botched the circumcision, and then he said, well, here's what we can do. | ||
You're right. | ||
Because gender is a social construct, we can raise him as a female and give him female hormones, and he won't know the difference. | ||
And he was never told about this, so he was raised as a girl, and he ended up killing himself in, like, his twenties. | ||
Both did. | ||
Well, no, one died from a drug overdose, I think. | ||
But, like, the David, I think, intentionally, like, I'm reading about Kinsey right now, and I think he was connected to the Rockefeller Foundation. | ||
He was also a eugenicist. | ||
John Money had these pre-bubescent kids simulating sex acts on each other, and then David, who I believe was being raised as a female, rejected the female identity, and kept trying to do boyish things, and they kept desperately trying to force the socialization of being female, but David kept saying no, and then finally the parents were like, okay, the depression is too severe, something's wrong here, we have to tell him the truth, tell her the truth, and then David immediately detransitioned and said, this was wrong, you shouldn't have done this to me, I, you know, I don't feel that way, | ||
And then tried reversing the process, eventually just committed suicide. | ||
unidentified
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Mm-hmm. | |
And then later, I think his brother was just so depressed, also, and just so messed up from the whole thing. | ||
You know, because I don't think he had any idea either that he ended up dying shortly after, but I believe it was a drug, an overdose. | ||
Yeah, I read that yesterday. | ||
Yeah, eugenicists aren't good people. | ||
unidentified
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No! | |
Sorry, go ahead, Ian. | ||
Well, it's an interesting debate of sex, if sexuality is a state of mind, or if it's something society puts on you, like the label. | ||
What does the label even mean? | ||
Some people are attracted to some people. | ||
That can change from day to day. | ||
Maybe it's for money. | ||
It can make people money. | ||
Maybe it makes a calm state of mind to think, I am a this, therefore I have some stability in my life. | ||
Yeah, I mean, well, I think that people always are looking for, like, a sense of community or just to bond with others like them. | ||
So maybe, I don't know, I feel like humans in general like putting labels on themselves and putting things into categories. | ||
His brother did commit suicide. | ||
Well, two years later or something. | ||
Really? | ||
Oh, it wasn't drugs? | ||
It wasn't. | ||
It was drugs. | ||
It was like he intentionally killed himself by swallowing. | ||
So this is the guy, John Money. | ||
This is, I mean, what you see happening now in society is like a direct mirror of his beliefs and his practices right now with like transitioning children and just making up genders on a whim. | ||
And all of that was his, you know, that was his thing. | ||
And it's being implemented now on a mass scale. | ||
And I think eugenics is the endgame here, because when you look at a lot of these policies, when you look at a lot of these social-cultural changes, what does it lead to? | ||
People not having babies. | ||
People not being able to have babies. | ||
People over-sexualized so they don't have families. | ||
And I think that's a key component here that I think a lot of us need to realize. | ||
No, I actually do, too. | ||
I think like population control, I think that's probably a big aspect, too. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Because killing people is messy, but if you get people to kill themselves and sterilize themselves, well that's true. | ||
I was just talking about that new legalized euthanasia thing the other day, but no, I think that the population control is probably a big thing behind it too. | ||
And that's why it's being shoved down everyone's throat in the culture, in the movies, in the series, in the schools, on social media. | ||
It's all being promoted in so many sinister ways where people growing up, especially young children growing up, they're inundated with this stuff. | ||
It's just non-stop. | ||
To fit in, to be accepted by the herd, you have to be this. | ||
And to have mainline doctors talk about how much money they're making off of cutting off the genitalia of small children is just absolutely sickening. | ||
It's disgusting. There's no word really for it. But no, I think, you know, because these puberty | ||
blockers, when you put a kid on puberty blockers, it's, it's, these drugs, the drug Lupron is like | ||
the most, most used puberty blocker for children. Huh? I said despicable. Yeah, no. And so it is | ||
routinely for, for a very long time only been used to chemically castrate sex offenders. | ||
Because that's what it does. | ||
It's a chemical castration drug. | ||
So what they are doing, they're putting these prepubescent children on these drugs, which is going to sterilize them. | ||
They will not be able to have children later on. | ||
And they know this very well. | ||
You know, I don't know. | ||
The thing is, I don't know if the parents know this. | ||
Like, how can a parent... I don't understand. | ||
Parents are part of this, too. | ||
Like, a really big problem. | ||
As Tim said, they show up to the parking lot of CVS, and they're like, yeah, just put it in me. | ||
Yeah, like, I don't know if these doctors are not making parents aware of the side effects, or, well, the side effects, you know, they're trying to hide the side effects. | ||
Right now we know for sure that brain swelling and vision loss are, like, two of the big ones from these puberty blockers, as well as sterilization. | ||
And so I just, I truly don't understand how any parent can be on board with this. | ||
I think a lot of parents are, like, trying to score woke points somehow, especially, like, these white liberal women. | ||
You know, they don't know how else to get woke points. | ||
Well, a lot of them aren't mentally stable. | ||
A lot of them are obese. | ||
A lot of them, their gut isn't working well, and their brain isn't working well. | ||
The father's missing. | ||
He's not in the home. | ||
And that's just the recipe for disaster. | ||
And munchausen. | ||
That's so funny. | ||
I was just going to say, we call, you know, there's the trans parents of these little kids that want to transition their children, we call them transhausen by proxy parents, or like munchausen mommies. | ||
But yeah, we say transhausen by proxy, because that's exactly what it is. | ||
They are using this, they are doing this for themselves, to feel good, to say, oh look, look at me, I'm the mommy in the neighborhood that has a little trans boy, you know? | ||
Like, my three-year-old daughter is a boy now. | ||
There are a bunch of stories about, like, a mom who says, all three of my kids are all trans. | ||
I saw that. | ||
What are the odds? | ||
Yeah, it's like serious statistical anomalies. | ||
It's crazy because there's child abuse laws on the books already. | ||
I always say this. | ||
This stuff needs to fall under that. | ||
Parents that put their children on these drugs that get them hooked up to the system, especially that take them for surgeries. | ||
You guys know Chloe Cole, I'm sure. | ||
She's so brave. | ||
What she's doing is incredible. | ||
It's saving an untold number of kids. | ||
She's like the detransitioner, right? | ||
Yeah, she's the detransitioner who was put on puberty blockers at 13 and had a double mastectomy at 15. | ||
You know, meanwhile, the people that oppose our organization are telling us every day this isn't happening. | ||
You know, it's like- Jazz Jennings got genital surgery at 17. | ||
Yes. | ||
Before the age of 18. | ||
Yeah, so these things are happening every day. | ||
I mean, there was a video that came out from a clinic, a hospital in California, I forget exactly where, but it was basically they were in a room and they were talking saying how like the youngest that they've done it on is a 12 year old girl, like a double mastectomy. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
And these are healthy children. | ||
I'm going to warn people if you've got kids in the room, but I want to say something about this, just as a point of fact. | ||
The purpose of what they refer to as bottom surgery for male to female transgender individuals serves one purpose, and that is to create a wound which can be used to sexually stimulate another individual. | ||
So, to me, you know, thinking about this, I was talking with another prominent trans person, a few, you know, because there are a handful that are relatively conservative or at least oppose this stuff, and they mention how they're not interested in what they call bottom surgery because it doesn't serve a purpose other than sexual gratification and it's like a wound and dilation and all these things are really, really severe. | ||
And there are a lot of videos of these people, of many trans people, who are crying over the pain that they're experiencing. | ||
It's kind of sad. | ||
But like, the only purpose for it is to create a hole for which a person could insert themselves into for pleasure. | ||
And I'm kind of like, I mean, that's kind of horrifying to me, to be completely honest. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
It's a wound. | ||
It is a wound. | ||
And you know, like, the really horrifying thing, I mean, that's very horrifying, but even beyond that is like what they're Um, like, let's say a child does go on puberty blockers, a boy, a biological boy goes on puberty blockers, it stunts their growth. | ||
So they will never form a fully grown penis, like, it will never grow past the childhood size of a penis, because they are not going through puberty. | ||
That happened to Jazz Jennings. | ||
Okay, right, and so, that's right. | ||
Which caused complications followed by extreme depression. | ||
Right, because there's not enough skin from the penis to invert, to create a vaginal canal, right? | ||
Well, it's not a vaginal canal. | ||
No, it's not. | ||
It's absolutely not. | ||
It's a, you know, mimicking that. | ||
It's an outpatient open wound. | ||
Do they call it a vaginoplasty? | ||
It's a fugazi vagina. | ||
But it's called like a, it's not called a vaginal canaloscopy. | ||
No, not phalloplasty, that's the other one. | ||
That's the other one. There's a word for the hole they create and it's not vaginal. | ||
Yeah, but no, so with, you know, if a trans, whatever, I'm so bad at keeping this stuff straight, | ||
but like if there's a biological boy that wants to be a girl and he knows very, very early on whatever | ||
and the parents put him on puberty blockers, he will never grow to the size he needs to | ||
to create that neo vagina. | ||
And then they use fish skin. | ||
They're using cadaver skin now. | ||
They use the colon. | ||
It's some Frankenstein Humans are not able to play God like this. | ||
Truly transhumanist. | ||
Not only is it transgender, we have transhumanist all at the same time. | ||
The trans agenda of becoming what we think we are not or becoming what we think we are. | ||
What better way to have people give up their own humanity and transition into this larger technocratic system than to, of course, get rid of their own identity? | ||
You made the point there, and I agree with you 100%. | ||
Well, the way I described it earlier is that you're gonna be living in a pod, you're gonna get a deposit of bugs into your pod to eat, you'll strap on your VR headset to go into your virtual newsroom and you'll be sitting there, then Godzilla will walk in and sit down, King Kong will walk in, And you'll be early to the meeting, and they'll say, well, you know, before we get the meeting started, anybody catch the game last night? | ||
And then King Kong and Godzilla are gonna start arguing over, you know, who's gonna be the next draft pick in virtual NBA. | ||
Then a carrot's gonna walk in, sit down, and be like, everybody please calm down, let's get this meeting in order. | ||
Sales numbers are off the charts, then a rabbit walks in, because people are just gonna be like, I identify this way, this is what I am. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And you're gonna live in this virtual reality where people are just gonna be these creatures and these things. | ||
I mean, you have kids in school now identifying as animals, right? | ||
Like, they had to put a litter box in one school. | ||
I don't think that's true. | ||
I think that was not true. | ||
No, there's kids that are identifying as cats. | ||
I think the litter box thing was contested. | ||
Yeah, I've never been able to confirm or deny it. | ||
Joe Rogan, I'm pretty sure, came out and said that he got hoaxed and it wasn't true, but I could be wrong. | ||
I don't know if I heard it first from Joe Rogan. | ||
It was a meme going around that I've never seen sourced by anything. | ||
unidentified
|
Fair. | |
Can I ask you, I don't know if you talked about this before, but what made you want to do this? | ||
What got you into this? | ||
I don't know if you talked about it before. | ||
Not on this scale, I don't think. | ||
Well, you know, I have been against kind of the direction that Pride Inc., that, you know, LGBTQIA Inc. | ||
has been headed in a lot for years now. | ||
I did not agree with the over-sexualization of everything, how Pride fests and parades have basically just become, you know, kink fests. | ||
Everything has swayed so far from like the original message of when we were fighting for equality, like true equality, which was a worthy fight. | ||
It was a necessary fight. | ||
But things, you know, I haven't associated with the community in a very long time. | ||
And when I saw things happening to, like, the red line being crossed was going after kids. | ||
Like, I was not a fan of the pushing pride down everyone's throats, like all the corporations changing their their profile pictures, whatever, during Pride Month. | ||
But then they started going after kids, and me and a bunch of my friends | ||
that are also now part of Gays Against Groomers, we would speak out against it, | ||
but there was no unified force. | ||
And I have had a platform called Gay Who Strayed for like six years now, | ||
which accumulated a large following over time. | ||
And I basically was just like, after seeing all of this just endless stream | ||
of these videos coming out of these drag shows for kids and seeing the material in schools | ||
and seeing that kids are being medicalized and transitioned, it got to the point in June where I was just like, | ||
I can no longer sit by with this platform and not try and do something to stop it from the inside. | ||
So the name came to my head and the next day I created the account and put a team together and just got the ball rolling and it exploded. | ||
You've got a lot of people now. | ||
Yeah, we have a lot of people. | ||
Is it a company? | ||
unidentified
|
Is it like an incorporation or a 501c3? | |
It's a non-profit. | ||
We have filed to be a C4. | ||
It takes like six to nine months for that process to be approved. | ||
So yeah, like I said, we're really new. | ||
We launched in June. | ||
of this past year. So we've done a lot in a short amount of time and now we have chapters | ||
popping up all over the place. And it's just it's great to see, you know, and the amount of support | ||
that we have is overwhelming. I mean, we have haters out there, you know, like we have some | ||
some pretty loud, notable haters that like to call us anti-trans and anti-LGBTQ. | ||
That's always a funny one. | ||
You know, Media Matters has written like eight articles on gays against groomers now and they always call us an anti-LGBTQ hate group. | ||
That's weird. | ||
Yeah, everybody in the organization is LGBT. | ||
We don't believe in the Q. Like, we don't believe in the Q. Everybody in the organization is either LGBT or T. | ||
Q is queer. | ||
What does it mean exactly? | ||
Well, queer was always a slur. | ||
You know, us older gays, I mean, I'm not, you know, just like not these new gays that are popping up all over the place. | ||
You know, that was always a slur. | ||
I mean, people use that against us in a very derogatory way, and we tried to get past that, but now it's like they reclaimed it and rebranded it, and suddenly we're all just supposed to be okay with it. | ||
But, you know, that's the real slur here. | ||
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, become a member at TimCast.com. | ||
We're gonna have a members-only show coming up for you around 11 or so p.m., but let's read what y'all have to say. | ||
We got this from Flooded Timber Farm, says, Illinois sent assault weapons ban bill to Pritzker. | ||
Sheriffs denying it across the state, Pritzker threatening to fire all that oppose him. | ||
Yeah, they're basically banning everything. | ||
Is that what's going on? | ||
The Pritzker family is very, very bad, by the way, in terms of all this trans child madness. | ||
They, like, fund so much of it. | ||
No, right on. | ||
Jim Bob says, yo, Ian, got your butt gem y'all sent me. | ||
The Emerald. | ||
I'm super stoked, bro. | ||
Building a musical Tesla coil and we'll put it on there so it looks cool. | ||
Oh, nice. | ||
It's a butt gem? | ||
Well, it could be if you wanted it to be. | ||
It's just an emerald. | ||
No questions. | ||
Venus Sofias says, I have canceled all my memberships except for my $10 a month to Timcast. | ||
Hope that means something after supporting you for the last two years. | ||
God bless. | ||
It really, really does. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
I really appreciate it. | ||
A lot of people are saying this Saturday thing we're doing is very dangerous. | ||
Because I'm giving out my assassination coordinates. | ||
I think of it as an event, even though it's technically not. | ||
If you announce something publicly, a time and a place, I feel like it's just de facto an event, and so should be treated as such. | ||
Except you can't cancel it. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
You can't protest it. | ||
Right. | ||
It's literally me standing somewhere. | ||
unidentified
|
Before security purpose is treated as if, as a security event. | |
Sure, sure, sure. | ||
But like, if someone showed up to protest me standing in a park, I would just walk 10 feet and stand in a different park. | ||
What do you guys, I want to see you do change my mind stuff with randos that are like, he's a Nazi! | ||
And you'll be like, let's talk. | ||
Okay. | ||
We could. | ||
I mean, we'll have cameras. | ||
But I'm just gonna go skate. | ||
You know, and this guy, you know, he's posting saying I couldn't do a shove-it. | ||
That's a bald-faced lie. | ||
It's not true. | ||
I did a gazelle, first try. | ||
That's a nollie backside 360 540 shove-it, okay? | ||
So my body does a 360, and the board does a 540. | ||
I did it first try. | ||
It's related to Star Wars. | ||
So it's like, I'll tell you what he's saying, and I'll be fair. | ||
I show up, I get out of the car, I'm riding my board around, and I'm sort of goofing off doing no complies and screwing up some flips and shoves. | ||
It's such a ridiculous smear to be like, Tim Pool can't do a shove it. | ||
They're just lying because they're trying to downplay the fact that I show up, Nobody cared that I was there, except for like a handful of people, apparently, and I was better than them at skating. | ||
And so it's like, they're trying to exert influence in a community where they have little, except for the fact that people are scared they'll get cancelled if they speak out against them or something like that. | ||
So I'm like, okay, well I'll show up, I'll skate. | ||
Plus they're also claiming that people brought me there, and that's the weirdest, stupid thing ever. | ||
I showed up with Allison, it was like me and her, and we're by ourselves. | ||
And I'm skating around and there's some guy that I knew that I talked to and now they're trying to claim that someone else told, like someone else brought me there. | ||
I'm like, what are you talking about, dude? | ||
Like, I'm the one who's like, hey guys, you want to go skate here? | ||
I showed up by myself. | ||
They're just making things up because they're crackpot weirdos, but if they want to make up crackpot weirdo stuff, I'm gonna show up. | ||
Anyway, my point is this. | ||
Uh, for those who are- who are giving the ten bucks a month, I mean it when I say I stand up for what I believe in. | ||
And people often say, like, oh, you don't know how hard it is, and, like, I can't do it for this reason or that reason, and I'm like, okay, well, if you think being swatted fifteen times, multiple death threats, and the bomb squad showing up twice is enough for me to hide and move to the middle of nowhere, like some other personalities have done, fine. | ||
Just know that I have announced where I will be Saturday morning, DC's Freedom Plaza, and I'll be skating around. | ||
Reminds me of the days of the YouTube meetups. | ||
And we're gonna bring the crew, Phil Labonte's gonna be there, a handful of other people | ||
are planning on being there. | ||
I'm gonna bring a whole bunch of people, Taylor Silverman's gonna be there, that should be | ||
fun. | ||
You know, and we'll skate. | ||
And that's it. | ||
Reminds me of the days of the YouTube meetups, the live meetups where we all go to New York, | ||
Washington Square Park on July 7th, 2007 and everybody's there with their cameras and... | ||
Taylor's awesome, by the way. | ||
Shouts out to Taylor. | ||
Taylor's cool. | ||
And there's like, there's nothing, you say it's like an event, like maybe, but there's nothing to protest. | ||
If people showed up protesting, I'd be like, I will stand there instead. | ||
Like, there's no tent, there's no speakers, there's no speeches, there's just, yo, if people are there and it's crowded, I will walk 20 feet and skate across the street. | ||
I will tell everybody, OK, let's go to the other skate park. | ||
We're going to be walking around if they want to follow us around. | ||
But I have a feeling like I don't think anything's going to happen. | ||
I think the point of this is to show people that all of this hype around like, oh, no, people are mad. | ||
You can't go. | ||
Nothing's going to happen. | ||
Oh, something's gonna happen. | ||
Ollie pop shove-it 720 in your face. | ||
Not a real trick, but okay. | ||
Sounds as real as the others you just said. | ||
You could say Ollie late 720 shove-it, which would be absolutely bonkers, but that would just, like, you'd have to launch off a ramp or a big drop for something like that maybe, or a half pipe, but no, probably not even. | ||
But what'll likely happen is fans of the show will show up, We'll give out a bunch of boards from the back of the car, and we'll skate, and Phil will be singing, Ian will be jamming, Carter will be jamming, if Ian gets up early enough. | ||
Yeah, he wants, it's a 10 a.m. | ||
thing, though, I don't know, that's early for me. | ||
unidentified
|
10 a.m.? | |
That sounds fun, though. | ||
I wake up at 7 a.m. | ||
That's when Ian goes to sleep. | ||
That's right. | ||
Geez, last night I got to bed at like 6 a.m. | ||
But look, look, my point is this, everybody's like, I'm getting messages from people being like, dude, are you serious about this? | ||
Like, you better be careful. | ||
I'm like, dude, I'm telling you, I'm gonna show up, and nothing's gonna happen. | ||
Like, first of all, I'm not that important. | ||
Like, nothing's gonna happen. | ||
Stop being afraid of these people. | ||
Nothing will happen. | ||
The only thing that's gonna happen, our fans are gonna jump. | ||
That's how I feel, honestly. | ||
You know, people kind of think I'm a little crazy. | ||
I'm like, these people, they're not gonna, you know. | ||
Honestly, we get like, it's kind of interesting how many death threats we get. | ||
Not to, you know, Override you here, but it you know people say this stuff and in your case, they have done stuff You know, they have tried it's it's all it's all like making the police do it because they're too scared, right? | ||
Yeah, these people are very scared, you know, they're scared of their own shadow They just talk big big talk and but it all but at the same time it only just takes one crazy person, right and Sure. | ||
But I don't think that you can let that run your life. | ||
I think though, as a model, when you set up, when you use social media to set times and days for people to meet, that you have a responsibility to protect those people, at least to the best of your ability with security. | ||
Wide open space, like I look at John Kennedy, man. | ||
Presidents don't go out open and ride around in the city anymore. | ||
I agree, when there's more people than just yourself, you have to worry about, but I don't think, I think it's okay. | ||
I walk around all the time. | ||
This is what they've tweeted. | ||
They've tweeted like, Tim Pool should live in fear. | ||
Matt Walsh, libs of TikTok should live in fear and never have a moment of peace again. | ||
And I'm like, bro, I have no idea what you're talking about. | ||
I go walk around. | ||
I was by myself in DC's Freedom Plaza. | ||
And apparently some people were hanging back and texting about how angry they were that I was there. | ||
And not a single person said anything other than fist bumping me. | ||
One of the OG local guys, some old black dude walked up and gave me a fist bump was like, What's up, brother? | ||
What's going on? | ||
And one other dude was doing tricks. | ||
We, like, talked for a little bit. | ||
They make this stuff up. | ||
I walk around all the time, ain't have no problems. | ||
I'm not worried about it. | ||
All right, let's read some more. | ||
1776's Life says, enjoying the episode, dinner tonight, garden-raised vegetables with venison hunted this year. | ||
Tim, can we work on a podcast about procuring cooking nutritious food? | ||
I would be willing to assist. | ||
We wanted to do a homesteading and, like, survivalist show. | ||
That'd be really fun. | ||
Something cool like, almost like, you ever guys ever watch Ancient Technology? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah. | |
That channel where it's like, you know. | ||
Yes! | ||
That's so cool. | ||
Sorry, I just got really excited. | ||
That's the one that I watched all the time when I was obsessed with my Bushman. | ||
It's so good. | ||
He's amazing. | ||
How do you do that stuff? | ||
It's amazing. | ||
It's cool. | ||
Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
says, Tim, your healthy life message is an important one. | ||
We can't be fatties fighting for our nation, taking breaks to catch our breath. | ||
The cult will not wait for us to catch up. | ||
We must prepare ourselves. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Start exercising, man. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
All right, this was a good one. | ||
We got this from TheRealHydroPX. | ||
Hydro, you know him, you love him. | ||
He says, Do not allow people like Luke to keep saying Biden is forgetful. | ||
Luke is working for the deep state. | ||
No gaslighting, Luke. | ||
Hold on, I gotta see what the CIA tells me to respond to with this one. | ||
Okay, that's a good opinion you have there. | ||
That's the best the CIA could muster? | ||
Reagan was like, I don't remember all the things you're accusing me of. | ||
I don't remember, because Alzheimer's. | ||
Like, no dude, you gotta take responsibility for your actions. | ||
I don't care where your mind's at. | ||
I believe the president's a puppet. | ||
Most presidents are. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Nick Osvi says, need a recommendation. | ||
I love rollerblading and skating, but broke my ankle and now my foot sits crooked. | ||
Where can I find a high-end pair of custom skates so I can skate comfortably once again? | ||
Honestly I have no idea. | ||
Custom skates are a really difficult thing to do unless you can like 3D print something. | ||
It's hard enough to get real blades these days because the industry basically doesn't exist. | ||
I mean look, skateboarding is a crippled industry. | ||
It's just like, it does not, there's wealthy skateboarders but they do not make that much money. | ||
Let alone the blading industry. | ||
The blading industry barely exists. | ||
Pinochet's helicopter tour says, Luke, please stop making excuses for Biden. | ||
Occam's Razorman, he is pretending to be senile, but knows exactly what he is doing. | ||
It's all by design. | ||
I don't think he's calling the shots here. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
That's just my two cents here. | ||
And we talked about that. | ||
We talked about different possibilities here. | ||
And I entertain that possibility as well. | ||
But I'm more convinced that there's a bigger power at play here. | ||
Yeah, Biden, he's like walking around with his hands like Mr. Burns and he's like, and then the camera turns off and he stands up straight, straightens his tie and says, let's get to work. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Or they just have a bunch of Biden actors that they give the script to read. | ||
And then they're like, okay, this one's out. | ||
This one's past its expiration date. | ||
Bring in Biden number XZ5B2. | ||
And that's probably what happened. | ||
That sounds like the new COVID variant. | ||
Point 1.5 Jimmy Kimmel. | ||
I know it from the Jimmy Fallon movie. | ||
unidentified
|
Or Fallon film. | |
Come on. | ||
God. | ||
We gotta go in here from Brett Bullard. | ||
He says, Jamie, why doesn't the gay community draw the line at LGB? | ||
How are the traditionalist, religious, etc. expected to accept the alphabet community | ||
as they become increasingly anti-straight? | ||
Right. | ||
Um. | ||
Well, I've spoken about this before. | ||
Me, personally, I never thought that LGB and T should have been combined together way back when, when they were. | ||
Being LGB is about who you love. | ||
Being T, being trans, is about who you are or who you believe you are. | ||
I have said I have more in common with a straight man than I do a trans person. | ||
I just don't have any shared Anything with them, you know, honestly. | ||
And so I've never understood why they were lumped together. | ||
I do want to say that, like, you know, there is the trans mafia. | ||
Like, there are these radical trans activists who have become, like, the talking head that is, like, the position of all trans people. | ||
And it's really not. | ||
You know, like, the trans people I know and the people that we have the trans people we have in Gays Against Groomers and in | ||
Trans Against Groomers, like, they are good people. They just want to live their | ||
lives, like, just like we do, and these people are giving them a really bad name. It is | ||
always the activists and the fringe, you know, radicals that destroy everything for everybody, | ||
and that's true about any group of people, you know? And so they want to fight this | ||
just as hard as we do, and that, you know, I created Trans Against Groomers, which is like a subsect, a partner of Gays Against Groomers, because so many trans people were reaching out, agreeing with what we're doing at Gays Against Groomers, and wanting to help somehow. | ||
So we made their own little group for them, and they are doing their thing with us. | ||
And so I really think their voices are very important. | ||
I agree that LGB and T are very different things, but I would encourage people to not base their ideas on every, you know, all trans people as a whole, on the messaging you see coming from like Trans Inc. | ||
and just the Alphabet Mafia in general, because that people, you know, the backlash against gay people is growing right now, too, because whatever you see happening, this push on children, You know, people assume that all gay people are on board with this and support this, when that's very far from reality, and that's why Gays Against Groomers is so important to show that. | ||
Right on. | ||
Pizza Steve says, do a cow show like Chicken City and call it the Steak Holders. | ||
Haha. | ||
Well, we were planning on getting one cow, but apparently they produce 10 to 12 gallons of milk per day. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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Wow. | |
What about the little ones? | ||
You look at those mini cows. | ||
Mini cows? | ||
Like a pygmy cows or something. | ||
You can see those. | ||
Maybe we'll get some goats. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Do you mean cows? | ||
We need a cow. | ||
Just don't ever end up in the Logan Paul situation. | ||
Dude, his pig. | ||
You heard about that? | ||
Yeah, what was up with that? | ||
Well, I don't know. | ||
Apparently, it wasn't. | ||
He gave it. | ||
I mean, we can get into this if you want. | ||
Otherwise, we can pass. | ||
But yeah. | ||
It's a quick version. | ||
OK. | ||
he was moving to Puerto Rico, he couldn't take his pig, Pearl Bingbing, I think was the name. | ||
And so he gave it to this farm that they said they were going to take care of it, her, the pig. | ||
But then they ended up giving it to somebody else who totally neglected it, left it alone to die, | ||
basically, in a field that was found by these people called the Gentle Farm, | ||
who then adopted Pearl and are taking care of her now. So apparently, Logan didn't have a hand in | ||
that in abandoning her. He did think he was providing a good home, but then it just ended up | ||
that way. And I'm not here to defend Logan Paul in any way. | ||
The Matrix attacked him. | ||
Oh, yeah, that was funny. Get ready for a wave of people that are blaming their | ||
misfortunes on the Matrix. That damn Matrix. Is it not? | ||
Don't be an asshole. You know that money I owed you, I forgot to pay you back? | ||
Matrix ticket. | ||
Matrix is hungry. | ||
Gotta feed the Matrix. | ||
All right, Mizarro says, Hey Tim and crew, today is my 33rd birthday. | ||
Can I get a shout out? | ||
Also, Ian, I appreciate your opinions on the topics. | ||
Keep rolling them 20s. | ||
Ooh, you gotta be. | ||
Happy birthday, Mizarro. | ||
Mizarro. | ||
Yeah, happy birthday, Mizarro. | ||
And stop encouraging Ian. | ||
Drew Outstanding in his field says, First you get the chickens, then you get the eggs, then you get the freedom. | ||
Luke's Scarface tweet. | ||
See you at Freedom Plaza. | ||
Scarface? | ||
What? | ||
I didn't get that one. | ||
Luke's Scarface. | ||
Oh yeah, I posted a Scarface meme. | ||
Instead of Scarface sitting in front of all the cocaine, he was sitting with a bunch of egg cartons around him. | ||
Because the price of eggs has pretty much doubled. | ||
Oh, this is funny. | ||
Kaiju Spirit says, Pilot Friend said, FAA crashed due to change in NOTAM definition. | ||
Notice to Airmen, became Notice to Air Mission. | ||
It's a rumor, but see the problem. | ||
Men. | ||
Oh my god. | ||
If that is true, I wouldn't be surprised if it was, but I'm kind of like, I don't know about that. | ||
Basically, like, they went in the computer and said, Notice to Airmen and changed it to Air Mission. | ||
Because man is transphobic. | ||
And then it caused all of the roots to, like, break. | ||
Was it based on transphobia? | ||
Well, no, it's misogyny. | ||
Misogyny, it's patriarchy or whatever. | ||
Well, shouldn't it? | ||
Yeah. | ||
There you go. | ||
They're all men. | ||
Hugh Men. | ||
Then we're women and men on top of that. | ||
Let me Steve says Notam is was noticed to air men. | ||
They changed it. | ||
They're now saying, uh, they tweeted that it was noticed to air mission. | ||
Do you guys think it's okay to call everybody guys? | ||
Because I just did. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Hey guys. | ||
Dudes. | ||
Hey, man, what's going on, man? | ||
Are you trying to apologize for calling people guys? | ||
Well, my whole life I called these two women guys when I was waiting tables when I was 18 or something. | ||
Yeah, you say, hey guys. | ||
I am NOT a guy and they left me a nickel as a tip just to let me know that it wasn't like they didn't forget. | ||
Survivor had a very cringe moment where the host was asking the new people there, hey, can I say guys? | ||
Is that okay? | ||
and everyone's like yeah it's totally cool it's fine and then like two episodes down there someone was thinking about it like no it's not okay it's offensive you need to stop and then he stopped and he capitulated and went on his knees and then sacrificed his soul and dignity on live national television All right. | ||
S.A. | ||
Federale says, all of you are correct in stakeholder capitalism being chi-com control. | ||
Same as the greenies have been called watermelons forever, green on the outside, commie on the inside, like beef roast, brown shirts in World War II. | ||
Fabian socialists go slow. | ||
But I wonder if it's chi-com control or if something's controlling chi-com and they're using CCP tactics. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I definitely don't think the CCP is running the show. | ||
Like, they're as flimsy as the US government right now. | ||
Politicians went to China, saw what they were doing, and said, hey, you get the benefits of absolute dictatorship with the benefits of a capitalist system. | ||
You just got to control the capitalist system so that they can work only underneath your dictatorship. | ||
No, the politicians went there and then set up that system, and now they're testing how far they could get away with it. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Yeah, like a bunch of politicians in, what was it, the 70s or 80s? | ||
Henry Kissinger, David Rockefeller, and I think it was Nixon? | ||
Yep. | ||
They opened up China. | ||
It was the Open China Policy that sent all of our jobs and all of our factories over there in exchange for slave labor. | ||
Basically, the Soviet Union, communism doesn't work. | ||
Command economies don't work. | ||
How can you have a capitalist economy that exists only as a subset of a command economic system? | ||
Meaning, people have mobility at the bottom, but you have tendrils in every single business that rises to a certain level. | ||
So if somebody owns a pizza restaurant, you don't care. | ||
But if they now have a hundred pizza restaurants, you get an office in their corporate headquarters and can control what they say and do. | ||
Yeah, you get a monopoly on the market, and the first thing that Western politicians did in China was implement a one-child policy, which was absolutely destructive and is leading to so much tremendous human suffering and harm that we can't even imagine. | ||
The Wizards of the Coast is prompting to change their licensing thing, so if you use Dungeons & Dragons and you make a game show, if you make over $750,000 a year, they take 20% of everything you make from now on. | ||
They're retroactively, or at least this is what I heard from Phil DeFranco, undoing the old contract. | ||
Even though the old contract said that we can never change this free contract, now they're like, the new contract overrides that. | ||
Let's make a new one! | ||
Yeah, make a new game. | ||
You know, Eric July's got Ripaverse, let's make— Dude, D&D was always just the easiest one to use. | ||
It was never the best. | ||
Right. | ||
So let's just make a nearly identical structure with different formatting or something, or like, I mean, themes. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
We'll call it— D10 instead of D20s. | ||
Instead of dungeons and dragons, we'll call it castles and kings. | ||
You want to play Castles and Kings? | ||
Like, yeah, sure, okay, I'm an elf, you're a dwarf. | ||
That's going to start happening, unfortunately, because Blizzard, or Wizards of the Coast rather, not Blizzard, is obsessively trying to control the market. | ||
They got rid of races in Dungeons & Dragons? | ||
Yeah, they got rid of racial bonuses, I heard. | ||
Is that real? | ||
Did that really happen? | ||
I'm pretty sure, and like, because now it doesn't matter, but it used to be like if you were an elf you had a certain bonus, if you were a human, but they're like, I don't know, that sounds racist to me. | ||
It feels like, well, let's just make our own. | ||
Yeah, I think I brought it up, one, because I wanted to talk about it, but two, because it's like top-down control of the economy, like they're trying to undo contracts. | ||
So contracts mean nothing, mean nothing, if they're able to do that. | ||
Just gotta make your own thing, you know? | ||
Very communist. | ||
And you know, we'll use the physical spaces we set up to host events to promote these parallels. | ||
You know, I think about Seth MacFarlane creating the Orville, because Star Trek got woke and went broke. | ||
And so, even though Seth MacFarlane is not, like, anti-woke or anything, he made the Orville, which was more similar to The Next Generation and Star Trek, because he wanted to maintain that certain level. | ||
And they actually had some pretty based episodes, like the one where the baby's forced under a sexual transition. | ||
Have you seen this? | ||
The Orville? | ||
No. | ||
There's an episode where there's a planet where there's only men, so when an egg hatches and it's a female, they're like, it must be made into a male through transition. | ||
And then they do, and then when the kid grows, gets older, the kid's like, I don't want to be a boy, I want to be a girl, this is wrong. | ||
And so they detransition the kid. | ||
And I'm like, that's pretty based. | ||
It's not like a definitively anti-trans or pro-trans statement, it just explored the idea in a way that I was like, I was surprised by. | ||
But that's Seth MacFarlane basically saying like, I'm gonna do my thing. | ||
And it's, you know it's Star Trek, the Orville, it's literally Star Trek. | ||
The Union, the Federation, he just copied it. | ||
So that's what we'll do. | ||
We'll make our own version of tabletop RPG called Castles and Kings, Crossland and Kings. | ||
Yeah, it's so easy. | ||
unidentified
|
It's so easy to do. | |
I like that name. | ||
Crosslands and Kings. | ||
Yeah, how about that? | ||
The Crosslands. | ||
Call it Rage, and then we'll use Rage as like a thing you get. | ||
All characters can build up their rage and use it as like for different abilities. | ||
I think we should call it the Crosslands. | ||
I can't stop you. That's the basis for the universe. It's like where the different realities are intersecting. The | ||
crosslands, that'll be like the the different planes of reality. It's the nexus point of | ||
all the different planes. Into the cross planes. The crosslands. | ||
Cross planes? | ||
We'll go there. The crosslands. Let's do it. | ||
And then if somebody wants to help craft a tabletop RPG called the crosslands, where there's a- The crosslands can | ||
be in the game. | ||
You can go there. | ||
But it doesn't have to be the name of the game. | ||
I think it's a good name. | ||
Really? | ||
Because, like, within the game, then you can go to, like, any universe you go is based on you travel through the Crosslands- That's badass. | ||
Like, from the Crosslands into- Yeah, man. | ||
Boom, we just created a new game! | ||
Like Chrono Trigger. | ||
Exactly! | ||
Timespace. | ||
unidentified
|
I like it. | |
Timelines and planes. | ||
The Crosslands. | ||
And they'll make a card game for it, where there's like four elements, and you draw the cards and you play the elements to cast spells that you pull from the crosslands to summon creatures. | ||
That's pretty cool. | ||
You could have at least four, you could have like nine, because there could be nine different planes, lands, I guess we could call them. | ||
unidentified
|
Roads. | |
Maybe they're all roads, like you never actually get there, you only go towards it. | ||
And you always head towards it. | ||
Six colors. | ||
Let's write this down. | ||
And then we basically replace D&D and Magic the Gathering. | ||
unidentified
|
One move. | |
Alright, and then we'll buy Wizards. | ||
The Ravenous Drifter says, I've been paying attention, Tim. | ||
Long time viewer. | ||
What's the deal with skating in D.C.? | ||
Be careful, man. | ||
The deal is, um, we go skating quite a bit. | ||
We went to the opening of the Hagerstown Skate Park. | ||
There was a big crowd there. | ||
It was a lot of fun. | ||
A bunch of people came up and gave us fist bumps. | ||
We had a picnic. | ||
It was delicious. | ||
I had, uh, we had, like, beef with, uh, with Havarti and some mustard on it. | ||
And, uh, we skated. | ||
And there was not a single issue. | ||
I go to the DC skate park and now there's this weird conspiracy that like some pro skaters brought me with them or something and that everyone was hiding on the other side of the park away from me and that I couldn't pop shove it or something and I'm like I literally just showed up to a plaza and skated around and like talked to some random people. | ||
And it became such like this big deal I guess they're posting on in forums that I was like, okay, I'm going back. | ||
Like, dude, we're gonna go skate. | ||
We're gonna have fun. | ||
And that's the point. | ||
I'm not gonna let people make up lies and try and chase us out of spaces when literally nothing happened. | ||
So my view is there should be no issue. | ||
I'll show up. | ||
We'll skate. | ||
We'll hang out. | ||
We'll do like a cool little meet and greet kind of thing. | ||
Phil Labonte, if all that remains, is going to be there. | ||
Ian's going to be there, because we're going to make him get up early enough. | ||
Hold on a second. | ||
He's going to be playing guitar. | ||
Oh my god. | ||
Big crowds, everyone's going to be cheering, Ian! | ||
Yeah! | ||
11am, are you kidding me? | ||
No! | ||
unidentified
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11am! | |
This guy! | ||
unidentified
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12, right? | |
It's an hour to get there. | ||
12 noon, right? | ||
Jeez. | ||
I say 12 is fine. | ||
I just want you to think, Ian, people are going to be like, and you're going to be playing the guitar, Phil's going to be singing, and everyone's going to be, And the police are gonna be like, this Ian guy's too popular, we gotta shut this down. | ||
But I like it, but I like it. | ||
Dancing. | ||
Yeah, all right. | ||
Let's grab another one. | ||
Jason says, yeah Tim, build a wood fire pizza oven. | ||
They are great and you can cook more than just pizza in them. | ||
Done. | ||
We actually were trying, we're gonna do it here. | ||
We actually had a plan for creating a wood fire oven, and then we decided not to do it because we're doing all the new construction at Freedomistan, but we'll do a brick wood fire oven. | ||
What is this new place called? | ||
Freedomistan. | ||
It's a great name. | ||
Oh, I like it. | ||
Luke came up with it. | ||
I like it. | ||
I think Luke randomly called it that. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Like as a joke. | ||
It sticks, right? | ||
Freedomistan. | ||
People are like, Freedomistan? | ||
Yeah, freedom. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
See, I heard the dom. | ||
I'm like, is this a play on dom? | ||
I hope it's not. | ||
unidentified
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No, no. | |
Yeah, no, but then I get it. | ||
It takes a second. | ||
I think, who called it Freedomistan? | ||
Or Freedomstan? | ||
Freedomistan. | ||
And then I was like for the, you know, Freedomistan, because you gotta put the I in there. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, Freedomistan. | ||
unidentified
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It works. | |
It's an eastern block, I like it. | ||
It's better than Freedistan, definitely. | ||
Freedistan isn't an option. | ||
Rather than Slavistan, you don't want that. | ||
Freetown, that would have been cheap. | ||
It's called New York City. | ||
Slavistan. | ||
Andre Gerasimenko says, Tim, it's not our fault you are gas stove deficient. | ||
In 40 years of cooking, I've never burnt bacon on the stove. | ||
Oven, yes. | ||
I went to an Airbnb, and they had a gas stove, and I grew up with a gas stove, and I got no problem with it, and there was a vent in the other room that was blowing, and so the flame kept going like this. | ||
Oh, that sucks. | ||
And then I had to move the pan over to the left to get it to cook evenly. | ||
I'm like, if this was just electric like we have here, it would have evenly lit the whole thing up way faster and cooked my bacon way faster. | ||
I'm not a chef. | ||
I'm not sitting here trying to do flame techniques. | ||
I'm just trying to cook bacon quickly. | ||
Environment is important. | ||
If you have too much of a breeze, flame is almost useless. | ||
Yeah, you gotta close the window, turn the fan off, because the flame's bouncing around. | ||
Get out of here. | ||
Yeah, no, I totally agree with that point, but I still don't think it should be forced. | ||
We should be able to have our gas stoves. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, I agree. | |
We should be cooking with plasma. | ||
Yeah, I might just go get one just in spite of all this, honestly. | ||
Joseph says, how fast all women wore yoga pants blows my mind. | ||
Just in general? | ||
It's just trends. | ||
Yeah, I was there for that trend in LA. | ||
All of a sudden everybody was wearing yoga pants? | ||
All of a sudden, 2008. | ||
It's like not wearing pants at all. | ||
It's really bad when they wear nude colored ones, like beige ones. | ||
Generally, from a few feet away, it looks like they're just wearing a hoodie. | ||
There's also a theory that there's a lot of plastic in them and a lot of very bad chemicals that are really bad for women's reproductive organs as well. | ||
I'm sure that's absolutely true. | ||
In the pants? | ||
Yep. | ||
Really? | ||
Yep. | ||
I just got a yoga mat, but I went all the way to the top. | ||
I got the best. | ||
How much was it? | ||
unidentified
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$130. | |
Not all the way, but way better than those cheap $30 mats. | ||
I don't want that potassium bromate. | ||
Plastic is leaching everywhere. | ||
What is this? | ||
There's a rumor going around. | ||
Someone said this. | ||
AdamDrop says, Andrew Tate has become an idol because they've torn down all our others as they are seen as toxic, like Elliot Page, possibly Superman. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
So I googled that. | ||
There are a bunch of stories saying Elliot Page may replace Henry Cavill as Superman. | ||
Yeah, please. | ||
Please say so. | ||
Let's do it. | ||
I want the Batgirl movie. | ||
I want it to come out. | ||
Let it all fall on its face. | ||
I totally agree with that part about Andrew Tate though, you know, this whole toxic masculinity movement degrading, you know, men for being men and shunning them has led to this, you know, really stupid idols that are taking advantage of these people. | ||
I want to talk about this. | ||
We'll pull up the article for the members-only segment, so smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, become a member at TimCast.com for the uncensored segment, which will be up in about an hour, where we'll carry on that conversation. | ||
I want to talk about that one. | ||
That matters. | ||
Toxic masculinity and all this stuff. | ||
You can follow the show at TimCastIRL, basically everywhere. | ||
Follow us on Instagram right now. | ||
You can follow me personally at TimCast, but more importantly, follow at TimCastNews on Twitter. | ||
Jamie, do you want to shout anything out? | ||
Uh, yeah. | ||
If you want to learn more about Gays Against Groomers, please go to GaysAgainstGroomers.com. | ||
Everything about us there, ways to support us too. | ||
All of our socials as well, but we are most active on Twitter and Instagram. | ||
Twitter is against G-R-M-R-S. | ||
That's when we had to avoid the word groomer back in the pre-Elon days. | ||
And then Instagram is just Gays Against Groomers. | ||
So appreciate that. | ||
Thank you. | ||
And you're an OG Ron Pauler. | ||
I am an OG Ron Pauler. | ||
Yeah, we bonded over that. | ||
Well, thank you so much for coming out. | ||
You were awesome. | ||
My website is LukeUncensored.com and there's a lot of things that I'm doing on there. | ||
I'm doing an AMA on there right now. | ||
I just released a video about Neil deGrasse Tyson going crazy and freaking out. | ||
That video is going to be available for free for everyone this Friday if you are on our email list. | ||
Right now it's available for members. | ||
Sign up on the email list very easily on WeAreChanged.org. | ||
Thank you again so much. | ||
Thanks so much for having me. | ||
I really appreciate the ever-flowing font of inspiration I receive from you listening and responding and interacting with the show and with me all over social media. | ||
If you want to get in touch more at Ian Crossland, hit me up anywhere. | ||
Very happy to see you. | ||
Good to see you, Jim. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Hey, y'all. | ||
It is me in the comments. | ||
It's at Surge.com. | ||
I do respond. | ||
I do read everyone's statements. | ||
I think it's like something I could do to contribute to the show. | ||
I thought this was a good one. | ||
I've been a fan for a while. | ||
It's been nice to meet you in real life. | ||
Thanks, Surge. | ||
Yeah, no worries. | ||
That means a lot. | ||
Hey, cool. | ||
And yeah, check in next time. | ||
Become a member of TimCast. | ||
Love it, guys. | ||
We will see you all over at TimCast.com. | ||
Let's talk about Elliot Page as Superman. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. |